National Republican Navy (Italy) Explained

Unit Name:National Republican Navy
Dates:1943–1945
Allegiance:Benito Mussolini
Branch:Navy
Colours:-->
Colours Label:-->
Battles:Second World War

The National Republican Navy (Italian: Marina Nazionale Repubblicana) was the navy of the Italian Social Republic, a World War II German puppet state in Italy.

History

The Marina Nazionale Repubblicana was formally created in late September 1943, following the establishment of the Italian Social Republic. Most of the Regia Marina fleet, however, after the Armistice of Cassibile between Italy and the Allies on 3 September 1943, had sailed to Allied-controlled ports (chiefly Malta),[1] and the few ships that remained in Italian ports, most of them undergoing maintenance or repair, were either scuttled or captured by the German forces and incorporated into the Kriegsmarine. The MNR was thus left without a real fleet; even ships abandoned during construction in Northern Italian shipyards (among them many Gabbiano-class corvettes and Ariete-class torpedo boats) were completed for the German Kriegsmarine, that refused to transfer any of them to the MNR.[2] [3]

The first Chief of Staff of the MNR was Admiral Antonio Legnani, who however died in a car crash less than a month after the creation of the MNR. He was succeeded by Captain Ferruccio Ferrini.[2] Junio Valerio Borghese's Decima Flottiglia MAS was formally part of the MNR, but it operated as a de facto independent unit under Borghese's undisputed leadership. Ferrini did not tolerate this independence; he accused Borghese of having contacts with the Allies and the anti-Communist partisans, and of conspiring to depose Mussolini and replace him at the head of the RSI. In January 1944 Borghese was summoned by Mussolini and placed under arrest, but this immediately brought the Decima MAS personnel on the verge of mutiny; the situation settled after Borghese was released, following German intervention.[4]

The fleet of the MNR never amounted to more than a small number of MAS, submarine chasers, midget submarines and assault craft, the latter operated by the Decima Flottiglia MAS. Part of the personnel recruited by the MNR served on Kriegsmarine ships in the Mediterranean, whereas others manned coastal batteries in Northern Italy.[3] Other personnel fought on land alongside the National Republican Army and the Wehrmacht

Size and ships

The Marina Nazionale Repubblicana only reached a twentieth the size of the Allied Italian fleet,[5] and consisted of nine motor torpedo boats (two large and seven small), dozens of MTSM small motor torpedo boats and MTM explosive motorboats.[6] The National Republican Navy also operated fifteen CB-class midget submarines (ten in the Adriatic and five in the Black Sea) and one larger submarine, CM 1,[7] as well as the auxiliary submarine chasers Equa and Antonio Landi, the trawlers Cefalo and Pegaso, and a flotilla of minesweepers based in Venice.[8]

An unknown number of MTSMs were active with the navy of the Italian Social Republic. Most of their operations took place in the Adriatic Sea, sometimes with mixed Italian and German crews.[9]

Of their CB midget class submarines, five were initially given to the Italian Social Republic by Germany,[10] [11] [12] but later ten more boats were transferred by the Germans to the RSI Navy and served in the Adriatic. One was used for spare parts, seven were sunk and two were captured by the Allies.[13]

Operational history

Due to its small size, activity by MNR mainly consisted in coastal patrolling and minelaying operations, as well as some limited offensive activity against Allied shipping with MAS and assault craft.[14]

The only success by a MNR vessel came on 16 April 1945, a few weeks before its dissolution, when one MTM hit and heavily damaged the French destroyer Trombe off Liguria, Italy.[15] In late April 1945, the MNR ceased to exist following the liberation of Northern Italy and the fall of the Italian Social Republic.

Many MNR and Decima MAS personnel stationed in Istria became victims of the Foibe massacres between April and May 1945.[16]

List of ships

CB-class submarines:

VAS-class patrol boats:

MTSM-class motorboat

MS-class speedboat

MAS-class

Ranks

See main article: Military ranks of the Italian Social Republic.

Commissioned officer ranks

The rank insignia of commissioned officers.

Other ranks

The rank insignia of non-commissioned officers and enlisted personnel.

Notes and References

  1. Robert Wallace & the editors of Time-Life Books, The Italian Campaign, Time-Life Books Inc, 1978. p.57
  2. Giorgio Giorgerini, Attacco dal mare. Storia dei mezzi d'assalto della Marina italiana, p. 297.
  3. Achille Rastelli, Sommergibili a Singapore, p. 160.
  4. Giorgio Giorgerini, Attacco dal mare. Storia dei mezzi d'assalto della Marina italiana, pp. 318 to 322.
  5. Page 100, "The Armed Forces of World War II", Andrew Mollo,
  6. Spencer C. Tucker, World War II at Sea: An Encyclopedia: An Encyclopedia, p. 389
  7. Jack Greene, Alessandro Massignani, The Black Prince and the Sea Devils: The Story of Valerio Borghese and the elite units of the Decima MAS, p.42
  8. Enrico Cernuschi, La marina repubblicana 1943-1945 parte 1, in Storia Militare n° 188-May 2009, page 45.
  9. Fock, Harald (1996). Marine-Kleinkampfmittel. Bemannte Torpedoes, Klein-U-Boote, Kleine Schnellboote, Sprengboote gestern – heute – morgen. Nikol, pp. 115.
  10. Web site: CB Class Midget Submarines . battleships-cruisers.co.uk . 6 January 2015 .
  11. Web site: M.A.S. and Midget Submarines in the Black Sea 1942–1943 . 29 March 2010 . comandosupremo.com . 6 January 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141109115930/http://www.comandosupremo.com/Blacksea.html . 9 November 2014 . dead .
  12. Jamie Prenatt and Mark Stille, Axis midget submarines p. 15
  13. W. M. Thornton, Submarine Insignia and Submarine Services of the World
  14. Enrico Cernuschi, La marina repubblicana 1943-1945 parte 1, in Storia Militare n° 188-May 2009, page 46.
  15. http://www.cybermodeler.com/hobby/kits/it/kit_it_5604.shtml Italeri 1/35 MTM Barchino by Ray Mehlberger
  16. Giorgio Giorgerini, Attacco dal mare. Storia dei mezzi d'assalto della Marina italiana, pp. 318-334.
  17. Web site: Italian CB Class Midget Submarines. www.battleships-cruisers.co.uk. 7 December 2016.
  18. Web site: Marina Nazionale Repubblicana (MNR). www.wlb-stuttgart.de. 7 December 2016.