Military Wiki
Advertisement
131st Tank Regiment
131° Reggimento Carri
160px
Regimental coat of arms
Active 27 July 1941 - 8 September 1943
1 September 1993 - 11 July 2013[1]
Country Flag of Italy Italy
Branch Italian Army
Part of Bersaglieri Brigade "Garibaldi"
Garrison/HQ Persano
Motto(s) "D'acciaio anche i cuori"
Anniversaries 1 October 1927 - Founding of the Armed Tanks Regiment[1]

The 131st Tank Regiment (Italian language: 31° Reggimento Carri ) was a tank regiment of the Italian Army based in Persano in Campania. Originally the regiment, like all Italian tank units, was part of the infantry, but on 1 June 1999 it became part of the cavalry. Operationally the regiment was last assigned to the Bersaglieri Brigade "Garibaldi".[1]

History[]

World War II[]

The regiment was formed by the depot of the 31st Tank Infantry Regiment in Siena on 27 July 1941 as 131st Tank Infantry Regiment with three tank battalions formed by the 4th Tank Infantry Regiment. All three battalions were equipped with captured French tanks.[1][2][3] The regiment was formed with the following structure:[4]

  • 131st Tank Infantry Regiment
    • CI Tank Battalion "R35" (captured French Renault R35 light tanks)[5]
    • CII Tank Battalion "R35" (captured French R35 light tanks)[5]
    • CC Tank Battalion "S35" (captured French SOMUA S35 tanks)[5]

On 15 August 1941 the regiment arrived in the Friuli region and joined the 131st Armored Division "Centauro", which already fielded the 31st Tank Infantry Regiment. On 25 December 1941 the regiment ceded the CC Tank Battalion "S35" to the XIII Army Corps on Sardinia. On 2 January 1942 the regiment left the Centauro division and moved to Sicily, where the regiment's CII Tank Battalion "R35" was assigned to the XII Army Corps defending the island's West, while the regiment's headquarter with the CI Tank Battalion "R35" joined the XVI Army Corps defending the island's South.[2][4][5]

In Sicily the regiment's two battalions and the companies of the CXXXIII Semovente Battalion "47/32" were split into small tactical groups.[6] When the allied invasion of Sicily began on 9 July 1943 the CII Tank Battalion "R35" was annihilated by the American 3rd Infantry Division on 21 July north of Agrigento, while remnants of the CI Tank Battalion managed to retreat to Messina and from where they were evacuated to Calabria. On 1 September the remnants of the 131st Tank Infantry Regiment arrived in Siena to be reformed, but after Italy changed sides with the Armistice of Cassibile on 8 September 1943 the 131st Tank Infantry Regiment was disbanded by the Germans.[1][2][4]

Cold War[]

On 1 January 1953 the Italian Army raised the CI Tank Battalion equipped M26 Pershing tanks in Pinerolo as an autonomous tank battalion of the III Army Corps. In October 1956 the battalion moved to Verona as a corps asset of the IV Army Corps. The battalion was disbanded on 31 December 1963 and its personnel contributed to the raising of the III Tank Battalion for the newly raised 32nd Tank Regiment.[1]

101st Tank Battalion "M.O. Zappalà"[]

During the 1975 army reform the 31st Tank Regiment was disbanded on 21 October 1975 and its II Tank Battalion became the 101st Tank Battalion "M.O. Zappalà", which received the war flag and traditions of the 131st Tank Infantry Regiment. Tank and armored battalions created during the 1975 army reform were all named for officers, soldiers and partisans, who were posthumously awarded Italy's highest military honor the Gold Medal of Military Valour during World War II. The 101st Tank Battalion's name commemorated the commander of the LI Tank Battalion "M14/41" Lieutenant Colonel Salvatore Zappalà, who had been awarded three Silver Medals of Military Valour (2x World War I, 1x Invasion of Yugoslavia), one Bronze Medal of Military Valour (Spanish Civil War) and three War Crosses of Military Valor (Spanish Civil War, Second Italo-Ethiopian War, Greco-Italian War), and was awarded posthumously a Gold Medal of Military Valour after being fatally injured on 30 June 1942 near El Dabaa in Egypt during the Axis pursuit of the British Eighth Army after the Battle of Mersa Matruh.[7] Based in Bellinzago Novarese and equipped with Leopard 1A2 main battle tanks the battalion joined the 31st Armored Brigade "Curtatone".[1]

With the end of the Cold War the Italian Army drew down its forces and on 31 July 1993 the 101st Tank Battalion "M.O. Zappalà" and its personnel entered the 1st Tank Battalion "M.O. Cracco", which reformed on 1 September 1993 as 31st Tank Regiment. On the same day the 131st Tank Regiment was reformed in Persano in Southern Italy with the 31st Tank Battalion "M.O. Andreani" of the Armored Troops School as its only battalion. The 131st Tank Regiment joined the Bersaglieri Brigade "Garibaldi" and in 2008 retired the army's last Leopard 1A5 main battle tanks after receiving new Ariete main battle tanks. On 11 July 2013 the 131st Tank Regiment was renamed 4th Tank Regiment and the flag of the 131st was transferred to the Shrine of the Flags in the Vittoriano in Rome.[1]

See also[]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 "131° Reggimento Carri - La Storia". Italian Army. https://web.archive.org/web/20121201050148/http://www.esercito.difesa.it/Organizzazione/Organizzazione%20Centrale/Comando%20delle%20Forze%20Operative%20Terrestri/2_fod/br_garibaldi/131_carri/Pagine/la_storia.aspx. Retrieved 24 November 2019. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 "131° Reggimento Carri". Museo Storico dell'Arma di Cavalleria. http://www.museocavalleria.it/Scuola%20e%20Reggimenti/Carrista/131%C2%B0%20Reggimento%20Carri.htm. Retrieved 24 November 2019. 
  3. Boisdron, Mathieu (December 2010). "Le Blindorama : La genèse de la force blindée bulgare 1935 - 1943" (in fr). Caraktère. pp. 4–7. ISSN 1765-0828. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Parri, Maurizio (2009). Tracce di Cingolo - Storia dei Carristi 1917-2009. Rome. pp. 76–77. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 F. dell'Uomo, R. Puletti (1998). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Primo - Tomo I. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 551. 
  6. Faldella, Emilio (1956). Lo sbarco e la difesa della Sicilia. 
  7. "Zappalà Salvatore". Quirinale - Presidenza della Repubblica. https://www.quirinale.it/onorificenze/insigniti/45707. Retrieved 22 November 2019. 




All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at 131st Tank Regiment (Italy) and the edit history here.
Advertisement