Bombing of Zadar in World War II

Bombing of Zadar in World War II

The bombing of Zadar ( _it. Zara) during the Second World War by the Allies lasted from November 1943 to October 1944. Although other large cities in Italy were also bombed, the bombing of Zara stands out because of the number of attacks and the number of fatalities. Reports vary greatly; the Allies documented 30 bombing raids, while contemporary Italian accounts claim 54. Fatalities recorded range from under 1,000, up to as many as 4,000 of the city's 20,000 inhabitants.

Over the course of the bombing, 60% of the city's buildings were destroyed. Zara has been called the Dresden of the Adriatic because of perceived similarities to the Allied bombing that city. In both cases, Allied bombs devastated a city rich in artistic and historical treasures but with no apparent industrial or military targets.

It is the most significant historical event in Zadar after the Siege of Zara in 1202 by forces of the Fourth Crusade.

Background

Italian enclave of Zara

Zara became part of the Kingdom of Italy as a result of the Treaty of Rapallo of 1920, which settled the status of former Austro-Hungarian territories. [http://www.dalmatia.it/dalmazia/zaritaen.htm] It had a large Italian majority and was an Italian enclave in Dalmatia. [http://www.dalmatia.it/dalmazia/scompa/primoen.htm] From the 1920s on, many more CroatsFacts|date=February 2007 were pressured to leave the city while their place was being taken by ethnic Italians resettling there from within Yugoslavian Dalmatia—such as the famous fashion stylist Ottavio Missoni, [http://www.missoni.it/ing.html] who moved with the family from Dubrovnik. The 1910 census in Austria-Hungary placed the Italians at 69.3% of the population, which consistently rose in the decades that followed. Public functionaries, teachers, and policemen were transferred from the mainland.

During this time, there was also a significant presence of military personnel.

In May 1940 Italy declared war on Britain and France.

Up until 1941, the city was surrounded by Italian fortifications, of which the bunker behind Gaženice and in the area of Ploče and Crnog were the most notable. At the same time as preparing a defense from the sea, an attack was planned against the Kingdom of YugoslaviaFacts|date=February 2007.

econd World War until the capitulation of Italy (1941–1943)

The Axis powers attacked the Kingdom of Yugoslavia on 6 April 1941. On 17 April, the Yugoslavian government surrendered. Zara held a force of 9,000 commanded by General Emilio Gilioli that after bloody fighting on 15 April reached Sibenik and Split. Arriving in Dubrovnik and Mostar on 17 April, they met troops that had started out from Albania.

It is known that on 8 April, the Yugoslavian air force bombed Zara. Although this resulted in some damage, it cannot be compared to the bombing that the city would endure two years later. The civilians had been previously evacuated towards Ancona and Pola (Croatian Pula) .The Treaty of Rome in 1941 between the newly-formed fascist puppet Independent State of Croatia (NDH) and Italy handed over a large part of northern Dalmatia to Italy including the cities of Split and Knin.

Capitulation of Italy

After Mussolini was removed from power, the new government of Pietro Badoglio declared an armistice, and on 8 September 1943, the Italian army collapsed. The NDH took advantage of this chaotic situation by proclaiming the Treaty of Rome to be void and occupying Italian Dalmatia with German support. However, the Germans entered Zara first, and on 10 September the German 114 Infantry Division took over. This avoided an occupation by Partisans, as happened in Split and Šibenik where several ethnic Italian civilians were executed. The city was prevented from joining the NDH on the grounds that Zara itself was not subject to the conditions of the Treaty of Rome, whether it was void or not. Despite this, the NDH's leader Ante Pavelić designated Zara as the capital of the Sidraga-Ravni Kotari County, although its prefect was prevented from entering the city. Zara remained under local Italian administration with German military protection, and in this unsure climate that the Allied bombing began.

The bombing

The first large Allied aerial attack on Zara was carried out on 2 November 1943 by the USAAF 12th Air Force, during which an orphanage was destroyed, among other buildings. Larger attacks followed on 28 November in which 200 people were killed, and on 16 December and 30 December. The first attacks caused many civilian casualties, but the city continued to function despite the damage. The attack on the 16th was especially harsh, as the shelters at Cereria (now Voštarnica) and at the city's centre were hit, killing between 150 and 200 people. Fifty American B-25 medium bombers participated in the strikes, dropping 90 tonnes of bombs.

Besides these main attacks, the city was bombed to a lesser degree on other days. Through the use of carpet bombing, entire neighborhood blocks were destroyed. The city centre was hardest hit, especially around the Forum and Calle Larga (Croatian: Kalelarga street) where no buildings were spared. As with other cases of urban bombings the damage was not caused by the initial explosions but the resulting fires, which turned the city into a pile of skeletons of burnt-out houses. Each attack targeted a specific part of the city. On the 16th, the area from the Church of Our Lady of Good Health to across the Calle Larga to the Piazza delle Erbe (today's People's Square) was targeted, while on the 30th the area from the "Riva Nova" waterfront to Giuseppe Verdi Theatre was attacked. On 31 December, the city hospital and the majority of the industrial machinery was destroyed. The Luxardo factory [http://en.luxardo.it/eng/company/our_history] (manufacturer of the famous Maraschino cherry liqueur) was set on fire, and the building burned for three days.

Attacks which completely ravaged Zara followed from January to March 1944. On 16 January 1944, Liberator heavy bombers attacked Zara losing one bomber but claiming nine "Luftwaffe" fighters. [https://www.airforcehistory.hq.af.mil/PopTopics/chron/44jan.htm] However, the number of casualties was much less because the population rendered homeless escaped to the less damaged outskirts (Arbanasi and Stanovi) as well as Zara's islands. It is estimated that in the spring of 1944, there were fewer than 4,000 civilians left in the city Facts|date=February 2007. Even though the industrial plants and piers were crippled, bombing continued throughout of 1944. Thus, the Germans were forced to establish a port in Zaton near Nin and Ražanac. By the summer, the center of Zara had practically ceased to exist. The majority of houses were completely destroyed and their ruins buried the streets. The city was desolate. The period from June to the beginning of October was not marked by any large attacks, but they resumed in the middle of October as German forces abandoned the city. The worst attacks came on the 25th and 30th of that month when the areas of Borgo Erizzo (Arbanasi) and Brodarica, Jazina, and the "Riva Nova" waterfront were hit.The last attacks came on the 31st on the same day that the forces of the Yugoslav Partisans entered Zara. It is presumed that the attack was an accident as some of the Partisans were killed in the attack.Several summary executions, even of civilians, were performed by the Partisans. Among them, three of the four Luxardo brothers (owners of the Maraschino factory) were murdered. Nicolò Luxardo, as was many others, was thrown alive into the sea with a stone tied to his neck in front of his wife, who was executed immediately afterwards with a shot to the head.Most of the survivors left the city some time later.

Destruction and casualties

The greater part of the city's core was destroyed, including the entire Riva Nova with its 12 Austro-Hungarian palaces, its post office and neighborhood blocks around the Forum, the Kalelarga, the school near the Church of St. Chrysogonus, the churches of St. Mary, Our Lady of Health, and the baptistry of the Cathedral of St. Anastasia. Only the churches were restored. Many buildings which had burned were not rebuilt but demolished, with their stone reused in the rebuilding of the coastline and roads. A well-known example of this was the city theatre Teatro Verdi, which was only slightly damaged, but was plundered by Communist forces and destroyed. War and postwar damage occurred mostly in the western part of the peninsula, where the government offices and piers were located. The eastern part (the present Varoš), was one of the areas where the prewar appearance was retained.

Apart from the destruction caused by the Allies, the withdrawing Germans mined the Riva Nova slowing down postwar recovery as well as causing casualties. Exact numbers will likely never be known, as Zara saw a great deal of population change.

The local population moved out, and were replaced by South Slavic settlers. The number of military personnel remaining in the city is undetermined.

After the war, the number of casualties became a political question, especially within the community of Italians who had left the city for Italy. They placed the number at 3,000-4,000 deaths, claiming that a genocide had been carried out on them. Most sources place the count at 1,000 deaths, as a big part of the population escaped after the first attacks in fall and winter, 1943 Facts|date=February 2007. This small figure was the highest of any city in Italy.

ee also

*Yugoslav People's Liberation War
*USAAF
*Yugoslav Partisans


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