25th Infantry Division Bologna


The 25th Infantry Division Bologna was an auto-transportable Infantry Division of the Italian Army during World War II. It was stationed in Tripolitania and was sent to Libya for the Italian invasion of Egypt. It fought in North Africa until it was destroyed in the Second Battle of El Alamein.
Garrisoned in Naples, it was made up almost entirely of residents of the city. From 1926 to 1934, it as called 25th Territorial Division of Naples. In 1934 the division was renamed to 25th Volurno Infantry Division and again renamed in 1939 to 25th Infantry Division Bologna. The Bologna was classified as an auto-transportable division, meaning staff and equipment could be transported on cars and trucks, although not simultaneously.

Actions

Occupation of Libya

At the beginning of Italian invasion of France 10 June 1940, the Bologna division has stayed at the Libya-Tunisia border. After the conclusion of hostilities in Europe in the end of June, 1940, it was ordered occupation duties in the Bir al-Ghanam town south of Tripoli. In the beginning of 1941, majority of infantry have quartered in Gharyan while artillery regiment with some support troops was sent to the front line between Derna, Libya and Mechili. After overcoming an initial Allied resistance 23–25 January 1941, it was ferried by sea, landing in eastern Libya, and advanced rapidly on the Marj-Benghazi-Qaminis route, reaching destination 5 February 1941. In March, 1941, it together with the elements of 17th Infantry Division Pavia have performed a security duties at Sirte. The Bologna division was called for the siege of Tobruk in the late May, 1941.

Siege of Tobruk

The besieging troops were mainly Italian belonging to the following five Divisions: the Ariete Division and Trieste, the Pavia, Bologna, and Brescia Division. The sector manned by the Bologna consisted of several strongpoints manned by infantry and artillery units, all surrounded by minefields. The Italians, after much hard fighting, had possession of most of the positions the Australians had lost on 1 May. Combat engineers under Lieutenant Francesco Tuci, had reportedly captured several of the Australian positions, and the officer was posthumously awarded the Medaglia d'Argento, Italy's second highest award for bravery, in helping defend them against an Australian counterattack. On 3 May, the Australians launched a counter-attack employing the 18th Brigade but by 4 May were only able to recapture one bunker from defending Italian troops. During that week, Australian morale took a dive, and it was reported that 30 Australian soldiers shot themselves in order to be evacuated. That month, an underground 'war neurosis clinic' was built in Tobruk and placed under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel E.L. Cooper and Captain A.J.M Sinclair, and 207 soldiers were admitted for treatment.
On 21 November 1941, the Bologna repulsed a British attempt to approach their positions as part of Operation Crusader. That morning, elements of the British 70th Infantry Division attacked overrunning a number of positions held by the Bologna, but other attacks were defeated. In summing up the experience of the 2nd Battalion the Black Watch in the attack, the Official History of New Zealand in the Second World War wrote that
On 23 November, the Bologna Division again withstood a determined attack from Tobruk aimed at penetrating into the area of Sīdī Rizq, and bought sufficient time to allow the Pavia Division to mount a counter-attack and defeat the British assault, as a German narrative recorded:
The Bologna's front now extended some 8 miles, and on November 25, the thinly spread-out division was assaulted by 50 British tanks and forced to withdraw some distance, although not before the German Böttcher Group had inflicted severe losses on the British tanks. The British advance was finally halted by the timely arrival of reinforcements in the form of a Bersaglieri battalion of the Trieste Division.
The personnel of the unit were gradually pushed back to the "Leopard strongpoint", covering their retreat with mines and machine-gun nests, but by the end of the month the Tobruk breakout was judged a success among British commanders. Meanwhile, the Bologna divisional command 27 November 1941, have started retreat and a series of breakthroughs of units being cut out on the east of Tobruk, leading to Al ‘Adam. By 5 December 1941, the consolidation of forces was nearly complete and Italians have retreated further to ‘Ayn al Ghazālah and then to Derna, Libya.
Despite the German 90th Light Division pulling out of the Tobruk sector on 4 December, the Bologna Division rearguard held out until the night of 8–9 December when trucks were finally assigned to give them some support.
However, it was to take a further assault led by the Polish Carpathian Brigade near Acroma, supported by tanks and artillery, before the siege of Tobruk was finally "lifted" on the morning of December 10. It is unclear if last Axis defenders had any relation to the Bologna division.
By 11 December 1941, be bulk of Bologna division forces was between Ajdabiya and El Agheila, over 400 km from Tobruk.
An Australian historian, when writing about the Italian role during Operation Crusader, concluded that:

The Alamein Battles

Initially, about half of the Bologna division was deployed at Ajdabiya and the rest was dispersed around Qārat al Ghazālah, but about 15 July 1942, the Bologna Division was summoned from Qārat al Ghazālah to reinforce the El Alamein front, lacking vehicles, the division was forced to march some 400 miles, being reviewed by Mussolini on the way. On the night of 25–26 August, the Bologna came under heavy artillery attack and the New Zealand 28th Battalion, under the cover of darkness, breached part of the perimeter, but the New Zealanders lost 25 killed, wounded and captured in the action. The attacking Maoris later reported that there were 100 Italian, dead, wounded or captured during the attack. Nevertheless, the Bologna division arrived to the front near ‘Alam al Ḩalfā 30 August 1942. During the Battle of Alam el Halfa, the Bologna and German 433rd Infantry Regiment attacked several Indian, South African and New Zealand units on Ruweisat Ridge, and managed to capture Point 211 with the Italians reported to have captured 70 British soldiers, but the attackers were later driven back by counterattack. Cyril Falls, a noted military historian, later wrote an article about the Italo-German counterattack:
In the first attack on Ruweisat Ridge, during the Second Battle of Alamein, the Bologna Division supported by two battalions of the Ramcke Parachute Brigade achieved some success, taking 40 prisoners.
In the centre of the British front a good Italian division, the Bologna, delivered a strong attack on the Ruweisat Ridge, and a considerable counter-attack was required to expel it from the footing it gained.

On the morning of 23 October 1942, Generalleutnant Georg Stumme personally presented German decorations to a number of members of the Bologna division and attached engineers. That day and until 31 October 1942, the Allied forces have launched a multiple attacks, supported by aviation and armor, on the Bologna division. The division defence finally failed 2 November 1942, near western end of wadi Dayr al Bayḑā’. 4 November 1942, the Bologna division was in hasty retreat. The retreat failed, as disparate units were catch by British and annihilated one-by-one. Remnants of division have fought 5 November 1942, in Ra’s al Ḩikmah, 6 November in Fukah and then in Mersa Matruh, where they were all defeated by 21 November 1942. The division Bologna was officially dissolved 25 November 1942. Some escaped detachments went to Tunisia, but all were merged to other units by February, 1943.
Private Sid Martindale, 1st Battalion Argyll & Sutherland Highlanders, wrote about 25th Bologna Infantry Division, which had taken the full weight of the British armoured attack:The Bologna and the remainder of Trento Division tried to fight their way out of Alamein and marched in the desert without water, food, or transport before surrendering exhausted and dying from dehydration. It was reported that Colonel Dall'Olio, commanding Bologna, surrendered saying, "We have ceased firing not because we haven't the desire but because we have spent every round." In a symbolic act of final defiance no one in Bologna Division raised their hands. Harry Zinder of Time magazine noted that the Italians fought better than had been expected, and commented that for the Italians:

Order of battle