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Battle of Porta

The Battle of Porta (Greek: Μάχη της Πόρτας) was fought on 8–9 June 1943 at the Porta and Mouzaki passes in western Thessaly, between the partisans of the Greek People's Liberation Army (ELAS) and the Royal Italian Army, during the Axis occupation of Greece.

Battle of Porta
Date8–9 June 1943
Location
PortaMouzaki area, Italian-occupied Greece
39°28′N 21°37′E / 39.467°N 21.617°E / 39.467; 21.617
Result Greek Resistance victory
Belligerents
Greek People's Liberation Army (ELAS) Royal Italian Army
Commanders and leaders
Georgios Zarogiannis
Dimitris Tasos
Thanasis Koufodimos
Giuseppe Berti
Units involved
Pelion and Kissavos sub-commands
Reserve ELAS forces
Agrafa sub-command as reinforcements and reserves
6th Lancieri di Aosta Cav. Reg. (two battalions)
24th Pinerolo Inf. Div. (four battalions)
Two Aromanian legionary companies
Strength
200–253 partisans 3,000–4,000 men (1st day), rising to c. 5,500 (2nd day)
4 bomber & 1 recon. aircraft
Casualties and losses
3 wounded 3 Italian soldiers and 5 Legionaries killed
class=notpageimage|
Location within Greece

In spring 1943, a wave of successes demonstrated the rise of the Greek Resistance to the Axis powers, particularly the Italians; large areas of the mountainous interior of the country were effectively liberated. In response, the Italian 11th Army planned a large-scale anti-partisan operation for June. Warned of Italian intentions, ELAS General Headquarters withdrew its dispersed detachments to the central Pindus massif.

In Thessaly the forces withdrawn from the Mount Pelion and Mount Kissavos areas were detailed to watch the Porta and Mouzaki passes, covering the withdrawal of the rest of the Thessalian partisans. Contrary to orders from ELAS GHQ to only engage in disruptive hit-and-run attacks against the Italian army, the commanders of these two detachments, numbering around 250 men with mostly light weaponry and scarce ammunition, decided to hold the passes against the expected Italian attack. Over two weeks, field works were erected in front of the passes and outposts established in the villages. The Italians moved against the Greek positions on 8 June, with around 4,000 men, both infantry and cavalry, from the 24th Pinerolo Infantry Division, with artillery and aviation support.

Facing far superior numbers and lacking sufficient ammunition, the partisans were able to hold back the Italians at Porta on the first day, but at Mouzaki, the Italians forced them back and occupied the village. After reinforcements were brought in during the night, the Italians managed to advance on both flanks on 9 June, threatening to encircle the partisan position at Porta. The ELAS partisans withdrew to the mountains, but their actions had been successful in that the Italians, having suffered significant casualties, broke off their planned anti-partisan sweeps in the mountainous interior without continuing their advance.

Background edit

On 6 April 1941, following a botched Italian invasion in October 1940, Nazi Germany invaded Greece through Bulgaria and Yugoslavia. The Greek capital Athens fell on 27 April, and by June, after the capture of Crete, all of Greece was under Axis occupation. Most of the country was left to the Italian forces, while Bulgaria annexed northeastern Greece and German troops occupied the strategically most important areas. A collaborationist government was installed, but its legitimacy among the Greek people was minimal, and its control over the country compromised by the patchwork of different occupation regimes Greece was divided into.[1] As early as the autumn 1941, the first stirrings of a resistance movement were registered, with attacks on isolated Gendarmerie stations in Macedonia in northern Greece. The establishment of large-scale resistance organizations in 1942, most notably the communist-dominated National Liberation Front (EAM) and its military wing, the Greek People's Liberation Army (ELAS) began to challenge not only the collaborationist government's organs, but also the Italian occupation troops.[2]

The winter and early spring of 1943 saw a series of resistance successes against the Italians in the mountainous areas of mainland Greece, with battlefield victories such as at Fardykambos, or the liberation of towns like Karditsa (12 March), Grevena (24 March), and Metsovo (22 April).[3][4] By 16 April an Italian report noted that "control throughout the north-east, centre and south-west of Greece remains very precarious, not to say nonexistent".[5] As a result, the high command of the Italian army in Greece, the 11th Army in Athens, decided to mount a large-scale and concerted anti-partisan effort, aimed at hemming in the partisan forces in the Pindus mountain massif, and then launching coordinated and concentric attacks in Thessaly, Central Greece, and Epirus to clear the area.[6] The operation would begin after 20 May, the deadline set by the new collaborationist government under Ioannis Rallis for partisans to surrender in exchange for a full amnesty.[7]

Consequently, the ELAS Central Committee issued orders to its regional headquarters to prepare for the attack, gathering the bulk of its forces in the Pindus massif, and relocating itself there, while leaving behind rear guards to obstruct the Italians.[a][6][10] Central Committee member Kostas Karagiorgis informed the Thessaly Headquarters of ELAS of these decisions when it met at Porta on 17 May. Thus the partisan groups of western and eastern Thessaly—the Agrafa sub-command (Ὑπαρχηγείον Ἀγράφων), the Koziakas [el] sub-command (Ὑπαρχηγείον Κόζιακα), the Kissavos–Mavrovouni sub-command (Ὑπαρχηγείον Κισσάβου-Μαυροβουνίου) and Pelion–Karantaou sub-command (Ὑπαρχηγείον Πηλίου-Καραντάου)—were ordered to move towards the area of Mount Smolikas, while leaving behind some forces to harass the Italians, and occupying some strategic passes, i.e, the Porta–Mouzaki pass and the Kalambaka–Diava pass.[11] After the Italian operation began on 22 May, the eastern Thessalian forces—the Kissavos and Pelion sub-commands—were forced to cross the Thessalian plain in a three-day operation, moving only under cover of darkness.[6]

Battlefield and opposing forces edit

 
The Portaikos river with the Ottoman-era footbridge

The Porta Pass is formed by the Portaikos [el] river as it descends from the Pindos mountains to the Thessalian plain. The village of Porta lies exactly at the entrance of the pass. In the 1940s, a narrow car road leading from Trikala to Pertouli passed near the village and crossed the river on a concrete bridge. The northern side of the pass, towards Koziakas, is nearly inaccessible except for narrow footpaths, but the southern side towards Agrafa is easier to traverse. The rear of the Porta defensive position could be attacked via the car road passing through the gap at Mouzaki allowed easy access to the village of Vatsounia. As a result, any defender of the Porta Pass against an opponent coming from the plain was also obliged to keep the Mouzaki–Porti area also under control to avoid being flanked.[12]

 
Dimitris Tasos (alias Mimis Boukouvalas), one of the ELAS commanders at Porta

The defence of the pass was undertaken by the eastern Thessalian sub-commands of Pelion and Kissavos, which were closest to the area. The Koziakas sub-command was ordered to occupy the Kalambaka–Diava pass, while a detachment sent to the Agrafa area for procuring supplies was ordered to remain there and carry out harassing attacks.[13] The ELAS forces deployed in the Porta–Mouzaki numbered in total 235 partisans,[b] aided by four groups of Reserve ELAS fighters from the villages of Dousikos, Porta, Beletsi, and Mouzaki, but only the Dousikos group actually fought in the battle, as the others were used as covering forces and messengers.[15] The two detachments of the Kissavos sub-command, reinforced by a squad from the Agrafa sub-command—8 squads in total—held the Porta straits, while the Pelion sub-command, likewise reinforced with a squad from Agrafa—6 squads in total—held the passes at Mouzaki.[15]

Typical for Greek resistance fighters during this time, their weaponry was a medley of different origins: Greek Mannlicher-Schönauer rifles, old French Lebel and even more antiquated Gras rifles, as well as rifles of Bulgarian, German and British provenance. Each squad had one sub-machine gun and one light machine gun, again of different types, from the World War I-vintage French Chauchat used by the Greek army, to captured Italian Breda 30s and British-supplied Brens. The only heavier armament was two Hotchkiss machine guns and an Italian mortar lacking aiming sights. One machine gun and the mortar were deployed at Porta, and the other machine gun at Mouzaki.[16][17] The partisans were also short of ammunition; some fighters had as few as 15 bullets for their rifles; only 36 shells were available for the mortar, of which six misfired and had to be repaired during the battle; the light machine guns only had about 300 bullets, sufficient for a brief firefight at most; there was no ammunition for one of the machine guns, so the partisans' arms workshop shortened 3,500 German rounds by 2 millimetres (0.079 in) to be fireable by the machine gun.[18]

The commanders at Porta, as well as of the overall force, were Cavalry Captain Georgios Zarogiannis (nom de guerre "Kavallaris", 'horseman'), a veteran of the Greco-Italian War and head of the Kissavos sub-command, and Dimitris Tasos, better known by his alias of "Mimis Boukouvalas".[19] During the course of the battle, a former General Staff colonel, Dimitrios Petroulakis, served in an advisory capacity; after the battle, despite being a committed royalist, he joined the ELAS General Headquarters as chief of staff.[20][21] According to Boukouvalas' memoirs, given the small force at their disposal, the Thessaly Headquarters initially insisted that they only harass the Italians, but he and Zarogiannis insisted on standing and fighting at Porta as long as possible. To that end, a fortnight before the battle they began preparing extensive fieldworks covering a front of some 4 kilometres (2.5 mi), running from north of Dousikos to Mouzaki. Telephone lines were laid to outposts in Dousikos, Mouzaki, and to Tyrna and Pertouli to their rear. Advanced detachments and horse patrols were sent out to gather supplies and reconnoitre the plain as close to Trikala as possible, and a telephone line was laid to the villages of Mikri Pouliana and Beletsi to warn of the approach of Italian forces.[22] Headquarters reluctantly conceded them freedom of action, and Boukouvalas and Zarogiannis continued preparing their defences in the area. Since no timely reinforcements could be expected, the plan was to delay the Italian advance for as long as possible. The forces covering the Mouzaki area were instructed, if pressed hard, to begin an orderly retreat by pivoting towards the right, while keeping their left anchored to maintain contact with the Porta position.[23]

In early June 1943, the Italians held Trikala with a cavalry and an infantry regiment, with a couple of tanks, an artillery battalion, engineers and support services, with a further cavalry regiment at Simikli (now Polyneri). The morale of the Italian forces was low, but its command was aware, from spies and reconnaissance flights, that ELAS had left some small forces in the Porta–Mouzaki area and had begun erecting fieldworks there.[10] In preparation for the anti-partisan sweeps, reinforcements were brought up from Larissa, including men of the so-called 'Roman Legion', an Aromanian ('Vlach') secessionist group sponsored by the Italians. Pack animals were requisitioned from the neighbouring settlements in preparation for an anti-partisan sweep. The forces amassed for the operation against Porta numbered two full infantry battalions from the Pinerolo Infantry Division,[c] two battalions from the—partly motorized—Lancieri di Aosta cavalry regiment at Trikala, a field battery, two companies of Aromanian separatists, four bomber aircraft and one reconnaissance aircraft.[18][21]

The battle edit

8 June edit

 
Italian infantry marching

The Italians' plans became apparent on the night of 7 June, when their force began moving by road from Trikala to the village of Gortzi on the road to Petra.[18] At about 01:00 on 8 June, the telephone operator from Poliana informed ELAS command of the Italian movement, and the partisans were alerted to occupy their positions. The Italians arrived at Beletsi at 04:30.[17] In order to increase the psychological impact on the partisans, the Italian commander placed his cavalry in front, advancing at the double.[17]

At 05:30, men of an advanced detachment from Pelion, situated on the heights above Beletsi, opened fire on the advancing Italians, before retiring higher up the mountain side.[25] Shortly after, Italian cavalry and motorcycle troops made contact with the defensive position of the Kissavos men at Petra. As Italian infantry followed up their advance guards, fighting developed both at Petra and at Mouzaki.[26] Both sides made use of their heavy equipment, while the Italian aircraft also began attacks. The Greeks' mortar proved inaccurate, due both to the lack of sights and being unable to train because of the lack of ammunition.[26]

On the Porta sector, the Italians withdrew around noon, leaving only a detachment of 40 men to watch the entrance in a guardpost outside Porta. Shortly afterwards a group of five partisans led by "Peronosporos" ('mildew') managed to crawl up to them without being seen, surprise the garrison, and force them to withdraw completely.[26] At about the same time, Lieutenant Georgios Nikitas took over the command of the partisan mortar and relocated it, greatly improving the accuracy and effect of its fire, which helped to scatter the Italian cavalry massing for an attack outside Beletsi in the afternoon. Repeated cavalry attacks between Porta and Dousikos were repelled by partisan fire before they came near the Greek positions. These were the last Italian attempts against Porta for that day.[27]

The Italians pressed their main attack in the direction of Mouzaki, and by noon had made some small progress. The commander of the Greek Pelion sub-command, Thanasis Koufodimos ("Petros Pilioritis") was wounded by a mortar fragment at c. 12:30, followed by another partisan, Dervisis. Despite his wound, Koufodimos remained in his post directing the battle until his replacement, Ioannis Katsantonis, arrived in the afternoon.[26] Around noon, the Italians occupied the village of Mouzaki, which they plundered and torched. To avoid being surrounded and outnumbered, the Pelion squads began withdrawing to the ridge between Beletsi and Mouzaki and the village of Porti. In the evening, the Italians broke off their advance and withdrew to Beletsi and Mouzaki.[28]

9 June edit

 
ELAS partisans

During the night Italian vehicles brought up more troops, including the cavalry regiment at Simikli and one infantry battalion each from Larissa and Volos, bringing the total force to 5,500 men, according to the testimony of Italian prisoners taken by the partisans. These reinforcements arrived during the morning.[28][29] The partisans' shortage of ammunition, bad the day before, was now worse.[28] According to Boukouvalas, messages were sent to the village of Prodromos, where the nearest ELAS force under the teacher Lepouchis was quartered. They requested he take his men to Lesiana, to the right and rear of the Italians, and attack them from there. However, Lepouchis put the proposal to a vote among his men, who rejected it as most expected that the Porta position could not be held.[30] The partisans did receive a reinforcement of 60 men from Pertouli during the night, who took position on the eastern flank of the Porta position.[31]

At dawn, the Italians renewed their assault with artillery and air support. Their attack was aimed not only to the south against Mouzaki as on the previous day, but also to the north against Mount Koziakas, in a pincer movement against the partisan positions.[28] The first assault was thrown back; Boukouvalas reported that the partisans could see the Italian commanding general landing in his liaison plane to bolster his men's morale.[32] The Italians managed to reach Porti around noon and torch it, but their subsequent attempts to push forward into the southern flank of the Petra position were repelled. The role of the Hotchkiss machine gun, emplaced outside Porti and manned by "Flogas" ('flame'), proved crucial as its fire pinned down the Italian troops for the rest of the day.[33]

On the northern flank, however, the Italians had more success: cavalry squadrons reconnoitred the approaches to Mount Koziakas, finding that the partisans held only the area up to the villages of Dousikos and Lepenitsa. In the afternoon, two battalions launched an attack on the northern flank of the Porta position, captured the villages of Gorgyri and Xylopariko, and pushed on to the heights of Lepenitsa, from where the Italians and their Legionary auxiliaries could flank the ELAS forces at Dousikos; the ELAS forces withdrew higher up the mountain.[34] After the squad defending the area ran out of ammunition, the Italians entered the village of Dousikos in the afternoon and set it on fire, threatening the defenders of Petra, who were also running low on ammunition, with only 2 to 5 rounds per rifle and no mortar shells.[35] At the same time, on the southern flank the Italians applied renewed pressure on the Sklataina–Vatsinia axis, threatening to outflank the Porta position.[36]

Consequently the ELAS commanders ordered a withdrawal, which began at 17:00, in the direction of Tyrna. At 17:30 they blew up the road bridge over the Portaikos river to impede an Italian advance. The withdrawal was so fast that the Italians, busy torching the village of Porta, lost contact with the partisans. Once the Porta troops were safely withdrawn and a new defensive position established at Dramizi, the Mouzaki position was evacuated under cover of night.[35][37]

Aftermath edit

According to EAM/ELAS members, the c. 250 partisans, fighting for two days against a vastly superior force, suffered only three wounded. The official number of Italian casualties recorded by the Hellenic Army History Directorate was three Italian soldiers and five Legionaries killed.[38] Other sources give much larger figures: about 300 dead and wounded, including a major;[35][39] the military commander of ELAS, Stefanos Sarafis, who was nearby at Tzourtza, claimed "almost 500" Italian dead and wounded, as well as the loss of many horses and an aircraft,[21] although later in his memoirs he raised the number of Italian casualties to "approximately 700".[40] The following day, the Italians torched the villages of Porta, Vatsinia, Chania, and Ropotania.[d] Estimating the partisan forces present at many times their actual number,[42] they made no attempt to enter the mountainous regions, and after gathering their dead returned to Trikala two days later.[35][43] Only eight days later did 1,500 men from Trikala move against the Agrafa area, setting fire to the villages of Vounesi, Kanalia, and Mesenikolas. Near Vounesi they were confronted by some 30 partisans of the Agrafa sub-command. The partisans withdrew higher up the mountain after a first firefight; the Italians, suspicious of a larger ambush, broke off the operation and returned to their bases.[43][44]

For ELAS, the battle of Porta was of particular importance as the first time it confronted the Italians as a regular army in a "more or less full-scale defensive action", as Sarafis describes it, rather than hit-and-run ambushes. This marked the transformation and maturation of ELAS from a guerrilla force into "disciplined troops who knew how to fight", a fact readily recognized by the Italians themselves: the Italian commandant at Trikala remarked as much to the local Greek prefect, reprimanding him for not providing accurate information about the partisans.[21][39][43] From then until the Italian armistice in September 1943, the Italian garrisons in Thessaly remained confined to the cities and gave up any further attempt at confronting the partisans.[20][45] In the weeks after the armistice, the Italian forces in Thessaly began negotiating their going over to the partisans. Initially it was agreed that the Italian formations, the Pinerolo division and the Aosta cavalry regiment, would remain intact and retain their armament to fight against the Germans, but on 15 October the 1st ELAS Division forcibly disarmed them, encountering only brief resistance from the Aosta cavalry regiment and isolated garrisons in the area of Porta.[46][47]

Notes edit

  1. ^ This decision, or rather the manner of its implementation in Thessaly and Macedonia, where the partisan groups were withdrawn entirely from large areas, was a result of a mix of caution and inexperience of the ELAS cadres, and of confusion in the chain of command between EAM and ELAS hierarchies, and came under heavy criticism: not only did it force the partisans to break off contact with the occupying forces, but it also exposed the civilian population to reprisals, and allowed rival groups to be established in the areas vacated by ELAS.[8] Some ELAS members in their post-war memoirs even attributed this to deliberate misinformation by the British Intelligence Service, aimed at allowing the rival EDES group, to which the British were more favourably disposed, to expand in the areas vacated by ELAS.[9]
  2. ^ In his memoirs, Boukouvalas claims a total force of only 140 men, reinforced during the battle with 60 more.[14]
  3. ^ According to the contemporary reports of the 11th Army, the Pinerolo division was classed as "incomplete" in terms of effectiveness in spring 1943, having only about 60% of the automobiles and pack animals on its table of organization and equipment, and 85% of personnel.[24]
  4. ^ Following the Italian surrender, the Italian forces in Thessaly went over to ELAS, and partisans captured the military archives of the Aosta regiment. Based on these documents, they held its commander, Colonel Berti, as prisoner with the intention of trying him for war crimes, but he was released on the intervention of the British military mission.[41]

References edit

  1. ^ Mazower 1993, pp. 5–22.
  2. ^ Mazower 1993, pp. 103ff., 123ff..
  3. ^ Eudes 1973, pp. 42–49.
  4. ^ Grigoriadis 1982, pp. 215, 218–219.
  5. ^ Mazower 1993, pp. 135–136.
  6. ^ a b c Grigoriadis 1982, p. 244.
  7. ^ Ballis 1981, p. 100.
  8. ^ Hatzis 1983, pp. 110–115.
  9. ^ Ballis 1981, pp. 101–102.
  10. ^ a b Sevastakis 1978, p. 386.
  11. ^ Ballis 1981, pp. 100–103.
  12. ^ Ballis 1981, pp. 103–104.
  13. ^ Ballis 1981, p. 103.
  14. ^ Sevastakis 1978, pp. 386–387, 389.
  15. ^ a b Ballis 1981, p. 104.
  16. ^ Ballis 1981, pp. 50, 104–105.
  17. ^ a b c Sevastakis 1978, p. 387.
  18. ^ a b c Ballis 1981, p. 105.
  19. ^ Sevastakis 1978, pp. 49, 387.
  20. ^ a b Grigoriadis 1982, p. 245.
  21. ^ a b c d Sarafis 1980, p. 130.
  22. ^ Sevastakis 1978, pp. 48–50, 387.
  23. ^ Sevastakis 1978, pp. 48–49, 387.
  24. ^ Bregantin 2010, pp. 267, 268.
  25. ^ Ballis 1981, pp. 105–106.
  26. ^ a b c d Ballis 1981, p. 106.
  27. ^ Ballis 1981, pp. 106–107.
  28. ^ a b c d Ballis 1981, p. 107.
  29. ^ Sevastakis 1978, pp. 55, 389–390.
  30. ^ Sevastakis 1978, pp. 56–57, 390.
  31. ^ Sevastakis 1978, p. 389.
  32. ^ Sevastakis 1978, p. 390.
  33. ^ Ballis 1981, pp. 107–108.
  34. ^ Sevastakis 1978, pp. 390–391.
  35. ^ a b c d Ballis 1981, p. 108.
  36. ^ Sevastakis 1978, p. 391.
  37. ^ Sevastakis 1978, pp. 56, 391.
  38. ^ Αρχεία Εθνικής Αντίστασης, p. 162.
  39. ^ a b Hatzis 1983, p. 110.
  40. ^ Sarafis 1980, p. 429.
  41. ^ Sevastakis 1978, pp. 58, 103.
  42. ^ Sevastakis 1978, p. 390 (note 3).
  43. ^ a b c Sevastakis 1978, p. 57.
  44. ^ Ballis 1981, pp. 108–109.
  45. ^ Ballis 1981, p. 109.
  46. ^ Eudes 1973, pp. 109–110.
  47. ^ Sarafis 1980, pp. 181ff., 199.

Sources edit

  • Ballis, Dimitrios E. (1981). Ο ΕΛΑΣ στη Θεσσαλία [ELAS in Thessaly] (in Greek). Athens: Synchroni Epochi.
  • Bregantin, Lisa (2010). L'occupazione dimenticata. Gli italiani in Grecia 1941-1943 (PhD) (in Italian). Università Ca’ Foscari di Venezia.
  • Eudes, Dominique (1973). The Kapetanios: Partisans and Civil War in Greece, 1943-1949. Translated by John Howe. New York and London: Monthly Review Press. ISBN 978-0-85345-275-1.
  • Grigoriadis, Solon (1982). Συνοπτική Ιστορία της Εθνικής Αντίστασης, 1941-1944 [Concise History of the National Resistance, 1941-1944] (in Greek). Athens: Kapopoulos. OCLC 165816421.
  • Hatzis, Thanasis (1983). Η νικηφόρα επανάσταση που χάθηκε [The victorious revolution that was lost] (in Greek). Vol. II. Athens: Dorikos.
  • Hellenic Army History Directorate (1998). Αρχεία Εθνικής Αντίστασης, 1941-1944. Τόμος 3ος "Αντάρτικη Οργάνωση ΕΛΑΣ" [National Resistance Archives, 1941-1944. 3rd Volume "ELAS Partisan Organization"]. Athens: Hellenic Army History Directorate. ISBN 960-7897-31-5.
  • Mazower, Mark (1993). Inside Hitler's Greece: The Experience of Occupation, 1941–44. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-06552-3.
  • Sarafis, Stefanos (1980). ELAS: Greek Resistance Army. Translated by Sylvia Moody. London: Merlin Press. ISBN 9780850362442.
  • Sevastakis, Alexis (1978). Καπετάν Μπουκουβάλας: Το αντάρτικο ιππικό της Θεσσαλίας [Kapetan Boukouvalas: The partisan cavalry of Thessaly] (in Greek). Athens: Diogenis.

External links edit

  • Antonis Vogiazos (Director & Scenario), Angelos Kovotsos (Production Director), Vaso Kanellopoulou (Producer), Petros Antaios (Scenario), Nikos Svoronos (Historical Advisor) (1987). ΧΡΟΝΙΚΟ ΤΗΣ ΕΘΝΙΚΗΣ ΑΝΤΙΣΤΑΣΗΣ, Επεισόδιο 8: ΤΟ ΑΝΤΑΡΤΙΚΟ ΚΙΝΗΜΑ ΣΤΟ ΠΡΩΤΟ ΕΞΑΜΗΝΟ ΤΟΥ 1943 [Chronicle of the National Resistance, Episode 8: The partisan movement in the first semester of 1943] (in Greek). Hellenic Broadcasting Corporation. Battle of Porta segment with on-site shots and interviews of Mimis Tasos ("Boukouvalas"), Giorgos Zarogianis ("Kavallaris"), Leonidas Pappas, at 26:35–36:03. Retrieved 26 January 2019.

battle, porta, greek, Μάχη, της, Πόρτας, fought, june, 1943, porta, mouzaki, passes, western, thessaly, between, partisans, greek, people, liberation, army, elas, royal, italian, army, during, axis, occupation, greece, date8, june, 1943locationporta, mouzaki, . The Battle of Porta Greek Maxh ths Portas was fought on 8 9 June 1943 at the Porta and Mouzaki passes in western Thessaly between the partisans of the Greek People s Liberation Army ELAS and the Royal Italian Army during the Axis occupation of Greece Battle of PortaDate8 9 June 1943LocationPorta Mouzaki area Italian occupied Greece39 28 N 21 37 E 39 467 N 21 617 E 39 467 21 617ResultGreek Resistance victoryBelligerentsGreek People s Liberation Army ELAS Royal Italian ArmyCommanders and leadersGeorgios ZarogiannisDimitris TasosThanasis KoufodimosGiuseppe BertiUnits involvedPelion and Kissavos sub commandsReserve ELAS forcesAgrafa sub command as reinforcements and reserves6th Lancieri di Aosta Cav Reg two battalions 24th Pinerolo Inf Div four battalions Two Aromanian legionary companiesStrength200 253 partisans3 000 4 000 men 1st day rising to c 5 500 2nd day 4 bomber amp 1 recon aircraftCasualties and losses3 wounded3 Italian soldiers and 5 Legionaries killedclass notpageimage Location within Greece In spring 1943 a wave of successes demonstrated the rise of the Greek Resistance to the Axis powers particularly the Italians large areas of the mountainous interior of the country were effectively liberated In response the Italian 11th Army planned a large scale anti partisan operation for June Warned of Italian intentions ELAS General Headquarters withdrew its dispersed detachments to the central Pindus massif In Thessaly the forces withdrawn from the Mount Pelion and Mount Kissavos areas were detailed to watch the Porta and Mouzaki passes covering the withdrawal of the rest of the Thessalian partisans Contrary to orders from ELAS GHQ to only engage in disruptive hit and run attacks against the Italian army the commanders of these two detachments numbering around 250 men with mostly light weaponry and scarce ammunition decided to hold the passes against the expected Italian attack Over two weeks field works were erected in front of the passes and outposts established in the villages The Italians moved against the Greek positions on 8 June with around 4 000 men both infantry and cavalry from the 24th Pinerolo Infantry Division with artillery and aviation support Facing far superior numbers and lacking sufficient ammunition the partisans were able to hold back the Italians at Porta on the first day but at Mouzaki the Italians forced them back and occupied the village After reinforcements were brought in during the night the Italians managed to advance on both flanks on 9 June threatening to encircle the partisan position at Porta The ELAS partisans withdrew to the mountains but their actions had been successful in that the Italians having suffered significant casualties broke off their planned anti partisan sweeps in the mountainous interior without continuing their advance Contents 1 Background 2 Battlefield and opposing forces 3 The battle 3 1 8 June 3 2 9 June 4 Aftermath 5 Notes 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksBackground editOn 6 April 1941 following a botched Italian invasion in October 1940 Nazi Germany invaded Greece through Bulgaria and Yugoslavia The Greek capital Athens fell on 27 April and by June after the capture of Crete all of Greece was under Axis occupation Most of the country was left to the Italian forces while Bulgaria annexed northeastern Greece and German troops occupied the strategically most important areas A collaborationist government was installed but its legitimacy among the Greek people was minimal and its control over the country compromised by the patchwork of different occupation regimes Greece was divided into 1 As early as the autumn 1941 the first stirrings of a resistance movement were registered with attacks on isolated Gendarmerie stations in Macedonia in northern Greece The establishment of large scale resistance organizations in 1942 most notably the communist dominated National Liberation Front EAM and its military wing the Greek People s Liberation Army ELAS began to challenge not only the collaborationist government s organs but also the Italian occupation troops 2 The winter and early spring of 1943 saw a series of resistance successes against the Italians in the mountainous areas of mainland Greece with battlefield victories such as at Fardykambos or the liberation of towns like Karditsa 12 March Grevena 24 March and Metsovo 22 April 3 4 By 16 April an Italian report noted that control throughout the north east centre and south west of Greece remains very precarious not to say nonexistent 5 As a result the high command of the Italian army in Greece the 11th Army in Athens decided to mount a large scale and concerted anti partisan effort aimed at hemming in the partisan forces in the Pindus mountain massif and then launching coordinated and concentric attacks in Thessaly Central Greece and Epirus to clear the area 6 The operation would begin after 20 May the deadline set by the new collaborationist government under Ioannis Rallis for partisans to surrender in exchange for a full amnesty 7 Consequently the ELAS Central Committee issued orders to its regional headquarters to prepare for the attack gathering the bulk of its forces in the Pindus massif and relocating itself there while leaving behind rear guards to obstruct the Italians a 6 10 Central Committee member Kostas Karagiorgis informed the Thessaly Headquarters of ELAS of these decisions when it met at Porta on 17 May Thus the partisan groups of western and eastern Thessaly the Agrafa sub command Ὑparxhgeion Ἀgrafwn the Koziakas el sub command Ὑparxhgeion Koziaka the Kissavos Mavrovouni sub command Ὑparxhgeion Kissaboy Mayroboynioy and Pelion Karantaou sub command Ὑparxhgeion Phlioy Karantaoy were ordered to move towards the area of Mount Smolikas while leaving behind some forces to harass the Italians and occupying some strategic passes i e the Porta Mouzaki pass and the Kalambaka Diava pass 11 After the Italian operation began on 22 May the eastern Thessalian forces the Kissavos and Pelion sub commands were forced to cross the Thessalian plain in a three day operation moving only under cover of darkness 6 Battlefield and opposing forces edit nbsp The Portaikos river with the Ottoman era footbridge The Porta Pass is formed by the Portaikos el river as it descends from the Pindos mountains to the Thessalian plain The village of Porta lies exactly at the entrance of the pass In the 1940s a narrow car road leading from Trikala to Pertouli passed near the village and crossed the river on a concrete bridge The northern side of the pass towards Koziakas is nearly inaccessible except for narrow footpaths but the southern side towards Agrafa is easier to traverse The rear of the Porta defensive position could be attacked via the car road passing through the gap at Mouzaki allowed easy access to the village of Vatsounia As a result any defender of the Porta Pass against an opponent coming from the plain was also obliged to keep the Mouzaki Porti area also under control to avoid being flanked 12 nbsp Dimitris Tasos alias Mimis Boukouvalas one of the ELAS commanders at Porta The defence of the pass was undertaken by the eastern Thessalian sub commands of Pelion and Kissavos which were closest to the area The Koziakas sub command was ordered to occupy the Kalambaka Diava pass while a detachment sent to the Agrafa area for procuring supplies was ordered to remain there and carry out harassing attacks 13 The ELAS forces deployed in the Porta Mouzaki numbered in total 235 partisans b aided by four groups of Reserve ELAS fighters from the villages of Dousikos Porta Beletsi and Mouzaki but only the Dousikos group actually fought in the battle as the others were used as covering forces and messengers 15 The two detachments of the Kissavos sub command reinforced by a squad from the Agrafa sub command 8 squads in total held the Porta straits while the Pelion sub command likewise reinforced with a squad from Agrafa 6 squads in total held the passes at Mouzaki 15 Typical for Greek resistance fighters during this time their weaponry was a medley of different origins Greek Mannlicher Schonauer rifles old French Lebel and even more antiquated Gras rifles as well as rifles of Bulgarian German and British provenance Each squad had one sub machine gun and one light machine gun again of different types from the World War I vintage French Chauchat used by the Greek army to captured Italian Breda 30s and British supplied Brens The only heavier armament was two Hotchkiss machine guns and an Italian mortar lacking aiming sights One machine gun and the mortar were deployed at Porta and the other machine gun at Mouzaki 16 17 The partisans were also short of ammunition some fighters had as few as 15 bullets for their rifles only 36 shells were available for the mortar of which six misfired and had to be repaired during the battle the light machine guns only had about 300 bullets sufficient for a brief firefight at most there was no ammunition for one of the machine guns so the partisans arms workshop shortened 3 500 German rounds by 2 millimetres 0 079 in to be fireable by the machine gun 18 The commanders at Porta as well as of the overall force were Cavalry Captain Georgios Zarogiannis nom de guerre Kavallaris horseman a veteran of the Greco Italian War and head of the Kissavos sub command and Dimitris Tasos better known by his alias of Mimis Boukouvalas 19 During the course of the battle a former General Staff colonel Dimitrios Petroulakis served in an advisory capacity after the battle despite being a committed royalist he joined the ELAS General Headquarters as chief of staff 20 21 According to Boukouvalas memoirs given the small force at their disposal the Thessaly Headquarters initially insisted that they only harass the Italians but he and Zarogiannis insisted on standing and fighting at Porta as long as possible To that end a fortnight before the battle they began preparing extensive fieldworks covering a front of some 4 kilometres 2 5 mi running from north of Dousikos to Mouzaki Telephone lines were laid to outposts in Dousikos Mouzaki and to Tyrna and Pertouli to their rear Advanced detachments and horse patrols were sent out to gather supplies and reconnoitre the plain as close to Trikala as possible and a telephone line was laid to the villages of Mikri Pouliana and Beletsi to warn of the approach of Italian forces 22 Headquarters reluctantly conceded them freedom of action and Boukouvalas and Zarogiannis continued preparing their defences in the area Since no timely reinforcements could be expected the plan was to delay the Italian advance for as long as possible The forces covering the Mouzaki area were instructed if pressed hard to begin an orderly retreat by pivoting towards the right while keeping their left anchored to maintain contact with the Porta position 23 In early June 1943 the Italians held Trikala with a cavalry and an infantry regiment with a couple of tanks an artillery battalion engineers and support services with a further cavalry regiment at Simikli now Polyneri The morale of the Italian forces was low but its command was aware from spies and reconnaissance flights that ELAS had left some small forces in the Porta Mouzaki area and had begun erecting fieldworks there 10 In preparation for the anti partisan sweeps reinforcements were brought up from Larissa including men of the so called Roman Legion an Aromanian Vlach secessionist group sponsored by the Italians Pack animals were requisitioned from the neighbouring settlements in preparation for an anti partisan sweep The forces amassed for the operation against Porta numbered two full infantry battalions from the Pinerolo Infantry Division c two battalions from the partly motorized Lancieri di Aosta cavalry regiment at Trikala a field battery two companies of Aromanian separatists four bomber aircraft and one reconnaissance aircraft 18 21 The battle edit8 June edit nbsp Italian infantry marching The Italians plans became apparent on the night of 7 June when their force began moving by road from Trikala to the village of Gortzi on the road to Petra 18 At about 01 00 on 8 June the telephone operator from Poliana informed ELAS command of the Italian movement and the partisans were alerted to occupy their positions The Italians arrived at Beletsi at 04 30 17 In order to increase the psychological impact on the partisans the Italian commander placed his cavalry in front advancing at the double 17 At 05 30 men of an advanced detachment from Pelion situated on the heights above Beletsi opened fire on the advancing Italians before retiring higher up the mountain side 25 Shortly after Italian cavalry and motorcycle troops made contact with the defensive position of the Kissavos men at Petra As Italian infantry followed up their advance guards fighting developed both at Petra and at Mouzaki 26 Both sides made use of their heavy equipment while the Italian aircraft also began attacks The Greeks mortar proved inaccurate due both to the lack of sights and being unable to train because of the lack of ammunition 26 On the Porta sector the Italians withdrew around noon leaving only a detachment of 40 men to watch the entrance in a guardpost outside Porta Shortly afterwards a group of five partisans led by Peronosporos mildew managed to crawl up to them without being seen surprise the garrison and force them to withdraw completely 26 At about the same time Lieutenant Georgios Nikitas took over the command of the partisan mortar and relocated it greatly improving the accuracy and effect of its fire which helped to scatter the Italian cavalry massing for an attack outside Beletsi in the afternoon Repeated cavalry attacks between Porta and Dousikos were repelled by partisan fire before they came near the Greek positions These were the last Italian attempts against Porta for that day 27 The Italians pressed their main attack in the direction of Mouzaki and by noon had made some small progress The commander of the Greek Pelion sub command Thanasis Koufodimos Petros Pilioritis was wounded by a mortar fragment at c 12 30 followed by another partisan Dervisis Despite his wound Koufodimos remained in his post directing the battle until his replacement Ioannis Katsantonis arrived in the afternoon 26 Around noon the Italians occupied the village of Mouzaki which they plundered and torched To avoid being surrounded and outnumbered the Pelion squads began withdrawing to the ridge between Beletsi and Mouzaki and the village of Porti In the evening the Italians broke off their advance and withdrew to Beletsi and Mouzaki 28 9 June edit nbsp ELAS partisans During the night Italian vehicles brought up more troops including the cavalry regiment at Simikli and one infantry battalion each from Larissa and Volos bringing the total force to 5 500 men according to the testimony of Italian prisoners taken by the partisans These reinforcements arrived during the morning 28 29 The partisans shortage of ammunition bad the day before was now worse 28 According to Boukouvalas messages were sent to the village of Prodromos where the nearest ELAS force under the teacher Lepouchis was quartered They requested he take his men to Lesiana to the right and rear of the Italians and attack them from there However Lepouchis put the proposal to a vote among his men who rejected it as most expected that the Porta position could not be held 30 The partisans did receive a reinforcement of 60 men from Pertouli during the night who took position on the eastern flank of the Porta position 31 At dawn the Italians renewed their assault with artillery and air support Their attack was aimed not only to the south against Mouzaki as on the previous day but also to the north against Mount Koziakas in a pincer movement against the partisan positions 28 The first assault was thrown back Boukouvalas reported that the partisans could see the Italian commanding general landing in his liaison plane to bolster his men s morale 32 The Italians managed to reach Porti around noon and torch it but their subsequent attempts to push forward into the southern flank of the Petra position were repelled The role of the Hotchkiss machine gun emplaced outside Porti and manned by Flogas flame proved crucial as its fire pinned down the Italian troops for the rest of the day 33 On the northern flank however the Italians had more success cavalry squadrons reconnoitred the approaches to Mount Koziakas finding that the partisans held only the area up to the villages of Dousikos and Lepenitsa In the afternoon two battalions launched an attack on the northern flank of the Porta position captured the villages of Gorgyri and Xylopariko and pushed on to the heights of Lepenitsa from where the Italians and their Legionary auxiliaries could flank the ELAS forces at Dousikos the ELAS forces withdrew higher up the mountain 34 After the squad defending the area ran out of ammunition the Italians entered the village of Dousikos in the afternoon and set it on fire threatening the defenders of Petra who were also running low on ammunition with only 2 to 5 rounds per rifle and no mortar shells 35 At the same time on the southern flank the Italians applied renewed pressure on the Sklataina Vatsinia axis threatening to outflank the Porta position 36 Consequently the ELAS commanders ordered a withdrawal which began at 17 00 in the direction of Tyrna At 17 30 they blew up the road bridge over the Portaikos river to impede an Italian advance The withdrawal was so fast that the Italians busy torching the village of Porta lost contact with the partisans Once the Porta troops were safely withdrawn and a new defensive position established at Dramizi the Mouzaki position was evacuated under cover of night 35 37 Aftermath editAccording to EAM ELAS members the c 250 partisans fighting for two days against a vastly superior force suffered only three wounded The official number of Italian casualties recorded by the Hellenic Army History Directorate was three Italian soldiers and five Legionaries killed 38 Other sources give much larger figures about 300 dead and wounded including a major 35 39 the military commander of ELAS Stefanos Sarafis who was nearby at Tzourtza claimed almost 500 Italian dead and wounded as well as the loss of many horses and an aircraft 21 although later in his memoirs he raised the number of Italian casualties to approximately 700 40 The following day the Italians torched the villages of Porta Vatsinia Chania and Ropotania d Estimating the partisan forces present at many times their actual number 42 they made no attempt to enter the mountainous regions and after gathering their dead returned to Trikala two days later 35 43 Only eight days later did 1 500 men from Trikala move against the Agrafa area setting fire to the villages of Vounesi Kanalia and Mesenikolas Near Vounesi they were confronted by some 30 partisans of the Agrafa sub command The partisans withdrew higher up the mountain after a first firefight the Italians suspicious of a larger ambush broke off the operation and returned to their bases 43 44 For ELAS the battle of Porta was of particular importance as the first time it confronted the Italians as a regular army in a more or less full scale defensive action as Sarafis describes it rather than hit and run ambushes This marked the transformation and maturation of ELAS from a guerrilla force into disciplined troops who knew how to fight a fact readily recognized by the Italians themselves the Italian commandant at Trikala remarked as much to the local Greek prefect reprimanding him for not providing accurate information about the partisans 21 39 43 From then until the Italian armistice in September 1943 the Italian garrisons in Thessaly remained confined to the cities and gave up any further attempt at confronting the partisans 20 45 In the weeks after the armistice the Italian forces in Thessaly began negotiating their going over to the partisans Initially it was agreed that the Italian formations the Pinerolo division and the Aosta cavalry regiment would remain intact and retain their armament to fight against the Germans but on 15 October the 1st ELAS Division forcibly disarmed them encountering only brief resistance from the Aosta cavalry regiment and isolated garrisons in the area of Porta 46 47 Notes edit This decision or rather the manner of its implementation in Thessaly and Macedonia where the partisan groups were withdrawn entirely from large areas was a result of a mix of caution and inexperience of the ELAS cadres and of confusion in the chain of command between EAM and ELAS hierarchies and came under heavy criticism not only did it force the partisans to break off contact with the occupying forces but it also exposed the civilian population to reprisals and allowed rival groups to be established in the areas vacated by ELAS 8 Some ELAS members in their post war memoirs even attributed this to deliberate misinformation by the British Intelligence Service aimed at allowing the rival EDES group to which the British were more favourably disposed to expand in the areas vacated by ELAS 9 In his memoirs Boukouvalas claims a total force of only 140 men reinforced during the battle with 60 more 14 According to the contemporary reports of the 11th Army the Pinerolo division was classed as incomplete in terms of effectiveness in spring 1943 having only about 60 of the automobiles and pack animals on its table of organization and equipment and 85 of personnel 24 Following the Italian surrender the Italian forces in Thessaly went over to ELAS and partisans captured the military archives of the Aosta regiment Based on these documents they held its commander Colonel Berti as prisoner with the intention of trying him for war crimes but he was released on the intervention of the British military mission 41 References edit Mazower 1993 pp 5 22 Mazower 1993 pp 103ff 123ff Eudes 1973 pp 42 49 Grigoriadis 1982 pp 215 218 219 Mazower 1993 pp 135 136 a b c Grigoriadis 1982 p 244 Ballis 1981 p 100 Hatzis 1983 pp 110 115 Ballis 1981 pp 101 102 a b Sevastakis 1978 p 386 Ballis 1981 pp 100 103 Ballis 1981 pp 103 104 Ballis 1981 p 103 Sevastakis 1978 pp 386 387 389 a b Ballis 1981 p 104 Ballis 1981 pp 50 104 105 a b c Sevastakis 1978 p 387 a b c Ballis 1981 p 105 Sevastakis 1978 pp 49 387 a b Grigoriadis 1982 p 245 a b c d Sarafis 1980 p 130 Sevastakis 1978 pp 48 50 387 Sevastakis 1978 pp 48 49 387 Bregantin 2010 pp 267 268 Ballis 1981 pp 105 106 a b c d Ballis 1981 p 106 Ballis 1981 pp 106 107 a b c d Ballis 1981 p 107 Sevastakis 1978 pp 55 389 390 Sevastakis 1978 pp 56 57 390 Sevastakis 1978 p 389 Sevastakis 1978 p 390 Ballis 1981 pp 107 108 Sevastakis 1978 pp 390 391 a b c d Ballis 1981 p 108 Sevastakis 1978 p 391 Sevastakis 1978 pp 56 391 Arxeia E8nikhs Antistashs p 162 a b Hatzis 1983 p 110 Sarafis 1980 p 429 Sevastakis 1978 pp 58 103 Sevastakis 1978 p 390 note 3 a b c Sevastakis 1978 p 57 Ballis 1981 pp 108 109 Ballis 1981 p 109 Eudes 1973 pp 109 110 Sarafis 1980 pp 181ff 199 Sources editBallis Dimitrios E 1981 O ELAS sth 8essalia ELAS in Thessaly in Greek Athens Synchroni Epochi Bregantin Lisa 2010 L occupazione dimenticata Gli italiani in Grecia 1941 1943 PhD in Italian Universita Ca Foscari di Venezia Eudes Dominique 1973 The Kapetanios Partisans and Civil War in Greece 1943 1949 Translated by John Howe New York and London Monthly Review Press ISBN 978 0 85345 275 1 Grigoriadis Solon 1982 Synoptikh Istoria ths E8nikhs Antistashs 1941 1944 Concise History of the National Resistance 1941 1944 in Greek Athens Kapopoulos OCLC 165816421 Hatzis Thanasis 1983 H nikhfora epanastash poy xa8hke The victorious revolution that was lost in Greek Vol II Athens Dorikos Hellenic Army History Directorate 1998 Arxeia E8nikhs Antistashs 1941 1944 Tomos 3os Antartikh Organwsh ELAS National Resistance Archives 1941 1944 3rd Volume ELAS Partisan Organization Athens Hellenic Army History Directorate ISBN 960 7897 31 5 Mazower Mark 1993 Inside Hitler s Greece The Experience of Occupation 1941 44 New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 06552 3 Sarafis Stefanos 1980 ELAS Greek Resistance Army Translated by Sylvia Moody London Merlin Press ISBN 9780850362442 Sevastakis Alexis 1978 Kapetan Mpoykoybalas To antartiko ippiko ths 8essalias Kapetan Boukouvalas The partisan cavalry of Thessaly in Greek Athens Diogenis External links editAntonis Vogiazos Director amp Scenario Angelos Kovotsos Production Director Vaso Kanellopoulou Producer Petros Antaios Scenario Nikos Svoronos Historical Advisor 1987 XRONIKO THS E8NIKHS ANTISTASHS Epeisodio 8 TO ANTARTIKO KINHMA STO PRWTO E3AMHNO TOY 1943 Chronicle of the National Resistance Episode 8 The partisan movement in the first semester of 1943 in Greek Hellenic Broadcasting Corporation Battle of Porta segment with on site shots and interviews of Mimis Tasos Boukouvalas Giorgos Zarogianis Kavallaris Leonidas Pappas at 26 35 36 03 Retrieved 26 January 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Porta amp oldid 1186810178, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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