Nickname: No information
Date of Birth: 14 January 1890 - Roßwein, Saxony (German Empire)
Date of Death: 25 April 1945 - near Pillau-Neutief, East Prussia (German Reich)
Battles and Operations: Poland campaign, Western campaign, Eastern Front (Leningrad blockade, Battle of Lake Ladoga, defensive battles at Narva, fighting around Liepna in Latvia, defensive actions in Kurland, battles around Gotenhafen, Oxhöfter Kämpe and Pillau-Neutief)
NSDAP-Number: No information
Religion: No information
Parents: No information
Siblings: No information
Spouse: No information
Children: No information
Promotions:
28 November 1909 Fähnrich
15 August 1910 Leutnant
unknown Oberleutnant
1919 Charakterisierter Hauptmann a.D.
1939 Hauptmann der Reserve
1940 Major der Reserve
1942 Oberstleutnant der Reserve
1 December 1942 Oberst der Reserve
27 March 1945 Generalmajor der Reserve (RDA 1 October 1944)
Career:
28 November 1909 joined the 9th (Royal Saxon) Infantry Regiment No. 133 in Zwickau as Fähnrich
1914-1919 served with the regiment in the 40th Infantry Division No. 4 on the Western Front (including Marne battles, wounded at Somme-Py and Vitry-le-François)
1919 discharged from active service
1919-1939 branch director of Allianz insurance in Essen
1 September 1939 reactivated as Hauptmann der Reserve, company commander in Infantry Regiment 40 (27th Infantry Division)
1939-1940 Poland and Western campaigns as company commander
1940 battalion commander in Infantry Regiment 40 (occupation duties in France)
1941 transferred to Infantry Regiment 366 of the 227th Infantry Division (initially coastal defense in Normandy)
1941-1942 advance with the division to Army Group North up to Leningrad
5 July 1942 commander of Infantry Regiment 366
1942 defense of the Wengler position north of Gaitolowo during the First Battle of Lake Ladoga (encirclement and successful breakout)
15 October 1942 regiment renamed Grenadier Regiment 366
1943-1944 defensive battles before Leningrad and withdrawal
22 February 1944 Oak Leaves awarded for defense at Narva (including destruction of 73 Soviet tanks and repelling a naval landing)
11 May 1944 commander of the 227th Infantry Division
1944-1945 defensive battles in the Pskov area, Livonia and Kurland (Army Group North, later Army Group Vistula)
27 March 1945 commander of the 83rd Infantry Division (succeeding Generalleutnant Wilhelm Heun)
March-April 1945 battles around Gotenhafen, Oxhöfter Kämpe and Pillau-Neutief (killed by aerial bomb)
Awards and Decorations:
Ritterkreuz des Militär-St.-Heinrichs-Ordens (15 October 1914)
Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse (1914)
Eisernes Kreuz 1. Klasse (1914)
Ehrenkreuz für Frontkämpfer
1939 Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz 2. Klasse (20 May 1940)
1939 Spange zum Eisernen Kreuz 1. Klasse (29 December 1940)
Infanterie-Sturmabzeichen in Silber
Nahkampfspange in Bronze
Medaille Winterschlacht im Osten 1941/42
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes #1222 (6 October 1942) as Oberstleutnant der Reserve and Kommandeur Infanterie-Regiment 366 / 227.Infanterie-Division. In the sweltering late summer of 1942, during the grinding battles to maintain the narrow German corridor along the southern shore of Lake Ladoga that kept the siege of Leningrad alive, Wengler’s regiment found itself locked in one of the most desperate defensive stands of the entire Eastern Front. From the end of August the unit had been holding a key forested ridge known as the Kugelwäldchen (literally the “little ball wood”), a dominating height north of Gaitolowo that overlooked the vital supply routes and gave the Germans fire control over the surrounding swampy lowlands. When Soviet forces smashed through the neighboring sector and sliced the regiment off from the rest of the 227. Infanterie-Division, Wengler’s men were suddenly isolated in a pocket that the enemy immediately tried to crush. For eight full days the grenadiers fought off wave after wave of Soviet infantry and armor in savage close-quarters combat. Ammunition and food ran so low that small shock troops had to fight their way through enemy lines just to reopen the supply route for a few precious hours, while on other occasions the only resupply came from Luftwaffe aircraft dropping canisters directly onto the ridge under heavy anti-aircraft fire. The ridge became a moonscape of shell craters, burned-out vehicles, and fallen trees, yet Wengler’s leadership kept the position intact until a German relief column finally punched through and re-established contact. The tenacious eight-day stand at the Kugelwäldchen (later sometimes called the Wengler-Nase in regimental lore) prevented a collapse of the entire Ladoga corridor and earned him the Ritterkreuz.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub #404 (22 February 1944) as Oberst der Reserve and Kommandeur Grenadier-Regiment 366 / 227.Infanterie-Division. By early 1944 the division was fighting for its life on the Narva River line in Estonia as part of the desperate effort to keep Army Group North from being cut off. On two consecutive days in the sector around the village of Omuti, Wengler’s grenadiers faced a massive Soviet armored assault across the frozen river and marshy ground. More than one hundred enemy tanks rolled forward in successive waves, supported by heavy artillery and masses of infantry. Under Wengler’s calm and inspiring command, the regiment’s anti-tank guns, Panzerfaust teams, and dug-in machine-gun nests turned the Narva shoreline into a blazing killing ground. When the smoke finally cleared, 73 of the 105 attacking Soviet tanks lay destroyed or abandoned in front of the German positions, their burning hulks lighting the winter sky. The regiment held the river line without yielding a single meter of ground. Shortly afterward Wengler’s men also played a decisive role in smashing a Soviet naval landing attempt west of Narva, where Red Army troops tried to come ashore from the Baltic in an effort to outflank the entire German bridgehead; the grenadiers rushed to the coast, met the invaders in brutal hand-to-hand fighting along the beaches and dunes, and drove them back into the sea with heavy losses. These twin feats at Omuti and the coastal landing secured the Narva front long enough for the Germans to stabilize their positions and earned Wengler the Eichenlaub.
Ritterkreuz des Eisernen Kreuzes mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern #123 (21 January 1945 as Generalmajor der Reserve and Kommandeur 227.Infanterie-Division. By the summer of 1944 the German front in the Baltic states was crumbling under the weight of the Soviet Baltic Offensive. Divisionskommandeur Wengler conducted a masterful series of delaying actions and counterattacks in the fighting around the town of Liepna in Latvia. Vastly outnumbered, the division repeatedly dug in along rivers, ridges, and village strongpoints, launching sharp local counter-strokes that bloodied the advancing Soviet columns and bought critical time for neighboring units to withdraw in good order or reinforce the Tannenberg Line farther north. Wengler’s troops fought through burning forests and muddy roads, using every available anti-tank weapon and artillery piece to exact a heavy toll on the Red Army’s armored spearheads while the infantry held off relentless human-wave assaults. Their stubborn defense around Liepna and the subsequent reinforcement of the Estonian defensive positions contributed directly to the temporary stabilization of the front and prevented an immediate breakthrough into the heart of the Baltic states. For this sustained display of leadership and the division’s outstanding performance against overwhelming odds in the summer battles of 1944, Wengler received the Schwerter while the unit was still engaged in the grueling withdrawal toward Courland.
Nennung im Wehrmachtbericht (23 August 1944)
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Paul Moritz Maximilian Wengler was a German reserve officer who served with distinction in both world wars and rose to the rank of Generalmajor der Reserve in the final months of World War II. Born on 14 January 1890 in Roßwein, Saxony, within the German Empire, he became one of the few non-regular army officers to command a full infantry division on the Eastern Front and to receive the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves and Swords. Wengler earned these high decorations through repeated acts of leadership in desperate defensive battles, particularly during the grueling campaigns to hold the Leningrad corridor, the Narva River line, and the Baltic states against overwhelming Soviet forces. His career spanned from the trenches of the Western Front in 1914 to the collapsing defenses of East Prussia in 1945, where he was killed in action at the age of 55 near Pillau-Neutief. Despite spending most of the interwar years as a civilian insurance executive, he demonstrated exceptional combat effectiveness as a reserve commander, turning isolated pockets and crumbling lines into temporary strongpoints that delayed the Red Army's advance.
Wengler's early life unfolded in the Saxon town of Roßwein, where he was raised as one of four children by his parents Max Wengler and Bertha Emilie Kruspe. Little is documented about his siblings or any formal higher education before military service, but in November 1909 he entered the Royal Saxon Army as a Fähnrich with the 9th (Royal Saxon) Infantry Regiment No. 133 stationed in Zwickau. He was commissioned as a Leutnant in August 1910 and quickly adapted to the rigorous training of the prewar imperial forces. His early military experience emphasized discipline and marksmanship, skills that would later prove vital in both world wars. By the outbreak of World War I in 1914, Wengler was already an experienced junior officer ready for frontline deployment with his regiment in the 40th Infantry Division No. 4.
During World War I, Wengler saw extensive combat on the Western Front, participating in the Marne battles and suffering wounds at Somme-Py and Vitry-le-François while serving continuously with his Saxon regiment from August 1914 until February 1919. His bravery under fire earned him the Ritterkreuz of the Military Order of St. Henry on 15 October 1914, along with both classes of the Iron Cross. The harsh realities of trench warfare, including gas attacks and artillery barrages, shaped his understanding of defensive tenacity, a trait that defined his later commands. After the armistice he was discharged from active duty as a charakterisierter Hauptmann and returned to civilian life, taking up a position as branch director of the Allianz insurance company in Essen, where he remained until the outbreak of the next global conflict in 1939.
Reactivated at the start of World War II as a Hauptmann der Reserve, Wengler first served as a company commander in Infantry Regiment 40 of the 27th Infantry Division, participating in the Poland and Western campaigns of 1939 and 1940. He advanced rapidly to battalion commander during the occupation of France before transferring in 1941 to Infantry Regiment 366 of the 227th Infantry Division, initially assigned to coastal defense duties in Normandy. By mid-1941 the division moved east with Army Group North, advancing through the Baltic states toward Leningrad. On 5 July 1942 Wengler assumed command of the regiment, which was soon thrust into the brutal fighting along the southern shore of Lake Ladoga. His leadership during these operations transformed him from a reserve officer into a recognized combat commander.
The action that secured Wengler's Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 6 October 1942 occurred in the late summer fighting north of Gaitolowo during the First Battle of Lake Ladoga. His regiment became isolated on a forested ridge known as the Kugelwäldchen after Soviet forces sliced through neighboring sectors, trapping the unit in a pocket for eight days of relentless assaults. Waves of Soviet infantry and armor crashed against the position amid swamps and shell craters, with ammunition so scarce that shock troops had to fight through enemy lines for resupply or rely on Luftwaffe airdrops under heavy fire. Wengler maintained calm authority, directing close-quarters defenses and counterattacks that prevented the collapse of the entire Ladoga corridor. The ridge, later nicknamed the Wengler-Nase in regimental accounts, held firm until relief arrived, showcasing his ability to inspire exhausted troops in near-hopeless conditions. The regiment was subsequently redesignated Grenadier Regiment 366 in October 1942.
Further recognition came in early 1944 on the Narva River line in Estonia, where Wengler, now an Oberst der Reserve still commanding Grenadier Regiment 366, earned the Oak Leaves to the Knight's Cross on 22 February 1944 as the 404th recipient. In the sector around the village of Omuti, his grenadiers faced a massive Soviet armored assault across frozen ground, with more than one hundred enemy tanks advancing in successive waves supported by artillery and infantry. Under Wengler's direction, anti-tank guns, Panzerfaust teams, and machine-gun nests turned the shoreline into a blazing killing ground, destroying 73 tanks while holding every meter of the river line. Shortly afterward the regiment repelled a Soviet naval landing west of Narva, rushing to the beaches to engage invaders in brutal hand-to-hand combat amid dunes and surf, driving them back into the sea with heavy losses. These feats stabilized the Narva front long enough for Army Group North to reorganize.
By May 1944 Wengler had been promoted to command the entire 227th Infantry Division. He led it through the summer Soviet Baltic Offensive, conducting masterful delaying actions and counterattacks around Liepna in Latvia against vastly superior forces. The division repeatedly dug in along rivers and ridges, launching sharp local counterstrokes that bloodied Soviet armored spearheads and bought time for neighboring units to withdraw or reinforce the Tannenberg Line. Fighting through burning forests and muddy roads, Wengler's troops used every anti-tank weapon and artillery piece to exact a heavy toll during relentless human-wave assaults. For this sustained leadership in the face of overwhelming odds he received the Swords to the Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves on 21 January 1945 as the 123rd recipient, becoming one of the few reserve officers to achieve this distinction. In March 1945 he took command of the 83rd Infantry Division, leading it through the final evacuation battles around Gotenhafen, the Oxhöfter Kämpe, and Pillau-Neutief in East Prussia.
Wengler met his end on 25 April 1945 when he was killed by an aerial bomb during the desperate fighting near Pillau-Neutief as German forces attempted to evacuate the last pockets of East Prussia. His death came just weeks before the unconditional surrender of Nazi Germany. Throughout his career Wengler exemplified the reserve officer who rose through merit rather than regular army privilege, commanding with a blend of Saxon discipline and pragmatic adaptability. His awards also included the 1939 Spange to both classes of the Iron Cross, the Infantry Assault Badge in silver, the Close Combat Clasp in bronze, the Winter Battle in the East Medal, and mention in the Wehrmachtbericht. Though details of his personal life, including any spouse or children, remain largely undocumented, his military legacy endures as a symbol of determined defensive leadership in the most attritional battles of the Eastern Front.
Source:
Wolfgang Keilig: Die Generale des Heeres 1939-1945
Gerhard von Seemen: Die Ritterkreuzträger 1939-1945
John R. Angolia, Roger James Bender: On the field of honor, volume 2
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://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maximilian_Wengler
https://www.tracesofwar.com/persons/34583/Wengler-Maximilian-Generalmajor.htm




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