Sunday, July 12, 2026

Johannes Blaskowitz in the German Victory Parade in Warsaw (1939)


Victory Parade of the German 8th Army in Warsaw, held on 5 October 1939. From left to right: Adolf Hitler (Führer und Oberster Befehlshaber der Wehrmacht), Generalmajor Friedrich-Carl Cranz (Commander of the 18th Infantry Division), General der Artillerie Emil Leeb (Commanding General of XI Army Corps), Generaloberst Wilhelm Keitel (Chief of the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht), General der Kavallerie Maximilian Reichsfreiherr von Weichs (wearing glasses, partially obscured by Blaskowitz, Commanding General of XIII Army Corps), Generaloberst Johannes Blaskowitz (Commander-in-Chief of the 8th Army), Generaloberst Walther von Reichenau (behind Blaskowitz, only his cap is visible; Commander-in-Chief of the 10th Army), and General der Flieger Albert Kesselring (Chief of Luftflotte 1). BTW, standing directly below Hitler is Erwin Rommel, who at that time was still a Generalmajor and served as commander of the Führer-Begleit-Bataillon (Führer’s Escort Battalion). Photo by Hugo Jaeger, one of Hitler’s personal photographers.


Generaloberst Johannes Blaskowitz (Oberbefehlshaber 8. Armee).



Source :
https://alifrafikkhan.blogspot.com/2010/10/koleksi-ratusan-foto-berwarna-dari-life.html
https://artsandculture.google.com/entity/hugo-jaeger/m064km4b?categoryid=artist

Original Color Photograph of Ernst-Günther Baade by Walter Frentz


Generalmajor Ernst-Günther Baade (Kommandeur 90. Panzergrenadier-Division) in a picture taken on 25 May 1944 by Walter Frentz, during Eichenlaub award ceremony with Hitler at Berghof in Obersalzberg, Bavaria. Previously, On 22 February 1944, then Oberst Ernst-Günther Baade formally received the Eichenlaub zum Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes as the 402nd recipient for his extraordinary personal bravery and outstanding leadership during the fierce defensive battles northwest of Cassino in the winter of 1943-1944 while leading elements of the 90. Panzergrenadier-Division, initially in a Kampfgruppe role under the broader command structure supporting the 44. Reichsgrenadier-Division Hoch- und Deutschmeister. In the grueling attritional fighting around Monte Cassino, where Allied forces launched repeated assaults against the heavily fortified German positions in the Liri Valley and surrounding heights, Baade repeatedly exposed himself to enemy fire by conducting front-line inspections, directing counterattacks, and personally intervening to stabilize critical sectors threatened by breakthroughs; his small staff and hands-on command style inspired his troops amid relentless artillery barrages, infantry assaults, and armored thrusts, enabling the division to hold key ground, repel penetrations, and inflict heavy casualties on superior Allied forces in some of the most intense close-quarters combat of the Italian Campaign. This performance, highlighted in the Wehrmachtbericht for the multi-day defensive actions, exemplified Baade's eccentric yet fearless approach, already legendary from his Afrikakorps days, turning potential collapses into tenacious resistance that prolonged the Battle of Monte Cassino and delayed the Allied advance toward Rome, cementing his reputation as one of the Wehrmacht's most charismatic and effective divisional leaders before his later promotion to Generalmajor and full command of the 90. Panzergrenadier-Division.




Source :
https://forum.axishistory.com/viewtopic.php?p=1389437&hilit=baade#p1389437
https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/1514/Baade-Ernst-G%C3%BCnther.htm
https://www.walter-frentz-collection.de/fotoarchiv/personenarchiv-a-z/personen-a-b/

Original Color Photograph of Karl Allmendinger by Walter Frentz


Generalleutnant Karl Allmendinger (Kommandeur 5.Jäger-Division) in a picture taken in December 1942 by Walter Frentz, during Eichenlaub award ceremony with Hitler at Führerhauptquartier Wolfsschanze in Rastenburg, East Prussia. Generalleutnant Karl Allmendinger, commanding the 5. Jäger-Division under II. Armeekorps of 16. Armee within Heeresgruppe Nord on the Eastern Front in late 1942, earned the Eichenlaub zum Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (153rd award) on 13 December 1942 for his outstanding leadership during the German offensive operation Michael from 27 September to 9 October 1942, which aimed to broaden and secure the vital land corridor to the encircled forces in the Demyansk Kessel southeast of Lake Ilmen. Under Allmendinger's determined command, the division executed aggressive attacks that played a pivotal role in shattering strong Soviet defensive positions, contributing decisively to the encirclement and subsequent destruction of significant Red Army forces in the area, actions that were explicitly highlighted in the Wehrmachtbericht of 9 October 1942 as a major success in stabilizing and expanding the German bridgehead amid fierce winter fighting. His personal direction of divisional operations, combining swift maneuver with resolute defense against repeated counterattacks, prevented Soviet breakthroughs that could have collapsed the corridor and isolated further German units, thereby maintaining the operational integrity of the Demyansk salient during a critical phase of the northern sector's attritional warfare; this achievement, building on his earlier Ritterkreuz for leadership of the 5. Infanterie-Division in 1941, underscored Allmendinger's tactical acumen in high-intensity Eastern Front conditions before he was relieved of divisional command in early January 1943.




Source :
https://forum.axishistory.com/viewtopic.php?p=1451176&hilit=karl+allmendinger#p1451176
https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/28081/Allmendinger-Karl.htm
https://www.walter-frentz-collection.de/fotoarchiv/personenarchiv-a-z/personen-a-b/

Original Color Photograph of Erich Abraham by Walter Frentz


Generalleutnant Erich Abraham (Kommandeur 76. Infanterie-Division) in a picture taken in July 1944 by Walter Frentz, during Eichenlaub award ceremony with Hitler at Berghof. Previously, in early April 1944, during the chaotic German withdrawal amid the Soviet Dnieper–Carpathian Offensive on the southern Eastern Front northwest of Odessa, Generalleutnant Erich Abraham, as commander of the reinforced 76. Infanterie-Division under XXIX. Armeekorps of Heeresgruppe Südukraine, distinguished himself by orchestrating a critical counter-maneuver that secured the 516th award of the Eichenlaub zum Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 26 June 1944. Facing relentless Red Army pressure as German forces fought their way westward through Soviet formations, Abraham directed his division in a determined thrust to establish and hold a bridgehead on the eastern bank of the Latka River, creating a vital corridor that enabled thousands of retreating troops, vehicles, and equipment to cross safely despite heavy enemy opposition. Under his personal leadership and tactical acumen, the reinforced division not only seized the crossing point against superior Soviet numbers and firepower but maintained the bridgehead open for an extended period through tenacious defensive fighting, repelling repeated assaults and preventing encirclement of larger withdrawing elements from Army Group South. This decisive feat stabilized a collapsing sector, bought precious time for the overall retreat, and exemplified outstanding command under extreme duress, directly contributing to the preservation of combat-effective forces in the face of the Red Army's spring offensive.



Source :
https://forum.axishistory.com/viewtopic.php?p=1438855#p1438855
https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/1227/Abraham-Erich-Gottfried.htm
https://www.walter-frentz-collection.de/fotoarchiv/personenarchiv-a-z/personen-a-b/#&gid=1&pid=1

Ritterkreuzträger of 216. Infanterie-Division


The 216. Infanterie-Division was a German Army formation of the Wehrmacht raised on 26 August 1939 in Wehrkreis XI at Hameln, Lower Saxony, primarily from Landwehr personnel in the Hannover region as part of the third mobilization wave (3. Welle), organized in the traditional alter Art structure with three infantry regiments (Infanterie-Regiment 348, 396, and 398), each of three battalions, plus the 216. Artillerie-Regiment, Panzerabwehr-Abteilung 216, Pionier-Bataillon 216, and supporting divisional units for a total strength of around 17,200 men. It spent the early months of the war in defensive positions along the Westwall in the Ardennes sector and did not participate in the 1939 Invasion of Poland, but in May-June 1940 it advanced under the 6. Armee through Belgium and into France as part of the Western Campaign, contributing to the rapid encirclement and defeat of Allied forces. Following occupation duties along the English Channel coast in 1940-1941, the division was urgently transferred to the Eastern Front in December 1941 amid the Soviet winter counteroffensive, where its units were frequently split into Kampfgruppen for emergency defense; notably, elements of Infanterie-Regiment 348 held the Festen Platz Suchinitschi against encirclement by the Soviet 10th Army for weeks until relieved in January 1942, an action that earned its commander Generalmajor Werner Freiherr von und zu Gilsa the Eichenlaub to his Ritterkreuz. Over the following year and a half the division endured positional warfare and heavy fighting in Army Group Center around Rzhev, Briansk, Orel, Spas-Demensk, and Gomel before participating in Operation Citadel during the Battle of Kursk in July 1943 as part of Generalfeldmarschall Model's 9. Armee on the northern shoulder of the salient, where it suffered severe casualties while attempting to breach Soviet defenses. After the failed offensive and subsequent Soviet counterattacks, the battered division conducted a fighting retreat toward the Dnieper River line and was officially disbanded on 17 November 1943; its staff and remaining elements, including most of Grenadier-Regiment 348 and the artillery, were transferred to Belgium to help form the new 272. Infanterie-Division, while surviving combat troops were reorganized into Divisions-Gruppe 216 and absorbed into the 102. Infanterie-Division. Under successive commanders including Generalleutnant Hermann Böttcher, Kurt Himer, Werner Freiherr von und zu Gilsa, Friedrich August Schack, Egon von Neindorff, and Gustav Gihr, the 216. Infanterie-Division exemplified the attritional struggles of mid-war Wehrmacht infantry units, transitioning from swift victory in the West to prolonged defensive agony on the Eastern Front until its dissolution.

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EICHENLAUBTRÄGER


General der Infanterie Werner Freiherr von und zu Gilsa (1889-1945) was a German officer in the Wehrmacht during World War II, born in Berlin into a noble family of barons, who entered the Royal Prussian Army in 1908 as a Fähnrich in the Garde-Füsilier-Regiment, served with distinction in World War I in staff and field roles earning both classes of the Iron Cross along with other decorations, and continued his career in the Reichswehr before rising through Wehrmacht ranks. As Oberst and Kommandeur of Infanterie-Regiment 9 he led his unit with outstanding bravery through the Polish campaign and, during the 1940 western offensive, personally directed a bold thrust by his III. Bataillon that seized intact Maas bridges near Charleville after breaking through a key enemy bridgehead position, an action that enabled the swift advance of Gruppe Haase and earned him the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 5 June 1940. From 1 April 1941 he commanded the 216. Infanterie-Division, which was transferred to the Eastern Front in winter 1941/42; there, as Generalmajor, he orchestrated the outstanding defense of the Festen Platz Suchinitschi during the German retreat from Moscow, holding the fortified position against heavy Soviet pressure in the central sector and securing the 68th award of the Eichenlaub zum Ritterkreuz on 24 January 1942. Promoted to General der Infanterie on 1 July 1943, he later commanded the LXXXIX. Armeekorps during the Battle of the Scheldt, served briefly in the Führerreserve, and ended the war as the last Kampfkommandant of Dresden from mid-March 1945, where he opened Wehrmacht facilities to civilians before suicide on 8 May 1945 in Leitmeritz as the Red Army advanced.



Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/216th_Infantry_Division_(Wehrmacht)

Ritterkreuzträger of 23. Infanterie-Division


The 23. Infanterie-Division of the German Wehrmacht, nicknamed Grenadierkopf and bearing an insignia based on the monogram of Frederick II of Prussia, was formed on 15 October 1935 in Potsdam as part of Wehrkreis III and mobilized in August 1939 as a first-wave division consisting of Infanterie-Regiment 9 (Potsdam), Infanterie-Regiment 67, and Infanterie-Regiment 68 along with standard artillery, reconnaissance, engineer, and anti-tank elements. It participated in the invasion of Poland in 1939 as a reserve of the 4th Army, then took part in the 1940 campaign in the West, advancing through France under commanders including Generalleutnant Walter Graf von Brockdorff-Ahlefeldt and later Generalleutnant Heinz Hellmich. In 1941 it was transferred to the Eastern Front for Operation Barbarossa, fighting in heavy engagements such as the battles around Roslavl, Smolensk, and Viazma, enduring the brutal winter conditions and Soviet counteroffensives while suffering significant casualties. In July 1942 the division was reorganized and redesignated as the 26. Panzer-Division, which served in occupation duties in the West before deploying to Italy in 1943, where it fought against the Allied invasion at Salerno and in subsequent defensive actions up the peninsula, including involvement in the Padule di Fucecchio massacre, before surrendering near Bologna in May 1945. Meanwhile, a new 23. Infanterie-Division was raised in October/November 1942 using replacement troops and the original regimental numbers (now designated as Grenadier-Regimenter to differentiate them), which returned to combat on the Eastern Front, seeing action in defensive battles, withdrawals, and counterattacks through 1943-1945 under various commanders including Generalleutnant Paul Gurran and others, ultimately being destroyed or surrendering in the East Prussia pocket in early 1945 as the Red Army overran German positions. Notable personnel from the original division, particularly from Infanterie-Regiment 9, included figures later associated with the 20 July 1944 plot against Hitler, reflecting the unit's ties to traditional Prussian military circles.

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RITTERKREUZTRÄGER


General der Infanterie Werner Freiherr von und zu Gilsa (1889-1945) was a German officer in the Wehrmacht during World War II, born in Berlin into a noble family of barons, who entered the Royal Prussian Army in 1908 as a Fähnrich in the Garde-Füsilier-Regiment, served with distinction in World War I in staff and field roles earning both classes of the Iron Cross along with other decorations, and continued his career in the Reichswehr before rising through Wehrmacht ranks. As Oberst and Kommandeur of Infanterie-Regiment 9 he led his unit with outstanding bravery through the Polish campaign and, during the 1940 western offensive, personally directed a bold thrust by his III. Bataillon that seized intact Maas bridges near Charleville after breaking through a key enemy bridgehead position, an action that enabled the swift advance of Gruppe Haase and earned him the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 5 June 1940. From 1 April 1941 he commanded the 216. Infanterie-Division, which was transferred to the Eastern Front in winter 1941/42; there, as Generalmajor, he orchestrated the outstanding defense of the Festen Platz Suchinitschi during the German retreat from Moscow, holding the fortified position against heavy Soviet pressure in the central sector and securing the 68th award of the Eichenlaub zum Ritterkreuz on 24 January 1942. Promoted to General der Infanterie on 1 July 1943, he later commanded the LXXXIX. Armeekorps during the Battle of the Scheldt, served briefly in the Führerreserve, and ended the war as the last Kampfkommandant of Dresden from mid-March 1945, where he opened Wehrmacht facilities to civilians before suicide on 8 May 1945 in Leitmeritz as the Red Army advanced.



Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/23rd_Infantry_Division_(Wehrmacht)

Ritterkreuzträger of 20. Infanterie-Division (mot.) / 20. Panzergrenadier-Division


The 20. Infanterie-Division (mot.) was a fully motorized infantry formation of the German Wehrmacht, originally established on 1 October 1934 in Hamburg under the cover name Reichswehrdienststelle Hamburg and officially designated as the 20. Infanterie-Division on 15 October 1935, before being motorized in autumn 1937 with core units including Infanterie-Regiment (mot.) 69, 76, and 90, Artillerie-Regiment (mot.) 20, Aufklärungs-Abteilung (mot.) 20, Panzerabwehr-Abteilung 20, and Pionier-Bataillon (mot.) 20. It first saw combat during the 1939 invasion of Poland as part of XIX. Armeekorps under General Heinz Guderian, advancing rapidly through central Poland, crossing the Narew River, engaging in battles south of Zambrow, and participating in the fighting around the fortress of Brest-Litovsk before serving as occupation troops. In May 1940 it joined the Westfeldzug with XVI. Armeekorps, breaking through the Dyle Line, fighting in Flanders and around Dunkirk, then pushing across the Aisne to the Moselle, after which it performed occupation duties in France until early 1941. Deployed to the Eastern Front for Operation Barbarossa in June 1941 under Panzergruppe 3 and Army Group Centre, it advanced through Bialystok and Minsk before transfer to Army Group North in September, where it endured heavy defensive actions on the Volkhov Front throughout 1942, including relief efforts at Velikiye Luki, before returning to Army Group Centre. On 23 July 1943 it was redesignated the 20. Panzergrenadier-Division, reinforced with an assault gun battalion, and continued fighting on the Eastern Front through grueling campaigns such as the Kamenets-Podolsky pocket, ultimately ending the war in the Battle of Berlin in May 1945 under LVI. Panzerkorps after successive commanders including Generals Mauritz von Wiktorin, Hans Zorn, Erich Jaschke, and Georg Jauer. Renowned for its mobility and rapid deployment capabilities that complemented panzer operations, the division exemplified the Wehrmacht's early Blitzkrieg doctrine but suffered attrition in prolonged defensive struggles, maintaining significant manpower strength into 1945 before its final destruction.

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RITTERKREUZTRÄGER


Generalleutnant Hans Traut (1895-1974), born on 25 January 1895 in Saargemünd and deceased on 9 December 1974 in Darmstadt, was a German officer who rose through the ranks of the Wehrmacht during World War II, ultimately commanding several infantry formations on both the Western and Eastern Fronts after serving in the First World War and the Reichswehr. As Oberstleutnant and commander of I./Infanterie-Regiment 90 of the 20. Infanterie-Division (mot.), he earned the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 5 August 1940 for his bold thrust during the Westfeldzug in France, where on 16 June 1940 he advanced from Langres toward Vesoul to seize the vital railroad junction and block enemy retreat routes southward; despite threats from the north, he reinforced his battalion, fought through to secure the Pont-sur-Saône river crossing, and personally led a renewed nighttime assault up a heavily defended mountain slope under intense machine-gun fire to capture the heights overlooking Vesoul by dawn, sealing the town's fate. Promoted to Oberst and given command of Infanterie-Regiment 41 (mot.) within the 10. Infanterie-Division, he received the Eichenlaub on 23 January 1942 as the 67th recipient for his outstanding leadership during Operation Barbarossa, including the fierce fight for Shlobin and the Dnieper crossing on 6 July 1941, the prolonged defense of Propoisk from 19 to 25 July, repelling a Soviet battalion incursion near Novosybkov with improvised supply troops and a Flak Zug on 24 August, holding against attacks by elements of four Soviet divisions north of the Desna on 27 August, pushing back strong enemy forces at the Glukhov bridgehead in late September to capture 1,700 prisoners, the contested battle for Negino in October, the storming of Yefremov in November while subordinated to the 18. Panzer-Division, and a decisive counterattack at Gorlovo on 8 December that recaptured heights at Klekotki, freed 39 German prisoners, and reopened key supply routes. Later rising to Generalleutnant, Traut commanded the 263. Infanterie-Division and then the 78. Sturm Division, participating in Unternehmen Zitadelle and subsequent defensive battles before being captured by Soviet forces during the Vitebsk–Orsha Offensive in July 1944, after which he endured imprisonment as a war criminal until his release in 1955.



Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/20th_Infantry_Division_(Wehrmacht)

Ritterkreuzträger of 10. Infanterie-Division (mot.)


The 10. Infanterie-Division (motorisiert) was a motorized infantry formation of the German Wehrmacht during World War II, originating from the 10. Infanterie-Division established in October 1934 under the cover name Kommandant von Regensburg in Wehrkreis VII to circumvent the Treaty of Versailles, and officially redesignated in 1935 with garrisons in Regensburg and surrounding areas. It saw early action in the 1938 Anschluss of Austria, advancing through Passau and Schärding to secure bridgeheads and support armored thrusts toward Vienna, followed by participation in the occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1939; fully mobilized in August 1939, it joined the invasion of Poland as part of the XIII. Armeekorps under the 8. Armee, fighting through Sieradz toward Lodz, countering Polish attacks at the Bzura, and advancing on Warsaw before serving as occupation troops. In 1940 it participated in the Battle of France under the 12. Armee and XVII. Armeekorps, providing flank security along the Oise-Aisne Canal and pushing southeast through Verdun and the Maas toward Langres as occupation forces in France until September, after which it returned home for full motorization by May 1941, relinquishing Infanterie-Regiment 85 and other elements while gaining motorized regiments 20 and 41, Kradschützen-Bataillon 40, and supporting units. As the 10. Infanterie-Division (mot.) it entered Operation Barbarossa in June 1941 with Panzergruppe 2 of Heeresgruppe Mitte, advancing through the Bug and Pripjet regions toward Gomel, Kiev, and Bryansk, then fighting in the battles for Tula and Moscow in late 1941 under XXXXVII. Armeekorps, enduring the harsh winter defensive actions around Moshaisk and Juchnow. It continued operations in 1942-1943 on the central front, including around Demjansk and Orel with the 4. Armee and 2. Panzerarmee, before being redesignated the 10. Panzergrenadier-Division on 15 June 1943; the division suffered heavy losses and was largely destroyed in the Jassy-Kishinev Offensive in August 1944, partially rebuilt in Germany as a Kampfgruppe, saw further destruction in Poland in January 1945, and finally surrendered to Soviet forces in Czechoslovakia in May 1945 after limited reconstitution. Elements of the division were also implicated in atrocities against Polish civilians during the 1939 campaign.

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EICHENLAUBTRÄGER


Generalleutnant Hans Traut (1895-1974), born on 25 January 1895 in Saargemünd and deceased on 9 December 1974 in Darmstadt, was a German officer who rose through the ranks of the Wehrmacht during World War II, ultimately commanding several infantry formations on both the Western and Eastern Fronts after serving in the First World War and the Reichswehr. As Oberstleutnant and commander of I./Infanterie-Regiment 90 of the 20. Infanterie-Division (mot.), he earned the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 5 August 1940 for his bold thrust during the Westfeldzug in France, where on 16 June 1940 he advanced from Langres toward Vesoul to seize the vital railroad junction and block enemy retreat routes southward; despite threats from the north, he reinforced his battalion, fought through to secure the Pont-sur-Saône river crossing, and personally led a renewed nighttime assault up a heavily defended mountain slope under intense machine-gun fire to capture the heights overlooking Vesoul by dawn, sealing the town's fate. Promoted to Oberst and given command of Infanterie-Regiment 41 (mot.) within the 10. Infanterie-Division, he received the Eichenlaub on 23 January 1942 as the 67th recipient for his outstanding leadership during Operation Barbarossa, including the fierce fight for Shlobin and the Dnieper crossing on 6 July 1941, the prolonged defense of Propoisk from 19 to 25 July, repelling a Soviet battalion incursion near Novosybkov with improvised supply troops and a Flak Zug on 24 August, holding against attacks by elements of four Soviet divisions north of the Desna on 27 August, pushing back strong enemy forces at the Glukhov bridgehead in late September to capture 1,700 prisoners, the contested battle for Negino in October, the storming of Yefremov in November while subordinated to the 18. Panzer-Division, and a decisive counterattack at Gorlovo on 8 December that recaptured heights at Klekotki, freed 39 German prisoners, and reopened key supply routes. Later rising to Generalleutnant, Traut commanded the 263. Infanterie-Division and then the 78. Sturm Division, participating in Unternehmen Zitadelle and subsequent defensive battles before being captured by Soviet forces during the Vitebsk–Orsha Offensive in July 1944, after which he endured imprisonment as a war criminal until his release in 1955.



Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/10th_Infantry_Division_(Wehrmacht)

Ritterkreuzträger of 32. Infanterie-Division (Pommersche Division)


The 32. Infanterie-Division, also known as the Pommersche Division due to its recruiting base in Pomerania, was formed on 1 October 1936 in Köslin within Wehrkreis II under the initial command of Generalleutnant Nikolaus von Falkenhorst as a standard first-wave infantry formation consisting of Infanterie-Regimenter 4, 94, and 136, Artillerie-Regiment 32, along with reconnaissance, anti-tank, engineer, and supply units typical of the Wehrmacht's Heer. Mobilized on 1 August 1939, it participated in the invasion of Poland as part of the Fourth Army, advancing rapidly from the border near Preußisch Friedland to the Vistula River at Kulm, crossing the Drewenz at Gollup, encircling Modlin Fortress, and contributing to operations around Warsaw-Praga. In 1940 it fought in the Battle of France, crossing the Meuse at Givet, pushing through Belgian and French defenses to Cambrai, La Bassée, and Lille while overcoming resistance from North African and British units, then advancing across the Somme and Seine rivers toward the Loire near Nantes during Fall Rot, before relocating to the Cotentin Peninsula in preparation for the canceled Operation Sea Lion. Transferred to East Prussia in October 1940 and slightly reorganized with transfers to other divisions, it joined Operation Barbarossa in 1941 as part of Army Group North, seeing heavy action in the northern sector before becoming trapped in the Demyansk Pocket in the winter of 1941-1942 alongside other units, enduring encirclement and supply shortages until relief, after which several battalions were disbanded due to casualties. The division continued defensive operations in the Demjansk and Staraja Russa areas, later withdrawing to the Courland Pocket in 1944-1945 where it engaged in desperate battles against Soviet forces, before being evacuated by the Kriegsmarine and finally surrendering on the Hel Peninsula on 8 May 1945 under commanders including notable figures such as Wilhelm Wegener and Hans Boeckh-Behrens, having exemplified the endurance and attrition faced by German infantry divisions on the Eastern Front throughout the war.

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General der Infanterie Wilhelm Wegener (1895-1944) was a highly decorated German officer who rose through the ranks of the Wehrmacht during the Second World War, ultimately commanding major formations on the Eastern Front before his death in action. Born in Trebatsch, Brandenburg, Wegener served in the First World War with Grenadier-Regiment Graf Gneisenau (Pommersches Nr. 2) Nr. 9, was taken prisoner by the British in 1916, and later joined the Reichswehr, advancing steadily to become Adjutant of the 32. Infanterie-Division by the late 1930s. At the outbreak of war he served as Adjutant of the II. Armeekorps before assuming command of Infanterie-Regiment 94 of the 32. Infanterie-Division in July 1940. During Operation Barbarossa with Heeresgruppe Nord, his regiment distinguished itself in heavy fighting; on 24 July 1941, when three Soviet divisions struck the division’s left flank at dawn while it was in marching formation, Wegener’s men repelled the main assault and then hunted down infiltrating enemy groups in fierce forest battles, saving the divisional staff from being overrun. Further successes during the attack on Cholm, the defense of its bridgehead, and defensive operations east of Demyansk earned him the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 27 October 1941 as Oberst and commander of Infanterie-Regiment 94. In early 1942, with his regiment encircled in the Kessel von Demjansk, Wegener led a determined counterattack in the Watolino sector after Soviet forces captured Medyanki; using Bataillon Stuppi he recaptured the village in bitter house-to-house fighting on 15 January 1942, destroying a Soviet regiment and preventing a breakthrough that would have isolated Infanterie-Regiment 418, actions that brought him the 66th Eichenlaub on 19 January 1942 while still an Oberst. Promoted through Generalmajor and Generalleutnant, he briefly commanded the 32. Infanterie-Division before taking charge of the L. Armeekorps in September 1943 as General der Infanterie, leading it through grueling withdrawal battles from the Leningrad front across the Luga and Pleskau to Livland. In August and September 1944, as commander of the Wegener group comprising the L., X. Armee and VI. SS-Armee-Korps, he masterfully repelled repeated Soviet attacks in the Modohn area and stabilized the frontline, feats recognized with the 97th Schwerter on 17 September 1944. Just days later, on 24 September 1944 near Wolmar (Valmiera), Latvia, General der Infanterie Wilhelm Wegener was killed by Soviet ground-attack aircraft while returning from the front to his headquarters; Berlin radio announced his “hero’s death” on the Eastern Front two days afterward.



Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/32nd_Infantry_Division_(Wehrmacht)

Ritterkreuzträger of 5. Panzer-Division


The 5. Panzer-Division, formed on 15 November 1938 in Oppeln (now Opole) as part of the second wave of German armored units with personnel primarily drawn from Silesians and Sudeten Germans, emerged as one of the Wehrmacht's reliable panzer formations throughout World War II, initially equipped with two panzer regiments (Panzer-Regiment 15 and 31) alongside supporting Schützen-Brigade 5, reconnaissance, artillery, and pioneer elements that evolved over time into a more streamlined structure centered on Panzer-Regiment 31 by 1943. It saw limited action in the 1939 invasion of Poland as part of the southern thrust toward Lwów during the Battle of Lwów, but played a prominent role in the 1940 Western campaign, advancing through Belgium toward Lille, participating in the Battle of Dunkirk, pushing south to capture Brest on 19 June, and reaching near the French-Spanish border before occupying France until early 1941, during which it contributed one regiment to form the 11. Panzer-Division. Transferred to the Balkans in 1941, the division advanced through southern Yugoslavia into Greece, engaging in heavy combat against the 2nd New Zealand Division, before redeploying northward for Operation Barbarossa as part of Army Group Centre, where it spearheaded the drive on Moscow, advancing to within 34 km of the city only to be halted and forced into retreat by the Soviet winter counteroffensive of December 1941, thereafter holding defensive lines through the harsh winter of 1941-42. Remaining with Army Group Centre and avoiding the southern thrust of Case Blue, it endured grueling defensive battles around Rzhev, participated indirectly in the post-Kursk withdrawals without leading the offensive itself, and continued retreating through Poland amid Operation Bagration in 1944, which devastated much of its parent formations, before shifting briefly to Courland and East Prussia. Trapped on the Samland peninsula in April 1945, elements were evacuated by the German Navy to surrender to Western Allies, while the remainder capitulated to Soviet forces in the final days of the war on 8 May 1945, having earned a reputation among Soviet opponents as one of the most formidable German units to avoid direct engagement when possible until the collapse of Army Group Centre. Under successive commanders including Heinrich von Vietinghoff, Joachim Lemelsen, Gustav Fehn, and Karl Decker, the 5. Panzer-Division exemplified the blend of offensive élan in early blitzkrieg victories and resilient defensive tenacity on the Eastern Front, reflecting the broader trajectory of Germany's armored forces from rapid conquests to protracted attrition.

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RITTERKREUZTRÄGER


General der Panzertruppe Hermann Breith (1892-1964), born on 7 May 1892 in Pirmasens and died on 3 September 1964 in Pech district of Wachtberg, was a German officer who rose to the rank of General der Panzertruppe in the Wehrmacht during World War II, commanding key armored formations including the 5. Panzer-Brigade, the 3. Panzer-Division, and ultimately the III. Panzerkorps. He earned the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 3 June 1940 as Oberst and Kommandeur of the 5. Panzer-Brigade within the 5. Panzer-Division for his leadership in the campaign in the West, where near Merdorp on 13 May 1940 his brigade bloodily repelled the first major French armored formation encountered, destroying over thirty enemy tanks amid heavy defensive fire through exemplary attacking spirit and personal example despite being wounded himself. Breith received the 69th Eichenlaub on 31 January 1942 as Generalmajor and Kommandeur of the 3. Panzer-Division for decisively eliminating a Soviet penetration north of Kursk near Butyrki—Judinka—Stakanowo, inflicting heavy losses on the enemy and forcing their withdrawal across the Tim river during intense defensive fighting on the Eastern Front. Finally, the 48th Schwerter were awarded to him on 21 February 1944 as General der Panzertruppe and Kommandierender General of the III. Panzerkorps for his outstanding command during the relief operation of the Cherkassy pocket, where his corps—comprising several Heer divisions and one Waffen-SS formation—fought through successive enemy positions to reach just west of the encircled Kampfgruppe Stemmermann, drawing the bulk of Soviet forces onto itself while Breith repeatedly demonstrated personal bravery by intervening at critical combat hotspots from the foremost lines, showcasing skillful leadership that enabled the breakthrough under extreme pressure. Throughout his career, which began in 1910 and spanned both world wars, Breith exemplified the aggressive yet adaptive tactics of the Panzertruppe, contributing significantly to major operations before his capture by American forces in May 1945 and subsequent release in 1947.



Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/5th_Panzer_Division_(Wehrmacht)

Ritterkreuzträger of Zerstörergeschwader 76 (ZG 76)


Zerstörergeschwader 76 (ZG 76), a Luftwaffe heavy fighter wing formed on 1 May 1939 from elements of Zerstörergeschwader 144 and operating primarily the Messerschmitt Bf 110 (with early use of the Bf 109 in some Gruppen redesignated as Jagdgruppe 176), embodied the Zerstörer concept of long-range escort and ground-attack operations championed by Hermann Göring throughout World War II. Equipped with the twin-engine Bf 110, its I. Gruppe participated in the Invasion of Poland in September 1939, providing fighter escort for bomber units and claiming numerous Polish aircraft while conducting close air support; during the Phoney War it defended the North Sea coast and played a key role in the Battle of the Heligoland Bight on 18 December 1939, where I./ZG 76 claimed several Vickers Wellingtons, contributing to the RAF's shift to night bombing. In April 1940 the wing supported the invasions of Denmark and Norway, securing airfields and engaging Allied aircraft, before committing fully to the Battle of Belgium, Battle of France, and Battle of Britain from May to October 1940, where its Gruppen flew escort missions for Stukas and bombers but suffered mounting losses against RAF fighters, highlighting the Bf 110's vulnerabilities in contested airspace. Elements of ZG 76 later operated in the Balkans, including the invasions of Yugoslavia and Greece as well as the Battle of Crete in 1941, while others served in the early Defence of the Reich over the occupied Low Countries; most Gruppen were disbanded by late 1941 after extensive action on multiple fronts. Reformed in 1943 under commanders such as Oberstleutnant Theodor Rossiwall and later Robert Kowalewski, ZG 76 was tasked with intercepting unescorted USAAF bomber formations over Germany using Bf 110 and Me 410 aircraft, achieving some successes with heavy armament and rockets before the arrival of long-range American fighter escorts in 1944 inflicted devastating casualties. Operations were progressively scaled down, leading to the wing's final disbandment in September 1944, with surviving pilots and personnel transferred to the single-engine Jagdgeschwader 76; throughout its existence ZG 76, with Geschwaderkennung M8 and notable shark-mouth nose art on many Bf 110s, compiled an impressive but costly record across Poland, Scandinavia, Western Europe, the Mediterranean, and the Reich defence, underscoring both the initial promise and ultimate limitations of the Zerstörer role in evolving air warfare.

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RITTERKREUZTRÄGER


Hauptmann Rolf Kaldrack (1913-1942), born on 25 June 1913 in Stargard, Pomerania, in the German Empire and killed in action on 3 February 1942 south of Toropets in the Soviet Union at the age of 28, was a highly decorated Luftwaffe fighter ace and Zerstörer pilot who rose to command major units during the early years of World War II. Initially serving in the Kriegsmarine before transferring to the Luftwaffe in 1935, he flew as an aerial observer with Aufklärungsgruppe 88 of the Condor Legion during the Spanish Civil War, claiming three aerial victories and earning the Spanienkreuz in Gold mit Schwertern. In the opening phases of the war he achieved his first confirmed victory over a Vickers Wellington during the Battle of the Heligoland Bight in December 1939 while flying with Jagdgruppe 101 (later integrated into Zerstörergeschwader units), received the Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse the following day, and progressed through commands including as Staffelkapitän and eventually Gruppenkommandeur. He was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 2 November 1940 as Hauptmann and Gruppenkommandeur of III./Zerstörergeschwader 76 after accumulating 11 aerial victories, reflecting his leadership and combat successes across the Battle of France, the Battle of Britain (including claims against Hawker Hurricanes while supporting Stuka operations), and defensive missions off Norway. Transferred with his Gruppe to become II./Schnellkampfgeschwader 210, Kaldrack led aggressive fighter-bomber and escort operations during Operation Barbarossa on the Eastern Front, claiming further victories including against Polikarpov I-16s and adding at least ten more aerial kills in support of Army Group Centre amid intense low-level attacks on Soviet airfields and ground targets. For his outstanding leadership of the Gruppe and these additional successes on the Eastern Front he was posthumously awarded the 70th Eichenlaub to the Ritterkreuz on 9 February 1942 (along with the Deutsches Kreuz in Gold days earlier), becoming the first Zerstörer pilot so honored; he met his end when, after downing a Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-1, his Messerschmitt Bf 110 E-1 collided with the wreckage, claiming the lives of both Kaldrack and his gunner Unteroffizier Martin Enke during the Toropets–Kholm offensive. Credited overall with approximately 24 aerial victories (including three from Spain).



Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zerst%C3%B6rergeschwader_76

Ritterkreuzträger of Zerstörerflieger (Fighter-Bomber Pilot)


The Luftwaffe's Zerstörer units, primarily equipped with the twin-engined Messerschmitt Bf 110 heavy fighter (Zerstörer, or "destroyer"), were conceived in the 1930s as long-range escort fighters and bomber destroyers intended to clear the skies ahead of the Kampfflieger and provide potent firepower with forward-firing armament of up to two 20 mm MG FF cannons and four 7.92 mm MG 17 machine guns, plus a rear defensive MG 15 or later MG 81Z. Organized into Zerstörergeschwader such as ZG 1, ZG 2, ZG 26, ZG 76, and later elements absorbed into Schnellkampfgeschwader like SKG 210, these Gruppen saw early successes in the Polish Campaign, the Battle of France, and the Norwegian Campaign, where their range and heavy armament allowed effective ground-attack and escort roles. During the Battle of Britain, however, the Bf 110's lack of agility against nimble RAF Hurricanes and Spitfires exposed its vulnerabilities in daylight fighter-versus-fighter combat, leading to heavy losses and a shift toward fighter-bomber (Jabo) duties and coastal defense. On the Eastern Front from Operation Barbarossa onward, Zerstörer units excelled in low-level strafing, interdiction, and close air support against Soviet forces, claiming numerous ground kills and aerial victories while operating in vast theaters, though attrition from flak, fighters, and the harsh environment mounted steadily. As the war progressed, many Bf 110 Gruppen transitioned to the night fighter (Nachtjäger) role within the Nachtjagdgeschwader, becoming the backbone of Germany's defense against RAF Bomber Command with radar, Schräge Musik upward-firing cannons, and successes by aces like Heinz-Wolfgang Schnaufer; upgraded variants like the Bf 110G carried heavier armament including 30 mm MK 108 cannons and rockets for anti-bomber operations against the USAAF's daylight raids. Despite attempts at replacements such as the troubled Me 210 and the improved Me 410 Hornisse, the Bf 110 soldiered on until 1945, but by 1944 the Zerstörer wings suffered catastrophic losses to long-range Allied escort fighters like the P-51 Mustang, which outmaneuvered and outranged them, contributing to the collapse of Luftwaffe daylight defenses and the broader erosion of German air superiority. Ultimately, while Zerstörer units delivered valuable multi-role service in diverse theaters—from Blitzkrieg breakthroughs to desperate Reichsverteidigung—they highlighted the limitations of pre-war heavy fighter doctrine against evolving enemy tactics and superior production.

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EICHENLAUBTRÄGER


Hauptmann Rolf Kaldrack (1913-1942), born on 25 June 1913 in Stargard, Pomerania, in the German Empire and killed in action on 3 February 1942 south of Toropets in the Soviet Union at the age of 28, was a highly decorated Luftwaffe fighter ace and Zerstörer pilot who rose to command major units during the early years of World War II. Initially serving in the Kriegsmarine before transferring to the Luftwaffe in 1935, he flew as an aerial observer with Aufklärungsgruppe 88 of the Condor Legion during the Spanish Civil War, claiming three aerial victories and earning the Spanienkreuz in Gold mit Schwertern. In the opening phases of the war he achieved his first confirmed victory over a Vickers Wellington during the Battle of the Heligoland Bight in December 1939 while flying with Jagdgruppe 101 (later integrated into Zerstörergeschwader units), received the Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse the following day, and progressed through commands including as Staffelkapitän and eventually Gruppenkommandeur. He was awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 2 November 1940 as Hauptmann and Gruppenkommandeur of III./Zerstörergeschwader 76 after accumulating 11 aerial victories, reflecting his leadership and combat successes across the Battle of France, the Battle of Britain (including claims against Hawker Hurricanes while supporting Stuka operations), and defensive missions off Norway. Transferred with his Gruppe to become II./Schnellkampfgeschwader 210, Kaldrack led aggressive fighter-bomber and escort operations during Operation Barbarossa on the Eastern Front, claiming further victories including against Polikarpov I-16s and adding at least ten more aerial kills in support of Army Group Centre amid intense low-level attacks on Soviet airfields and ground targets. For his outstanding leadership of the Gruppe and these additional successes on the Eastern Front he was posthumously awarded the 70th Eichenlaub to the Ritterkreuz on 9 February 1942 (along with the Deutsches Kreuz in Gold days earlier), becoming the first Zerstörer pilot so honored; he met his end when, after downing a Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-1, his Messerschmitt Bf 110 E-1 collided with the wreckage, claiming the lives of both Kaldrack and his gunner Unteroffizier Martin Enke during the Toropets–Kholm offensive. Credited overall with approximately 24 aerial victories (including three from Spain).



Source :
https://wiki.warthunder.com/5924-the-destroyer-destroyed-the-zerst-rer-escort-fighter-idea-and-why-it-was-fatally-flawed

Saturday, July 11, 2026

Ritterkreuzträger of 137. Infanterie-Division


The 137. Infanterie-Division was formed on 10 October 1940 at Truppenübungsplatz Döllersheim as part of the 11. Welle (wave) of the Wehrmacht, drawing personnel primarily from replacement units in the Krumau area, and was structured as a standard infantry division with Grenadier-Regimenter 447, 448, and 449, Artillerie-Regiment 137, Pionier-Bataillon 137, Panzerjäger-Abteilung 137, and supporting reconnaissance, signals, and supply elements. Under initial command of Generalleutnant Friedrich Bergmann, it first entered combat during Operation Barbarossa in June 1941 as part of Army Group Centre, advancing through the Białowieża Forest and participating in the push toward Orscha and the Smolensk region, where it faced intense Soviet resistance in dense woodlands and conducted blocking actions against retreating enemy forces. Throughout 1941 and 1942, the division remained on the central sector of the Eastern Front, enduring heavy defensive fighting around the Dnieper River, participating in operations near Vyazma and Rzhev during the winter crises, and suffering significant attrition from Soviet counteroffensives, partisan activity, and harsh weather conditions. By mid-1943, cumulative losses had reduced its strength dramatically, leading to the consolidation into only two grenadier regiments and a division battalion by November 1943; it was subsequently withdrawn from the line, officially disbanded on 2 November 1943, with its remaining troops reorganized into Division Group 137 subordinated to Korps-Abteilung E under Army Group Centre, while its staff was repurposed for the 271. Infanterie-Division. Commanders included notable figures such as Hans Kamecke and Egon von Neindorff in its final phases, and the unit's history exemplified the grinding attrition faced by German infantry formations on the Ostfront, contributing to key holding actions but ultimately succumbing to the unsustainable manpower demands of prolonged warfare.

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EICHENLAUBTRÄGER


Major Karl-Heinz Noak (1916-1978) was a highly decorated officer in the Wehrmacht during World War II who later served as an Oberst in the Bundeswehr. Born in Berlin, he joined the Panzerabwehr-Abteilung 3 in October 1936 and was commissioned Leutnant in Panzerabwehr-Abteilung 4 by April 1939, later serving as Zugführer in the 2./Panzerjäger-Abteilung 46 of the 44. Infanterie-Division. He earned the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 5 August 1940 for extraordinary bravery and prudent leadership during the Battle of France, when his actions were crucial in securing a bridgehead across the Loire River at Beaugency using the still-intact bridge. Under the heaviest enemy fire, Noak advanced metre by metre with his Pak gun across the bridge, then launched a bold thrust on the opposite bank with a strong patrol, capturing a bitterly defending French company along with numerous machine guns, anti-tank guns, and a field gun—an achievement of decisive importance for operations on the southern bank in mid-June 1940. Transferred to the Eastern Front with the 137. Infanterie-Division, Noak, now Oberleutnant and Chef of the 1./Panzerjäger-Abteilung 137, received the Eichenlaub (63rd award) on 16 January 1942 for his outstanding leadership on 26–27 June 1941 near Białowieża. Tasked with blocking the sole Soviet retreat road through dense forests with his lead company from Pionier-Bataillon 137, reinforced by troops from Infanterie-Regiment 448, his unit faced the main Soviet withdrawal alone due to a positioning error. Acting as a lone wave breaker amid the flow of retreating forces, Noak's company held firm in intense combat through his exemplary command, preventing the enemy breakout and contributing significantly to the division's advance. He later commanded schwere Panzerjäger-Abteilung 654, earning the Deutsches Kreuz in Gold on 6 January 1945, and survived the war to continue his military career in the postwar Bundeswehr until his death in Koblenz.



Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/137th_Infantry_Division_(Wehrmacht)

Ritterkreuzträger of Panzerjäger (Tank Hunter)


German Panzerjäger, the specialized anti-tank forces of the Wehrmacht during World War II, evolved from towed anti-tank gun units known initially as Panzerabwehr into a critical component of combined-arms defense and mobile warfare, encompassing both motorized Panzerjäger-Abteilungen equipped with Pak guns such as the 3.7 cm Pak 36, 5 cm Pak 38, and powerful 7.5 cm Pak 40, as well as self-propelled tank destroyers like the Marder series, Nashorn, Jagdpanzer IV, Hetzer, and heavily armed Jagdpanther and Jagdtiger. Organized at divisional level as Panzerjäger-Abteilungen often including companies of towed guns, Sturmgeschütz assault guns, and later dedicated Jagdpanzer vehicles, or as independent battalions and brigades assigned to corps and armies for flexible deployment, these units were tasked with countering enemy armor by engaging from concealed positions, ambushes, or defilade, frequently cooperating with infantry and Panzer forces where tanks would draw fire to expose targets for flanking shots. Early successes in the Blitzkrieg campaigns of 1939-1941 relied on the light 3.7 cm Pak, but the shock of encountering superior Soviet T-34 and KV tanks during Operation Barbarossa in 1941 forced rapid adaptation, leading to up-gunned vehicles on captured chassis and the development of casemate-style tank destroyers that offered potent firepower at lower cost and silhouette than full turrets, though often at the expense of limited traverse, thin side armor, and crew vulnerability in open-top designs. By 1943-1945, Panzerjäger played increasingly defensive roles on the Eastern and Western Fronts, excelling in delaying actions, urban combat support with high-explosive rounds against bunkers and infantry, and elite heavy battalions like schwere Panzerjäger-Abteilungen that achieved remarkable kill ratios with vehicles such as the Ferdinand/Elefant and Jagdtiger, yet suffered from chronic shortages, mechanical unreliability, fuel constraints, and Allied air superiority that limited their mobility and effectiveness in the war's final desperate campaigns.

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HEER


Major Karl-Heinz Noak (1916-1978) was a highly decorated officer in the Wehrmacht during World War II who later served as an Oberst in the Bundeswehr. Born in Berlin, he joined the Panzerabwehr-Abteilung 3 in October 1936 and was commissioned Leutnant in Panzerabwehr-Abteilung 4 by April 1939, later serving as Zugführer in the 2./Panzerjäger-Abteilung 46 of the 44. Infanterie-Division. He earned the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 5 August 1940 for extraordinary bravery and prudent leadership during the Battle of France, when his actions were crucial in securing a bridgehead across the Loire River at Beaugency using the still-intact bridge. Under the heaviest enemy fire, Noak advanced metre by metre with his Pak gun across the bridge, then launched a bold thrust on the opposite bank with a strong patrol, capturing a bitterly defending French company along with numerous machine guns, anti-tank guns, and a field gun—an achievement of decisive importance for operations on the southern bank in mid-June 1940. Transferred to the Eastern Front with the 137. Infanterie-Division, Noak, now Oberleutnant and Chef of the 1./Panzerjäger-Abteilung 137, received the Eichenlaub (63rd award) on 16 January 1942 for his outstanding leadership on 26–27 June 1941 near Białowieża. Tasked with blocking the sole Soviet retreat road through dense forests with his lead company from Pionier-Bataillon 137, reinforced by troops from Infanterie-Regiment 448, his unit faced the main Soviet withdrawal alone due to a positioning error. Acting as a lone wave breaker amid the flow of retreating forces, Noak's company held firm in intense combat through his exemplary command, preventing the enemy breakout and contributing significantly to the division's advance. He later commanded schwere Panzerjäger-Abteilung 654, earning the Deutsches Kreuz in Gold on 6 January 1945, and survived the war to continue his military career in the postwar Bundeswehr until his death in Koblenz.



Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panzerj%C3%A4ger

Ritterkreuzträger of 8. Panzer-Division


The 8. Panzer-Division was a Wehrmacht armored formation formed in October 1939 by reorganizing the 3. leichte Division, initially equipped with a mix of Panzer II, Panzer 38(t), and other vehicles under Panzer-Regiment 8, and it went on to participate in nearly every major theater of the Second World War from the invasion of France through the grueling campaigns on the Eastern Front until its eventual surrender in 1945. In May 1940, as part of XXXXI. Armeekorps in Panzergruppe Guderian, the division spearheaded breakthroughs during the Battle of France, notably contributing to the crossings of the Meuse River and the subsequent encirclement and destruction of French 1st and 7th Armies, before occupying positions in France until early 1941. It then saw action in the Balkans Campaign in April 1941 as part of the rapid thrust into Yugoslavia, after which it was transferred east for Operation Barbarossa in June 1941 with LVI. Panzerkorps under Panzergruppe 4 of Army Group North, advancing aggressively toward Leningrad through the Baltic states, seizing key bridges and engaging in heavy fighting around Lake Ilmen and the Volkhov River while suffering mounting attrition. Throughout 1942 and 1943 the division remained on the northern and central sectors, playing a key role in the relief of the Kholm Pocket, defensive battles near Orel during the Soviet summer offensives, and the grueling withdrawals of Army Group Centre amid manpower shortages and equipment losses, before shifting south to Army Group South where it conducted repeated retrograde operations through Ukraine, counterattacks in Hungary, and final desperate stands in Silesia as part of efforts to stem the Soviet advance into the Reich. By early 1945, reduced to a shadow of its former strength with ad-hoc Kampfgruppen, the 8. Panzer-Division continued fighting in Upper Silesia and Moravia until it capitulated to Soviet forces near Olomouc in May 1945, having exemplified the mobility and striking power of German panzer units in early blitzkrieg victories while enduring the attritional realities of prolonged defensive warfare on the Ostfront.

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EICHENLAUBTRÄGER


Oberst Hans Freiherr von Wolff (1903-1944), born on 6 March 1903 in Lindenberg near Riga as Johann-Gottlieb Erich Viktor Alexander Joseph Freiherr von Wolff into a Baltic German noble family, rose through the ranks of the Wehrmacht to become a highly decorated officer who commanded armored and cavalry formations during the Second World War before succumbing to wounds on 20 June 1944 in a field hospital near Brest in the Soviet Union. Entering military service in 1922, he transferred from early SS-Reiter units to the Heer, serving as Rittmeister and later Hauptmann commanding the I. Bataillon of Schützen-Regiment 28 (part of the 8. Panzer-Division) in Panzergruppe 4 during Operation Barbarossa. His Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes was awarded on 13 July 1940 as Hauptmann for exceptional personal bravery and leadership in the Battle of France, where he repeatedly led his battalion from the front lines with weapon in hand, most notably capturing the strongly defended commanding hilltop position at Chaumont on 14 June 1940 despite intense opposition. The Eichenlaub zum Ritterkreuz followed on 16 January 1942 as the 61st recipient while still a Hauptmann, recognizing his battalion’s critical achievements as the spearhead of Kampfgruppe B: seizing the intact bridge at Rusenika on 22 June 1941 to enable the division’s rapid advance toward Rossitten, the capture of Pogostje and Maluksa on 15 September 1941, and sustained successes during the push toward Tikhvin in October 1941 amid fierce Soviet resistance. Later promoted to Oberst and commanding cavalry and Cossack units including elements of the Kosakenreiterbrigade, Wolff continued frontline service until his death from injuries sustained during a training exercise.



Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/8th_Panzer_Division
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/Gliederungen/Panzerdivisionen/8PD.htm

Ritterkreuzträger of 73. Infanterie-Division


The 73. Infanterie-Division was formed on 26 August 1939 as part of the second wave of mobilization by the Wehrmacht, drawing personnel primarily from the 17. Infanterie-Division in the Württemberg-Baden region, and it quickly became a semi-motorized infantry formation consisting of the 170th, 186th, and 213th Infantry Regiments along with supporting artillery, engineer, reconnaissance, and antitank units, earning the nickname Kleist Division. Shortly after activation it served as a reserve unit with Army Group North during the invasion of Poland in September 1939, seeing limited initial combat before being redeployed. In 1941 the division participated in the Balkans Campaign, fighting in the Greek Campaign and operations against Yugoslavia, before being transferred to the Eastern Front where it joined the 11th Army under General der Infanterie Erich von Manstein and played a significant role in the Crimean Campaign, including the intense assaults on the Perekop isthmus and the Tartar Ditch in late 1941, followed by heavy fighting during the siege and capture of Sevastopol in 1942. It remained engaged in the southern sector of the Eastern Front through defensive battles in the Kuban bridgehead and the retreat across southern Russia, suffering heavy losses but maintaining cohesion until the spring of 1944 when it was trapped in the Crimea and largely destroyed during the Soviet reconquest of Sevastopol in May 1944. Reformed in Hungary on 16 June 1944 from replacement units, the division was rushed to the central sector to counter the Soviet summer offensive, fighting around Warsaw in July and August 1944 where it was mauled by the Red Army's 2nd Guards Tank Army and further decimated in September during the Soviet assault on the Praga suburb of Warsaw; it was reformed once more and continued operations with the 9th Army, holding positions with a strength of about 10,782 men as of 1 January 1945 before being committed to the defense of Danzig in early 1945, where it was finally destroyed in the fierce fighting for the city, with surviving staff officers perishing aboard the evacuation ship Goya when it was sunk on 17 April 1945. Throughout its existence the 73. Infanterie-Division exemplified the typical experience of second-wave Wehrmacht infantry units, transitioning from offensive operations in 1939-1942 to grueling defensive actions marked by repeated near-destructions and rebuilds amid the shifting tides of the war on multiple fronts.

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EICHENLAUBTRÄGER


General der Infanterie Otto Hitzfeld (1898-1990) was a highly decorated German officer who served in both World War I and World War II, rising through the ranks to command major formations on the Eastern and Western Fronts before ending the war as commander of the 11th Army. Born in Schluchsee in the German Empire, Hitzfeld saw extensive combat experience starting in 1914 and continued his career in the Reichswehr and Wehrmacht. He earned his Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 30 October 1941 as Oberstleutnant and commander of Infanterie-Regiment 213 for his outstanding leadership during the German breakthrough at the Perekop isthmus in the Crimea; his regiment played a pivotal role in the assault, breaching deep Soviet defensive positions up to the Tartar ditch amid heavy fighting on 24-25 September 1941, which triggered the collapse of other Soviet lines in the sector. Just months later, on 17 January 1942, he received the 65th Eichenlaub as Oberstleutnant still commanding Infanterie-Regiment 213, in recognition of the regiment's exceptional defensive performance against massive Soviet assaults during the brutal winter fighting in the Crimea in 1941/42. Hitzfeld went on to command the 102nd Infantry Division, serve as an instructor at the infantry school in Döberitz, and later lead the LXVII. Armeekorps in the Ardennes Offensive (Battle of the Bulge); promoted to General der Infanterie on 1 March 1945, he was reportedly awarded the 158th Schwerter on 9 May 1945 as commanding general of the LXVII. Armeekorps for his continued leadership in the final defensive operations on the Western Front. In April 1945 he briefly commanded the 11th Army, declaring Göttingen an open city to protect refugees before his capture by American forces on 19 April 1945; released in 1947, he learned of his Swords award only after the war. Hitzfeld, uncle of the renowned football manager Ottmar Hitzfeld, died in Dossenheim in 1990 at the age of 92.



Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/73rd_Infantry_Division_(Wehrmacht)

Ritterkreuzträger of 16. Panzer-Division


The 16. Panzer-Division, formed in November 1940 from the veteran 16th Infantry Division in Wehrkreis VI with its garrison initially in Münster and later Wuppertal, emerged as one of the Wehrmacht's premier armoured formations under the command of Generalmajor Hans-Valentin Hube, incorporating the 2. Panzer-Regiment from the 1. Panzer-Division and standard elements including the 64. and 79. Panzergrenadier-Regimenter, 16. Panzer-Artillerie-Regiment, reconnaissance, engineer, and anti-tank battalions. Deployed to the southern sector for Operation Barbarossa in June 1941, it spearheaded advances through Ukraine, distinguishing itself in the Battle of Brody where it helped destroy hundreds of Soviet tanks, the massive encirclement at Kiev that netted over 600,000 prisoners, and subsequent drives toward the Sea of Azov and Kharkov, enduring harsh winter defensive fighting and anti-partisan operations around Stalino while maintaining high combat effectiveness through aggressive combined-arms tactics. In summer 1942 as part of Case Blue, the division thrust toward Stalingrad, reaching the Volga River north of the city on 23 August and anchoring the northern flank, but it suffered catastrophic attrition, reduced to about 4,000 men by mid-November; caught in Operation Uranus, most of the division was trapped in the Stalingrad pocket, where it was virtually annihilated by February 1943, with its final commander Generalleutnant Günther von Angern committing suicide upon surrender. Reformed in Brittany in March 1943 from survivors and new recruits, the rebuilt 16. Panzer-Division deployed to Italy in June, fighting tenaciously against the Allied landings at Salerno under Generalmajor Rudolf Sieckenius - inflicting heavy casualties despite naval gunfire losses - before participating in the defensive retreat up the peninsula until November. Transferred back to the Eastern Front, it engaged in mobile operations across the southern sector, contributing to the relief attempts at the Korsun-Cherkassy Pocket in early 1944 and breaking out of the Kamenets-Podolsky encirclement as part of the 1. Panzer-Armee, then conducting rearguard actions during the retreat through Poland, anti-partisan sweeps, and final battles in Silesia and Czechoslovakia. By May 1945, fragmented elements surrendered to Soviet and American forces in Czechoslovakia after desperate efforts to reach Western lines, having fought on nearly every major front with extraordinary resilience but at the cost of repeated near-destruction and heavy personnel losses.

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EICHENLAUBTRÄGER


Generaloberst Hans-Valentin Hube (29 October 1890 – 21 April 1944) was a highly decorated German commander renowned for his leadership of armoured forces throughout World War II, rising from command of the 16. Panzer-Division to Oberbefehlshaber of the 1. Panzer-Armee despite having lost his left arm in World War I combat at Verdun. As Generalmajor and Kommandeur of the 16. Panzer-Division during Operation Barbarossa in 1941, he earned the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 1 August for a decisive breakthrough near Stary-Konstantynow, where he halted powerful Soviet tank, artillery, and infantry advances northwest of the town through aggressive armoured thrusts and resolute defense. He received the Eichenlaub on 16 January 1942 as the 62nd recipient for his division’s critical role in the capture of Nikolajew and the encirclement battle of Kiev. Promoted to General der Panzertruppe and commanding the XIV. Panzer-Korps at Stalingrad, Hube was awarded the Schwerter on 21 December 1942 as the 22nd recipient for his bold advance to the Volga north of the city and tenacious defense against repeated Soviet counterattacks amid Operation Uranus. Later transferred to the Mediterranean, he masterfully commanded Gruppe Hube in Sicily during Operation Husky, organizing the Etna Line defense and successful evacuation of most German forces to the mainland, followed by determined resistance at Salerno. Recalled to the Eastern Front as commander of the 1. Panzer-Armee, he orchestrated the dramatic breakout of the “Wandering Pocket” from the Kamenets-Podolsky encirclement in March–April 1944, extricating roughly 200,000 troops despite being surrounded by superior Soviet forces, actions for which Hitler personally awarded him the Brillanten on 20 April 1944 as the 13th recipient—along with promotion to Generaloberst—before Hube perished the next day in a Heinkel He 111 air crash near Obersalzberg. Known affectionately as “der Mensch” or “Papa Hube,” he exemplified frontline leadership and tactical brilliance across Poland, France, the Soviet Union, and Italy.



Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/16th_Panzer_Division