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August 15, 1940: Italians Torpedo Greek Cruiser Elli as a Precursor to War

Greek Cruiser Elli
August 15, 1940: Italians Torpedo Greek Cruiser ‘Elli’ as a Precursor to War. Credit: Naval History and Heritage Command/ Wikipedia Commons

It was August 15, 1940 when the Italian submarine ‘Delfino’ torpedoed and sank the Greek light cruiser ‘Elli’ at Tinos’ port during the Word War II.

World War II had been raging for almost a year in Europe, with Greece maintaining a neutral stance, even though dictator Ioannis Metaxas and the Palace were quietly on the side of Great Britain, which at the time was heavily tested by the Luftwaffe’s aerial bombing campaign.

Fascist Italy, Nazi Germany’s ally, with its powerful fleet claimed the Mediterranean seas from Great Britain. The order for the torpedoing of the Greek cruiser ‘Elli’ was given by Italian Dodecanese Chancellor Cesare Maria de Vecchi, a prominent Fascist.

The Italian submarine ‘Delfino’, commanded by Lt. Gen. Giuseppe Aicardi, started from the naval base in Partheni, Leros on the night of August 14th, with the mission to hit enemy ships on Tinos, Syros and then block the Corinth Canal.

Italians Torpedoing Greek Cruiser Elli

In the morning hours of August 15th, the submarine approached the port of Tinos, aiming to torpedo the passenger ships ‘Elsi’ and ‘Esperos’ carrying pilgrims, but the Italians considered them to be carrying troops.

From the perimeter, Aicardi saw the cruiser ‘Elli’ in the port and decided that should be the first target, as he admitted after the war. Cruiser ‘Elli’ had docked on Tinos to participate in the religious celebration.

At 8.25 a.m., just before the procession of the Virgin Mary icon at the port, thousands of people were waiting piously. At that moment, ‘Delfino’ fired three torpedoes at the Greek cruiser. Only one of the three torpedoes hit ‘Elli’ and that was in the engine room and the oil tanks. An hour later, ‘Elli’ sank, despite the crew’s efforts to keep it afloat.

The other two torpedoes missed their target and exploded on the quay. The one that hit the Greek warship killed a junior officer, eight seamen and injured 24. One woman at the port died of a heart attack after the second torpedo exploded on the waterfront.

Local Greek newspaper of the time reporting the sink of Elli cruiser
Local Greek newspaper reporting the sink of Elli cruiser. Credit: Asyrmatos

Italian Submarine Returned to base

After completing its mission, the ‘Delfino’ sailed away, its identity still unknown. After a few hours it reached Syros, but immediately departed as there was no ship in the port. Then the submarine returned promptly to Leros by order of the Italian authorities. Foreign Minister Galeatso Ciano wrote in his memoirs that the sinking of the Greek ship was attributed to the megalomania of de Vecchi himself.

Top Secret Investigation

A search carried out by Hellenic Navy divers revealed the torpedoes were Italian and therefore the attack was from an Italian submarine. The Ioannis Metaxas government kept the investigation report secret in order not to challenge Italy and disrupt the neutral stance of Greece.

Eventually the investigation report was released on Oct. 30, 1940, two days after the Italian attack on Greece. Nevertheless, from the very beginning, the Greek public had no doubt about the submarine’s origin.

Italy Grants a New Warship to Greek Navy

In 1950, in the context of war reparations, Italy granted Greece the ‘Eugenio Di Savoia’ light cruiser, which was renamed ‘Elli’ in June 1951 and hoisted the blue and white flag. In the mid-1950s, the ‘Elli’ wreckage was partially dismantled and sold for scrap.
In 1985, Greek divers discovered at the bottom of Tinos the remnants of the Italian torpedo that sank ‘Elli’. The find is exhibited at the Piraeus Maritime Museum.

The sinking of light cruiser ‘Elli’ was the precursor of Greece’s eventual involvement in World War II. Italians were expecting that Greece would be afraid to fight against the Axis forces and surrender. However, the 1940 Greek – Italian war in the Epirus and Albania mountains was a triumph not only of the Greek army but of the Greek spirit as well. The enemy was defeated to the point that Nazi Germany was forced to send valuable forces to occupy Greece instead of sending them to the Soviet Union front.

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