1872 to 1887 of a Combat Engineer of the Alpini Corps: with raven feather, amaranth Nappina,'' (tuft) and the coat of the
2° Engineer Regiment. In 1872, Captain
Giuseppe Perrucchetti published a study in the May edition of the Military Review (Italian:
Rivista Militare). In the study, he proposed to assign the defence of mountain borders of the recently established
Kingdom of Italy to soldiers recruited locally. Indeed, thanks to their knowledge of the surroundings and personal attachment to the area, they would be highly capable and better motivated defenders. Perrucchetti drew heavily on the work of
Lieutenant General Agostino Ricci, who in 1868 had organised exercises in the mountains to assess the feasibility of a specialised mountain infantry corps. Five months after Perrucchetti's article, the first 15 Alpini
companies were formed by Royal decree no. 1056, with their activation effective on October 15, 1872 - the date marked as the official Corps Day. The activation of the mountain companies thus made the Alpini the oldest active Mountain Infantry in the world. At first the Alpini were organized as a
militia, capable of defending Italy's northern mountainous borders. Austria's surrender in the
Austro-Prussian War of 1866 resulted in Italy annexing the province of
Venetia, the northern borders of which coincided in large part with the
Alpine Arch. Prior to gaining the new northern borders, homeland defence was based on the so-called
Quadrilatero strategy. That outdated strategy, however, ignored the
geopolitics of the new Italian Kingdom. It called for primary defence of the
Po Valley region ("
Pianura Padana") farther to the southwest, but left the Alpine region undefended (as it was considered a territory mainly unsuitable for military operations). Recruiting Italy's mountain valleys locals and organising them into a special corps was indeed an innovative idea. They possessed superior knowledge of mountain territory and greatest adaptability to Alpine conditions. At the beginning, the mountain regions were divided into seven military districts, each commanded by an Officer and home to at least two Alpini companies, each consisting of 120 personnel. Soldiers were equipped with the
Vetterli 1870 rifle. In 1873 nine more companies were added, thus totalling 24. In 1875, the companies doubled in size, having 250 soldiers and 5 officers, which were then organised into 7 Alpini battalions. Each battalion was named after one of the seats of the seven military districts: : 1°
Cuneo, 2°
Mondovi, 3°
Torino (Susa), 4°
Torino (Chivasso), 5°
Como, 6°
Treviso, 7°
Udine In 1877, five Alpini mountain
artillery batteries were formed and - in the following year - the Alpini had already grown to 36 mountain infantry companies organised into 10
battalions. On November 1, 1882, the Alpini organisation doubled in size to 72 companies and a total of 20 Alpini battalions. The latter plus 8 Alpini mountain artillery batteries were now organized into six numbered Alpini regiments and two Alpini mountain artillery brigades with their respective headquarters and support formations. Each battalion was named after the area it was required to defend in case of war: The numbers used earlier to distinguish the battalions were dropped while - at the same time - the companies were now numbered from 1 to 72. In order to distinguish the battalions, soldiers and non-commissioned officers were issued thread tufts of various colors (the
Nappina), which were added to the
Cappello Alpino: white for the First Bn., red for the Second Bn., and Green for the Third Bn. of each regiment. Special Bn. and Fourth Bn. were issued blue tufts. Soldiers of the Mountain Artillery units were issued a green tuft with a black patch in the middle onto which the number of the battery was written in yellow numbers. On June 7, 1883, the green flames (Italian: "
fiamme verdi") collar patch was introduced, thus making the Alpini officially a speciality within the Italian infantry corps. The
Cappello Alpino, with its black
raven feather, was also introduced at that time. The distinctive headdress quickly led the Alpini to be nicknamed "The Black feathers" (Italian: "
Le Penne Nere"). Officers hats had the black feather replaced with a white
eagle feather. At first, the hat was a black
felt hat, but as soon as the new green-grey uniform was adopted in 1909 the hat was changed to the distinctive grey felt still in service today. The Alpini were also distinguished by the green cuffs on the dark blue tunics worn for
full dress and barrack dress until 1915, and by green piping on their light blue/grey trousers. When grey-green service uniforms were trialled by the Alpini in 1906, before being adopted by the entire army in 1909, the distinctive green collar patches and typical headdress were retained. The materials, weapons, and equipment of each battalion were stored in the major village of a specific area they were required to defend in case of war. Soldiers of a battalion were only recruited from that area. In 1887, the names of the battalions were changed from those of the defended areas to those of local villages. Therefore, e.g., the
Edolo Bn. soldiers were recruited in the vicinity of that village
Edolo - where the battalion's
arsenal, training ground, and officer's housing were also located. Local recruitment generated strong bonds with and self-identification between the locals and the Alpini units, as men assigned to a single company were all recruited from the same village, and the companies from one valley were all part of the same battalion. In 1887 the Mountain Troops Inspectorate (Italian:
Ispettorato delle truppe alpine) was established in Rome, and took administrative command of all Mountain troops. This led to the reorganization of the Alpini Corps: on August 1, 1887, the
7th Alpini Regiment was formed in
Conegliano Veneto and assigned two battalions from the 6th regiment. The number of battalions had grown by two, thus reaching 22. On November 1, 1887, the
1st Mountain Artillery Regiment was formed in
Turin with nine batteries, each equipped with four 75 mm howitzers. The resulting new layout of the Alpini Corps was as follows: ::: * (renamed
"Exilles" in 1889) ** (renamed
"Vestone" in 1889)
1888 to 1914 Although established as a defensive mountain warfare force, the ''1° Battaglione Alpini d'Africa'' (1st African Alpini Battalion) was established in 1887. The battalion's four companies were composed of volunteers taken from all other Alpini battalions. As part of the ''Corpo Speciale d'Africa'' (Special African Corps), the battalion deployed to
Eritrea to take revenge for the lost
battle of Dogali. The battalion returned on April 27, 1888, to
Naples, having lost its commanding officer and 13 men due to tropical diseases. Back in Italy, eight mules were assigned to each Alpini company in the same year. The Vetterli 70 rifle was replaced by the newer Vetterli-Vitali mod. 70/87 rifle. Also, based on a general reorganization of the Italian militia system, 38 Alpini companies and 15 mountain batteries were assigned to active units of the
Regio Esercito (Royal Italian Army). In 1892 the Alpini were the first troops to be issued with the new
Mod. 91 rifle, which was replaced in 1897 by the Mod. 91TS version and remained in service until 1945. When the tensions between Italy and Abyssinia escalated into the
First Italo–Abyssinian War the ''1° Battaglione Alpini d'Africa'' was reformed and sent to Eritrea again. It would soon become the first Alpini unit to engage combat. Four batteries of the
1st Mountain Artillery Regiment were also sent to Eritrea to augment the four deployed brigades under command of
Oreste Baratieri. The battalions' first engagement was on March 1, 1896, during the
Battle of Adowa. The Alpini were outnumbered and heavily defeated by Abyssinian troops. Over 400 out of 530 men died, including the commanding officer, Lt.Col.
Davide Menini. After the battle, the first Gold Medal for Military Valor (Italian: ''Medaglia d'oro al valor militare
) was awarded to a member of the Alpini Corps: Capitan Pietro Cella and his Alpini from the 4th company occupied and held the Amba Rajo'' (English: Rajo Mountain) until March 2, thus allowing the rest of defeated Italian Army forces to flee. Capitan Cella and all his men died in the effort. In memory of their ultimate sacrifice, he has been awarded the Gold Medal for Military Valor (). After such a defeat, an Alpini expeditionary regiment with 5 battalions was formed and sent to Eritrea on March 7, 1896, but it saw little combat and was repatriated in June of the same year. During the 1900
Boxer Rebellion, a Mountain Artillery Battery was sent to China as part of the international relief force that lifted the siege of the International Compound in
Beijing, and remained on garrison duty in
Tianjin until the end of 1901. On November 13, 1902, after a short period of experimentation with
skis the Alpini began to form specially-equipped and trained Skiing Companies (Italian:
Compagnie Sciatori). After a heavy earthquake on September 8, 1905, in the
Calabria region (Southern Italy), the Alpini deployed to the area for three months to assist in the clearance of debris and reconstruction efforts. They experienced a similar situation in 1908, after the devastating
Messina earthquake. A massive expansion of the Alpini begun in 1909. On July 15 the
2nd Mountain Artillery Regiment was formed in
Vicenza with four artillery groups and a total of 12 batteries. In 1908, two new battalions - namely the
Tolmezzo and
Pallanza (later renamed as
Intra in 1909) - had already been formed and assigned to the 7th and 4th regiments, respectively. On October 1, 1909, the "Tolmezzo" and "Gemona" battalions from the 7th Alpini regiment, along with the newly raised Cividale battalion, became the three battalions of new
8th Alpini Regiment, based in Udine. The first commander of the 8th Alpini regiment was Col.
Antonio Cantore, who would become a living legend to the Alpini during
World War I. As the 8th Alpini regiment was formed, the Alpini could now count on 25 battalions organised into 8 regiments, 2 mountain artillery regiments with 24 batteries organised into 8 groups, and 75 reserve companies organised into 22 battalions. Reserve battalions were named after the valleys from where their soldiers, former Alpini, were recruited (also known as the 'Valle' battalions). In 1910 the last pre-war Alpini battalion was established as the
Belluno Bn. in the very same city. When Italy declared
war on Turkey in 1911 in an attempt to conquer
Libya, the Alpini units were once again deployed on desert combat. From 1911 to 1914, the Saluzzo, Mondovì, Ivrea, Verona, Tolmezzo, Feltre, Susa, Vestone, Fenestrelle, and Edolo battalions, together with the
Torino-Susa,
Mondovì, and
Vicenza artillery groups, were deployed to Libya on missions of different duration. The first units to be sent to Libya were the Saluzzo (25 October 1911), Mondovì (3 November 1911), Ivrea (3 November 1911) and Verona (16 December 1911) battalions. When the unexpected Turkish resistance caused an embarrassingly slow advance of the Italian forces, reinforcements were sent to Libya. On October 18, 1912 Turkey and Italy signed the Treaty of Lausanne, which ended the war between the two nations. Italy, however, had now to face a full-scale rebellion by the local population, and required more troops than those deployed in combat to suppress it. Therefore, in October 1912 the Tolmezzo, Feltre, Susa, and Vestone battalions were deployed in Zanzur, Libya, and formed the 8th Special Alpini Regiment (Italian:
8° Reggimento Alpini Speciale) under the command of
Colonel Antonio Cantore. The last Alpini unit to leave Libya was the
Feltre battalion. It reached Italy in August 1914, while the Bedouin rebellion in Libya continued unabated.
World War I after the detonation of the Italian
mine. During
World War I the 26 peacetime
Alpini battalions were increased by 62 battalions and saw heavy combat all over the alpine arch. During the war years the
Alpini regiments consisted of the following battalions (the pre-war raised battalions are in bold; their reserve battalions, named after valleys (in Italian:
Val or
Valle), and the newly raised battalions, named after mountains (in Italian:
Monte) drawn from the same recruiting areas as the original battalions follow below the pre-war battalions): The Alpini battalions fielded 264
companies of one captain, four lieutenants and 250 men each. The Alpini regiments were never sent into battle, but remained at their seats to continue training recruits. The Alpini battalions were grouped together in regiment-sized Groups (
Gruppo), and the groups were attached to brigade-sized Groupings (
Raggruppamento), which deployed the Alpini battalions as needed. The war, today known as the "
War in snow and ice", as most of the 600 km frontline ran through mountains and glaciers of the
Alps. 12 meters (40 feet) of snow were a usual occurrence during the winter of 1915/16 and thousands of soldiers were lost in
avalanches. The remains of these soldiers are still being uncovered today. The Alpini, as well as their Austrian counterparts:
Kaiserschützen,
Standschützen and
Landeschützen occupied every hill and mountain top around the whole year. Huge underground bases were drilled and dug into the mountainsides and into the ice of glaciers such as the
Marmolada. Guns were dragged by hundreds of troops on mountains up to 3,890 m (12,760 feet) high. Roads, cable cars, mountain railroads and walkways were built up, through and along the steepest of cliffs. Many of these walkways and roads are still visible today, and many are maintained as
Via Ferrata for climbing enthusiasts. In addition, along the former frontline it is still possible to see what is left of hundreds of kilometers of barbed wire. In this kind of warfare, whoever occupied the higher ground first was almost impossible to dislodge, so both sides turned to drilling tunnels under mountain peaks, filling them up with explosives and then detonated the summits, including its defenders, to pieces: i.e.
Col di Lana,
Monte Pasubio,
Lagazuoi, etc. Climbing and
skiing became essential skills for the troops of both sides and soon ski battalions and special climbing units were formed. It was during these years that the Alpini, their spirit and their deeds became famous. Most of the
Alpini songs originated during this time and reflect upon the hardships of the "War in Snow and Ice". At the war's end the Alpini counted 114,948 casualties: 14,175
KIA, 61,620
WIA, 39,153
MIA (most lost in avalanches or to
mine warfare).
World War II under his left arm) After World War I all battalions with the exception of the pre-war battalions were dissolved. In 1919 the Alpini gained the
9th Alpini Regiment. In 1935 the
fascist government of Italy reorganized its Armed Forces, creating five Alpine divisions and forming a new Alpini regiment: the
11th Alpini Regiment. A
12th Alpini Regiment was also formed to oversee the battalions of the
9th Alpini Regiment, which were not sent with the regimental command and the
5 Alpine Division Pusteria to fight in the
Italian attack on
Abyssinia. After the return of the 7th Regiment, the 12 Alpini regiment was dissolved. In 1941 the
6th Alpine Division Alpi Graie was raised with reserve units of the other five Alpine divisions. Thus Italy fielded the following six alpine divisions during
World War II: •
1st Alpine Division "Taurinense" •
2nd Alpine Division "Tridentina" •
3rd Alpine Division "Julia" •
4th Alpine Division "Cuneense" •
5th Alpine Division "Pusteria" •
6th Alpine Division "Alpi Graie" Each division consisted of two Alpini regiments with three battalions each, one Alpine Artillery Regiment with three Artillery groups, one Mixed Engineer Battalion, one Logistic Battalion and some support units. The strength of each division was 573 officers and 16,887 NCOs and soldiers for a total strength of 17,460 men. Also each division had almost 5,000 mules and 500 vehicles of various types at its disposal. The divisions saw combat in
France,
Africa,
Italy,
Albania,
The Soviet Union,
Yugoslavia and
Greece. One Alpini battalion was employed in
East Africa. In 1942, Tridentina, Julia and Cuneense division were sent to
fight in the Soviet Union. In Russia, instead of being deployed in the Caucasus mountains as expected, the Alpini were tasked with holding a front on the plains of the
Don River. As a result of this disastrous strategic decision, troops armed, trained, and equipped for mountain warfare were pitted in the plains against tanks and mechanized infantry, to counter which they were neither equipped nor trained. Despite this, the Alpini held the front until
January 1943, when, due to the collapse of the Axis front, they were encircled by the advancing Soviet Army. The Alpini were able to break the encirclement in
Battle of Nikolayevka and fight their way towards the new line of the front established after the Axis retreat. Only about one third of the Tridentina division (4250 survivors of 15,000 troops deployed) and one tenth of the Julia (1,200/15,000) were able to survive this odyssey. The Cuneense division was annihilated. . After the
Armistice of Cassibile between the
Kingdom of Italy and
Western Allies became public on 8 September 1943, Italy split in half. The king went to the South of Italy and left the
Royal Italian Army without any orders. Subsequently, most divisions of the Army surrendered without a fight to the invading German forces. The only Alpini division to resist the Germans was the 1st Alpine Division "Taurinense", which along with the
19th Infantry Division "Venezia" and remnants of the
155th Infantry Division "Emilia" resisted German attempts to occupy
Montenegro. After suffering heavy casualties the divisions troops were given the choice to either surrender or to retreat into the
Durmitor mountains and continue the fight. The 16,000 men, who had chosen to fight, formed then the Italian Partisan Division
Garibaldi, which entered the II Corps of the
Yugoslav Partisans and fought on the
Yugoslav Front until it returned to Italy in March 1945. On June 25, 1944, the
3rd Alpini Regiment was recreated in Southern Italy with the battalions
Piemonte and
Monte Granero. Along with the 4th Bersaglieri Regiment it formed the 1st Italian Brigade of the
Italian Liberation Corps, which fought in the war on the Allied side. After the Bersaglieri regiment had suffered heavy casualties the two regiments were merged on 30 September 1944 to form the Special Infantry Regiment, which entered the
Legnano Combat Group. The Combat Group was equipped with British weapons and
materiel and fought as part of the
Polish II Corps on the extreme left of the
British 8th Army near the river
Idice. In the north a
fascist regime under dictator
Benito Mussolini, known as the
Republic of Salò continued the war alongside the Germans. Its Army, the fascist
National Republican Army, raised the
4th Alpine Division "Monterosa", which was trained and equipped by
Nazi Germany. The division fought along the
Gothic Line, notably against units of
Brazilian Expeditionary Division,
U.S. 92nd Infantry Division and
8th Indian Infantry Division. At the end of the
final allied offensive, the division surrendered after the
Battle of Collecchio.
Cold War After World War II the Alpini units were once more tasked with defending Italy's northern borders. On 15 October 1949 the
Alpine Brigade Julia was activated in
Udine; on 1 May 1951 the
Alpine Brigade Tridentina was activated in
Brixen; on 15 April 1952 the
Alpine Brigade Taurinense was activated in
Turin; on 1 January 1953 the
Alpine Brigade Orobica was activated in
Meran and on 1 July 1953 the
Alpine Brigade Cadore was activated in
Belluno. Each brigade recruited its soldiers from specific parts of the mountainous areas of Italy thus creating a strong bond with the local populations. But only in 1972 when the
Taurinense joined the
IV Army Corps a singular command was finally in place for all the Alpini, Alpine and Mountain units of the Italian Army. •
IV Alpine Army Corps •
Julia •
Taurinense •
Tridentina •
Cadore •
Orobica After the 1976 reform the IV Alpine Army Corps was responsible to defend the Italian border along the
main chain of the alps from the
Swiss-
Austrian-Italian border
tripoint in the west to the Italian-
Yugoslavian border in the east. In case of war with Yugoslavia the IV Alpine Army Corps would remain static in its position guarding the left flank of the Italian V Corps, which would meet the enemy forces in the plains of
Friuli-Venezia Giulia. The only brigade which would have seen combat in such a case would have been the
Julia. In case of a war with the
Warsaw Pact the IV Alpine Army Corps had two war plans: one in the case the Soviet
Southern Group of Forces and
Hungarian Army would march through Yugoslavia and the other in case the Warsaw Pact would violate the
Austrian neutrality and march through Austria. In case the enemy forces would come through Yugoslavia, the Julia would cover the mountainous left flank of the 5th Corps, which with its four armoured and five mechanized brigades would try to wear down the enemy before it could break out into the North Italian
Padan plain. The other Alpini brigades would remain static. In the more likely case the Soviet and Hungarian divisions would invade Austria and march through Southern
Styria and through the
Drava Valley in
Carinthia the Alpini brigades would have been the first front line units of the Italian Army: the
Julia would have defended the Canal Valley, the
Cadore would have defended the
Piave Valley and the
Tridentina the
Puster Valley, while the
Orobica had a special mission and the
Taurinense would remain in reserve. == Today ==