PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Battle of San Matteo
rdfs:comment
  • At the beginning of 1918 Austro-Hungarian troops set up a fortified position with small artillery pieces on the top of the San Matteo Peak, from which they were able to shell the road to the Gavia Pass and thus harass the Italian supply convoys to the front line. On August 13, 1918 a small group of Italian Alpini (307th Company, Ortles Battalion) conducted a surprise attack taking the fortified position, half of the Austro-Hungarian soldiers were taken prisoner and the other half fled to lower positions.
owl:sameAs
Strength
  • 1
  • 150
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Partof
  • the Italian Front
Date
  • --08-13
Commander
  • Unknown
  • Arnaldo Berni
Caption
  • Italian monument dedicated to the victims of the battle, on the way to the Gavia Pass
Casualties
  • 10
  • 17
Result
  • Austro-Hungarian victory
combatant
  • Italy
Place
Conflict
  • Battle of San Matteo
abstract
  • At the beginning of 1918 Austro-Hungarian troops set up a fortified position with small artillery pieces on the top of the San Matteo Peak, from which they were able to shell the road to the Gavia Pass and thus harass the Italian supply convoys to the front line. On August 13, 1918 a small group of Italian Alpini (307th Company, Ortles Battalion) conducted a surprise attack taking the fortified position, half of the Austro-Hungarian soldiers were taken prisoner and the other half fled to lower positions. The loss of the San Matteo Peak constituted a loss of face to imperial Austria, and reinforcements were immediately sent to the region while the Italians were still organizing their defence on the top of the peak. On September 3, 1918 the Austro-Hungarian started operation "Gemse", an attack aimed to retake the mountain. A large scale artillery bombardment, followed by the assault of at least 150 Kaiserschützen of the (3rd kuk Kaiserjäger Regiment from Dimaro) was eventually successful and the lost position was retaken. The Italians, who already considered the mountain lost, began a counter-bombardment of the fortified positions, causing many victims among both the defending Italian and the Austro-Hungarian troops. The base of the peak lies at 2800m altitude and it takes a four-hour ice climb up a glacier to reach the top. The Austro-Hungarians lost 17 men in the battle and the Italians 10. This was the last Austro-Hungarian victory in World War I. The Armistice of Villa Giusti, concluded on November 3, 1918 at 15:00 at Villa Giusti (near Padua) ended the Alpine War in these mountains on November 4, 1918 at 1500 h. In the summer of 2004 the ice-encased bodies of three Kaiserschützen were found at 3400m, near the peak.