Award issued by Italy to recognize recipients as worthy of public honor
The awards for Civil Valor are the honors the Italian Republic grants in order to "reward acts of exceptional courage that clearly manifest civic virtue and to recognize the recipients as worthy of public honor". Individual citizens can receive the award (including posthumously), and it can also be bestowed collectively on all members of a military department or all residents of a municipality, city, or province when they have knowingly exposed their life to manifest danger.
Historical background
On 30 April 1851, Victor Emmanuel II, King of Sardinia, established the Medal for Civil Valor for the first time. When the Kingdom of Italy was established in 1861 with him as its first king, the Medal for Civil Valor became an award of the new kingdom.
The Carnegie Foundation, based in the Palazzo del Viminale, home of the Ministry of the Interior, has been involved in awards for civil valor since the Scottish philanthropist Andrew Carnegie in a 17 June 1911 letter to the President of the Council of Ministers, Prime Minister of ItalyGiovanni Giolitti, granted to the government of the Kingdom of Italy a fund of US$750,000 in shares of the Carnegie Steel Company, annual annuities of which had to be used to pay premiums to people who were in economic difficulty but who nonetheless had worked in the face of danger to save the lives of others. Carnegie also suggested that instead of money, medals could be awarded to people who were not in economic difficulty.
In the modern Italian Republic, the law of 2 January 1958, Number 13, governs the awarding of medals for civil valor.[1]
Award criteria
The awards for civil valor can be made for specific acts, which include:
Saving people exposed to imminent and grave danger;
Preventing or diminishing the damage caused by a serious public or private disaster;
Re-establishing public order where it has been gravely disturbed and maintaining the rule of law;
Arresting or participating in the arrest of malefactors;
Performing acts aimed at the progress of science or in general for the good of humanity;
Keeping the name and prestige of the country high.
Types of awards
Depending on the circumstances of time and place in which the action was performed and on the effects achieved, four different types of award can be presented:
Gold Medal for Civil Valor
Silver Medal for Civil Valor
Bronze Medal for Civil Valor
Certificate of Public Merit for Civil Valor (award has no ribbon)
The law provides (Article 7) that the granting of recognition normally will follow an examination of the courageous act by a committee composed of a prefect, a senator, a deputy, two members representing the Presidency of the Council of Ministers, a general of the Carabinieri, a representative of the Carnegie Foundation, and a member of the civil administration of the Ministry of the Interior. However, if "the character of the courageous act and the resonance that it has aroused in public opinion" are sufficient to attest to the propriety of the honor, the President of the Italian Republic can proceed with the recognition without the evaluation of the commission (Article 8).
Of particular significance are medals for civil valor the Italian Republic has awarded to cities, municipalities, and provinces in recognition of the acts of heroism credited to the entire community during war, natural disasters. or other tragedies at various times in Italy's national history.
Gold Medal for Civil Valor
Municipalities decorated for acts of self-denial during Italy's participation the Second World War (1940–1945)
Acerra (awarded for collective heroism following a Nazi German massacre on 2 October 1943; 67 men and boys and 15 women and girls were killed, including 14 children, 48 elderly people, and 20 other adults)
^Gambetti, Nicola (20 June 2023). "Monumenti sopravvissuti: l'Arco d'Augusto" [Surviving monuments: The Arch of Augustus]. Rimini Sparita (in Italian). Retrieved 16 January 2024.