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COVER_03613(39):Layout 1 3/7/08 09:05 Page 1 O SPREY Battle Orders 35 Battle Orders (cid:129) PUBLISHING Command, deployment, organization and evolution Panzer Divisions: B Panzer Divisions: The a t of forces in battle, describing elements of doctrine, The Eastern tle O training, tactics and equipment r Front 1941–43 d Eastern Front 1941–43 e r s (cid:129) On 22 June 1941 Germany 3 5 attacked the USSR, opening the front that would bleed the German Army white. The Panzer P Divisions fought hard from a n the outset, with 17 of the 21 z e divisions deployed on the Eastern r D Front. The losses of the USSR i v i Photographs Full colour maps were appalling – within months s i o almost three million men were n s dead, and 20,500 tanks and : T SP guns destroyed. Yet despite h e efforts to sustain this triumph, E a Germany’s forces would be s t e ground down and defeated r n within years. This book describes F r the development of Panzer forces o n on the Eastern Front – the t 1 Germans’ armoured doctrine, 9 4 organization, tactics and 1 – 4 command – along with accounts 3 of the campaign’s major actions. Organization charts P ie r P a o O lo SPREY B a PUBLISHING t t is t e www.ospreypublishing.com lli O S P R Pier Paolo Battistelli E (cid:129) Consultant editor Dr Duncan Anderson Y © Osprey Publishing • www.ospreypublishing.com JOB NO:E6-03613 TITLE:BTO 35 PANZER DIVISION:THE EASTERN FRONT UK Text(SW) 175# DTP:39 PAGE:COVER 001-096_03613(39):BTO035layouts.qxd 3/7/08 08:32 Page 1 Battle Orders (cid:129) 35 Panzer Divisions: The Eastern Front 1941–43 Pier Paolo Battistelli Consultant editor Dr Duncan Anderson (cid:129) Series editors Marcus Cowper and Nikolai Bogdanovic © Osprey Publishing • www.ospreypublishing.com JOB NO:E6-03613 TITLE:BTO 35 PANZER DIVISION:THE EASTERN FRONT Text Black(SW) 175# DTP:39 PAGE:1 First published in Great Britain in 2008 by Osprey Publishing, Midland House, West Way, Acknowledgements Botley, Oxford OX2 0PH, United Kingdom. Email: [email protected] The author wishes to thank the following people for their help: Nik Cornish, Antonio Attarantato and Carlo Pecchi for the photographs; © 2008 Osprey Publishing Ltd. Mr Andrew Orgill and the staff of the Central Library, Royal Military All rights reserved. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study, Academy Sandhurst; Dr Christopher Pugsley and Dr Klaus research, criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Schmider (Department of War Studies, Royal Military Academy Act, 1988, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, Sandhurst) for their friendly help and support and, last but not least, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, electrical, chemical, mechanical, the series editors Marcus Cowper and Nikolai Bogdanovic. optical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner. Enquiries should be addressed to the Publishers. Author’s note Print ISBN: 978 1 84603 338 4 PDF e-book ISBN: 978 1 84603 796 2 In the tree diagrams and maps in this volume, the units and movements of national forces are depicted in the following colours: Editorial by Ilios Publishing, Oxford, UK (www.iliospublishing.com) Page layout by Bounford.com, Cambridge, UK German units Grey Maps by Bounford.com, Cambridge, UK Soviet units Red Typeset in Monotype Gill Sans and ITC Stone Serif Index by Sandra Shotter German number and case endings are often omitted in the text Originated by United Graphics Pte for clarity and to avoid confusion for readers. Printed and bound in China through Bookbuilders 08 09 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. © Osprey Publishing. Access to this book is not digitally restricted. In return, we ask you that you use it for personal, non-commercial For a catalogue of all books published by Osprey Military and Aviation please contact: purposes only. Please don’t upload this pdf to a peer-to-peer site, email it to everyone you know, or resell it. Osprey Publishing reserves all rights Osprey Direct USA, c/o Random House Distribution Center, 400 Hahn Rd, to its digital content and no part of these products may be copied, Westminster, MD 21157 USA stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form by any means, E-mail: [email protected] electronic, mechanical, recording or otherwise (except as permitted Osprey Direct UK, P.O. Box 140, Wellingborough, Northants, NN8 2FA, UK here), without the written permission of the publisher. Please support E-mail: [email protected] our continuing book publishing programme by using this pdf responsibly. www.ospreypublishing.com Key to military symbols Army Group Army Corps Division Brigade Regiment Battalion Company Platoon Section Squad Infantry Armour Artillery Engineer Headquarters MP MG Reconnaissance Medical Military Police Equipment Signal Anti-tank Mortar Machine gun Radio Surveying Motorcycle Airborne Anti-Aircraft Observation Transportation Mountain Bakery Butcher Post Heavy Supply Special Forces Key to unit identification Unit Parent METEO K identifier unit Commander Quartermaster Bridging Meteorological Ambulance Rocket © Osprey Publishing (cid:129) www.ospreypublishing.com 001-096_03613(39):BTO035layouts.qxd 27/6/08 08:06 Page 3 Contents k ; y t, Introduction 4 Combat mission 5 Doctrine and training 7 s: Unit organization 10 Reorganizing the Panzer Divisions (cid:129) The Panzer Regiment The Schützen/Panzergrenadier Regiment (cid:129) Reconnaissance units (cid:129) Artillery Anti-tank and engineers (cid:129) Signals, replacement, supply and divisional services Tactics 42 11. Panzer Division’s drive to Dubno, 23–25 June 1941 (cid:129) The Dvina River crossing, 7 July 1941 The raid across the Susha River, 23–24 October 1941 (cid:129) Counter-attack at Klin, 11 December 1941 The battle for Charkow, 16–20 May 1942 (cid:129) Defence at Belyj, 30 November 1942 The drive on Stalingrad, 18–19 December 1942 (cid:129) Last battle at Rostow, 13 February 1943 III Panzer Korps at Kursk, 11–12 July 1943 (cid:129) Defence at Orel, 16 July 1943 Weapons and equipment 63 Command, control, communications and intelligence 76 Auftragstaktik: the German mission command system at work The ‘lead forward’ concept (cid:129) Leading a Panzer Division on the battlefield Unit status 82 Lessons learned 88 Abbreviations and glossary 90 Bibliography 92 Key to vehicle silhouette identification 94 Index 95 3 © Osprey Publishing • www.ospreypublishing.com JOB NO:E6-03613 TITLE:BTO 35 PANZER DIVISION:THE EASTERN FRONT Text Black(SW) 175# DTP:39 PAGE:3 001-096_C41000(39):BTO035layouts.qxd 3/7/08 10:57 Page 4 Introduction C On 22 June 1941, when Operation Barbarossa was S unleashed, there was no longer any doubt; the G Panzerwaffe, the German armoured branch, was the T new, decisive instrument of modern land warfare – t and it would be the tool that Germany would use to m overcome her enemies. In the wake of the fall of s France and the German victory in the West in June d 1940, Hitler ordered the doubling of the number of s Panzer and motorized infantry divisions, seeking a w new, larger and better-mechanized army. The months i before Barbarossa clearly shown how correct his a desire had been; in April the German Army, t spearheaded by its Panzer Divisions, quickly t conquered both Yugoslavia and Greece, while in North Africa, Rommel’s Panzers reconquered all of d the territory – except Tobruk – that the Italians had d Blitzkrieg unleashed on the Eastern lost the previous winter. In the first weeks of Barbarossa, it appeared that the f Front: Panzer Regiment 35 from 4. war on the Eastern Front was going to follow the same pattern as the Panzer e Panzer Division deploys to attack Divisions, spearheading the German forces, drove deep into Soviet territory, e the town of Sluzk, 26 June 1941. In encircling large numbers of Red Army units. The extent of these initial ( the foreground stands an SdKfz 253 successes was such that in early July 1941 an overconfident General Franz w artillery observation vehicle. Halder, chief of staff of the German Army, wrote in his diary that the war m against the Soviet Union had been won. Events would prove that Halder was t quite wrong. t Two years later, having survived two massive defeats, the German Army – once again stood ready to attack on the Eastern Front, led by its Panzer o Divisions. This time, however, the setting was completely different; the main c purpose of this new offensive was to regain the initiative and, unlike the two previous summers, no one was thinking any longer of blitzkrieg. The eventual failure of this 1943 attack (Operation Zitadelle)– which was doomed even before it began – simply marked the end of a long process that had started with Barbarossa. It was a process that saw the Panzer Divisions – as well as modern, mechanized land warfare – endure a series of changes that shaped land warfare in the years to come. The German successes of 1939–40 had demonstrated that blitzkrieg was possible, yet in 1941 it took fewer than six months to discover that it would not always be so – and the lesson was learned the hard way. Not only would the Soviet Union remain undefeated by blitzkrieg, but when the Red Army struck back, the German Army barely managed to escape disaster. Panzer Divisions suffered such severe losses that what was left of them was nothing more than a mere shadow of the once-triumphant Panzerwaffe. In the wake of this, a reorganization took place, and a new offensive was unleashed. However, there was little resemblance now to the blitzkrieg-style warfare of the previous years. Again, in winter 1942/43, the German Army suffered a further major defeat, which the Panzer Divisions were unable to prevent. In early 1943, yet another reorganization took place, and a new offensive was planned. By this time, however, the Panzer Divisions’ methods of waging war had been significantly altered. In the light of the failure of Zitadelle, the Panzer Divisions appeared a distant shadow of that new, decisive instrument 4 of warfare they had been deemed only three years earlier. © Osprey Publishing • www.ospreypublishing.com JOB NO:E6-03613 TITLE:BTO 35 PANZER DIVISION:THE EASTERN FRONT Text Black(SW) E7-AC41000/ 175# DTP:39 PAGE:4 001-096_03613(39):BTO035layouts.qxd 27/6/08 08:08 Page 5 Combat mission s Successfully adapted and tested in the field during the 1940 campaign, the e German principles of war provided the basis of the planning of Barbarossa. e The plan envisaged an in-depth penetration by the Panzergruppe, which was – tasked with surrounding and encircling enemy forces, which would then be o mopped up by German infantry units. This annihilation of enemy forces was f sought by targetting a main Schwerpunkt (‘centre of gravity’), which would e destroy the bulk of Red Army units in the area and split the front in two. Two f separate German advances to the north and the south of the main advance a were to play only a secondary role until they could be given greater support s in the advance to their objectives –Leningrad and the Dniepr River. Since the s annihilation of enemy forces was more critical than the seizure of specific y, targets, no objectives were fixed, save for the seizure of Moscow, which was y to mark the last stage of the campaign. n Like the 1940 campaign in the West, Barbarossa required the enemy to f deploy the bulk of his forces forwards, thus allowing for his encirclement and d destruction – a distinct possibility given the poor condition the Red Army e found itself in, lacking leadership at every echelon. The speed of advance was r essential to the success of blitzkrieg, in order to prevent the Red Army from y, establishing a firm defensive line. A speedy conclusion to the campaign l (which, according to German planners, would be within four to five months) z was also desirable, bringing victory before the Soviet Union could fully r mobilize its men and resources –a process that the Germans estimated would s take a year. While the plan for Barbarossa was based on the same premises as the 1940 campaigns –though adapted to a completely different environment y –namely the use of speed, manoeuvre and in-depth penetration with the aim r of encircling and annihilating the enemy – the operational plan did not, and n could not, match that of the ‘sickle cut’ of 1940. o e d d s t s d d y r g e d. f A group of Soviet prisoners is a escorted back to a collection point n by an SdKfz 251 during the German offensive of summer 1942. The s German officer shielding his eyes r from the sun is the Knight’s Cross e winner Oberst Maximilian von t Edersheim, then commanding Panzergrenadier Regiment 26. 5 © Osprey Publishing • www.ospreypublishing.com JOB NO:E6-03613 TITLE:BTO 35 PANZER DIVISION:THE EASTERN FRONT Text Black(SW) 175# DTP:39 PAGE:5 001-096_03613(39):BTO035layouts.qxd 27/6/08 08:08 Page 6 The reality of blitzkrieg –an D obsolete PzKpfw 38 (t) tank meets a horse-drawn carriage in the early stages of Operation Barbarossa. In June 1941 the German Army had only 30 fully motorized divisions out of a total of 200. G h i P i o m s c o t D i l t r E 1 e d The first weeks of Barbarossa saw the Panzers make rapid advances and o Soviet forces taking heavy losses, outshining the German achievements of b 1940. However, problems soon surfaced. The lack of a suitable road network e slowed down the German follow-up infantry and supplies, with the result D that the Panzers failed to complete the encirclement of the enemy. The O infantry took longer than expected to mop up enemy forces and the Panzer g Divisions became worn out; to compound matters, the Soviet mobilization e came sooner than expected. Autumn, with its unfavourable climate, soon bogged down Operation Taifun, the German assault on Moscow. Time and T space – two unforeseen factors – took their toll, and eventually the Soviet w counter-offensive of December 1941 brought the German Army and the b Panzerwaffe face to face with their first defeat, which was to have dire a consequences for the Germans. in The German offensive launched in 1942 (aimed not only at the destruction T of enemy forces but also at the seizure of the Soviet oil sources) was based on t different premises to the previous year. Since the Panzer Divisions had lost p much of their edge and now lacked both flexibility and ‘penetrating power’, m Hitler ordered them to closely cooperate with the infantry to avoid gaps in w their encirclements. The Panzer Divisions were intermingled with infantry and w were dispersed over a wide area, following the decision to split the offensive in f two. Moreover, the Soviet withdrawal that followed the beginning of the new c offensive completely thwarted any chance of waging blitzkrieg warfare again. a As the battles around Kharkov of 1942 and 1943 showed, the Germans were r now capable of outmanoeuvring the Red Army only when allowed to do so. m Facing its own shortcomings and the growing capabilities of the enemy, the notion of blitzkrieg died; firepower prevailed over speed and manoeuvrability, ( with the result being that Operation Zitadelle would be based on a concept m which would have been inconceivable a year earlier: attacking the enemy a 6 where it was strongest. Mechanized warfare had entered a new era. o © Osprey Publishing • www.ospreypublishing.com JOB NO:E6-03613 TITLE:BTO 35 PANZER DIVISION:THE EASTERN FRONT Text Black(SW) 175# DTP:39 PAGE:6 001-096_C41000(39):BTO035layouts.qxd 3/7/08 10:57 Page 7 Doctrine and training Germany’s victorious 1940 campaign shaped its armoured warfare doctrine, helping to further refine the tactics of the Panzerwaffe. First, experience gained in difficult terrain such as the wetlands around Dunkerque had shown that the Panzer Divisions needed more infantry and a better balance between armour, infantry and support weapons. This was also demonstrated by the experiences of the ‘four tank battalion’ brigades, which proved too cumbersome to manoeuvre efficiently. The subsequent reorganization of these units into a single Panzer Regiment was another step forward in German doctrine, which conceived of such a division as an all-arms, balanced unit capable of carrying out every kind of mission by itself. Yet, true to the concept of concentrating their forces, the Germans stressed that the best way in which the Panzer Divisions could be employed was within the Panzerkorps (armoured corps), itself part of the Panzergruppe (armoured army). Shortly after the conclusion of the 1940 campaign, commanders at every level were requested to submit detailed reports about their own experiences in the field. These were used to improve the 1938 technical manual, which was reissued on 3 December 1940 under the title Directives for Command and Employment of a Panzer Division(Heeres-Dienstvorschrift g 66). It was reprinted in 1942 without further changes, and its guidelines remained unaltered until the end of the war. It stated that the main task of the Panzer Division was to seek decision on the battlefield. A Panzer Division was required to attack every kind d of enemy position and to exploit the success using either in-depth penetration f behind enemy lines or attacking an enemy’s rear positions, and pursuing any k enemy remnants. Attack was the only combat method suited to the Panzer t Divisions; even in defence they were to counter-attack enemy breakthroughs. e Only when facing fixed or fortified defence lines were the Panzer Divisions to The original caption to this photo notes that snow could do little r give way to the infantry, not only to avoid severe losses but also to avoid harm to German tanks –though it n eschewing the decisive advantage of their speed and manoeuvrability. certainly did to their crews. It n Those dual advantages were the decisive factors in a Panzer Division attack. shows a line of PzKpfw IIIs on the d Tanks no longer ruled the battlefield alone, although they were still the decisive move during Operation Taifun, in t weapon that required concentration – nothing less than a Panzer Abteilung was to autumn 1941. e be used. Attacking only with tanks meant attacking into a void, while combined e arms warfare was the best solution. This required close cooperation between tanks, infantry, artillery and other support units such as engineers and anti-tank units. n The classic attack saw Panzer units breaking through and conquering the area with n the aid of engineers (who opened the path of advance across obstacles, mines in t particular) and supported by artillery fire. Meanwhile, infantry secured the area, , mopping up the enemy and defending the flanks. There were several ways in n which the Panzers and infantry could cooperate, though initially the preferred one d was for mechanized infantry to closely follow up the Panzer attack. Heavy fire and n fast movement were the keys to a successful attack. First, suitable terrain had to be w chosen (wooded and built-up areas were quite unsuitable); second, while the n. artillery kept pace with the Panzer and infantry advance, attacking units were to e reach their firing positions quickly. Third, as soon as a breakthrough had been o. made, the enemy forces had to be encircled and attacked in their rear. e Combined-arms warfare led to the widespread use of mixed Kampfgruppen y, (combat groups), which involved splitting up a Panzer Division into two or t more mixed groups. The main combat group consisted of the Panzer Regiment y and the armoured Schützen Bataillon plus an Artillerie Abteilung, a company of Pioniere (armoured engineer battalion) and one of Panzerjäger. (What was 7 © Osprey Publishing • www.ospreypublishing.com JOB NO:E6-03613 TITLE:BTO 35 PANZER DIVISION:THE EASTERN FRONT Text Black(SW) E7-AC41000/ 175# DTP:39 PAGE:7 001-096_03613(39):BTO035layouts.qxd 27/6/08 08:10 Page 8 In mid-September 1942, 3. Panzer Division attacked in the Nogaj steppe just north of the Caucasus Mountains, trying to cut the military supply roads leading south. The attempt failed in the face of formidable Soviet defences. Here a group of Panzergrenadiers advances behind the cover of a PzKpfw III. Training Following the reorganization of autumn 1940, there was an left of the Schützen Brigade and the artillery, engineers and anti-tank units, injection of new soldiers into plus the Aufklärungs Abteilung, could form one or more groups.) The main the Panzer Divisions. The rank group would spearhead the advance, breaking through the enemy defences and and file became younger, at most heading for its target, leaving the tasks of mopping up and securing conquered 26 years old, and experienced areas, or reconnoitring the flanks, to support groups (either moving on the officers and NCOs were wings or following up). The mixed Kampfgruppen replaced the Panzer and transferred to other units while Schützen brigades as the main attack and support groups of the division, new ones were commissioned from experienced personnel. though every combat element retained its particular role. Training started at the lowest It did not take long before the war on the Eastern Front exposed the level, taking advantage of the shortcomings of German doctrine. The lack of an adequate road network and experience gained by battle- accurate maps, the erroneous estimates for fuel consumption (60,000 litres of tested officers and NCOs in the fuel daily for a 200-tank Panzer Regiment soon turned into 120,000 and cadres. However, since doctrine 180,000 litres daily) and the wear and tear on the vehicles greatly influenced stressed combined-arms warfare, training also took place the Panzer Divisions’ capabilities, along with the inability of the infantry to at divisional level between keep pace with the armoured advance. Until 27 June 1941 Panzergruppen 2 different units such as Panzer, and 3 advanced 320km with a daily rate of 64km, but this shrank to 20km a Schützen and artillery regiments. day in early July. Likewise, 8. Panzer Division’s daily rate of advance was 75km Particular emphasis was placed until 26 June, but this dropped to 32km in the first half of July. Autumn on rapid movement and brought the first bad weather, and the resulting quagmire, which restricted the exploitation of circumstances, including in wooded and built-up Panzer Divisions to movement on the main roads, made manoeuvre and areas and in conditions of poor encirclement practically impossible. Winter combined with improvements to visibility, such as at night or in the Soviet defences, with their anti-tank guns deployed forward, further fog. Combined-arms warfare also reduced the mobility of the Panzer Divisions. Eventually, the severe losses meant that every unit had to suffered during the first Soviet counter-offensive and the subsequent learn how to keep up with the reorganization of the Panzer Divisions crushed any German hopes of victory. Panzers’ pace of advance, in In 1942 the Panzer Divisions were still an effective fighting force, despite particular the artillery and dismounted infantry. However, having only part of their established strength. Along with improvements made the extensive reorganization and to the Red Army, this eventually tipped the balance in favour of firepower restructuring of units and rather than movement and, in order to spare tanks, German attacks were led personnel eventually had an more often by the infantry with artillery support. The Panzer was no longer the effect on divisional-level training, decisive weapon and was now used rather for support and exploitation, while particularly amongst newly infantry and artillery were deemed the best weapons for breaking through. The formed units. The situation deteriorated after the winter of structure of the Kampfgruppe changed accordingly, as more Panzer units were 1941, when specialist troops broken down to company level, especially since only one Panzer Abteilung was (such as Panzer crewmen) were available. Also, since the Panzerkorps and the Panzergruppe now featured a forced to fight as infantry, mixture of Panzer and infantry divisions, the former came to be used as suffering heavy losses that were battering rams for breaking through enemy fixed defences. hard to replace. Eventually, some Although the Panzer Divisions were still capable of manoeuvring and striking divisions had to be withdrawn from the front and sent to in depth, even if to a reduced extent, the rest of the German Army was no longer Germany or France to able to support them in these roles. Eventually, this reshaped the entire notion of reorganize fully. armoured warfare, as the doomed Operation Zitadelleshowed. As a consequence, 8 the Panzer Divisions would soon be entrusted with a new task. © Osprey Publishing • www.ospreypublishing.com JOB NO:E6-03613 TITLE:BTO 35 PANZER DIVISION:THE EASTERN FRONT Text Black(SW) 175# DTP:39 PAGE:8 001-096_03613(39):BTO035layouts.qxd 27/6/08 08:10 Page 9 A mixed column, part of an unknown Kampfgruppe, moving to meet the enemy, January 1943. In 1941 the Germans developed the use of mixed ‘battle groups’ made up of different units. As seen here, they may have included armour, infantry, artillery and other support units such anti-tank and engineer elements. s, A PzKpfw 38 (t) hauls a car out of n the mud in autumn 1941. With the d coming of the rasputitsy(‘the times d without roads’) during the heavy rains of autumn and spring, most of e the Soviet road network became d impassable for non-tracked vehicles, n, which featured heavily in the Panzer Divisions. e d f d d o 2 a m Providing replacements for the Bataillon 1 referred to Kradschützen freeing Feldheer units for the front. Newly n Panzer Divisions Ersatz Bataillon 1 (Meiningen), while called up recruits received basic training e Each German Army unit was mobilized in Panzer Regiment 1 referred to the Panzer with the Ersatz unit, and were then sent d a particular area located in one of the 18 Ersatz Abteilung 1 (Erfurt), which was to the Ausbildung unit to complete o Wehrkreis (military districts) into which made up of the former first and sixth training, eventually joining a Marsch r Germany and annexed territories were Panzer Kompanie plus the third and Kompanie being sent to the Feldheer. In s divided. These were part of the Ersatzheer seventh Panzer Kompanie from Panzer early 1943, Heinz Guderian, the newly (replacement army) which, amongst other Regiment 2 (it actually provided appointed inspector general of the t tasks, was in charge of the call-up and replacements for both Panzer Regiments). Panzertruppe, took over the Panzer training of new recruits, NCOs and Trained personnel from every Ersatz Divisions’ replacement system, creating a e officers, and of the training and (replacement) unit would then create a Kommandeur der Panzertruppen in every e replacement units. Every combat unit Marsch Kompanie, eventually forming the Wehrkreis to directly control r down to battalion level had its own Marsch Bataillon, which would be sent to replacements and schools. In April four d counterpart in the Ersatzheer. Following join its parent division. This would see it Reserve Panzer Divisions, actually made mobilization, the first unit joined the taken into the Feldersatz Bataillon (field up of a few Ausbildung units, were e Feldheer (field army) going to its division replacement battalion). Here further created, followed by a fifth in November. e or other command, while the latter (made training and acclimatization followed, until These were sent either to France (155, e up of cadres) remained in place and was replacement personnel were sent to their 178, 179 and 273. Reserve Panzer e filled with new recruits. For example, 1. final destination. Divisions) or Denmark (233. Reserve s Panzer Division was raised in Wehrkreis In October 1942, due to the increased Panzer Division), and eventually were used a IX (HQ at Kassel), located in Hessen, part pressures on manpower, most Ersatzheer to replenish any badly mauled Panzer of Thuringia. The home station of the units were split in two, forming an Ersatz Divisions. In May 1944, s division was Erfurt, and its units were and an Ausbildung (training) battalion. 155. Reserve Panzer Division was raised in other parts of Thuringia including While the former continued to perform absorbed by 9. Panzer Division, g Weimar, Langensalza and Eisenach. Thus, its duties with newly called up recruits, 179. Reserve Panzer Division was used to r Schützen Regiment 1 had its Ersatzheer the latter – composed of partly trained create 116. Panzer Division and f counterpart in the Schützen Ersatz recruits – was sent outside Germany and 273. Reserve Panzer Division was e, Bataillon 1 (Weimar); Kradschützen used to garrison occupied areas, thus absorbed by 11. Panzer Division. 9 © Osprey Publishing • www.ospreypublishing.com JOB NO:E6-03613 TITLE:BTO 35 PANZER DIVISION:THE EASTERN FRONT Text Black(SW) 175# DTP:39 PAGE:9

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