Isonzo
288 ratings
My great-great-grandfather Franc / BW Version
By _DOOMMASTER_
A guide to the artwork of my great-great-grandfather Franc.

Many of you have shown an interest, which makes me very happy.
I decided to create a guide to the artwork to show the photos in a chronological context.

This is the black and white photobook version.
I started to colorize some photos. I will also upload a version in color.

So you can get impressions of original black and white photos and also in color version.

Artwork:
https://steamhost.cn/steamcommunity_com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=2864038910
47
4
29
14
3
5
12
9
3
3
2
   
Award
Favorite
Favorited
Unfavorite
His life
He was born in 1898.

At the age of 17 he was drafted 1915 with his brother into the austrian army and fought against the italian army in the Dolomites.

First picture when he moved in to the army in 1915. (He stands right)


This is a picture from his fight time on the Dolomites. In the photo he is leaning against the door.


Here you can see the a photo of the work on the rail network to the Dolomits. It was important to expand the rail network for the supply. In addition to fighting, the soldiers also had to take part in construction projects.


Here is another photo of his comrades and friends. In the Austro-Hungarian army they fought with people from different countries. There were also different religions to deal with. In my great-great-grandfathers unit there were also Bosniaks of Muslim faith. In the canteen there was an extra kitchen and food distribution for them. They ate together and not separately. Only the officers are among themselves in a separate area.


Another friend of Franc


During a fight a grenade shrapnel shredded his right leg. In the hospital they wanted to amputate it, but he refused. The leg was saved, but he was never able to walk properly again.
Throughout his life he needed a walking stick because his right leg was stiff.

Photo after his treatment. His head was also shave to prevent lice infestation. The hygienic measures at the front were bad. (He is on the right side)


Photo of his comrades in the hospital.


He received the bravery medal.


After his recovery, he was classified as unfit for action. He was transferred to the army music corps in which he played the violin. (The X marks his position)


But that didn't stop him from living his life. He had modified a bicycle so that he could ride it with one leg. After the war he opened a cinema and married my great-great-grandmother Maria and had 2 children.


Photo of my great-great-grandmother Maria.


Photo of my great-great-grandmother Maria with her sister and her 2 children Ivan and Franc. Fun Fact: In 3 generation people in my Family had the name Franc with the exact same surnames. On family outings in other countries where you stood in line and had to show your ID on the border, they drive the inspectors into madness.

Unfortunately, my great-great-grandmother Maria died early of tuberculosis. After a few years he married a second time and adopted his new wife's child. But it was more of an arranged marriage because of the children. As a single person it was very difficult at that time to go to work and take care of the children at the same time.


Photo of him in 1920 at a veterans meeting in Slovenia. (He sits right)


When the stock market crashed in 1929, he also lost his cinema. He invested in railroad stocks that went worthless overnight. He had to work in the fields for a while. Later he opened a small tobacconist and a small library. For the books, he sewed some of the old film tapes together and used them as protective covers.

During World War II he lived in Slovenia, which was once part of Austria-Hungary.
When the Italians marched in, his situation worsened.
The Italians were paranoid about the partisan issue.
Anyone could be arrested and deported for no reason.

My great-great-grandfather Franc, his brother and his two children were arrested and sent to the Italian concentration camp in Gonars.
Until the end of the war they had to try to survive under the worst circumstances.

The fact that he once fought on the Austrian side against the Italians was not an advantage in this situation.


Here you can see 4 ration coupons that he received in the concentration camps.
At first he was imprisoned in a civilian concentration camp in Renicci.
He was then transferred to a concentration camp for prisoners of war in Gonars.


Translated version of the camp ration coupons (Renicci: left side) (Gonars: right side)


He made this cross during his captivity in the concentration camp Gonars. The plaque bears the inscription "spomin na Gonars" which meens "memory of Gonars". He had the plaque engraved after the war. It is originally a name badge. On the back he scratched his name in.

All 4 also survived the 2nd World War.

77 Comments
Mick McMack 4 Apr @ 11:25am 
that is some crazy lore right there
Samurer12 25 Feb @ 10:52pm 
The history that you have shared is an absolute gem!
Xivion 24 Feb @ 9:52am 
This is fantasttic, absolutely fascinating. Thank you for sharing
hectordj18 1 Feb @ 7:01pm 
This is so cool
_DOOMMASTER_  [author] 29 Jan @ 1:14pm 
I'm glad you liked it and thank you for sharing your family history. I also find it very exciting to see how other people have a connection to the K.u.K. past and came across the game. It's amazing what similarities there are, especially on a platform like Steam :)
Keramikkon 29 Jan @ 5:05am 
It is incredibly nice of you to share the memory of your great-great-grandfather with us and bring a piece of history back to life. My great-great-grandfather (and his son, my great-grandfather) served in the Austro-Hungarian Army as well; reading the latter's memoires is what inspired me to play Isonzo, so it is very encouraging to see similar experiences in other descendants of K.u.K. veterans (on Steam, of all places). Viribus unitis! Hvala ti mnogo, brate ^^
[NS] zu Pferd 25 Jan @ 3:30pm 
Gran rispetto per suo nonno e per lei. Buon Anno
_DOOMMASTER_  [author] 12 Jan @ 6:58am 
Thank you :emofdr:
HandsomeJack762 10 Jan @ 1:57pm 
By far the best community post ever made on steam. This is the shit I love to see. in my 18 years of Steam Service and some time in the USMC/Navy, Gramps is an OG body stacker. Thank your family for their service for me!

Doc Z
:mkb::VBCOOL:
_DOOMMASTER_  [author] 1 Jan @ 4:47am 
Thank you very much, I wish you a happy new year as well :emofdr: