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75th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)


FieldValue
unit_name75th Infantry Division
native_name
image75. Infanterie Division.png
image_size200
caption75. Infanterie Division Vehicle Insignia
countryNazi Germany
typeInfantry
sizeDivision
branch[[File:Heer - decal for helmet 1942.svg16px]] Heer ([[File:Balkenkreuz.svg16px]] Wehrmacht)
dates26 August 1939 – 8 May 1945
battlesBattle of France
Operation Barbarossa
Battle of Kiev (1941)
Battle of Kursk
Lower Dnieper Offensive
Kamenets-Podolsky pocket
Battle of the Dukla Pass
Upper Silesian Offensive
Prague Offensive
notable_commandersHelmuth Beukemann

Operation Barbarossa Battle of Kiev (1941) Battle of Kursk Lower Dnieper Offensive Kamenets-Podolsky pocket Battle of the Dukla Pass Upper Silesian Offensive Prague Offensive

The 75th Infantry Division () was a German infantry division in World War II. It was formed on 26 August 1939.

Service history

The 75th Infantry Division was formed on 26 August 1939 as a division of the second Aufstellungswelle in Wehrkreis II using personnel of the 12th Infantry Division (also headquartered at Wehrkreis II) to form three infantry regiments and an artillery regiment. These regiments were the Infantry Regiments 172 (Neustrelitz), 202 (Rostock), and 222 (Schwerin), and the Artillery Regiment 175 (Ludwigslust), as well as the Division Units 175 for divisional support.

On 31 January 1940, the battalion II./172 was transferred to the 292nd Infantry Division as II./508. A third of the division (Staff/222, I./172, I./202, I./222) was transferred away on 8 October 1940 and reassigned to the 302nd Infantry Division. These transfers were subsequently replenished.

The 75th Infantry Division participated in the Massacre at Babi Yar (29–30 September 1941).

After an OKH directive of 15 October 1942, all infantry regiments were redesignated "Grenadier Regiment", though regiments in the tradition of certain previous German military units could instead petition to be called "Rifle Regiment" or "Fusilier Regiment". In the case of the 75th Infantry Division, this resulted in the Grenadier Regiments 172 and 222 and, after 11 June 1943, the Fusilier Regiment 202.

Following a directive of 2 October 1943, divisions on the Eastern Front were reformed to become Division neuer Art organization-style divisions. The battalions I./272, II./202 and II./222 were dissolved and replaced by their regiments' respective third battalions. The Bicycle Detachment 175, which had been added to the division on 7 June 1942, became the Division Fusilier Battalion 75.

On 1 January 1945, the 75th Infantry Division (then a part of Army Group Heinrici (Gotthard Heinrici) under Army Group A) had a strength of 8,441 men.****

In March to April 1945, the division was smashed in the Mährisch-Ostrau sector and its remnants absorbed by other forces.

Superior formations

YearMonthArmy CorpsArmyArmy GroupArea of operations
**1939**Sep.*Army reserves*[1st Army](1st-army-wehrmacht)Army Group CSaar Palatinate
Oct.XXIV Army Corps
Dec.XII Army Corps
**1940**Jan.–Jul.
Jul.–Aug.III Army Corps[18th Army](18th-army-wehrmacht)*None*German-occupied Poland
Sep.–Dec.[12th Army](12th-army-wehrmacht)Army Group B
**1941**Jan.–Apr.[17th Army](17th-army-wehrmacht)
May[6th Army](6th-army-wehrmacht)Army Group A
Jun.–Aug.LV Army CorpsArmy Group SouthKholm, Kyiv
Sep.–Dec.XXIX Army CorpsKyiv, Belgorod
**1942**Jan.–Jul.Belgorod
Aug.*Army group reserves*
Sep.–Dec.VII Army Corps[2nd Army](2nd-army-wehrmacht)Voronezh
**1943**Jan.–Feb.
Mar.–Jul.Army Group CenterSumy
Aug.–Dec.[4th Panzer Army](4th-panzer-army)Army Group SouthBelgorod, Kyiv, Zhytomir
**1944**Jan.Vinnytsia
Feb.[1st Panzer Army](1st-panzer-army)Cherkassy
Mar.[8th Army](8th-army-wehrmacht)
Apr.XXXXVI Panzer Corps1st Panzer ArmyArmy Group North UkraineBrody
May–Jul.XXIV Army Corps
Aug.XI Army CorpsCarpathian mountains
Sep.XXIV Army Corps
Oct.Army Group ABeskid mountains
Nov.–Dec.XI Army Corps
**1945**Jan.
Feb.–Mar.LIX Army CorpsArmy Group CenterUpper Silesia
Apr.*Army reserves*Mährisch-Ostrau

Commanders

  • Ernst Hammer, 26 August 1939 – 5 September 1942
  • Erich Diestel, 5 September 1942 – 12 September 1942
  • Helmuth Beukemann, 15 September 1942 – 9 July 1944
  • Karl Arning, 10 July 1944 – 5 April 1945
  • Lothar Berger, 6 April 1945 – May 1945
  • Gerhard Matthaiss, May 1945 – 8 May 1945

References

References

  1. Tessin, Georg. (1977). "Die Landstreitkräfte 071–130". Biblio Verlag.
  2. (31 May 2016). "Babi Yar | Sciences Po Mass Violence and Resistance - Research Network".
  3. Tessin, Georg. (1977). "Die Waffengattungen - Gesamtübersicht". Biblio Verlag.
  4. Lakowski, Richard. (2008). "Die Militärische Niederwerfung der Wehrmacht". Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt.
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