Niccolò Turrisi Colonna, leader of the Palermo …

Years: 1865 - 1865

Niccolò Turrisi Colonna, leader of the Palermo National Guard, had written in 1864 of a "sect of thieves" that operates across Sicily.

This "sect" is mostly rural, composed of cattle thieves, smugglers, wealthy farmers and their guards.

The sect makes "affiliates every day of the brightest young people coming from the rural class, of the guardians of the fields in the Palermitan countryside, and of the large number of smugglers; a sect which gives and receives protection to and from certain men who make a living on traffic and internal commerce. It is a sect with little or no fear of public bodies, because its members believe that they can easily elude this." (Paoli, Letizia (2003). Mafia Brotherhoods: Organized Crime, Italian Style, New York: Oxford University Press; p. 33.)

Colonna seems to know what he is talking about, as there is widespread suspicion that he is the protector of some important Mafiosi in Palermo.

It has special signals to recognize each other, offers protection services, scorns the law and has a code of loyalty and non-interaction with the police known as umirtà ("humility").

Colonna had warned in his report that the Italian government's brutal and clumsy attempts to crush unlawfulness had only made the problem worse by alienating the populace.

An 1865 dispatch from the prefect of Palermo to Rome first officially describes the phenomenon as a "Mafia".

Related Events

Filter results