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Luigi Nava

Luigi Nava (1851-1928) was an Italian General of the Army who participated in the First Italo-Ethiopian War and World War I. He participated in the Italian colonial campaign in the Horn of Africa which lead to his participation at the Battle of Adwa, where he was wounded and taken prisoner by the Abyssinians. Having become Lieutenant General, at the action of the general mobilization of 1915 he was appointed commander of the 4th Army but was dismissed from the command four months after Italy entered the war.[1]

Luigi Nava
Born(1851-06-13)June 13, 1851
Turin, Piedmont, Kingdom of Sardinia
DiedJuly 9, 1928(1928-07-09) (aged 77)
Alessandria, Piedmont, Italy
Allegiance Italy
Branch Royal Italian Army
Years of service1870–1921
Rank General of the Army
Commands held4th Army
Battles/warsItalo-Ethiopian War of 1887–1889

First Italo-Ethiopian War

World War I

Alma materRoyal Academy of Turin [it]

Early career edit

He was born in Turin on June 13, 1851, as the son of Giacomo Antonio and Elisabetta Salino. He entered the Royal Academy of Turin [it] on September 22, 1867, and graduated with the rank of second lieutenant of the General Staff of the artillery in July 1870. He was promoted to lieutenant on July 25, 1872, and served in the 3rd Field Artillery Regiment, where he became aide-major in the 2nd. In 1874, he began to attend the Scuola di applicazione [it], for the positions of Staff but he left in 1877. Nava was promoted to captain in August 1878 and he passed through the Staff Corps and served first in the Alessandria Division and then in the command of the III Corps. He became major in October 1885, serving as battalion commander in the 4th Infantry Regiment "Piedmont".

Service in Ethiopia edit

After the Battle of Dogali,[2] fought on January 26, 1887,[3] the new head of government Francesco Crispi[4] decided to continue the hostilities by sending an expeditionary force of 20,000 men, of which he became assigned to the command of the special corps, as Chief of Staff of the African troops. Starting from October of the same year, he participated in some war operations in the context of the Italo-Ethiopian War of 1887–1889, including the Battle of Saati, as commander of the Bersaglieri battalion of the 1st Regiment "Hunters of Africa".[4] He returned to Italy in May 1888 to serve first at the 7th, and then at the 9th Army Corps. In November 1889, he was promoted to lieutenant colonel, serving as Chief of Staff of the Milan Division.

In May 1890 he returned to Eritrea as a lieutenant colonel of staff, under the orders of General Alessandro Asinari di San Marzano, participating in the 1890–91 campaign as an officer assigned to the governor. He returned to Italy in April 1892 to be promoted to colonel on November 23, 1893. In January 1894, he became commander of the 40th Infantry Regiment "Bologna", then stationed in Milan. He returned to Eritrea in time to participate in the First Italo-Ethiopian War.[5] He was assigned as the commander of the 5th Infantry Regiment of Africa, to the III Brigade of General Giuseppe Ellena.[6] He reached the theater of operations on January 12, 1896, in time to take part in the Battle of Adwa, where he tried in vain to block[7] the road to the enemy advance[8] with a company of Alpini troops and the 16th Battalion of the 5th Infantry Regiment.[8] Nava was then wounded by a spear blow and he was taken prisoner by Ras Mengesha Yohannes, who, before releasing him, reserved him a preferential treatment.[8] For his service in Adwa, he obtained the Knight's Cross of the Military Order of Savoy.[9]

In December 1897, he became honorary adjutant of King Umberto I. After his period in the service of the King, he returned to the General Staff, serving for three years as a military attaché at the Italian Embassy in Vienna. On April 19, 1900, he was elevated to the rank of major general and assumed command of the "Acqui" Brigade which he maintained until September 1906. He then assumed command of the Military Academy of Modena and on April 10, 1907, he was promoted to lieutenant general. From 1909 to 1910, he was in command of the 15th Division in Florence and from September 30, 1910, of the 11th Army Corps in Bari. From 17 December 1911 to 1 October 1914 he was commander of the 6th Army Corps in Bologna, and on August 30, he received the designation of possible army commander in case of war under Giovanni Giolitti.

World War I edit

With the Italian entry into World War I, on May 24, 1915, he assumed command of the 4th Army,[10] with its headquarters in Vittorio Veneto, which deployed its forces from Passo Cereda to Monte Peralba on a front of about 75 km. General Luigi Cadorna, supreme commander of the Royal Italian Army, began an offensive against Austria-Hungary [11] starting with the conquest of the forts of Sexten, Landro and Valparola.[11] The first objective of the operations was to take possession of the Toblach node on the right and on the left of the hills surrounding the Sella group.[11]

His army failed to fulfill expectations, and he stood out, indeed, as the most wait-and-see of the Italian army commanders.[1] At the end of June 1915, he requested the exemption of the subordinate general Pietro Marini, whose fault was having imprudently occupied the saddle of the Sasso di Stria and Cadorna, who did not share the esteem of which his subordinate was almost unanimously accredited, accepted the request. However, on September 25, of the same year Cadorna also exonerated him, replacing him with General Mario Nicolis di Robilant.[1]

The official motivation was that: "In the first fifteen days of operations he did not act with promptness and energy, exploiting his superiority of forces, and he exercised the command with insufficient decision."[1] In 1916, Nava was entrusted with the Presidency of the Central Health Commission, which he maintained until February 1917. From March 1, of the same year he was placed in the position of auxiliary service. In April 1918, he asked the new supreme commander of the army, General Armando Diaz, to be readmitted to the command of a mobilized unit. However, this proved to be almost impossible given the assignment previously carried out, and the lack of army commands available in the face of the abundance of other officers that wanted to lead them.

Later years edit

In June 1919, he left active service, passing through the reserve and dedicating himself to the drafting of two volumes of memoirs,[12] to which he entrusted the defense of his work, in particular against the accusations made by General Luigi Capello, who accused him of the excessive delay in the attack operations of the 4th army and of not having occupied the Cortina d'Ampezzo basin before the 13th day of the war. To the accusations, he replied by arguing the delay and the numerical insufficiency of the siege artillery park that had been made available to him, without which it was criminally unrealistic to face the permanent works and field defenses prepared by the Austrians in Cadore and in the Ampezzano area.

The two volumes, like other polemical writings by generals exonerated during the First World War, did not have much circulation. On June 2, 1921, he was definitively retired due to his service length and enrolled in the roles of the reserve, where in November 1924 he was nominated as army general, with seniority from February 1 of the previous year. Two years later, he also managed to have the partial revision of his exemption provision, which recognized him as active service from March 1, 1917, to June 11, 1919. He died in Alessandria on July 9, 1928.

Awards edit

Works edit

  • L'armata sarda nella giornata del 24 giugno 1859, Voghera, 1907. (reprinted in anastatic edition, s.l. 2010)
  • Il combattimento di Montebello, 20 maggio 1859, Modena, 1909.
  • Le giornate di Custoza. Campagna di guerra del 1848. Estratto da memorie storico-militari, Città di Castello 1911.
  • Contronote di guerra, Raselli, Cherasco, 1920.
  • Operazioni militari della 4ª Armata nei primi quattro mesi della campagna di guerra 1915, Raselli, Cherasco, 1922.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Pelagalli 2011, p. 19.
  2. ^ Montanari 2000, p. 42.
  3. ^ Montanari 2000, p. 39.
  4. ^ a b Montanari 2000, p. 40.
  5. ^ Montanari 1996, p. 7.
  6. ^ Montanari 1996, p. 5.
  7. ^ Montanari 1996, p. 10.
  8. ^ a b c Gazzetta Ufficiale del Regno d'Italia n.65, del 19 marzo 1898, p.973.
  9. ^ Regio Decreto dell'11 marzo 1898.
  10. ^ Cadorna 1921, p. 92.
  11. ^ a b c Cadorna 1921, p. 132.
  12. ^ Contronote di guerra, e Operazioni militari della 4ª Armata nei primi quattro mesi della campagna di guerra 1915.

Bibliography edit

  • Cadorna, Luigi (1921). Fratelli Treves editori (ed.). La guerra alla fronte italiana. Vol. 1. Milan.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Capello, Luigi (1920). Fratelli Treves editori (ed.). Note di guerra. Milan.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Capello, Luigi (1921). Fratelli Treves editori (ed.). Dall'inizio alla presa di Gorizia. Milan.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Battaglia, Roberto (1958). Einaudi (ed.). La prima Guerra d'Africa. Torino.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Del Boca, Angelo (2002). A. Mondadori Editore (ed.). Gli italiani in Africa Orientale. Dall'unità alla marcia su Roma. Vol. 1. Milao. ISBN 88-04-46946-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • McLachlan, Sean (1902). Osprey Publishing Company (ed.). Armies of the Adowa Campaign 1896. Botley. ISBN 1-84908-458-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Segato, Luigi (1935). Fratelli Vallardi editori (ed.). L'Italia nella guerra mondiale. Vol. 1. Milan.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Thompson, Mark (2009). Il Saggiatore s.p.a. (ed.). La guerra bianca. Vita e morte sul fronte italiano 1915-1919. Milan. ISBN 978-88-6576-008-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Montanari, Mario (May 1996). Ermanno Albertelli Editore (ed.). Adua 1896. number: Storia Militare. pp. 4–10. ISSN 1122-5289.
  • Montanari, Mario (May 2000). Ermanno Albertelli Editore (ed.). Il combattimento di Dogali. Parma: Storia Militare. pp. 39–44. ISSN 1122-5289.
  • Pelagalli, Sergio (August 2011). Ermanno Albertelli Editore (ed.). Esoneri dal comando nella Grande Guerra. Parma: Storia Militare. pp. 17–23. ISSN 1122-5289.

  Media related to Luigi Nava at Wikimedia Commons

luigi, nava, 1851, 1928, italian, general, army, participated, first, italo, ethiopian, world, participated, italian, colonial, campaign, horn, africa, which, lead, participation, battle, adwa, where, wounded, taken, prisoner, abyssinians, having, become, lieu. Luigi Nava 1851 1928 was an Italian General of the Army who participated in the First Italo Ethiopian War and World War I He participated in the Italian colonial campaign in the Horn of Africa which lead to his participation at the Battle of Adwa where he was wounded and taken prisoner by the Abyssinians Having become Lieutenant General at the action of the general mobilization of 1915 he was appointed commander of the 4th Army but was dismissed from the command four months after Italy entered the war 1 Luigi NavaBorn 1851 06 13 June 13 1851Turin Piedmont Kingdom of SardiniaDiedJuly 9 1928 1928 07 09 aged 77 Alessandria Piedmont ItalyAllegiance ItalyBranch Royal Italian ArmyYears of service1870 1921RankGeneral of the ArmyCommands held4th ArmyBattles warsItalo Ethiopian War of 1887 1889 Battle of DogaliFirst Italo Ethiopian War Battle of Adwa POW World War I Italian Front White WarAlma materRoyal Academy of Turin it Contents 1 Early career 2 Service in Ethiopia 3 World War I 4 Later years 5 Awards 6 Works 7 References 7 1 BibliographyEarly career editHe was born in Turin on June 13 1851 as the son of Giacomo Antonio and Elisabetta Salino He entered the Royal Academy of Turin it on September 22 1867 and graduated with the rank of second lieutenant of the General Staff of the artillery in July 1870 He was promoted to lieutenant on July 25 1872 and served in the 3rd Field Artillery Regiment where he became aide major in the 2nd In 1874 he began to attend the Scuola di applicazione it for the positions of Staff but he left in 1877 Nava was promoted to captain in August 1878 and he passed through the Staff Corps and served first in the Alessandria Division and then in the command of the III Corps He became major in October 1885 serving as battalion commander in the 4th Infantry Regiment Piedmont Service in Ethiopia editAfter the Battle of Dogali 2 fought on January 26 1887 3 the new head of government Francesco Crispi 4 decided to continue the hostilities by sending an expeditionary force of 20 000 men of which he became assigned to the command of the special corps as Chief of Staff of the African troops Starting from October of the same year he participated in some war operations in the context of the Italo Ethiopian War of 1887 1889 including the Battle of Saati as commander of the Bersaglieri battalion of the 1st Regiment Hunters of Africa 4 He returned to Italy in May 1888 to serve first at the 7th and then at the 9th Army Corps In November 1889 he was promoted to lieutenant colonel serving as Chief of Staff of the Milan Division In May 1890 he returned to Eritrea as a lieutenant colonel of staff under the orders of General Alessandro Asinari di San Marzano participating in the 1890 91 campaign as an officer assigned to the governor He returned to Italy in April 1892 to be promoted to colonel on November 23 1893 In January 1894 he became commander of the 40th Infantry Regiment Bologna then stationed in Milan He returned to Eritrea in time to participate in the First Italo Ethiopian War 5 He was assigned as the commander of the 5th Infantry Regiment of Africa to the III Brigade of General Giuseppe Ellena 6 He reached the theater of operations on January 12 1896 in time to take part in the Battle of Adwa where he tried in vain to block 7 the road to the enemy advance 8 with a company of Alpini troops and the 16th Battalion of the 5th Infantry Regiment 8 Nava was then wounded by a spear blow and he was taken prisoner by Ras Mengesha Yohannes who before releasing him reserved him a preferential treatment 8 For his service in Adwa he obtained the Knight s Cross of the Military Order of Savoy 9 In December 1897 he became honorary adjutant of King Umberto I After his period in the service of the King he returned to the General Staff serving for three years as a military attache at the Italian Embassy in Vienna On April 19 1900 he was elevated to the rank of major general and assumed command of the Acqui Brigade which he maintained until September 1906 He then assumed command of the Military Academy of Modena and on April 10 1907 he was promoted to lieutenant general From 1909 to 1910 he was in command of the 15th Division in Florence and from September 30 1910 of the 11th Army Corps in Bari From 17 December 1911 to 1 October 1914 he was commander of the 6th Army Corps in Bologna and on August 30 he received the designation of possible army commander in case of war under Giovanni Giolitti World War I editWith the Italian entry into World War I on May 24 1915 he assumed command of the 4th Army 10 with its headquarters in Vittorio Veneto which deployed its forces from Passo Cereda to Monte Peralba on a front of about 75 km General Luigi Cadorna supreme commander of the Royal Italian Army began an offensive against Austria Hungary 11 starting with the conquest of the forts of Sexten Landro and Valparola 11 The first objective of the operations was to take possession of the Toblach node on the right and on the left of the hills surrounding the Sella group 11 His army failed to fulfill expectations and he stood out indeed as the most wait and see of the Italian army commanders 1 At the end of June 1915 he requested the exemption of the subordinate general Pietro Marini whose fault was having imprudently occupied the saddle of the Sasso di Stria and Cadorna who did not share the esteem of which his subordinate was almost unanimously accredited accepted the request However on September 25 of the same year Cadorna also exonerated him replacing him with General Mario Nicolis di Robilant 1 The official motivation was that In the first fifteen days of operations he did not act with promptness and energy exploiting his superiority of forces and he exercised the command with insufficient decision 1 In 1916 Nava was entrusted with the Presidency of the Central Health Commission which he maintained until February 1917 From March 1 of the same year he was placed in the position of auxiliary service In April 1918 he asked the new supreme commander of the army General Armando Diaz to be readmitted to the command of a mobilized unit However this proved to be almost impossible given the assignment previously carried out and the lack of army commands available in the face of the abundance of other officers that wanted to lead them Later years editIn June 1919 he left active service passing through the reserve and dedicating himself to the drafting of two volumes of memoirs 12 to which he entrusted the defense of his work in particular against the accusations made by General Luigi Capello who accused him of the excessive delay in the attack operations of the 4th army and of not having occupied the Cortina d Ampezzo basin before the 13th day of the war To the accusations he replied by arguing the delay and the numerical insufficiency of the siege artillery park that had been made available to him without which it was criminally unrealistic to face the permanent works and field defenses prepared by the Austrians in Cadore and in the Ampezzano area The two volumes like other polemical writings by generals exonerated during the First World War did not have much circulation On June 2 1921 he was definitively retired due to his service length and enrolled in the roles of the reserve where in November 1924 he was nominated as army general with seniority from February 1 of the previous year Two years later he also managed to have the partial revision of his exemption provision which recognized him as active service from March 1 1917 to June 11 1919 He died in Alessandria on July 9 1928 Awards editMilitary Order of Savoy Knight War Merit Cross April 9 1919 Order of the Crown of Italy Knight Grand Cross 1913 Grand Officer 1904 Commander Officer Knight Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus Commander 1909 Officer KnightWorks editL armata sarda nella giornata del 24 giugno 1859 Voghera 1907 reprinted in anastatic edition s l 2010 Il combattimento di Montebello 20 maggio 1859 Modena 1909 Le giornate di Custoza Campagna di guerra del 1848 Estratto da memorie storico militari Citta di Castello 1911 Contronote di guerra Raselli Cherasco 1920 Operazioni militari della 4ª Armata nei primi quattro mesi della campagna di guerra 1915 Raselli Cherasco 1922 References edit a b c d Pelagalli 2011 p 19 Montanari 2000 p 42 Montanari 2000 p 39 a b Montanari 2000 p 40 Montanari 1996 p 7 Montanari 1996 p 5 Montanari 1996 p 10 a b c Gazzetta Ufficiale del Regno d Italia n 65 del 19 marzo 1898 p 973 Regio Decreto dell 11 marzo 1898 Cadorna 1921 p 92 a b c Cadorna 1921 p 132 Contronote di guerra e Operazioni militari della 4ª Armata nei primi quattro mesi della campagna di guerra 1915 Bibliography edit Cadorna Luigi 1921 Fratelli Treves editori ed La guerra alla fronte italiana Vol 1 Milan a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Capello Luigi 1920 Fratelli Treves editori ed Note di guerra Milan a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Capello Luigi 1921 Fratelli Treves editori ed Dall inizio alla presa di Gorizia Milan a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Battaglia Roberto 1958 Einaudi ed La prima Guerra d Africa Torino a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Del Boca Angelo 2002 A Mondadori Editore ed Gli italiani in Africa Orientale Dall unita alla marcia su Roma Vol 1 Milao ISBN 88 04 46946 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link McLachlan Sean 1902 Osprey Publishing Company ed Armies of the Adowa Campaign 1896 Botley ISBN 1 84908 458 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Segato Luigi 1935 Fratelli Vallardi editori ed L Italia nella guerra mondiale Vol 1 Milan a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Thompson Mark 2009 Il Saggiatore s p a ed La guerra bianca Vita e morte sul fronte italiano 1915 1919 Milan ISBN 978 88 6576 008 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Montanari Mario May 1996 Ermanno Albertelli Editore ed Adua 1896 number Storia Militare pp 4 10 ISSN 1122 5289 Montanari Mario May 2000 Ermanno Albertelli Editore ed Il combattimento di Dogali Parma Storia Militare pp 39 44 ISSN 1122 5289 Pelagalli Sergio August 2011 Ermanno Albertelli Editore ed Esoneri dal comando nella Grande Guerra Parma Storia Militare pp 17 23 ISSN 1122 5289 nbsp Media related to Luigi Nava at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Luigi Nava amp oldid 1186136445, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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