Battle of Monte Pelado
Template:Short description Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Infobox military conflict".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The Battle of Monte Pelado (Template:Langx; Template:Langx) was an early engagement of the Spanish Civil War, which took place on 28 August 1936 in the province of Uesca. During the battle, roughly 100 Italian anti-fascist volunteers defended Template:Ill (nicknamed Script error: No such module "Lang". by the volunteers) from a trained and well-equipped Nationalist force several times its size. The Italians held out for four hours against a frontal assault and flanking maneuvers, before counterattacking. The anti-fascist victory in the battle opened the way for a further series of Republican offensives in Uesca.
Background
Soon after the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, many Italian anti-fascists went to revolutionary Catalonia to enlist in the anarchist militias.Template:Sfnm On 17 August, an Italian militia column was established by Camillo Berneri of the Italian Syndicalist Union, Carlo Rosselli of Giustizia e Libertà and Template:Ill of the Italian Republican Party,Template:Sfnm with funding from the Italian-American syndicalist Carlo Tresca.Template:Sfn It was integrated into the Ascaso Column and went to fight on the Template:Ill.Template:Sfnm
The Column arrived in the village of Bizién, in the province of Uesca, on 21 August. There they met with Domingo Ascaso, who suggested they take the peak of Template:Ill, a strategically important hill in the Galocha Plateau, which overlooked the frontlines;Template:Sfn situated between the cities of Almudébar and Uesca.Template:Sfn Angeloni nicknamed it the Script error: No such module "Lang". (Template:Langx).Template:Sfn On 25 August, riflemen led by Template:Ill and a machine-gun detachment led by Angeloni established a military camp on the mountain and immediately dug trenches around it, creating a highly defensible position.Template:Sfn
Battle
At 04:00, on 28 August, Nationalist forces attacked Monte Pelado in a frontal assault.Template:Sfn The Nationalists outnumbered the Italians: between 600 and 650 highly-trained and well-equipped soldiers,Template:Sfnm with the backing of artillery cannonsTemplate:Sfnm and a number of armoured vehicles,Template:Sfnm faced between 100 and 130 Italian volunteers.Template:Sfnm It was the Italian Column's first battle of the Spanish Civil War,Template:Sfnm and the first that Italian anti-fascists had fought in since the dissolution of the Arditi del Popolo.Template:Sfn
During the first wave, the first defender to die was an old Italian anarchist named Michele Centrone, who was killed by a bullet to the head.Template:Sfnm They repelled the frontal assault, but the Nationalists then attempted to flank them. On the right flank, the anarchist journalist Fosco Falaschi was killed; while on the left flank, a Sardinian anti-fascist named Giuseppe Zuddas was killed and Mario Angeloni was mortally wounded while crossing open ground to throw grenades at an armoured vehicle.Template:Sfn After four hours of fighting, at 08:00,Template:Sfnm the Italian Column counterattacked.Template:Sfnm While pursuing the retreating Nationalists, Attilio Papperotto and Andrea Colliva were both shot in the head after they had exposed themselves.Template:Sfn
By the end of the battle, the Italian Column had killed most of the Nationalist attackers and taken only a few as prisoners of war.Template:Sfn The bodies of the fallen anti-fascists were buried in Bizién. Mario Angeloni died at a field hospital in Balbastro and his funeral was held in Barcelona.Template:Sfn Bifolchi subsequently took command of the column.Template:Sfn Also among those who survived the battle were Carlo RosselliTemplate:Sfn and Camillo Berneri,Template:Sfn as well as the artist Template:IllTemplate:Sfn and the anarchist Alberto Meschi.Template:Sfn
Aftermath
The Italian Column's victory at Monte Pelado opened the way for a series of offensives in the province of Uesca, with the aim of surrounding the city of Uesca and cutting off the road between it and Zaragoza. It also received attention in the international press and inspired many more anti-fascists to come to Spain to fight. Meanwhile, members of the Italian Communist Party attempted to downplay the battle's significance and dismissed it as inconsequential.Template:Sfn In November 1936, the Italian Column was reorganised into two battalions: the Matteotti Battalion, led by Rosselli; and the International Battalion, led by the anarchists. These battalions remained in the Ascaso Column.Template:Sfn
References
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Bibliography
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Further reading
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