Misplaced Pages

First Battle of the Piave River

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from First Battle of the Piave) 1917 battle between Italy and Austro-Hungary For the Napoleonic battle, see Battle of Piave River (1809).
First Battle of the Piave River
Part of Italian front of the First World War

Italian troops on the new Piave front
Date13–26 November 1917
LocationPiave
Result

Italian victory

Belligerents
 Austria-Hungary
 German Empire
 Kingdom of Italy
Commanders and leaders
German Empire Otto von Below
Austria-Hungary Archduke Eugen of Austria
Kingdom of Italy Armando Diaz
Kingdom of Italy Mario Nicolis di Robilant
Strength
German Empire 14th Army
Austria-Hungary11th Army
Kingdom of Italy 4th Army
Casualties and losses
~21,000 ~12,000
Italian Front
1915

1916

1917

1918

White War (1915–1918)

Austrian trenches on the Asolone flank of the Monte Grappa massif

The First Battle of the Piave River (Italian: Prima battaglia del Piave), was fought during World War I between the armies of the Austro-Hungarian Empire supported by the German Empire against the Kingdom of Italy along the Piave river.

The Italian Army was in all-out retreat after the Austro-Hungarian autumn offensive of 1917. The Italian Chief of the general staff, general Luigi Cadorna, had ordered the construction of fortified defenses around the Monte Grappa summit in order to make the mountain range an impregnable fortress. When the Austro-Hungarian offensive routed the Italians, the new Italian chief of staff, Armando Diaz, ordered the Fourth Army to stop their retreat and defend these positions between the Roncone and the Tomatico mountains, with the support of the Second Army.

The Austro-Hungarians, despite help from the German Army's Alpenkorps and numerical superiority, failed to take the mountain's summit during the first battle of Monte Grappa, which lasted from November 11, 1917, to December 23, 1917. Armando Diaz allowed his local commanders much more freedom of manoeuvre than his predecessor, which resulted in a more elastic and effective Italian defense.

Thus the Italian front along the Piave river was stabilized and the Austro-Hungarians failed to enter the plains beyond and to take the city of Venice.

See also

References

This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. Please help improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (January 2016) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
World War I
Theatres
European
Middle Eastern
African
Asian and Pacific
Naval warfare
Principal
participants
Entente Powers
Central Powers
Timeline
Pre-War conflicts
Prelude
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
Co-belligerent conflicts
Post-War conflicts
Aspects
Warfare
Conscription
Casualties /
Civilian impact
Disease
Occupations
POWs
Refugees
War crimes
Diplomacy
Entry into the war
Declarations of war
Agreements
Peace treaties
Other

Categories: