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Jola Dziubinska | all galleries >> POLAND - MY BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY >> WARSAW, POLAND >> ARCHITECTURE AND MONUMENTS > Battle of Monte Cassino Monument
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13-MAY-2014 Jola Dziubinska

Battle of Monte Cassino Monument

Warsaw, Poland

Today, May 18 2014, it is a 70th anniversary of the battle.

The Battle of Monte Cassino was actually a series of four intense and sometimes controversial battles that took place between January 20 and May 18, 1944, culminating at a 1,300-year-old Benedictine monastery on the top of the 1,100 metre Monte Cassino in southern Italy. After the successful Allied landings in Italy in September 1943 a route was needed from the Allied position north of Naples to Rome, and the only way through was via the Liri Valley. Blocking the valley was a mass of German-occupied hills around the town of Cassino. Involving British, US, French, North African, New Zealand, Ghurkha and Polish troops, fierce battles raged against the Germans on a slow and brutal advance towards the monastery, whose eventual capture would give the Allied forces the access they needed to open the road to Rome. At a cost of over 25,000 lives including the deaths by heavy allied bombing on February 15 of a number of Italian civilians who were taking refuge in the monastery, the final battle ended on the morning of May 18 when a reconnaissance group of soldiers from the Polish 12th Podolian Uhlans Regiment finally reached the completely devastated monastery. The Battle of Monte Cassino paved the way for the Allied advance on Rome, which fell on June 4, 1944, two days before the Normandy invasion, and is one of Poland’s proudest military achievements.


The monument was unveiled on May 18, 1999, exactly 55 years after the event, to commemorate the soldiers of Poland’s 2nd Army Corps which took the Italian monastery of Monte Cassino in May 1944, clearing the way for the Allies to push on to Rome.
It was designed by the Polish sculptor Gustaw Zemła.
Constructed of reinforced concrete and covered by white marble, the 12-metre monument is graced by a battle-scarred figure of Nike, Roman goddess of victory.

Nikon D700 ,Nikkor AF-S 24-70mm f/2.8G ED
1/125s f/8.0 at 24.0mm iso200 full exif

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