- 4 Alpine Division Cuneense
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4a Divisione Alpina Cuneense
Coat of Arms of the 4th Alpine Division CuneenseActive 31 October 1935 – 28 January 1943 Country Italy Branch Regio Esercito Type Alpini Role Mountain Infantry Size 17,460 men Part of Italian Alpine Corps
1942-1943Garrison/HQ Cuneo Engagements World War II
Greco-Italian War
Italian War in Soviet UnionCommanders Notable
commandersGeneral Emilio Battisti Subordinate UnitsComponents 1st Alpini Regiment
2nd Alpini Regiment
4th Alpine Artillery Regiment
4° Mixed Engineer BattalionThe 4th Alpine Division Cuneense was an Italian division composed of Alpini - light Mountain Infantry - and Mountain Artillery units. The division participated in all Italian campaigns of World War II with the exception of the North African Campaign. The division was completely destroyed by Soviet Forces during Operation Little Saturn
Contents
Formation
The Cuneense division was constituted on 31 October 1935 through the reorganization of the existing 5th Superior Alpini Command. The headquarter of the division was in the city of Cuneo and the majority of its soldiers were drafted from the surrounding valleys - hence the name "Cuneense".
Order of battle
- 1st Alpini Regiment based in Mondovì
- 2nd Alpini Regiment based in Cuneo
- 4th Alpine Artillery Regiment based in Cuneo
- Pinerolo artillery group
- Mondovì artillery group
- Val Po artillery group
- 4th Engineer Battalion based in Peveragno
- 2nd Logistic Battalion based in Busca
- 201st Auto-Transport Battalion based in Cuneo
- 413th, 414th Carabinieri Companies based in Cuneo
- 701st Heavy Armament Company based in Borgo San Dalmazzo
- 613th, 614th, 616th, 617th Field Hospitals based in Spinetta
The division strength was 573 officers and 16,887 NCOs and soldiers for a total strength of 17,460 men. The division also had 176 horses, 4,698 mules and 584 transport vehicles at its disposal. [1]
Battle of France
On 21 June 1940 (one day before the French surrender) the “Cuneense” division began to advance with other Italian units into Southern France.
Greco-Italian War
The division was then sent to Albania, where it participated in the Greco-Italian War. As the German Wehrmacht came to the aid of the beaten Italian armies in Albania in April 1941 through a invasion of Yugoslavia the “Cuneense” was sent north to aid the rapidly advancing German divisions. The Cuneense advanced through Montenegro and reached Dubrovnik at the end of the campaign.
Italian participation in the Eastern Front
In September 1942 the “Cuneense” was sent with the Alpini divisions Julia and Tridentina and other Italian units to the Soviet Union to form the Mountain Corps of the Italian Army in Russia (Armata Italiana in Russia, or ARMIR) and fight alongside the Germans against the Red Army. Taking up positions along the Don river the Italian units covered part of the left flank of the German Sixth Army, which spearheaded the German summer offensive of 1942 into the city of Stalingrad.
After the Red Army successfully encircled the German Sixth Army in Stalingrad during Operation Uranus, Soviet attention turned to the Italian and Hungarian units along the Don. On 13 January 1943 the Soviet offensive Operation Little Saturn began and the three Alpini divisions found themselves quickly encircled by the rapidly advancing armoured forces of Soviet General Filipp Golikov's Voronezh Front. The Alpinis held the front on the river Don, but within three days the Soviets advanced 200km to the left and right of the Alpini. On the evening of 17 January the commanding officer of the corps General Gabriele Nasci finally ordered a full retreat. At this point the Julia and Cuneense divisions were already heavily decimated and only the Tridentina division was still capable of conducting combat operations.
The 40,000 men strong mass of stragglers - Alpinis and Italians from other commands, plus various Germans and Hungarians - formed two columns, that followed the Tridentina division, supported by a handful of German armoured vehicles, which led the way westwards to the new Axis front. On 24 January the Cuneense formed its own column and marched south of the Tridentina division. As the Soviets had already occupied every village bitter battles had to be fought to clear the way. On the morning of 28 January the division had walked 200km, fought 20 battles, lost 80% of its men and spent 11 nights camped out in the middle of the Russian Steppe. Temperatures during the nights were between -30°C and -40°C. During the 28th the last remnants of the division were annihilated by Cossack forces. The last survivors of the 1st Alpini regiment burned the regiment's flag to prevent it from falling into enemy hands. The Cuneense then ceased to exist.
On 11 February 1943 the count of the survivors gave the following result:
- 1st Alpini Regiment out of 5,206 men: 722 survivors; none of the soldiers of the battalions Ceva, Pieve di Teco and Mondovì survived.
- 2nd Alpini Regiment out of 5,206 men: 208 survivors; none of the soldiers of the battalions Borgo San Dalmazzo and Saluzzo survived.
- 4th Alpine Artillery Regiment out of 3,897 men: 379 survivors; none of the soldiers of the Artillery Group Mondovì survived.
- 4th Mixed Engineer Battalion out of 1,240 men: 139 survivors
- Support units out of 1,313 men: 159 survivors
In total 1,607 men of the division's total of 17,460 survived Operation Little Saturn.
Sources
Official Homepage of the reduci (survivors) of the 4th Alpine Division Cuneense
Italian Divisions in World War II Armoured 131 Armoured Division Centauro · 132 Armoured Division Ariete · 133 Armoured Division Littorio · 134 Armoured Divison Freccia · 135 Armoured Divison Ariete II · 136 Armoured Divison Centauro II
Cavalry 1 Cavalry Division Eugenio di Savoia · 2 Cavalry Division Emanuele Filiberto Testa di Ferro · 3 Cavalry Division Amedeo Duca d'Aosta
Alpine 1 Alpine Division Taurinense · 2 Alpine Division Tridentina · 3 Alpine Division Julia · 4 Alpine Division Cuneense · 5 Alpine Division Pusteria · 6 Alpine Division Alpi Graie
Mountain 1 Mountain Infantry Division Superga · 2 Mountain Infantry Division Sforzesca · 3 Mountain Infantry Division Ravenna · 4 Mountain Infantry Division Livorno · 26 Mountain Infantry Division Assietta · 33 Mountain Infantry Division Acqui · 36 Mountain Infantry Division Forlì · 37 Mountain Infantry Division Modena · 59 Mountain Infantry Division Cagliari
Motorised 9 Motorised Division Pasubio · 10 Motorised Division Piave · 16 Motorised Division Pistoia · 17 Motorised Division Pavia · 25 Motorised Division Bologna · 27 Motorised Division Brescia · 52 Motorised Division Torino · 101 Motorised Division Trieste · 102 Motorised Division Trento · 103 Motorised Division Piacenza · 104 Motorised Division Mantova · 105 Motorised Division Rovigo
Infantry 5 Infantry Division Cosseria · 6 Infantry Division Cuneo · 7 Infantry Division Lupi di Toscana · 8 Infantry Division Po · 11 Infantry Division Brennero · 12 Infantry Division Sassari · 13 Infantry Division Re · 14 Infantry Division Isonzo · 15 Infantry Division Bergamo · 18 Infantry Division Messina · 19 Infantry Division Venezia · 20 Infantry Division Friuli · 21 Infantry Division Granatieri di Sardegna · 22 Infantry Division Cacciatori delle Alpi · 23 Infantry Division Ferrara · 24 Infantry Division Pinerolo · 28 Infantry Division Aosta · 29 Infantry Division Piemonte · 30 Infantry Division Sabauda · 31 Infantry Division Calabria · 32 Infantry Division Marche · 38 Infantry Division Puglie · 40 Infantry Division Cacciatori d'Africa · 41 Infantry Division Firenze · 44 Infantry Division Cremona · 47 Infantry Division Bari · 48 Infantry Division Taro · 49 Infantry Division Parma · 50 Infantry Division Regina · 51 Infantry Division Siena · 53 Infantry Division Arezzo · 54 Infantry Division Napoli · 55 Infantry Division Savona · 56 Infantry Division Casale · 57 Infantry Division Lombardia · 58 Infantry Division Legnano · 60 Infantry Division Sabratha · 61 Infantry Division Sirte · 62 Infantry Division Marmarica · 63 Infantry Division Cirene · 64 Infantry Division Catanzaro · 65 Infantry Division Granatieri di Savoia · 136 Infantry Division Giovani Fascisti
Garrison 151 Infantry Division Perugia · 152 Infantry Division Piceno · 153 Infantry Division Macerata · 154 Infantry Division Murge · 155 Infantry Division Emilia · 156 Infantry Division Vicenza · 157 Infantry Division Novara · 158 Infantry Division Zara · 159 Infantry Division Veneto
Airborne 184 Airborne Division Nembo · 185 Airborne Division Folgore · 80 Infantry Division La Spezia (Airlanding)
Blackshirt 1 Blackshirt Armoured Division M · 1 Blackshirt Division 23 Marzo · 2 Blackshirt Division 28 Ottobre · 3 Blackshirt Division 21 Aprile · 4 Blackshirt Division 3 Gennaio
Libyan 1 Libyan Division Sibelle · 2 Libyan Division Pescatori · Maletti Group (special unit) ·
Coastal 201 Coastal Division · 202 Coastal Division · 203 Coastal Division · 204 Coastal Division · 205 Coastal Division · 206 Coastal Division · 207 Coastal Division · 208 Coastal Division · 209 Coastal Division · 210 Coastal Division · 211 Coastal Division · 212 Coastal Division · 213 Coastal Division · 214 Coastal Division · 215 Coastal Division · 216 Coastal Division · 220 Coastal Division · 221 Coastal Division · 222 Coastal Division · 223 Coastal Division · 224 Coastal Division · 225 Coastal Division · 226 Coastal Division · 227 Coastal Division · 230 Coastal Division
Categories:- Military history of Italy
- Military history of Italy during World War II
- Alpini divisions of Italy
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