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Bersaglieri

The Bersaglieri, singular Bersagliere, (Italian pronunciation: [bersaʎˈʎɛːri], "sharpshooter") are a troop of marksmen in the Italian Army's infantry corps. They were originally created by General Alessandro La Marmora on 18 June 1836 to serve in the Royal Sardinian Army, which later became the Royal Italian Army. They can be recognized by their distinctive wide-brimmed hats decorated with black capercaillie feathers, which is worn with the dress uniform. The feathers are also applied to their combat helmets.

A Bersagliere in 1900
8th Bersaglieri Regiment in 2007
Bersaglieri Helmet WW II

Description

The Bersaglieri Corps were a high-mobility light infantry at their inception in 1836, with their specific situation evolving with changes in warfare. In the nineteenth century, Bersaglieri acted as skirmishers or shock troops, moving from place to place by running. An elaborate system of bugle calls allowed their units to be deployed and commanded quickly, singly or in combination. The tradition of running continues today in parades and during barracks duty. In World War I, some Bersaglieri served as bicycle troops, better to execute their mission of maneuver warfare. During the Cold War, the Bersaglieri were exclusively employed as mechanized infantry.

Bersaglieri are well-known for their extraordinary performances in parades and military tattoos, always running instead of marching, with hundreds of black capercaillie feathers flowing from their wide-brimmed black hats. These feathers are also worn on Bersaglieri combat helmets. They once served a military purpose, acting as camouflage and as a sunshade for the marksman's shooting eye. Today, they are a badge of honour, attracting new recruits and fostering esprit among their wearers.[1]

Origins and history

 
The Bersaglieri halt the Russian attack during the Battle of the Chernaya

The relatively poor Kingdom of Sardinia could not afford large numbers of cavalry, so a quick-moving infantry corps of marksmen were needed. These troops were trained to high physical and marksmanship standards. Like the French chasseurs à pied, a level of independence and initiative was encouraged so that they could operate in looser formations, in which direct command and control was not required. They fired individually and carried 60 rounds instead of the standard 40 rounds of traditional line infantry. The first uniform was black with brimmed hats, called "vaira". These were intended to defend the head from sabre blows.

The first public appearance of the Bersaglieri was on the occasion of a military parade on 1 July 1836. The First Company marched through Turin with the rapid, high-stepping gait (180 paces/minute) still used by the Bersaglieri in World War II and later. The modern Bersaglieri still run both on parade and even during barracks duty - on penalty of punishment if they do not. The new corps impressed King Charles Albert, who immediately had them integrated as part of the Piedmontese regular army. The corps grew rapidly and by 1852 there were already 10 battalions, each with four companies.

Throughout the nineteenth century the Bersaglieri filled the role of skirmishers, screening the slow-moving line and column formations, but acting as special shock troops if required. They were originally intended to serve as mountain troops, as well; the climber Jean-Antoine Carrel was a Bersagliere. When the Alpini Corps were created in 1872 a strong rivalry arose between the two elite corps.

Unified Italy

 
British commercial advertising showing a Bersagliere, circa 1890

During the First War of Italian Independence (1848–1849) the Bersaglieri distinguished themselves by storming the bridge at Goito in an episode known to later historiography as the battle of Goito bridge (la Battaglia del Ponte di Goito). In 1855 the Bersaglieri provided five battalions for the Sardinian Expeditionary Corps in the Crimean War, where they were involved in the Siege of Sevastopol and the Battle of the Cernaia. Most of the casualties were suffered due to a cholera epidemic. Their bravery at the Cernaia was widely recognized and played a key role in gaining Piedmont-Sardinia a seat in the negotiations at the war's end. For their effort in the Crimea, the Bersaglieri were rewarded a red fez with a blue tassel, in honour from the French zouaves troops, with whom they served, as they watched the Bersaglieri's bravery in the battle.

When the Armata Sarda became the Regio Esercito (Royal Italian Army) in 1860, the existing 36 battalions were used to create six Bersaglieri regiments, which had administrative and disciplinary duties. The regiments were assigned to the army corps', with the regiment's battalions assigned to the divisions in the corps as reconnaissance units.

The most famous action of the Bersaglieri occurred on 20 September 1870, when the 12th Bersaglieri battalion stormed Rome through a breach created by Italian artillery in the Aurelian Walls near Porta Pia leading to the capture of Rome and end of the temporal power of the Pope, thus completing the unification of Italy. A monument was erected in 1932 in front of Porta Pia to commemorate the event at the same time as the National Museum of the Bersaglieri corps was moved to Porta Pia, where it resides still today.

In 1871, the Bersaglieri corps added another four battalions and the regiments were increased from six to 10 and given also operational command of the battalions. In 1883 a further two regiments were added for a total of 12 Bersaglieri regiments, one for each army corps with three battalions per regiment. Therefore, the four battalions raised in 1871 were disbanded.

World War I

 
'AVANTI ITALIA!': The War Illustrated, Vol.5, No.106, Aug., 1916

During World War I, the 12 existing Bersaglieri regiments were augmented by nine newly raised regiments and fought with distinction on the Italian Front. Of the 210,000 members of Bersaglieri regiments, 32,000 were killed and 50,000 wounded during the war. Italy's last surviving World War I veteran, Delfino Borroni, was a member of the 6th Bersaglieri Regiment from Bologna. Another member who served as Bersagliere on the front (and was wounded) was Benito Mussolini.

A contingent of Bersaglieri drawn from the autonomous battalions of the 1st Bersaglieri Regiment was sent to participate in the Sinai and Palestine Campaign in 1917, where they were attached to the Egyptian Expeditionary Force commanded by General Edmund Allenby. Their "mainly political" role was to assert "hereditary ecclesiastical prerogatives in connection with the Christian churches at Jerusalem and Bethlehem."[2][3][4]

Peacetime regiments

At the outbreak of World War I in 1914 the Bersaglieri corps consisted of 12 regiments each organized into a regimental HQ, three battalions on foot, and one cyclist's battalion. Each regiment also contained a machine gun section with two machine guns. The battalions on foot consisted of three companies of 250 men each, while the cyclist battalions consisted of three companies of 150 men each. Additionally, each cyclist's battalion had its own machine gun section with two machine guns.[5] Between the outbreak of the war and the Italian declaration of war on 23 May 1915 the Italian army was forced to send the 1st Bersaglieri Regiment and five battalions from other Bersaglieri regiments to Libya as the local population fiercely resisted the Italian occupation. On 29 December 1914 the army sent the 10th Bersaglieri Regiment to Albania, which was in turmoil after its freshly installed ruler William, Prince of Albania had fled the country in September 1914. Already since 4 May 1912 two battalions of the 4th Bersaglieri Regiment were in Rhodes to garrison the newly conquered Italian Islands of the Aegean.[6][7]

With war imminent the army began to raise new Bersaglieri battalions to replace the battalions deployed overseas and on 8 April 1915, the 10th bis Bersaglieri Regiment was formed to replace the 10th deployed in Albania. Starting in January 1915 additional battalions were raised starting, which remained autonomous and were not integrated into an existing regiment. When hostilities commended the Bersaglieri consisted of:[5]

  • 13 regiments (one in Libya, one in Albania, eleven in Italy)
  • 55 battalions on foot (41 grouped in 13 regiments (two deployed to Rhodes); 14 autonomous battalions, of which seven in Libya and seven at the Italian Front)
  • 12 cyclist battalions

On 10 January 1916 the High Command ordered to increase all Bersaglieri battalions on foot by one company to four companies, with the battalions deployed to Libya being exempt, retaining three. Later that spring the Bersaglieri companies of the battalions on foot were reduced from 250 to 225 men, but in turn each battalion received its own machine gun section with two machine guns, a submachine-gun section with two Villar Perosa submachine guns, and a Sapper unit with 88 men. On 3 March 1916 the regimental command of the 1st Bersaglieri Regiment was disbanded and its battalions became autonomous.[5]

At the end of 1916 the Bersaglieri fielded:[5][8]

  • 15 regiments (one in Albania, 14 in Italy)
  • 48 battalions on foot (45 grouped in 15 regiments and three autonomous battalions). Each of these battalions consisted of four companies of 225 men each, a sapper unit, a machine-gun section, and two submachine-gun sections
  • 15 autonomous battalions on foot (two deployed to Rhodes, thirteen in Libya). Each of these battalions consisted of three companies of 250 men each and a machine-gun section
  • 12 cyclist battalions, each with three companies of 150 men and a machine-gun section

Early in 1917 each battalion in Italy received a second submachine-gun section and in May the battalions were thoroughly reorganized: the machine gun sections of each battalion were increased to a machine gun company with six machine guns, while the battalion's 4th companies were grouped in independent "marching" battalions (Battaglione di Marcia), which acted as personnel reserve for the armies deployed to the front.[8]

After the defeat at Caporetto the Italian army was forced to retreat from the Isonzo river to the Piave river. During the retreat four Bersaglieri regiments and three autonomous battalions were so badly mauled that they had to be disbanded: besides the wartime regiments 15 and 21, also the peacetime regiments 4 and 9 were disbanded.[9] Thus at the end of 1917 the Bersaglieri corps consisted of:[8]

  • 16 regiments (one in Albania, 15 in Italy)
  • 48 battalions on foot (grouped in 16 regiments). Each of these battalions consisted of three companies of 225 men each, a machine gun company, a sapper unit, and two submachine-gun sections.
  • 15 autonomous battalions on foot (two deployed to Rhodes, ten in Libya). Each of these battalions consisted of three companies of 250 men each and a machine-gun section
  • 12 cyclist battalions, each with three companies of 150 men and a machine-gun section

After the Battle of Caporetto the Chief of Staff of the Italian Army Luigi Cadorna was finally dismissed and replaced by Armando Diaz. Diaz reorganized the army and ordered the Bersaglieri battalions to be reorganized: the companies on foot were reduced to 150 men in three platoons - two of infantry and one of sappers and combat support troops. At the same, the machine-gun companies were increased to eight machine guns, and the submachine-gun sections increased to three and attached to the companies. Each battalion also received a Stokes mortar section, while each regiment received a flamethrower section and a "reparto cannoncini d'accompagnamento" (loosely translated: small accompaniment cannons unit), with Italian copies of the Austrian 3.7cm Infantry Gun M.15.[10][11] Additionally the command of the 16th Bersaglieri Regiment was disbanded and its battalions became autonomous, six of the autonomous battalions deployed to Libya were ordered to return and reorganized as the other battalions on the Italian front. The cyclist battalions were also reorganized (see the "Cyclist Battalions" section here below).[10]

At the onset of the last offensive of the war the Bersaglieri was organized on the following structure:

  • 15 regiments (one in Albania, 14 in Italy)
  • 45 battalions on foot (grouped in 15 regiments). Each of these battalions consisted of three companies of 150 men each, a machine gun company, three submachine-gun sections, and a Stokes mortar section
  • 12 autonomous battalions on foot (two deployed to Rhodes, four in Libya, and six battalions assigned to the two divisions of the Assault Army Corps. The overseas battalions consisted of three companies of 250 men each and a machine gun section, while the six battalions of the Assault Army Corps were organized as the regimental battalions
  • 8 cyclist battalions, each with three companies of 150 men and a machine gun section (six in two groups and attached to cavalry divisions, and two assigned to the Assault Army Corps)[10]
Peacetime regiments
Regiment Battalions Based in Notes Battles
1st Bersaglieri[12][13][14] I 
VII 
IX 
I Cyc. 
Naples Regiment (without the I Cyclists Btn.) deployed in Libya
Regimental command disbanded 3 March 1916; battalions became autonomous

Regiment raised the:

21st Bersaglieri Regiment
LV Autonomous Battalion
I, VII, IX battalions:
19 May 1915: arrived in Libya
28 May 1918: returned to Italy
29 June 1918: entered 1st Assault Div.
1918: Battle of Vittorio Veneto: Sernaglia

I Cyclists:

1915: Fogliano, Monte Sei Busi, Sella San Martino
1916: Trincea delle Frasche, Asiago, Coston di Lora, Monte Pasubio, Monte Fior, Marcesina
1917: Castagnevizza, Piave, Forcella Muis, Forcella Campidello, Lestans, Sequals
1918: Caposile, Fossalta, Capo d'Argine, Monte Castellazzo, Vittorio Veneto
2nd Bersaglieri[15][16] (II)
IV
XVII
LIII
II Cyc. 
Rome 29 Aug. 1918: VII Bersaglieri Bde.[17]
II Btn. in Libya
24 June 1918: II Cyclists disbanded

Regiment raised the:

14th Bersaglieri Regiment
LIII Btn. (to replace II Btn.)
LIV Autonomous Battalion
LXI Btn. (for the 14th Rgt.)
LXIV Btn. (for the 17th Rgt.)
XXVI Assault Battalion
1915: Monte Coston, Costa d'Agra, Monte Maronia, Val di Sole
1916: Plezzo, Oslavia, Zaibena, Nad Logem, Monte Kuk
1917 Monte Santo, Monte Mrzli, Monte Pleca, Kamno, Monte Stol, Sequals, Piave
1918: Montello, Vittorio Veneto: Paradiso
3rd Bersaglieri[18][19][20] XVIII
XX
XXV
III Cyc.  
Livorno 29 Aug. 1918: VII Bersaglieri Bde.[17]

Regiment raised the:

13th Bersaglieri Regiment
XL Btn. (for the 14th Rgt.)
LX Btn. (for the 13th Rgt.)
LXV Btn. (for the 17th Rgt.)
1915: Col di Lana, Carso: Vermegliano, Monte Sei Busi
1916: Selz: quota 70 - Monte Sief, Piccolo Colbricon, Val Cismon, Carso: Monfalcone, quota 85, Jamiano, quota 144
1917 Carso: Flondar, Monte Ermada - Monfenera, Piave: Zenson, Ponte di Pinzano
1918: Monte Costalunga, 2nd Piave: Fosso Gorgazzo, Fossalta, Meolo - Vittorio Veneto: Serravalle, Fadalto Pass, Pieve di Cadore
4th Bersaglieri[6][7]  (XXVI)
XXIX
(XXXI)
XXXVII
XLIII
IV Cyc. 
Turin 8 June - 7 Nov. 1917: V Bersaglieri Bde.[21]
XXVI Btn. and XXXI Btn. in Rhodes
9 Dec. 1917: Rgt. disbanded[9] (Caporetto)

Regiment raised the:

19th Bersaglieri Regiment
20th Bersaglieri Regiment
XXXVII Btn. (to replace XXXI Btn.)
XLI Autonomous Battalion
XLII Autonomous Battalion

Regiment received the XLIII Btn. from the 9th Rgt. as replacement for the XXVI Btn.

1915: Isonzo: Ajba - St. Lucia di Tolmino
1916: St. Maria di Tolmino, Monte Mrzli, Zagora, Monfalcone, quota 85
1917: Bodrez, Semmer, Monte Fratta, Bainsizza: Ossoiuka, Oscedrilk, Monte Globokak, Monte Badenecche, Monte Tonderecar
1918: Monfenera, San Bartolomeo di Piave, Molino Novo, Grave di Papadopoli, Vittorio Veneto: Maniago, Flagogna, Tolmezzo
5th Bersaglieri[22][23]  XIV
(XXII)
XXIV
XLVI
V Cyc. 
Sanremo 1 March 1918: V Bersaglieri Bde.[21]
XXII Btn. in Libya
Regiment raised the:
XLVI Btn. (to replace XXII Btn.)
XLVII Autonomous Battalion
LXXII Assault Battalion
1915: Isonzo: Santa Lucia, Alture di Polazzo - Monte Mrzli
1916: Isonzo: Dolje, Monte Mrzli, Monte Vodil - Asiago: Monte Lemerle, Magnaboschi, Kaberlaba - Carso: Monfalcone, quota 85, quota 121, Nova Vas, quota 208, Jamiano, quota 144
1917: Monte Gallio, Monte Sisemol, Monte Melago, Col del Rosso
1918: Monte Valbella, Sernaglia
6th Bersaglieri[24][25][26]  VI
XIII
XIX
VI Cyc.
Bologna 15 Feb. 1916: I Bersaglieri Bde.[27]
24 June 1918: VI Cyclists disbanded

Regiment raised the:

15th Bersaglieri Regiment
XLIX Autonomous Battalion
L Autonomous Battalion
1915: Plezzo
1916: Carso: Veliki Hribach, Pecinka, quota 308
1917: Isonzo: Monte Vodice - Bainsizza: Semmer, Oscedrilk, quota 808 - Monte Globokak, Pradamano, Monte Tonderecar
1918: Monte Cornone: Sasso Rosso
7th Bersaglieri[28][29][30]  VIII
X
(XI)
XLIV
VII Cyc. 
Brescia 6 Nov. 1916: II Bersaglieri Bde.[31]
XI Btn. in Libya
Regiment raised the:
XLIV Btn. (to replace XI Btn.)
XLV Autonomous Battalion
all Fiat–Revelli Modello 1914 equipped Bersaglieri Machine Gunner Companies
1915: Val di Ledro: Bezzecca, Monte Vies
1916-17 Carso: Jamiano, quota 144, Flondar
1918: 2nd Piave, Vittorio Veneto, Occupation of Triest
8th Bersaglieri[32][33][34]  (III)
V
XII
XXXVIII
VIII Cyc. 
Verona 1 June 1918: VI Bersaglieri Bde.[35]
III Battalion:
until 28 May 1918 in Libya
29 June 1918: entered 2nd Assault Div.

Regiment raised the:

XXXVIII Btn. (to replace III Btn.)
XLVIII Autonomous Battalion
XXII Assault Battalion 
1915-17: Cadore
Candelù, Fagarè, Caserta island (Piave river), Vittorio Veneto: Piave, Livenza, Tagliamento, Ariis, Paradiso
9th Bersaglieri[36][37] XXVIII
XXX
XXXII
IX Cyc.
Asti 11 Feb. - 6 Nov. 1916: II Bersaglieri Bde.[31]
28 Nov. 1917: Rgt. disbanded[9] (Caporetto)
24 June 1918: X Cyclists disbanded

Regiment raised the:

16th Bersaglieri Regiment
XLIII Btn. (as replacement for the XXVI Btn. of the 4th Rgt.)
LIX Btn. (for the 13th Rgt.)
Regiment:
1915: Plezzo, Oslavia
1916: Oslavia, Monte Zebio, Monte Colombara, Carso: Nad Logem, Gorizia
1917: Monte Ermada, Monte Ortigara, Monte Forno, Agnello Pass, Monte Pleca, Monte Kozliak, Monte Carnizza

IX Cyclists:

1918: 2nd Piave
10th Bersaglieri[38][39] XVI
XXXIV
XXXV
X Cyc.
Palermo 29 Dec. 1914: Rgt. deployed to Albania
24 June 1918: X Cyclists disbanded

Regiment raised the:

16th Bersaglieri Regiment
LVII Btn. (for the 16th Rgt.)
LVIII Btn. (for the 16th Rgt.)
LXIII Btn. (for the 16th Rgt.)
LXIX Btn. (for the 18th Rgt.)
Regiment:
1915-1918 Albania

X Cyclists:

1915: Canina
1916: Forcella Omladet
1917: Monte Santo, Bainsizza, Valsugana, Monte Tomba Cormons, Santa Lucia di Polcenigo
1918: Fagarè, Fossalta, Scolo Palumbo
11th Bersaglieri[40][41][42]  (XV)
XXVII
XXXIII
XXXIX
XI Cyc.[43]   
Naples 11 Feb. 1916: II Bersaglieri Bde.[31]
XV Battalion:
until 28 May 1918 in Libya
9 July 1918: entered 2nd Assault Div.

Regiment raised the:

17th Bersaglieri Regiment
XXXIX Btn. (to replace XV Btn.)
LI Autonomous Battalion
LXVI Btn. (for the 17th Rgt.)
LXVII Btn. (for the 18th Rgt.)
Regiment:
1915: Carso: Monte San Michele, Plezzo, Monte Javorcek
1916: Monfalcone: quota 85, quota 93, quota 144
1917: Carso: Jamiano, Flondar - Monte Piana, Mauria Pass
1918: Stretta di Serravalle, Revine Lago, Occupation of Triest

XI Cyclists:

1915: Gradisca, Lucinico, Monte San Michele
1916: Vermegliano, Cave di Sels, Monfalcone
1917: Doberdò, Flondar, Sella Nevea, Forcella la Croce, Monfenera
1918: 2nd Piave, Monte Grappa, Revine Lago
12th Bersaglieri[44][45][46]   XXI
XXIII
XXXVI
XII Cyc.
Milan 15 Feb. 1916: I Bersaglieri Bde.[27]

Regiment raised the:

18th Bersaglieri Regiment
LII Autonomous Battalion
LVI Autonomous Battalion
LXVIII Btn. (for the 18th Rgt.)
1915: Monte Mrzli, Monte Sleme
1916: Carso: Veliki Hribach, Pecinka, quota 308, Vippacco
1917: Isonzo: Monte Vodice - Bainsizza: Semmer, Oscedrilk - Monte Globokak, Pradamano, Melette di Gallio
1918: Val Frenzela: Pizzo Razzea - Vittorio Veneto

Regiments raised during the war

At the outbreak of the war the army fielded 13 Bersaglieri regiments: the twelve peacetime regiments and the 10th bis Bersaglieri Regiment, which had been raised with new battalions on 8 April 1915 to replace the 10th Bersaglieri Regiment sent to Vlorë in Albania on 29 December 1914. During 1915 two more regiments were raised; the 1st bis Bersaglieri Regiment with three autonomous battalions and then 13th Bersaglieri Regiment with three new battalions:[5]

  • 8 April 1915: 10th bis Bersaglieri Regiment
  • 8–25 June 1915: 13th Provisional Bersaglieri Regiment. The regiment was formed from new battalions and meant to replace the 1st Bersaglieri Regiment deployed to Libya, but it became never operational, and upon reaching the front the regiment was disbanded and its battalions became autonomous.
  • 24 September 1915: 1st bis Bersaglieri Regiment, formed from the three autonomous of the short-lived 13th Provisional Bersaglieri Regiment
  • 22 November 1915: 13th Bersaglieri Regiment

On 5 January 1916 the 1st bis Bersaglieri Regiment changed its name and became the 15th Bersaglieri Regiment, while on the same date the 10th bis Bersaglieri Regiment changed its name and became 16th Bersaglieri Regiment. During 1916 only one new regiment was raised: the 14th Bersaglieri Regiment on 11 March with two newly formed and one autonomous battalion.[5]

In 1917 the army raised five new Bersaglieri regiments: the 17th and 18th regiments with newly raised battalions, the 19th regiment with three autonomous battalions, and the 20th and 21st regiments with reserve battalions.[8]

  • 31 Jan. 1917: 18th Bersaglieri Regiment
  • 6 Feb. 1917: 17th Bersaglieri Regiment
  • 15 Feb. 1917: 19th Bersaglieri Regiment
  • 1 April 1917: 20th Bersaglieri Regiment
  • 27 April 1917: 21st Bersaglieri Regiment

Due to the defeat at the Battle of Caporetto the army was forced to disbanded the 15th and the 21st Bersaglieri regiments with their battalions in November 1917. In 1918 the command of the 16th Bersaglieri Regiment was disbanded and its three battalions became autonomous.[8][9]

After the war four of the regiments raised for the conflict were disbanded (13th, 14th, 17th, 18th), while the 19th Bersaglieri Regiment was renamed 4th Bersaglieri Regiment, and the 20th Bersaglieri Regiment was renamed 9th Bersaglieri Regiment. Of the nine regiments raised during the war none, except for 18th Bersaglieri Regiment, was ever activated again. The 18th was active again from 1 April 1935 until 31 December 1936, from 1 February 1942 until 8 September 1943, and for the last time from 10 September 1993 until 1 January 2005.[47]

Regiments raised during the war
Regiment Battalions Raised on
Raised by
Notes Battles
13th Bersaglieri[48][49]  LIX
LX
LXII
22 Nov. 1915
3rd Ber. LX
9th Ber. LXI
11th Ber. LXII
1 Jan. 1918: VI Bersaglieri Bde.[35]
1919: disbanded
1916: Alpi di Fassa
1917: Monte Pertica, Monte Grappa
1918: Caposile, Candelù, Breda, Cima Ninni, Vittorio Veneto: Grave di Papadopoli
14th Bersaglieri[50][51]  XL
LIV
LXI
11 March 1916
2nd Ber. LIV, LXI
3rd Ber. XL
Raised from two new (XL, LXI) and one autonomous battalion (LIV)
1 April 1917: IV Bersaglieri Bde.[52]
12 April 1919: Rgt. disbanded
1916: San Michele, Asiago, Marcesina, Monte Zebio
1917: Val d'Astico, Val Posina, Borgo, Luico, Monte Sisemol
1918: Monte Valbella, 2nd Piave, Vittorio Veneto: Trento
15th Bersaglieri[53][54]  XLIX
L
LI
5 Jan. 1916
6th Ber. XLIX, L
11th Ber. LI
Raised from three autonomous battalions:
XLIX Btn. raised Jan. 1915
L Btn. raised Jan. 1915
LI Btn. raised 1915

24 Sep. 1915 - 5 Jan. 1916:

1st bis Bersaglieri Rgt.

7 Nov. 1917: Rgt. disbanded[9] (Caporetto)

1915: Redipuglia, Third Isonzo: Trincea delle Frasche
1916: Monfalcone, Monte Sei Busi, Doberdò, Jamiano: quota 208 sud
1917: Caporetto
16th Bersaglieri[55][56] LVII
LVIII
LXIII 
5 Jan. 1916
10th Bersaglieri
8 April 1915 – 5 Jan. 1916:
10th bis Bersaglieri Rgt. with
XVI bis, XXXIV bis, XXXV bis

7 March 1918: Rgt. disbanded and
battalions transferred to other units

1915: Monte Mrzli, Monte Vodil
1916: Pal Piccolo
1917: Ampezzano, Monte Iof, Meduna river
17th Bersaglieri[57][58]  LXIV
LXV
LXVI
6 Feb. 1917
2nd Ber. LXIV
3rd Ber. LXV
11th Ber. LXVI
6 Feb. 1917: III Bersaglieri Bde.[59]
March 1919: Rgt. disbanded
1917: Valsugana, Castagnevizza, Tagliamento: Bridge of Madrisio, Piave: Cà Lunga
1918: Cavazuccherina, Cortellazzo, Vittorio Veneto: Giudicarie
18th Bersaglieri[60][61][47]  LXVII
LXVIII
LXIX
31 Jan. 1917
10th Ber. LXIX
11th Ber. LXVII
12th Ber. LXVIII
6 Feb. 1917: III Bersaglieri Bde.[59]
31 Dec. 1919: Rgt. disbanded
1917: Castagnevizza: quota 244, Piave: Fagarè, Cà Lunga
1918: 2nd Piave, Vittorio Veneto: Castel Romano/Val Chiese
19th Bersaglieri[62][63] XLI
XLII
XLV
15 Feb. 1917
4th Ber. XLI, XLII
7th Ber. XLV
Raised from three autonomous battalions:
XLI Btn. raised 7 Jan. 1915
XLII Btn. raised 22 Feb. 1915
XLV Btn. raised 19 May 1915

1 March 1918: V Bersaglieri Bde.[21]
11 Jan. 1919: renamed 4th Bersaglieri

1915:
XLI Btn: Monte Maronia, Monte Plan
XLII Btn: Loppio
XLV Btn: Val Chiese: Monte Merlino

1916:

XLI Btn: Cima Cece, Cima Valmaggiore, Nova Vas
XLII Btn: Mori, Malga Zugna
XLV Btn: Coste di Salò, Monfalcone

1917: Val Degano, Longarone
1918: Cima Tre Pezzi, Vittorio Veneto: Piave crossing

20th Bersaglieri[64][65] LXX
LXXI
LXXII
1 April 1917
4th Bersaglieri
Raised from the II, IV, VI Bersaglieri reserve battalions
1 April 1917: IV Bersaglieri Bde.[52]
20 Feb. 1919: renamed 9th Bersaglieri
1917: Carzano, Lunico, Monte Sisemol
1918: Monte Valbella, Monte Maio, Vittorio Veneto: Passo Borcola, Monte Maggio
21st Bersaglieri[66][67]  LXXIII
LXXIV
LXXV
27 April 1917
1st Bersaglieri
Raised from the VII, X, XI Bersaglieri reserve battalions
18 June 1917: V Bersaglieri Bde.[21]
7 Nov. 1917: Rgt. disbanded[9] (Caporetto)
1917: Plava: Monte Kuk/Monte Vodice, Bainsizza: Fratta, Semmer, quota 898 - Monte Globokak

Cyclist Battalions

 
Bersaglieri Cyclists in 1915

The twelve cyclist battalions of the peacetime regiments had been raised in 1910. Each consisted of three companies of 150 men, and a machine gun section with two machine guns.[5] For the duration of the war the cyclists battalions operated independently from their regiments and were assigned as needed to higher commands. On various occasions Bersaglieri Cyclist Battalion Groups were formed, but only after the Battle of Caporetto forced the Italian army to retreat from the Isonzo front, during which the cyclist battalions served as rearguard,[68] did the army institute permanent cyclist groups. These four groups were officially instituted on 15 January 1918 and each fielded three cyclist battalions and formed initially the mobile reserve of the Third Army on the lower Piave river:[68]

  • 1st Group: IV, V, XII cyclist battalions
  • 2nd Group: II, X, XI cyclist battalions
  • 3rd Group: I, VII, VIII cyclist battalions
  • 4th Group: III, VI, IX cyclist battalions

In April and May 1918 the 1st and 2nd Group were assigned to the 1st, respectively the 7th Army to defend the Western, respectively the Eastern shore of Lake Garda from possible Austro-Hungarian amphibious landings. By June all four groups had returned to the 3rd Army and were assigned to the army's corps as mobile reserve (1st Group to XI Corps, 2nd Group to XXVIII Corps, 3rd Group as army reserve, 4th Group to XXIII Corps).[68]

On 24 June 1918 the 2nd and 4th group and the II, VI, IX, and X battalions were disbanded and with their troops the Cyclist Assault Reserve Battalion formed. This battalion was assigned to the Assault Army Corps (Corpo d'Armata d'Assalto), which consisted of Bersaglieri and Arditi troops. The surviving III and XI cyclist battalions were assigned to 1st, respectively the 2nd Assault Division of the same carmy corps. The two remaining groups, the 1st and 3rd, left the 3rd Army on 16 October 1918 and were assigned for the last offensive of the war to the 1st, respectively 4th Cavalry division.[11]

Autonomous Battalions

During World War I the Bersaglieri regiments raised a number of battalions, which were not attached to a regiment and designated as "autonomous battalions". At the same time seven battalions of pre-war regiments, which were deployed to the Italian colonies, became autonomous and were replaced in their regiments by newly raised battalions. The 1st Bersaglieri Regiment was deployed to Italian Libya and its three battalions became autonomous in February 1916 when the regimental command returned to the mainland. Of the autonomous battalions raised during the war only the LII and LV battalions remaining autonomous and active for the entire duration of the conflict.

Autonomous Battalions
Battalion Raised on
Raised by
Deployed to Notes
XLI Battalion[62][63] 7 Jan. 1915
4th Bersaglieri
Italian Front 15 Feb. 1917: entered 19th Bersaglieri
XLII Battalion[62][63] 22 Feb. 1915
4th Bersaglieri
Italian Front
XLV Battalion[62][63] 19 May 1915
7th Bersaglieri
Italian Front
XLVII Battalion[69] 1 Feb. 1915
5th Bersaglieri
Italian Front 18 Nov. 1917: disbanded (Caporetto)
XLVIII Battalion[70] 6 Feb. 1915
8th Bersaglieri
Italian Front 10 Nov. 1917: destroyed (Caporetto)
XLIX Battalion[53][54] Jan. 1915
6th Bersaglieri
Italian Front 5 Jan. 1916: entered 15th Bersaglieri
L Battalion[53][54] Jan. 1915
6th Bersaglieri
Italian Front
LI Battalion[53][54] 1915
11th Bersaglieri
Italian Front
LII Battalion[71] Jan. 1915
12th Bersaglieri
Libya
LIV Battalion[50][51] 1915
2nd Bersaglieri
Italian Front 11 March 1916: 14th Bersaglieri Rgt.
LV Battalion[72] 5 Jan. 1915
1st Bersaglieri
1915-18: Libya
1918: Italian Front
In Libya until 31 May 1918, returned to Italy and entered 6th Group/2nd Assault Division
LVI Battalion[73] 17 Jan. 1915
12th Bersaglieri
Italian Front 18 Nov. 1917: disbanded (Caporetto)

During the war a number of battalions of existing regiments became autonomous either for geographic reasons (battalion deployed to the colonies) or organizational reasons (regimental command disbanded). The following table gives an overview of these battalions:

Temporarily Autonomous Battalions
Battalion Regiment Deployed to Notes
I Battalion[12][13] 1st Bersaglieri 1915-18: Libya
1918: Italian Front
24 Feb. 1916: 1st Bersaglieri Regiment disbanded and battalion became autonomous
28 May 1918: returned to Italy
29 June 1918: entered 1st Group/1st Assault Div.
II Battalion[15][16] 2nd Bersaglieri Libya Battalion fighting rebels in Libya since 15 Feb. 1915.
Replaced in the regiment by the LIII battalion.
III Battalion[32][33] 8th Bersaglieri 1915-18: Libya
1918: Italian Front
Battalion fighting rebels in Libya until 28 May 1918
Replaced in the regiment by the XXXVIII battalion.
29 June 1918: battalion entered 4th Group/2nd Assault Div.
VII Battalion[12][13] 1st Bersaglieri 1915-18: Libya
1918: Italian Front
24 Feb. 1916: 1st Bersaglieri Regiment disbanded and battalion became autonomous
28 May 1918: returned to Italy
29 June 1918: entered 2nd Group/1st Assault Div.
IX Battalion[12][13] 1st Bersaglieri 1915-18: Libya
1918: Italian Front
24 Feb. 1916: 1st Bersaglieri Regiment disbanded and battalion became autonomous
28 May 1918: returned to Italy
29 June 1918: entered 3rd Group/1st Assault Div.
XI Battalion[28][29] 7th Bersaglieri Libya Battalion fighting rebels in Libya since 11 Feb. 1915.
Replaced in the regiment by the XLIV battalion.
XV Battalion[40][41] 11th Bersaglieri 1915-18: Libya
1918: Italian Front
Battalion fighting rebels in Libya from 4 Jan. 1915 until 28 May 1918
Replaced in the regiment by the XXXIX battalion.
29 June 1918: battalion entered 5th Group/2nd Assault Div.
XXII Battalion[22][23] 5th Bersaglieri Libya Battalion fighting rebels in Libya since 15 Feb. 1915.
Replaced in the regiment by the XLVI battalion.
XXVI Battalion[6][7] 4th Bersaglieri Rhodes Battalions on garrison duty in Rhodes since 12 May 1912.
Replaced in the regiment by the XLIII, respectively XXXVII battalion.
XXXI Battalion[6][7]
LVII Battalion[55][56] 16th Bersaglieri Italian Front 7 March 1918: 16th Bersaglieri Regiment disbanded and its battalions became autonomous
LVIII Battalion[55][56]
LXIII Battalion[55][56]

Machine Gunner Companies

At the outbreak of war each infantry and Bersaglieri battalion of the Italian Army fielded one machine gun section with two Maxim 1911 machine guns carried by horses. After the outbreak of the war this proved quickly to be inadequate and in spring 1916 the army began to raise dedicated machine gunner companies (Compagnia Mitraglieri). These companies were attached to brigades, divisions and army corps, which deployed them with tactical units (regiments, battalions, companies) as needed. 2,277 Machine Gunner companies were raised and numbered continuously. The Bersaglieri depots raised 31 companies equipped with six St. Étienne Mle 1907 machine guns each, and 84 companies equipped with six Fiat–Revelli Modello 1914 machine guns each.[74]

Special Bersaglieri Division

At the outbreak of war seven Bersaglieri regiments were assigned to divisions or army corps, while four Bersaglieri regiments formed on 20 May 1915 the Special Bersaglieri Division (Divisione Speciale Bersaglieri). The four regiments were joined by IV Mountain Artillery Group of the 1st Mountain Artillery Regiment and minor support units. On 11 February 1916 the four regiments were grouped together in two brigades: the I Bersaglieri Brigade consisted of the 6th and 12th Bersaglieri regiments, while the II Bersaglieri Brigade consisted of the 9th and 11th Bersaglieri regiments. After not even a year of existence the division is transformed on 5 March 1915 into a standard infantry division and the two Bersaglieri brigades are attached like the regiments to divisions and army corps as needed.[75]

Division Regiment Battalions Notes
Special Bersaglieri Division
(Divisione Speciale Bersaglieri)
6th Bersaglieri Regiment VI Battalion
XIII Battalion
XIX Battalion
11 Feb. 1916: formed the I Bersaglieri Brigade with the 12th Bersaglieri Regiment
9th Bersaglieri Regiment XXVIII Battalion
XXX Battalion
XXXII Battalion
11 Feb. 1916: formed the II Bersaglieri Brigade
11th Bersaglieri Regiment XXVII Battalion
XXXIII Battalion
XXXIX Battalion
12th Bersaglieri Regiment XXI Battalion
XXIII Battalion
XXXVI Battalion
11 Feb. 1916: formed the I Bersaglieri Brigade with the 6th Bersaglieri Regiment
IV Mountain Artillery Group 1st Mountain Artillery Regiment

Bersaglieri Brigades

After the Special Bersaglieri Division had been disbanded the two Bersaglieri brigades were attached to higher commands as needed. On 6 November 1916, the 7th Bersaglieri Regiment replaced the 9th Bersaglieri Regiment in the II Bersaglieri Brigade, but there were no further changes to the brigades during that year.

In 1917 the army decided to activate a further three Bersaglieri brigades of two regiments each, bringing the Bersaglieri closer in line with the regular infantry, all of whose regiments were grouped together in brigades composed of a headquarters and two infantry regiments. During the year the III, IV, and V Bersaglieri brigades were raised, with respectively the 17th and 18th, 14th and 20th, and 4th and 21st regiments belonging to their parent brigades. However the defeat in the Battle of Caporetto led to the destruction of the V Bersaglieri Brigade, which, together with the 21st Bersaglieri Regiment, was annihilated during the retreat from the Isonzo river to the Piave river.

In 1918 the army raised the V Bersaglieri Brigade again and also activated the VI and VII Bersaglieri brigades. The VI consisted of the 8th and 13th, respectively the 2nd and 3rd Bersaglieri regiments belonged to the VII Brigade. With this, all Bersaglieri regiments in Italy were now assigned to one of the seven Bersaglieri brigades.

Brigade Regiment Battalions Notes
I Bersaglieri Brigade[27] 6th Bersaglieri Regiment VI Battalion
XIII Battalion
XIX Battalion
formed 11 Feb. 1916
12th Bersaglieri Regiment XXI Battalion
XXIII Battalion
XXXVI Battalion
II Bersaglieri Brigade[31] 7th Bersaglieri Regiment VIII Battalion
X Battalion
XLIV Battalion
formed 11 Feb. 1916 with the 9th and 11th Bersaglieri regiments
9th Regiment replaced by the 7th Regiment on 6 Nov. 1916
11th Bersaglieri Regiment XXVII Battalion
XXXIII Battalion
XXXIX Battalion
III Bersaglieri Brigade[59] 17th Bersaglieri Regiment LXIV Battalion
LXV Battalion
LXVI Battalion
formed 18 March 1917
18th Bersaglieri Regiment LXVII Battalion
LXVIII Battalion
LXIX Battalion
IV Bersaglieri Brigade[52] 14th Bersaglieri Regiment XL Battalion
LIV Battalion
LXI Battalion
formed 1 April 1917
20th Bersaglieri Regiment LXX Battalion
LXXI Battalion
LXXII Battalion
V Bersaglieri Brigade[21]
(1st formation)
4th Bersaglieri Regiment XXIX Battalion
XXXVII Battalion
XLIII Battalion
formed 18 June 1917
destroyed 7 Nov. 1917[9]
21st Bersaglieri Regiment LXXIII Battalion
LXXIV Battalion
LXXV Battalion
V Bersaglieri Brigade[21]
(2nd formation)
5th Bersaglieri Regiment XIV Battalion
XXIV Battalion
XLVI Battalion
formed 1 March 1918
19th Bersaglieri Regiment XLI Battalion
XLII Battalion
XLV Battalion
VI Bersaglieri Brigade[35] 8th Bersaglieri Regiment V Battalion
XII Battalion
XXXVIII Battalion
formed 1 June 1918
13th Bersaglieri Regiment LIX Battalion
LX Battalion
LXII Battalion
VII Bersaglieri Brigade[17] 2nd Bersaglieri Regiment IV Battalion
XVII Battalion
LIII Battalion
formed 29 August 1918
3rd Bersaglieri Regiment XVIII Battalion
XX Battalion
XXV Battalion

Assault Divisions

At the end of 1915 each infantry regiment the Italian Army began to create Arditi platoons modeled after the German Stormtroopers. These units remained a regimental asset until 1917 when the 2nd Army on its own initiative an Arditi school in Sdricca di Manzano. The first unit raised from volunteers was officially activated with a live-fire exercise in front of King Victor Emmanuel III on 29 July 1917. Named I Assault Battalion (I Reparto d'Assalto) the successful exercise led to the creation of a second battalion, with both units having their baptism of fire during the Eleventh Battle of the Isonzo on the Banjšice Plateau.[76]

After the success of the Arditi during the Eleventh Battle of the Isonzo all armies were ordered to raise Arditi battalions. However each army raised and employed these battalions in different ways and only after the disastrous Battle of Caporetto did the Italian High Command take control of the formation and use of the Arditi units. Each army corps was to receive an Assault Battalion organized into a battalion HQ, three Arditi companies, three machine gun sections, six machine pistol section, and six flamethrower sections. The Bersaglieri raised three Assault battalions with similar composition.[76]

On 10 June 1918 the I Assault Division was created with three regiment-sized groupings of three Arditi battalions each with assigned HQ. On 25 June 1918 the II Assault Division was raised and the two divisions thus formed the Assault Army Corps (Corpo d'Armata d'Assalto). Each division consisted of three groupings with two assault battalions and a Bersaglieri battalion, with an attached group HQ. Additionally each division fielded one Bersaglieri cyclists battalion, a cavalry squadron, a mountain artillery group, a sapper battalion, and various support units. The six Bersaglieri battalions in the groupings had been deployed to Libya until 28 May 1918. Additionally the corps fielded the Cyclist Assault Reserve Battalion formed on 24 June 1918 from the remaining men of the II, VI, IX, and X cyclist battalions.[11]

The corps's two divisions had the following structure:

Division Group Battalion Notes
1st Assault Division[77]
(1a Divisione d'Assalto)
1st Group X Assault Battalion
XX Assault Battalion
I Bersaglieri Battalion 1st Bersaglieri Regiment
2nd Group XII Assault Battalion
XIII Assault Battalion
VII Bersaglieri Battalion 1st Bersaglieri Regiment
3rd Group VIII Assault Battalion
XX Assault Battalion
IX Bersaglieri Battalion 1st Bersaglieri Regiment
III Cyclists Battalion 3rd Bersaglieri Regiment
5th Cavalry Squadron Cavalry Rgt. Piacenza (18th)
IX Mountain Artillery Group 3rd Mountain Artillery Regiment
XCI Sapper Battalion
2nd Assault Division
(2a Divisione d'Assalto)
4th Group XIV Assault Battalion
XXV Assault Battalion
III Bersaglieri Battalion 8th Bersaglieri Regiment
5th Group I Assault Battalion
V Assault Battalion
XV Bersaglieri Battalion 11th Bersaglieri Regiment
6th Group VI Assault Battalion
XXX Assault Battalion
LV Bersaglieri Battalion Autonomous Battalion
XI Cyclists Battalion 11th Bersaglieri Regiment
6th Cavalry Squadron Cavalry Rgt. Piacenza (18th)
XII Mountain Artillery Group 3rd Mountain Artillery Regiment
Sapper Battalion

Geographical Distribution

In 1914 the 1st Bersaglieri Regiment moved its depot from Sanremo to Naples to be closer to its upcoming area of deployment in Libya, while the 5th Bersaglieri Regiment moved from Ancona into the vacant barracks located at Sanremo.

 
 
1° Bersaglieri
 
2° Bersaglieri
 
3° Bersaglieri
 
4° Bersaglieri
 
5° Bersaglieri
 
6° Bersaglieri
 
7° Bers.
 
8° Bersaglieri
 
9° Bersaglieri
 
10° Bersaglieri
 
11° Bersaglieri
 
12° Bersaglieri
class=notpageimage|
Bersaglieri Regiments 1914

Interwar years

After the war the nine wartime regiments were disbanded and the number of Bersaglieri battalions in the remaining regiments reduced to two per regiment. A new role was seen for the light infantry as part of Italy’s commitment to Mobile Warfare. The post-war Bersaglieri were converted into bicycle troops to fight alongside cavalry in the Celeri (fast) divisions. Elite units with high morale and an aggressive spirit were seen as one way to break such tactical stalemates as the trench warfare of 1915-18. The Bersaglieri gave Italy highly trained formations suitable for service with both cavalry and tanks. When the armoured divisions were formed in 1939, the link between the Bersaglieri and mobile warfare continued. Each new armoured and motorised division was allocated one Bersaglieri regiment.

Interwar Period

A single Bersaglieri regiment, the 3rd Bersagleri, took part in the Second Italo-Ethiopian War in October 1935, invading from Eritrea as part of the 30th Infantry Division Sabauda under General Italo Gariboldi. There, they took part in the Christmas Offensive and the Battle of Amba Aradam, among others. The regiment was detached and sent back to Asmara in March 1936 to join a new unit, the East Africa Fast Column under Achille Starace.

World War II

 
Bersaglieri in Ukraine in 1941

Italy began the Second World War with twelve Bersaglieri regiments of three battalions each. Over the preceding years the Army had resisted suggestions to dilute the regiment's quality, and recruits continued to be of above-average size and stamina, endured intense physical training and had to qualify as marksmen. During the war an additional Bersaglieri regiment, the 18th, with three battalions was raised, but only one of its battalions saw combat.

The Bersaglieri fought in the Italian invasion of France and in the Greco-Italian War, later Bersaglieri regiments were deployed on the Eastern Front. One battalion of Bersaglieri participated in the East African Campaign. Six Bersaglieri regiments served and were destroyed during the North African Campaign.

After the Armistice of Cassibile between the Kingdom of Italy and Western Allies on 8 September 1943, Italy split in half. The Republic of Salò continued the war alongside Nazi Germany. Its Army, the fascist National Republican Army, raised the 1st Bersaglieri Division "Italia", which was attached to the German 14th Army in a sector on the Northern Apennines. The division fought along the Gothic Line, and at the end of the final allied offensive, along with two Wehrmacht and the last fascist divisions, surrendered after the Battle of Collecchio.[78][79][80]

On the other side of the front the Italian Co-belligerent Army raised a Bersaglieri battalion as part of the Combat Group "Legnano" from remnants of the 4th Bersaglieri Regiment.

Cold War

During the Cold War the Bersaglieri were exclusively employed as mechanized infantry. The three active Bersaglieri regiments were assigned to the Army's armored divisions, with the 3rd and 8th regiments fielding two Bersaglieri and one tank battalion, while the 1st Armored Bersaglieri Regiment fielded two tank and one Bersaglieri battalion. Additionally each of the three active tank regiments fielded one Bersaglieri and two tank battalions, while the four armored infantry regiments of the motorized divisions fielded one Bersaglieri and one tank battalion each. Without exception the Bersaglieri battalions were armed with M113 armored personnel carriers.

At the end of 1974 the following Bersaglieri regiments were active:

At the end of 1974 the following tank regiments fielded one Bersaglieri battalion:

Together the three Bersaglieri and three tank regiments formed the army's two armored divisions:

The remaining four active Bersaglieri battalions were assigned to the army's four armored infantry regiments:

1975 army reform

During the Italian Army reform of 1975 the regimental level was abolished and battalions became independent units under newly formed brigades. The Army formed the 3rd Mechanized Brigade "Goito" with the regimental command and units of the 3rd Bersaglieri Regiment and the 8th Mechanized Brigade "Garibaldi" with the regimental command and units of the 8th Bersaglieri Regiment. Both brigades received one extra Bersaglieri battalion from disbanded armored infantry regiments and both fielded only personnel - with the exception of the tank crews and artillerists - from the Bersaglieri corps.

 
Soldiers of the 2nd Bersaglieri Battalion "Governolo" on patrol with the Multinational Force in Lebanon in 1982

When the battalions became independent they received the flags and traditions of disbanded Bersaglieri regiments and each battalion was given an honorary name commemorating a significant event in which it had participated: e.g. the 3rd Bersaglieri Battalion "Cernaia" received its honorary name to commemorate the conduct of the battalion during the Battle of the Chernaya in Crimea during the Crimean War in 1855. In the following list of Bersaglieri units active in 1977.

Additionally the Bersaglieri fielded five anti-tank companies, one per Bersaglieri and one per Armored Brigade (Armored brigades "Manin", "Centauro", and "Mameli").

With the end of the Cold War, the Italian army began a reduction in personnel and units which also affected the Bersaglieri. On 1 June 1991 the Mechanized Brigade "Goito" was disbanded, while the Mechanized Brigade "Garibaldi" moved to the Southern city of Caserta, as the Army had decided to reduce the number of units in the north of Italy. The Garibaldi arrived in Caserta on 1 July 1991 and changed its name to 8th Bersaglieri Brigade "Garibaldi". Also in 1991, the battalions of the Army were renamed as regiments without changing composition.

Current structure

 
A Bersagliere of the NATO Response Force

While in the past the mobility of the Bersaglieri manifested itself in running and the use of bicycles, regiments currently in service are all mechanised with either Dardo or Freccia infantry fighting vehicles. To distinguish them from other infantry units the Bersaglieri collar patches are crimson-red and enlisted troops wear a red fez instead of berets. Officers wear black berets with their standard uniform, but a feathered "vaira" when dressed in ceremonial uniform. They also wear black gloves, while other Italian regiments wear white ones. Originally each Bersaglieri regiment had a band called a "fanfara", who played their instruments at the double while on parade. Today only the Garibaldi Brigade, 6th and 7th Bersaglieri Regiment retain a "fanfara", which are technically brass bands.

Since 1982 Bersaglieri have served as peacekeepers with the Multinational Force in Lebanon, and during the Yugoslav and Somali Civil Wars. Bersaglier units also served in Operation Iraqi Freedom and were repeatedly deployed to serve in the war in Afghanistan. As of 2019 the following Bersaglieri units are in active service:

Bugle calls

 
The Bersaglieri Bugles during a Tattoo in 2006.

In mid-1800 the Bersaglieri were born as light infantry sharpshooters fighting in loose skirmish formations, and specific bugle calls were used to direct the units in the confusion of the battlefield. Each battalion[94] had its own specific bugle call played repeatedly to rally the troops or used as a sort of "address" before tactical bugle calls, to identify who the order was intended for (for example, a composite bugle call could be "1st Bersaglieri" + "Company" + "Right/Nr.3" + "Deploy in open order").

Regimental Bugle Calls Tactical Bugle Calls

Notes

  1. ^ Traficante, Tony (7 September 2017). "The Bersaglieri: Italy's Spectacular Military Group". ISDA Website. Italian Sons and Daughters of America. Retrieved 10 September 2018.
  2. ^ Wavell 1968 pp. 90–1
  3. ^ "Distaccamento Italiano di Palestina". Australian Light Horse Studies Centre. 18 April 2009. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
  4. ^ fiammecremisiguerra1172. "Bersaglieri a Gerusalemme" (in Italian). Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g L'Esercito Italiano nella Grande Guerra 1915-18 - Volume III Tomo 1 - Le Operazioni del 1916 - Gli avvenimenti invernali. Rome: Ufficio Storico - Stato Maggiore dell'Esercito. 1940. p. 10. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
  6. ^ a b c d F. dell'Uomo, R. Puletti (1998). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Primo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 414.
  7. ^ a b c d "4° Reggimento Bersaglieri". Fronte del Piave. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  8. ^ a b c d e L'Esercito Italiano nella Grande Guerra 1915-18 - Volume IV Tomo 1 - L'ampliamento dell'Esercito nell'anno 1917. Rome: Ufficio Storico - Stato Maggiore dell'Esercito. 1940. p. 14. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g L'Esercito Italiano nella Grande Guerra 1915-18 - Volume V Tomo 1 bis - Gli Avvenimenti 1918 dal Gennaio-Giugno. Rome: Ufficio Storico - Stato Maggiore dell'Esercito. 1940. p. 23. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  10. ^ a b c L'Esercito Italiano nella Grande Guerra 1915-18 - Volume V Tomo 1 - Gli Avvenimenti 1918 dal Gennaio-Giugno. Rome: Ufficio Storico - Stato Maggiore dell'Esercito. 1940. p. 76. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
  11. ^ a b c L'Esercito Italiano nella Grande Guerra 1915-18 - Volume V Tomo 2 - La conclusione del conflitto 1918. Rome: Ufficio Storico - Stato Maggiore dell'Esercito. 1940. pp. 157–159. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  12. ^ a b c d F. dell'Uomo, R. Puletti (1998). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Primo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 397.
  13. ^ a b c d "1° Reggimento Bersaglieri". Fronte del Piave. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  14. ^ "1° Reggimento Bersaglieri - La Storia". Esercito Italiano. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
  15. ^ a b F. dell'Uomo, R. Puletti (1998). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Primo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 403.
  16. ^ a b "2° Reggimento Bersaglieri". Fronte del Piave. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  17. ^ a b c "VII Brigata Bersaglieri". Fronte del Piave. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  18. ^ F. dell'Uomo, R. Puletti (1998). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Primo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 408.
  19. ^ "3° Reggimento Bersaglieri". Fronte del Piave. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  20. ^ "3° Reggimento Bersaglieri - La Storia". Esercito Italiano. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
  21. ^ a b c d e f "V Brigata Bersaglieri". Fronte del Piave. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  22. ^ a b F. dell'Uomo, R. di Rosa (2001). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Secondo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 479.
  23. ^ a b "5° Reggimento Bersaglieri". Fronte del Piave. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  24. ^ F. dell'Uomo, R. Puletti (1998). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Primo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 419.
  25. ^ "6° Reggimento Bersaglieri". Fronte del Piave. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  26. ^ "6° Reggimento Bersaglieri - La Storia". Esercito Italiano. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
  27. ^ a b c "I Brigata Bersaglieri". Fronte del Piave. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  28. ^ a b F. dell'Uomo, R. Puletti (1998). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Primo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 424.
  29. ^ a b "7° Reggimento Bersaglieri". Fronte del Piave. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  30. ^ "7° Reggimento Bersaglieri - La Storia". Esercito Italiano. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
  31. ^ a b c d "II Brigata Bersaglieri". Fronte del Piave. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  32. ^ a b F. dell'Uomo, R. Puletti (1998). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Primo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 429.
  33. ^ a b "8° Reggimento Bersaglieri". Fronte del Piave. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  34. ^ "8° Reggimento Bersaglieri - La Storia". Esercito Italiano. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
  35. ^ a b c "VI Brigata Bersaglieri". Fronte del Piave. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  36. ^ F. dell'Uomo, R. Puletti (1998). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Primo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 434.
  37. ^ "9° Reggimento Bersaglieri". Fronte del Piave. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  38. ^ F. dell'Uomo, R. di Rosa (2001). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Secondo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 483.
  39. ^ "10° Reggimento Bersaglieri". Fronte del Piave. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
  40. ^ a b F. dell'Uomo, R. Puletti (1998). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Primo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 438.
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  84. ^ F. dell'Uomo, R. Puletti (1998). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Primo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 429.
  85. ^ F. dell'Uomo, R. Puletti (1998). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Primo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 540.
  86. ^ F. dell'Uomo, R. Puletti (1998). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Primo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 543.
  87. ^ F. dell'Uomo, R. Puletti (1998). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Primo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 553.
  88. ^ F. dell'Uomo, R. Puletti (1998). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Primo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 532.
  89. ^ F. dell'Uomo, R. Puletti (1998). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Primo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 532.
  90. ^ Stefani, Filippo (1989). La storia della dottrina e degli ordinamenti dell'Esercito Italiano - Vol. III - Tomo 2°. Rome: Ufficio Storico - Stato Maggiore dell'Esercito. p. 351.
  91. ^ F. dell'Uomo, R. Puletti (1998). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Primo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 536.
  92. ^ F. dell'Uomo, R. di Rosa (2001). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Secondo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 115.
  93. ^ F. dell'Uomo, R. di Rosa (2001). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Secondo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 353.
  94. ^ Later each regiment.
  95. ^ Half battalion

References

  • Chase, Patrick J. Seek, Strike, Destroy: the History of the 894th Tank Destroyer Battalion in World War II Gateway Press, 1995. Page 90
  • Giannasi, Andrea. "Il Brasile in guerra: la partecipazione della Força Expedicionaria Brasileira alla campagna d'Italia (1944-1945)" (in Italian) Prospettiva Editrice, 2004. ISBN 8874182848. Pages 146-48.
  • Popa, Thomas A. "Po Valley 1945" WWII Campaigns, United States Army Center of Military History, 1996. ISBN 0-16-048134-1. CMH Pub 72-33.
  • Wavell, Field Marshal Earl (1968) [1933]. "The Palestine Campaigns". In Sheppard, Eric William (ed.). A Short History of the British Army (4th ed.). London: Constable & Co. OCLC 35621223.

Further reading

See also

External links

  • Video showing distinctive feathered hats and fast jog pace (3:56. Best view is from 3:02-3:22)
  • Italian military report the capture of 300 British paratroopers by part of the Bersaglieri
  • Photos

bersaglieri, singular, bersagliere, italian, pronunciation, bersaʎˈʎɛːri, sharpshooter, troop, marksmen, italian, army, infantry, corps, they, were, originally, created, general, alessandro, marmora, june, 1836, serve, royal, sardinian, army, which, later, bec. The Bersaglieri singular Bersagliere Italian pronunciation bersaʎˈʎɛːri sharpshooter are a troop of marksmen in the Italian Army s infantry corps They were originally created by General Alessandro La Marmora on 18 June 1836 to serve in the Royal Sardinian Army which later became the Royal Italian Army They can be recognized by their distinctive wide brimmed hats decorated with black capercaillie feathers which is worn with the dress uniform The feathers are also applied to their combat helmets A Bersagliere in 1900 8th Bersaglieri Regiment in 2007 Bersaglieri Helmet WW II Contents 1 Description 2 Origins and history 3 Unified Italy 4 World War I 4 1 Peacetime regiments 4 2 Regiments raised during the war 4 3 Cyclist Battalions 4 4 Autonomous Battalions 4 5 Machine Gunner Companies 4 6 Special Bersaglieri Division 4 7 Bersaglieri Brigades 4 8 Assault Divisions 4 9 Geographical Distribution 5 Interwar years 6 Interwar Period 7 World War II 8 Cold War 8 1 1975 army reform 9 Current structure 10 Bugle calls 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 See also 15 External linksDescription EditThe Bersaglieri Corps were a high mobility light infantry at their inception in 1836 with their specific situation evolving with changes in warfare In the nineteenth century Bersaglieri acted as skirmishers or shock troops moving from place to place by running An elaborate system of bugle calls allowed their units to be deployed and commanded quickly singly or in combination The tradition of running continues today in parades and during barracks duty In World War I some Bersaglieri served as bicycle troops better to execute their mission of maneuver warfare During the Cold War the Bersaglieri were exclusively employed as mechanized infantry Bersaglieri are well known for their extraordinary performances in parades and military tattoos always running instead of marching with hundreds of black capercaillie feathers flowing from their wide brimmed black hats These feathers are also worn on Bersaglieri combat helmets They once served a military purpose acting as camouflage and as a sunshade for the marksman s shooting eye Today they are a badge of honour attracting new recruits and fostering esprit among their wearers 1 Origins and history Edit The Bersaglieri halt the Russian attack during the Battle of the Chernaya The relatively poor Kingdom of Sardinia could not afford large numbers of cavalry so a quick moving infantry corps of marksmen were needed These troops were trained to high physical and marksmanship standards Like the French chasseurs a pied a level of independence and initiative was encouraged so that they could operate in looser formations in which direct command and control was not required They fired individually and carried 60 rounds instead of the standard 40 rounds of traditional line infantry The first uniform was black with brimmed hats called vaira These were intended to defend the head from sabre blows The first public appearance of the Bersaglieri was on the occasion of a military parade on 1 July 1836 The First Company marched through Turin with the rapid high stepping gait 180 paces minute still used by the Bersaglieri in World War II and later The modern Bersaglieri still run both on parade and even during barracks duty on penalty of punishment if they do not The new corps impressed King Charles Albert who immediately had them integrated as part of the Piedmontese regular army The corps grew rapidly and by 1852 there were already 10 battalions each with four companies Throughout the nineteenth century the Bersaglieri filled the role of skirmishers screening the slow moving line and column formations but acting as special shock troops if required They were originally intended to serve as mountain troops as well the climber Jean Antoine Carrel was a Bersagliere When the Alpini Corps were created in 1872 a strong rivalry arose between the two elite corps Unified Italy Edit British commercial advertising showing a Bersagliere circa 1890 During the First War of Italian Independence 1848 1849 the Bersaglieri distinguished themselves by storming the bridge at Goito in an episode known to later historiography as the battle of Goito bridge la Battaglia del Ponte di Goito In 1855 the Bersaglieri provided five battalions for the Sardinian Expeditionary Corps in the Crimean War where they were involved in the Siege of Sevastopol and the Battle of the Cernaia Most of the casualties were suffered due to a cholera epidemic Their bravery at the Cernaia was widely recognized and played a key role in gaining Piedmont Sardinia a seat in the negotiations at the war s end For their effort in the Crimea the Bersaglieri were rewarded a red fez with a blue tassel in honour from the French zouaves troops with whom they served as they watched the Bersaglieri s bravery in the battle When the Armata Sarda became the Regio Esercito Royal Italian Army in 1860 the existing 36 battalions were used to create six Bersaglieri regiments which had administrative and disciplinary duties The regiments were assigned to the army corps with the regiment s battalions assigned to the divisions in the corps as reconnaissance units 1st Bersaglieri Regiment under I Army Corps with the I IX XIII XIX XXI and XXVII battalions 2nd Bersaglieri Regiment under II Army Corps with the II IV X XV XVII and XVIII battalions 3rd Bersaglieri Regiment under III Army Corps with the III V VIII XX XXIII and XXV battalions 4th Bersaglieri Regiment under IV Army Corps with the VI VII XI XII XXXV and XXXVI battalions 5th Bersaglieri Regiment under V Army Corps with the XIV XVI XXII XXIV XXVI and XXXIV battalions 6th Bersaglieri Regiment under VI Army Corps with the XXVIII XXIX XXX XXXI XXXII and XXXIII battalionsThe most famous action of the Bersaglieri occurred on 20 September 1870 when the 12th Bersaglieri battalion stormed Rome through a breach created by Italian artillery in the Aurelian Walls near Porta Pia leading to the capture of Rome and end of the temporal power of the Pope thus completing the unification of Italy A monument was erected in 1932 in front of Porta Pia to commemorate the event at the same time as the National Museum of the Bersaglieri corps was moved to Porta Pia where it resides still today In 1871 the Bersaglieri corps added another four battalions and the regiments were increased from six to 10 and given also operational command of the battalions In 1883 a further two regiments were added for a total of 12 Bersaglieri regiments one for each army corps with three battalions per regiment Therefore the four battalions raised in 1871 were disbanded 1st Bersaglieri Regiment under I Army Corps with the I VII and IX battalions 2nd Bersaglieri Regiment under II Army Corps with the II IV and XVII battalions 3rd Bersaglieri Regiment under III Army Corps with the XVIII XX and XXV battalions 4th Bersaglieri Regiment under IV Army Corps with the XXVI XXIX and XXXI battalions 5th Bersaglieri Regiment under V Army Corps with the XIV XXII and XXIV battalions 6th Bersaglieri Regiment under VI Army Corps with the VI XIII and XIX battalions 7th Bersaglieri Regiment under VII Army Corps with the VIII X and XI battalions 8th Bersaglieri Regiment under VIII Army Corps with the III V and XII battalions 9th Bersaglieri Regiment under IX Army Corps with the XXVIII XXX and XXXII battalions 10th Bersaglieri Regiment under X Army Corps with the XVI XXXIV and XXXV battalions 11th Bersaglieri Regiment under XI Army Corps with the XV XXVII and XXXIII battalions 12th Bersaglieri Regiment under XII Army Corps with the XXI XXIII and XXXVI battalionsWorld War I Edit AVANTI ITALIA The War Illustrated Vol 5 No 106 Aug 1916 During World War I the 12 existing Bersaglieri regiments were augmented by nine newly raised regiments and fought with distinction on the Italian Front Of the 210 000 members of Bersaglieri regiments 32 000 were killed and 50 000 wounded during the war Italy s last surviving World War I veteran Delfino Borroni was a member of the 6th Bersaglieri Regiment from Bologna Another member who served as Bersagliere on the front and was wounded was Benito Mussolini A contingent of Bersaglieri drawn from the autonomous battalions of the 1st Bersaglieri Regiment was sent to participate in the Sinai and Palestine Campaign in 1917 where they were attached to the Egyptian Expeditionary Force commanded by General Edmund Allenby Their mainly political role was to assert hereditary ecclesiastical prerogatives in connection with the Christian churches at Jerusalem and Bethlehem 2 3 4 Peacetime regiments Edit At the outbreak of World War I in 1914 the Bersaglieri corps consisted of 12 regiments each organized into a regimental HQ three battalions on foot and one cyclist s battalion Each regiment also contained a machine gun section with two machine guns The battalions on foot consisted of three companies of 250 men each while the cyclist battalions consisted of three companies of 150 men each Additionally each cyclist s battalion had its own machine gun section with two machine guns 5 Between the outbreak of the war and the Italian declaration of war on 23 May 1915 the Italian army was forced to send the 1st Bersaglieri Regiment and five battalions from other Bersaglieri regiments to Libya as the local population fiercely resisted the Italian occupation On 29 December 1914 the army sent the 10th Bersaglieri Regiment to Albania which was in turmoil after its freshly installed ruler William Prince of Albania had fled the country in September 1914 Already since 4 May 1912 two battalions of the 4th Bersaglieri Regiment were in Rhodes to garrison the newly conquered Italian Islands of the Aegean 6 7 With war imminent the army began to raise new Bersaglieri battalions to replace the battalions deployed overseas and on 8 April 1915 the 10th bis Bersaglieri Regiment was formed to replace the 10th deployed in Albania Starting in January 1915 additional battalions were raised starting which remained autonomous and were not integrated into an existing regiment When hostilities commended the Bersaglieri consisted of 5 13 regiments one in Libya one in Albania eleven in Italy 55 battalions on foot 41 grouped in 13 regiments two deployed to Rhodes 14 autonomous battalions of which seven in Libya and seven at the Italian Front 12 cyclist battalionsOn 10 January 1916 the High Command ordered to increase all Bersaglieri battalions on foot by one company to four companies with the battalions deployed to Libya being exempt retaining three Later that spring the Bersaglieri companies of the battalions on foot were reduced from 250 to 225 men but in turn each battalion received its own machine gun section with two machine guns a submachine gun section with two Villar Perosa submachine guns and a Sapper unit with 88 men On 3 March 1916 the regimental command of the 1st Bersaglieri Regiment was disbanded and its battalions became autonomous 5 At the end of 1916 the Bersaglieri fielded 5 8 15 regiments one in Albania 14 in Italy 48 battalions on foot 45 grouped in 15 regiments and three autonomous battalions Each of these battalions consisted of four companies of 225 men each a sapper unit a machine gun section and two submachine gun sections 15 autonomous battalions on foot two deployed to Rhodes thirteen in Libya Each of these battalions consisted of three companies of 250 men each and a machine gun section 12 cyclist battalions each with three companies of 150 men and a machine gun sectionEarly in 1917 each battalion in Italy received a second submachine gun section and in May the battalions were thoroughly reorganized the machine gun sections of each battalion were increased to a machine gun company with six machine guns while the battalion s 4th companies were grouped in independent marching battalions Battaglione di Marcia which acted as personnel reserve for the armies deployed to the front 8 After the defeat at Caporetto the Italian army was forced to retreat from the Isonzo river to the Piave river During the retreat four Bersaglieri regiments and three autonomous battalions were so badly mauled that they had to be disbanded besides the wartime regiments 15 and 21 also the peacetime regiments 4 and 9 were disbanded 9 Thus at the end of 1917 the Bersaglieri corps consisted of 8 16 regiments one in Albania 15 in Italy 48 battalions on foot grouped in 16 regiments Each of these battalions consisted of three companies of 225 men each a machine gun company a sapper unit and two submachine gun sections 15 autonomous battalions on foot two deployed to Rhodes ten in Libya Each of these battalions consisted of three companies of 250 men each and a machine gun section 12 cyclist battalions each with three companies of 150 men and a machine gun sectionAfter the Battle of Caporetto the Chief of Staff of the Italian Army Luigi Cadorna was finally dismissed and replaced by Armando Diaz Diaz reorganized the army and ordered the Bersaglieri battalions to be reorganized the companies on foot were reduced to 150 men in three platoons two of infantry and one of sappers and combat support troops At the same the machine gun companies were increased to eight machine guns and the submachine gun sections increased to three and attached to the companies Each battalion also received a Stokes mortar section while each regiment received a flamethrower section and a reparto cannoncini d accompagnamento loosely translated small accompaniment cannons unit with Italian copies of the Austrian 3 7cm Infantry Gun M 15 10 11 Additionally the command of the 16th Bersaglieri Regiment was disbanded and its battalions became autonomous six of the autonomous battalions deployed to Libya were ordered to return and reorganized as the other battalions on the Italian front The cyclist battalions were also reorganized see the Cyclist Battalions section here below 10 At the onset of the last offensive of the war the Bersaglieri was organized on the following structure 15 regiments one in Albania 14 in Italy 45 battalions on foot grouped in 15 regiments Each of these battalions consisted of three companies of 150 men each a machine gun company three submachine gun sections and a Stokes mortar section 12 autonomous battalions on foot two deployed to Rhodes four in Libya and six battalions assigned to the two divisions of the Assault Army Corps The overseas battalions consisted of three companies of 250 men each and a machine gun section while the six battalions of the Assault Army Corps were organized as the regimental battalions 8 cyclist battalions each with three companies of 150 men and a machine gun section six in two groups and attached to cavalry divisions and two assigned to the Assault Army Corps 10 Peacetime regimentsRegiment Battalions Based in Notes Battles1st Bersaglieri 12 13 14 I VII IX I Cyc Naples Regiment without the I Cyclists Btn deployed in LibyaRegimental command disbanded 3 March 1916 battalions became autonomous Regiment raised the 21st Bersaglieri Regiment LV Autonomous Battalion I VII IX battalions 19 May 1915 arrived in Libya 28 May 1918 returned to Italy 29 June 1918 entered 1st Assault Div 1918 Battle of Vittorio Veneto SernagliaI Cyclists 1915 Fogliano Monte Sei Busi Sella San Martino 1916 Trincea delle Frasche Asiago Coston di Lora Monte Pasubio Monte Fior Marcesina 1917 Castagnevizza Piave Forcella Muis Forcella Campidello Lestans Sequals 1918 Caposile Fossalta Capo d Argine Monte Castellazzo Vittorio Veneto2nd Bersaglieri 15 16 II IVXVIILIIIII Cyc Rome 29 Aug 1918 VII Bersaglieri Bde 17 II Btn in Libya24 June 1918 II Cyclists disbandedRegiment raised the 14th Bersaglieri Regiment LIII Btn to replace II Btn LIV Autonomous Battalion LXI Btn for the 14th Rgt LXIV Btn for the 17th Rgt XXVI Assault Battalion 1915 Monte Coston Costa d Agra Monte Maronia Val di Sole1916 Plezzo Oslavia Zaibena Nad Logem Monte Kuk1917 Monte Santo Monte Mrzli Monte Pleca Kamno Monte Stol Sequals Piave1918 Montello Vittorio Veneto Paradiso3rd Bersaglieri 18 19 20 XVIIIXXXXVIII Cyc Livorno 29 Aug 1918 VII Bersaglieri Bde 17 Regiment raised the 13th Bersaglieri Regiment XL Btn for the 14th Rgt LX Btn for the 13th Rgt LXV Btn for the 17th Rgt 1915 Col di Lana Carso Vermegliano Monte Sei Busi1916 Selz quota 70 Monte Sief Piccolo Colbricon Val Cismon Carso Monfalcone quota 85 Jamiano quota 1441917 Carso Flondar Monte Ermada Monfenera Piave Zenson Ponte di Pinzano1918 Monte Costalunga 2nd Piave Fosso Gorgazzo Fossalta Meolo Vittorio Veneto Serravalle Fadalto Pass Pieve di Cadore4th Bersaglieri 6 7 XXVI XXIX XXXI XXXVIIXLIIIIV Cyc Turin 8 June 7 Nov 1917 V Bersaglieri Bde 21 XXVI Btn and XXXI Btn in Rhodes9 Dec 1917 Rgt disbanded 9 Caporetto Regiment raised the 19th Bersaglieri Regiment 20th Bersaglieri Regiment XXXVII Btn to replace XXXI Btn XLI Autonomous Battalion XLII Autonomous BattalionRegiment received the XLIII Btn from the 9th Rgt as replacement for the XXVI Btn 1915 Isonzo Ajba St Lucia di Tolmino1916 St Maria di Tolmino Monte Mrzli Zagora Monfalcone quota 851917 Bodrez Semmer Monte Fratta Bainsizza Ossoiuka Oscedrilk Monte Globokak Monte Badenecche Monte Tonderecar1918 Monfenera San Bartolomeo di Piave Molino Novo Grave di Papadopoli Vittorio Veneto Maniago Flagogna Tolmezzo5th Bersaglieri 22 23 XIV XXII XXIVXLVIV Cyc Sanremo 1 March 1918 V Bersaglieri Bde 21 XXII Btn in LibyaRegiment raised the XLVI Btn to replace XXII Btn XLVII Autonomous Battalion LXXII Assault Battalion 1915 Isonzo Santa Lucia Alture di Polazzo Monte Mrzli1916 Isonzo Dolje Monte Mrzli Monte Vodil Asiago Monte Lemerle Magnaboschi Kaberlaba Carso Monfalcone quota 85 quota 121 Nova Vas quota 208 Jamiano quota 1441917 Monte Gallio Monte Sisemol Monte Melago Col del Rosso1918 Monte Valbella Sernaglia6th Bersaglieri 24 25 26 VIXIIIXIXVI Cyc Bologna 15 Feb 1916 I Bersaglieri Bde 27 24 June 1918 VI Cyclists disbandedRegiment raised the 15th Bersaglieri Regiment XLIX Autonomous Battalion L Autonomous Battalion 1915 Plezzo1916 Carso Veliki Hribach Pecinka quota 3081917 Isonzo Monte Vodice Bainsizza Semmer Oscedrilk quota 808 Monte Globokak Pradamano Monte Tonderecar1918 Monte Cornone Sasso Rosso7th Bersaglieri 28 29 30 VIIIX XI XLIVVII Cyc Brescia 6 Nov 1916 II Bersaglieri Bde 31 XI Btn in LibyaRegiment raised the XLIV Btn to replace XI Btn XLV Autonomous Battalion all Fiat Revelli Modello 1914 equipped Bersaglieri Machine Gunner Companies 1915 Val di Ledro Bezzecca Monte Vies1916 17 Carso Jamiano quota 144 Flondar1918 2nd Piave Vittorio Veneto Occupation of Triest8th Bersaglieri 32 33 34 III VXIIXXXVIIIVIII Cyc Verona 1 June 1918 VI Bersaglieri Bde 35 III Battalion until 28 May 1918 in Libya 29 June 1918 entered 2nd Assault Div Regiment raised the XXXVIII Btn to replace III Btn XLVIII Autonomous Battalion XXII Assault Battalion 1915 17 CadoreCandelu Fagare Caserta island Piave river Vittorio Veneto Piave Livenza Tagliamento Ariis Paradiso9th Bersaglieri 36 37 XXVIIIXXXXXXIIIX Cyc Asti 11 Feb 6 Nov 1916 II Bersaglieri Bde 31 28 Nov 1917 Rgt disbanded 9 Caporetto 24 June 1918 X Cyclists disbanded Regiment raised the 16th Bersaglieri Regiment XLIII Btn as replacement for the XXVI Btn of the 4th Rgt LIX Btn for the 13th Rgt Regiment 1915 Plezzo Oslavia 1916 Oslavia Monte Zebio Monte Colombara Carso Nad Logem Gorizia 1917 Monte Ermada Monte Ortigara Monte Forno Agnello Pass Monte Pleca Monte Kozliak Monte CarnizzaIX Cyclists 1918 2nd Piave10th Bersaglieri 38 39 XVIXXXIVXXXVX Cyc Palermo 29 Dec 1914 Rgt deployed to Albania24 June 1918 X Cyclists disbandedRegiment raised the 16th Bersaglieri Regiment LVII Btn for the 16th Rgt LVIII Btn for the 16th Rgt LXIII Btn for the 16th Rgt LXIX Btn for the 18th Rgt Regiment 1915 1918 AlbaniaX Cyclists 1915 Canina 1916 Forcella Omladet 1917 Monte Santo Bainsizza Valsugana Monte Tomba Cormons Santa Lucia di Polcenigo 1918 Fagare Fossalta Scolo Palumbo11th Bersaglieri 40 41 42 XV XXVIIXXXIIIXXXIXXI Cyc 43 Naples 11 Feb 1916 II Bersaglieri Bde 31 XV Battalion until 28 May 1918 in Libya 9 July 1918 entered 2nd Assault Div Regiment raised the 17th Bersaglieri Regiment XXXIX Btn to replace XV Btn LI Autonomous Battalion LXVI Btn for the 17th Rgt LXVII Btn for the 18th Rgt Regiment 1915 Carso Monte San Michele Plezzo Monte Javorcek 1916 Monfalcone quota 85 quota 93 quota 144 1917 Carso Jamiano Flondar Monte Piana Mauria Pass 1918 Stretta di Serravalle Revine Lago Occupation of TriestXI Cyclists 1915 Gradisca Lucinico Monte San Michele 1916 Vermegliano Cave di Sels Monfalcone 1917 Doberdo Flondar Sella Nevea Forcella la Croce Monfenera 1918 2nd Piave Monte Grappa Revine Lago12th Bersaglieri 44 45 46 XXIXXIIIXXXVIXII Cyc Milan 15 Feb 1916 I Bersaglieri Bde 27 Regiment raised the 18th Bersaglieri Regiment LII Autonomous Battalion LVI Autonomous Battalion LXVIII Btn for the 18th Rgt 1915 Monte Mrzli Monte Sleme1916 Carso Veliki Hribach Pecinka quota 308 Vippacco1917 Isonzo Monte Vodice Bainsizza Semmer Oscedrilk Monte Globokak Pradamano Melette di Gallio1918 Val Frenzela Pizzo Razzea Vittorio VenetoRegiments raised during the war Edit At the outbreak of the war the army fielded 13 Bersaglieri regiments the twelve peacetime regiments and the 10th bis Bersaglieri Regiment which had been raised with new battalions on 8 April 1915 to replace the 10th Bersaglieri Regiment sent to Vlore in Albania on 29 December 1914 During 1915 two more regiments were raised the 1st bis Bersaglieri Regiment with three autonomous battalions and then 13th Bersaglieri Regiment with three new battalions 5 8 April 1915 10th bis Bersaglieri Regiment 8 25 June 1915 13th Provisional Bersaglieri Regiment The regiment was formed from new battalions and meant to replace the 1st Bersaglieri Regiment deployed to Libya but it became never operational and upon reaching the front the regiment was disbanded and its battalions became autonomous 24 September 1915 1st bis Bersaglieri Regiment formed from the three autonomous of the short lived 13th Provisional Bersaglieri Regiment 22 November 1915 13th Bersaglieri RegimentOn 5 January 1916 the 1st bis Bersaglieri Regiment changed its name and became the 15th Bersaglieri Regiment while on the same date the 10th bis Bersaglieri Regiment changed its name and became 16th Bersaglieri Regiment During 1916 only one new regiment was raised the 14th Bersaglieri Regiment on 11 March with two newly formed and one autonomous battalion 5 In 1917 the army raised five new Bersaglieri regiments the 17th and 18th regiments with newly raised battalions the 19th regiment with three autonomous battalions and the 20th and 21st regiments with reserve battalions 8 31 Jan 1917 18th Bersaglieri Regiment 6 Feb 1917 17th Bersaglieri Regiment 15 Feb 1917 19th Bersaglieri Regiment 1 April 1917 20th Bersaglieri Regiment 27 April 1917 21st Bersaglieri RegimentDue to the defeat at the Battle of Caporetto the army was forced to disbanded the 15th and the 21st Bersaglieri regiments with their battalions in November 1917 In 1918 the command of the 16th Bersaglieri Regiment was disbanded and its three battalions became autonomous 8 9 After the war four of the regiments raised for the conflict were disbanded 13th 14th 17th 18th while the 19th Bersaglieri Regiment was renamed 4th Bersaglieri Regiment and the 20th Bersaglieri Regiment was renamed 9th Bersaglieri Regiment Of the nine regiments raised during the war none except for 18th Bersaglieri Regiment was ever activated again The 18th was active again from 1 April 1935 until 31 December 1936 from 1 February 1942 until 8 September 1943 and for the last time from 10 September 1993 until 1 January 2005 47 Regiments raised during the warRegiment Battalions Raised onRaised by Notes Battles13th Bersaglieri 48 49 LIXLXLXII 22 Nov 19153rd Ber LX9th Ber LXI11th Ber LXII 1 Jan 1918 VI Bersaglieri Bde 35 1919 disbanded 1916 Alpi di Fassa1917 Monte Pertica Monte Grappa1918 Caposile Candelu Breda Cima Ninni Vittorio Veneto Grave di Papadopoli14th Bersaglieri 50 51 XLLIVLXI 11 March 19162nd Ber LIV LXI3rd Ber XL Raised from two new XL LXI and one autonomous battalion LIV 1 April 1917 IV Bersaglieri Bde 52 12 April 1919 Rgt disbanded 1916 San Michele Asiago Marcesina Monte Zebio1917 Val d Astico Val Posina Borgo Luico Monte Sisemol1918 Monte Valbella 2nd Piave Vittorio Veneto Trento15th Bersaglieri 53 54 XLIXLLI 5 Jan 19166th Ber XLIX L11th Ber LI Raised from three autonomous battalions XLIX Btn raised Jan 1915 L Btn raised Jan 1915 LI Btn raised 191524 Sep 1915 5 Jan 1916 1st bis Bersaglieri Rgt 7 Nov 1917 Rgt disbanded 9 Caporetto 1915 Redipuglia Third Isonzo Trincea delle Frasche1916 Monfalcone Monte Sei Busi Doberdo Jamiano quota 208 sud1917 Caporetto16th Bersaglieri 55 56 LVIILVIIILXIII 5 Jan 191610th Bersaglieri 8 April 1915 5 Jan 1916 10th bis Bersaglieri Rgt with XVI bis XXXIV bis XXXV bis7 March 1918 Rgt disbanded andbattalions transferred to other units 1915 Monte Mrzli Monte Vodil1916 Pal Piccolo1917 Ampezzano Monte Iof Meduna river17th Bersaglieri 57 58 LXIVLXVLXVI 6 Feb 19172nd Ber LXIV3rd Ber LXV11th Ber LXVI 6 Feb 1917 III Bersaglieri Bde 59 March 1919 Rgt disbanded 1917 Valsugana Castagnevizza Tagliamento Bridge of Madrisio Piave Ca Lunga1918 Cavazuccherina Cortellazzo Vittorio Veneto Giudicarie18th Bersaglieri 60 61 47 LXVIILXVIIILXIX 31 Jan 191710th Ber LXIX11th Ber LXVII12th Ber LXVIII 6 Feb 1917 III Bersaglieri Bde 59 31 Dec 1919 Rgt disbanded 1917 Castagnevizza quota 244 Piave Fagare Ca Lunga1918 2nd Piave Vittorio Veneto Castel Romano Val Chiese19th Bersaglieri 62 63 XLIXLIIXLV 15 Feb 19174th Ber XLI XLII7th Ber XLV Raised from three autonomous battalions XLI Btn raised 7 Jan 1915 XLII Btn raised 22 Feb 1915 XLV Btn raised 19 May 19151 March 1918 V Bersaglieri Bde 21 11 Jan 1919 renamed 4th Bersaglieri 1915 XLI Btn Monte Maronia Monte Plan XLII Btn Loppio XLV Btn Val Chiese Monte Merlino1916 XLI Btn Cima Cece Cima Valmaggiore Nova Vas XLII Btn Mori Malga Zugna XLV Btn Coste di Salo Monfalcone1917 Val Degano Longarone 1918 Cima Tre Pezzi Vittorio Veneto Piave crossing20th Bersaglieri 64 65 LXXLXXILXXII 1 April 19174th Bersaglieri Raised from the II IV VI Bersaglieri reserve battalions1 April 1917 IV Bersaglieri Bde 52 20 Feb 1919 renamed 9th Bersaglieri 1917 Carzano Lunico Monte Sisemol1918 Monte Valbella Monte Maio Vittorio Veneto Passo Borcola Monte Maggio21st Bersaglieri 66 67 LXXIIILXXIVLXXV 27 April 19171st Bersaglieri Raised from the VII X XI Bersaglieri reserve battalions18 June 1917 V Bersaglieri Bde 21 7 Nov 1917 Rgt disbanded 9 Caporetto 1917 Plava Monte Kuk Monte Vodice Bainsizza Fratta Semmer quota 898 Monte GlobokakCyclist Battalions Edit Bersaglieri Cyclists in 1915 The twelve cyclist battalions of the peacetime regiments had been raised in 1910 Each consisted of three companies of 150 men and a machine gun section with two machine guns 5 For the duration of the war the cyclists battalions operated independently from their regiments and were assigned as needed to higher commands On various occasions Bersaglieri Cyclist Battalion Groups were formed but only after the Battle of Caporetto forced the Italian army to retreat from the Isonzo front during which the cyclist battalions served as rearguard 68 did the army institute permanent cyclist groups These four groups were officially instituted on 15 January 1918 and each fielded three cyclist battalions and formed initially the mobile reserve of the Third Army on the lower Piave river 68 1st Group IV V XII cyclist battalions 2nd Group II X XI cyclist battalions 3rd Group I VII VIII cyclist battalions 4th Group III VI IX cyclist battalionsIn April and May 1918 the 1st and 2nd Group were assigned to the 1st respectively the 7th Army to defend the Western respectively the Eastern shore of Lake Garda from possible Austro Hungarian amphibious landings By June all four groups had returned to the 3rd Army and were assigned to the army s corps as mobile reserve 1st Group to XI Corps 2nd Group to XXVIII Corps 3rd Group as army reserve 4th Group to XXIII Corps 68 On 24 June 1918 the 2nd and 4th group and the II VI IX and X battalions were disbanded and with their troops the Cyclist Assault Reserve Battalion formed This battalion was assigned to the Assault Army Corps Corpo d Armata d Assalto which consisted of Bersaglieri and Arditi troops The surviving III and XI cyclist battalions were assigned to 1st respectively the 2nd Assault Division of the same carmy corps The two remaining groups the 1st and 3rd left the 3rd Army on 16 October 1918 and were assigned for the last offensive of the war to the 1st respectively 4th Cavalry division 11 Autonomous Battalions Edit During World War I the Bersaglieri regiments raised a number of battalions which were not attached to a regiment and designated as autonomous battalions At the same time seven battalions of pre war regiments which were deployed to the Italian colonies became autonomous and were replaced in their regiments by newly raised battalions The 1st Bersaglieri Regiment was deployed to Italian Libya and its three battalions became autonomous in February 1916 when the regimental command returned to the mainland Of the autonomous battalions raised during the war only the LII and LV battalions remaining autonomous and active for the entire duration of the conflict Autonomous BattalionsBattalion Raised onRaised by Deployed to NotesXLI Battalion 62 63 7 Jan 1915 4th Bersaglieri Italian Front 15 Feb 1917 entered 19th BersaglieriXLII Battalion 62 63 22 Feb 1915 4th Bersaglieri Italian FrontXLV Battalion 62 63 19 May 1915 7th Bersaglieri Italian FrontXLVII Battalion 69 1 Feb 1915 5th Bersaglieri Italian Front 18 Nov 1917 disbanded Caporetto XLVIII Battalion 70 6 Feb 1915 8th Bersaglieri Italian Front 10 Nov 1917 destroyed Caporetto XLIX Battalion 53 54 Jan 1915 6th Bersaglieri Italian Front 5 Jan 1916 entered 15th BersaglieriL Battalion 53 54 Jan 1915 6th Bersaglieri Italian FrontLI Battalion 53 54 1915 11th Bersaglieri Italian FrontLII Battalion 71 Jan 1915 12th Bersaglieri LibyaLIV Battalion 50 51 1915 2nd Bersaglieri Italian Front 11 March 1916 14th Bersaglieri Rgt LV Battalion 72 5 Jan 1915 1st Bersaglieri 1915 18 Libya 1918 Italian Front In Libya until 31 May 1918 returned to Italy and entered 6th Group 2nd Assault DivisionLVI Battalion 73 17 Jan 1915 12th Bersaglieri Italian Front 18 Nov 1917 disbanded Caporetto During the war a number of battalions of existing regiments became autonomous either for geographic reasons battalion deployed to the colonies or organizational reasons regimental command disbanded The following table gives an overview of these battalions Temporarily Autonomous BattalionsBattalion Regiment Deployed to NotesI Battalion 12 13 1st Bersaglieri 1915 18 Libya 1918 Italian Front 24 Feb 1916 1st Bersaglieri Regiment disbanded and battalion became autonomous28 May 1918 returned to Italy29 June 1918 entered 1st Group 1st Assault Div II Battalion 15 16 2nd Bersaglieri Libya Battalion fighting rebels in Libya since 15 Feb 1915 Replaced in the regiment by the LIII battalion III Battalion 32 33 8th Bersaglieri 1915 18 Libya 1918 Italian Front Battalion fighting rebels in Libya until 28 May 1918Replaced in the regiment by the XXXVIII battalion 29 June 1918 battalion entered 4th Group 2nd Assault Div VII Battalion 12 13 1st Bersaglieri 1915 18 Libya 1918 Italian Front 24 Feb 1916 1st Bersaglieri Regiment disbanded and battalion became autonomous28 May 1918 returned to Italy29 June 1918 entered 2nd Group 1st Assault Div IX Battalion 12 13 1st Bersaglieri 1915 18 Libya 1918 Italian Front 24 Feb 1916 1st Bersaglieri Regiment disbanded and battalion became autonomous28 May 1918 returned to Italy29 June 1918 entered 3rd Group 1st Assault Div XI Battalion 28 29 7th Bersaglieri Libya Battalion fighting rebels in Libya since 11 Feb 1915 Replaced in the regiment by the XLIV battalion XV Battalion 40 41 11th Bersaglieri 1915 18 Libya 1918 Italian Front Battalion fighting rebels in Libya from 4 Jan 1915 until 28 May 1918Replaced in the regiment by the XXXIX battalion 29 June 1918 battalion entered 5th Group 2nd Assault Div XXII Battalion 22 23 5th Bersaglieri Libya Battalion fighting rebels in Libya since 15 Feb 1915 Replaced in the regiment by the XLVI battalion XXVI Battalion 6 7 4th Bersaglieri Rhodes Battalions on garrison duty in Rhodes since 12 May 1912 Replaced in the regiment by the XLIII respectively XXXVII battalion XXXI Battalion 6 7 LVII Battalion 55 56 16th Bersaglieri Italian Front 7 March 1918 16th Bersaglieri Regiment disbanded and its battalions became autonomousLVIII Battalion 55 56 LXIII Battalion 55 56 Machine Gunner Companies Edit At the outbreak of war each infantry and Bersaglieri battalion of the Italian Army fielded one machine gun section with two Maxim 1911 machine guns carried by horses After the outbreak of the war this proved quickly to be inadequate and in spring 1916 the army began to raise dedicated machine gunner companies Compagnia Mitraglieri These companies were attached to brigades divisions and army corps which deployed them with tactical units regiments battalions companies as needed 2 277 Machine Gunner companies were raised and numbered continuously The Bersaglieri depots raised 31 companies equipped with six St Etienne Mle 1907 machine guns each and 84 companies equipped with six Fiat Revelli Modello 1914 machine guns each 74 Special Bersaglieri Division Edit At the outbreak of war seven Bersaglieri regiments were assigned to divisions or army corps while four Bersaglieri regiments formed on 20 May 1915 the Special Bersaglieri Division Divisione Speciale Bersaglieri The four regiments were joined by IV Mountain Artillery Group of the 1st Mountain Artillery Regiment and minor support units On 11 February 1916 the four regiments were grouped together in two brigades the I Bersaglieri Brigade consisted of the 6th and 12th Bersaglieri regiments while the II Bersaglieri Brigade consisted of the 9th and 11th Bersaglieri regiments After not even a year of existence the division is transformed on 5 March 1915 into a standard infantry division and the two Bersaglieri brigades are attached like the regiments to divisions and army corps as needed 75 Division Regiment Battalions NotesSpecial Bersaglieri Division Divisione Speciale Bersaglieri 6th Bersaglieri Regiment VI BattalionXIII BattalionXIX Battalion 11 Feb 1916 formed the I Bersaglieri Brigade with the 12th Bersaglieri Regiment9th Bersaglieri Regiment XXVIII BattalionXXX BattalionXXXII Battalion 11 Feb 1916 formed the II Bersaglieri Brigade11th Bersaglieri Regiment XXVII BattalionXXXIII BattalionXXXIX Battalion12th Bersaglieri Regiment XXI BattalionXXIII BattalionXXXVI Battalion 11 Feb 1916 formed the I Bersaglieri Brigade with the 6th Bersaglieri RegimentIV Mountain Artillery Group 1st Mountain Artillery RegimentBersaglieri Brigades Edit After the Special Bersaglieri Division had been disbanded the two Bersaglieri brigades were attached to higher commands as needed On 6 November 1916 the 7th Bersaglieri Regiment replaced the 9th Bersaglieri Regiment in the II Bersaglieri Brigade but there were no further changes to the brigades during that year In 1917 the army decided to activate a further three Bersaglieri brigades of two regiments each bringing the Bersaglieri closer in line with the regular infantry all of whose regiments were grouped together in brigades composed of a headquarters and two infantry regiments During the year the III IV and V Bersaglieri brigades were raised with respectively the 17th and 18th 14th and 20th and 4th and 21st regiments belonging to their parent brigades However the defeat in the Battle of Caporetto led to the destruction of the V Bersaglieri Brigade which together with the 21st Bersaglieri Regiment was annihilated during the retreat from the Isonzo river to the Piave river In 1918 the army raised the V Bersaglieri Brigade again and also activated the VI and VII Bersaglieri brigades The VI consisted of the 8th and 13th respectively the 2nd and 3rd Bersaglieri regiments belonged to the VII Brigade With this all Bersaglieri regiments in Italy were now assigned to one of the seven Bersaglieri brigades Brigade Regiment Battalions NotesI Bersaglieri Brigade 27 6th Bersaglieri Regiment VI BattalionXIII BattalionXIX Battalion formed 11 Feb 191612th Bersaglieri Regiment XXI BattalionXXIII BattalionXXXVI BattalionII Bersaglieri Brigade 31 7th Bersaglieri Regiment VIII BattalionX BattalionXLIV Battalion formed 11 Feb 1916 with the 9th and 11th Bersaglieri regiments9th Regiment replaced by the 7th Regiment on 6 Nov 191611th Bersaglieri Regiment XXVII BattalionXXXIII BattalionXXXIX BattalionIII Bersaglieri Brigade 59 17th Bersaglieri Regiment LXIV BattalionLXV BattalionLXVI Battalion formed 18 March 191718th Bersaglieri Regiment LXVII BattalionLXVIII BattalionLXIX BattalionIV Bersaglieri Brigade 52 14th Bersaglieri Regiment XL BattalionLIV BattalionLXI Battalion formed 1 April 191720th Bersaglieri Regiment LXX BattalionLXXI BattalionLXXII BattalionV Bersaglieri Brigade 21 1st formation 4th Bersaglieri Regiment XXIX BattalionXXXVII BattalionXLIII Battalion formed 18 June 1917destroyed 7 Nov 1917 9 21st Bersaglieri Regiment LXXIII BattalionLXXIV BattalionLXXV BattalionV Bersaglieri Brigade 21 2nd formation 5th Bersaglieri Regiment XIV BattalionXXIV BattalionXLVI Battalion formed 1 March 191819th Bersaglieri Regiment XLI BattalionXLII BattalionXLV BattalionVI Bersaglieri Brigade 35 8th Bersaglieri Regiment V BattalionXII BattalionXXXVIII Battalion formed 1 June 191813th Bersaglieri Regiment LIX BattalionLX BattalionLXII BattalionVII Bersaglieri Brigade 17 2nd Bersaglieri Regiment IV BattalionXVII BattalionLIII Battalion formed 29 August 19183rd Bersaglieri Regiment XVIII BattalionXX BattalionXXV BattalionAssault Divisions Edit At the end of 1915 each infantry regiment the Italian Army began to create Arditi platoons modeled after the German Stormtroopers These units remained a regimental asset until 1917 when the 2nd Army on its own initiative an Arditi school in Sdricca di Manzano The first unit raised from volunteers was officially activated with a live fire exercise in front of King Victor Emmanuel III on 29 July 1917 Named I Assault Battalion I Reparto d Assalto the successful exercise led to the creation of a second battalion with both units having their baptism of fire during the Eleventh Battle of the Isonzo on the Banjsice Plateau 76 After the success of the Arditi during the Eleventh Battle of the Isonzo all armies were ordered to raise Arditi battalions However each army raised and employed these battalions in different ways and only after the disastrous Battle of Caporetto did the Italian High Command take control of the formation and use of the Arditi units Each army corps was to receive an Assault Battalion organized into a battalion HQ three Arditi companies three machine gun sections six machine pistol section and six flamethrower sections The Bersaglieri raised three Assault battalions with similar composition 76 On 10 June 1918 the I Assault Division was created with three regiment sized groupings of three Arditi battalions each with assigned HQ On 25 June 1918 the II Assault Division was raised and the two divisions thus formed the Assault Army Corps Corpo d Armata d Assalto Each division consisted of three groupings with two assault battalions and a Bersaglieri battalion with an attached group HQ Additionally each division fielded one Bersaglieri cyclists battalion a cavalry squadron a mountain artillery group a sapper battalion and various support units The six Bersaglieri battalions in the groupings had been deployed to Libya until 28 May 1918 Additionally the corps fielded the Cyclist Assault Reserve Battalion formed on 24 June 1918 from the remaining men of the II VI IX and X cyclist battalions 11 The corps s two divisions had the following structure Division Group Battalion Notes1st Assault Division 77 1a Divisione d Assalto 1st Group X Assault BattalionXX Assault BattalionI Bersaglieri Battalion 1st Bersaglieri Regiment2nd Group XII Assault BattalionXIII Assault BattalionVII Bersaglieri Battalion 1st Bersaglieri Regiment3rd Group VIII Assault BattalionXX Assault BattalionIX Bersaglieri Battalion 1st Bersaglieri RegimentIII Cyclists Battalion 3rd Bersaglieri Regiment5th Cavalry Squadron Cavalry Rgt Piacenza 18th IX Mountain Artillery Group 3rd Mountain Artillery RegimentXCI Sapper Battalion2nd Assault Division 2a Divisione d Assalto 4th Group XIV Assault BattalionXXV Assault BattalionIII Bersaglieri Battalion 8th Bersaglieri Regiment5th Group I Assault BattalionV Assault BattalionXV Bersaglieri Battalion 11th Bersaglieri Regiment6th Group VI Assault BattalionXXX Assault BattalionLV Bersaglieri Battalion Autonomous BattalionXI Cyclists Battalion 11th Bersaglieri Regiment6th Cavalry Squadron Cavalry Rgt Piacenza 18th XII Mountain Artillery Group 3rd Mountain Artillery RegimentSapper BattalionGeographical Distribution Edit In 1914 the 1st Bersaglieri Regiment moved its depot from Sanremo to Naples to be closer to its upcoming area of deployment in Libya while the 5th Bersaglieri Regiment moved from Ancona into the vacant barracks located at Sanremo 1 Bersaglieri 2 Bersaglieri 3 Bersaglieri 4 Bersaglieri 5 Bersaglieri 6 Bersaglieri 7 Bers 8 Bersaglieri 9 Bersaglieri 10 Bersaglieri 11 Bersaglieri 12 Bersagliericlass notpageimage Bersaglieri Regiments 1914Interwar years EditAfter the war the nine wartime regiments were disbanded and the number of Bersaglieri battalions in the remaining regiments reduced to two per regiment A new role was seen for the light infantry as part of Italy s commitment to Mobile Warfare The post war Bersaglieri were converted into bicycle troops to fight alongside cavalry in the Celeri fast divisions Elite units with high morale and an aggressive spirit were seen as one way to break such tactical stalemates as the trench warfare of 1915 18 The Bersaglieri gave Italy highly trained formations suitable for service with both cavalry and tanks When the armoured divisions were formed in 1939 the link between the Bersaglieri and mobile warfare continued Each new armoured and motorised division was allocated one Bersaglieri regiment Interwar Period EditA single Bersaglieri regiment the 3rd Bersagleri took part in the Second Italo Ethiopian War in October 1935 invading from Eritrea as part of the 30th Infantry Division Sabauda under General Italo Gariboldi There they took part in the Christmas Offensive and the Battle of Amba Aradam among others The regiment was detached and sent back to Asmara in March 1936 to join a new unit the East Africa Fast Column under Achille Starace World War II Edit Bersaglieri in Ukraine in 1941 Italy began the Second World War with twelve Bersaglieri regiments of three battalions each Over the preceding years the Army had resisted suggestions to dilute the regiment s quality and recruits continued to be of above average size and stamina endured intense physical training and had to qualify as marksmen During the war an additional Bersaglieri regiment the 18th with three battalions was raised but only one of its battalions saw combat 1st Bersaglieri Regiment I VII IX battalions initially III Army Corps from March 1942 2nd Cavalry Division Emanuele Filiberto Testa di Ferro 2nd Bersaglieri Regiment II IV XVII battalions garrison unit in Euboea Greece 3rd Bersaglieri Regiment XVIII XX XXV battalions 3rd Cavalry Division Principe Amedeo Duca d Aosta served on the on the Eastern Front 4th Bersaglieri Regiment XXVI XXIX XXXI battalions garrison unit in Split Yugoslavia 5th Bersaglieri Regiment XIV XXII XXIV battalions 131st Armored Division Centauro destroyed in the Tunisian campaign 6th Bersaglieri Regiment VI XIII XIX battalions 2nd Cavalry Division Emanuele Filiberto Testa di Ferro from March 1942 3rd Cavalry Division Principe Amedeo Duca d Aosta on the Eastern Front 7th Bersaglieri Regiment VIII X XI battalions 102nd Motorized Division Trento destroyed in the Tunisian campaign 8th Bersaglieri Regiment III V XII battalions 132nd Armored Division Ariete destroyed in the Tunisian campaign reformed in July 1943 9th Bersaglieri Regiment XXVIII XXX XXXII battalions 101st Motorized Division Trieste destroyed in the Second Battle of El Alamein 10th Bersaglieri Regiment XVI XXXIV XXXV battalions German Division von Broich von Manteuffel destroyed in the Tunisian campaign 11th Bersaglieri Regiment XV XXVII XXXIII battalions 1st Cavalry Division Eugenio di Savoia from early 1942 attached to the 158th Infantry Division Zara 12th Bersaglieri Regiment XXI XXIII XXXVI battalions 133rd Armored Division Littorio destroyed in the Second Battle of El Alamein 18th Bersaglieri Armored Reconnaissance Regiment LXVII LXVIII LXIX battalions garrison unit in the South of France in spring 1942 the LXVII battalion was sent to the Eastern Front remaining regiment joined the 136th Armored Legionary Division Centauro on 9 September 1943 in RomeThe Bersaglieri fought in the Italian invasion of France and in the Greco Italian War later Bersaglieri regiments were deployed on the Eastern Front One battalion of Bersaglieri participated in the East African Campaign Six Bersaglieri regiments served and were destroyed during the North African Campaign After the Armistice of Cassibile between the Kingdom of Italy and Western Allies on 8 September 1943 Italy split in half The Republic of Salo continued the war alongside Nazi Germany Its Army the fascist National Republican Army raised the 1st Bersaglieri Division Italia which was attached to the German 14th Army in a sector on the Northern Apennines The division fought along the Gothic Line and at the end of the final allied offensive along with two Wehrmacht and the last fascist divisions surrendered after the Battle of Collecchio 78 79 80 On the other side of the front the Italian Co belligerent Army raised a Bersaglieri battalion as part of the Combat Group Legnano from remnants of the 4th Bersaglieri Regiment Cold War EditDuring the Cold War the Bersaglieri were exclusively employed as mechanized infantry The three active Bersaglieri regiments were assigned to the Army s armored divisions with the 3rd and 8th regiments fielding two Bersaglieri and one tank battalion while the 1st Armored Bersaglieri Regiment fielded two tank and one Bersaglieri battalion Additionally each of the three active tank regiments fielded one Bersaglieri and two tank battalions while the four armored infantry regiments of the motorized divisions fielded one Bersaglieri and one tank battalion each Without exception the Bersaglieri battalions were armed with M113 armored personnel carriers At the end of 1974 the following Bersaglieri regiments were active 1st Armored Bersaglieri Regiment in Civitavecchia 81 82 Command and Services Company I Bersaglieri Battalion 3rd Bersaglieri Regiment in Milan 83 Command and Services Company XVIII Bersaglieri Battalion XXV Bersaglieri Battalion in Solbiate Olona 8th Bersaglieri Regiment in Pordenone 84 Command and Services Company III Bersaglieri Battalion XII Bersaglieri BattalionAt the end of 1974 the following tank regiments fielded one Bersaglieri battalion 31st Tank Regiment in Bellinzago Novarese 85 XXVIII Bersaglieri Battalion 32nd Tank Regiment in Tauriano 86 XXIII Bersaglieri Battalion 132nd Tank Regiment in Aviano 87 XXXVIII Bersaglieri BattalionTogether the three Bersaglieri and three tank regiments formed the army s two armored divisions Armored Division Centauro 1st Armored Bersaglieri 3rd Bersaglieri and 31st Tank Regiment Armored Division Ariete 8th Bersaglieri 32nd Tank and 132nd Tank RegimentThe remaining four active Bersaglieri battalions were assigned to the army s four armored infantry regiments 3rd Armored Infantry Regiment in Persano 88 89 90 Infantry Division Granatieri di Sardegna IV Bersaglieri Battalion 4th Armored Infantry Regiment in Legnano 91 Infantry Division Legnano II Bersaglieri Battalion 22nd Armored Infantry Regiment Cremona in Turin 92 Infantry Division Cremona VI Bersaglieri Battalion 182nd Armored Infantry Regiment Garibaldi in Sacile 93 Infantry Division Folgore XI Bersaglieri Battalion1975 army reform Edit During the Italian Army reform of 1975 the regimental level was abolished and battalions became independent units under newly formed brigades The Army formed the 3rd Mechanized Brigade Goito with the regimental command and units of the 3rd Bersaglieri Regiment and the 8th Mechanized Brigade Garibaldi with the regimental command and units of the 8th Bersaglieri Regiment Both brigades received one extra Bersaglieri battalion from disbanded armored infantry regiments and both fielded only personnel with the exception of the tank crews and artillerists from the Bersaglieri corps Soldiers of the 2nd Bersaglieri Battalion Governolo on patrol with the Multinational Force in Lebanon in 1982 When the battalions became independent they received the flags and traditions of disbanded Bersaglieri regiments and each battalion was given an honorary name commemorating a significant event in which it had participated e g the 3rd Bersaglieri Battalion Cernaia received its honorary name to commemorate the conduct of the battalion during the Battle of the Chernaya in Crimea during the Crimean War in 1855 In the following list of Bersaglieri units active in 1977 1st Bersaglieri Battalion La Marmora in Civitavecchia Mechanized Brigade Granatieri di Sardegna 2nd Bersaglieri Battalion Governolo in Legnano Mechanized Brigade Legnano 3rd Bersaglieri Battalion Cernaia in Pordenone 8th Mechanized Brigade Garibaldi 6th Bersaglieri Battalion Palestro in Turin 3rd Mechanized Brigade Goito 10th Bersaglieri Battalion Bezzecca in Solbiate Olona 3rd Mechanized Brigade Goito 11th Bersaglieri Battalion Caprera in Orcenico Superiore 8th Mechanized Brigade Garibaldi 14th Bersaglieri Recruits Training Battalion Sernaglia in Albenga 3rd Army Corps 18th Bersaglieri Battalion Poggio Scanno in Milan 3rd Mechanized Brigade Goito 23rd Bersaglieri Battalion Castel di Borgo in Tauriano 32nd Armored Brigade Mameli 26th Bersaglieri Battalion Castelfidardo in Maniago 8th Mechanized Brigade Garibaldi 27th Bersaglieri Battalion Jamiano in Aviano 132nd Armored Brigade Manin 28th Bersaglieri Battalion Oslavia in Bellinzago Novarese 31st Armored Brigade Curtatone 67th Bersaglieri Battalion Fagare in Persano Mechanized Brigade Pinerolo Additionally the Bersaglieri fielded five anti tank companies one per Bersaglieri and one per Armored Brigade Armored brigades Manin Centauro and Mameli With the end of the Cold War the Italian army began a reduction in personnel and units which also affected the Bersaglieri On 1 June 1991 the Mechanized Brigade Goito was disbanded while the Mechanized Brigade Garibaldi moved to the Southern city of Caserta as the Army had decided to reduce the number of units in the north of Italy The Garibaldi arrived in Caserta on 1 July 1991 and changed its name to 8th Bersaglieri Brigade Garibaldi Also in 1991 the battalions of the Army were renamed as regiments without changing composition Current structure Edit A Bersagliere of the NATO Response Force While in the past the mobility of the Bersaglieri manifested itself in running and the use of bicycles regiments currently in service are all mechanised with either Dardo or Freccia infantry fighting vehicles To distinguish them from other infantry units the Bersaglieri collar patches are crimson red and enlisted troops wear a red fez instead of berets Officers wear black berets with their standard uniform but a feathered vaira when dressed in ceremonial uniform They also wear black gloves while other Italian regiments wear white ones Originally each Bersaglieri regiment had a band called a fanfara who played their instruments at the double while on parade Today only the Garibaldi Brigade 6th and 7th Bersaglieri Regiment retain a fanfara which are technically brass bands Since 1982 Bersaglieri have served as peacekeepers with the Multinational Force in Lebanon and during the Yugoslav and Somali Civil Wars Bersaglier units also served in Operation Iraqi Freedom and were repeatedly deployed to serve in the war in Afghanistan As of 2019 the following Bersaglieri units are in active service 1st Bersaglieri Regiment in Cosenza as part of the Bersaglieri Brigade Garibaldi 1st Battalion La Marmora Dardo IFV 3rd Bersaglieri Regiment in Teulada Mechanized Brigade Sassari 18th Battalion Poggio Scanno Freccia IFV 4th Bersaglieri Command and Tactical Supports Unit in Caserta Bersaglieri Brigade Garibaldi 6th Bersaglieri Regiment in Trapani Mechanized Brigade Aosta 6th Battalion Palestro Freccia IFV 7th Bersaglieri Regiment in Altamura Mechanized Brigade Pinerolo 10th Battalion Bezzecca Freccia IFV 8th Bersaglieri Regiment in Caserta Bersaglieri Brigade Garibaldi 3rd Battalion Cernaia Dardo IFV 11th Bersaglieri Regiment in Orcenico Superiore 132nd Armored Brigade Ariete 11th Battalion Caprera Dardo IFV 2nd Bersaglieri Company Pantere in Teulada part of the 1st Armored Regiment 3rd Bersaglieri Company Celere in Solbiate Olona part of the Tactical and Logistic Support Regiment of the NRDC ITA Support Brigade Bugle calls EditMain article Italian Bersaglieri Bands The Bersaglieri Bugles during a Tattoo in 2006 In mid 1800 the Bersaglieri were born as light infantry sharpshooters fighting in loose skirmish formations and specific bugle calls were used to direct the units in the confusion of the battlefield Each battalion 94 had its own specific bugle call played repeatedly to rally the troops or used as a sort of address before tactical bugle calls to identify who the order was intended for for example a composite bugle call could be 1st Bersaglieri Company Right Nr 3 Deploy in open order Regimental Bugle Calls Tactical Bugle Calls 1st Bersaglieri Regiment source source Problems playing this file See media help Affirmative Yes source source Problems playing this file See media help Charge source source Problems playing this file See media help 2nd Bersaglieri Regiment source source Problems playing this file See media help Negative Not source source Problems playing this file See media help Defend lively source source Problems playing this file See media help 3rd Bersaglieri Regiment source source Problems playing this file See media help Question Repeat source source Problems playing this file See media help Defend from cavalry source source Problems playing this file See media help 4th Bersaglieri Regiment source source Problems playing this file See media help Wing 95 source source Problems playing this file See media help Open fire source source Problems playing this file See media help 5th Bersaglieri Regiment source source Problems playing this file See media help Companies source source Problems playing this file See media help Stop firing source source Problems playing this file See media help 6th Bersaglieri Regiment source source Problems playing this file See media help Supports source source Problems playing this file See media help Normal step source source Problems playing this file See media help 7th Bersaglieri Regiment source source Problems playing this file See media help Right or Nr 1 source source Problems playing this file See media help Quick step source source Problems playing this file See media help 8th Bersaglieri Regiment source source Problems playing this file See media help Left or Nr 2 source source Problems playing this file See media help Running step source source Problems playing this file See media help 9th Bersaglieri Regiment source source Problems playing this file See media help Center or Nr 3 source source Problems playing this file See media help Stop at the mark source source Problems playing this file See media help 10th Bersaglieri Regiment source source Problems playing this file See media help Deploy in open order source source Problems playing this file See media help Backpacks to the ground source source Problems playing this file See media help 11th Bersaglieri Regiment source source Problems playing this file See media help Deploy in closed order source source Problems playing this file See media help Alternate skirmish lines source source Problems playing this file See media help 12th Bersaglieri Regiment source source Problems playing this file See media help Deploy in successive lines source source Problems playing this file See media help Retreat source source Problems playing this file See media help 18th Bersaglieri Regiment source source Problems playing this file See media help Double spacing source source Problems playing this file See media help Attention source source Problems playing this file See media help Half spacing source source Problems playing this file See media help Ask reinforcements source source Problems playing this file See media help Regroup source source Problems playing this file See media help Notes Edit Traficante Tony 7 September 2017 The Bersaglieri Italy s Spectacular Military Group ISDA Website Italian Sons and Daughters of America Retrieved 10 September 2018 Wavell 1968 pp 90 1 Distaccamento Italiano di Palestina Australian Light Horse Studies Centre 18 April 2009 Retrieved 29 July 2020 fiammecremisiguerra1172 Bersaglieri a Gerusalemme in Italian Retrieved 30 July 2020 a b c d e f g L Esercito Italiano nella Grande Guerra 1915 18 Volume III Tomo 1 Le Operazioni del 1916 Gli avvenimenti invernali Rome Ufficio Storico Stato Maggiore dell Esercito 1940 p 10 Retrieved 21 January 2019 a b c d F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 414 a b c d 4 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 a b c d e L Esercito Italiano nella Grande Guerra 1915 18 Volume IV Tomo 1 L ampliamento dell Esercito nell anno 1917 Rome Ufficio Storico Stato Maggiore dell Esercito 1940 p 14 Retrieved 21 January 2019 a b c d e f g L Esercito Italiano nella Grande Guerra 1915 18 Volume V Tomo 1 bis Gli Avvenimenti 1918 dal Gennaio Giugno Rome Ufficio Storico Stato Maggiore dell Esercito 1940 p 23 Retrieved 19 January 2019 a b c L Esercito Italiano nella Grande Guerra 1915 18 Volume V Tomo 1 Gli Avvenimenti 1918 dal Gennaio Giugno Rome Ufficio Storico Stato Maggiore dell Esercito 1940 p 76 Retrieved 21 January 2019 a b c L Esercito Italiano nella Grande Guerra 1915 18 Volume V Tomo 2 La conclusione del conflitto 1918 Rome Ufficio Storico Stato Maggiore dell Esercito 1940 pp 157 159 Retrieved 19 January 2019 a b c d F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 397 a b c d 1 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 1 Reggimento Bersaglieri La Storia Esercito Italiano Retrieved 21 January 2019 a b F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 403 a b 2 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 a b c VII Brigata Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 19 January 2019 F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 408 3 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 3 Reggimento Bersaglieri La Storia Esercito Italiano Retrieved 21 January 2019 a b c d e f V Brigata Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 19 January 2019 a b F dell Uomo R di Rosa 2001 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Secondo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 479 a b 5 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 419 6 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 6 Reggimento Bersaglieri La Storia Esercito Italiano Retrieved 21 January 2019 a b c I Brigata Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 19 January 2019 a b F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 424 a b 7 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 7 Reggimento Bersaglieri La Storia Esercito Italiano Retrieved 21 January 2019 a b c d II Brigata Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 19 January 2019 a b F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 429 a b 8 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 8 Reggimento Bersaglieri La Storia Esercito Italiano Retrieved 21 January 2019 a b c VI Brigata Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 19 January 2019 F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 434 9 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 F dell Uomo R di Rosa 2001 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Secondo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 483 10 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 a b F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 438 a b 11 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 11 Reggimento Bersaglieri La Storia Esercito Italiano Archived from the original on 11 October 2017 Retrieved 21 January 2019 F dell Uomo R di Rosa 2001 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Secondo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 494 F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 442 12 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 12 Reggimento Bersaglieri Esercito Italiano Retrieved 21 January 2019 a b 18 Reggimento Bersaglieri Esercito Italiano Retrieved 21 January 2019 F dell Uomo R di Rosa 2001 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Secondo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 486 13 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 a b F dell Uomo R di Rosa 2001 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Secondo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 487 a b 14 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 a b c IV Brigata Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 19 January 2019 a b c d F dell Uomo R di Rosa 2001 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Secondo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 488 a b c d 15 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 a b c d F dell Uomo R di Rosa 2001 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Secondo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 489 a b c d 16 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 F dell Uomo R di Rosa 2001 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Secondo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 490 17 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 a b c III Brigata Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 19 January 2019 F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 446 18 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 a b c d F dell Uomo R di Rosa 2001 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Secondo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 491 a b c d 19 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 F dell Uomo R di Rosa 2001 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Secondo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 492 20 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 F dell Uomo R di Rosa 2001 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Secondo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 493 21 Reggimento Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 a b c L Esercito Italiano nella Grande Guerra 1915 18 Volume V Tomo 1 Gli Avvenimenti 1918 dal Gennaio Giugno Rome Ufficio Storico Stato Maggiore dell Esercito 1940 p 77 Retrieved 19 January 2019 XLVII Battaglione Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 XLVIII Battaglione Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 LII Battaglione Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 LV Battaglione Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 LVI Battaglione Fronte del Piave Retrieved 20 January 2019 Pagano Salvatore 2013 Evoluzione della tattica durante la Grande Guerra EFFEPI pp 179 198 Divisione Speciale Bersaglieri Fronte del Piave Retrieved 21 January 2019 a b Gli Arditi La Storia Esercito Italiano Retrieved 20 January 2019 L Esercito Italiano nella Grande Guerra 1915 18 Volume V Tomo 1 bis Gli Avvenimenti 1918 dal Gennaio Giugno Rome Ufficio Storico Stato Maggiore dell Esercito 1940 p 286 Retrieved 19 January 2019 Popa 1996 Page 23 Giannasi Pages 146 48 Chase 1995 Page 90 1 Reggimento Associazione Nazionale Bersaglieri Retrieved 10 November 2018 F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 398 F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 408 F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 429 F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 540 F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 543 F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 553 F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 532 F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 532 Stefani Filippo 1989 La storia della dottrina e degli ordinamenti dell Esercito Italiano Vol III Tomo 2 Rome Ufficio Storico Stato Maggiore dell Esercito p 351 F dell Uomo R Puletti 1998 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Primo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 536 F dell Uomo R di Rosa 2001 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Secondo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 115 F dell Uomo R di Rosa 2001 L Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 Vol Secondo Tomo I Rome SME Ufficio Storico p 353 Later each regiment Half battalionReferences EditChase Patrick J Seek Strike Destroy the History of the 894th Tank Destroyer Battalion in World War II Gateway Press 1995 Page 90 Giannasi Andrea Il Brasile in guerra la partecipazione della Forca Expedicionaria Brasileira alla campagna d Italia 1944 1945 in Italian Prospettiva Editrice 2004 ISBN 8874182848 Pages 146 48 Popa Thomas A Po Valley 1945 WWII Campaigns United States Army Center of Military History 1996 ISBN 0 16 048134 1 CMH Pub 72 33 Wavell Field Marshal Earl 1968 1933 The Palestine Campaigns In Sheppard Eric William ed A Short History of the British Army 4th ed London Constable amp Co OCLC 35621223 Further reading EditTriplet William S 2000 Ferrell Robert H ed A Youth in the Meuse Argonne Columbia Mo University of Missouri Press pp 47 48 ISBN 0 8262 1290 5 LCCN 00029921 OCLC 43707198 See also EditItalian Bersaglieri BandsExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bersaglieri Video showing distinctive feathered hats and fast jog pace 3 56 Best view is from 3 02 3 22 Italian military report the capture of 300 British paratroopers by part of the Bersaglieri Photos Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bersaglieri amp oldid 1120731964, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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