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    claudio2574

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    Posts posted by claudio2574

    1. The firm Borani moved fro Torino to Rome in 1871. Later it was took over by Cravanzola (Paul Wood wrote in 1871, I can not confirm this). Thus the date should be exactly 1871.

      Infos about Borani-Cravanzola-Gardino can be read in the website of the Gardino firm, here:

      http://www.gardino.it/chi.html

      A box for the Order of the Crow of Italy having both Borani and Cravanzola marks can be seen here http://www.mymilitaria.it/liste_04/corona_umberto.htm, it's a sample for sure dated before 1900, since it was the date of death of king Umberto I

    2. Hello. Here are the answers I got.

      The gunner was in the 134th company machine guns, using the SantEtienne French weapons.
      The collar tabs were white over blue.
      That company was under the following main unit in the years 1917-1918:
      Vth army corp
      15-26 jan 1917 in Cornedo
      26 jan - feb in Cestone Sogi Lora
      mar-may again in Cornedo
      6th division
      jun-feb 1918 Val Croina
      XIV army corp
      mar Tremalzo
      apr Barghe
      may-jul Monte Melino
      aug-oct Val Albinocolo
      X army corp
      nov 1918 Bressanone

      The signs showed in the picture should have been used since april 1918.
      The badge for the "fatiche di guerra" become the "enemy bronze medal" in 1920, so the picture can be dated between april 1918 and july 1920.

    3. Yes for sure. The collar with the three stripes and the star was for machine gunners. They can be white over red (Fiat machine guns) or white over blue (Breda ones). Here is a small medal from ww1

      52.jpg

      After WW1 (I don't know exactly when) the white over red remained for all machine gunners, while the white over blue disappeared. Here is my father picture, shooted in Cavtat on 24th july 1943 (one day before the end of fascism in Italy), having the same collar tabs. The picture was taken in front of the church of St. Michael.

      cavtat43.jpg

    4. Hello everybody.

      I'd like to introduce my collection of Italian (and not Italian, but related to Italy) badges. The first international mission which used such a badge was launched in 1981 in Lebanon (and I was on the way to participate, but it didn not happened eventually).

      At the very beginning I tried to put them over an uniform woolen cloth, dividing them into geographical areas. But they grew su much that now they are somehow mixed together. As a size reference, consider that the normal diameter il 24 mm.

      The first image is mainly related to European missions:

    5. Well, I got the answer. Not a para badge, just a strange mix of Italian Army story.

      1975.

      In that years the old regiment-division structure was changing in battalion-brigade-division.

      The old "Folgore" paratroop division does not exist any more, it is an ordinary army division, still using the old tab (sword, gold wing, blue background).

      The 40th brigade "Trieste" is part of the "Folgore"

      The 40th regiment "Bologna" (tabs: red line over white background) is changed in 40th battalion "Bologna" and becomes part of the "Trieste" brigade; its tabs become a mix of the old regiment and the new division structure, thus creating yours.

      Please note that the geographic references are not necessarily linked to the placing of the unit in the chart. For example, the brigade "Sassari" (the famous "Dimonios!" brigade) was and still is strongly linked to the Sardinia, having Sassari one of the main cities of Sardinia. On the other hand, the "Torino" division (81° and 82° regiment) during WW2 were recruited in the Rome area (I'm sure of it, since my father was in 81° rgt in 1942)

    6. Metal? 99% after WW2. I'm not an expert in this field, but the paratroops use a parachute since 1970, more or less, before that year they had a gold wing with a sword, like your. The pale blue background is normal for the paras, while the white with a red line in the middle was the collar tab of the "Bologna" division. I can't explain how these simbols are mixed together, may be I can ask in an Italian forum. Could you post a bigger picture of the tabs?

    7. Actually the medal and the diploma are not strictly linked.

      The diploma was defined by the law of 16 march 1983 no. 75, without any medal. This document was given to three groups of people: soldiers in service, "deportati politici" (should be partisans) and the IMIes (Italian military internees = Italian POWs in Germany, who were not recognized by the Nazies as regular prisoners). In this case the word "Patriota" confirms your statement about a partisan fighter.

      The medal with "VL" (Volontario per la Liberta') comes first, 1945. Actually it should be simply a ribbon, but this ribbon is usually mounted on the standard medal for volunteers, as it is in your case. The rules for the badge are more or less the same than the ones for your diploma.

      So you have two different awards, given in different times for the same reasons, and your deduction is correct.

    8. After several months, I wish to add another French medallion similar to the above mentioned.

      It remembers the dates of the Italy Campaign: 10 may begin of the war, 6 june entering in Milan, 11-12 july peace of Villafranca, 14 august back to Paris.

      Please note that the Villafranca treaty was signed by Napoleon III and the Austrian Emperor without informing the King of Sardinia...

      750.jpg

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