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  1. Luigi Giuseppe Faravelli (29 October 1852 - 22 March 1914) was an Italian admiral who fought in the Italo-Turkish War. Military service Admiral Faravelli and Captain Cagni in Tripoli at the handover with the Royal Italian Army.

  2. Luigi Giuseppe Faravelli ( Stradella, 29 ottobre 1852 – Roma, 22 marzo 1914) è stato un ammiraglio italiano . Indice. 1 Biografia. 2 Onorificenze. 3 Note. 4 Collegamenti esterni. Biografia. L'ammiraglio Faravelli e il capitano Cagni a Tripoli al passaggio di consegne con il Regio Esercito.

  3. Luigi Giuseppe Faravelli ( Stradella, 29 octobre 1852 - Rome, 22 mars 1914) était un amiral italien.

    • Background
    • Military Campaign
    • Treaty of Ouchy
    • Aftermath
    • See Also
    • Works Cited
    • External Links

    Italian claims to Libya date back to the Ottoman defeat by the Russian Empire during the War of 1877–1878 and subsequent disputes thereafter. At the Congress of Berlin in 1878, France and the United Kingdom had agreed to the French occupation of Tunisia and British control over Cyprusrespectively, which were both parts of the declining Ottoman stat...

    Opening maneuver

    The Italian army was ill-prepared for the war and was not informed of the government's plans for Libya until late September. The army had a shortage of soldiers as the class of 1889 was demobilized before the war started. Military operations started with the bombardment of Tripoli on 3 October.The city was conquered by 1,500 sailors, much to the enthusiasm of the interventionist minority in Italy. Another proposal for a diplomatic settlement was rejected by the Italians, and so the Ottomans d...

    Italian troops landing in Libya

    The first disembarkation of Italian troops occurred on 10 October. Having no prior military experiences and lacking adequate planning for amphibious invasions, the Italian armies poured onto the coasts of Libya, facing numerous problems during their landings and deployments.After a destructive bombing of its Ottoman fortifications, the city of Tripoli and its surroundings were quickly conquered by 1,500 Italian sailors. The Italians believed that a force of 20,000 would be able to take over L...

    Trench phase

    Technologically and numerically superior Italian forces easily managed to take the shores. However, the Italians still could not penetrate deep inland. The Libyans and Turks, estimated at 15,000, made frequent attacks day and night on the strongly-entrenched Italian garrison in the southern suburbs of Benghazi. The four Italian infantry regiments on the defensive were supported by the cruisers San Marco and Agordat. The Italians rarely attempted a sortie. An attack of 20,000 Ottoman and local...

    Italian diplomats decided to take advantage of the situation to obtain a favourable peace deal. On 18 October 1912, Italy and the Ottoman Empire signed a treaty in Ouchy in Lausanne called the First Treaty of Lausanne, which is often also called Treaty of Ouchy to distinguish it from the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne, (the Second Treaty of Lausanne). The...

    The invasion of Libya was a costly enterprise for Italy. Instead of the 30 million lire a month judged sufficient at its beginning, it reached a cost of 80 million a month for a much longer period than was originally estimated.[citation needed] The war cost Italy 1.3 billion lire, nearly a billion more than Giovanni Giolitti estimated before the wa...

    Geppert, Dominik; Mulligan, William; Rose, Andreas, eds. (2015). The Wars before the Great War. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107478145.

    Media related to Italo-Turkish Warat Wikimedia Commons 1. Antonio De Martino.Tripoli italianaSocieta Libraria italiana (Library of Congress). New York, 1911 2. Turco-Italian Warat Turkey in the First World War website 3. Johnston, Alan (2011-05-10). "Libya 1911: How an Italian pilot began the air war era". BBC News Online. Retrieved 10 May 2011. 4....

  4. On 4 March, Aubry died while aboard his flagship; Admiral Luigi Faravelli replaced him as the squadron commander. On 13 April, the 1st Division left Taranto, bound for the island of Rhodes. Meanwhile, the 3rd Division escorted a convoy of troopships from Tobruk to the island.

  5. Luigi Giuseppe Faravelli (29 October 1852 - 22 March 1914) was an Italian admiral who fought in the Italo-Turkish War. Not much is known about his history prior to his naval career but he first entered service as Rear Admiral in 1905, then promoted to Vice Admiral in 1911. His most notable...

  6. Luigi Giuseppe Faravelli (29 October 1852 - 22 March 1914) was an Italian admiral who fought in the Italo-Turkish War. Contents. Military service; References; External links; Military service Admiral Faravelli and Captain Cagni in Tripoli at the handover with the Royal Italian Army.