The 9th Alpini Regiment was formed on 1 July 1921 in Gorizia and was assigned to the 3rd Alpine Division. Initially the regiment consisted of four battalions, which had been transferred from other Alpini regiments:[5]
In 1926, the Feltre and Cividale were returned to their original regiments and the 9th Alpini Regiment consisted of the battalions Vicenza and Bassano.[5] On 11 March 1926 the 3rd Alpine Division was reduced to the III Alpine Brigade.[6]
On 13 April 1935 the Alpini Battalion "L'Aquila" was formed in Gorizia,[1] drawing its personnel from the "Vicenza" and "Bassano" battalions. The new battalion was considered to be the heir to the World War I Alpini Battalion "Monte Berico", which had been consisted of soldiers recruited in Abruzzo.[5]Gabriele D'Annunzio created the battalion's motto "D'Aquila Penne, Ugne di Leonessa", which is a word pun: its literal translation is "Eagle feathers, Lioness claws", but L'Aquila, Penne, Ugne and Leonessa are Abruzzo towns, which were the recruitment basin of the Monte Berico.[1] On 10 September 1935, the 3rd Alpine Division "Julia" was formed by renaming the III Superior Alpine Command "Julio", which was the successor of the III Alpine Brigade.[7]
On 31 October 1935, the regiment was structured as follows:
On 20 January 1936 the fourth companies of the battalions were disbanded and on 25 September 1937 the Alpini Battalion "Bassano" was transferred to the 11th Alpini Regiment.[5]
After the outbreak of World War II, the regiment formed reserve battalions, which were named after valleys (Italian: Val) located near L'Aquila and Vicenza. At the end of the 1939 the regiment consisted of the following units:
In mid-April 1939, the 3rd Alpine Division "Julia" was sent to Albania and posted to the Albanian-Yugoslav border until September 1941, when it was moved to the Greek border for the planned Italian invasion of Greece. During the following Greco-Italian war the 9th Alpini consisted of the Vicenza and L'Aquila battalions, and was led by Colonel Gaetano Tavoni.[7] After the German invasion of Greece and the Greek surrender the Julia returned to Italy. For its conduct during the Greco-Italian war the 9th Alpini Regiment was awarded Italy's highest military honor a Gold Medal of Military Valor.[9]
After successfully encircling the German Sixth army in Stalingrad the Red Army's attention turned to the Italian units along the Don. On 14 January 1943, the Soviet Operation Little Saturn began and the three alpine division found themselves quickly encircled by rapidly advancing armored Soviet Forces. The Alpini held the front on the Don, but within three days the Soviets had advanced 200 km to the left and right of the Alpini. On the evening of 17 January the commanding officer of the Italian Mountain Corps General Gabriele Nasci ordered a full retreat. At this point the Julia and Cuneense divisions were already heavily decimated and only the Tridentina was still capable of conducting combat operations. As the Soviets had already occupied every village bitter battles had to be fought to clear the way out of the encirclement. The remnants of the Tridentina were able to break the Soviet encirclement in the Battle of Nikolayevka on 26 January 1943, allowing the survivors of the Julia to reach German lines, which were reached on the morning of 28 January. By then the men of the 9th Alpini Regiment had walked 200 km, fought in 20 battles and spent 11 nights camped out in the middle of the Steppe. Temperatures during the nights were between -30 °C and -40 °C. For its conduct during the campaign in the Soviet Union the 9th Alpini Regiment was once more awarded Italy's highest military honor a Gold Medal of Military Valor.[10]
The few survivors of the regiment were repatriated in spring 1943 and garrisoned in Udine. The L'Aquila was the worst affected battalion and returned with just three officers and 159 Alpini out more than 1,500 deployed. After the announcement of the Armistice of Cassibile on 8 September 1943, the regiment and its battalions were disbanded by invading German forces.[5]
During the war the regiment's depot raised several additional units:
XXXIX Battalion "Monte Berico", initially raised as XXXIX Reserve Battalion for the 9th Alpini Regiment, but after the destruction of the regiment the battalion was assigned to the 167th Alpini Coastal Regiment of the 223rd Coastal Division.[5]
In September 1944, the Italian Co-belligerent Army raised the Alpini Battalion "Abruzzi", which was soon renamed Alpini Battalion "L'Aquila" for service with the Combat Group "Legnano". The Legnano participated on the allied side in the Italian campaign until the German surrender.[1]
On 15 April 1946, the Alpini Battalion "L'Aquila" was the first battalion to enter the reformed of the 8th Alpini Regiment, first based in Edolo and then in Tarvisio.[5]
Alpini Battalion "Vicenza"
During the 1975 Italian Army reform the 8th Alpini Regiment was disbanded and its battalions became independent. On 1 September 1975, the Alpini Battalion "Vicenza" in Tolmezzo was reformed as Alpini Battalion "Vicenza" (Recruits Training).[11] The Vicenza received the flag and traditions of the 9th Alpini Regiment, but had to transfer the two Silver Medals of Military Valor awarded to the Alpini Battalion "L'Aquila" to that battalion's newly created flag; while the two Gold Medals of Military Valor, awarded to the 9th Alpini Regiment for its conduct during the Greco-Italian war and on the Eastern Front, were duplicated for the new flag of the L'Aquila battalion. The Silver Medal of Military Valor awarded to the Vicenza battalion for its conduct during World War I, and the Silver Medal of Military Valor awarded to the Val Leogra battalion for its conduct during the Greco-Italian war remained affixed to the flag of the Alpini Battalion Vicenza.[1][3]
For its conduct and work after the 1976 Friuli earthquake the battalion was awarded a Bronze Medal of Army Valor, which was affixed to the battalion's flag and added to the battalion's coat of arms.[12]
With the battalions base in Tolmezzo damaged by the earthquake the battalion moved to Codroipo, with the exception of the 61st Company, which was transferred to Teramo to train the recruits of the L'Aquila Battalion.[1]
Alpini Battalion "L'Aquila"
During the same reform the Alpini Battalion "L'Aquila" in Tarvisio was disbanded on 31 August 1975 and the next day the Alpini Recruits Training Battalion "Julia" in L'Aquila was reformed as Alpini Battalion "L'Aquila".[13] As the traditions and flag of the 9th Alpini Regiment had been assigned to the Alpini Battalion "Vicenza", the L'Aquila was granted a new flag on 12 November 1976 by decree 846 of the President of the Italian RepublicGiovanni Leone.[14] The two Gold Medals of Military Valor awarded to the 9th Alpini Regiment for its conduct during the Greco-Italian war and on the Eastern Front, were duplicated for the new flag of the L'Aquila, while the Silver Medal of Military Valor awarded to the L'Aquila battalion for its conduct during the allied Spring 1945 offensive in Italy and the Silver Medal of Military Valor awarded to the Monte Berico battalion for its conduct in World War I, were transferred from the flag of the 9th Alpini to the L'Aquila's flag.[15][16][3]
For its conduct and work after the 1980 Irpinia earthquake the battalion was awarded a Bronze Medal of Army Valor, which was affixed to the battalion's flag and added to the battalion's coat of arms.[17]
Recent times
On 4 September 1991, the Alpini Battalion "L'Aquila" entered the reformed 9th Alpini Regiment in L'Aquila. As the regiment's original flag had been assigned to the Alpini Battalion "Vicenza" the 9th Alpini continued to use the flag of the L'Aquila. On 27 August 1996, the Vicenza battalion was disbanded and the 9th Alpini Regiment received its original flag in a ceremony on 13 September 1996.[1][5]
On 1 September 1997, the regiment was transferred from the Alpine Brigade "Julia" to the Alpine Brigade "Taurinense".[5] In 2001, the regiment raised the 264th Anti-tank Company "Val Cismon", which later merged with the 119th Mortar Company to form the 119th Maneuver Support Company.[5] On 29 May 2017, the regiment raised the Multifunctional battalion "Orta",[18] which was renamed later in the same year "Vicenza".[19] As of 2022, the 9th Alpini Regiment is one of two Alpini regiments of the Army with two battalions on its ORBAT.
Organization
The 9th Alpini Regiment is assigned to the Alpine Brigade "Taurinense" and based in the central Italian city of L'Aquila. It is the strongest regiment of the Italian Army, with the "L'Aquila" fielding four instead of the usual three infantry companies, and fielding a second battalion with transport, engineering, and support companies. As of 2022 the regiment consists of:
Franco dell'Uomo, Rodolfo Puletti: L'Esercito Italiano verso il 2000 - Volume Primo - Tomo I, Rome 1998, Stato Maggiore dell'Esercito - Ufficio Storico, pages: 494-497 (L'Aquila Battalion) & 515-518 (Vicenza Battalion)