Hey, happy
November 4th! Today is the 100th anniversary of National
Unity and Armed Forces Day in Italy, and uniforms and hardware were on full
display at Teatro Massimo (below) in Palermo—a
curiously operatic setting for the Italian military.
National Unity and Armed Forces Day has been an Italian national
holiday since 1919 and commemorates victory in World War I, a war event
considered the completion of the unification of Italy. It's celebrated every 4
November, which is the anniversary of the armistice of Villa Giusti becoming
effective in 1918 declaring Austria-Hungary’s surrender.
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| Gray-green
Army Uniform, 1915 |
Under
the terms of the armistice, Austria-Hungary's forces were required to evacuate
not only all territory occupied since August 1914 but also South Tirol, Gorizia,
Trieste, Istria, and Dalmatia. All German forces should be expelled from
Austria-Hungary within 15 days or interned, ... They were also obliged to allow
the transit of the Entente armies [France, Great Britain, and Russia],
to reach Germany from the South. Beginning in November 1918, the Italian Army
with 20,000-22,000 soldiers occupied Innsbruck and all North Tirol.
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| Army
Canteen, Mess Kit, Brass Telescope |
After
the war, the Kingdom of Italy annexed the Southern Tyrol (now Trentino-Alto
Adige/Südtirol), as well as Trieste [, Istria and Gorizia].
In 2018, the
German Historical Museum held a centenary WWI exhibition, which featured the Italian alpine campaign. You can
read about the campaign here: Smithsonian. I remember seeing photographs of Italian
alpini crossing the rugged, practically vertical Dolomite Mountains in deep snow and icy
conditions.
These are the mountains that
define the Südtirol, separating today’s Italy from Austria.
It was nearly the end of the war, and the
soldiers wore uniforms that had once been rather snappy, but by that late date
had seen better days. That November 1918
and continuing through the winter, they dragged themselves over the mountains
dressed in ragged woolen coats, their boots either destroyed or replaced with
strips of army-issue blankets, the holes in their worn knitted gloves exposing
their fingers to frostbite.
It looked
extremely brutal, even hopeless.
But
somehow these soldiers managed to outlast their Austro-Hungarian counterparts
(below)
and went on to victory and a completion of the Risorgimento (resurgence) that had begun in 1815, continued through
several civil wars, and was brought to incomplete fruition in 1860 by Garibaldi
and his Spedizione dei Mille, the expedition
of the one thousand that set out from Sicily and drove up the Italian peninsula to Campania near Naples, where he was welcomed by King Vittorio Emanuele II.
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| Soldiers
Watching Women Kick-boxers |
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| Underwater
Unit |
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| Tax
Police Dog (This Cutie Can Smell Drugs and Illegal Cash in Excess of €10,000) |
Wiki describes the Risorgimento as:
…the
political and social movement that consolidated different states of the Italian
peninsula into the single state of the Kingdom of Italy in the 19th century.
The process began in 1815 with the Congress of Vienna and was completed in 1871
when Rome became the capital of the Kingdom of Italy.
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| Royal
Carabinieri Palermo Print |
The
term, which also designates the cultural, political and social movement that
promoted unification, recalls the romantic, nationalist, and patriotic ideals
of an Italian renaissance through the conquest of a unified political identity
that, by sinking its ancient roots during the Roman period, "suffered an
abrupt halt [or loss] of its political unity in 476 AD after the collapse of
the Western Roman Empire". However, some of the terre irredente did not join the Kingdom of
Italy until 1918 after Italy defeated Austria-Hungary in World War I. For this
reason, sometimes the period is extended to include the late 19th-century and
the First World War (1915–1918), until the 4 November 1918 Armistice of Villa
Giusti, which is considered the completion of unification.
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| Air
Force Recruiting |
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| Anti-Sabotage
Equipment |
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| Army
Equestrians |
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| Be All That You Can Be! |
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| Newfoundland
and Labrador Rescue Dogs with Trainers |
Almost
every Italian town I’ve ever visited has a street named IV novembre. Now I know
why. Happy National Unity Day! It’s unfortunate (but all too familiar) that Italian
soldiers had to kill and be killed to get there.
P.S. The title photo of WWI and WWII memorabilia
is a window display at the best menswear shop in Palermo, Dell’Oglio.
As ever, what enormous waste of life and limb, what sacrifices. That period of our history never ceases to astonish. Great blog,
ReplyDeletelearned something new!
"That period" continues apace. Sigh.
ReplyDeleteI think it should be a requirement for the presidency that you have served in the military. You should know first hand the consequences of conflict. To be learning on the job while being Commander-in-Chief makes no sense.
ReplyDelete100% agreed.
DeleteVery enjoyable read Marilyn. I didn't know any of this (well, a tiny bit my Middle School History Class regurgitated to us circa 1979). War is bad word.
ReplyDelete