The Liberation Of Rome (1944)

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  • Опубліковано 9 вер 2010
  • Reel 1, Gen. Montgomery and the British 8th Army land at Reggio Calabria. The Italian navy surrenders to the Allies. Gen. Mark Clark and the U.S. 5th Army land at Salerno behind an intense naval bombardment. The Luftwaffe bombards the beachhead. The 5th and the 8th Armies meet. The Allies take the Foggia airfield and later enter Naples. Refugees return to the city. U.S. troops cross the Volturno River and advance through mud. Reel 2, Ortona is taken after street fighting and a savage tank battle. Gens. Eisenhower and Clark inspect Cassino defenses. 5th Army units land at Anzio. Gens. Rommel and Kesselring direct the arrival of Nazi reserves. British Gen. Alexander directs an artillery bombardment on the Gustav Line. Cassino falls. Allied tanks roll toward Rome. The Nazis evacuate the city and 5th Army units enter.
    National Archives and Records Administration
    THE LIBERATION OF ROME
    Department of Defense. Department of the Army. Office of the Chief Signal Officer. (09/18/1947 - 02/28/1964)
    ARC Identifier 24348 / Local Identifier 111-CR-1 .

КОМЕНТАРІ • 305

  • @Wanderer628
    @Wanderer628 6 років тому +72

    You guys want to know a bit of history? The American general in change of this division, General Clark, wanted some glory and whipped himself into a frenzy at the thought of the British 'beating' him to Rome. So ignoring the order of his British superior officer to complete the encirclement of the German 10th army and link up with British units to close the pocket, he instead took his division and ran off to Rome to wave the flag in front of the coliseum. This allowed the German army to escape and link up at the next defensive line, an act which would mean thousands more American and Allied lives lost taking ground from soldiers they could have killed and captured with minimal loss had Clark not listened to his own ego.

    • @davidgoldin5759
      @davidgoldin5759 5 років тому +4

      Lucian Truscott doesn't have much good to say about Clark. Loved the headlines. But he was personally brave. Should have stayed as a staff officer.

    • @64MDW
      @64MDW 4 роки тому +12

      Nice try, but you might want to get your facts straight...what division did General Clark command? Gen. Mark Clark was the commander of the 5th Army, not a single division. He had no "superior British officer." The 5th Army was comprised of American, British, Canadian, Brazilian, Polish and Free French units. He pretty much called the shots in Italy.

    • @rtk3543
      @rtk3543 4 роки тому +9

      @@64MDW The fact is he blew it.

    • @SilvertownMates
      @SilvertownMates 4 роки тому +12

      His superior officer was General Alexander, who ordered him to ignore Rome and round up the retreating Germans, He preferred the picture opportunity of going straight to Rome, It did him little good as the D-day invasion of France took all the front pages and the men of the 8th Army and the 5th Army had to fight the Germans who had escaped thanks to Clark insubordination in the mountains of Northern Italy through the winter of 1944/45.

    • @ea.fitz216
      @ea.fitz216 2 роки тому +4

      @@64MDW Alexander was his superior officer Lmao

  • @constancio2306
    @constancio2306 5 років тому +32

    I live in Rome around the streets it has showed. So many emotions, kinda makes you feel an awe in the presence of time!

  • @larryloveless2967
    @larryloveless2967 3 роки тому +13

    Thanks for placing on UA-cam. This is the first I remember seeing this much on the invasion of Italy as most is of the D-DAY invasion through France. Once a local tour guide from Rome driving past Naples for us to see Pompeii for a day trip there and back to Rome menioned to us how the valley between the two mountain ranges on both sides of the highway we were taking to get there was where German and Allied forces fought it out during world war two.

  • @travel734
    @travel734 3 роки тому +17

    My dad fought at Ortona. It was the Canadians there not the British, in fact the Canadian, Australian, New Zealander and Indian Armies played a very significant role in the Italian campaign.

    • @marcio8090
      @marcio8090 3 роки тому +7

      And Brazil

    • @biniulutowy6146
      @biniulutowy6146 2 роки тому +1

      Poland Army

    • @loreCarbonell
      @loreCarbonell 2 роки тому

      Ortona ? I live there! If your dad is still alive give him a great hug from me

    • @travel734
      @travel734 2 роки тому

      @@loreCarbonell Thank you, unfortunately we lost him a few years ago. I visit the cemetary in Ortona when I am there around November 11. It is good to see that so many people come out. We have a house near Avezzano.

    • @marklomax7452
      @marklomax7452 2 роки тому +1

      you didn't mention the Poles. see the Polish Cemetery at Monte Casino.

  • @CanadianStereotype
    @CanadianStereotype 11 років тому +15

    You have no idea what you're talking about. The American Forces that entered Rome were common Infantry. There were NO GERMANS IN ROME. They had all retreated after the Canadians broke the Melfa Line and forced the Germans into retreat. Gen Mark Clark's orders were to capture the German 10th Army, and then Rome. Instead, he went straight to Rome and the German 10th Army doubled the total amount of Allied casualties in Italy after they escaped.

    • @chrisbreezy-ryanbarbosa4320
      @chrisbreezy-ryanbarbosa4320 3 роки тому +2

      If that is true then even your own Canadian media has not documented that very well because I saw a CBC documentary that stated US forces liberated Rome and Paris. Canadian media needs to do better job for you guys.

    • @spencersholden
      @spencersholden 3 роки тому +2

      @@chrisbreezy-ryanbarbosa4320 you Canadians are the unsung heroes many times.

    • @peterwhite507
      @peterwhite507 2 роки тому

      @@chrisbreezy-ryanbarbosa4320 It's common knowledge amongst historians and those who follow WW2 events that Clark disobeyed orders so he could enter Rome first. He failed to cut off the German 10th army. This is a fact, not an opinion.
      Hollywood writes WW2 history, not Canadian media.

  • @llynfach
    @llynfach 11 років тому +1

    Oh, Andrew, you are SPOT ON!

  • @spencersholden
    @spencersholden 3 роки тому +10

    I am so glad Rome was never bombed into near oblivion by Allied artillery and bombers.

    • @johnnyfortpants1415
      @johnnyfortpants1415 3 роки тому +2

      Unlike Malta, which was mercilessly bombed. The axis sowed the wind, and reaped the whirlwind.

    • @thunderbird1921
      @thunderbird1921 2 роки тому +4

      Well, actually a couple of areas in Rome were bombed before the city was taken. The American forces (using mostly B-17s) did a massive but carefully planned raid on the city to destroy steel production areas, the rail yard, and the main airport, yet avoid as many civilians as possible. The British also did several raids of their own.

    • @spencersholden
      @spencersholden Рік тому +1

      @@johnnyfortpants1415Malta, one of the greatest nations during WW2. The entire country was given the George Cross for their actions.

  • @rustyalcorta3643
    @rustyalcorta3643 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you...gratzie mille..

  • @geoffm9944
    @geoffm9944 5 років тому +37

    General Clark ignored orders from his superiors by moving his troops to take Rome, which allowed the Germans to retreat and establish another fortified line. Clark was desperate to get there before the British, who would take the glory. Clark should have been fired for seriously compromising the allied strategy which was to destroy German forces as quickly as possible.

    • @WBSGBS
      @WBSGBS 4 роки тому +6

      Geoff M lucky for him DDay over shadowed his actions.

    • @Osayannx
      @Osayannx 4 роки тому +3

      Geoff M Right, I read your comment and thought I'd written so yes, I agree. Canadians were told to go off to another destination and the U.S came in with their cameras for the newspapers and took credit for many other things too.

    • @rnstoo1
      @rnstoo1 3 роки тому +2

      You know your history Sir!

    • @oldman8584
      @oldman8584 3 роки тому +1

      @@Osayannx. Actually Rome was left undefended so Clarke’s decision to take it was pretty awful.
      But being undefended prompted British news media to take a look. They got there before the Americans!! So all those films of the brave Americans marching into Rome were taken by unarmed British news people.
      Hence the title of this film which mentions the British film units.

    • @ShaggyPWN
      @ShaggyPWN 2 роки тому

      Or he chose to secure a massive civilian population and world city in order to spare it and its people destruction. Wars are not conducted in a vacuum, there are considerations other than 'destroy, destroy, destroy' to take into account.

  • @asullivan4047
    @asullivan4047 Рік тому

    Interesting and informative. Wonderful film footage.

  • @charlenelord6860
    @charlenelord6860 5 років тому +8

    Thank you for sharing. I was one of the tourists who believed the Germans didn't destroy it because of its beauty!

    • @DavBlc7
      @DavBlc7 4 роки тому +1

      Hitler tried to destroy Paris but it's German military governor refused to obey his order and surrendered to Free French forces instead.

    • @vites8925
      @vites8925 4 роки тому +3

      @@DavBlc7 at least, thats what the history books say... and history was written by the victors.

    • @spencersholden
      @spencersholden 3 роки тому +2

      @@DavBlc7 Hitler destroyed every bridge in Venice except one because he loved its design.

    • @SniaViscosaToxSwag
      @SniaViscosaToxSwag 11 місяців тому +1

      The Allied monsters destroyed my city (Lodi) completely. Garuffio Theatre, the old walls... Gone,

    • @guypalumbo7892
      @guypalumbo7892 9 місяців тому

      Stronzo, blame it on the Nazi and Fascist monsters!@@SniaViscosaToxSwag

  • @davidpasztor3142
    @davidpasztor3142 11 років тому +7

    In 1985 my father and all the men in his squad were awarded the Bronze Star for what they did on that hill outside of Rome.

  • @younglock73
    @younglock73 11 років тому +2

    my granda was there..top upload nuclearvault.. many thanks harold bhoy...

  • @dpetrano
    @dpetrano 3 роки тому

    Thank you José Ferrer for narrating.

  • @brauliovazdemelomendes1016
    @brauliovazdemelomendes1016 4 роки тому +6

    Gostaria de ver documentários como este, mostrando o Brazil na guerra da Itália. Obrigado

  • @jamesbulldogmiller
    @jamesbulldogmiller 5 років тому +17

    Is the narrator José Ferrer ?
    It sounds like his voice.

    • @jchapman8248
      @jchapman8248 3 роки тому +1

      I believe it is José Ferrer. Do you remember his role as a JAG attorney heading the court martial Lt Cmdr Quig in the film, "Mutiny on the Cain"? It starred Humphrey Bogart, Fred Mac Murry, and Van Johnson? I thought José Ferrer did a splendid job in that movie!

  • @peterkingsley8736
    @peterkingsley8736 10 років тому +12

    in reply to 555paint: Yup that was Jose Ferrer as the narrator

  • @warmonger8799
    @warmonger8799 5 років тому

    AWESOME

  • @Boomstik1123
    @Boomstik1123 11 років тому +5

    I'm not bitter, but Clark was a horrible commander. He completely ignored previous orders to trap the German 10th army and drove into Rome anyway. Absolute insubordination.

  • @shuaty
    @shuaty 5 років тому +5

    Sad that the general gets no recognition these days cause d day was the day after so we normally focus on the 6th not the 5th :l

  • @Boomstik1123
    @Boomstik1123 11 років тому +23

    How about the Canadians who suffered the most grievous fighting in the Italian campaign.

  • @marioarmentario
    @marioarmentario 11 років тому +8

    Of course, British, US and all allied forces are to be thanked and never be forgotten

  • @marioarmentario
    @marioarmentario 12 років тому +6

    Thanks from deep of my hearth to the US and allied oldiers that liberated Italy by nazi and fascists. The sacrifice of US GIs will never be forgotten.

    • @giorgioditizio6293
      @giorgioditizio6293 4 роки тому

      Bastardi...

    • @patrickmiano7901
      @patrickmiano7901 3 роки тому

      It already has been. Americans have always been more interested in France 🇫🇷 than Italy 🇮🇹.

    • @clementegarcia4261
      @clementegarcia4261 2 роки тому

      And now, we will have to go to war again against fascism and fascists… except this time, it will be here on our homeland.

  • @mistervacation23
    @mistervacation23 4 роки тому +5

    I once worked for District Attorney Thomas Lee Woolwine in LA. and let me tell you, that guy was on the take. Thats all I can tell you as I fear for my life.

  • @AdaL0906
    @AdaL0906 Місяць тому +1

    Lest we forget the army that break the front through was the French Army 🇫🇷. French Army 🇫🇷 then took Rome first and hanged their flag on the city. France continue its advance until Sierra after which the army started the landing in France. Among this 112000 French soldiers (representing the third of all the effectives, 30 000 were killed or injured)

  • @2BAStarrySky
    @2BAStarrySky 11 років тому +10

    Really inspiring to hear about the Multinational Forces!
    Would it happen today?

    • @bobtudbury8505
      @bobtudbury8505 Рік тому

      only as long as the yanks got the glory and hollywood headlines

  • @lorenzobeckmann3736
    @lorenzobeckmann3736 4 роки тому +8

    I was told by very reliable source (3rd Army, XX Corp) that it was the Polish fighters who cleaned the last defenders at Casino.

    • @travel734
      @travel734 3 роки тому +3

      Many tried, but yes the Polish soldiers took it in the end.

    • @powerdriller4124
      @powerdriller4124 Рік тому +1

      A tragedy, the later abandonment, outright treason, that those soldier suffered when Poland was given away by Brits and Yanks to genocidal Stalin.

  • @davidanthonystone5165
    @davidanthonystone5165 6 років тому +8

    My Dad was in the U S Army that invaded Italy and on the Rome

  • @mickerdoodle51
    @mickerdoodle51 3 роки тому +2

    Thank all mighty God, for the peace and freedom we now enjoy.

    • @HawklordLI
      @HawklordLI 3 роки тому

      Except for the 7 or so countries the USA is bombing in the Middle East.

  • @leaomartinofaria1667
    @leaomartinofaria1667 3 роки тому +2

    Olha só o respeito daquele militar...tirou suas armas pra entrar na igreja....na casa do pai temos que ter muito respeito!

  • @bryanllanos5843
    @bryanllanos5843 2 роки тому

    I remember Gina Lollobridgda I know I got the name wrong but I remember her from films in Italy near to those days. There was an Italian family living in my neighbourhood in Trinidad in the West Indies

  • @hardyakka6200
    @hardyakka6200 4 роки тому

    I'm confused I watch beachhead Anzio where is was stated that there was very little opposition when they landed here they say they were heavily opposed. WHICH WAS IT?

    • @dashcroft1892
      @dashcroft1892 3 роки тому

      Little opposition when they landed. Clarke was overly ... “cautious” ... which allowed the Germans time to mount a strong opposition.

  • @HunterstonB
    @HunterstonB 12 років тому +3

    General 'I am a glory hunting clown' Mark Clark. . . .the man who lost the war in Italy because I wanted the glory of capturing Rome.

    • @64MDW
      @64MDW 4 роки тому +1

      The war wasn't "lost in Italy" any more than it was lost in Burma.

    • @alanmacification
      @alanmacification 3 роки тому

      @@64MDW, The Americans were beat at Anzio and Monte Cassino. The British 8th army had to extend over from the Adriatic to punch through at Casino and take the Liri Valley ( Clark' original objective ). After the Germans were driven back, Clark demanded the Canadian I Corp get off the roads so he could be first into Rome and he would shoot them if they didn't. The Canadians promised to shoot back.

  • @marioarmentario
    @marioarmentario 11 років тому

    The subject od the discussion was air bombing in wwii and my comment (that is correct) made reference to this conflict.

  • @draganbanic7015
    @draganbanic7015 9 років тому

    good call tom,i just rad your comment you spotted it too.

  • @theshameofthesun
    @theshameofthesun 5 років тому +7

    General Mark Clark Liberated Rome...let the Germans go up country to establish another line of defence....the Rome crowds...rightly so cheered..history was sated...luckily D Day overshadowed big EGOs

    • @j3lny425
      @j3lny425 3 роки тому +1

      As I understood it he was supposed to swing east, connect with the British/Canadian forces and cut of the German lines of retreat. Instead he went for Rome and the glory and the Germans slipped away.

    • @theshameofthesun
      @theshameofthesun 3 роки тому

      @@j3lny425 its funny everyone blames one another, but at the end of the day, the best armies of WW2 beat the evil nazis

    • @robsan52
      @robsan52 Рік тому

      Yeah Clark was a piece of work. Eisenhower and Marshall tried to reign him in several times to no avail.

  • @DiscothecaImperialis
    @DiscothecaImperialis 2 роки тому

    The campaign that fought along the millenia roads built by Roman Empire. Is this counted amongs 'Sackings of Rome' tally?

  • @ZontarDow
    @ZontarDow 13 років тому +1

    @preemptivestrike20 But did they liberate it? I didn't think so.

  • @redzenith0488
    @redzenith0488 Рік тому +5

    The glory-hound Mark Clark robbed the Canadian armored units of the honor of being the first Allied units to enter Rome and liberate the city. But the Germans had withdrawn from the city and it was entered without a fight by the U.S. 5th Army: Rome was not taken from the Wehrmacht, which had abandoned the city.

  • @younglock73
    @younglock73 11 років тому

    big shout out to your auld man

  • @marktruckingkelly
    @marktruckingkelly 9 років тому +6

    Clark entered Rome WHILE THE BRITISH FENDED OFF GERMANS .Clark was told not to enter Rome . Clark sucked up glory in Rome as British soldiers clashed with Germans.

    • @danm9750
      @danm9750 9 років тому +1

      Mark Kelly ... no ... the Canadians ...not the British ....... Canadians did all the work

    • @marktruckingkelly
      @marktruckingkelly 9 років тому +4

      The British force ("Peter Beach")[edit]
      This force attacked the coast 6 miles (9.7 km) north of Anzio.
      1st British Infantry Division
      2nd Infantry Brigade
      1st Battalion, Loyal Regiment (North Lancashire)
      2nd Battalion, North Staffordshire Regiment
      6th Battalion, Gordon Highlanders
      3rd Infantry Brigade
      1st Battalion, Duke of Wellington's Regiment
      1st Battalion, King's Shropshire Light Infantry
      2nd Battalion, Sherwood Foresters
      24th Guards Brigade
      5th Battalion, Grenadier Guards
      1st Battalion, Irish Guards
      1st Battalion, Scots Guards
      1st Reconnaissance Regiment, Reconnaissance Corps
      2/7th Battalion, Middlesex Regiment
      2nd, 19th & 67th Field Regiments, Royal Artillery
      81st Anti-tank Regiment, Royal Artillery
      90th Light Anti-aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery
      23rd, 238th & 248th Field Companies, Royal Engineers
      6th Field Park Company, Royal Engineers
      1st Bridging Platoon, Royal Engineers
      46th Royal Tank Regiment
      2nd Special Service Brigade (partial)
      No. 9 Commando
      No.43 (Royal Marine) Commando
      No 1, 2 & 3 Field Ambulance, Royal Army Medical Corps
      18th Infantry Brigade (February to August 1944)
      1st Battalion, Buffs (Royal East Kent Regiment)

    • @Osayannx
      @Osayannx 8 років тому +3

      +Mark Kelly Yes, the United States claimed victory when in fact it was the Canadians who liberated Rome etc. I think the people of the U.S. today still believe they deserve all of the glory for liberating Europe during WW2. Not so, but hey, this made for a real bang up UA-cam show!!

    • @robertbrockway7301
      @robertbrockway7301 7 років тому

      Saysanne S Bullshit

    • @mrryencoke
      @mrryencoke 7 років тому +3

      The Canadians busted through the Adolph Hitler line and had a clear path to Rome through the Liri Valley 4 days before the Americans got there. The German Army had declared Rome an "open city" and unoccupied meaning the Canadians could have walked right in, but they were ordered to hold and put on reserve. Once the German defense line was penetrated, they began to quickly retreat. U.S. General Clark was supposed to cut off the retreat and trap the 10th German army but ignored his orders and charged towards an undefended Rome instead. Clark's decision to feed his ego and run for Rome is considered one of the biggest military fuckups in WW2 as it allowed most of the German 10th to escape! This is fact you can easily confirm with Google.

  • @MsAbolo
    @MsAbolo 4 роки тому

    Wouaaa il on même batu jules cesar !

  • @MrRoyobentoni
    @MrRoyobentoni 4 роки тому

    Gregory Peck?

  • @VanlifewithAlan
    @VanlifewithAlan 11 років тому

    More or less how I see it too.

  • @CanadianStereotype
    @CanadianStereotype 11 років тому +2

    The First Canadian Army broke the Melfa Line, sending Germans in retreat past Rome. They had the toughest fight and received disproportional heavy casualties compared to the rest of the Allies. 26 miles away, 2 hours out, the Canadians were ordered to stop so General Mark Clark's army could capture the retreating 10th Army and liberate Rome. He instead chose to simply liberate Rome for glory, letting the 10th escape and double Allied casualties. The Canadians rode through at 3AM without pomp or

  • @johndaugherty4127
    @johndaugherty4127 Рік тому +1

    This is history, because Orson Welles says so, and HE would never try to fool anyone, would he?

  • @loveofthegame1517
    @loveofthegame1517 5 років тому

    At 7:57 that guy sticking his head out of the tent is pissed and is "F" bombing the weather. Watch his mouth LOL

  • @user-wk4cq9el6s
    @user-wk4cq9el6s 3 роки тому

    이 영상에 나온 사람은 다 고인이 되셧답니다.

  • @ummglick
    @ummglick 3 роки тому

    The more things change the more they remain the same

  • @MB-hv3ic
    @MB-hv3ic 4 роки тому

    Que pensaron
    14.30 ..no se la iban a hacer fácil
    como la serie Combate.😈

  • @tulongpham6002
    @tulongpham6002 4 роки тому

    Mien nam dans mon coeur mat=perdu...TÔI như dứt từng khuc ruot=intestin!Bye!

  • @555paint
    @555paint 12 років тому +8

    is that jose ferrer?

  • @chrisbreezy-ryanbarbosa4320
    @chrisbreezy-ryanbarbosa4320 2 роки тому +1

    Liberate? I thought Italy was the Axis?

  • @farishammad4762
    @farishammad4762 3 роки тому

    We all know that ezio auditore da firenze did this first during the Renaissance

  • @veronicavero9498
    @veronicavero9498 11 років тому

    e siamo passati!

  • @aaaarrrgggghh
    @aaaarrrgggghh 11 років тому +14

    my most sincere thanks to Brits, Canadians and everyone else who helped beat the nazis

    • @linoalva
      @linoalva 6 років тому

      aaaarrrgggghh
      Y los Estados Unidos. qué ???

    • @linoalva
      @linoalva 6 років тому

      Cientos de Miles de americanos perdieron la vida por liberar a Italia, Francia y el resto de Europa..y Asia...

  • @u.s.militia7682
    @u.s.militia7682 Рік тому

    Great days.

  • @marioarmentario
    @marioarmentario 11 років тому +2

    I would say that liberated is the right word to be used. Considering that Allied freed us from Nazi Fascism and feed Italians liberating them from hunger I would sau that Liberation is the right word, unless you preferred the Nazi fascist regime. But this is not my case and that of millions of Italians that crowded the street of Italy in 1944-1945 to welcome tge liberators.

  • @draganbanic7015
    @draganbanic7015 9 років тому +17

    pause it at exactly 17:37,wow that's hitler!

  • @marklomax7452
    @marklomax7452 11 місяців тому

    powerful ending

  • @domenicozagari2443
    @domenicozagari2443 Рік тому +2

    INSTEAD OF WRITING OCCUPATION OF ROME THEY SAY LIBERATION OF ROME, LIBERATION FROM THE ITALIANS??

    • @powerdriller4124
      @powerdriller4124 Рік тому +1

      Liberation from the Germans. Technically, Italy was in war with Germany after the fall of Mussolini and a new Italian Government was formed declaring war to the Nazis (A big flip).

  • @yank1776
    @yank1776 11 років тому +2

    Clark was one of the worse generals in American history, only his connections prevent him from being relieved.

    • @HankWest-er8iw
      @HankWest-er8iw 5 років тому

      yank1776 - A political general, grandstander and racist to his Black soldiers under his command also, undercutting them at every turn, even giving decorations they earned in battle to other units...

  • @davidc4613011972
    @davidc4613011972 7 років тому +7

    Near STIA AREZZO TUSCANY Where I live , there was a small village called VALLUCCIOLE valley of fireflies in the spring of 1944 in these valleys were active partisan groups and in those days killed an officer and several soldiers ss You must know that beautiful place at the foot of the falterona mountain was swept away with inhuman ferocity where life lost all those old women and children men were all at the front or Abandoned to themselves by the Fascist regime, look at what the Germans did to Greece's Cephalonia Against Italian soldiers .Today in 2017 there is only the cemetery surrounded by fir trees There are so many babies some of them had few days and months of age In this years there is civil war in italy partisan vs fascist total caos from 43 to 45 Many Italians were not fascists You had to accept dictatorship, democracy did not exist anymore You had to be careful otherwise your family was over my grandfather was not fascist for example but You had to pretend to be fascist but in reality the Italians did not want this fucking war only the fascists wanted it check what the Fascists did in Italy with the gestapo and Ss List of massacres in Italy only 1944
    29 September - 5 October 1944, Marzabotto massacre (Marzabotto, Emilia-Romagna; between 770 and 1,830 civilians killed)
    12 August 1944, Sant'Anna di Stazzema massacre (Sant'Anna di Stazzema, Tuscany; 560 people, including children)
    29 June 1944, Civitella-Cornia-San Pancrazio massacre (Abruzzo; 203 people, including children)
    Ardeatine massacre (Rome, Lazio; 335 prisoners executed)
    Boves massacre (Cuneo, Piedmont; 189 civilians and partisans killed in two separate massacres)[25]
    Padule Fucecchio massacre (Fucecchio, Tuscany; 176 civilians killed on 23 August 1944)[26]
    Cavriglia-Castelnuovo dei Sabbioni massacre (Tuscany; 173 civilians killed on 4 July 1944)[26]
    Vinca massacre (Fivizzano, Tuscany; between 160[27] and 178[28] civilians executed on 24 August 1944)
    Fosse del Frigido massacre (Massa, Tuscany; 146-149 prisoners murdered on 10 September 1944)[28]
    Pietransieri massacre (Roccaraso, Abruzzo; 128 civilians killed on 21 November 1943)[29]
    Stia massacre (Stia, Tuscany; 122 civilians killed between 12 and 15 April 1944)[27]
    San Terenzo Monti massacre (Fivizzano, Tuscany; 110 civilians and 52 political prisoners killed on 21 August 1944)[27]
    Valla massacre (Fivizzano, Tuscany; 103 civilians killed on 19 August 1944)[28]
    Serra di Ronchidoso massacre (Gaggio Montano, Emilia-Romagna; over 100 civilians killed on 28-29 September 1944)[26]
    Three men executed by public hanging in a street of Rimini, 1944
    Verghereto massacre (Verghereto, Emilia-Romagna; 96 civilians killed between 22 and 25 July 1944)[26]
    Massacre of Monchio, Susano and Costrignano (Palagano, Emilia-Romagna; between 79[27] and 136 civilians killed on 18 March 1944)
    Leonessa and Cumulata massacre (Leonessa, Lazio; 51 civilians killed between 2 and 7 April 1944)
    Cumiana massacre (Cumiana, Piedmont; 51 civilians killed on 3 April 1944)
    Tavolicci massacre (Verghereto, Emilia-Romagna; 64 civilians killed on 22 July 1944)
    Forno massacre (Massa, Tuscany; 72 civilians killed on 13 June 1944)
    Gubbio mssacre (Gubbio, Umbria; 40 civilians executed on 22 June 1944)[27]
    Valdine massacre (Fivizzano, Tuscany; 52 hostages executed in August 1944)[27]
    Casaglia massacre (Marzabotto, Emilia-Romagna; 42 civilians killed on 29 September 1944)[27]
    Bergiola Foscalina (it) massacre in Carrara (Carrara, Tuscany; 72 civilians killed on 16 September 1944)[26]
    Madonna dell'Albero massacre (Ravenna, Emilia-Romagna; 56 civilians killed on 27 November 1944)
    "La Romagna" massacre (Molina di Quosa, San Giuliano Terme, Tuscany; 75 civilians killed on 11 August 1944)[26]
    San Polo di Arezzo massacre (Arezzo, Tuscany; 65 civilians killed on 14 July 1944)[26]
    Certosa di Farneta massacre (Lucca, Tuscany; 60 civilians killed between 2 and 10 September 1944)[26]
    Guardistallo massacre (Guardistallo, Tuscany; 46 civilians killed on 29 June 1944)[26]
    Massaciuccoli-Massarosa massacre (Massaciuccoli, Massarosa, Tuscany; 41 civilians killed between 2 and 5 September 1944)[26]
    Fossoli-Carpi massacre (Carpi, Emilia-Romagna; 67 civilians killed on 12 July 1944)[26]
    Turchino Pass massacre (Fontanafredda, Liguria; 59 civilians executed on 19 May 1944)[28]
    Pedescala massacre (Valdastico, Veneto; 82 civilians killed between 30 April and 2 May 1945)[28]

    • @dynasticlight1073
      @dynasticlight1073 3 роки тому +1

      Italy ,really suffered .Thankyou David. My Family is from Calabria area. Very Sad Time..

  • @alanmacification
    @alanmacification 3 роки тому +2

    My father and uncle were in those battles with 8th Army. ( CDN 1st INF DIV ). Serious bad blood was developed between the Americans and Canadians after Patton without warning deserted the Canadian left flank in Sicily to go on a useless and costly " end-around ". It got worse. Clark sat and sulked at Anzio because they took his shipping away for the Normandy invasion. And the rest of the American troops were stuck at Monte Cassino and were exhausted. The Canadians were brought over from the Adriatic side as the British 8th extended west to Casino . The British, Canadians, Poles, and the Free French broke through the Gustav and Hitler line and the Canadian I Corp was on the way to Rome and relieved Anzio. At this point Clark demanded that the Canadians get off the roads and let the Americans be the first into Rome, and that they would shoot anyone who got in the way, the Canadians promised to shoot back. Cool heads prevailed and the Americans were " officially " the first to enter Rome. At the start of the campaign, it was felt prudent to keep Canadians between the British and Americans. After Patton's desertion and for the rest of the war, they kept British troops between the Americans and Canadians. Notice how NO American produced newsreel or documentary every mentions the Canadians.

    • @bradleyhenry2411
      @bradleyhenry2411 3 роки тому

      Canadian 1st Division were nicknamed "Red Patch Devils" and German 1st Parachute (nicknamed Green Devils) considered at the time to be the best of any division on either side were always put head to head during the Italy Campaign and produced some of the most intense fights during WW2.

    • @chrisbreezy-ryanbarbosa4320
      @chrisbreezy-ryanbarbosa4320 2 роки тому

      Americans are inherently show offs i mean look at their last president Trump. America is a great country but they turn into the worst AHoles when they dont get their way.

  • @qalixtepremier3764
    @qalixtepremier3764 3 роки тому

    There was a French army of 125,000 men commanded by General Juin ... hardly a word ...

  • @HappyFlapps
    @HappyFlapps 4 роки тому +3

    Italy should've been left to its own devices. The entire Italian campaign was a German general's wet dream. So many allied lives lost for very little gain.

    • @gk10002000
      @gk10002000 4 роки тому +1

      yeah. the fight from the south to the north was tough. German moved in and similar to the Japanese on Okinawa, would establish a line fight, then fall back a few dozen miles and do the same thing over and over.

  • @Russell_Huston
    @Russell_Huston Рік тому

    Sounds like they got Barney Greenwald to take a break from defending U.S. Navy sailors from mutiny charges to narrate this news reel. Good job Barney !

  • @ZontarDow
    @ZontarDow 13 років тому +2

    The Allied 5th army walked in from the South, but it was the Canadian 1st army that liberated it and was first in at 3 AM, then our orders where to move on north and let the 5th move in during the day, making our victory forgoten by many as one by the US. If a history book sais the US liberated Rome, though it out, it's wrong.

    • @peladohdp8304
      @peladohdp8304 Місяць тому

      Canadians didn't liberate shit, stop lying to yourself.

  • @dekipet
    @dekipet 3 роки тому +1

    Liberation or occupation?

  • @nicolaslangeard7424
    @nicolaslangeard7424 3 роки тому +1

    Sans la division française d'Algérie Rome n'aurait pas été libérée

  • @Franciscus_the_Collector
    @Franciscus_the_Collector 6 місяців тому

    My grandfather was there in Saint John in Lateran Square, when the Americans Soldiers arrived. He was 14 years old!

  • @PY3NK
    @PY3NK 12 років тому

    VIVa Romel a Raposa do Deserto.

  • @marcosrobertosantos9586
    @marcosrobertosantos9586 3 роки тому

    A FEB do Brasil???

  • @JamesTilsley1
    @JamesTilsley1 6 років тому +3

    Italy signed a armistice agreement with the Allies, formed a new government and declared war on Germany who subsequently invaded them. So yes Liberation is the correct term as Italy was occupied by a belligerent.

    • @markthecenturion
      @markthecenturion 5 років тому +3

      But remember that after he was freed by the Germans, Mussolini also formed a new fascist government in northern Italy called the Italian Social Republic, which continued to the war on the axis side until the end. So it would be more correct to say it was half liberated and half conquered.

    • @lolloblue9646
      @lolloblue9646 3 роки тому +1

      @@markthecenturion The Social Republic was a puppet state of Germany, the legitimate government was the Kingdom in the South.
      Also, Italy declared war on Germany AFTER being invaded

  • @WilloSNoack
    @WilloSNoack Рік тому

    The Romans were happy about the victory of their former enemies, after they had joined them and fought against their former allies like in WW I!

  • @MadProfessor1962
    @MadProfessor1962 3 роки тому

    sounds like the great Jose Ferrer narrating.......

  • @johannesnicolaas
    @johannesnicolaas 4 роки тому +2

    So much for the soft belly of Churchill. It was a brutish struggle.

    • @None-zc5vg
      @None-zc5vg 2 роки тому

      Churchill was just a figurehead, not a strategist: his top general, Brooke, said that W.S C. talked rubbish and was often uninformed.

  • @zonianinexile
    @zonianinexile 3 роки тому +1

    Any paisans?

  • @ugniusstackunas4834
    @ugniusstackunas4834 5 років тому +3

    HOROR!!! OKUPANT!!!
    In ROME

  • @ragnarjohansson8002
    @ragnarjohansson8002 Рік тому

    Read John Ellis "Casino" and you will learn that hadn't it been for General Juin and his four excellent french divisions, there would not have been an entry of Rome in June 1944. American and British forces where rather incompetent in mountain warfare. As for Casino it was a blunder from the beginning to the end.

  • @psk1w1
    @psk1w1 4 роки тому +2

    Great celebration, Rome is liberated from Nazism! But the US commander directly ignored his orders, and broke off from active combat to have this little jolly. With the result that the Nazis, who had been on the run, were able to re-group and form new defences. This parade was a disaster, and cost many Allied soldiers their lives, The continued combat meant ongoing destruction of Italy and civilian deaths as well. The US commander who ordered this parade was removed from his post, rightly so. He should have been court-martialed.

    • @americafirst7785
      @americafirst7785 4 роки тому +1

      Yes I believe it was general Clarke?

    • @Don_Camillo
      @Don_Camillo 4 роки тому +1

      The same Gen.Clarke who wrote the book "Calculated risk" ?

  • @meherbaba-godinhumanform7926

    💘💘❤❤💕💕

  • @trieucao3604
    @trieucao3604 3 роки тому

    only one person caused too much disaster for the whole world, how someone can justify this

  • @davidpasztor3142
    @davidpasztor3142 11 років тому +3

    @ CanadianStereotype ... Read the Unit History Book of the First Special Service Force. They were the ones who siezed the 7 bridges over the Tiber River. My father's commanding general, General Frederick was badly wounded while securing one of those bridges. On a hill outside of Rome my father's squad ambushed a rear guard unit from the Hermann Goering Panzer Division. 4 assualt guns were destroyed by bazookas and 50 krauts were killed or captured while 4 of my father's men were wounded.

    • @palmergriffiths1952
      @palmergriffiths1952 Рік тому

      My Grandfather was also a member of The First Special Service Force. I remember him talking about going into Rome and advancing to the Tyber.

  • @MrShobar
    @MrShobar Рік тому

    Narrated by Jose Ferrer.

  • @benwinchester777
    @benwinchester777 7 років тому +3

    The Allies destroyed Monte Cassino but there were no germans because they wanted it to protect from the bombs.

  • @pjdooner8699
    @pjdooner8699 4 роки тому +6

    Liberated Rome? LOL

    • @thomasgibbons1935
      @thomasgibbons1935 3 роки тому +2

      Yes liberated. At this point the government ousted Mussolini, disbanded their party and surrendered to the allies. The germans then invaded Italy and disarmed their troops

    • @timmysupreme4472
      @timmysupreme4472 3 роки тому

      @@thomasgibbons1935 Rome was still under the control of the Italian Social Republic

    • @thomasgibbons1935
      @thomasgibbons1935 3 роки тому +2

      @@timmysupreme4472 yes, but the official title of Mussolini's Italy was the kingdom of Italy. The Italian government kicked him out, and surrendered to the allies. The Italian social Republic was a German puppet state as a result of their invasion and no more. So Rome was in the hands of the Germans

  • @jiggler8935
    @jiggler8935 3 роки тому

    TYLER1 LIVES!?

  • @meherbaba-godman7483
    @meherbaba-godman7483 Рік тому

    💕💕❤❤💘💘

  • @genesiswestcontractingltd1819
    @genesiswestcontractingltd1819 3 роки тому

    How can you call it the liberation of Rome?

    • @EmanueleCorreani
      @EmanueleCorreani 3 роки тому

      No, you can't

    • @genesiswestcontractingltd1819
      @genesiswestcontractingltd1819 3 роки тому

      @@EmanueleCorreani exactly. If rome through in with Mussolini And Hitler, what are you liberating it from?

    • @EmanueleCorreani
      @EmanueleCorreani 3 роки тому

      ​@@genesiswestcontractingltd1819 Despite there were still German troops occupying the area, I do not understand the reason the Allies wanted to bomb Rome at least 16 times. They hit residential working class districts with no strategical interest (local residents were already expelling the Nazis on their own).
      The area I came from (13 miles south of Rome) has been severely bombed by the allies. 70% of the buildings were completely destroyed (including the historical ones)
      Lot of civilians died and again, there were no strategical targets within those cities. Presumably Americans were looking for Leopold, a railway gun which kept them busy in Anzio. But this doesn't justify the amount of destruction and human loss.
      Local population was shot on the ground by the Nazis and bombed from the sky by the Allies. And now we all drink CocaCola and eat at McDonalds.

  • @jameshotz1350
    @jameshotz1350 2 роки тому

    Why didn;t they just go straight to Rome?

  • @user-io6pj8bz8h
    @user-io6pj8bz8h Рік тому +1

    The downfall of Rome.

  • @tkelly411
    @tkelly411 9 років тому

    the german pow@ 1735,,a fuehrer double?

  • @tulongpham6002
    @tulongpham6002 4 роки тому

    GIEO GIO GAT BÃO minh bach juste NHAN-QUA bao ưng!Bye!

  • @michaelf7093
    @michaelf7093 6 років тому +2

    America was at its greatest when it fought Fascists.

    • @RideMyBMW
      @RideMyBMW 5 років тому

      Michael F

    • @darjuz96
      @darjuz96 5 років тому

      Yes, but now the U.S. people elected a person what twitted a Mussolini's quote, ad have some of fascist attitudes

    • @RideMyBMW
      @RideMyBMW 5 років тому

      @@darjuz96

  • @AlexanderJScheu
    @AlexanderJScheu 2 роки тому

    not * Liberation - it's *Occupation.....

  • @64MDW
    @64MDW 4 роки тому +4

    To all the armchair generals...could you have done better having to deal with the mountains, the mud, the rain, the politics and the challenges of logistics and dealing with a contrary Italian government? Step up and show us with 70 years of hindsight that you'd do any better. Otherwise, shut up and watch the sacrifices of better men than you could ever hope to be.

  • @CanadianStereotype
    @CanadianStereotype 11 років тому +3

    triumph, thanks to the American's horrible sense of glory-hounding. Don't let history be written by the victor, let it be written by everyone who was there.

  • @HappyFlapps
    @HappyFlapps 4 роки тому

    Wuckin' Fops

  • @hirameberhardt8643
    @hirameberhardt8643 3 роки тому

    A well known crime boss back in the 40's convinced the Italian army to surrender to the Allies.