60th Infantry Regiment "Calabria"

The regiment is named for the region of Calabria and part of the Italian Army's infantry arm.

[1][2] In 1958, the regiment was disbanded in Sassari in Sardinia and then reformed in Trapani in Sicily as a recruits training unit.

In October 1866, the 60th Infantry Regiment was sent to Palermo to patrol the city after the suppression of the Seven and a Half Days Revolt.

In 1895–96, the regiment provided seven officers and 229 enlisted for units deployed to Italian Eritrea for the First Italo-Ethiopian War.

At the time the 60th Infantry Regiment consisted of three battalions, each of which fielded four fusilier companies and one machine gun section.

On 8 July 1915, the 59th Infantry Regiment began operations to take the summit of Col di Lana.

For the rest of the year the two regiments continued the attacks against the Austro-Hungarian positions on Col di Lana.

On 7 November 1915, the 60th Infantry Regiment's III Battalion finally reached the Col di Lana summit, but an Austro-Hungarian counterattack the following night drove the Italians back.

[1][4] During the night of 18 April 1916, the Italians detonated five tonnes of blasting gelatin in a mine driven under the summit of Col di Lana.

On the latter date, the 59th Infantry Regiment's 6th Company managed to break into the Austro-Hungarian trenches on the Piccolo Colbricon, but was again forced to retreat after the enemy counterattacked.

On 2 December 1917, the brigade, which had suffered 1,665 casualties in two weeks of combat, was replaced in the first line by French troops.

[1][4] For the conquest of Col di Lana, their conduct and sacrifice on Cima Stradon and Piccolo Colbricon, and their bravery and sacrifice on Monte Tomba and Monfenera, the 59th Infantry Regiment and 60th Infantry Regiment were both awarded a Silver Medal of Military Valor.

Initially the "Sabauda" division was tasked with border defence duties in the Asmara-Dek’emhāre area.

In November 1935, the "Sabauda" division took Negash, Agula and Bolbala and then moved to positions on the heights overlooking the Tekezé river during the Ethiopian Christmas Offensive.

On 3 April 1936, the division arrived at Amba Alagi, where it won a decisive encounter and pursued the retreating Ethiopians to Agumserta and finally to Lake Ashenge.

[1][10][11] In following months the regiment's battalions battled Ethiopian forces and rebels, which operated near Addis Ababa.

On 24 July 1936, the regiment's III Battalion encountered a large rebel force and dispersed it with a bayonet charge.

The division, which also included the 40th Artillery Regiment "Calabria", was tasked with the defense of the Northern half of Sardinia.

[1][7][9][10][11] At the outbreak of World War II, the 60th Infantry Regiment "Calabria" consisted of a command, a command company, three fusilier battalions, a support weapons battery equipped with 65/17 infantry support guns, and a mortar company equipped with 81mm Mod.

The "Calabria" division and its regiments remained in Sardinia on coastal defense duty until the Armistice of Cassibile was announced on 8 September 1943.

On 12–14 September 1943, the 59th Infantry Regiment "Calabria" skirmished with German forces at Bassacutena and Campovaglio, while the 60th Infantry Regiment "Calabria" engaged German forces at Littichedda, and Santa Teresa Gallura, in an attempt to speed up their withdrawal from the island.

For the rest of the war the regiment was tasked with the defence of Mediterranean Allied Air Forces airfields on Sardinia; as well as public security and demining.

[1][12] On 14 February 1978, the 46th Infantry Battalion "Reggio", which had trained the recruits assigned the Motorized Brigade "Aosta", was disbanded and the 60th Infantry Battalion "Col di Lana" from then onward also trained the recruits destined for the Motorized Brigade "Aosta".