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4th Army Corps Auto Group "Claudia"

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Inactive Italian Army transport unit
4th Army Corps Auto Group "Claudia"
4° Autogruppo di Corpo d'Armata "Claudia"
Group coat of arms
Active1 Oct. 1976 — 31 Aug. 1982
Country Italy
BranchItalian Army
RoleMilitary logistics
Part of4th Alpine Army Corps
Garrison/HQEppan
Motto(s)"Inter montes velocior"
Anniversaries22 May 1916 - Battle of Asiago
Insignia
Unit gorget patches
Military unit

The 4th Army Corps Auto Group "Claudia" (Italian: 4° Autogruppo di Corpo d'Armata "Claudia") is an inactive military logistics battalion of the Italian Army, which was based in Eppan in South Tyrol. Originally a transport regiment of the Royal Italian Army, the unit was last active from 1976 to 1982. The group's anniversary falls, as for all units of the Italian Army's Transport and Materiel Corps, on 22 May, the anniversary of the Royal Italian Army's first major use of automobiles to transport reinforcements to the Asiago plateau to counter the Austro-Hungarian Asiago Offensive in May 1916.

History

Interwar years

In August 1920, the III Automobilistic Center was formed in Verona and assigned to the III Army Corps. In 1923, the center was disbanded and its personnel and materiel used to form the III Auto Grouping, which consisted of a command, an auto group, a railway group, and a depot. On 30 September 1926, the grouping was disbanded and the next day its personnel and vehicles were used to from the 4th Automobilistic Center. The center consisted of a command, the IV Automobilistic Group, and a depot. The three companies of the disbanded railway group were assigned to the 8th Field Artillery Regiment, 9th Field Artillery Regiment, and 20th Field Artillery Regiment.

In 1935-36, the center mobilized 3,000 troops to augment units deployed for the Second Italo-Ethiopian War. On 16 July 1935, the center formed the XI Auto Group, which deployed with the 1st Motorized Division "Trento" to Libya for the duration of the war. After the war's conclusion, the XI Auto Group returned to Italy, where the group was renumbered 30 September 1936 XXIV Auto Group and assigned to the 46th Motorized Artillery Regiment.

World War II

In 1939, the 4th Automobilistic Center moved from Verona to Bolzano. On 1 July 1942, the center was renamed 4th Drivers Regiment. In the evening of 8 September 1943, the Armistice of Cassibile, which ended hostilities between the Kingdom of Italy and the Anglo-American Allies, was announced by General Dwight D. Eisenhower on Radio Algiers and by Marshal Pietro Badoglio on Italian radio. Germany reacted by invading Italy and the 4th Drivers Regiment was disbanded soon thereafter by German forces. During World War II the center mobilized in its depot in Bolzano among others the following units:

Cold War

On 1 March 1947, the 4th Drivers Center was formed in Trento, which consisted of a command, the 4th Auto Unit, the 4th Vehicles Park, a fuel depot, and a depot. The center supported the IV Territorial Military Command of the Northeastern Military Region. The unit was tasked with the transport of fuel, ammunition, and materiel between the military region's depots and the logistic supply points of the army's divisions and brigades. On 1 June 1948, the center moved from Trento to Bolzano. On 1 March 1949, the 4th Vehicles Park was transferred to the 4th Automotive Repair Shop. On 1 May 1952, the IV Territorial Military Command was reorganized as IV Army Corps. On 1 May 1957, the center formed the 1st Mixed Auto Unit for the IV Army Corps. On 13 August of the same year, the 4th Drivers Center was disbanded and the 4th Auto Unit was assigned to the Northeastern Military Region.

On 1 July 1961, the 1st Mixed Auto Unit and 4th Auto Unit were merged to form the 4th Army Corps Auto Group, which was based in Eppan. The group was assigned to the IV Army Corps and consisted of a command, the 1st Mixed Auto Unit, 2nd Mixed Auto Unit (the former 4th Auto Unit), and a light workshop.

On 1 October 1976, as part of the 1975 army reform, the 4th Army Corps Auto Group was renamed 4th Army Corps Auto Group "Claudia". The group consisted of a command, a command unit, and two mixed auto units. Like all Italian Army transport units the group was named for a historic road near its base, in case of the 4th Army Corps Auto Group for the Roman road Via Claudia, which crossed the Alps and connected Italy with Rhaetia in southern Germany.

On 12 November 1976, the President of the Italian Republic Giovanni Leone granted with decree 846 the group a flag and assigned the group the traditions of the 4th Drivers Regiment.

On 31 August 1982, the 4th Army Corps Auto Group "Claudia" was disbanded and the group's 1st Mixed Auto Unit and 2nd Mixed Auto Unit were transferred to the 4th Maneuver Logistic Battalion in Bolzano. The two units were reorganized into a medium transport company and a mixed transport company. On 1 September 1982, the group's flag was transferred to the Shrine of the Flags in the Vittoriano in Rome for safekeeping.

See also

References

  1. ^ F. dell'Uomo, R. di Rosa (2001). L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Vol. Secondo - Tomo II. Rome: SME - Ufficio Storico. p. 456.
  2. "Arma dei Trasporti e Materiali - La Storia". Italian Army. Retrieved 17 October 2024.
  3. "Decreto del Presidente della Repubblica 12 novembre 1976, n. 846". Quirinale - Presidenza della Repubblica. Retrieved 17 October 2024.
Italian Army
Four-star rank (OF 9) Chief of the Army General Staff
Three-star rank (OF 8)
Two-star rank (OF 7)
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One-star rank (OF 6)
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  • Military Academy
  • Army NCO School
  • Infantry School
  • Cavalry School
  • Administrative School
  • Medical and Veterinary School
  • Alpine Training Center
  • Army Aviation Training Center
Italian Army alpine units
Alpini
Active1st Alpini Command and Tactical Supports Unit, 2nd Alpini Regiment, 3rd Alpini Regiment, 4th Alpini Paratroopers Regiment, 5th Alpini Regiment, 6th Alpini Regiment, 7th Alpini Regiment, 8th Alpini Regiment, 9th Alpini Regiment, 14th Alpini Command and Tactical Supports Unit
Inactive11th Alpini Regiment, 12th Alpini Regiment, 15th Alpini Regiment, 16th Regiment "Belluno", 18th Regiment "Edolo",
Alpini Battalion "Tirano", Alpini Battalion "Val Brenta", Alpini Battalion "Val Chiese", Alpini Battalion "Val Cismon", Alpini Battalion "Val Tagliamento"
Support
Active1st Field Artillery Regiment (Mountain), 3rd Field Artillery Regiment (Mountain), 2nd Alpine Signal Regiment, 2nd Engineer Regiment, 32nd Engineer Regiment, Logistic Regiment "Julia", Logistic Regiment "Taurinense"
Inactive2nd Mountain Artillery Regiment, 4th Heavy Field Artillery Regiment, 5th Mountain Artillery Regiment, 6th Mountain Artillery Regiment, Mountain Artillery Group "Agordo", Mountain Artillery Group "Asiago", Mountain Artillery Group "Belluno", Mountain Artillery Group "Pinerolo", Mountain Artillery Group "Sondrio", Mountain Artillery Group "Udine", 3rd Artillery Specialists Group "Bondone", 4th Engineer Battalion "Orta", 4th Signal Battalion "Gardena", 4th Army Corps Auto Group "Claudia", Logistic Battalion "Cadore", Logistic Battalion "Julia", Logistic Battalion "Orobica", Logistic Battalion "Taurinense", Logistic Battalion "Tridentina"
Italian Army logistic units
Active
Logistic unitsLogistic Regiment "Aosta", Logistic Regiment "Ariete", Logistic Regiment "Folgore", Logistic Regiment "Garibaldi", Logistic Regiment "Julia", Logistic Regiment "Pinerolo", Logistic Regiment "Pozzuolo del Friuli", Logistic Regiment "Sassari", Logistic Regiment "Taurinense", 6th General Support Logistic Regiment, 33rd Logistic and Tactical Support Regiment "Ambrosiano", Transit Areas Management Regiment
Transport units8th Transport Regiment "Casilina", 11th Transport Regiment "Flaminia", Joint Forces Maneuver Regiment
Inactive
Corps logistic units5th Maneuver Logistic Battalion "Euganeo", 8th Maneuver Logistic Battalion "Carso", 24th Maneuver Logistic Battalion "Dolomiti", 33rd Maneuver Logistic Battalion "Ambrosiano", 50th Maneuver Logistic Battalion "Carnia"
Division logistic unitsLogistic Battalion "Ariete", Logistic Battalion "Centauro", Logistic Battalion "Folgore", Logistic Battalion "Mantova"
Brigade logistic unitsLogistic Battalion "Acqui", 13th Logistic Battalion "Aquileia", Logistic Battalion "Brescia", Logistic Battalion "Cadore", Logistic Battalion "Centauro", Logistic Battalion "Cremona", Logistic Battalion "Friuli", Logistic Battalion "Goito", Logistic Battalion "Gorizia", Logistic Battalion "Granatieri di Sardegna", Logistic Battalion "Julia", Logistic Battalion "Legnano", Logistic Battalion "Mameli", Logistic Battalion "Mantova", Logistic Battalion "Orobica", Logistic Battalion "Piemonte", Logistic Battalion "Pinerolo", Logistic Battalion "Pozzuolo del Friuli", Logistic Battalion "Taurinense", Logistic Battalion "Tridentina", Logistic Battalion "Trieste", Logistic Battalion "Vittorio Veneto"
Transport units1st Transport Battalion "Monviso", 3rd Army Corps Auto Group "Fulvia", 4th Army Corps Auto Group "Claudia", 5th Army Corps Auto Group "Postumia", 7th Transport Battalion "Monte Amiata", 10th Transport Battalion "Appia", 10th Maneuver Transport Group "Salaria", 11th Transport Battalion "Etnea", 14th Transport Battalion "Flavia"
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