In 1916, prior to Romania entering the First World War on the side of the
Allied Forces, Dragalina was named commander of the First Infantry Division, stationed at
Turnu Severin. His troops patrolled a very large area on the western border, extending from the sources of the
Argeș River to the city of
Calafat.
Capture of Orsova The Romanian 1st Division—part of General
Ioan Culcer's
1st Army—took the
Austro-Hungarian town of Orsova (
Orșova) in the
Banat region on 4 September. The division was commanded by General Ioan Dragalina. The battle started on the morning of 28 August, with a bombardment of Turnu Severin by the
Álmos. The monitor had left Orsova at dawn, shelling harbor facilities, the rail yards, a cavalry barracks and some shipyards at Turnu Severin, where Dragalina's division had its headquarters. The Austrian warship fired almost 500 artillery rounds of 75 mm, as well as considerable machine gun fire. Returning upstream to Orsova,
Álmos couldn't overcome the current until her crew threw 25 tons of coal overboard. In retaliation, the Romanians under Dragalina put Orsova under artillery fire around noon on that day. Dragalina recognized the Alion Height, towering above the city on the east side of the Cerna's mouth, as the key to the Austrian position. The Romanians launched a full-scale assault on 1 September, their numbers enabling them to take the Alion Height by the end of the day. A simultaneous diversionary attack to the north on that same day enabled the Romanians to capture Mehádia (today
Mehadia) and Herkulesfürdő (today
Băile Herculane). The Austro-Hungarians conducted a rear-guard action, but lost Orsova along with the west bank of the Cerna on 4 September, retreating north of Mehádia.
First Battle of the Jiu Valley In late October, a massive
German and Austro-Hungarian offensive was launched in the
Jiu Valley under the command of General . On 24 October 1916, General Dragalina was summoned to Craiova and ordered to take over the command of the First Army. He decided to fight Kneußl in the mountains and called upon his Romanian soldiers:
"Officers and soldiers of the First Romanian Army, from this moment on I am at the helm of the army and demand from all of you, from General to the last soldier: first that you defend with your life the sacred ground of our fatherland, our ancestral home, our land and the honor of the Romanian name. I demand from all of you total discipline and the strictest execution of orders. The troop which cannot advance should die fighting." Early on the morning of 25 October 1916 General Dragalina left by car for the Jiu Valley, accompanied by two officers – Colonel Toma Dumitrescu and Major Constantin Militiade. He wanted personally to assess the situation on the front and reconnect with his military leaders, since phone lines were out of order. He reached the outposts of the first line of defense close to the
Lainici Monastery. He stopped there to confess and take communion. While crossing the narrow Lainici bridge on his way back, the car was caught in machine gun cross fire. Speeding under a hail of bullets, his driver managed to cross the bridge, but the general was hit in his left upper arm and scapula. Dragalina was urgently transported to the medical outpost at
Gura Sadului, where the wound was disinfected and his arm was bandaged. From Gura Sadului he was transported to
Târgu Jiu and that very same day to Craiova, where doctors recommended amputation. However, a telegram from Military Headquarters in Bucharest ordered his urgent transfer by train to the Military Hospital at the
Royal Palace in Bucharest. The tedious and long trip delayed his arrival (the train arrived in Bucharest on the evening of 13 October) and his wound became infected. In Bucharest, doctors disinfected the wound, extracted the bullet from his scapula, and set his arm in a cast. His son, captain
Corneliu Dragalina, himself wounded on the
Dobruja front, came back to be at his bedside. On his hospital bed,
King Ferdinand I conferred upon him the
Order of Michael the Brave. On 16 October 1916 his left arm was amputated. His condition began to ameliorate, but then
sepsis set in. He died on the evening of 9 November 1916. Memorial services were held at
Biserica Albă in Bucharest. In attendance were King Ferdinand and Prince
Carol (the future King Carol II) as well as many political personalities:
Ion I.C. Brătianu (Prime-Minister of Romania),
Vintilă Brătianu (War Minister), the writer
Barbu Ștefănescu Delavrancea, Mihai Cantacuzino (Justice Minister),
Take Ionescu (Minister of Foreign Affairs), Henry Catargi (Marshal of the Royal Palace), generals and foreign military attachés in Romania. He was laid to rest in the Heroes' Cemetery (
Bellu Military Cemetery) in Bucharest. ==Legacy==