Sunday, April 12, 2026

Bio of Generalmajor d.R. Werner Mummert (1897-1950)


Full name: Karl Julius Reingard Werner Mummert
Nickname: No information

Date of Birth: 31.03.1897 - Lüttewitz, Sachsen (German Empire)
Date of Death: 28.01.1950 - POW camp Schuja (Soviet Union)

Battles and Operations: Weltkrieg I, Polenfeldzug, Westfeldzug, Ostfront, Schlacht um Rschew, Kesselschlacht von Tscherkassy, Kurlandkessel, Schlacht um die Seelower Höhen, Schlacht um Berlin

NSDAP-Number: 1.004.990 (1932)
SS-Number: 340.759 (1939)
Religion: No information
Parents: No information
Siblings: No information
Spouse: No information
Children: No information

Promotions:
22.05.1916 Vizewachtmeister der Reserve
22.05.1916 Leutnant der Reserve
18.08.1917 Leutnant
1936 Oberleutnant der Reserve
1938 Rittmeister der Reserve
01.09.1939 SS-Sturmbannführer
1941 Hauptmann der Reserve
01.12.1941 Major der Reserve
18.09.1942 Oberstleutnant der Reserve
01.09.1943 SS-Obersturmbannführer
01.02.1944 Oberst der Reserve
01.02.1944 SS-Standartenführer
01.02.1945 Generalmajor der Reserve

Career:
1914 Kriegsfreiwilliger
22.05.1916 - 12.1918 2. Schweres Regiment, Königlich Sächsisch Karabiner-Regiment Nr. 10 / XIX. Armee-Korps
1917 - 1918 Reiter-Regiment 10
1936 Reaktivierung als Oberleutnant der Reserve im Heer
1938 Versetzung zum Reiter-Regiment 10 als Rittmeister der Reserve
01.09.1939 16. SS-Reiterstandarte
1939 - 1940 Kommandeur Aufklärungs-Abteilung 256 / 256. Infanterie-Division
1940 Kommandeur Aufklärungs-Abteilung 256 nach dem Westfeldzug
1941 - 1942 Führer Aufklärungs-Abteilung 256 an der Ostfront
1942 Führerreserve OKH
1943 Chef Panzeraufklärungs-Abteilung 14 / 14. Panzer-Division
18.01.1944 - 11.1944 Kommandeur Panzergrenadier-Regiment 103 / 14. Panzer-Division
01.09.1944 - 04.09.1944 m.F.b. 14. Panzer-Division
11.1944 Kommandeur Panzer-Brigade 103
21.11.1944 - 19.12.1944 Divisionsführer-Lehrgang 16, Hirschberg
09.03.1945 - 03.05.1945 Kommandeur Panzer-Division Müncheberg
03.05.1945 - 28.01.1950 Kriegsgefangenschaft bei der Roten Armee

Awards and Decorations:
Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse (1914) 1916
Ritterkreuz des Königlich-Sächsischen Militär-St.-Heinrichs-Ordens 16.06.1918
Verwundetenabzeichen in Schwarz (1918) 07.1918
Vapaudenristin 2. luokka (VR 2) 17.08.1918
Ehrenkreuz für Frontkämpfer 1934
Dienstauszeichnung der Wehrmacht 4. Klasse, 4 Jahre 02.10.1936
Dienstauszeichnung der NSDAP 10 Jahre 01.04.1939
Ehrenwinkel der Alten Kämpfer 1939
Medaille zur Erinnerung an den 1. Oktober 1938 1939
1939 Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz 2. Klasse 1914 11.05.1940
Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse 07.07.1940
Infanterie-Sturmabzeichen in Silber 1941
Deutsches Kreuz in Gold 11.01.1942
Ehrenblattspange des Heeres und Waffen-SS 04.05.1942
Nahkampfspange in Bronze 1942
Panzervernichtungsabzeichen in Silber 1942
Panzerkampfabzeichen (ohne Zahl) in Bronze 1942
Medaille Winterschlacht im Osten 1941/42 (Ostmedaille) 1942
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (17.08.1942) as Major der Reserve and Kommandeur Aufklärungs-Abteilung 256 / 256.Infanterie-Division. In the summer of 1942, during the ongoing fighting around the Rzhev salient north of the city, Mummert was leading a Kampfgruppe formed from his reconnaissance battalion. Soviet forces launched a powerful assault aimed at cracking the German defensive ring held by the 9. Armee. From the village of Polunino, just north of Rzhev, Mummert independently ordered and personally directed a swift counterattack. His men, outnumbered and under heavy artillery and infantry pressure, charged across open fields and through Soviet forward positions in a daring thrust that slammed directly into the enemy spearhead. The assault halted the Soviet advance cold, preventing the capture of the vital supply node at Rohow, which served as the logistical lifeline for the entire 9. Armee. Without this action the German front in the Rzhev area would have collapsed. The counterblow restored the line and bought precious time for reinforcements, sealing the breach against overwhelming odds in bitter fighting that exemplified resolute small-unit leadership under extreme conditions.
Verwundetenabzeichen 1939 in Silber 20.08.1943
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #429 (20.03.1944) as Oberstleutnant der Reserve and Kommandeur Panzergrenadier-Regiment 103 / 14.Panzer-Division. Early February 1944 found the 14. Panzer-Division engaged in desperate defensive fighting southwest of Cherkassy near Kirovograd as part of the larger Korsun-Cherkassy Pocket battles. Soviet pressure threatened to tear open the German front and isolate further forces. On 5-6 February Mummert led his Panzergrenadiers in a bold attack beyond the icy stream at Lipjanka, pushing through mud, thawing snow, and heavy enemy fire toward the villages of Meshigorka and Lipjanka. Under constant Soviet artillery and tank-supported assaults, the regiment fought its way forward in close-quarters combat, linking up successfully with elements of the 3. Panzer-Division. This junction re-established a continuous defensive front in the sector, stabilizing the line and preventing a complete rupture that could have doomed the pocket. Mummert’s personal drive and the regiment’s tenacious advance through the chaotic, snow-mantled terrain turned a near-catastrophic breach into a restored defensive position, saving the situation at the height of the encirclement crisis.
Wehrmachtbericht 23.09.1944
SS-Ehrenring 01.10.1944
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #107 (23.10.1944) as Oberst der Reserve and Kommandeur Panzergrenadier-Regiment 103 / 14.Panzer-Division. In the northern sector of the Eastern Front during the late summer and autumn of 1944, as German forces conducted fighting withdrawals toward the Baltic, Mummert’s regiment was heavily engaged in the area around Baldone in Latvia. On 18 September 1944 Soviet attacks threatened to collapse the local German positions. Mummert immediately organized and led a counterattack directed toward Arstes. His Panzergrenadiers, supported by available armor, surged forward through wooded terrain and open ground under intense fire, smashing into the advancing enemy and driving them back in fierce hand-to-hand and anti-tank fighting. The assault stabilized the entire sector in the Germans’ favor, restoring the front and preventing further Soviet penetration. For these actions, along with the regiment’s sustained performance in the preceding weeks of heavy defensive combat, the formation was mentioned in the Wehrmachtbericht of 23 September 1944. The Swords recognized Mummert’s repeated ability to turn threatened withdrawals into successful local counterstrokes at a moment when the entire northern front was under extreme pressure.
Verwundetenabzeichen 1939 in Gold 1944
Ärmelband Kurland 1945

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Werner Mummert, whose full name was Karl Julius Reingard Werner Mummert, was a German officer who rose to the rank of generalmajor der reserve in the Wehrmacht during the Second World War and commanded Panzer Division Müncheberg in the final battles for Berlin. Born on 31 March 1897 in the Saxon village of Lüttewitz within the German Empire, he became a decorated veteran of the First World War before rejoining military service in the 1930s. Mummert earned the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords for repeated acts of decisive leadership on the Eastern Front, where he repeatedly turned threatened sectors into stabilized defensive lines amid overwhelming Soviet pressure. His career spanned service in cavalry and reconnaissance units early in the conflict to commanding armored formations in the war's closing months, culminating in his capture by Soviet forces in May 1945 and death in captivity five years later.

Mummert volunteered for the Saxon Army at the outbreak of the First World War in 1914 and served initially as a war volunteer in the Königlich Sächsisches Karabiner-Regiment Nr. 10. He was commissioned as leutnant der reserve in May 1916 and later transferred to active duty as a full leutnant in 1918. During the fighting of the German Baltic Division in Finland in 1918 he led a platoon that captured a strategically vital road junction at Janakkala on 26 April, an action that earned him the Knight's Cross of the Royal Saxon Military Order of St. Henry from King Friedrich August III on 16 June 1918. He also received both classes of the Iron Cross and the Wound Badge in Black before being discharged from the army in December 1918 at the end of the war.

In the interwar years Mummert initially left military service but maintained ties to nationalist circles by joining the National Socialist German Workers' Party on 1 March 1932 with membership number 1 004 990. He was reactivated in the Wehrmacht in 1936 as an oberleutnant der reserve and promoted to rittmeister der reserve in 1938 while serving with Reiter-Regiment 10. At the beginning of the Second World War he assumed command of Aufklärungs-Abteilung 4 of the 4th Infantry Division, leading the unit through the Polish campaign and the subsequent Western campaign in 1940. He then transferred to command Aufklärungs-Abteilung 256 of the 256th Infantry Division, which he led into the invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941 as part of the ongoing operations on the Eastern Front.

By the summer of 1942 Mummert had been promoted to major der reserve and was operating as commander of a battle group drawn from his reconnaissance battalion in the Rzhev salient north of the city. Soviet forces launched a heavy assault aimed at shattering the German defensive ring held by the Ninth Army. From the village of Polunino Mummert independently directed a swift counterattack across open fields and through enemy forward positions, personally leading his outnumbered men in a daring thrust that slammed directly into the Soviet spearhead. The assault halted the enemy advance cold, prevented the capture of the vital supply node at Rohow that served as the logistical lifeline for the entire Ninth Army, and restored the front long enough for reinforcements to arrive. For this resolute leadership under extreme pressure he was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 17 August 1942 and simultaneously promoted to oberstleutnant der reserve.

In early 1944, now commanding Panzergrenadier-Regiment 103 of the 14th Panzer Division as an oberstleutnant der reserve, Mummert found himself in the desperate defensive fighting southwest of Cherkassy near Kirovograd during the larger Korsun-Cherkassy Pocket battles. On 5 and 6 February Soviet pressure threatened to tear open the German line and isolate further forces. Mummert led his panzergrenadiers in a bold attack across the icy stream at Lipjanka, pushing through deep mud, thawing snow, and constant artillery and tank-supported assaults toward the villages of Meshigorka and Lipjanka. In close-quarters combat the regiment fought its way forward and successfully linked up with elements of the 3rd Panzer Division, re-establishing a continuous defensive front and preventing a complete rupture that could have doomed the pocket. This action earned him the Oak Leaves to the Knight's Cross on 20 March 1944 as the 429th recipient of that award.

Later that year, during the fighting withdrawals toward the Baltic in the northern sector of the Eastern Front, Mummert's regiment was heavily engaged around Baldone in Latvia. On 18 September 1944 Soviet attacks threatened to collapse local German positions, prompting him to organize and personally lead a counterattack directed toward Arstes. Supported by available armor, his panzergrenadiers surged forward through wooded terrain and open ground under intense fire, smashing into the advancing enemy in fierce hand-to-hand and anti-tank fighting that drove the Soviets back and restored the sector in the Germans' favor. The regiment's sustained performance in these weeks of heavy defensive combat led to its mention in the Wehrmachtbericht of 23 September 1944. For these repeated successes Mummert received the Swords to the Knight's Cross on 23 October 1944 as the 107th recipient.

In November 1944 Mummert briefly commanded Panzer-Brigade 103 before attending a divisional commanders' training course. On 9 March 1945 he took over Panzer Division Müncheberg, which he led through the final defensive battles in and around Berlin after his promotion to generalmajor der reserve on 1 February 1945. On 25 April he assumed command of defense sectors A and B in eastern Berlin under the city commandant General Helmuth Weidling and shortly afterward also directed elements of the LVI Panzer Corps. His division fought intensely in Rudow, at Tempelhof airfield, Anhalter station, Potsdamer Platz, and Schöneberg, with Mummert famously forbidding summary courts-martial in his sector and declaring that a formation containing so many holders of the Knight's Cross and Oak Leaves deserved better than to be hounded by young, barely decorated SS leaders who were blind and fanatical. Although he broke out of the city with remnants of his units he was captured by Soviet troops outside Berlin on 3 May 1945. Mummert remained in Soviet captivity until his death on 28 January 1950 in the prisoner-of-war camp at Šuja in the Russian SFSR.



The Eichenlaub award ceremony for three outstanding Heer members, which held on 14 May 1944 at the Führerhauptquartier Berghof Obersalzberg (Münich), and was presented directly by Adolf Hitler (Führer und oberster Befehlshaber der Wehrmacht). The recipients are, from left to right: Oberst der Reserve Werner Mummert (Kommandeur Panzergrenadier-Regiment 103 / 14.Panzer-Division. Eichenlaub # 429 dated 20 March 1944), Leutnant der Reserve Josef Schneider (Führer 13.Kompanie / III.Bataillon / Jäger-Regiment 207 / 97.Jäger-Division. Eichenlaub # 389 dated 10 February 1944), and Oberfeldwebel Johann Schwerdfeger (Zugführer at 1.Kompanie / I.Bataillon / Jäger-Regiment 228 / 101.Jäger-Division. Eichenlaub # 474 dated 14 May 1944). Other pictures from this award ceremony can be seen HERE.


Source:
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/
https://en.wikipedia.org/
https://www.tracesofwar.com/
https://grokipedia.com/
https://rk.balsi.de/index.php?action=list&cat=300
https://www.unithistories.com/units_index/index.php?file=/officers/personsx.html
https://web.archive.org/web/20091027052912fw_/http://geocities.com/orion47.geo/index2.html
https://forum.axishistory.com/
https://www.wehrmacht-awards.com/forums/
https://www.geni.com/
https://www.feldgrau.com/
https://military-history.fandom.com/
Werner Mummert - Leben eines sächsischen Offiziers (Amazon.de, 3954290014)

Saturday, April 11, 2026

Bio of Generalleutnant Hans Källner (1898-1945)


Full name: Hans Gottfried Alfons Källner
Nickname: No information

Date of Birth: 09.10.1898 - Kattowitz, Upper Silesia (German Empire)
Date of Death: 18.04.1945 - near Sokolnice near Olmütz, Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia

Battles and Operations: Polish Campaign, Western Campaign, Operation Barbarossa, Eastern Front battles (including Zhitomir, Kamenez-Podolsk pocket, Poland and Silesia 1944-1945)

Religion : No information
Parents: Friedrich Källner (teacher and deputy headmaster / Konrektor) and unknown mother
Siblings: No information
Spouse: Luise "Lisa" Elisabeth Schmidt (married 24.07.1926)
Children: one son (name unknown)

Promotions:
06.06.1915 Kriegsfreiwilliger
28.04.1916 Gefreiter
00.04.1917 Unteroffizier
00.09.1917 Vizewachtmeister
16.10.1917 Leutnant der Reserve
21.10.1920 Polizei-Leutnant
24.05.1924 Polizei-Oberleutnant (with effect from 01.05.1924)
18.12.1929 Polizei-Hauptmann
15.10.1935 Rittmeister (RDA 01.10.1932)
01.08.1936 Major (RDA 01.08.1936)
01.11.1939 Oberstleutnant (RDA 01.11.1939)
01.03.1942 Oberst (RDA 01.03.1942)
01.11.1943 Generalmajor (RDA 01.11.1943)
01.06.1944 Generalleutnant (RDA 01.06.1944)

Career:
06.06.1915-13.10.1915 War volunteer in Jäger-Regiment 11
13.10.1915-27.10.1915 Cavalry-Replacement-Regiment II. Armeekorps
27.10.1915-02.12.1916 Replacement-Squadron Jäger-Regiment 11
02.12.1916-29.04.1918 13. Reserve-Dragoner-Schützen-Regiment
29.04.1918-04.06.1918 Infanterie-Regiment 147
04.06.1918-06.01.1919 Signals officer, II. Battalion, Infanterie-Regiment 147
13.02.1919-01.05.1920 4. Volunteer-Dragoner-Regiment
21.10.1920-01.09.1921 Polizei-Squadron Lublinitz
01.09.1921-01.08.1922 2nd Alarm Police-Group Oppeln
01.08.1922-01.04.1925 Protection-Police Kreuzburg
01.04.1925-28.07.1926 Mounted Alarm Protection-Police Gleiwitz
28.07.1926-15.10.1935 Riding instructor, Police-Riding-School Potsdam
15.10.1935-12.10.1937 Squadron chief, Reiter-Regiment 4
12.10.1937-26.08.1939 Commander II. Battalion, Kavallerie-Regiment 4
26.08.1939-12.08.1941 Commander Aufklärungs-Abteilung 11
28.08.1941-01.07.1942 Commander Schützen-Regiment 73
01.07.1942-13.07.1942 Commander 19. Schützen-Regiment
13.07.1942-15.04.1943 Commander 19. Panzer-Grenadier-Regiment
18.08.1943-01.11.1943 Delegated leadership 19. Panzer-Division
01.11.1943-22.03.1945 Commander 19. Panzer-Division
22.03.1945-18.04.1945 Delegated leadership XXIV. Panzerkorps

Awards and Decorations:
Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse 1914 (03.09.1917)
Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse 1914 (04.08.1918)
Schlesisches Bewährungsabzeichen 2. Stufe (09.09.1919)
Schlesisches Bewährungsabzeichen 1. Stufe (09.09.1919)
Ehrenkreuz für Frontkämpfer 1914/18 mit Schwertern (20.12.1934)
Dienstauszeichnung der Wehrmacht 4. Klasse (1936)
Dienstauszeichnung der Wehrmacht 3. Klasse (1936)
Dienstauszeichnung der Wehrmacht 2. Klasse (1936)
1939 Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz 2. Klasse (19.09.1939)
1939 Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz 1. Klasse (18.10.1939)
Panzerkampfabzeichen ohne Zahl
Deutsches Kreuz in Gold (18.10.1941)
Allgemeines Sturmabzeichen (31.07.1941)
Verwundetenabzeichen 1939 in Silber (08.11.1941)
Medaille Winterschlacht im Osten 1941/42 (05.08.1942)
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes #967 (03.05.1942) as Kommandeur Schützen-Regiment 73 / 19.Panzer-Division. In April 1942, during the spring thaw on the central sector of the Eastern Front west of Kaluga, a freshly arrived Soviet rifle division suddenly launched a powerful thrust that drove deep into the German lines. The enemy spearheads advanced to within just three kilometers of the vital Roslawl–Juchnow supply road, threatening to cut off German forces and collapse the entire sector. Oberst Källner, without waiting for higher headquarters, immediately seized command of the first friendly battalion that rushed onto the scene. Under heavy Soviet artillery and small-arms fire he personally led a lightning counterattack across open, muddy terrain. His grenadiers stormed the villages the Soviets had just seized, fighting house-to-house with grenades and bayonets in the pouring rain. Within hours Källner’s men had recaptured every lost position and driven the enemy back far enough that the road was no longer under direct fire. The Soviet breakthrough was completely halted. For this personal bravery and decisive leadership in the heat of battle Källner received the Ritterkreuz.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #392 (12.02.1944) as Generalmajor and Kommandeur 19. Panzer-Division (some sources list 10 or 14 February). By the winter of 1943–44 the Red Army had launched its massive Dnieper-Carpathian Offensive. In January 1944 the 19. Panzer-Division under Källner was thrown into the ferocious defensive battles around Shitomir (Zhitomir). Soviet tank and infantry waves, supported by endless artillery barrages and ground-attack aircraft, hammered the German positions day and night. Snow, ice and mud turned the battlefield into a frozen quagmire; panzers sank to their turrets and supply columns were cut off. Källner, true to his habit of leading from the front, was constantly at the hottest points of the line. He orchestrated desperate counterattacks with his remaining tanks and panzergrenadiers, personally directing fire missions and rallying shaken companies under direct enemy fire. When Soviet forces nearly encircled parts of his division, Källner organized and led a breakout operation through dense enemy blocking positions. Under cover of darkness and a rolling artillery barrage his units smashed through Soviet lines in close combat, extricating men, wounded and precious equipment while Soviet flares lit the sky and machine-gun tracers cut the night. The division held the Shitomir sector long enough to prevent a total collapse and successfully fought its way out of the Russian encirclement. For this outstanding divisional leadership in the heaviest fighting Källner was awarded the Eichenlaub.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #106 (23.10.1944) as Generalleutnant and Kommandeur 19. Panzer-Division. After the desperate breakout from the “Wanderkessel” of Kamenez-Podolsk in spring 1944 the 19. Panzer-Division was repeatedly refitted and thrown back into action during the great Soviet summer and autumn offensives. By October 1944, as the German front in the East began to buckle under constant pressure, Källner’s division was engaged in mobile defensive operations in Poland and the approaches to Silesia. Soviet armored thrusts repeatedly tried to break through; Källner’s panzers and grenadiers conducted skillful delaying actions, launching sharp counterattacks by day and night to blunt the enemy advance and buy time for the withdrawal of other units. Leading always from the front, Källner appeared wherever the danger was greatest, directing tank duels at point-blank range and inspiring his exhausted troops to hold positions against overwhelming odds. His division repeatedly turned potential routs into orderly fighting withdrawals, inflicting heavy losses on the Soviets while preserving combat effectiveness far beyond what could have been expected. For this continued exemplary leadership and tactical skill in the face of the collapsing Eastern Front Källner received the Schwerter.

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Hans Gottfried Alfons Källner was a German army officer who served in both world wars and rose to the rank of Generalleutnant during the Second World War. Born on 9 October 1898 in Kattowitz in Upper Silesia he volunteered for military service at the age of seventeen and fought with distinction on the Western Front before transferring to police duties in the Weimar Republic. He returned to the army in 1935 and commanded reconnaissance and motorized infantry units through the Polish and French campaigns before distinguishing himself on the Eastern Front. Källner became widely known for his habit of leading from the front and received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords for repeated acts of personal bravery and divisional leadership under extreme pressure. He was killed in action on 18 April 1945 while visiting forward positions as acting commander of the XXIV Panzer Corps near Sokolnice south of Brünn in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. His remains lie in the German war cemetery in Brno.

Källner entered the Imperial German Army on 6 June 1915 as a war volunteer in Jäger-Regiment zu Pferde Nr. 11. After brief transfers to cavalry replacement units he served in the 13th Reserve Dragoon Rifle Regiment and was promoted to Leutnant der Reserve on 16 October 1917. He later joined Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 147 as a signals officer and completed a gas warfare course in Berlin before the armistice. During the fighting he earned both classes of the Iron Cross and the Silesian Eagle in both grades. Demobilized in January 1919 he briefly served in a Freikorps formed from former dragoons before joining the police in Upper Silesia. By 1929 he had risen to Polizei-Hauptmann and from 1926 to 1935 served as a riding instructor at the police riding school in Potsdam where he also completed advanced physical training and mounted courses.

In August 1935 Källner transferred to the Wehrmacht as a Rittmeister and joined Reiter-Regiment 4. He commanded a squadron and then the II Battalion of Kavallerie-Regiment 4 before mobilization in 1939 placed him at the head of Aufklärungs-Abteilung 11 of the 11th Infantry Division. With this reconnaissance battalion he participated in the Polish Campaign and earned the 1939 clasps to both classes of the Iron Cross. After the Western Campaign and the opening phase of Operation Barbarossa he assumed command of Schützen-Regiment 73 in the 19th Panzer Division. In October 1941 he received the German Cross in Gold. On 1 March 1942 he was promoted to Oberst and on 3 May 1942 he was awarded the Knight's Cross for a decisive counterattack west of Kaluga. In April 1942 a fresh Soviet rifle division had driven to within three kilometres of the vital Roslawl-Juchnow supply road. Without awaiting orders Källner seized the first available friendly battalion advanced across muddy terrain under artillery fire and in pouring rain stormed the occupied villages in close combat with grenades and bayonets. Within hours every lost position had been recaptured the road was secured and the Soviet breakthrough was halted.

Källner continued to lead motorized infantry formations and on 1 July 1942 took command of the 19th Schützen-Brigade which was soon redesignated the 19th Panzer-Grenadier-Brigade. After a brief period in the Führerreserve and a division commanders' course in Berlin he was delegated leadership of the 19th Panzer Division on 18 August 1943 and confirmed as its commander with promotion to Generalmajor on 1 November 1943. The division was heavily engaged in the winter battles of 1943-1944. On 24 December 1943 the Soviet winter offensive struck east of Zhitomir. Källner's division was forced to withdraw after a breakthrough on a neighbouring sector but in three days of bitter fighting amid snow ice and mud it prevented any further Soviet advance destroyed about fifty tanks and twenty guns and successfully rejoined the new German defensive line near Zhitomir despite severe logistical shortages and constant enemy air attacks. For this outstanding leadership Källner received the 392nd Oak Leaves to the Knight's Cross on 12 February 1944. The division later fought its way out of the Kamenez-Podolsk pocket and continued defensive operations on the southern sector of the Eastern Front.

By the summer of 1944 the 19th Panzer Division under Källner now a Generalleutnant since 1 June 1944 was shifted to the central sector and engaged in mobile defensive actions north of Warsaw. In August 1944 his panzers and grenadiers conducted repeated sharp counterattacks that blunted Soviet armored thrusts and allowed other German formations to withdraw in good order and establish a new defensive line on the western bank of the Vistula. Källner's personal presence at the point of greatest danger his skillful coordination of tank duels and his insistence on maintaining combat effectiveness despite overwhelming odds earned him the 106th award of the Swords on 23 October 1944. He retained command of the division until 22 March 1945 when he was delegated leadership of the XXIV Panzer Corps. On 18 April 1945 while inspecting forward positions south of Brünn during the final defensive battles in Moravia he was killed by enemy fire. Throughout his career Källner was noted for sharing every risk with his troops and for turning critical situations through decisive personal example rather than remote staff direction. He left behind a wife Luise Elisabeth Schmidt whom he had married in 1926 and one son.


Map discussion of the officers from Schützen-Regiment 73 / 19.Panzer-Division at Bessarabia, Soviet Union, summer of 1941. At right is the Regimentskommandeur, Oberstleutnant Hans Källner, who would receive the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 3 May 1942 (as Kommandeur of Schützen-Regiment 73), Eichenlaub on 12 February 1944 (as Kommandeur of 19. Panzer-Division), and Schwerter on 23 October 1944 (as Kommandeur of 19. Panzer-Division). Other pictures from this occasion can be seen HERE.



From left to right: Generalmajor Gustav Schmidt (Kommandeur 19. Panzer-Division) and Oberst Hans Källner (Kommandeur Schützen-Regiment 73 / 19.Panzer-Division). The picture was taken during the Ritterkreuz award ceremony for Regimentskommandeur Källner, May 1942. More from this award ceremony can be seen HERE.






 

From left to right: General der Panzertruppe Otto von Knobelsdorff (Führer 1. Armee), Generalleutnant Hans Källner (Kommandeur 19. Panzer-Division), and Adolf Hitler (Führer und Oberster Befehlshaber der Wehrmacht). The picture was taken in late October 1944 during the Schwerter presentation for Knobelsdorff and Källner. Knobelsdorff received the medal on 21 September 1944, while Källner on 23 October 1944.







Source:
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/
https://en.wikipedia.org/
https://www.tracesofwar.com/
https://grokipedia.com/
https://rk.balsi.de/index.php?action=list&cat=300
https://www.unithistories.com/units_index/index.php?file=/officers/personsx.html
https://web.archive.org/web/20091028013450fw_/http://geocities.com/orion47.geo/WEHRMACHT/HEER/Generalleutnant2/KAELLNER_HANS.html
https://forum.axishistory.com/
https://www.wehrmacht-awards.com/forums/
https://www.geni.com/
https://books.google.com/
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/Personenregister/K/KaellnerH-R.htm
https://military-history.fandom.com/wiki/Hans_K%C3%A4llner
https://www.oocities.org/~orion47/WEHRMACHT/HEER/Generalleutnant2/KAELLNER_HANS.html

Ritterkreuz Award Ceremony for Hans Källner

 


From left to right: Generalmajor Gustav Schmidt (Kommandeur 19. Panzer-Division) and Oberst Hans Källner (Kommandeur Schützen-Regiment 73 / 19.Panzer-Division). The picture was taken during the Ritterkreuz award ceremony for Regimentskommandeur Källner, May 1942.


Hans Gottfried Alfons Källner, born on 9 October 1898 in Kattowitz in Upper Silesia, rose through the ranks of the German Army to become one of the decorated officers of the Wehrmacht during the Second World War. A veteran of the First World War, where he served as a war volunteer in cavalry and infantry units, earning both classes of the Iron Cross 1914, Källner transitioned to police service after the armistice before rejoining the military in 1935. By the outbreak of the Second World War, he commanded reconnaissance elements and later motorized infantry formations. His steady advancement saw him promoted to Oberst on 15 February 1942, with seniority dated 1 March 1942, and assigned as commander of Schützen-Regiment 73 within the 19th Panzer Division on the Eastern Front.

The spring of 1942 found the 19th Panzer Division operating under the XXXX Panzer Corps of the Fourth Army in Army Group Center, engaged in defensive operations amid the harsh conditions of the Russian theater. The division had endured the brutal winter of 1941-42 and was now positioned in the area west of Kaluga, tasked with holding key lines against Soviet counteroffensives. It was here, in late April 1942, that Källner performed the actions that would earn him the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross, the prestigious Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes, Germany's highest military decoration for bravery or outstanding leadership at that stage of the war.

The citation for the award details a critical defensive engagement. A freshly arrived Soviet rifle division launched a sudden advance that penetrated to within three kilometers of the vital Roslawl-Juchnow road, threatening German supply lines and communications. Without hesitation, Oberst Källner assumed personal command of the first available friendly battalion that reached the scene. Leading a swift counterattack, he recaptured the lost villages and drove the Soviet forces back far enough to remove the immediate threat to the road. The breakthrough attempt was halted, stabilizing the sector and preventing a potentially disastrous collapse in the German defensive line. This display of initiative, courage under fire, and tactical acumen exemplified the qualities the Ritterkreuz was designed to recognize. The proposal for the award was formally submitted on 24 April 1942 through the chain of command, reaching higher headquarters amid the ongoing operations. It was approved swiftly, with the official award date recorded as 3 May 1942, making Källner the recipient of the 967th Ritterkreuz of the Second World War.

In the Wehrmacht's award system, the Ritterkreuz was not merely a piece of metal and ribbon but a symbol of elite status, worn prominently at the throat of the uniform. For officers like Källner serving on the front lines, the process from approval to presentation followed a standardized yet practical procedure adapted to wartime realities. The high command in Berlin or the relevant army group headquarters would issue the formal notification, often accompanied by a preliminary certificate, known as the vorläufige Urkunde, and the physical cross itself. These items were dispatched through military channels to the recipient's parent formation. In Källner's case, records indicate that the provisional document and the decoration were forwarded on 6 May 1942 to the headquarters of the Fourth Army (AOK 4), from where they would be delivered to the 19th Panzer Division in the field.

The actual award ceremony for Källner's Ritterkreuz took place in early May 1942, likely within days of the official notification reaching the division, in the operational area west of Kaluga. Unlike the elaborate presentations of higher grades such as Oak Leaves or Swords, which were frequently conducted by Adolf Hitler himself at the Wolf's Lair or Berghof for prominent recipients, the basic Ritterkreuz for a regimental commander was typically bestowed at the divisional or corps level. Historical accounts of similar presentations during this period on the Eastern Front describe modest but solemn field ceremonies, often held at a regimental or divisional command post when combat conditions permitted a brief pause. The division commander or a senior staff officer would assemble a small formation of troops from the recipient's unit, perhaps including representatives from Schützen-Regiment 73 and supporting elements of the 19th Panzer Division. The cross, suspended from its distinctive black-white-red ribbon, would be placed around the recipient's neck, followed by the reading of the citation and the presentation of the preliminary certificate.

This recognition came at a pivotal moment for Källner and his division. The 19th Panzer Division continued its operations in the central sector, transitioning from defensive stands to mobile counterattacks as the German summer offensive unfolded elsewhere. Källner remained at the forefront, later commanding the division itself as Generalmajor from November 1943 and earning the Oak Leaves on 12 February 1944 (the 392nd such award) for defensive successes east of Zhitomir during the Soviet winter offensive. The Swords followed on 23 October 1944 (the 106th award) for leadership north of Warsaw. Promoted to Generalleutnant in June 1944, he assumed temporary command of the XXIV Panzer Corps in March 1945. His career ended tragically on 18 April 1945 when he was killed in action while visiting front lines near Sokolnitz, south of Brünn in what is now the Czech Republic, during the final Soviet advances into Moravia. He was buried in the German war cemetery at Brno.



Source :
https://forum.axishistory.com/viewforum.php?f=5

Bio of General der Panzertruppe Maximilian von Edelsheim (1897-1994)


Full name: Konstanz Johann Georg Maximilian Axel Reichsfreiherr von Edelsheim
Nickname: No information

Date of Birth: 06.07.1897 - Berlin (German Empire)
Date of Death: 26.04.1994 - Konstanz (Germany)

Battles and Operations: World War I, Invasion of Poland 1939, Operation Barbarossa 1941, Breakthrough to Voronezh and battles in the Don Bend 1942, Battles around Stalingrad 1942, Defensive battles on the Eastern Front 1943-1944 (Dnieper bend, Nikopol bridgehead, Cherkassy pocket, battles between San and Vistula rivers), Surrender negotiations of the 12th Army May 1945

NSDAP-Number: No information
SS-Number: No information
Religion: No information
Parents: No information
Siblings: No information
Spouse: No information
Children: No information

Promotions:
11.08.1914 Offiziersanwärter (Fahnenjunker)
04.12.1914 Fahnenjunker-Unteroffizier
30.03.1915 Fähnrich
15.12.1915 Leutnant (Patent 21.05.1916, RDA 01.09.1915)
31.07.1925 Oberleutnant (RDA 01.04.1925)
01.04.1931 Rittmeister
01.03.1936 Major
01.04.1939 Oberstleutnant
17.12.1941 Oberst (RDA 01.12.1940)
01.06.1943 Generalmajor
20.05.1944 Generalleutnant
01.12.1944 General der Panzertruppe

Career:
11.08.1914 Fahnenjunker in 2. Garde-Ulanen-Regiment, Berlin
20.02.1915-28.03.1916 In the field with Mobile 2. Garde-Ulanen-Regiment
24.02.1916-20.03.1916 Detached to MG-Course with 5. MG-Bataillon
28.03.1916-10.08.1916 Detached to MG-Zug of 2. Garde-Ulanen-Regiment
10.08.1916-14.01.1917 Detached to Field-War-School Libau
14.01.1917-31.01.1919 Infanterie-Ersatz-Regiment Nr. 59 / 59. Reserve-Infanterie-Regiment
20.06.1917-16.07.1917 Detached to MG-Course in Olita
10.06.1918-17.06.1918 Detached to Course for Indirect Firing with Machineguns, 46. MG-Bataillon
31.01.1919-09.03.1919 Back to 2. Garde-Ulanen-Regiment
09.03.1919-01.05.1919 Detached to Freikorps Hülsen
01.05.1919-01.04.1920 9. Reichswehr-Kavallerie-Regiment / 4. (Preußisches) Reiter-Regiment
01.04.1920-30.09.1920 Detached to Kavallerieschule Hannover
30.09.1920-01.04.1923 Training-Squadron, 4. Reiter-Regiment
01.04.1923-01.10.1926 MG-Zug, 4. Reiter-Regiment
01.10.1926-01.10.1928 Ausbildungsoffizier Kavallerieschule Hannover
01.10.1928-01.01.1929 Squadron-Officer, 4. Schwadron, 4. Reiter-Regiment
01.01.1929-01.04.1929 Detached to Kavallerieschule Hannover
01.04.1929-01.10.1931 Stab, 2. (Preußisches) Reiter-Regiment, Osterode
01.10.1931-01.10.1934 Chef 4. Schwadron, 4. Reiter-Regiment, Perleberg
01.10.1934-15.05.1935 Schwadronchef, Reiter-Regiment Potsdam
15.05.1935-15.10.1935 Stab Kavallerie-Kommando Potsdam
15.10.1935-01.04.1936 Adjutant, 4. Reiter-Brigade Potsdam
01.04.1936-12.10.1937 Höherer Kavallerie-Offizier 4
12.10.1937-29.07.1938 Höherer Kavallerie-Offizier 2
29.07.1938-10.11.1938 Führer II./Kavallerie-Regiment 6
10.11.1938-30.09.1941 Kommandeur Radfahr-Abteilung 1, Tilsit
30.09.1941-01.12.1941 Kommandeur Reiter-Regiment 22
01.12.1941-10.10.1942 Kommandeur Schützen-Regiment 26 / Panzergrenadier-Regiment 26
10.10.1942-08.11.1942 mit der Führung beauftragt 20. Panzergrenadier-Brigade
08.11.1942-01.03.1943 Führerreserve OKH
18.01.1943-12.02.1943 Divisions-Führerlehrgang Döberitz
01.03.1943-01.06.1943 Führer 24. Panzer-Division
01.06.1943-21.09.1944 Kommandeur 24. Panzer-Division
21.09.1944-01.12.1944 mit der Führung beauftragt XXXXVIII. Panzerkorps
01.12.1944-03.05.1945 Kommandierender General XXXXVIII. Panzerkorps
03.05.1945 Verhandlungsführer 12. Armee (surrender negotiations with Americans)
08.05.1945-31.03.1947 American POW
31.03.1947 Released

Awards and Decorations:
1914 Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse (27.11.1915)
1914 Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse (26.10.1918)
1939 Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz 2. Klasse (19.09.1939)
1939 Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz 1. Klasse (14.10.1939)
Ehrenkreuz für Frontkämpfer
Wehrmacht-Dienstauszeichnung IV. bis I. Klasse
Ritterkreuz II. Klasse des Großherzoglich Badischen Ordens vom Zähringer Löwen mit Schwertern
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes #398 (30.07.1941) as Oberstleutnant and Kommandeur Radfahr-Abteilung 1 / 1.Kavallerie-Division. He led the division’s Vorausabteilung (advance detachment) in the opening phase of Operation Barbarossa. His orders were clear and urgent: thrust forward through Hwoznice, Maloriyta, Mekrany and Dywin, seize every important bridge intact, and smash through any enemy resistance to open the road for the rest of the division. Racing on bicycles and light vehicles across the dusty roads of western Russia, Edelsheim’s men repeatedly found themselves outnumbered by Soviet infantry and artillery. Soviet defenders fought stubbornly from villages and woodlines, pouring machine-gun and mortar fire onto the narrow columns. Yet Edelsheim kept the momentum, personally directing assaults that captured bridge after bridge before the enemy could blow them. His detachment fought its way forward in a series of sharp, running battles, clearing obstacles and maintaining contact with the following main force. By reaching the area south of Slutsk, the unit secured the vital right flank of XXIV. Armee-Korps and enabled the rapid German advance deeper into Belarus. For this outstanding leadership under constant pressure in the chaotic first days of the invasion, he received the Ritterkreuz.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #162 (23.12.1942) as Oberst and Kommandeur Panzergrenadier-Regiment 26 / 24.Panzer-Division. He earned the award through a string of brilliant offensive actions during the 1942 summer campaign. In the breakthrough to Voronezh (28 June – 8 July 1942) his regiment spearheaded the division’s dash across the open steppe, overrunning Soviet positions in rapid combined-arms assaults. The fighting in the great Don Bend (9 July – 21 August 1942) saw weeks of mobile warfare: panzergrenadiers riding half-tracks and assault guns, duelling with Soviet tank brigades amid burning wheat fields and endless dust clouds while protecting the flanks of the advancing 6. Armee.
The climax came in September 1942 inside Stalingrad itself. Edelsheim formed the core of Kampfgruppe Edelsheim – the strongest battle group in the division – with tanks from Panzer-Abteilung Lancken, his own panzergrenadiers, self-propelled guns and artillery. On the morning of the main assault into the southern city, the Kampfgruppe surged forward under Luftwaffe Stuka support. Within hours they had carved two kilometres deep into the southern districts, then swung north, slicing another two kilometres toward the city centre. Soviet defenders fought desperately from ruined factories, apartment blocks and cellars in the infamous “Rattenkrieg” – brutal, room-by-room, hand-to-hand combat. Edelsheim’s grenadiers cleared streets under sniper fire, stormed the South Railway Station in savage close-quarters fighting, and pushed a narrow corridor to within two kilometres of the Volga. Despite heavy losses and constant counter-attacks, the regiment held key positions along the Tsaritsa River and the railway embankment. These successes in the blood-soaked ruins of Stalingrad, combined with the earlier breakthroughs, brought him the Eichenlaub.
Königlich Rumänischer Orden „Michael der Tapfere“ III. Klasse 30.05.1944
Nennung im Wehrmachtbericht 21.02.1944, 28.08.1944, 17.10.1944
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #105 (23.10.1944) as Generalleutnant and Kommandeur 24. Panzer-Division. He received the Swords for his masterly direction of the division through nearly a year of bitter defensive fighting on the Eastern Front. From October to November 1943 the division anchored the German line in the Dnieper Bend, launching repeated counter-attacks to blunt massive Soviet assaults and buying time for the withdrawal of Army Group South. In the Nikopol bridgehead (November 1943 – January 1944) his panzers and grenadiers clung to the western bank of the Dnieper under ceaseless artillery barrages and infantry waves, evacuating only after inflicting punishing losses on the Red Army.
The Cherkassy Pocket (28 January – 9 February 1944) tested the division to the limit. Encircled with other German units, the 24. Panzer-Division fought a desperate breakout through waist-deep snow and mud. Under constant fire from three sides, Edelsheim coordinated the division’s fighting withdrawal, keeping the panzers and assault guns as a mobile shield while the infantry clawed their way westward through Soviet blocking positions. The battles between the Dnieper and Ingulez rivers, then the Ingulez and Bug (February – March 1944), were a series of savage delaying actions: rearguard stands, night marches and local counter-strokes to cover the long retreat. In Romania, between Targul Frumos and Jassy (March – June 1944), the division stopped Soviet armoured thrusts in open-country tank-versus-tank fighting.
Later that summer, between the San and Vistula rivers (July – August 1944), Edelsheim’s men again formed the backbone of the defence amid the chaos following the Soviet summer offensive. Finally, in the Dukla Pass through the Carpathians up to 28 September 1944, the division held the mountain strongpoints in bitter high-ground fighting against overwhelming odds. Throughout these campaigns Edelsheim’s calm, decisive leadership preserved the division’s combat power, prevented collapse of entire sectors and allowed the orderly withdrawal of larger German forces. For this sustained excellence in the face of relentless Soviet superiority he was awarded the Schwerter.

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Maximilian Reichsfreiherr von Edelsheim was a highly decorated German general of the Wehrmacht who rose to the rank of General der Panzertruppe and commanded both a panzer division and a panzer corps during the Second World War. Born into an old noble family on 6 July 1897 in Berlin, he served with distinction in two world conflicts, earning the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords for his leadership in cavalry reconnaissance, armored breakthroughs, and tenacious defensive operations on the Eastern Front. His career exemplified the transition from traditional mounted warfare in the Kaiser's army to the motorized and armored tactics of the Blitzkrieg era, and later to the grim attritional fighting of the war's final years. After the conflict he spent two years as a prisoner of war before living quietly in postwar West Germany until his death on 26 April 1994 in Konstanz at the age of ninety-six.

Edelsheim's military service began at the outbreak of the First World War when, as a seventeen-year-old Fahnenjunker, he joined the elite 2nd Guard Uhlan Regiment in Berlin. He saw action on the Western and Eastern Fronts, earning both classes of the Iron Cross for bravery under fire. After the armistice he was retained in the small Reichswehr, specializing in cavalry and machine-gun tactics. Through the 1920s and 1930s he progressed steadily through regimental and staff appointments, serving as a squadron commander, instructor at the cavalry school in Hannover, and eventually as a higher cavalry officer. These interwar years honed his skills in mobile reconnaissance and combined-arms operations, preparing him for the rapid campaigns that would define the opening phases of the next war.

When the Second World War erupted in 1939 Edelsheim participated in the invasion of Poland as a major and later lieutenant colonel. By the launch of Operation Barbarossa in June 1941 he commanded the bicycle-mounted Radfahr-Abteilung 1 of the 1st Cavalry Division. Leading the division's advance detachment, he drove his men forward through western Russia in a series of lightning thrusts, seizing bridges intact at Hwoznice, Maloriyta, Mekrany, and Dywin despite fierce Soviet resistance from villages and woodlines. Under constant machine-gun and mortar fire his troops cleared obstacles and maintained momentum, securing the right flank of the XXIV Army Corps and enabling the deeper German advance into Belarus. For this outstanding leadership in the chaotic first days of the invasion he was awarded the Knight's Cross on 30 July 1941.

Transferred to the 24th Panzer Division, Edelsheim took command of Panzergrenadier Regiment 26 and distinguished himself during the great summer offensive of 1942. His regiment spearheaded the breakthrough to Voronezh in late June and early July, racing across the open steppe in rapid combined-arms assaults amid clouds of dust and burning wheat fields. In the subsequent fighting in the great Don Bend his panzergrenadiers dueled Soviet tank brigades in mobile warfare that protected the flanks of the Sixth Army. The climax came in September inside Stalingrad itself when Edelsheim formed Kampfgruppe Edelsheim, the division's strongest battle group. Supported by Stuka dive-bombers, the Kampfgruppe carved deep into the southern districts on the first day of the assault, then swung north through ruined factories and apartment blocks in brutal hand-to-hand combat known as the Rattenkrieg. His grenadiers stormed the South Railway Station under sniper fire and pushed a corridor to within two kilometers of the Volga, holding key positions along the Tsaritsa River despite relentless counterattacks. These actions earned him the Oak Leaves on 23 December 1942.

As commander of the 24th Panzer Division from mid-1943 onward, Edelsheim directed nearly a year of bitter defensive fighting across Ukraine and Poland. In the Dnieper Bend his division launched repeated counterattacks to blunt massive Soviet assaults, buying precious time for the withdrawal of Army Group South. During the encirclement in the Cherkassy Pocket in January and February 1944 the division fought a desperate breakout through waist-deep snow and mud, with Edelsheim coordinating the panzers as a mobile shield while infantry clawed westward through Soviet blocking positions. Subsequent delaying actions between the Ingulez and Bug rivers, tank-versus-tank clashes near Targul Frumos and Jassy in Romania, and rearguard stands along the San and Vistula rivers in the summer of 1944 demonstrated his skill in preserving combat power amid overwhelming odds. In the Carpathian mountains at the Dukla Pass his men held high-ground strongpoints until late September. For this sustained excellence he received the Swords on 23 October 1944.

In the final weeks of the war Edelsheim was appointed commander of the XLVIII Panzer Corps and later served as the chief negotiator for the Twelfth Army's surrender to American forces at the Elbe River in May 1945. Captured by U.S. troops, he spent nearly two years in prisoner-of-war camps before his release in March 1947. Little is known of his postwar private life; he lived quietly in southern Germany without seeking public prominence or writing memoirs. Edelsheim's decorations also included both classes of the 1939 Iron Cross Spange, the Honor Cross for Frontline Combatants, long-service awards, and several foreign orders. His career remains a study in the evolution of German mobile warfare from the cavalry traditions of 1914 to the armored rearguard actions that prolonged the defense of the Reich in 1944 and 1945.


 

At the start of Operation Barbarossa Oberstleutnant Edelsheim commanded the Vorausabteilung of the 1. Kavallerie-Division. Its initial orders were to march through Hwoznice, Maloriyta, Mekrany and Dywin. Along the way it was to capture any important bridges and break through any enemy forces encountered. Despite the tough enemy resistance that often outnumbered the Vorausabteilung itself, Edelsheim and his men were able to fight their way through the Soviet forces and clear the way for the rest of the Division. The Division was ultimately able to reach the area south of Sluck as ordered and fulfill its mission of providing flank protection for the XXIV. Armee-Korps. Oberstleutnant Edelsheim and Unteroffizier Brakat would subsequently be awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes for the invaluable service they rendered in this capacity. Other pictures from this award ceremony can be seen HERE.


Oberstleutnant Maximilian Reichsfreiherr von Edelsheim as Kommandeur of Radfahr-Abteilung 1 / 1.Kavallerie-Division in the Eastern Front in 1941. He is wearing the soldier's uniform as a precaution for the enemy sniper. At the start of Operation Barbarossa, the initial orders for Edelsheim's unit were to march through Hwoznice, Maloriyta, Mekrany and Dywin. Along the way it was to capture any important bridges and break through any enemy forces encountered. Despite the tough enemy resistance that often outnumbered the Vorausabteilung itself, Edelsheim and his men were able to fight their way through the Soviet forces and clear the way for the rest of the Division. The Division was ultimately able to reach the area south of Sluck as ordered and fulfill its mission of providing flank protection for the XXIV. Armee-Korps. Oberstleutnant Edelsheim would subsequently be awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes on 30 July 1941 for the invaluable service he rendered in this capacity.


Oberstleutnant Maximilian von Edelsheim (Kommandeur Radfahr-Abteilung 1 / 1.Kavallerie-Division) with his officers in the Eastern Front, 1941. At the start of Operation Barbarossa Oberstleutnant Edelsheim commanded the Vorausabteilung of the 1. Kavallerie-Division. Its initial orders were to march through Hwoznice, Maloriyta, Mekrany and Dywin. Along the way it was to capture any important bridges and break through any enemy forces encountered. Despite the tough enemy resistance that often outnumbered the Vorausabteilung itself, Edelsheim and his men were able to fight their way through the Soviet forces and clear the way for the rest of the Division. The Division was ultimately able to reach the area south of Sluck as ordered and fulfill its mission of providing flank protection for the XXIV. Armee-Korps. Oberstleutnant Edelsheim would subsequently be awarded the Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes for the invaluable service he rendered in this capacity.






General der Panzertruppe Maximilian Reichsfreiherr von Edelsheim and other officers leave in their command VW Schwimmwagen for the far side of the River Elbe to convey the terms of surrender to their subordinate commanders. They have just left the city hall of Stendal, Germany, where Major Frank Keating from the U.S. 102nd Infantry Division and Major General James Moore, Chief of Staff of the U.S. 9th Army, gave them the terms for the German XXXXVIII. Panzerkorps of which Edelsheim commanded at the time. 4 May 1945. The bulk of the retreating German forces, along with several thousand civilians fleeing the final Soviet advance, reached and crossed the Elbe using the partially destroyed bridge at Tangermünde between 4 May and 7 May 1945, surrendering to elements of the 102nd Infantry Division / 9th Army. The vehicle isn't a standard Type 166 VW Schwimmwagen, but the very rare limited production Type 128. Notice the high the body sides and the exhaust venting under the rear mudguard. The small badge on the side of the vehicle is the 48th Panzerkorps badge). Photo courtesy of US Army Signal Corps. Colourised by Richard James Molloy. Other pictures from this occasion can be seen HERE.




Source:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maximilian_von_Edelsheim
https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/29895/Edelsheim-Reichsfreiherr-von-Maximilian.htm
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/Personenregister/E/EdelsheimMRv.htm
http://www.geocities.ws/orion47.geo/WEHRMACHT/HEER/General/EDELSHEIM_MAXIMILIAN.html
https://grokipedia.com/page/maximilian_von_edelsheim
https://forum.axishistory.com/
https://www.wehrmacht-awards.com/forums/
Scherzer, Veit. Die Ritterkreuzträger 1939-1945. Jena 2007.

The Capitulation of Maximilian von Edelsheim and His Troops


General der Panzertruppe Maximilian Reichsfreiherr von Edelsheim and other officers leave in their command VW Schwimmwagen for the far side of the River Elbe to convey the terms of surrender to their subordinate commanders. They have just left the city hall of Stendal, Germany, where Major Frank Keating from the U.S. 102nd Infantry Division and Major General James Moore, Chief of Staff of the U.S. 9th Army, gave them the terms for the German XXXXVIII. Panzerkorps of which Edelsheim commanded at the time. 4 May 1945. The bulk of the retreating German forces, along with several thousand civilians fleeing the final Soviet advance, reached and crossed the Elbe using the partially destroyed bridge at Tangermünde between 4 May and 7 May 1945, surrendering to elements of the 102nd Infantry Division / 9th Army. The vehicle isn't a standard Type 166 VW Schwimmwagen, but the very rare limited production Type 128. Notice the high the body sides and the exhaust venting under the rear mudguard. The small badge on the side of the vehicle is the 48th Panzerkorps badge).

In the chaotic final days of the Second World War, as Soviet forces closed in from the east and American troops held the western bank of the Elbe River, General der Panzertruppe Maximilian Reichsfreiherr von Edelsheim played a pivotal role in one of the largest mass surrenders of the conflict. By late April 1945, the German 12th Army under General Walther Wenck, along with battered remnants of the 9th Army that had fought their way out of the Halbe pocket, had abandoned any hope of relieving Berlin. Instead, these exhausted formations turned westward in a desperate race to reach the Elbe and capitulate to the Western Allies rather than face the advancing Red Army. With tens of thousands of soldiers, wounded men, stragglers, and fleeing civilians pressing toward the river, Edelsheim—then commanding the XXXXVIII Panzer Corps—was selected by Wenck as the official negotiator, or Verhandlungsführer, to arrange the surrender of all German forces east of the Elbe.

On or about 3 May 1945, Edelsheim crossed the Elbe in a captured American amphibious Volkswagen Schwimmwagen under escort by U.S. officers. The journey itself was perilous; the river was swollen with spring melt, and the only viable crossing point near the historic town of Tangermünde featured a railroad bridge that German engineers had partially demolished weeks earlier to slow the Allied advance. Now, under a flag of truce, Edelsheim met representatives of the U.S. Ninth Army, including elements of the 102nd Infantry Division, near the western approaches to the damaged structure. Calm and resolute despite the surrounding chaos, he outlined the dire situation: his men were out of ammunition, fuel, and supplies, with Soviet artillery already audible in the distance. The negotiations were brief but pragmatic; the Americans agreed to accept the surrender of combat and non-combat personnel alike, providing medical aid for the wounded while forbidding further organized resistance or attempts to cross in strength once Soviet forces arrived at the eastern bank.

Word of the agreement spread rapidly through the German columns. Between 4 and 7 May 1945, a human tide converged on the Tangermünde bridge. Soldiers from panzer and infantry units, many still carrying their rifles or dragging exhausted horses, shuffled across the twisted girders and makeshift planking alongside thousands of civilians pushing carts laden with belongings. The partially destroyed span swayed under the weight of the desperate procession, yet it held long enough for an estimated 100,000 people to reach the western shore. On the American side, GIs watched in astonishment as disciplined German officers supervised the orderly stacking of weapons—rifles, machine guns, and Panzerfausts piled in neat heaps—while medical teams tended to the most severely injured. Edelsheim himself returned briefly to the eastern bank to ensure compliance, then formally surrendered with his staff and the last organized elements of his corps. Photographs from the scene capture the surreal calm: German generals in greatcoats being escorted in U.S. vehicles, weary troops handing over sidearms to sergeants, and long lines of prisoners forming under the watchful eyes of American sentries.

The capitulation at Tangermünde marked the effective end of the 12th Army as a fighting force and saved countless lives from potential Soviet captivity. For Edelsheim and his men, the crossing represented both defeat and deliverance; they had evaded the fate of units trapped farther east, where summary executions and forced marches awaited many. By 7 May, with Soviet troops reaching the eastern bridgehead and halting further movement, the bridge fell silent except for the occasional crack of small-arms fire as stragglers were rounded up. Edelsheim was taken into American custody on 8 May 1945, the day of Germany's unconditional surrender, and spent the next two years in U.S. prisoner-of-war camps before his release in March 1947.





General der Panzertruppe Maximilian Reichsfreiherr von Edelsheim (Kommandierender General XXXXVIII. Panzerkorps). Behind him is Oberstleutnant i.G. Seidel.







Source :
Photo courtesy of US Army Signal Corps. Colourised by Richard James Molloy
https://www.facebook.com/worldwarincolor/photos/general-der-panzertruppe-maximilian-von-edelsheim-and-other-officers-leave-in-th/1145807355549055/
https://www.vesteburg.com/begegnung/beg_geschichte.html
https://forum.axishistory.com/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=164870
https://www.zweiterweltkrieg.org/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=3001

Bio of General der Infanterie Hermann Recknagel (1892-1945)


Full name: Hermann Recknagel  
Nickname: No information  

Date of Birth: 18.07.1892 - Strauchmühle bei Hofgeismar, Hessen-Nassau (German Empire)  
Date of Death: 23.01.1945 - near Petrikau (Piotrków Trybunalski), General Government (Poland)

Battles and Operations: World War I (Western Front and Eastern Front), Invasion of Poland 1939, Battle of France 1940, Operation Barbarossa, Donets Basin operations, Caucasus campaign, Eastern Front defensive battles 1943-1944, Lviv-Sandomierz Offensive, Vistula-Oder Offensive  

NSDAP-Number: No information  
SS-Number: No information  
Religion: No information  
Parents: Adolf Karl Ferdinand Recknagel (estate tenant/Gutspächter) and Marie Nanny Lydia Recknagel, née vom Hof  
Siblings: No information (youngest son of the family)  
Spouse: Carola von Hertzberg (born 23.02.1903 in Borkau, died 19.09.1961 in Kassel; married 28.10.1924 in Beulwitz)  
Children: No information  

Promotions:
25.09.1913 Fahnenjunker/Offiziersanwärter (Infanterie-Regiment 83)  
06.08.1914 Leutnant  
18.04.1918 Oberleutnant  
01.10.1926 Hauptmann  
01.08.1934 Major  
01.03.1937 Oberstleutnant  
01.02.1940 Oberst  
01.05.1942 Generalmajor  
01.06.1943 Generalleutnant  
01.07.1944 General der Infanterie  

Career:
25.09.1913-1918 Zugführer and Regimentsadjutant, Infanterie-Regiment 83 (WWI service on Western and Eastern Fronts, wounded multiple times)  
1919 Freikorps Maercker, then transferred to Reichswehr-Brigade 16  
1919-1920 various staff and regimental posts in Weimar and Infanterie-Regiment 32/12  
01.10.1921-30.09.1922 Batterieoffizier for Führergehilfenausbildung, Artillerie-Regiment 4 (Dresden)  
1922-1934 regimental adjutant and company commander, Infanterie-Regiment 12 (Halberstadt/Quedlinburg)  
01.10.1934 Kommandeur II. Bataillon, Infanterie-Regiment 54 (Glogau, later 18. Infanterie-Division)  
26.08.1939-1941 Kommandeur Infanterie-Regiment 54 (Poland and Western campaigns)  
01.01.1942-15.08.1943 and 30.08.1943-01.11.1943 Kommandeur 111. Infanterie-Division (Eastern Front)  
15.11.1943-25.02.1944 Leiter Sonderstab I (Operationsabteilung Ost), OKH  
28.04.1944-14.06.1944 stellvertretender Führer, then 14.06.1944-23.01.1945 Kommandierender General XXXXII. Armeekorps (Eastern Front)  
Posthumously listed in Wehrmachtbericht for defensive actions  

Awards and Decorations:
Eisernes Kreuz (1914) 2. Klasse (01.10.1914)  
Eisernes Kreuz (1914) 1. Klasse (30.09.1916)  
Verwundetenabzeichen 1918 in Silber  
Waldeckisches Verdienstkreuz IV. Klasse mit Schwertern  
Österreichisches Militärverdienstkreuz III. Klasse mit Kriegsdekoration  
Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz (1939) 2. Klasse (22.09.1939)  
Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz (1939) 1. Klasse (02.10.1939)  
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes (05.08.1940 as Oberst and Kommandeur Infanterie-Regiment 54 / 18. Infanterie-Division. In the final phase of the Westfeldzug, during the fierce fighting for the fortress-port of Dunkirk on 3 June 1940, Recknagel personally led the vanguard elements of his regiment in a direct assault against heavily fortified British and French rearguard positions. The city was still shrouded in smoke from the evacuation beaches, with enemy machine-gun nests, artillery observers, and barricaded buildings turning every street into a killing zone. Under Recknagel’s command the regiment smashed through the outer perimeter in bitter house-to-house combat, overrunning strongpoints that had held up larger German formations for days. His forward presence inspired the troops to press the attack despite heavy casualties from sniper fire and mortar barrages; by nightfall key heights and the eastern approaches had fallen. The following day, 4 June, the city was fully secured. The Wehrmachtbericht of 8 June 1940 explicitly praised the regiment’s outstanding performance in the capture of the Dunkirk fortress, noting that one infantry regiment under an unnamed but clearly identifiable commander had distinguished itself above all others. This action sealed Recknagel’s reputation as a front-line regimental leader who could break the toughest resistance when everything hung in the balance.
Deutsches Kreuz in Gold (11.02.1943 als Generalmajor und Kommandeur 111. Infanterie-Division)  
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #319 (06.11.1943) as Generalleutnant and Kommandeur 111. Infanterie-Division. By the high summer of 1943 the Soviet Donets Basin offensive had torn open the German lines north of Taganrog. Recknagel, now commanding the 111. Infanterie-Division and temporarily elevated to lead Korpsgruppe Recknagel (a battle group built around the 111th and elements of the 336th Infantry Division), found his forces encircled against the coast of the Sea of Azov. For two desperate weeks, from mid-August until 30 August, the Kampfgruppen fought a series of savage defensive actions in the villages of Kamyschewacha, Many, and Uspenskaja. In blinding dust and 40-degree heat, German grenadiers and anti-tank crews destroyed 273 Soviet tanks in close combat—Panzerfaust teams stalking T-34s through burning wheat fields, 8.8 cm guns firing over open sights at point-blank range, and infantry assaults that left the steppe littered with wrecked armor and corpses. When the ring finally closed and the XXIX. Armeekorps was pressed against the sea, Recknagel refused to wait for relief. On the morning of 31 August he personally directed the breakout of the main Kampfgruppe 111./336. Infanterie-Division. Under cover of a violent artillery barrage and the last remaining assault guns, the columns slipped through the Soviet cordon in a night march across open steppe, fighting off repeated tank-infantry counterattacks, wading rivers, and carrying their wounded. By dawn they had linked up with German lines near Mariupol-Melitopol, saving thousands of men who would otherwise have been lost. The citation highlighted this masterful fighting withdrawal and the enormous tank-kill tally as the decisive factor that prevented the total collapse of the southern sector.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #104 (23.10.1944) as General der Infanterie and Kommandierender General XXXXII. Armeekorps. After the catastrophe of Operation Bagration and the simultaneous Lvov-Sandomierz Offensive, Recknagel’s XXXXII. Armeekorps became the anchor of the collapsing front in the great bend of the Vistula in early August 1944. Soviet armored spearheads had crossed the river at Baranow and were threatening to rip the entire German line apart. With only two understrength divisions—the 88. Infanterie-Division (Franco-Sudeten) and the 72. Infanterie-Division (Hessian-Moselle)—Recknagel faced massed tank armies in swampy, forested terrain criss-crossed by streams and ravines. For weeks the corps fought a textbook mobile defense: Recknagel shuttled his few reserves from crisis to crisis, launching sharp counterattacks at dawn and dusk, using the river bends and villages as natural strongpoints, and coordinating every available artillery piece and Nebelwerfer battery into concentrated fire missions that shredded Soviet infantry waves. On 19 August the Wehrmachtbericht praised the “unshakeable courage and bold recklessness” of the troops under his command in the great bend of the Vistula. A second communique on 9 September noted that his corps had sealed off the dangerous Soviet bridgehead west of Baranow through repeated counter-thrusts, preventing a major breakout that could have unhinged the entire central sector. Despite being outnumbered ten to one in armor and constantly threatened with encirclement, Recknagel’s leadership held the line long enough for the front to be stabilized, turning a potential rout into an orderly fighting withdrawal that bought the German high command critical breathing space.
Infanterie-Sturmabzeichen  
Ehrenkreuz für Frontkämpfer  

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Hermann Recknagel was a German general of the infantry who served with distinction in both world wars and rose to command a corps on the Eastern Front during the Second World War. Born on 18 July 1892 in Strauchmühle near Hofgeismar in the Prussian province of Hesse-Nassau, he came from a family of estate tenants with possible Huguenot roots and was the youngest son of Adolf Karl Ferdinand Recknagel and Marie Nanny Lydia Recknagel. Recknagel entered the Imperial German Army in 1913 as a cadet in Infantry Regiment 83 and fought on both the Western and Eastern Fronts in the First World War, where he was wounded several times and earned the Iron Cross in both classes along with other decorations. After the armistice he briefly served in the Freikorps Maercker before transferring into the Reichswehr, steadily advancing through regimental and staff positions during the interwar years until he commanded Infantry Regiment 54 at the outbreak of the new conflict in 1939.

Recknagel’s regiment participated in the invasion of Poland and the subsequent campaign in the West, where it distinguished itself in the final assault on the port of Dunkirk in June 1940. On 3 June, with the beaches still shrouded in smoke from the ongoing British evacuation, Recknagel personally led the vanguard of his regiment against heavily fortified British and French rearguard positions. Machine-gun nests, artillery observers hidden in upper floors, and barricaded buildings turned every street corner into a deadly ambush. Undeterred, he pushed his men forward in bitter house-to-house fighting, overrunning strongpoints that had stalled larger formations for days. By nightfall key heights overlooking the eastern approaches had fallen, and the following day the fortress city was secured. The Wehrmacht communiqué of 8 June praised the regiment’s outstanding performance, and for this action Recknagel received the Knight’s Cross of the Iron Cross on 5 August 1940.

Transferred to the Eastern Front with the 18th Infantry Division and later given command of the 111th Infantry Division in January 1942, Recknagel led his formation through the grueling campaigns in the Donets Basin and the Caucasus. By high summer 1943 the Soviet summer offensive had torn open the German lines north of Taganrog, and Recknagel found himself temporarily elevated to command Korpsgruppe Recknagel, a battle group built around the 111th and elements of the 336th Infantry Division. Encircled against the coast of the Sea of Azov, his troops fought a desperate two-week defensive battle in the villages of Kamyschewacha, Many, and Uspenskaja under blinding dust and scorching heat. German grenadiers and anti-tank crews destroyed 273 Soviet tanks in close combat, with Panzerfaust teams stalking T-34s through burning wheat fields and 8.8 cm guns firing over open sights at point-blank range. When the ring finally closed, Recknagel refused to await relief. On the morning of 31 August he directed a violent breakout under cover of artillery and the last assault guns; the columns slipped through the Soviet cordon in a night march across open steppe, fighting off repeated tank-infantry counterattacks, wading rivers, and carrying their wounded until they linked up with German lines near Mariupol-Melitopol. For this masterful fighting withdrawal he was awarded the Oak Leaves to the Knight’s Cross on 6 November 1943.

In April 1944 Recknagel assumed command of the XLII Army Corps, which he led through the catastrophic Soviet summer offensive that followed Operation Bagration and the simultaneous Lvov-Sandomierz Offensive. With only two understrength divisions—the 88th Infantry Division and the 72nd Infantry Division—he faced massed Soviet tank armies in swampy, forested terrain criss-crossed by streams and ravines in the great bend of the Vistula. For weeks the corps conducted a textbook mobile defense, shuttling its few reserves from crisis point to crisis point, launching sharp counterattacks at dawn and dusk, and using river bends and villages as natural strongpoints. Every available artillery piece and Nebelwerfer battery was coordinated into concentrated fire missions that shredded Soviet infantry waves. On 19 August the Wehrmacht communiqué praised the unshakeable courage and bold recklessness of the troops under his command, and a second report on 9 September noted that the corps had sealed off the dangerous Soviet bridgehead west of Baranow through repeated counter-thrusts, preventing a major breakout that could have unhinged the entire central sector. For these defensive actions Recknagel received the Swords to the Knight’s Cross on 23 October 1944.

Despite being outnumbered ten to one in armor and constantly threatened with encirclement, Recknagel’s leadership held the line long enough for the front to be stabilized, turning a potential rout into an orderly fighting withdrawal that bought the German high command critical breathing space. By January 1945, however, the Vistula-Oder Offensive had shattered the German defenses once more. As his corps remnants fought as a wandering pocket amid the chaos, Recknagel was killed in action on 23 January 1945 near Petrikau when Soviet partisans shot him during close-quarters fighting. At the time of his death he held the rank of General der Infanterie and was one of the last high-ranking Wehrmacht generals to fall in combat on the Eastern Front.

Recknagel was married in 1924 to Carola von Hertzberg, a noblewoman from Borkau, and the couple remained together until his death; he left no known children. Throughout his career he was remembered by contemporaries as a calm, decisive leader whose personal example and tactical skill repeatedly turned near-disaster into successful resistance. His progression from regimental assault commander in the West to corps commander on the collapsing Eastern Front traced the arc of the German Army’s fortunes across two world wars, and his three highest decorations—the Knight’s Cross, Oak Leaves, and Swords—were each earned through direct, hands-on command in the most desperate battles of the conflict.









Source:  
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermann_Recknagel  
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermann_Recknagel_(General)  
https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/16350/Recknagel-Hermann-General-der-Infanterie.htm  
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/Personenregister/R/RecknagelH.htm  
https://rk.balsi.de/index.php?action=list&cat=300  
https://www.geni.com/people/Hermann-Recknagel/6000000200628949835  
Scherzer, Veit. Die Ritterkreuzträger 1939-1945. Jena 2007.  
Patzwall, Klaus D. & Scherzer, Veit. Das Deutsche Kreuz 1941-1945. Norderstedt 2001.  
https://www.unithistories.com/units_index/index.php?file=/officers/personsx.html  
https://forum.axishistory.com/  
https://www.wehrmacht-awards.com/forums/  
https://web.archive.org/web/20091027052912fw_/http://geocities.com/orion47.geo/index2.html  
https://books.google.com/ (various references to Scherzer and unit histories)  
https://grokipedia.com/ (cross-reference for award details)