Cavalry action at Königgrätz - by Alexander von Bensa |
Affondatore (as later reconstructed) |
Re d'Italia |
Persano |
The Italian Minister
of Marine forced Persano’s hand by ordering an attack, not on Pola, but on the Austro-Hungarian
held island of Lissa (now Vis), off the Adriatic’s eastern coast. Possession of
this island was regarded as essential for control of the Adriatic – and gaining
it had been an Italian ambition for some time – but attacking it while there
was still an undefeated enemy fleet at large could only be regarded as foolhardy.
One reason for the decision may have been that, with negotiations imminent to
end the war, possession of Lissa, even at high cost, might provide a valuable
bargaining chip.
Tegetthoff |
The decisive
factor in the drama now unfolding was to be the aggressive Austro-Hungarian
naval commander, Wilhelm von Tegetthoff, who had been blooded in action against
the Danes. His crews were of both Slav and Italian stock from along the
Adriatic coast, including some 600 from Venice, and they were unlikely to have
been inherently superior to Persano’s men. The difference lay in the loyalty,
fighting spirit and discipline which Tegettoff had instilled in them and their
facing down of the Italian fleet at Ancona on 27th June had boosted their
confidence.
Tegetthoff was
initially suspicious that the Italian moves against Lissa were a diversion but
telegrams from there convinced him that they represented a major Italian
attempt to take the island. Accordingly, on 19th July, he headed
there with his entire force.
The Italian offensive
was meanwhile proceeding slowly. It opened with shore bombardment – a difficult
undertaking as Lissa’s coastal batteries were sited on commanding heights and
manned by determined marines and artillerymen. The operation was nevertheless
largely successful, not least due to the arrival of the powerful Affondatore
and by the end of the second day
some two-thirds of the Austro-Hungarian guns had been silenced. Had the
Italian ground-troops waiting offshore been landed the island could probably
have been captured before Tegettoff arrived. Zeal to do so was lacking however
and on the following day, 20th July, clearing mists revealed to the
island’s defenders the Austro-Hungarian squadron driving from the north-east at
full speed. Persano hurriedly gathered the Italian ships to the north of the
island to meet them.
Tegettoff’s force advanced
in three successive divisions, ironclads, wooden frigates, and finally the
smaller vessels, each in a wedge-shaped formation (see diagram above), with the
apex toward the enemy. The object was to drive through the Italian line, if
possible near the van, and bring on a melee in which all ships could take part,
ramming tactics could be employed, and the enemy would profit less by their
superiority in armour and guns. Tegetthoff's tactic depended on aggression and
confidence, matching them against a hesitant and passive enemy commander.
The Italians had
been caught at a disadvantage. On the previous day the Formidabile, one
of their better ships, had been put out
of action by shore batteries. Another, coming from the west end of
the island, was too late to take part in the action. The commander of the
Italian wooden ships, one Albini, was reluctant to risk them, despite Persano
signalling desperately to them to come around the Austro-Hungarian rear. With
his ironclads Persano formed three divisions, each of three ships and he swung across
the enemy's bows in line ahead. At this critical juncture, and for no obvious
reason, he shifted his flag from the Re d'Italia in the centre
to the Affondatore, which was steaming alone on the starboard side
of the line. The change was not noted by all his ships, and confusion of orders
inevitably followed. The delay involved also left a wide gap between the Italian
van and centre divisions and through this the Austrians drove, with Tegetthoff
in his flagship Erzherzog Ferdinand Max leading the way.
Contemporary painting - the confused-melee nature of the action is obvious |
From this point on,
formations became almost meaningless, a confused fracas in which the two forces
rammed or fired into each other in a fog of smoke and spray. The Austro-Hungarian
left flank and rear held up the Italian van while their ironclads attacked the Italian
centre. The wooden ships of the Austro-Hungarian middle division displayed none
of the hesitation of their Italian counterparts. Led by the 92-gun Kaiser,
essentially a traditional wooden ship of the line equipped with a steam engine,
they smashed into the Italian rear. The Kaiser, an obsolete relic, was
to endure the hardest fighting of the battle. She twice avoided the Affondatore's ram
though she was struck by one of her 300-pound projectiles. The Re di
Portogallo then bore down on her but her Captain Petz rang for
full speed ahead and steered for the ironclad, striking a glancing blow and
scraping past her, both ships blazing at each other as they passed. The Kaiser thereafter
withdrew, her foremast and funnel down and a fire burning amidships. Altogether
she fired 850 rounds in the action, or about one-fifth of the total fired by
the Austrians, and she received 80 hits, about one-fifth of the total. Of the
38 Austrians killed and 138 wounded in the battle, Kaiser lost 24 and 75 respectively.
Kaiser charging the Re di Portogallo while the Affondator attacks on her port quarter Painting by Eduard Nezbeda |
Erzherzog Ferdinand Max ramming the Re d'Italia |
The Re d'Italia rolling over and sinking - Erzharzog Ferdinand Max in background Painting by Carl Frederich Sorensen |
Kaiser after the battle - foremast and funnel gone, bows badly damaged |
Tegettoff’s
victory had no impact on the outcome of the war, which had essentially been
determined by the Prussian victory at Königgrätz. Despite defeat by land and
sea at Custoza and Lissa, Italy was awarded Venetia in the peace negotiations.
The most notable naval consequence of the Lissa battle was the exaggerated value
many assigned to ramming as a tactic, thereby making a ram bow a feature of
almost every warship, large or small, up to World War I. The more valuable
lesson was that a passive and defensive policy, such as Persano had adopted,
would always fail if confronted by a determined and aggressive enemy.. There have
been few better examples than Lissa of the American Admiral Farragut's
belief that “iron in the ships is less
important than iron in the men".
It is surprising, in view of the facts, that Persano
announced a victory when he returned to Italy, thereby triggering widespread
celebrations which was dampened when the full story was made known. He was to
suffer the humiliation of being arraigned before the Italian Senate and being dismissed
from the navy on the basis of cowardice and incompetence.
The classic image of the defiant Tegetthoff on the Ferdinand Max's open bridge during the battle |
Tegetthoff, still only 39 at the time of his victory, had
one five years to live before he was struck down by pneumonia. Deservedly
promoted and hailed as a national hero,
his most significant – and painful – duty in his later career was to sail to
Mexico in the frigate Novara in 1867 to
bring back the body of the so-called Emperor Ferdinand Maximilian who had been
shot by the Mexican government of Benito Juárez.
But that’s another story!
Britannia’s Wolf
The first book in the Dawlish Chronicles Series features ironclad action in the Black Sea as the vicious Russo-Turkish War of 1877-78 reaches its climax.
Russian forces are driving deep into the corrupt Ottoman-Turkish Empire. In the depths of a savage winter, as the Turks face defeat on all fronts, a British officer is enmeshed and finds himself confronting enemy ironclads, Cossack lances and merciless Kurdish irregulars. And in the midst of this chaos, while he himself is a pawn in the rivalry of the Sultan’s half-brothers for control of the collapsing empire, he is unwillingly and unexpectedly drawn to a woman whom he believes he should not love.
Britannia’s Wolf is available in hard-copy and Kindle format –click here for details.
Britannia's Wolf It is also available as an audio book read by the distinguished American actor David Doersch. If you haven't previously ordered an audio-book from audible.com you can download it without cost as part of a 30-Day Free Trial. You can listen on your Smart Phone, Tablet or MP3 Player.
Who invented ironclads, by the way? I know they were used in the American Civil War, but don't know if that was the first time they were employed in battle.
ReplyDeleteIn the years after the Crimean War both the British and the French built the first ocean-gong ironclads. In terms of weapons carried they represented no real innovation - still tiers of guns, as on the old wooden warships. The real innovations as regards mounting of weapons came in the American Civil War, including the revolutionary introduction of the turret in the Union's "monitor" and successors, and a variety of brilliant improvisations by the Confederates.
ReplyDelete"His crews were of both Slav and Italian stock from along the Adriatic coast, including some 600 from Venice, and they were unlikely to have been inherently superior to Persano’s men."
ReplyDeleteSo if they had been of some other stock -- Aryan, perhaps -- they perhaps would have been "innately superior"...?
Nothing to do with race, just the fact that both navies were drawing on a pool of people from around the shores of the Adriatic who had broadly similar seafaring traditions.
ReplyDelete