1914 killer still not recognised as dead
Notorious gunman Simone Pianetti, who has been regarded as a hero by some Italian and American anarchists, was born on this day in 1858 in Camerata Cornello in the province of Bergamo in Lombardy.
Simone Pianetti remains officially
'on the run' - after 112 years
In July 1914, Pianetti went out with his rifle one day and shot and killed seven people living in his local area who he believed had wronged him. He then went on the run and, after firing at some Carabinieri officers who tried to arrest him, escaped into the mountains above Bergamo.
A search was carried out by more than 200 officers, from the Polizia di Stato, the Carabinieri and an infantry regiment, to try to capture him, but Pianetti managed to stay hidden in the mountains near the villages of Olmo al Brembo and Cassiglio.
Despite a 'Wanted' poster being published and circulated by the local Prefetto, offering a 5,000 lire reward, Pianetti was never caught and his body was never found.
It is known that when he was young, Pianetti had fired his rifle at his father without injuring him, after an argument over a legacy. He was not charged with any offence as a result and with the agreement of the local head of the Carabinieri, he left Italy and went to the USA.
Years later, he returned to Italy, his journey being paid for by his father, and he went back to live in Camerata Cornello, where he married and fathered seven children.
He opened a small restaurant where customers were also allowed to dance, but because the local parish priest and other church officials did not approve of the dancing at his restaurant, he was eventually forced to close it by the local municipal authorities.
He then opened an electric powered mill, but this also turned out to be an unsuccessful business venture. His reputation was blackened by his enemies and as a result he lost all his money and became impoverished.
As the only person in the area who did not attend church, Pianetti grew to believe that everyone hated him, which led to his murderous rampage in 1914.
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| A reward of 5,000 lire was offered if Pianetti could be tracked down |
His victims were the local doctor, Domenico Morali, the manager of the municipality, Abramo Giudici, and his daughter, Valeria, Giovanni Ghilardi, a shoemaker, Stefano Filippo, a priest, Giovanni Giupponi, a layman, and Caterina Milesi, a farmer.
It is thought his actions in 1914 may have been inspired by those of Gavrilo Princip, a Serbian student, who had assassinated Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife the previous month, the famous killings that set off the events that led to the start of World War I.
Pianetti was known to have survived in hiding in the mountains for some time and it is not known when, or where, he eventually died. It is thought that it may have been in 1952 in Milan, but this has never been proved.
There were reported sightings of him in the Bergamo mountains, as well as in America and Venezuela.
Some of the local people began to see the fugitive Pianetti as a liberator, and wrote on walls, praising him, with slogans such as ‘Long Live Pianetti, we need one in every town’.
It is thought people helped him stay hidden from the authorities by giving him food and some residents were later sentenced to terms of imprisonment by the authorities for helping him.
| Pianetti hailed from the village of Camerata Cornello in the Val Brembana area of Lombardy |
Many theories have been put forward about how he escaped justice. Some people claim to have met him years later in either Switzerland or America, and there is a theory that in his old age he returned from America and lived with his son, Nino, in Milan, until he died in 1952.
In later years, Pianetti’s personality came to be admired by some Italian and American anarchists because of his actions against what was perceived to be the bigotry of those in authority in Italy in the religious establishment and society of his time.
He is remembered in towns in the Brembana Valley as a sort of avenger, often referred to as a righter of wrongs, and a kind of elusive hero opposed to the people in authority. The “romantic” aspect of the story prevails, leaving aside the tragic and criminal side, and the threat of “doing like Pianetti”, (in the Bergamo dialect fà de Pianetti ) is still used.
Pianetti’s death has never been recorded and the case against him has never been dropped, so he is now officially on the run aged 168.
Travel tip:
The hamlet of Cornello dei Tasso, near Camerata
Cornello, is one of Lombardy's most beautiful villages
Camerata Cornello, where Pianetti was born, is a small municipality in the province of Bergamo in Lombardy about 20km (12 miles) north of the city of Bergamo, in the upper part of the Brembana Valley, with a population of around 550 residents. It is one of the oldest towns in the valley and the first written information about it dates back to the year 1000. It is thought that the first permanent settlements in this area date back to the time of the barbarian invasions, when local populations fled to remote places to escape raids. In the Middle Ages part of fiefdom of the Visconti family, it grew in importance thanks to trade brought by the Via Mercatorum. Its thriving market made it a rival to neighbouring Zogno and San Giovanni Bianco. In the 13th century the town was the birthplace of several members of the Tasso family, of which the poets Bernardo and Torquato are the most famous. The nearby hamlet of Cornello dei Tasso is among the best preserved and most picturesque in Lombardy.
Find accommodation in Val Brembana with Expedia
Travel tip:
The Grand Hotel at San Pellegrino is one of the
best known landmarks in the Val Brembana
The Val Brembana - Brembana Valley - stretches along the River Brembo, from the outskirts of Bergamo into the Orobic Alps. Its landscape is characterised by steep, forested slopes giving way to alpine meadows, with fast-moving rivers coursing through narrow gorges and stone villages clinging to the hillsides above the towns of the valley, the most famous of which is San Pellegrino Terme, the birthplace of San Pellegrino mineral water, also known for its Grand Hotel and Casino, built in the architectural style known as Stile Liberty, the Italian take on Art Nouveau. Val Brembana’s cuisine is hearty, alpine, and draws heavily on local ingredients, particularly its cheeses, including Branzi, made in the village of the same name, Formai de Mut, Averara and Valtorta. Venison and wild boar can be found on menus, inevitably accompanied by polenta, an alpine comfort food made from buckwheat flour, often with local cheese stirred in.
Stay in Val Brembana with Hotels.com
More reading:
Carmine Crocco, the bandit seen by peasants as Italy’s ‘Robin Hood’
Giuseppe Musolino, the vengeful killer who became an unlikely folk hero
Gino Lucetti, the anarchist who tried to kill Mussolini
Also on this day:
1497: The Bonfire of the Vanities
1622: The birth of Vittorio della Rovere, Grand Duchess of Tuscany
1878: The death of Pope Pius IX
1909: The birth of cavalry officer Amedeo Guillet
1941: The birth of pop singer Little Tony
1952: The birth of rock star Vasco Rossi

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