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There were four Littorio class battleships built for
the Italian Navy, the others being Vittorio Veneto,
Roma and Impero. Italy’s finest
warships were docked in Taranto Harbor when Swordfish
aircraft from the British carrier Illustrious
carried out a surprise attack November 12th 1940. Of the
six battleships at Taranto, Littorio, Conti
di Cavour and Caio Duilio were
damaged with torpedoes. The Japanese took a great interest
in the success of that mission, as they were planning a
similar attack on Pearl Harbor.
Littorio’s first assignments after the
completion of repairs in August 1941 were to escort supply
convoys bound for the war in North Africa. An attack by
Littorio on a British convoy on route to Malta in
June 1942 led to Allied aircraft being directed to her
position. An American Liberator bomber was first to make an
attack with one bomb finding its target. Before
Littorio could make it back to port for repairs, an
attack by five Wellington torpedo aircraft succeeded in
hitting her with one torpedo. Repairs to the damage
sustained in these attacks took almost four months to
complete. After Littorio was damaged by another bomb
during an American aircraft attack on the port of La Spezia
June 19th 1943, the Italian Navy renamed her Italia
as she underwent repairs for a third time.
Following Italy agreeing to the Allies terms of
surrender in September 1943, German aircraft attacked
Italia with remote controlled glider bombs as she
made her way to the British base at Malta. Although one
bomb found its target, damage to the ship was minimal. The
remaining months of the war saw Italia and
Vittorio Veneto interred at Lake Amaro
(southern exit of the Suez Canal). Although Roma saw
no active service during the war, she was attacked twice,
first by American aircraft at La Spezia and later by German
light bombers as she steamed from La Spezia to Malta after
the Italian capitulation. The one remote controlled glider
bomb that found its target in the German attack caused so
much damage she sank with the loss of over 1,250 of her
crew. A shortage of steel during the war forced the
Italian’s to postpone the completion of
Impero. This battleship was transferred from her
builders at Genoa to Brindisi, Venice and later Trieste to
be used as target practice by German forces. Although
damaged beyond repair by German shellfire, American
aircraft targeted and sank Impero during an attack
on Trieste February 20th 1945. Italia and
Vittorio Veneto were dismantled at La Spezia soon
after being returned to Italy in 1947.
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