Difference between revisions of "8th Bersaglieri Regiment"

From Conservapedia
Jump to: navigation, search
(Second World War)
(Second World War)
Line 7: Line 7:
 
During the Second World War the Regiment formed part of the ''Ariete'' Armoured Division. When the armoured division arrived in North Africa, the Regiment comprised the 3rd, 5th and 12th Battalion plus the 132nd Anti-Tank Company.
 
During the Second World War the Regiment formed part of the ''Ariete'' Armoured Division. When the armoured division arrived in North Africa, the Regiment comprised the 3rd, 5th and 12th Battalion plus the 132nd Anti-Tank Company.
  
During the [[Second Battle of El Alamein]], the ''Ariete'' (under General Francesco Arena) fought a stubborn rearguard action around Aqqaqir Ridge<ref>"Soon after midday, ten miles south-west of the Aqqaqir ridge, 22 Armoured Brigade came up against the tanks and anti-tank screen of the Italian rearguard, Ariete Division ... For most of the rest of the day, they slugged it out until finally, under the constant pounding, Ariete broke and ran, abandoning equipment everywhere ... The men they had fought were the Bersaglieri ... The cock-feather plumes in their helmets did not look so jaunty now as they lay twisted on the ground. The riflemen dug graves. They found piles  of propaganda postcards, men in feathered hats marching towards Cairo. There was a songbook too ... trying to make out the meaning of the lyrics. L'Addio del Bersaglieri." End of the Beginning, Phil Craig, Tim Clayton, Hachette, 2012</ref>T, effectively derailing General Bernard Montgomery's plans to encircle and completely destroy the retreating ''Afrika Korps''.
+
During the [[Second Battle of El Alamein]], the ''Ariete'' (under General Francesco Arena) fought a stubborn rearguard action on 4 November<ref>"Soon after midday, ten miles south-west of the Aqqaqir ridge, 22 Armoured Brigade came up against the tanks and anti-tank screen of the Italian rearguard, Ariete Division ... For most of the rest of the day, they slugged it out until finally, under the constant pounding, Ariete broke and ran, abandoning equipment everywhere ... The men they had fought were the Bersaglieri ... The cock-feather plumes in their helmets did not look so jaunty now as they lay twisted on the ground. The riflemen dug graves. They found piles  of propaganda postcards, men in feathered hats marching towards Cairo. There was a songbook too ... trying to make out the meaning of the lyrics. ''L Addio del Bersaglieri''." End of the Beginning, Phil Craig, Tim Clayton, Hachette, 2012</ref>, effectively derailing General Bernard Montgomery's plans to encircle and completely destroy the retreating ''Afrika Korps''. The German Army High Command recognized the effort of the tankers and Bersaglieri from the ''Ariete'' and claimed that the ''"British were made to pay for their penetration with enormous losses in men and material. The Italians fought to the last man."''<ref>Rolling Thunder: A Century of Tank Warfare, Philip Kaplan, p. 139, Pen and Sword, 2013</ref>
  
 
== Notes ==
 
== Notes ==

Revision as of 16:18, October 29, 2016

The 8th Bersaglieri Regiment form part of the Bersaglieri Corps of the Italian Army, originally created by General Alessandro La Marmora on 18 June 1836.

They compiled an excellent combat record, and can still be recognized by the distinctive helmets, decorated with black plumes.

Second World War

During the Second World War the Regiment formed part of the Ariete Armoured Division. When the armoured division arrived in North Africa, the Regiment comprised the 3rd, 5th and 12th Battalion plus the 132nd Anti-Tank Company.

During the Second Battle of El Alamein, the Ariete (under General Francesco Arena) fought a stubborn rearguard action on 4 November[1], effectively derailing General Bernard Montgomery's plans to encircle and completely destroy the retreating Afrika Korps. The German Army High Command recognized the effort of the tankers and Bersaglieri from the Ariete and claimed that the "British were made to pay for their penetration with enormous losses in men and material. The Italians fought to the last man."[2]

Notes

  1. "Soon after midday, ten miles south-west of the Aqqaqir ridge, 22 Armoured Brigade came up against the tanks and anti-tank screen of the Italian rearguard, Ariete Division ... For most of the rest of the day, they slugged it out until finally, under the constant pounding, Ariete broke and ran, abandoning equipment everywhere ... The men they had fought were the Bersaglieri ... The cock-feather plumes in their helmets did not look so jaunty now as they lay twisted on the ground. The riflemen dug graves. They found piles of propaganda postcards, men in feathered hats marching towards Cairo. There was a songbook too ... trying to make out the meaning of the lyrics. L Addio del Bersaglieri." End of the Beginning, Phil Craig, Tim Clayton, Hachette, 2012
  2. Rolling Thunder: A Century of Tank Warfare, Philip Kaplan, p. 139, Pen and Sword, 2013