Carlo Petitti di Roreto

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Born(1862-12-18)18 December 1862
Died27 January 1933(1933-01-27) (aged 70)
Turn, Piedmont, Italy
Allegiance Kingdom of Italy
Carlo Petitti di Roreto
Born(1862-12-18)18 December 1862
Died27 January 1933(1933-01-27) (aged 70)
Turn, Piedmont, Italy
Allegiance Kingdom of Italy
Branch Royal Italian Army
CommandsXXIII Corps
Battles / warsItalo-Turkish War
World War I

Carlo Petitti di Roreto (1862-1933) was an Italian general who was most notable during his service in the Italo-Turkish War and World War I.

Carlo Petitti di Roreto was the son of a noble Piedmontese family, his grandfather was Carlo Ilarione Petitti di Roreto, an economist and writer and he was the nephew of Senator Agostino Petitti Bagliani di Roreto.

After embarking on a military career at the end of the nineteenth century, he participated in the clashes of the First World War, where from 4 June to 29 October 1915, he obtained command of the 1st Infantry Division as a general. In 1916 he obtained command of the 35th Division, taking possession of it at 3.30 pm on 15 May that year near Malga Zolle, on the southern side of Monte Toraro, precisely on the occasion of the start of the Austrian offensive on the highlands. He was in command of the Italian expeditionary force in Macedonia from August 1916 to June 1917.

From 1918, he was promoted to general of the army corps, he obtained the command of the XXIII Corps with specifically divisions 28 and 61, which during the Second Battle of the Piave River operated on the right bank of the Piave from Croce di Piave to the sea. On 2 November 1918 he became governor of Trieste and Venezia Giulia, keeping the post until July 1919.

At the end of the First World War, he obtained the appointment as general commander of the Carabinieri on 25 August 1919, remaining in office until 29 October 1921 .

In December 1919 he was appointed Senator of the Kingdom of Italy.[1]

In politics an active exponent of the traditional liberal currents, he was a personality with a gruff trait, even haughty in the opinion of foreign observers (often prejudicedly hostile, or prejudiced, for their own interests) not accustomed to the "Piedmontese" character, but considered a good administrator and a skilled mediator, as proved in Macedonia and Venezia Giulia.[2]

Edoardo Schott, war correspondent in Thessaloniki called him "a haughty Italian of high Piedmontese nobility".[3]

He died in Turin in 1933.

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