Gino Pedrazzoli (2 August 1884 – 1 January 1973) was an Italian general during World War II.
[2][1][3] On 10 June 1940, the day of Italy's entry into the Second World War, he assumed command of the 48th Infantry Division Taro, which he commanded uninterruptedly for the entirety of Italy's belligerence against the Allies, participating in the Greco-Italian War from November 1940 to April 1941, in the Italian occupation of Montenegro from June 1941 to August 1942 and in the Italian occupation of France (where the division was stationed near Toulon, with headquarters in Bormes) from November 1942 to September 1943.
On January 1, 1941, he was promoted to major general, and in October he was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Military Order of Savoy.
[4] After the Armistice of Cassibile he was taken prisoner by the Germans in France and held as a prisoner of war in Oflag 64/Z in Schokken, Poland, and later in Vittel, France, returning to Italy after the end of the hostilities in May 1945.
He was later promoted to lieutenant general; after the war he was included by Yugoslav authorities in a list of war criminals for crimes committed by his troops during anti-partisan operations in Montenegro, but was never prosecuted.