Paolo Caccia Dominioni was born on 14 May 1896, in
Nerviano,
Milan, Kingdom of Italy. He was the son of Carlo (seventeenth count of Sillavengo; a
diplomat) and Bianca (a marquise; maiden name, Cusani-Confalonieni). In 1913 he entered the Faculty of Engineering at the
Royal High Polytechnical School of Milan. In 1915, when Italy joined
World War I, he registered as a volunteer. He fought in the Alpini Corps, where he was commissioned a
first lieutenant. In February 1920, he re-entered the Polytechnical School. He earned his doctorate in
Civil Engineering in 1922. From 1924 onwards, Caccia Dominioni worked mainly abroad. During his engineer's career in prewar Egypt, he developed a deep friendship with the Belgian expatriate
Vladimir Peniakoff, later to be known as Popski (the creator and leader of a World War II Special Forces unit called
Popski's Private Army ("No 1 Demolition Squadron, PPA") with whom he had explored the Egyptian desert; a few years later the two friends would be facing each other as enemies, in
Libya, in
World War II. In 1931, Caccia Dominioni undertook a
topographical survey of
Tripolitania and in 1935 he led a reconnaissance campaign in
Sudan. In 1935–6 Caccia Dominioni fought in the
Second Italo-Ethiopian War. At the outbreak of World War II he was first assigned to Military Intelligence (
Servizio Informazioni Militare). In June 1942 he was given command of the
XXXI Sappers Battalion, which he commanded during the
First Battle of El Alamein, the
Battle of Alam el Halfa, and the
Second Battle of El Alamein. Field Marshall
Erwin Rommel personally awarded him the
Iron Cross, 2nd Class for his actions during the First Battle of El Alamein. After the
Armistice of Cassibile he joined the
Italian resistance movement. In July 1944 he was arrested by the
National Republican Guard, but released shortly afterward. His book on the Italian Campaign in North Africa,
Alamein 1933–1962, was translated into English and published by
Allen & Unwin in 1966 as
Alamein 1933–1962: An Italian Story. On 7 May 1958, Caccia Dominioni married Elena Sciolette (an amateur
archaeologist). They had two daughters: Bianca Ottavia and Anna Francesca. Caccia Dominioni devoted his postwar career to the retrieving of soldiers' corpses still on the Alamein battlefield and to the design and construction of a cemetery and a
memorial building, located on a particular spot on the Alamein battleground named "Hill 33" where – thanks to his twenty years of efforts – thousands of Italian, German and British unknown fallen soldiers, were eventually identified and received a proper burial. Dominioni also designed the
Italian National Ossario in
Murchison, Australia. The ossario holds the remains of 130 Italian prisoners of war and interned civilians who died in while interned in Australia during World War II. Caccia Dominioni was
correspondent for the Italian newspaper
Il Corriere della Sera (1931–61), and contributor to other Italian and French newspapers. He died on 12 August 1992, in Rome, Lazio, Italy. == Works ==