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11th Army

 
Wikipedia: 11th Army (Germany)
11. Armee
11th Army
Active 1915 - November 1918
October 5, 1940 - November 21, 1942
November 26, 1944 - April 21, 1945
Country  German Empire
 Nazi Germany
Branch Heer
Type Field Army
Engagements World War I

World War II

Commanders
Notable
commanders
Erich von Manstein

The 11th Army (German: 11. Armee) was a World War I and a World War II field army.

Contents

World War I

The 11th Army was formed in early 1915. It briefly fought on the Western Front during the Battle of Ypres holding the line against the allied attack. On April 22nd, it was transferred and placed with Austrian 4th Army under Mackensen's command behind the Gorlice-Tarnow gap, south of the Vistula River. In July 1915, the 11th Army advanced into Russian territory in a general German offensive. It continued to fight on the Eastern Front when after armistice in 1917, it was then re-deployed to the Western Front and took part in the German spring offensive in 1918. After the German surrender in November 1918, the Army was disbanded.

World War II

The Army was activated in 1940 to prepare for the forthcoming German attack on the Soviet Union.

The 11th Army was part of Army Group South when it invaded Russia in Operation Barbarossa. In September 1941, Erich von Manstein was appointed commander of 11th Army. Its former commander, Colonel-General Eugen Ritter von Schobert, had perished when his plane landed in a Russian minefield.

Before the start of Barbarossa operation the 11th Army included:

Army Staff

  • 54th Corps
Corps Staff
    • 22nd infantry division
    • 24th infantry division
    • 50th infantry division
    • 132nd infantry division
    • 4th mountain rifle division (Rum.)
190th battalion assault guns
197th battalion assault guns
    • 306th artillery division
division Staff
138th artillery brigade
Staff 138th artillery brigade
49th artillery regiment
Staff 49th artillery regiment
battery 147th artillery battalion (105- mm guns)
battery 148th artillery battalion (105- mm guns)
502nd separate artillery battery
741st separate artillery battery (280- mm howitzer)
742nd separate artillery battery (280- mm howitzer)
743rd separate artillery battery (280- mm howitzer)
744th separate artillery battery (280- mm howitzer)
781st heavy artillery regiment
Staff 781st heavy artillery regiment
31st battalion artillery reconnaissance
556th battalion artillery reconnaissance
627th platoon artillery fire correction
513th meteorological platoon
459th separate artillery battery (420- mm howitzer Gamma)
672nd artillery railroad battalion (800- mm gun Dora)
688th artillery railroad battery (280- mm gun Bruno)
787th artillery regiment
Staff 787th artillery regiment
battery 54th heavy artillery battalion (150- mm howitzer 105- mm guns)
battery 77th heavy artillery battalion (150- mm howitzer)
battery 111th heavy artillery battalion (150- mm howitzer)
battery 2nd heavy artillery regiment (210-mm howitzer)
458th separate heavy artillery battery (420- mm howitzer)
624th heavy artillery battalion (305- mm howitzer)
641st heavy artillery battalion (305- mm and 355- mm howitzer)
737th heavy artillery battalion (150- mm howitzer)
767th heavy artillery battalion (150- mm guns)
2 batteries 814th heavy artillery battalion (240-mm howitzers)
battery 818th heavy artillery battalion (105- mm guns)
815th heavy artillery battalion (305- mm howitzer)
833rd battalion heavy self-propelled guns (600- mm howitzer Carl)
857th heavy artillery battalion (210-mm howitzers)
917th separate battery self-propelled guns (194- mm guns)
1st missile brigade
brigade Staff
1st rocket regiment (280 mm launchers )
battery 1st regiment rocket mortars (150- mm)
battery 54th battalion rocket mortars (150- mm)
4th separate mortar battalion (105-mm mortars)
46th combat engineer battalion
744th combat engineer battalion
905th combat engineer company (assault floating craft)
88th mobile construction column
620th mobile construction column
454th Corps signal battalion
737th battalion special-connection
791st motor transport company
872nd motor transport company
316th gendarme company
  • 30th Corps
Corps Staff
    • 72nd infantry division
    • 170th infantry division
    • 28th light infantry division
249th battalion assault guns
610th anti-aircraft artillery battalion
70th battalion rocket mortars (150- mm mortars 280 mm guns)
    • 110th artillery brigade
brigade Staff
29th battalion artillery reconnaissance
battery 2nd heavy artillery regiment (210-mm howitzer 150- mm guns)
154th heavy artillery battalion (150- mm howitzer)
battery 624th heavy artillery battalion (305- mm howitzer)
battery 767th heavy artillery battalion (150- mm guns)
battery 818th heavy artillery battalion (105- mm guns)
battery 147th artillery battalion (105- mm guns)
battery 772nd artillery battalion (150- mm guns)
battery 601st artillery battalion
690th field-engineer regiment
Staff regiment
70th combat engineer battalion
741st combat engineer battalion
902nd combat engineer company (assault floating craft)
176th mobile construction column
430th Corps signal battalion
430th Corps battalion supply
430th Corps cartographic battalion
430th field post company
430th gendarme company
  • Mountain-rifle Corps (Rum.)
Corps Staff
    • 1st mountain rifle division (Rum.)
    • 18th infantry division (Rum.)
7th Corps artillery regiment (Rum.)
regiment Staff
? th artillery battalion (105- mm guns)
? th artillery battalion (150- mm guns)
52nd separate artillery battalion
54th separate artillery battalion
57th separate artillery battalion
  • 42nd Corps
  • 7th Corps (Rum.)

Army assets

  • Rail road operations command
control Staff
19th construction brigade
Supply service
300th tank battalion
223rd tank company
617th cartography battalion
756th traffic controllers battalion
766th artillery regiment
regiment Staff
147th artillery battalion (105- mm guns)
148th artillery battalion (105- mm guns)
284th artillery battalion (150- mm guns)
747th artillery battalion (150- mm guns)
774th artillery battalion (150- mm guns)
789th artillery battalion (105- mm guns)
battery 601st artillery battalion
926th construction command
173rd mobile construction column
1st department 403rd mobile construction column
1st department 410th mobile construction column
2nd department 427th mobile construction column
2nd department 430th mobile construction column
536th mobile construction column
558th army communications regiment
693rd propaganda company
521st cartographic platoon
542nd cartographic command
647th field gendarme detachment
15th field communications detachment

The 11th Army was tasked with invading the Crimea and the pursuit of enemy forces on the flank of Army Group South during its advance into Russia.

The 11th Army order of battle included two Corps: 30th Corps, composed of 22nd, 72nd, and Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler, and LIXth Mountain Corps, consisting of 170th Infantry Division and the 1st and 4th Mountain Divisions, and LIVth Corps, consisting of 46th, 73rd, and 50th Infantry Divisions. The latter Corps had been in charge of the advance into the Crimean peninsula earlier in September. The Romanian 3rd Army, three Mountain brigades and three cavalry brigades, were also under von Manstein's command.

Battle of Sevastopol

The 11th Army fought in southern Russia from 1941 until mid-summer 1942 and laid siege to Sevastopol. It did not take part in Operation Blue when Army Group South attacked in Southern Russia towards Stalingrad. The 11th Army cut off the Russians from the sea thus sealing the fate of the remaining Russian defenders. An estimated 100,000 prisoners marched into captivity. For his achievements in this battle, Manstein was promoted to Field Marshall. A grateful Adolf Hitler also authorized the Crimean Shield to commemorate the efforts of 11th Army. Manstein recommended that the 11th Army either cross the straits of Kerch and push into the Kuban to aid in the capture of Rostov or be placed into Army Group South reserve. Instead, part of 11th Army, along with the heavy siege train was transferred to Army Group North. Ordered to oversee Leningrad's reduction, Manstein transferred with them. The remainder of 11th Army was parceled out to Army Group Center and Army Group South. Headquarters, 11th Army was inactivated on November 21, 1942, and used to form the newly created Army Group Don.

Order of Battle During the Battle for Sevastopol

The German 11th Army during the battle of Sevastopol had 9 German infantry divisions (including 2 received during the battle) in two corps, and two Romanian rifle corps, plus various supporting elements including 150 tanks, several hundred aircraft, and one of the heaviest concentrations of artillery fielded by the Wehrmacht.

October 1944 to April 1945

The 11th SS Panzer Army (SS panzer-Armeeoberkommando 11. ), was not much more than a paper army formed between November 1944 and February 1945 by Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler while he was commander of Army Group Vistula. The military historian Antony Beevor wrote that when the Eleventh SS Panzer Army was created the available units at best could constitute a corps, "'But panzer army' observed Eismann 'has a better ring to it'". It also allowed Himmler to promote SS officers to senior staff and field commands within the formation. Obergruppenführer Felix Steiner, probably the best SS officer available, was named its commander. [1] The Army was officially listed as the 11th Army but it was also known as SS Panzer-Armeeoberkommando 11.[2] and is often referred to in English as the 11th SS Panzer Army. After fighting east of the Oder River during February 1945 the 11th was assigned to OB West and reorganized (and given the command of new units) for combat against the Western Allies in March 1945. After defending the Weser River and the Harz mountains, the Eleventh surrendered to the Western Allies on 21 April.[2]

Army Detachment Steiner, fought in the Battle of Berlin, and because Steiner commanded that paper army it can easily be confused with the Eleventh SS Panzer Army.

Commanders

  • Generaloberst Eugen Ritter von Schobert (October 5, 1940 – September 12, 1941)
  • Generalfeldmarschall Erich von Manstein (September 12, 1941 – November 21, 1942)
  • General der Artillerie Anton Graßer (October 1944 – March 1945)
  • General der Infanterie Otto Hitzfeld (March 1945 – March 1945)
  • General der Artillerie Walter Lucht (March 1945 – April 10, 1945)

References

  • Beevor, Antony. Berlin: The Downfall 1945, Penguin Books, 2002, ISBN 0-670-88695-5.
  • Tessin, Georg Verbände und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen-SS 1939 - 1945, Volume 3, Biblio Verlag, 1974, ISBN 3-7648-0942-6.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Beevor p.88
  2. ^ a b Tessin p.??

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