Luigi Rizzo

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Luigi Rizzo
Rear Admiral Luigi Rizzo in 1935.jpg
Rear Admiral Luigi Rizzo in 1935
Nickname(s)The Sinker
Born(1887-10-08)8 October 1887
Milazzo
Died27 June 1951(1951-06-27) (aged 63)
Rome
AllegianceKingdom of Italy Kingdom of Italy (1912–20 and 1940–41)
Service/branch Regia Marina
RankDivisional Admiral
Battles/warsFirst World War
Second Italo-Abyssinian War
Second World War
AwardsGold Medal of Military Valor (2)
Silver Medal of Military Valor (4)
Cross of War
Order of the Crown of Italy
Croix de Guerre (France)
Distinguished Service Order (United Kingdom)
Navy Distinguished Service Medal (United States)
Legion of Honour (France)
Order of Saint Stephen of Hungary (Hungary)
SMS Szent István low in the water
The last moments of SMS Szent István

Luigi Rizzo, 1st Count of Grado and Premuda (1887–1951), nicknamed the Sinker, was an Italian admiral. He is mostly known for his distinguished service in World War I; as a torpedo boat commander having sunk no fewer than two Austro-Hungarian battleships (SMS Wien in 1917 and SMS Szent István in 1918).

Biography[]

Born in Milazzo, Sicily on October 8, 1887 to a family of merchant ship Captains. While a Student Captain in the Merchant Marine, on March 17, 1912 he was appointed second lieutenant of the Naval Reserve . During WW I from June 1915 to the end of 1916 he was assigned to the maritime defense of Grado, where, at the orders of LCDR Filippo Camperio first, and of CDR Alfredo Dentice di Frasso later, he particularly distinguished himself, obtaining a silver medal for military valor. He was later transferred to the newly formed MAS flotilla, participating to various war missions. They include:

• May 1917: he Captured two pilots of an Austrian seaplane downed by engine failure ; for this action he was awarded his second silver medal for military valor;

• December 1917: Sinking of the Austrian battleship Wien, which took place in the Trieste bay. For this action Rizzo was decorated with the gold medal of military valor. In the same month, for missions carried out in defense of the mouth of the River Piave, he was decorated with a third silver medal for military valor and was advanced to Lieutenant for war merits, obtaining the transition to the Permanent Service in the Royal Italian Navy;

• February 1918: with Gabriele d'Annunzio and Costanzo Ciano participated to the "Buccari's Mock", obtaining a bronze medal for military valor, elevated, at the end of the war, to a silver medal for military valor;

• June 1918: On June 10, 1918, off the coast of Premuda, he attacked and sank the battleship SMS Szent István. For this action he was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Military Order of Savoy.

By virtue of the R.D. 25 May 1915 nr. 753, which forbade the same person to be awarded more than three medals including silver and gold, he was not awarded the second gold medal for military valor. This restriction was repealed with the R.D. 15 June 1922 n. 975 and then, with R.D. 27 May 1923, his appointment as a knight of the Military Order of Savoy was revoked and he was awarded the gold medal for military valor for the Action of Premuda. Volunteer Fiumano in 1919, he was placed by D'Annunzio at the helm of the Quarnaro Fleet, and he operated providing food to the city, until the beginning of 1920. That year he left active duty with the rank of Commander. In 1925 he assumed the chairmanship of the Eolie Navigation Society of Messina, a position he held until 1948. The following year he founded Calatimbar in Genoa, a company of shipowners, exporters and shippers, which was intended to board all goods departing from that port. Calatimbar was also attended by companies such as Fiat, and public Agencies, such as the Port Consortium and the State Railways. On the following years he was also appointed President of the Maritime Accident and Diseases Fund of the Sea People, the Italian Maritime Safety Union, and the Anonymous Air Navigation Society.. By the Royal Decree of October 25, 1932 on 20 June 1935, he was appointed Count of Grado. The Premuda appointment was added to the Grado title with the “motu proprio” Royal Decree of October 20, 1941. In 1936, as a volunteer, he participated in the Ethiopian War; on June18, 1936, he was appointed Division Admiral in the Naval Reserve for outstanding merit. On June 10, 1940, at the outbreak of hostilities, he asked to return to active duty and he dealt with the anti-submarine warfare in the Sicilian Channel; he was discharged from service in January 1941, assuming the post of President of Lloyd Triestino. On February 20, 1942 he was appointed President of the Adriatic Shipyards; after September 8, 1943 he ordered the sabotage of the ocean liners and steamers so that they would not fall into German hands. For this initiative he was transferred by the Gestapo to Austria, first to Klagenfurt prison and later to the obligatory stay in Hirschegg, where he was reached by his daughter Maria Guglielmina. He died in Rome on 27 June 1951 ,two months after an operation for lung cancer. The operation was carried out by Professor Raffaele Paolucci, his great friend, who during the Great War had been the protagonist, with Major Raffaele Rossetti, of the sinking in the port of Pola of the Austrian battleship Viribus Unitis..

Two Italian warships have been named in his honor; The Bergamini-class frigate, in service from 1960-1980, and the FREMM multipurpose frigate, ITS Luigi Rizzo (F 595) commissioned in 2017 and in active service.


ITS Luigi Rizzo (F 596)
ITS Luigi Rizzo (F 595)

Notes[]

Bibliography[]

  • Kennedy, Paul. The Sinking of the Szent Istvan, in "The History of the First World War", BPC Publishing Ltd., Bristol, England, 1971, vol.7, no.14, pps:3072 – 3075.

See also[]

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