Asiago War Memorial

Last updated
Sacrario militare di Asiago
Italy
Ossario Asiago.jpg
For Italian and Austro-Hungarian soldiers who died on the battles on the Asiago plateau in World War I
Unveiled17 July 1938 (inaugurated)
Designed byOrfeo Rossato

The Asiago War Memorial is a World War I memorial located in the town of Asiago in the Province of Vicenza in the Veneto region of northeast Italy. Surrounded by mountains that were the site of several World War I battles, the monument houses the remains of over 50,000 Italian and Austro-Hungarian soldiers and is a popular destination for travelers to the region. In Italian the memorial is typically called Sacrario Militare di Asiago or Sacrario Militare del Leiten. Leiten is the name of the hill on which the memorial sits.

Contents

Background and Construction

Asiago was one of the most symbolic locations of the Great War, having been overrun at the end of May 1916 by the Austro-Hungarian advance. [1] After the war, Asiago was selected to house one of the largest Italian World War I memorials. [1] Venetian architect Orfeo Rossato designed the monument, using one giant block of locally mined white marble of 80 square meters for the base, with the Roman arch added on top. [1] [2] Sculptors Montini and Zanetti also contributed to the work. [3] The memorial was completed in 1938, with an inauguration ceremony held on 17 July. [3] Benito Mussolini presided over the ceremony, [2] and King Victor Emmanuel III was also present. [1] The memorial is on Leiten Hill a few hundred meters from the center of Asiago. [4] Connecting the memorial with the city center is Via degli Eroi (Road of Heroes), which is lined with large cypress trees. [1]

The exterior consists of the square base, on top of which is a terrace with the arch in the middle and an altar located at the center of the arch. [3] The base's sides are each 80 meters long, [3] and two 35-meter staircases lead up to the terrace. [1] [2] The Roman arch is quadrifrons , meaning four-faced with four arches. [4] With its hilltop location and a height of 47 meters, the arch is visible from throughout the Asiago plateau. [4] This arch, along with the memorials of Pasubio, Cimone, and Monte Grappa, has become a symbol of the province of Vicenza. [1] On the parapet of the terrace are arrows indicating the names of surrounding mountains and important battle sites. [3] Around the entire memorial are original cannons that have been restored. [1]

The interior contains the crypt and an octagonal chapel in the center. [3] The crypt is therefore beneath the terrace, and its perimetrical and axial corridors intersect to create the central area where the chapel, which includes an altar, is located. [2] Also set in the chapel are the remains of twelve Italian Gold Medals of Military Valor. [5] Along the walls of the corridors are burial niches holding the remains of 33,086 fallen Italian soldiers, whose bodies were exhumed from 35 nearby war cemeteries between 1935 and 1938. [2] The identified remains are in individual burial niches in alphabetical order, and the unidentified remains are in two communal tombs. [1] [3] Of the Italians buried in this memorial, 12,795 are known and 20,291 are unknown. [3] Some years later the remains of 18,505 Austro-Hungarian soldiers, 12,355 of which are unidentified, were also gathered from surrounding war cemeteries and brought to this crypt. [2] [3]

Museum

Near the entrance to the crypt is a museum containing many relics gathered from the battle fields of the Asiago plateau, as well as related documents and photographs from the time period of the war. [3] The museum has a plastic model relief map of the Asiago plateau providing a visual depiction of the events that unfolded there. [4] The left side of the museum focuses on the events of the first two years of the war, 1915–1916, and the right side documents the happenings of 1917–1918. [3] The museum also houses a small cinema hall, and video-documentaries may be viewed there upon request. [2]

A noteworthy piece in the museum's collection is a letter from a young soldier on the eve of the Battle of Mount Ortigara, which was discovered in the 1950s. [1] The author, second lieutenant Adolfo Ferrero, fought in the Alpine battle of Val Dora and was a protagonist of the Battle of Mount Ortigara, where he died in combat. [5] This last letter to his family was found in the personal effects of his page, whose mortal remains were exhumed from Mount Ortigara and entombed in the Asiago War Memorial, where Ferrero's remains are also located. [5] Ferrero's family, therefore, never received the letter, but by a strange twist of fate the letter now directly reaches future generations, as part of a monument to never forget the Great War. [5]

Visitor Information

Alpine War 1915-1918 Monument in Asiago Asiago2001.jpg
Alpine War 1915-1918 Monument in Asiago

The war memorial and its museum are open to the public every day except Monday and the following holidays: New Year's Day, Easter, Easter Monday, 1 May, 15 August, 21 September (Asiago's patron saint day for St. Matthew), and Christmas. [6] The winter hours, 1 October to 15 May, are 9:00-12:00 and 14:00-17:00. The summer hours, 16 May to 30 September, are 9:00-12:00 and 15:00-18:00. [1]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Asiago</span> Township in Veneto, Italy

Asiago is a minor township with the title of city in the surrounding plateau region in the Province of Vicenza in the Veneto region of Northeastern Italy. It is near the border between the Veneto and Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol regions in the foothills of the Alps, approximately equidistant (60 km) from Trento to the west and Vicenza to the south. The Asiago region is the origin of Asiago cheese. The town was the site of a major battle between Austrian and Italian forces on the Alpine Front of World War I. It is a major ski resort destination, and the site of the Astrophysical Observatory of Asiago, operated by the University of Padua.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1st Army (Italy)</span> Italian Army field army, in World War I and II

The 1st Army was a Royal Italian Army field army, in World War I, facing Austro-Hungarian and German forces, and in World War II, fighting on the North African front.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Battle of Asiago</span> Battle on the Italian Front during World War I

The Battle of Asiago(Battle of the Plateaux) or the Südtirol Offensive (in Italian: Battaglia degli Altipiani), nicknamed Strafexpedition ("Punitive expedition") by the Austro-Hungarian forces, was a major counteroffensive launched by the Austro-Hungarians on the territory of Vicentine Alps in the Italian Front on 15 May 1916, during World War I. It was an "unexpected" attack that took place near Asiago in the province of Vicenza (now in northeast Italy, then on the Italian side of the border between the Kingdom of Italy and Austria-Hungary) after the Fifth Battle of the Isonzo (March 1916).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Battle of Mount Ortigara</span>

The Battle of Mount Ortigara was fought from 10 to 25 June 1917 between the Italian and Austro-Hungarian armies for possession of Mount Ortigara, in the Asiago Plateau.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mount Ortigara</span> Mountain in Italy

Mount Ortigara is one of the peaks, about 2,000 m tall, which delimit to the north the Seven Municipalities Plateau, falling sheer on the underlying Sugana Valley with a jump of over 1,500 meters. With the neighbouring mountains, it forms an imposing ridge easily accessible from the Asiago Plateau, but only reachable through steep paths from the Sugana Valley.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">San Biagio di Callalta</span> Comune in Veneto, Italy

San Biagio di Callalta is a comune (municipality) in the province of Treviso, Veneto, north-eastern Italy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sacrario militare di Pocol</span> Memorial and cemetery in Vento, Italy

Sacrario militare di Pocol is a cemetery and shrine near the Falzarego Pass, in the locality of Pocol in the comune of Cortina d'Ampezzo in the Veneto region of northern Italy. The small church and cemetery were built in 1916 as a military cemetery by the 5th Alpine group. A shrine was built in 1935 as memorial to the thousands who died during World War I on the Dolomite front. It is a massive square tower of stone, clearly visible from the entire Ampezzo valley below. The remains of 9,707 Italian soldiers and 37 Austro-Hungarian soldiers are buried in the shrine. In a crypt in the centre of the structure rests the body of general Antonio Cantore, who was awarded the gold medal for military valor.

The 6th Army was a field army of the Royal Italian Army which was formed in World War I and World War II.

The Sacrario dei Caduti Oltremare is a World War II memorial located in the city of Bari, in the Apulia region of Southern Italy. The shrine, inaugurated in 1967, houses the remains of 75,098 Italian soldiers killed overseas in both World Wars as well as in Italy's colonial wars.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Redipuglia War Memorial</span> World War I memorial in the Friuli Venezia Giulia region of Italy

The Redipuglia War Memorial is a World War I memorial located on the Karst Plateau near the village of Fogliano Redipuglia, in the Friuli Venezia Giulia region of northeastern Italy. It is the largest war memorial in Italy and one of the largest in the world, housing the remains of 100,187 Italian soldiers killed between 1915 and 1917 in the eleven battles fought on the Karst and Isonzo front.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alpini and mountain artillery formations in World War I</span>

The Alpini are a specialised mountain warfare infantry corps of the Italian Army, which distinguished itself in World War I fighting in the Alps against Austro-Hungarian Kaiserjäger and the German Alpenkorps. The Alpini were supported by the Mountain Artillery, which both share the Cappello Alpino as identifying symbol. Below follow tables listing the regiments, battalions and groups, companies and batteries of the Alpini and Mountain Artillery active in World War I.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">The Italian Charnel House, Kobarid</span>

The Italian Charnel House, Kobarid is an Italian military shrine in Kobarid, Slovenia. Sited on the battlefield of Caporetto, it houses the remains of 7,014 Italians who fell during the battles of the Isonzo.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Italian fortifications on the Austro-Hungarian border</span>

Between the 1860s and the First World War the Kingdom of Italy built a number of fortifications along its border with Austria-Hungary. From 1859 the fortified border ran south from Switzerland to Lake Garda, between Italian Lombardy and Austrian South Tyrol. After 1866 it extended to include the border between South Tyrol and Veneto, from Lake Garda to the Carnic Alps. This frontier was difficult to defend, since Austria-Hungary held the higher ground, and an invasion would immediately threaten the industrial and agricultural heartlands of the Po valley. Between 1900 and 1910, Italy also built a series of fortifications along the defensive line of the Tagliamento to protect against an invasion from the northeast. The border with Switzerland was also fortified in what is known as the Cadorna Line.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Military Memorial of Monte Grappa</span>

The military memorial of Monte Grappa is the largest Italian military ossuary of the First World War. It is located on the summit of Monte Grappa between the provinces of Treviso and Vicenza, at 1,776 meters above sea level. Access to the memorial is via the Strada Cadorna, built by the army on the orders of General Luigi Cadorna to bring construction materials for the fortification on Monte Grappa in 1917.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Oslavia War Memorial</span> Italian fascist monument

The Oslavia War Memorial is an Italian monument to soldiers who fell in battle during the battles of the Isonzo, particularly those who died during the taking of Gorizia in 1916. It stands on a 150m hill in the village of Oslavia, on the outskirts of Gorizia. The hilltop was on the front line as Austro-Hungarian troops defended the salient around Gorizia during the first, third and fourth battles of the Isonzo.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Monte Cengio</span> Mountain in Italy

Monte Cengio is a mountain in the Asiago plateau, within the Vicentine Alps, in Veneto, northeastern Italy. It has an elevation of 1,354 metres and is located on the southwestern edge of the plateau, in the territory of Cogollo del Cengio.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Roberto Brusati</span> Italian general (1850–1935)

Roberto Brusati OSML OCI, was an Italian General of the Army who was an active participant in World War I. He was known for not having any military experience prior to the war and commanding the 1st Army before being dismissed from commanding the regiment on May 8, 1916, which was 8 days before the Battle of Asiago which was led by Field Marshal Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Coni Zugna</span> Mountain in Italy

Coni Zugna, also known as Monte Zugna, is a mountain in the Vicentine Alps, in northeastern Italy. It has an elevation of 1,865 metres and is located near the southern border of the province of Trento, close to the province of Vicenza, just north of the Gruppo della Carega. It is part of the mountain range that divides the Vallarsa from the Lagarina Valley.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Egidio Grego</span> Italian aviator (1894 – 1917)

Egidio Grego was an Italian soldier and aviator who was awarded four medals for military valor, two of which were silver.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dente Italiano</span> Mountain in Trentino, Italy

Dente Italiano is one of the ridges of the Pasubio summit highlands in the Vicentine Alps.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "Sacrario militare di Asiago-Leiten e museo del Sacrario" (in Italian). Itinerari della Grande Guerra. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "The War Memorial". Asiago tourism office. Archived from the original on 28 July 2009. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "Sacrario Militare del Laiten" (in Italian). Asiago tourism office. Archived from the original on 28 July 2009. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "Il Sacrario Militare" (in Italian). la radio dell'Altopiano 7 Comuni. Archived from the original on 14 October 2013. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  5. 1 2 3 4 "Sacrario Militare del Leiten, Asiago" (in Italian). La Grande Guerra 1914-1918. Retrieved 24 April 2013.
  6. "Sacrario Militare di Asiago: i nuovi orari di apertura". Vicenza e (in Italian). Vicenza. Retrieved 22 April 2013.

45°52′28.61″N11°31′13.59″E / 45.8746139°N 11.5204417°E / 45.8746139; 11.5204417