Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Carlo Favagrossa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Italian general and politician

Carlo Favagrossa

Carlo Secillano Favagrossa (22 November 1888 – 22 March 1970), was an Italian general and politician.

During theWorld War II era, he was the Italian Under-Secretary for War Production. He also participated in theSpanish Civil War on the side ofFrancisco Franco.

Prior to the outbreak of hostilities, Favagrossa had calculated that Italy would not be prepared for war until October 1942.[1]

In 1946 published a book, with the titlePerchè perdemmo la guerra (why we lost the war), where he pinpointed the reasons of his calculations.[2]

Biography

[edit]

Having embarked on a military career in theRoyal Italian Army, he entered the Turin Academy in 1906, leaving three years later as a second lieutenant in the Engineer Corps. With the rank of lieutenant he served during the Libyan War and then as a captain on the Italian front in World War I, in which he was awarded a silver medal and promotion to major for war merit (1917). After the war he reconciled his commitments in the army with a brief diplomatic activity that took him toCyrenaica,Czechoslovakia, and France. In 1930 he was promoted to colonel and in 1936 to brigadier general.

He took part in theSpanish Civil War as commander of the Volunteer Troops Corps (deployed on the side of GeneralFrancisco Franco) and as chief of intelligence. In the same year he was appointed chief officer of the 1. Motorized Brigade, a post he held until 1937.In 1939, with the rank of general, he assumed command of the 16. Fossalta Division, and in the same year he was appointed, replacingAlfredo Dallolio, Commissioner General for War Production inBenito Mussolini government.

At the outbreak ofWorld War II. at the behest of theMussolini government he analyzed the state of Italian military preparedness, presenting on April 7, 1940 an assessment that Italy would not be ready to take the field until October 1942. However,Adolf Hitler initial military successes with theBlitzkrieg strategy convinced the Duce that the conflict would be short-lived, so much so that he took the risk of entering it on June 10, 1940, more than two years earlier than the date suggested by Favagrossa. Italy's military unpreparedness and inadequacy, coupled with the prolongation of the conflict beyond Mussolini's expectations, was a not secondary cause of the subsequent defeat.

Undersecretary of State from May 23, 1940, he was put in charge of the General Commissariat for Liquid Fuels, Fuels and Lubricants from September 7, 1942. When on Feb. 6, 1943 Fabbriguerra (the name assigned to the former Commissariat for War Production) was elevated, with considerable delay, to the rank of Ministry of War Production, Favagrossa was called to lead it. Uninvolved in the plots that led to the fall of the Duce, he held the government post until Jan. 27, 1944, the day theFirst Badoglio government suppressed his dicastery.

In the immediate aftermath of the war, he published the book Perché perdemmo la guerra (ed. Rizzoli, 1946) in which he made public the assessments he had made at the time. Indeed, many of the documents Favagrossa attached to the text have still not been found in the various archives,[3] and the various considerations about the lack of raw materials would have little effect on the “Italian military problem, which in the summer of 1940 and then again until late 1942 concerned the quality of means, not quantity.”For example, "the nickel used for the armor of the medium wagon, between 1940 and 1942, dropped from 46 kg to 8. But already by May 8, 1941, the Army General Staff (report of Gen. Engineer L. Sarracino) had ascertained that the Italian wagons destroyed at Beda Fomm (Libya) in the previous February (and therefore built in 1940 with the largest amount of nickel), had succumbed to British shells due to elementary construction defects and carelessness in assembly." Retired in 1954, he received various citations during his lifetime including the knighthood of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Walker, Ian W. (2003). Iron Hulls, Iron Hearts: Mussolini's Elite Armoured Divisions in North Africa. Ramsbury: The Crowood Press.ISBN 1-86126-646-4. p.19
  2. ^Carlo FavagrossaPerché perdemmo la guerra: Mussolini e la produzione bellica. 1946
  3. ^Lucio Ceva."FAVAGROSSA, Carlo".

External links

[edit]
Members of theMussolini Cabinet
Head of government andduce of Fascism
Minister of Aeronautics
(since 1925)
Minister of Foreign Affairs
Minister of Agriculture
(abolished in 1923)
Minister of Agriculture and Forestry
(since 1929)
Minister of the Colonies
(abolished in 1937)
Minister of Italian Africa
(since 1937)
Minister of Communications
(since 1924)
Minister of Corporations
(since 1926)
Ministry of Popular Culture
(since 1937)
Minister of the Interior
Minister of Domestic Economy
Minister of Domestic Education
Minister of Finance
Minister of Justice and Affairs of Religion
Minister of Industry and Commerce
Minister of Public Works
Minister of War
Minister of Labour and Social Security
Minister of Posts and Telegraphs
Minister of War Production
(since 6 February 1943)
Minister of Public Education
Minister of Trades and Currencies
Minister of Press and Propaganda
Minister of Freed Territories from Enemies
(abolished on 5 February 1923)
Minister of Treasure
(merged into Ministry of Finance on 31 December 1922)
International
National
People
Other
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Carlo_Favagrossa&oldid=1332288360"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp