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Battle of Driskos

The Battle of Driskos (Greek: Μάχη του Δρίσκου, Turkish: Driskos Muharebesi), took place on 26–28 November (O.S.), 1912. It was fought between Greek forces under General Dimitrios Matthaiopoulos and Ottoman forces under General Esad Pasha during the First Balkan War. The battle began when a unit of Greek Redshirt volunteers attacked the Ottoman defensive line at Mount Driskos, Epirus.

The Greeks seized the Ottoman camp and cleared its surroundings. On 27 November, the Ottomans regrouped after receiving considerable reinforcements in both manpower and artillery, launching an assault on Greek positions. The Greeks began withdrawing at noon the following day, after realizing that they were at risk of being overwhelmed. The Battle of Driskos marked the last intervention of the Redshirts into Greek expansionist conflicts.

Background[edit]

During 1912, Greece, Serbia, Bulgaria, and Montenegro joined in a Balkan League against the Ottoman Empire. Fearing a new war in the Balkans, the Ottomans mobilized their armed forces on 14 September and began transferring units to Thrace; the Balkan League responded in kind.[1] On 30 September, the League presented the Ottomans with a list of demands regarding the rights of its Christian population. The Ottoman Empire rebuffed the demands, recalled its ambassadors in Sofia, Belgrade and Athens and expelled the League's negotiators on 4 October. The League declared war against the Ottomans, while Montenegro had already began military operations on 25 September.[2]


Greece dispatched the Army of Epirus and the Army of Thessaly to its frontiers in Epirus and Thessaly respectively. The Army of Epirus numbered 20,000 men and 30 artillery pieces and was commanded by Lieutenant General Konstantinos Sapountzakis. Facing the Greeks in Epirus was the Yanya Corps under General Esad Pasha, which numbered 35,000 men and 102 artillery pieces; most of which were concentrated at the Yanya Fortified Area protecting the regional capital of Yanya (Ioannina).[3] The Army of Epirus was ordered to only conduct a limited number of offensive operations, mainly focusing on protecting the Army of Thessaly's western flank, because it was too small to breach the Ottoman defenses around Yanya.[4]


The Yanya Fortified Area included two major fortresses, those of Bizani and Kastritsa, guarding the main southern approaches, along with five smaller forts in a ring around the city, covering the western and northwestern approaches. The terrain south of Yanya provided excellent defensive ground, as all the roads leading to the city could be observed from Bizani.[5][6] The Army of Epirus crossed the Bridge of Arta into Ottoman territory at midday 6 October, capturing the Gribovo heights by the end of the day. On 19 October, the Army of Epirus launched an attack on Preveza in conjunction with the Ionian squadron of the Greek Navy, taking the city on 21 October. On 27 October, the Hellenic Army captured Metsovo.[7]

Prelude[edit]

Motivated by militant Philhellenism and Liberationist ideology, the leader of the Italian Redshirts, Ricciotti Garibaldi, called upon his followers to support the Greek war effort.[8] Garibaldi only managed to recruit 140–200 Italian volunteers due to administrative barriers placed by the country's government and internal opposition within Italy's leftist circles. Nevertheless, many Greek citizens and members of the Greek diaspora, as well as smaller numbers of Bulgarians, Britons and Frenchmen answered the call, bringing the unit to 2,224 men. The unit was split into four battalions,[9] two of which were dubbed Corps of Greek Red Shirts and were commanded by former Speaker of the Hellenic Parliament and veteran Redshirt, Count Alexandros Romas.[10] The Garibaldini were equipped by the Greek government, which provided them with obsolete Gras rifles and old surplus swords, but failed to issue them with winter greatcoats.[9] The Garibaldini and a regular army rear area protection battalion arrived at Metsovo between 17 and 20 November, forming the 3,800-man strong Metsovo Detachment.[11]


On 23 November, the newly appointed commander of the Metsovo Detachment General Dimitrios Matthaiopoulos arrived in Metsovo. A day prior Ricciotti Garibaldi ordered his son Peppino Garibaldi to advance in the direction of Mount Driskos at the head of a unit of 500 Redshirts. This was done on Garibaldi's own initiative and was not communicated to the Greek General Staff.[12] On 24 November, Sapountzakis ordered Romas to capture Mount Driskos and the north-eastern shore of Lake Pamvotida.[10] The Garibaldini were then to unite with the rest of the Army of Epirus and launch a coordinated attack on Bizani.[13] The same day, the rest of the Redshirts set off from Metsovo in the same direction. The Redshirts under Peppino reached the caravanserai of Kamber Agha north east of the village of Kryovrysi on 25 November, having encountered no resistance. Matthaiopoulos then commanded units of Greek volunteers stationed in the villages of Tristeno and Greveniti to head towards Kryovrysi.[12][14]

Aftermath[edit]

Greek casualties in the Battle of Driskos numbered between 200 and 400 killed and approximately 400 wounded, while the Ottomans lost between 1,000 and 2,000 killed and wounded.[22] Ricciotti Garibaldi attributed the Greek defeat to poor communication between the Garibaldini and the Army of Epirus. A number of Redshirts later claimed that the Greek state had intentionally left their unit exposed to a numerically superior force and poorly supplied so as to deny it the glory it had once attained at the Battle of Domokos.[22] The Neapoli-Siatista Evzone Detachment arrived in Metsovo several days later, replacing the casualties the Metsovo Detachment had suffered.[11]


On 30 November, Sapountzakis ordered Ricciotti Garibaldi and Matthaiopoulos to regroup their forces and retake Driskos or at least attempt to distract the enemy in that direction. Garibaldi claimed that the Redshirts were in no position to carry out such an order after suffering heavy losses, while the Metsovo Detachment took up new positions on the Itia-Demati-Gotista line.The same day, Garibaldi disbanded the Redshirts and the volunteers began demobilizing on 3 December. Approximately 300 Greek Redshirts under Romas remained in active service. Greek Redshirts were said to have been received with hostility by the Greek society, while Italian volunteers were transported to their hometowns on mail trains and under police surveillance, a treatment usually reserved for criminals.[22][23] The Battle of Driskos marked the last intervention of the Garibaldini into Greek expansionist conflicts. Many, including Ricciotti, later turned to fascism, while a group of dissenters under Cipriano Facchinetti had deserted the movement over its stance on the Albanian Question, generating an uproar of negative press.[24]


Following the conclusion of the Greek campaign in Macedonia, the Army of Epirus received considerable reinforcements. This enabled it to capture the Yanya Fortified Area in the aftermath of the Battle of Bizani (19–21 February 1913).[25] By May 1913, the numerically inferior Ottomans had suffered a series of serious defeats to the League's armies on all fronts. The League had captured most of the Ottoman Empire's European territories and was rapidly approaching Constantinople. On 30 May, the two sides signed the Treaty of London which granted the League's members all Ottoman lands west of a line stretching from Enos on the Aegean Sea to north of Midia on the Black Sea, as well as Crete. The fate of Albania and the Aegean islands occupied by Greece was to be determined by the Great Powers.[26]

Apostolidis, Dimitrios (1913). [The Victorious Greco-Turkish War of 1912-1913] (in Greek). Vol. I. Athens: Estia. Retrieved 13 November 2019.

Ο νικηφόρος ελληνοτουρκικός πόλεμος του 1912-1913

Bitarchas, Efstrathios (2019). . Italy on the Rimland: Storia Militare di Un Penisola Eurasiatica. 1: 207–222. Retrieved 9 April 2020.

"Ricciotti Garibaldi and the last expedition of the Italian Garibaldini volunteers to Greece (1912)"

Dimitracopoulos, Anastasios (1992). The First Balkan War Through the Pages of Review L'Illustration. Athens: Hellenic Committee of Military History.  37043754.

OCLC

Erickson, Edward (2003). Defeat in Detail: The Ottoman Army in the Balkans, 1912-1913. Westport: Praeger.  978-0-275-97888-4.

ISBN

Hall, Richard (2000). The Balkan Wars, 1912–1913: Prelude to the First World War. London: Routledge.  978-0-415-22946-3.

ISBN

Hellenic Army General Staff (1987). Επίτομη Ιστορία των Βαλκανικών Πολέμων 1912-1913 [Concise History of the Balkan Wars 1912–1913] (in Greek). Athens: Hellenic Army General Staff, Army History Directorate.  51846788.

OCLC

Hellenic Army General Staff (1991). Ιστορία των Βαλκανικών Πολέμων 1912-1913 [History of the Balkan Wars] (in Greek). Vol. 2. Athens: Hellenic Army General Staff, Army History Directorate.

Hooton, Edward (2014). Prelude to the First World War: The Balkan Wars 1912-1913. Stroud: Fonthill Media.  978-1781551806.

ISBN

Kargakos, Sarandos (2012). Η Ελλάς κατά τους Βαλκανικούς Πολέμους (1912-1913) [Greece in the Balkan Wars (1912-1913)] (in Greek). Athens: Peritechnon.  978-960-8411-26-5.

ISBN

Oikonomou, Nikolaos (1977). "Ο Α′ Βαλκανικός Πόλεμος: Οι επιχειρήσεις του ελληνικού στρατού και στόλου" [The First Balkan War: Operations of the Greek army and fleet]. In Christopoulos, Georgios A. & Bastias, Ioannis K. (eds.). Ιστορία του Ελληνικού Έθνους, Τόμος ΙΔ΄: Νεώτερος Ελληνισμός από το 1881 έως το 1913 [History of the Greek Nation, Volume XIV: Modern Hellenism from 1881 to 1913] (in Greek). Athens: Ekdotiki Athinon. pp. 289–326.  978-960-213-110-7.

ISBN

Svolopoulos, Konstantinos (1977). "Η Συνθήκη του Λονδίνου" [The Treaty of London]. In Christopoulos, Georgios A. & Bastias, Ioannis K. (eds.). Ιστορία του Ελληνικού Έθνους, Τόμος ΙΔ΄: Νεώτερος Ελληνισμός από το 1881 έως το 1913 [History of the Greek Nation, Volume XIV: Modern Hellenism from 1881 to 1913] (in Greek). Athens: Ekdotiki Athinon. pp. 330–334.  978-960-213-110-7.

ISBN