Battle of Monte Pelado
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- t
- e
- German intervention
- Guadarrama
- Andalusia
- Alcázar
- Extremadura
- Convoy de la Victoria
- Almendralejo
- Sigüenza
- 1st Mérida
- Badajoz
- Majorca
- Sierra Guadalupe
- Córdoba
- Gipuzkoa
- Monte Pelado
- Talavera
- Santuario de Nuestra Señora de la Cabeza
- Guinea
- Cerro Muriano
- Cape Spartel
- Seseña
- Madrid
- 1st Corunna Road
- Villarreal
- Ursula
- Aceituna
- 2nd Corunna Road
- 3rd Corunna Road
- Málaga
- Jarama
- Cape Machichaco
- Guadalajara
- Pozoblanco
- War in the North
- Jaén
- 2nd Barcelona
- Deutschland
- Almería
- Segovia
- Huesca
- Albarracín
- Brunete
- Zaragoza
- 1st Belchite
- Cape Cherchell
- Sabiñánigo
- 1st Lérida
- Teruel
- Valladolid
- Alfambra
- Cape Palos
- Aragon
- 2nd Belchite
- 3rd Barcelona
- Caspe
- 2nd Lérida
- 1st Gandesa
- Segre
- Levante
- Balaguer
- Los Blázquez
- Alicante
- Granollers
- Bielsa
- 2nd Mérida
- Ebro
- 2nd Gandesa
- Cantabria
- Cabra
- Sant Vicenç de Calders
The Battle of Monte Pelado ("Bald Mountain") was an engagement of the Spanish Civil War fought on 28 August 1936. It was notable as the first major engagement of the Italian Republican volunteers of the Matteotti Battalion.[1]
Monte Pelado, in Aragon, between Huesca and Almudévar, was the site of a Francoist gun emplacement and a concentration of around five hundred Nationalist troops. In bitter fighting from five until nine in the morning, Italians and the Spanish anarchists of the Francisco Ascaso column seized the Nationalist position while suffering heavy losses.
Amongst those Italian volunteers killed were republican Mario Angeloni, commander of the Column, the anarchist Michele Centrone, the "giellista" Giuseppe Zuddas, the anarchist Fosco Falaschi, the Communist Attilio Papparotto and the anarchist Vincenzo Perrone.
Among those Italians who survived were socialist Carlo Rosselli, anarchists Camillo Berneri, Maria Zazzi, and Leonida Mastrodicasa.
See also
- List of Spanish Republican military equipment of the Spanish Civil War
- List of Spanish Nationalist military equipment of the Spanish Civil War
References
- ^ Alexander, Robert (1999). The Anarchists in the Spanish Civil War. Paul Avrich Collection (Library of Congress). London: Janus. pp. 1135–1136. ISBN 1-85756-400-6. OCLC 43717219.
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: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
- Gli antifascisti grossetani nella guerra civile spagnola in La Risveglia, quadrimestrale di varia umanità. (n°3/4 Gennaio - Aprile 2000, Maggio - Agosto 2000).
- La colonna antifascista italiana si batte vittoriosamente davanti a Huesca, in Giustizia e Libertà,( n.36, 4 set. 1936).
- Calosso, Umberto. La guerra di Angeloni, in Il mondo, (1 set. 1951), p. 8
- Bifolchi, Giuseppe. Monte Pelato: prima battaglia dell'antifascismo italiano in difesa della rivoluzione in Spagna, in Umanità nova, (27 August 1966).
External links
- Monte Pelado today as in GoogleMaps StreetView mode