The
Großdeutschland (
Greater
Germany)
Division was an élite
German Army (
Heer) combat unit which saw action during
World War II. It was the premier
division of the German
Army.
Großdeutschland is sometimes mistakenly perceived as being
a part of the
Waffen-SS, but it was
actually a
Heer unit. It was,
along with the
Panzer Lehr
Division, the best-equipped unit in the German Armed Forces
(
Wehrmacht), receiving equipment
before all other units (including Waffen-SS units).
The GD
Division was annihilated near Pillau
in May
1945.
Early history - Wachregiment Berlin

roots of the Division can be traced
to 1921, and the formation of the initial guard units in Berlin
that would become
Infantry Regiment
Großdeutschland. The Regiment saw action in France in 1940, and
was attached to Panzer Group 2 in the opening phases of Barbarossa,
being all but annihilated in the fighting outside of Moscow in late
1941. On the last day of February 1942, Rifle Battalion GD (all
that was left of the original Regiment) was disbanded and two
battalions formed a new GD Regiment out of reinforcements arriving
from Neuruppin. The Regiment moved to Orel after a period in the
front line, and on 1 Apr 1942, arising out of the need for new
motorized formations for the summer offensives of 1942, an
announcement was made at a regimental parade at Rjetschiza:
- "Effective immediately the former Infantry Regiment
Großdeutschland is expanded to the Infantry Division
Großdeutschland."
Infantry Division Großdeutschland 1942
While resting and refitting near Orel, the
Infantry Regiment
Großdeutschland reorganized and expanded to become
Infanterie-Division Großdeutschland
(mot). The existing Regiment became Infanterie-Regiment
Großdeutschland 1, and was joined by the newly formed
Infanterie-Regiment
Großdeutschland 2. Supporting units in
the form of a
Panzer battalion, an
assault gun battalion and increased
flak,
artillery and
engineers were added with the upgrade to
divisional status.
After the reorganization, the
Großdeutschland Division was
assigned to
XLVIII.
Panzerkorps during the opening
phases of Fall Blau, the assault on
Stalingrad
. The division took part in the successful
attacks to cross the upper Don
river and to capture Voronezh
.
In August,
the division was pulled back to the north bank of the Donets
and held as
a mobile reserve and fire-brigade counterattack
force. After the Soviet Operation Uranus, the Division was involved
in heavy winter fighting near Rzhev
.
Kharkov
In
January-February 1943, Großdeutschland and
XLVIII.Panzerkorps, along with the II
SS Panzer Corps took part in the Third Battle of
Kharkov
. The division fought alongside the
1.SS Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf
Hitler,
2.SS Division
Das Reich and
3.SS
Division Totenkopf during these battles. After the
fall of Kharkov, the
Großdeutschland was again pulled back
and refitted. At this time, the division was equipped with a
company of
Tiger 1s, an unusual addition
making GD the only Panzergrenadier division to have its own heavy
tanks, and the only non-Waffen SS division at that time to have its
own Tigers (they were normally deployed in independent heavy tank
battalions).
Panzergrenadier Division Großdeutschland
In June 1943, with the addition of armoured personnel carriers and
Tigers the division was redesignated
Panzergrenadier-Division Großdeutschland,
though in reality it now had more armoured vehicles than most full
scale panzer divisions.

A Tiger I of the 10./III.Abteilung of
the "Großdeutschland" Panzer Regiment.
Kursk
The newly
re-equipped division was attached to the German Fourth Panzer Army of
Generaloberst Hermann Hoth,
and was to take a major role (again paired with the SS-Panzerkorps)
in Operation
Citadel
, the battles to sever the Kursk
salient. During the buildup period, a battalion of new
Panther Ausf. D tanks came under the operational control of
Großdeutschland. After the launch of Citadel, the division
was heavily engaged in the fight to penetrate the southern flank of
the salient. The new Panthers were plagued by technical problems,
suffering from engine fires and mechanical breakdowns, many before
reaching the battle. The division fought on until it was pulled
back to
Tomarovka on 18 July 1943.

Großdeutschland Division soldiers,
Kursk, July 1943
Defensive battles
After the canceled Kursk offensive, the division was transferred
back to Heeresgruppe Mitte, and resumed its role as mobile reserve.
The Tiger tank company was expanded to an entire battalion,
becoming the III. Bataillon of the Panzer Regiment.
GD saw heavy fighting
around Karachev
before being
transferred back to XLVIII
Panzerkorps in late August. For the rest of 1943,
Großdeutschland was engaged in the fighting withdrawal
from the eastern Ukraine, taking part in battles around Kharkov,
Belgorod
, and finally on the Dnieper,
ending the year fighting strong enemy forces near Michurin-Rog, east of Krivoi-Rog. It was during this period that
the division earned the nickname
"die Feuerwehr" (The Fire
Brigade).
1944

Grossdeutschland's Retreat -
1944.
Großdeutschland continued fighting in the area of
Krivoi-Rog early in January 1944 until it was transferred west for
rest and refit. During this period, 1./Panzer Regiment 26 (Panther)
joined the Panzer Regiment GD, and GD's I.
Bataillon moved to
France to refit and train with the new tanks; they did not rejoin
the Division until after the Normandy invasion
.
Over the next months, the division continued moving from
crisis-point to crisis-point across the front.
Panzer Regiment
Großdeutschland saw action in the battles to relieve the
Cherkassy pocket in late January
1944 while the rest of the division was involved in heavy fighting
from the Dniester
to Northern Bessarabia
. On 4 March 1944 the First, Second and Third
Ukrainian Fronts launched a major attack on the north, central and
southern flanks of Army Group South, and GD moved to Kirovgrad,
bolstering weak parts of the line until withdrawn to
Rovnoye to the southwest. On 16 March the division
began the move to the Dniester River, and by the end of March had
entered Romania.
In April
1944, GD. as a part of LVII.Panzerkorps. fought defensive
battles near Iaşi
, including
the First Battle of
Târgu Frumos, slowly retreating to Târgul Frumos in
Moldavia. Fighting in the region raged for over a month. A
renewed Soviet offensive began on 2 May, aimed at breaking through
GD and onto the Romanian oil fields.
The defensive action
at the Second Battle
of Târgu Frumos was the focus of several NATO
studies
during the Cold War.
In mid May, the infantry and reconnaissance components of the
division were equipped with armored personnel carriers
(
Schützenpanzerwagen) and other
armoured vehicles. The Füsilier regiments were downsized from four
battalions to three. The division was then sent back to the front,
where it was involved in the fighting around Podul.
After a brief rest in
early July, the division was again committed to heavy fighting in
northern Romania
.
In late July, the division was transferred to
East Prussia. Over the next months,
Großdeutschland was involved in heavy fighting in both
East Prussia and the
Baltic States,
suffering immense casualties in both men and materiel. The division
was virtually annihilated during the battles in the
Memel bridgehead.
Panzerkorps "Großdeutschland"
In November 1944, while the division retained its status as a
Panzergrenadier division, several attached units were expanded to
divisional status, and the
Panzerkorps
Großdeutschland was
formed.
The Corps was made up primarily of two Divisions -
Großdeutschland and the
Brandenburg Division, which had a
lineage which was strongly linked to the
Großdeutschland.
By March 1945, the Panzergrenadier Division
Großdeutschland had been reduced to around 4,000 men.
These escaped by ferry from the collapsing Memel bridgehead.
They
landed at Pillau
and were put
straight back into combat. By 25 April 1945, the division
ceased to exist, having been completely destroyed in the battles
around Pillau.
Of the survivors only a few hundred were
able to make their way to Schleswig-Holstein
and surrendered to British forces. The
majority of the men were left behind and were forced to surrender
to the Russians where they often faced a fatal and indefinite
amount of time in Russian Labor Camps (
Gulags).
Panzergrenadier Division
Kurmark had been created out of
Großdeutschland remnants in early 1945 and had fought
throughout the last months of the war. Men of both the Brandenburg
and Kurmark units were entitled to wear
Großdeutschland
insignia.
Commanding officers
Hasso von Manteuffel, 1
February 1944
Insignia

Image of the Latin Script cuff title
introduced in 1944.
From the GD for CM website, courtesy the
webmaster.
As a celebration of their elite status, the
Großdeutschland was permitted to wear unique insignia. An
intertwined GD was displayed on the shoulder straps, and a
cuff title, of the type granted to Waffen-SS
units, was also distributed. Some examples of the green cuff title
worn by
Infantry
Regiment Großdeutschland were still seen late in the war, but
the most common title was the pattern introduced in 1940, with
Sütterlin script on a black backing.
All divisional elements were granted this cuff title. As an Army
formation,
Großdeutschland was ordered to wear their cuff
title on the right sleeve, since the SS wore theirs on the
left.
Personal accounts
The unit
became known in the West through the book The Forgotten Soldier, by the
Alsatian
veteran Guy Sajer (a
pseudonym), who served as a volunteer. The book was first
published in 1967 in France as
Le Soldat Oublié. While the
historical accuracy of Sajer's autobiographical work has been
questioned, it nevertheless offers a vivid and moving account of
the horrors of war on the Eastern Front. A more recent account was
written by Alfred Nowotny, entitled
The Good Soldier,
which focuses on both his experiences in Panzerfüsilier Regiment GD
from 1944, but also his captivity in the Soviet Union after the
German surrender. Jurgen Herbst, emeritus professor of history at
the University of Wisconsin, recounts his experience as a young
volunteer who joined the Division in 1945 in his book
Requiem
for a German Past.
Orders of Battle
Panzergrenadier Division "Großdeutschland" September 1943
Divisional Headquarters
Divisional Staff (32 Officers, 143 NCOs and enlisted)
maps and the divisional war diary, liaison with neighbouring units,
and structuring component units of the division.
- Ib (II General Staff Officer) (Supply and Administration)
Directed the supply and workshop units of the division, field
police, provost marshall and field post office units.
- O2 (1st Assistant Adjutant) Assisted the Ib and handled the
organization of all back line services.
- Ib/WuG (Waffen und Geräte - Weapons and Equipment). Responsible
for replacement, repair, supply, and maintenance of ammunition,
weapons and non-specialized equipment.
- Ib/Kfz (Divisional Engineer). Provided for replacement and
supply of motor vehicles, spare parts, tires, fuel, etc. as well as
traffic control, the workshop companies, fuel points and
columns.
- Ic (III General Staff Officer). Intelligence. Responsible for
interrogation of POWs, radio intercept work, etc.
- O3 (Third Assistant Adjutant). Assisted the Ic, oversaw map
unit and interpreters at division HQ.
- Id (Training)
- IIa (Adjutant) Handled administration such as loss and casualty
reports, rosters, etc. as well as administration relating to
officers - replacements, promotions, decorations, leaves,
punishment.
- IIb (Division Assistant Adjutant) Handled administrative
matters described above regarding the NCOs and men and oversaw the
divisional orderly room.
- III (Chief of Feldjustizamt GD - legal branch). In charge of
divisional courts-martial, civilian relations, legal matters.
- IVa (Head of Intendantur). Supplies, clothing, medical, dental,
pay matters, canteens, housekeeping needs, etc.
- IVb (Divisional Surgeon) Commanded the medical services
simultaneous with this position, responsible for sanitation and
hygience, movement and treatment of sick and injured soldiers,
procurement and maintenance of medical equipment.
- IVz (Divisional Paymaster)
- IVe (Chief Chaplain). While regular divisions had 2 chaplains
(one Catholic, one Protestant) GD was forbidden from having
chaplains after holding mass at Notre Dame in 1940. Divisional
level chaplain support was provided as needed from the Corps
level.
- Map Section. Eight men charged with reproducing maps,
overprinting captured maps, shot diagrams for the divisional
artillery, etc. (Under O3, Divisions Assistant Nachrichten
Officer)
- Headquarters Company (under Divisions O4)
Divisional Escort Company
On formation of GD as a Panzergrenadier Division, a 219 man
Divisional Escort Company was added to Divisional headquarters.
Modelled after the escort companies of Waffen SS Divisions, this
unit was intended to guard divisional headquarters, serve as a
mobile reserve, and was in essence a small battle group suited to
all operational circumstances. It included, according to varying
sources, some or all of the following:
- Rifle Platoon
- Motorcycle Platoon
- Heavy Machinegun/Mortar Platoon
- Infantry Platoon
- Heavy Anti-Tank Platoon
- Self-Propelled Flak Platoon
- Mixed Anti-Tank (Panzerjäger) Platoon.
Feldgendarmerie (Military Police)
Military Police Troop - Numbering one platoon of men, the Military
Police detachment (recruited like the rest of the Army's MPs from
civilian police) were equipped with light cars and motorcycles.
Almost all military policemen not holding officer rank were NCOs
(Unteroffizier or higher) excepting some drivers, in order to
provide authority for their duties - including maintenance of
discipline, but most importantly collection of prisoners and
traffic control duties. GD had several hundred motorized vehicles
which had to be moved over great distances both rapidly and
efficiently.
Kriegsberichter (War Correspondent Platoon)
Responsible for recruitment and propaganda literature. GD was
fairly unique in having its own correspondents permanently assigned
to the division.
Panzergrenadier Regiment "Großdeutschland"

- Regimental Headquarters
- Headquarters Company
- signals platoon
- pioneer platoon
- motorcycle platoon
- I. (SPW) Battalion (At the beginning of June 1943, 83 SPW
halftracks arrived to equip the first battalion of the Grenadier
Regiment.)
- Headquarters
- 1. Company
- Headquarters
- Rifle Platoon - light anti-tank rifle team, three squads, each
with 2 LMGs
- Rifle Platoon
- Rifle Platoon
- Heavy Platoon - 4 HMGs, two 81 mm mortars, heavy anti-tank
rifle team
- 2. Company - as above
- 3. Company - as above
- 4. (MG) Company
- HQ Platoon
- Mortar Platoon
- Light Infantry Support Platoon
- 5. (Heavy) Company
- II. (Motorized) Battalion
- 6. Company - as 1 above
- 7. Company - as 1 above
- 8. Company - as 1 above
- 9. (MG) Company - as 4 above
- 10. (Heavy) Company - as 5 above
- III. (Motorized) Battalion
- 11. Company - as 1 above
- 12. Company - as 1 above
- 13. Company - as 1 above
- 14. (MG) Company - as 4 above
- 15. (Heavy) Company - as 5 above
- IV. (Heavy) Battalion
- 16. (FlaK) Company
- 17. (Infantry Gun) Company
- 18. (Panzerjäger) Company
- 1st Platoon self-propelled
Panzerfüsilier Regiment "Großdeutschland"
As for Panzergrenadier Regiment GD, above
- Regimental Headquarters
- I. Battalion
- II. Battalion
- III. Battalion
- IV. (Heavy) Battalion
Artillery Regiment "Großdeutschland"
- Regimental Headquarters
- HQ Battery
- Observation Battery
- Self-propelled light FlaK platoon
- I. Battalion
- Headquarters Battery and Signals Platoon
- 1. Battery - 4 x l. FH. 18 (105 mm) howitzers
- 2. Battery - 4 x l. FH. 18 (105 mm) howitzers
- 3. Battery - 4 x s. FH. (150 mm) 18 howitzers
- II. Battalion
- Headquarters Battery and Signals Platoon
- 4. Battery - 6 x Wespe SP (105 mm) howitzers
- 5. Battery - 6 x Wespe SP (105 mm) howitzers
- 6. Battery - 6 x Hummel (150 mm) howitzers
- III. Battalion
- Headquarters Battery and Signals Platoon
- 7. Battery - 4 x s. FH. (150 mm) 18 howitzers
- 8. Battery - 4 x s. FH. (150 mm) 18 howitzers
- 9. Battery - 4 x K 18 10 cm howitzers
- IV. Battalion - formed upon reorganization
- Headquarters Battery and Signals Platoon
- 10. Battery - 105 mm howitzers
- 11. Battery - 105 mm howitzers
- 12 Battery - 6 x Nebelwerfer
- Armoured Observation Battery
- Sound Ranging Platoon
- 2 x Flash Spotting Platoon
- Survey Platoon
- Warning Platoon
- 2 x Analysis Platoons
Anti-Aircraft Artillery Battalion "Großdeutschland"
Reorganizations in June 1943 involved renumbering the 3.7 FlaK
batteries 1 and 2, and the addition of 6 Battery
- 1. Battery - 3.7 cm self propelled
- 2. Battery - 3.7 cm self propelled
- 3. Battery - 4 x 8.8 cm - halftracked prime movers
- 4. Battery - 4 x 8.8 cm - halftracked prime movers
- 5. Battery - 4 x 8.8 cm - halftracked prime movers
- 6. Battery - Quadruple anti-aircraft guns
Panzerjäger (Anti-Tank) Battalion "Großdeutschland"
- 1. (Self Propelled) Company
- 1. Platoon - 3 x Marder
- 2. Platoon - 3 x Marder
- 3. Platoon - 3 x Marder
- 2. Company
- 4 x 5cm PaK 38 AT gun
- 4 x 5 cm PaK 38 AT gun
- 4 x 5 cm PaK 38 AT gun
- 3. Company
- 4 x 5 cm PaK 38 AT gun
- 4 x 5 cm PaK 38 AT gun
- 4 x 5 cm PaK 38 AT gun
Panzer Aufklärungs (Armoured Reconnaissance) Battalion
"Großdeutschland"
Upon expansion to a panzergrenadier Division, this battalion
adopted golden-yellow waffenfarbe and cavalry traditions for all
its companies.
- Battalion HQ
- 8 motorcycles
- 2 Kfz 15 cars
- 1 Sd Kfz 247 armoured car
- Battalion Maint Det - 1 motorcycle/sidecar, 1 car (2/40), 1
light car, 2 x 3ton trucks
- Battalion train - 1 motorcycle, 2 light cars, 1 Kfz 15 car, 2
light trucks, 2 medium trucks, 1 medium (33 seat) bus
- Signal Platoon
- HQ Section - 1 mc, 1 mc with sidecar, 1 Kfz 15 car
- 2 x pack radio sections "b" each with Kfz 2
- 1 light armoured radio section "b" with 1 armoured car Sd Kfz
260
- 4 x light armoured radio section "c" with 1 armoured car Sd Kfz
261
- 3 x med armoured radio section "b" each with 1 car (Kfz 15) and
1 armoured car Sd Kfz 263
- 1. (Armd Car) Squadron
- Squadron HQ - 2 motorcycles, 5 motorcycle/sidecars, 1 Kfz 15
car
- Heavy Armoured Car platoon - 3 x Sd Kfz 231, 3 x Sd Kfz
232
- Light Armoured Car Platoon - 4 x Sd Kfz 222, 2 x Sd Kfz
223
- Light Armoured Car Platoon - 4 x Sd Kfz 222, 2 x Sd Kfz
223
- Light Armoured Car Platoon - 4 x Sd Kfz 222, 2 x Sd Kfz
223
- Maintenance Section - 1 mc/sidecar, 1 car (2/40) 2 x 2 ton
truck
- Squadron Train - 1 Kfz 15 car, 3 x 2 ton truck, 1 med truck, 3
ton truck
- 2. (Armd Recon) Squadron
- Squadron HQ - 4 motorcycles, 1 mc/sidecar, 2 x SPW 250/3
- Recon Platoon
- HQ Sec - SPW 250, SPW 250/10
- Squad - 2 x SPW 250/1
- Squad - as above
- Squad - as above
- Squad - 2 x LMG
- Recon Platoon - as above
- Recon Platoon - as above
- Heavy Platoon
- HQ section - mc, SPW 250/1
- HMG section - 3 x SPW 250/1, 2 x HMG
- HMG section - as above
- Mtr section - 2 x SPW 250/7, 2 SPW 250/7 without mortar (ammo
carrier?)
- Maintenance Section - 1 mc/sidecar, 2 x 2 ton trucks, 1 Kfz 10
halftrack, 1 x LMG
- Squadron train -Kfz 15 car, 2 ton truck, med truck, 2 x 3 ton
truck
- 3. (Recon) Squadron (Volkswagen)
- Squadron HQ - 4 motorcycles, 2 x Kubelwagen (Kfz 1)
- Recon Platoon
- HQ section - 1 mc, 1 x Kubel (Kfz 1), 1 anti-tank rifle
- Squad - 4 x Kubel
- Squad - as above
- Squad - as above
- Recon Squad - 2 x LMG
- Recon Platoon - as above
- Recon Platoon - as above
- Heavy Platoon
- HQ section - mc, 3 x Kubel
- HMG sec - 7 x Kubel, 2 x HMG
- HMG sec - as above
- Mortar sec - 3 x trucks (Kfz 70) and 2 mortars
(81 mm)
- Maintenance Section - 1 mc/sidecar, 1 car (2/40)
- Squadron train - Kubel (Kfz 1), 2 ton truck, med truck, 3 ton
truck
- 4. (Recon) Squadron (Volkswagen) - As above
- 5. (Heavy) Squadron
- Squadron HQ 3 x mc, 2 x mc/sidecar, 1 Kfz 15
- Light telephone sec - 1 Kfz 15
- Maintenance section - mc/sidecar, 1 car (2/40)
- Anti-Tank Platoon - HQ sec - mc, mc/sidecar, Kfz 15
- Ammo sec - 2 Sd Kfz 10 halftracks, 2 ammo trailers
- Gun sect - 3 Sd Kfz 10 halftracks, 3 x 50 mm Anti-Tank
guns, 3 x LMG
- Pionier Platoon - HQ sec - mc, mc/Sidecar, Kfz 15, 2 x 2 ton
truck
- 4 x Engineer section (each with 2 ton truck)
- 1 x Engineer section with LMG
- Anti-Tank gun sec - mc/sidecar, 3 x Kfz 70 truck, 3 x
28 mm ATG, 3 x LMG
- Infantry Gun Platoon HQ sec - 1 mc, 1 mc/sidecar, 1 Kfz 69
truck
- Ammo sec - Kfz 69 truck, ammo trailer
- Gun sec - 2 x Kfz 69 trucks, 2 light 75 mm Infantry
guns
- Squadron train - Kfz 15, 2 ton truck, med truck, 3 ton truck
- Motorized light column
- Column HQ - 3 x motorcycle, 4 x mc/sidecar, Kfz 15, 3 x
LMG
- 1 Section - mc, 5 x 2 ton truck
- 2 Section - 4 x medium truck
- Column train - mc/sidecar, 2 x medium truck
Panzer (Tank) Regiment "Großdeutschland"
- Regimental Headquarters
- HQ Company - 17 x PzKpfw IV
- I. Battalion
- Battalion Headquarters Company - 17 x PzKpfw IV
- 1. Company
- HQ Platoon - 3 x PzKpfw V
(Panther)
- 1. Platoon - 5 x PzKpfw V
- 2. Platoon - 5 x PzKpfw V
- 3. Platoon - 5 x PzKpfw V
- 2. Company
- HQ Platoon - 3 x PzKpfw IV
- 1. Platoon - 5 x PzKpfw IV
- 2. Platoon - 5 x PzKpfw IV
- 3. Platoon - 5 x PzKpfw IV
- 3. Company
- 4. Company
- II. Battalion (raised February 1943) as per I. Battalion
- Battalion Headquarters Company
- 5. Company
- 6. Company
- 7. Company
- 8. Company
- III. Battalion (joined Division August 1943)
- Battalion Headquarters
- Headquarters Company - signals platoon, scout platoon
(motorcycles), pioneer platoon (2 x SPW, 4 trucks), flak platoon
with 4 x quadruple guns, reconnaissance platoon with 7 x SPW
- 9. Company - 14 Tigers
- 10. Company -14 Tigers
- 11. Company - 14 Tigers
- Heavy Workshop Company
- Maintenance Platoon - 3 Ton Trucks
Sturmpionier (Assault Pioneer) Battalion "Großdeutschland"
- Headquarters
- 1. Company - 219 Officers and Men
- 1 Platoon
- 2 Platoon
- 3 (Storm boat) Platoon - 27 assault boats
This company was outfitted with armoured personnel carriers after
Kursk.
-
- 2. Company - 219 Officers and Men
- 1 Platoon
- 2 Platoon
- 3 (Storm boat) Platoon - 27 assault boats
- 3.Company - 219 Officers and Men
- 1 Platoon
- 2 Platoon
- 3 (Storm boat) Platoon - 27 assault boats
- "K" Type Bridging Column - Transported "K" type bridges -
assembly responsibility of the companies above.
- Light Pioneer Column
Sturmgeschütz (Assault Gun) Battalion "Großdeutschland"
Formed from 16th Company, Infantry Regiment GD and the 192nd
Assault Gun Battalion.
- Headquarters
- 1. Battery - also includes Sd Kfz 252 or 260/6 ammunition
carrier - 6 x StuG III
(7.5 cm StuK gun)
- 2. Battery - also includes Sd Kfz 252 or 260/6 ammunition
carrier - 6 x StuG III (7.5 cm StuK gun)
- 3. Battery - also includes Sd Kfz 252 or 260/6 ammunition
carrier - 6 x StuG III (7.5 cm StuK gun)
Panzer Nachrichten (Armoured Signals) Battalion
"Großdeutschland"
Formed from IR GD Signals Company and remnants of 309th Signals
Battalion
- Telephone Company
- Radio Company
Medical Battalion "Großdeutschland"
- Medical Company
- Heavy Platoon
- Light Platoon
- Pharmacy
- Dental Station
- Medical Company
- Heavy Platoon
- Light Platoon
- Pharmacy
- Dental Station
- GD Field Hospital
- 1. Ambulance Platoon
- 2. Ambulance Platoon
- 3. Ambulance Platoon
Supply Services
Formed from IR GD Supply Services
- Supply Services - 18 columns
- Field Workshop Company
- Field Workshop Company
- Field Workshop Company
- Replacement Parts Company
- Armourer-Artificer Platoon
- Administrative Services
- Bakery Company
- Butcher Company
- Division Ration Office
- Field Post Office
Commanders
 |
Infantry Division GD (1 Apr 1942 - 1 Jun
1943)Panzergrenadier Division GD (June 1943 - 8
May 1945) |
|
| Generalmajor (later Generalleutnant) Walther Hoernlein |
1 April 1942 - 27 January 1944 |
| General der Panzertruppen Hermann
Balck (temporary command) |
3 Apr 1943 - 30 Jun 1943 |
| Generalleutnant Hasso von
Manteuffel |
27 January 1944 - 1 September 1944 |
| Oberst Karl Lorenz |
1 September 1944 - May 1945 |
Artillery Regiment
GD |
| Oberst Georg Jauer |
15 Mar 1942 - Dec 1942 |
| Oberst Reinke |
|
| Oberstleutnant Albrecht |
|
| Hauptmann Dr. Ritter |
|
| Burchardt |
|
Panzer Regiment
GD |
| Oberst Hyazinth
Graf Strachwitz von Gross-Zauche und Camminetz |
January 1943 - November 1943 |
| Major Pfeffer (PanzerAbteilung 51, in temporary command of Pz
Regt GD) |
|
| Oberst Büsing |
(Killed in Action 8 March 1944) |
| Oberst Willi Langkeit |
1 March 1944 - 1 November 1944 |
| Oberstleutnant Bruno Kahl |
1 November 1944 - May 1945 |
 |
Infantry Regiment GD 1 (1 Apr 1942 - 1 Oct
1942)Grenadier Regiment GD (1 Oct 1942 - June
1943)
Panzergrenadier Regiment GD (June 1943 - 8 May
1945) |
|
| Oberst Köhler |
1 Apr 1942 - 1 Dec 1942 (Killed in Action) |
| Oberst Karl Lorenz |
1 Dec 1942 - 14 Dec 1942 |
| Oberst Kurt Moehring |
14 Dec 1942 - 14 Jan 1943 |
| Oberst Karl Lorenz |
14 Jan 1943 - 1 August 1944 |
| Major Hugo Schimmel |
1 August 1944 - August 1944 |
| Major Harald Kriegk (?) |
October 1944 |
| Major Wolfgang Heesemann |
November 1944 - Feb 1945 (Killed in Action) |
| Major Krützman |
Feb 1945 - War's End |
 |
Infantry Regiment GD 2 (1 Apr 1942 - 1 Oct
1942)Füsilier Regiment GD (1 Oct 1942 - June
1943)
Panzerfüsilier Regiment GD (June 1943 - 8 May
1945) |
|
| Oberst Eugen Garski |
1 Apr 1942 - 30 Sep 1942 (Killed in Action) |
| Oberst Erich Kahsnitz |
21 Oct 1942 - 3 July 1943 (fatally wounded and died of wounds
on 29 July 1943 in Germany) |
| Oberst Schulte-Heuthaus |
7 July 1943 - 4 Sep 1943 (Wounded in action) |
| Major Rudolf
Watjen |
4 Sep 1943 - 18 Sep 1943 |
| Major Wack |
18 Sep 1943 - 15 Oct 1943 |
| Oberst Horst Niemack |
16 Oct 1943 - 24 August 1944 |
| Oberst Heinz Wittchow von Brese-Winiary |
3 Sep 1944 - 13 Feb 1945 (Dismissed, captured 18 Feb 1945) |
| Oberstleutnant Maxemilian Fabich |
13 Feb 1945 - May 1945 |
War crimes
The book
German Army and Genocide (ISBN 1-56584-525-0)
mentions the following incident, from the invasion of
Yugoslavia:
- When one German soldier was shot and one seriously wounded
in Pancevo, Wehrmacht soldiers and the Waffen SS rounded up about
100 civilians at random...the town commander, Lt. Col.
Fritz Bandelow conducted the Court's Martial...The presiding judge,
SS-Sturmbannführer Rudolf Hoffmann sentenced 36 of those arrested
to death. On April 21, 1941, four of the civilians were
the first to be shot...On the following day eighteen victims were
hanged in a cemetery and fourteen more were shot at the cemetery
wall by an execution squad of the Wehrmacht's
'Grossdeutschland regiment. (Page
42)
Part of the photographic presentation for the book includes a photo
where the
GD cuff title on the officer is clearly visible.
The official GD history by Helmuth Spaeter mentions only that
"Draconian measures were occasionally required to halt looting by
the civilian population" in Belgrade. The events of 21 April in
Pancevo are not discussed directly, though many references are made
to "security duties" in Yugoslavia.
The subject of Grossdeutschland's complicity in war crimes was the
subject of the book by Omer Bartov
The Eastern Front, 1941-45,
German Troops, and the Barbarization of Warfare (1986, ISBN
0-312-22486-9). The link, however, between GD's and atrocities is
never fully realized. A complete discussion is available at the
GD for CM website.
References
- Spaeter, Helmuth. History of the Panzerkorps
Großdeutschland Volume I. Page 290
- Sharpe, Michael and Brian L. Davis Grossdeutschland:
Guderian's Eastern Front Elite, p. 39
Bibliography
Printed references
- de Lannoy, François and Jean-Claude Perrigault La division
Grossdeutschland ("The Grossdeutschland Division from Regiment
to Panzerkorps 1939-1945") French edition, Editions Heimdal
- Lee, Cyrus A. Soldat: The World War Two German Army Combat
Uniform Collector's Guide (Volume V: Uniforms and Insignia of
Panzerkorps Grossdeutschland 1939-1945) (Pictorial Histories
Publishing Company, Missoula, MT, 1993) ISBN 0-929521-76-5
- Lucas, James Germany's Elite Panzer Force:
Grossdeutschland (MacDonald's and Jane's, London, 1978) ISBN
0-354-01165-0
- Novotny, Alfred THE GOOD SOLDIER: FROM AUSTRIAN SOCIAL
DEMOCRACY TO COMMUNIST CAPTIVITY WITH A SOLDIER OF PANZER-GRENADIER
DIVISION "GROSSDEUTSCHLAND" (The Aberjona Press, 2002.) ISBN
0-9666389-9-9
- Quarrie, Bruce Panzer-Grenadier Division
"Grossdeutschland" (VANGUARD series book, Osprey Publishing
Group, London, UK. 1977. US version published in 1978 by
Squadron/Signal Publications, Warren, MI.) ISBN 0-85045-055-1
- Scheibert, Horst (Bruce Culver Editor) Panzer Grenadier
Division Grossdeutschland (English version by Squadron Signal
Publications, Carrollton, TX, 1987) ISBN 089747061
- Sharpe, Michael and Brian L. Davis GROSSDEUTSCHLAND:
Guderian's Eastern Front Elite, Compendium Publishing Ltd,
2001 ISBN 0-7110-2854-0.
- Solarz, Jacek. Division/Korps "Großdeutschland" 1943-1945
Vol. I and II. (Polish/English edition by Wydawnictwo
"Militaria", Warsaw, 2005) ISBN 83-7219-237-5
Web resources
- Dorosh, Michael. Grossdeutschland for Combat Mission. Retrieved
April 8, 2005.
- Pipes, Jason. " Panzergrenadier-Division
Großdeutschland". Retrieved April 8, 2005.
- " Panzergrenadier Division
Großdeutschland". German language article at
www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de. (Follow links for Infanterie Division
Großdeutschland (mot).) Retrieved April 8, 2005.
- Brandenburg Historica (2006). " Grossdeutschland: Von der Wachtruppe zum
Panzerkorps". Updated May 8, 2006.
- Wendel, Marcus (2005). " Panzergrenadier Division Großdeutschland".
Retrieved April 8, 2005.
- Großdeutschland USA, Living History Group. [83115].
- 2\KP Pzr Grn Rgt Grossdeutschland, UK based Living History
Group http://www.grossdeutschland.org