Eleventh Battle of the Isonzo
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| Eleventh Battle of the Isonzo | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of Italian Front (World War I) | |||||||
| Image:Italian Front 1915-1917.jpg | |||||||
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| Combatants | |||||||
| Image:Flag of Italy (1861-1946).svg Italy | Image:Flag of Austria-Hungary.svg Austria-Hungary | ||||||
| Commanders | |||||||
| Luigi Cadorna Luigi Capello | Svetozar Boroević | ||||||
| Strength | |||||||
| 600 battalions 5,200 guns | 250 battalions 2,200 guns | ||||||
| Casualties | |||||||
| 40,000 dead 108,000 wounded 18,000 missing | 10,000 dead 45,000 wounded 30,000 missing 20,000 captured | ||||||
| Italian Front |
|---|
| 1st Isonzo – 2nd Isonzo – 3rd Isonzo – 4th Isonzo – 5th Isonzo – Asiago – 6th Isonzo – 7th Isonzo – 8th Isonzo – 9th Isonzo – 10th Isonzo – Ortigara – 11th Isonzo – Caporetto – Piave River – Vittorio Veneto |
The Eleventh Battle of the Isonzo was a World War I battle fought by the Italian and Austro-Hungarian Armies on the Italian Front between August 18 and September 12, 1917.
On the Isonzo River, Luigi Cadorna, the Italian Chief of Staff, concentrated three quarters of his troops: 600 battalions (52 divisions) with 5,200 guns. The attack was carried forth from Tolmin (in the upper Isonzo valley) to the Adriatic Sea, and the Italians crossed the river in several points on temporary bridges, but the main effort was exerted on the Bainsizza Plateau, whose capture was to further the offensive and break the Austro-Hungarian lines in two segments, isolating the strongholds of Mount Saint Gabriel and Mount Hermada.
After fierce and deadly fightings, the Italian Second Army, led by General Capello, pushed back Boroević's Isonzo Armee, conquering the Bainsizza and Mount Santo. Other positions were taken by the Duke of Aosta's Third Army.
However, Mount Saint Gabriel and Mount Hermada turned out to be impregnable, and the offensive wore out.
After the battle, the Austro-Hungarians were exhausted, and could not have withstood another attack. Fortunately for them (and unfortunately for their opponents), so were the Italians, who could not find the resources necessary for another assault, even though it might have been the decisive one. So the final result of the battle was an inconclusive bloodbath.

