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Balilla
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Balilla was the nickname of Giovanni Battista Perasso (1735–1781), a boy who, according to tradition, started the against the Habsburg forces that occupied the city in the War of the Austrian Succession by throwing a stone at an Austrian official.


Story and legacy
The word Balilla is thought to mean "little boy" and is thus one of only two clues about Perasso's age (the other being an Austrian report that makes reference to "a little boy" throwing stones at officials).

Legend asserts that while some Austrian soldiers were dragging an artillery piece along a muddy road in the neighbourhood of Genoa, the piece got stuck in a moat. The soldiers forced onlookers and passers-by to dislodge it, cursing and lashing them. Disgusted by the scene, Perasso allegedly grabbed a stone from the road and skilfully threw it at the Austrian patrol, asking his fellow citizens in the : "i=no" ("Am I to begin?" or "Shall I start?"), which set in motion an uproar which eventually caused the Austrian garrison to be evicted from the city. The phrase became proverbial in Italian as well.

For his supposed age and revolutionary activity, Perasso became a symbol of the struggle of the Italian people for independence and unification. Conversely, accounts of the sack of Genoa by Royal Piedmontese troops in 1849 mention soldiers running through the streets and shouting, "Genoese people are all Balilla, they do not deserve compassion, we must kill them all!".

Later on, Italy's named the Opera Nazionale Balilla (ONB), a school-grade scouting-paramilitary youth organization, after him. Accordingly, the anthem of the ONB began with the verse "i=no" ("The stone whistles...").

Several types of the Fiat 508 car, produced during the 1930s, were also named for Balilla (Fiat 508 Balilla, Fiat 508S Balilla Coppa d'Oro, Fiat 508 Balilla Sport, Fiat 508 Balilla Spider Militare). An Italian fighter plane designed in 1917, the Ansaldo A.1, was named Balilla.

He is also mentioned in the Italian , "i=no", composed in 1847: "i=no" ("The children of Italy / are all named Balilla").


Italian Navy submarines
Two submarines were named Balilla:

  • The former German U42 which was building at the FIAT yard in La Spezia when Italy entered World War I. It was sunk in 1916.
  • The nameship of the Balilla class submarines, laid up in 1941 and scrapped after World War II.


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