La scorsa estate ho potuto visitare il museo di Passo Fedaia, mi sono commossa, ricordando che ho avuto il mio nonno materno (che purtroppo non ho mai conosciuto, perché è morto giovanissimo quando mia madre aveva solo 6 anni), era un Ardito d'Italia - giovane del '99. Per me è stato emozionante ed interessante la visita al museo.NON DIMENTICHIAMO!
Bellissimo video...😊😊😊 Complimenti per tutte queste informazioni 😊😊😊😊Grande video....... È PROPRIO VERO ...... LA SCUOLA PREPARA VERAMENTE MOLTO POCO RIGUARDO LA PRIMA E LA SECONDA GUERRA MONDIALE 😢😢😢😢SEMBRA QUASI VOGLIANO VOLUTAMENTE DIMENTICARLA😢😢😢
I've been watching quite a few vids on the Italian/Austrian front of WW I. I'm fairly well versed on history, but at fifty-four years old, I find myself still educating my mind. Where this fighting had taken place is just insane! All of those soldiers, of both sides, were cut from a different cloth. Not to sound crass, but their balls were clanking on the way up they were so big. The terrain is just insane! Much less dragging what I assume is a latter part of the 1800's artillery piece up to the top of the ridge (how high? 15-20 thousand feet?). I have a hard time wrapping my brain around half a million men doing battle in such a place! Anyway, again I apologise for my crass American mouth talking about the size of those dude's balls. But, how the hell else do you explain that? It'd be easy to say that they were all crazy, but from a strategic point of view, there's no better natural "choke point" than those mountain passes. I'm willing to bet that one artillery piece kept thousands of soldiers bottled up below. All I can say is WOW. I don't care what some say about Italian's will to fight during WW II, they're full of sht! These dudes were as "hard" as they come, and I have my doubts that one bit of that was lost by WW II. Mussolini's cronies maybe, but not these guys. Maybe twice (the World Wars) was enough in a thirty year span, but geez. The next person I hear talking crap about Italian soldiers is getting punched in the mouth. My heritege is Native American and Norman. I've got forty-five plus years of hunting, fishing, and tracking in the Appalachian Mountains of the Eastern US (mostly my home state of West Virginia)... and I think that I've got skills? Not like that...I tip my cap to you. On a side note, I've seen some of the most beautiful places on Earth, but Northern Italy is just gorgeous... maybe I can visit there before my days on this Earth are done. I'll leave you with what is sewn on our state flag...Montani Semper Liberi (Mountaineers are always free...it fits the people of Italy well I think).
La scorsa estate ho potuto visitare il museo di Passo Fedaia, mi sono commossa, ricordando che ho avuto il mio nonno materno (che purtroppo non ho mai conosciuto, perché è morto giovanissimo quando mia madre aveva solo 6 anni), era un Ardito d'Italia - giovane del '99. Per me è stato emozionante ed interessante la visita al museo.NON DIMENTICHIAMO!
Bellissimo video...😊😊😊 Complimenti per tutte queste informazioni 😊😊😊😊Grande video....... È PROPRIO VERO ...... LA SCUOLA PREPARA VERAMENTE MOLTO POCO RIGUARDO LA PRIMA E LA SECONDA GUERRA MONDIALE 😢😢😢😢SEMBRA QUASI VOGLIANO VOLUTAMENTE DIMENTICARLA😢😢😢
I've been watching quite a few vids on the Italian/Austrian front of WW I. I'm fairly well versed on history, but at fifty-four years old, I find myself still educating my mind. Where this fighting had taken place is just insane! All of those soldiers, of both sides, were cut from a different cloth. Not to sound crass, but their balls were clanking on the way up they were so big. The terrain is just insane! Much less dragging what I assume is a latter part of the 1800's artillery piece up to the top of the ridge (how high? 15-20 thousand feet?). I have a hard time wrapping my brain around half a million men doing battle in such a place! Anyway, again I apologise for my crass American mouth talking about the size of those dude's balls. But, how the hell else do you explain that? It'd be easy to say that they were all crazy, but from a strategic point of view, there's no better natural "choke point" than those mountain passes. I'm willing to bet that one artillery piece kept thousands of soldiers bottled up below. All I can say is WOW. I don't care what some say about Italian's will to fight during WW II, they're full of sht! These dudes were as "hard" as they come, and I have my doubts that one bit of that was lost by WW II. Mussolini's cronies maybe, but not these guys. Maybe twice (the World Wars) was enough in a thirty year span, but geez. The next person I hear talking crap about Italian soldiers is getting punched in the mouth. My heritege is Native American and Norman. I've got forty-five plus years of hunting, fishing, and tracking in the Appalachian Mountains of the Eastern US (mostly my home state of West Virginia)... and I think that I've got skills? Not like that...I tip my cap to you. On a side note, I've seen some of the most beautiful places on Earth, but Northern Italy is just gorgeous... maybe I can visit there before my days on this Earth are done. I'll leave you with what is sewn on our state flag...Montani Semper Liberi (Mountaineers are always free...it fits the people of Italy well I think).
Che riposino in pace tra le loro trincee😪
i disertori,quelli sono i veri eroi delle guerre. denigrati ancora oggi