Now all roads lead to France and heavy is the tread
Of the living; but the dead returning lightly dance.
Edward Thomas, Roads

Wednesday, August 2, 2017

World War One and Trieste


Today is the last day of my battlefield tour of the Italian Front and we are looking at the sites in Trieste associated with the Great War.  Recall that  acquiring Trieste was one of the principal reasons Italy joined the war. Italy fought 11 bloody battles to capture Trieste that all failed. Then, when the Central Powers collapsed, Italy almost fell into possession of it. 


Trieste's Tram Was Used to Transport Wounded Soldiers from the Nearby Carso Plateau

1.  Victory Lighthouse
The Victory Lighthouse (Faro della Vittoria) overlooking Trieste was built in 1927, to honor the fallen at sea during World War I. With its height of 223 feet (68 m), it is one of the tallest lighthouses in the world.



2.   Mole Audace
Our first stop on Trieste's waterfront will be at the place where Italian forces and officials arrived on a naval flotilla led by the destroyer Audace on 3 November 1918 (a day before the Armistice) to claim the city for the Kingdom of Italy.  It provides a beautiful vista of the city, which since 1955 has  once again been part of Italy.



3.  Piazza Unità d'Italia
Naturally we will walk to the nearby and highly photogenic main square of Trieste for a photo opportunity. It's said to be the largest seaside plaza in Europe.



4.  Memorial to the Fallen
Like almost every city of every combatant of the Great War, Trieste has its own monument to the fallen, which is located adjacent to the city's Remembrance Park,  Miramare Castle.



5. Miramare Castle
Before departing on our drive back to Vienna, we are stopping at a non-WWI site:  the pride and joy of the ill-fated Maximilian, brother of Emperor Franz Josef and briefly, Emperor of Mexico. Nonetheless, his castle is considered a masterpiece of 19th-century architecture, and I just didn't want to miss it.


3 comments:

  1. Trieste has held some fascination for me; from its intrigues in the Truman years after WWII to the hometown of Lydia, the very fine PBS chef. I would like to visit there. Are you posting this from there?

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    Replies
    1. My kind of town Tieste is, my kind of town.

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  2. Trst is Austrian....Italy forfeited it's ownership for being opportunistic "conquerors.... Divorce the Italians ASAP.

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