The 3rd Army Corps Auto Group "Fulvia" (Italian: 3° Autogruppo di Corpo d'Armata "Fulvia") is an inactive military logistics battalion of the Italian Army, which was based in Milan in Lombardy.
[1] The group's anniversary falls, as for all units of the Italian Army's Transport and Materiel Corps, on 22 May, the anniversary of the Royal Italian Army's first major use of automobiles to transport reinforcements to the Asiago plateau to counter the Austro-Hungarian Asiago Offensive in May 1916.
[1] On 16 January 1936, the center formed the XXIII Auto Group for the 8th Infantry Division "Po".
Germany reacted by invading Italy and the 3rd Drivers Regiment was disbanded soon thereafter by German forces.
The unit was tasked with the transport of fuel, ammunition, and materiel between the military region's depots and the logistic supply points of the army's divisions and brigades.
Like all Italian Army transport units the group was named for a historic road near its base, in case of the 3rd Army Corps Auto Group for the Roman road Via Fulvia, which connected Tortona and Turin.