After four attempts to cross the Soča (Isonzo) river and invade Austro-Hungarian territory, Luigi Cadorna, the Italian commander-in-chief, organized a strong new offensive following the winter lull in fighting which had allowed the Italian High Command to regroup and organize 8 new divisions for the front.
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| - Fifth Battle of the Isonzo
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| rdfs:comment
| - After four attempts to cross the Soča (Isonzo) river and invade Austro-Hungarian territory, Luigi Cadorna, the Italian commander-in-chief, organized a strong new offensive following the winter lull in fighting which had allowed the Italian High Command to regroup and organize 8 new divisions for the front.
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| Strength
| - 100(xsd:integer)
- 286(xsd:integer)
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| dbkwik:military/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
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| Partof
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| Date
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| Commander
| - Conrad von Hötzendorf,Svetozar Boroević,
- Luigi Cadorna,Emmanuel Philibert, Duke of Aosta
- Archduke Eugen of Austria,
- Franz Rohr von Denta,
- Gustav Globočnik Edler von Vojka
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| Caption
| - Eleven Battles of the IsonzoJune 1915 – September 1917
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| Casualties
| - 1882(xsd:integer)
- 1985(xsd:integer)
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| Result
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| combatant
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| Place
| - Soča river, western Slovenia
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| Conflict
| - Fifth Battle of the Isonzo
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| abstract
| - After four attempts to cross the Soča (Isonzo) river and invade Austro-Hungarian territory, Luigi Cadorna, the Italian commander-in-chief, organized a strong new offensive following the winter lull in fighting which had allowed the Italian High Command to regroup and organize 8 new divisions for the front. However, it was an offensive launched not after detailed strategic planning, but rather as a distraction to shift the Central Powers away from the Eastern Front and from Verdun, where the greatest bloodshed of the war was occurring. The attack was a result of the allied Chantilly Conference of December 1915.
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