NAZI ATROCITIES
MURDER AND VANDALISM IN NAPLES DESTRUCTION OF ANCIENT UNIVERSITY. WITH IRREPLACEABLE RECORDS & WORK OF ART. (Bv Telegraph—Press Association— Copyright) LONDON, October 12. Specially selected British Army officers, some of whom came from the British Museum, the National Gallery and the Royal Institute of British Architects, are at work in southern Italy with the aim of protecting works of art and cultural buildings and monuments. Necessary temporary repairs to damaged buildings are already being put in hand. An example of calculated German vandalism has been reported by a correspondent. On September 19 Germans in Naples rounded up 300 men, women and children, from whose number a man was taken and killed in front of the university, this because, the Germans said, a civilian had killed a German nearby. So far there was nothing unusual in this. But the Germans followed up their demonstration by setting fire to the University of Naples. The university, dating from 1224, was the third oldest in Europe, ihe Germans poured petrol on the books and furnishings and then hurled in hand grenades. At the same time the building of the Royal Society of Naples, erected in 1400 and once one of the proudest institutions of learning in Italy, was set on fire. Tlic fire raged for four days, and the Germans forbade the firemen to go to it. Ancient manuscripts, books and frescoes were destroyed. In this fire were lost more than 200,000 irreplaceable vellums and other documents.
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Wairarapa Times-Age, 13 October 1943, Page 3
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244NAZI ATROCITIES Wairarapa Times-Age, 13 October 1943, Page 3
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