Action off Cape Spada
July 19th, 1940
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| Supermarina, the Italian navy command, decided to counteract the increasing British
traffic in the Aegean by transferring two light cruisers under the command of Admiral
Casardi to the Italian base of Leros in the Dodecanese. The two units, part of of
the Second Division, were the light cruisers Bande Nere and Colleoni of
the Di Giussano class and left Tripoli on the evening of July 17th, 1940. While
transferring, in the morning of July 19th, the Bande Nere and Colleoni met several British
destroyers of the Second Flotilla off the island of Crete and went into pursuit (Hyperion,
Ilex, Hero, and Hasty).
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R.N. Colleoni existing Taranto's Mar Piccolo

R.N. Giovanni dalle Bande Nere
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| Commander at Sea |
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Casardi |
| Cruisers |
Sydney (Leander Class) |
Bande Nere, Colleoni (da Barbiano Class) |
| Destroyers |
Hasty, Havock, Hero, Hyperion (H class)
Ilex (Isis class) |
- |
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Despite the fact that these cruisers were built to fight destroyers, and
probably due to the very rough sea, the attack was not successful. The British destroyers
immediately cruised North where the Australian cruiser Sydney and the destroyer
Havock
set up a mortal trap.
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Battlemap (Requires Java)
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An hour later, at 0730 the cruiser division entered into contact with the
second British force composed of the cruiser H.M.A.S. Sydney, the destroyer Havock
and immediately turned South. The four destroyers of the Second Flotilla joined in. The
heavy sea made the Italian fire control almost impossible and only a single hit reached
the Sydney on a funnel.
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H.M.A.S. Sydney

H.M.S. Hasty

H.M.S. Hero
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After about one hour of an intense exchange of salvos, at 0824 the
British scored a hit on the Colleoni, which locked the rudder. A second hit
immediately disabled the cruiser. Without power, the Colleoni fought on using the
manually operated 100mm guns, but it soon succumbed to torpedoes, sinking at around 8:30.
The H.M.A.S. Sydney, short of ammunition, disengaged from the remaining Bande
Nere which made it safely to Benghazi, despite a hit from a 6" gun. The Italian
air force, only one hour flight time from the scene, did not arrive if not no thwart
British attempts to rescue the survivors of the Colleoni.
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R.N. Bartolomeo Colleoni

R.N. Bartolomeo Colleoni during the battle
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| The destroyers Hyperion, Ilex and Havock were able to rescue over 525
sailors, while 4 officers, 17 non-commissioned officers and 100 sailors died. Captain
Umberto Novaro of the Colleoni was rescued, but died of severe wounds four days later in
Alexandria where he was buried with full military honors, with Captain Collins of the
Sydney
being one of the officers baring the coffin. The Bande Nere was sunk by a
British submarine on April 1st, 1942 while the H.M.A.S. Sydney was sunk by the
German Raider Kormoran during an epic battle near Fremantle (Australia).
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The R.N. Colleoni dead in the water without its bow.
(Imperial War Museum)
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