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sacrario militare di redipuglia

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  • sacrario militare di redipuglia
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    • alohatripper 图标 图标 图标 图标 图标

      Oct 2For the men in our group this memorial site and small museum were interesting. For the first time we were seeing a World War I monument. We had all seen the WWII American cemetery in Normandy, France, but never one like this. The museum was well done. There was plenty of artifacts found in the battleground to see, including a mock-up of a trench line complete with barbed wire. I enjoyed examining the various small arms pistols and rifles. Then there were the machine guns and heavy artillery pieces with wooden wheels. Across from the museum was the monolithic memorial with hundreds of steps leading to the top. We were struck by the enormity, symmetry, and meticulous inscription of the fallen soldiers' names on the steps. The solitude of the moment with the absence of other tourists and tour buses made the experience more reverent.
    • HengistScotland 图标 图标 图标 图标 图标

      Italy is home to several very impressive war memorials that make allied efforts - even the big Somme ones - look rather pale in comparison. This, at Redipuglia, is perhaps the most impressive. Taking up a whole hillside, there are thousands of men's names (I'm guessing 40000) under the repeated "Presente" on each main step, positioned behind their generals and the Duke of Aosta leading his 3rd Army.Zig-zagging steps lead to the triple crucifix at the top of the hill, where 60000 unknown troops are also remembered. Behind the museum at the top (which, in typical Italian fashion, never seems to be open!) is a plinth with a bronze map of the campaign area, a couple of artillery pieces and a monument to a soldier who won a Gold Medal of Honour.Returning to the foot of the hill, don't miss the preserved blind trenches on your left before you cross the main road to visit the original burial ground, the entrance to which is flanked by another two artillery pieces. The small effort of walking up this hill will reward you with several memorials to different branches of the services, and an array of artillery weaponry when you reach the top.The small museum on the site (in the big yellow building) contains well-preserved artefacts and is worth a few minutes of your time.There's also a cafe on-site, with a well-stocked freezer full of ice cream - which you'll need after climbing to the top of the monument!As a footnote, the Austro-Hungarian cemetery is about a kilometre further along the road.
    • ErosSlovenija 图标 图标 图标 图标 图标

      Hundreds of thousands of dead. For what ? So many clashes of interest have gathered in the heads of brainwashed politicians and monarchs, but the one who suffered were ordinary people, defending or attacking in the name of someone. Silly.This powerful monument reminds all of us on a period, which should not happen, ever. But it could have easily happen some 70 years earlier, and at the same time it could happen even today. Of course not in the same area, but in the vicinity for sure.Lets some 400 steps in one direction not prevent you from trying to climb them, it is worth, believe me, also for the reverence to the dead. Stay there, think a little what happened, then go browse through history and you may see things with different eyes as you did before. Or not. It is definitely a monument worth seeing. It is a pity that bodies of soldiers from the Austro-Hungarian side are buried elsewhere. We were all victims of this war, which actually did extend to a second world war in a way. Let humans make all the effort to prevent the history not to repeat itself.
    • williame739 图标 图标 图标 图标 图标

      Well worth contemplating. This war memorial remembers the tragic loss of life occasioned by the unfortunate Italian military adventures in World War 1, profoundly sobering because it need not have happened. Italy was not one of the initial antagonists in that pivotal war, which has hadsuch terrible consequences we live with down to the present day. Rather it chose to join later, in 1915, lured by the prospect of gaining territory, especially Slovenia to the east, for which it instead paid an awful price, including Mussolini soon after the conflict.One image will remain forever with me. I do not read Italian, but I did understand a photo of a young soldier playing a guitar waiting for a train, railside somewhere near the conflict. We arrived late in the morning, near noon when the museo was about to close, but the young chap in charge very kindly me to linger after the noon close, to finish viewing. Top marks for him.
    • GRO_12 图标 图标 图标 图标 图标

      If you plan to visit Gorizia, you definitely must stop by Redipuglia. There are 100.000 soldiers burried there. They fought on the Isonzo front during the Great War. The Sacrario is huge. It is a great reminder of what a war can cause. It was built in the late 1930's. There is a small museum there that offers a glimps of the history of the area.
    • JandSD 图标 图标 图标 图标 图标

      If you are in the area, well worth a detour to see this enormous monument built between 1935-38. It is a peaceful setting and the quite long climb up the steps is worth it for the appreciation of the enormity of the losses suffered as well as the views. Worth reading Wikipedia - Italian Front (First World War) as historical background to what was going on.One hopes it was built in Mussolini's time was motivated primarily as a tribute rather than to "inspire" people for the next one - Italy joined the Axis in 1937....The trenches near the entrance on the right just inside the site are worth a visit too.
    • 20150119A 图标 图标 图标 图标 图标

      It is a very evocative place, imposing but not bombastic. Over 100,000 soldiers (known 40k, 60k unknown) lie beneath 22 huge Karst stone steps built in front of one of the 1st-World-War most contended hills. Watch out for heart patients: the climb is long and tiring. But the view from the top gets even the effort. This shrine replaces and exceeds, by size and ambitions, the previous Invitti Cemetery, located above the opposite hill, where there is a free parking. It is possible to reach the top (where there is a small military museum) by car, from a side street.
    • MladenB_13 图标 图标 图标 图标 图标

      Historical monument erected in honour of all italian soldiers who lost their lifes in batles during world war I aginst austro hungarian imperia.Altar of the nation.
    • bender57 图标 图标 图标 图标 图标

      Vengo sempre a vedere la scalinata, nel giorno della festa del 4 novembre avrei diritto di stare in prima fila come primogenito rimasto dei nonni che combatterono, il luogo e' un luogo di dolore di ricordo, la sera visto al buio con le 3 croci illuminate in cima vicino alla tomba del Duca D'Aosta che decise di farsi seppellire qua vicino ai suoi uomini incute timore. Per capire visitalo
    • massimoepaminondad 图标 图标 图标 图标 图标

      Arrivando e partendo dall'aeroporto di Trieste e guardando verso l'arco alpino si nota, in lontananza, una serie di grandi gradoni in granito chiaro con una grande parallelepipedo scuro in primo piano e una serie infinita di strisce bianche sopra ogni gradone. Parliamo del Sacrario Militare di Redipuglia. Inaugurato nel 1938 accoglie le tombe dei soldati e degli ufficiali del Regio Esercito, così allora si chiamava l'esercito del Regno d'Italia, caduti durante la Prima Guerra Mondiale 1915-1918. Il grande parallelepipedo nero è la tomba del Duca d'Aosta mentre ciascun striscione bianco è fregiato dalla scritta PRESENTE. Sui gradoni i nomi dei caduti: Mario, Carlo, Sergio, Mauro, Enrico, Giuseppe, Giovanni ma anche Davide, Erminio, Eugenio, Massimo, Francesco, Aldo, Gabriele, Claudio e tanti altri, oltre centomila. Quest'anno ricorre il primo centenario dello scoppio del Primo Conflitto Mondiale ed una visita, anche breve, a questo sacrario dovrebbe essere un obbligo per tutti gli Italiani. Un tributo ai nostri connazionali che, cent'anni fà, hanno sacrificato la loro vita par la Patria ! Buona visita !!
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