Battle of Calatafimi explained

Conflict:Battle of Calatafimi
Partof:the Expedition of the Thousand
Date:15 May 1860
Place:Calatafimi, Sicily
Result:Garibaldine victory[1] [2] [3]
  • Two Sicilies forces retreat
  • Garibaldi takes Calatafimi
Combatant1: Red Shirts
Combatant2: Two Sicilies
Commander1:Giuseppe Garibaldi[4]
Commander2:Francesco Landi
Strength1:1,200
Strength2:2,000
Casualties1:32 killed[5] [6]
160-182 wounded
Casualties2:36 killed [7]
148 wounded
6 captured
1 gun captured

The Battle of Calatafimi was fought on the 15 May 1860 between Giuseppe Garibaldi's Redshirts and the troops of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies at Calatafimi, Sicily, as part of the Expedition of the Thousand (Italian: I Mille). The battle was the first of Garibaldi's victory during his invasion of Sicily in 1860 and saw his 'Thousand' defeat a larger Neapolitan army sent from Palermo to block the roads to the Sicilian capital.

Prelude

Four days before the battle, the Mille had landed at Marsala, on board the ships Il Piemonte and Il Lombardo. Francesco Crispi, among others, landed before the Mille on Sicily to raise support among the locals for the Mille.

Garibaldi took the direct route to Palermo via Salemi. Paolo Ruffo di Castelcicala, commanding Palermo, sent Landi west, and Mechel south, in an attempt to intercept Garibaldi. Landi deployed his 2,700 men on the terraced hill Piante dei Romani, consisting of three battalions, with a squadron of light horse and four cannon. Garibaldi had 2,000 men that included the squadre recruited by Giuseppe La Mesa and Rosalino Pilo. Garibaldi would have to attack uphill.[8]

Battle

The battle started at 1.30 pm and was over in three hours after Landi's men ran out of ammunition and retreated.[8]

The battle was inconclusive, but served to boost the morale of the Mille and, at the same time, depress the Neapolitans, who, ill led with their often corrupted officers, started to feel themselves abandoned. During the battle, Garibaldi is said to have uttered the famous battle cry "Qui si fa l'Italia o si muore" ("Here we make Italy, or we die").

Aftermath

On 17 May, following the battle's success, Garibaldi continued his advance on Palermo.[8]

With the help of a popular insurrection, on 27 May Garibaldi began the Siege of Palermo, the island's capital. The city was defended by some 18,000 men, but they were under the confused and timid command of general Ferdinando Lanza, aged 75, and on 30 May Garibaldi's forces took Palermo.

Sources

  1. Book: Rüstow, Wilhelm . Die Feldherrnkunst des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts . 1867 . Zurich.
  2. Book: Hartwig, Otto . Aus Sicilien: Vol.II . 1869 . Kassel.
  3. Book: Trevelyan, George Macaulay . Garibaldi and the Thousand . 1912 . London.
  4. Book: von Meerheimb, Richard . Von Palermo bis Gaëta . 1865 . Dresden.
  5. Book: Esercito. Corpo di stato maggiore. Ufficio storico. . Il Generale Giuseppe Garibaldi . 1982 . Rome.
  6. Book: Deutsche Revue . Deutsche Revue: Vol.XXV . 1900 . Deutschland.
  7. Book: Forbes, Charles Stuart . The campaign of Garibaldi in the Two Sicilies . 1861. Edinburgh.
  8. Book: Schneid . Frederick . The Second War of Italian Unification 1859-61 . 2012 . Osprey Publishing . Oxford . 9781849087872 . 58–62.

See also