Samland offensive: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|WWII Soviet offensive on the Eastern Front}} |
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{{Infobox |
{{Infobox military conflict |
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|conflict=Zemland Offensive Operation |
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|conflict=Samland offensive |
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|image= |
|image= |
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|caption= |
|caption= |
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|partof=[[Eastern Front of World War II]] |
|partof=[[Eastern Front of World War II]] |
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|place=[[East Prussia]] |
|place=[[Sambia]], [[East Prussia]] (now Kaliningrad Oblast) |
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|date= |
|date=April 13 – April 25, 1945 |
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|result=Soviet Victory |
|result=Soviet Victory |
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|combatant1= |
|combatant1={{flagcountry|Nazi Germany}} |
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|combatant2={{ |
|combatant2={{flagcountry|USSR|1936}} |
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|commander1= |
|commander1=[[Hans Gollnick]]<br/>[[Dietrich von Saucken]] |
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|commander2= |
|commander2=[[Hovhannes Bagramyan]] |
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| units1 = [[XXVIII Army Corps (Wehrmacht)|Army Detachment Samland]]<br>[[Armee Ostpreußen]] |
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| units2 = [[Zemland Group of Forces]] |
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|strength1= |
|strength1= |
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|strength2= |
|strength2= |
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|casualties1= |
|casualties1='''Soviet claim:''' 80,000 KIA or POW |
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|casualties2= |
|casualties2=Unknown |
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|}} |
|}} |
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{{Campaignbox Poland 1944–1945}} |
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The ''' |
The '''Samland offensive''' was a [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] offensive on the [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]] in the final stages of World War II. It took place in [[Sambia Peninsula|Sambia]] ({{langx|de|Samland}}); ({{langx|ru|земланд|translit=Zemland}}). |
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⚫ | The [[East Prussian offensive]], which commenced on January 13, 1945, had seen the [[Red Army]] clear German forces from much of [[East Prussia]]. The defenders had been driven into a series of [[Salients, re-entrants and pockets|pockets]] on the Baltic coast and in the city of [[Königsberg]], in which they were besieged. |
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==Role in the conflict== |
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⚫ | Marshal [[Aleksandr Vasilevsky]], who had taken over command of the [[3rd Belorussian Front]] in February, incorporated General [[Hovhannes Bagramyan]]'s [[1st Baltic Front]] into his command from February 22, redesignating it as the Zemland Army Group (or Samland Front).<ref name=duffyp203>Duffy, p.203</ref> Bagramyan's forces initially laid siege to [[Königsberg]]; the city was eventually [[Battle of Königsberg|stormed]] on April 9. They were then given the task of overcoming the substantial German force still remaining in [[Sambia]]. |
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{{main|East Prussian Offensive}} |
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⚫ | The East Prussian |
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==Soviet planning== |
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⚫ | Marshal [[Aleksandr Vasilevsky]], who had taken over command of the [[3rd Belorussian Front]] in February, incorporated General [[Hovhannes Bagramyan]]'s [[1st Baltic Front]] into his command from |
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==German planning== |
==German planning== |
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⚫ | German defence efforts had largely focused on the port of [[Pillau]] at the tip of the peninsula, which was the main evacuation point for casualties and East Prussian civilians. Throughout the [[Battle of Königsberg]], Sambia had been defended by [[XXVIII Army Corps (Wehrmacht)|Army Detachment Samland]] under the command of General [[Hans Gollnick]], who had tried to maintain a corridor between Königsberg and Pillau. |
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⚫ | On April 7, the remnants of [[2nd Army (Wehrmacht)|Second]] and [[4th Army (Wehrmacht)|Fourth]] Armies, which had been destroyed in encirclements at [[East Pomeranian offensive|Danzig]] and [[Heiligenbeil Pocket|Heiligenbeil]] respectively, were combined as ''[[Armee Ostpreußen]]'' with the task of defending Sambia, the [[Vistula]] delta and the [[Hel Peninsula]]; Gollnick's troops were incorporated in it. |
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⚫ | German defence efforts had largely focused on the port of [[Pillau]] at the tip of the peninsula, which was the main evacuation point for casualties and East Prussian civilians. Throughout the |
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⚫ | On |
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Most of the units of ''Armee Ostpreußen'' were little more than remnants, and the entire formation was very poorly supplied. During the battle for Sambia, its officers were outraged to discover that the ''[[Luftwaffe]]'' and ''[[Kriegsmarine]]'' had maintained large underground depots full of stores and fuel in the woods of the peninsula; the supplies had to be destroyed in the retreat.<ref name=duffyp384>Duffy, p.384</ref> |
Most of the units of ''Armee Ostpreußen'' were little more than remnants, and the entire formation was very poorly supplied. During the battle for Sambia, its officers were outraged to discover that the ''[[Luftwaffe]]'' and ''[[Kriegsmarine]]'' had maintained large underground depots full of stores and fuel in the woods of the peninsula; the supplies had to be destroyed in the retreat.<ref name=duffyp384>Duffy, p.384</ref> |
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===Red Army=== |
===Red Army=== |
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*Samland Army Group (General [[Hovhannes Bagramyan]]) |
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*[[ |
**[[2nd Guards Army]] (Lieutenant-General [[Porfiry Chanchibadze]]) |
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**[[2nd Guards Army]] (Lieutenant-General [[Porfirii Chanchibadze]]) |
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**[[11th Guards Army]] (General [[Kuzma Galitsky]]) |
**[[11th Guards Army]] (General [[Kuzma Galitsky]]) |
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**[[5th Army (Soviet Union)|5th Army]] (Colonel-General [[Nikolay Krylov]]) |
**[[5th Army (Soviet Union)|5th Army]] (Colonel-General [[Nikolay Ivanovich Krylov|Nikolay Krylov]]) |
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**[[ |
**[[49th Army]] (Lieutenant-General [[Ivan Grishin]]) |
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**[[43rd Army]] (General [[ |
**[[43rd Army (Soviet Union)|43rd Army]] (General [[Afanasy Beloborodov]]) |
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===Wehrmacht=== |
===Wehrmacht=== |
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⚫ | |||
⚫ | **[[XXVI Corps (Germany)|XXVI Corps]] (General [[Gerhard Matzky]]) (remnants of [[58th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)|58th]], [[1st Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)|1st]], and [[21st Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)|21st]] Infantry Divisions, [[5th Panzer Division (Wehrmacht)|5th Panzer Division]], [[28th Jäger Division (Germany)|28th Jäger Division]], and [[561st Volksgrenadier Division (Germany)|561st Volksgrenadier Division]]) |
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⚫ | |||
**[[ |
**[[LV Corps (Germany)|LV Corps]] / 'Fortress [[Pillau]]' (Lieutenant-General [[Kurt Chill]]) (remnants of [[50th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)|50th]] and [[286th Security Division (Germany)|286th]] Infantry Divisions and [[558th Volksgrenadier Division (Germany)|558th Volksgrenadier Division]]) |
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**[[ |
**[[IX Army Corps (Wehrmacht)|IX Corps]] (General [[Rolf Wuthmann]] to April 20, then Lieutenant-General [[Hermann Hohn]]) (remnants of [[95th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)|95th]], [[93rd Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)|93rd]], and [[14th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)|14th]] Infantry Divisions, [[551st Volksgrenadier Division (Germany)|551st Volksgrenadier Division]] and ''[[Panzer-Grenadier-Division Großdeutschland|Panzergrenadier Division Großdeutschland]]'') |
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⚫ | **[[ |
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==The offensive== |
==The offensive== |
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⚫ | The offensive plan called for the 5th and 39th Armies to break through towards [[Fischhausen]] as the main strike force, with the 11th Guards Army in reserve.<ref name=bagramyanp576>Bagramyan, p.576</ref> The 2nd Guards Army would attack in the north, with the 43rd Army breaking through on the southern flank. There would also be amphibious landings in the south of Sambia. The 3rd Belorussian Front's head of intelligence suggested that they faced up to 100,000 defending troops<ref name=bagramyanp575>Bagramyan, p.575</ref> but by shortening the frontage of each unit the attackers were able to achieve a superiority of two to one in men and three to one in artillery.<ref name=bagramyanp576>Bagramyan, p.576</ref> Bagramyan issued a call for the defenders to surrender in exchange for fair treatment and medical assistance for the wounded, but this went unanswered, and the offensive commenced with an artillery barrage and air attacks on April 13. |
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⚫ | The initial attack scattered many of the remaining German forces, some falling back towards Pillau. The Soviet [[115th Rifle Division (Soviet Union)|115th Rifle Division]] broke through and cleared the 551st Volksgrenadier Division from [[Rauschen]] on the north-western tip of Sambia; the German forces in the north of the peninsula, including the 95th Infantry Division and parts of Heavy Panzer Battalion 511, were driven southwards into [[Palmnicken]] and destroyed.<ref name=schneiderp91>Schneider, p.91</ref> |
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⚫ | The offensive plan called for the 5th and 39th Armies to break through towards [[Fischhausen]] as the main strike force, with the 11th Guards Army in reserve.<ref name=bagramyanp576>Bagramyan, p.576</ref> The 2nd Guards Army would attack in the north, with the 43rd Army breaking through on the southern flank. There would also be amphibious landings in the south of Sambia. The 3rd Belorussian Front's head of intelligence suggested that they faced up to 100,000 defending troops<ref name=bagramyanp575>Bagramyan, p.575</ref> but by shortening the frontage of each unit the attackers were able to achieve a superiority of two to one in men and three to one in artillery.<ref name=bagramyanp576>Bagramyan, p.576</ref> Bagramyan issued a call for the defenders to surrender in exchange for fair treatment and medical assistance for the wounded, but this went unanswered, and the offensive commenced with an artillery barrage and air attacks on |
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⚫ | By April 16, Soviet forces broke through near Fischhausen; parts of XXVI Corps, including the 5th Panzer and 28th Jäger Divisions became cut off on the peninsula at [[Peyse]], and were lost.<ref name=duffyp219>Duffy, p.219</ref> A defence line, the ''Tenkitten-Riegel'', had been improvised across the narrow strip of land leading to Pillau; to break German resistance, the 11th Guards Army was committed on April 20. Fighting intensified at [[Tenkitten]], where the commander of the [[16th Guards Rifle Corps (Soviet Union)|16th Guards Rifle Corps]], Major-General S S Gur'ev, was killed by a shell fragment on April 22.<ref name=maslovp178>Maslov, p.178</ref> |
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⚫ | The initial attack scattered many of the remaining German forces, some falling back towards Pillau. The Soviet [[115th Rifle Division (Soviet Union)|115th Rifle Division]] broke through and cleared the 551st Volksgrenadier Division from [[Rauschen]] on the north-western tip of Sambia; the German forces in the north of the peninsula, including the 95th Infantry Division and parts of Heavy Panzer |
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⚫ | By |
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The German defensive perimeter was pushed back towards Pillau, which was defended by elements of the 1st, 21st, 58th and other Infantry Divisions; remaining German troops were evacuated to the [[Frische Nehrung]]. Pillau had been heavily fortified, being described by Bagramyan as "Konigsberg in miniature",<ref name=bagramyanp584>Bagramyan, p.584</ref> and was supported by fire from naval artillery and coastal batteries. After a stubborn defence, it was eventually stormed by units of 11th Guards Army, including the [[31st Guards Rifle Division]], on April |
The German defensive perimeter was pushed back towards Pillau, which was defended by elements of the 1st, 21st, 58th and other Infantry Divisions; the remaining German troops were evacuated to the [[Frische Nehrung]]. Pillau had been heavily fortified, being described by Bagramyan as "Konigsberg in miniature",<ref name=bagramyanp584>Bagramyan, p.584</ref> and was supported by fire from naval artillery and coastal batteries. After a stubborn defence, it was eventually stormed by units of the 11th Guards Army, including the [[31st Guards Rifle Division]], on April 25, the town being cleared in around 12 hours.<ref name=bagramyanp586>Bagramyan, p.586</ref> The last German position to fall was a battery commanded by Major-General [[Karl Henke (general)|Karl Henke]], which was overrun by the 16th Guards Rifle Corps on April 27.<ref name=duffyp219-henke>Duffy, p.219 (who misidentifies Major-General Henke as Major Henke)</ref> |
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==Aftermath== |
==Aftermath== |
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The Red Army claimed to have killed or taken prisoner 80,000 German troops during the operations in Sambia.<ref name=bagramyanp588>Bagramyan, p.588. This estimate seems high, but may include all prisoners taken on the Frische Nehrung.</ref> |
The Red Army claimed to have killed or taken prisoner 80,000 German troops during the operations in Sambia.<ref name=bagramyanp588>Bagramyan, p.588. This estimate seems high, but may include all prisoners taken on the Frische Nehrung.</ref> |
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The remnants of IX Corps resisted on the Frische Nehrung to the end of the war, though the corps staff was removed to [[Bornholm]]. |
The remnants of IX Corps resisted on the Frische Nehrung to the end of the war, though the corps staff was removed to [[Bornholm]]. |
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The headquarters of the Zemland Group of Forces later became the headquarters of the [[Baltic Military District]] on 9 July 1945.<ref>V.I. Feskov et al 2004, Tomsk, p.8.</ref> |
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==References== |
==References== |
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* "Kronborg, Ove C.: ''Et hjørne af en hærs sammenbrud - Den tyske 551. Grenaderdivisions fødsel, kampe og undergang i Litauen og Østpreussen 1944 – 45''. (2013). Published by Forlaget Als - {{ISBN|978-87-996754-0-1}} |
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[[Category:Battles involving Germany]] |
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[[Category:Conflicts in 1945]] |
[[Category:Conflicts in 1945]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Military operations of World War II involving Germany]] |
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[[Category:Battles and operations of the Soviet–German War]] |
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[[Category:Strategic operations of the Red Army in World War II]] |
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[[Category:April 1945 events]] |
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[[Category:East Prussia in World War II]] |
Latest revision as of 11:49, 24 November 2024
Samland offensive | |||||||
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Part of Eastern Front of World War II | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Germany | Soviet Union | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Hans Gollnick Dietrich von Saucken | Hovhannes Bagramyan | ||||||
Units involved | |||||||
Army Detachment Samland Armee Ostpreußen | Zemland Group of Forces | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
Soviet claim: 80,000 KIA or POW | Unknown |
The Samland offensive was a Soviet offensive on the Eastern Front in the final stages of World War II. It took place in Sambia (German: Samland); (Russian: земланд, romanized: Zemland).
The East Prussian offensive, which commenced on January 13, 1945, had seen the Red Army clear German forces from much of East Prussia. The defenders had been driven into a series of pockets on the Baltic coast and in the city of Königsberg, in which they were besieged.
Marshal Aleksandr Vasilevsky, who had taken over command of the 3rd Belorussian Front in February, incorporated General Hovhannes Bagramyan's 1st Baltic Front into his command from February 22, redesignating it as the Zemland Army Group (or Samland Front).[1] Bagramyan's forces initially laid siege to Königsberg; the city was eventually stormed on April 9. They were then given the task of overcoming the substantial German force still remaining in Sambia.
German planning
[edit]German defence efforts had largely focused on the port of Pillau at the tip of the peninsula, which was the main evacuation point for casualties and East Prussian civilians. Throughout the Battle of Königsberg, Sambia had been defended by Army Detachment Samland under the command of General Hans Gollnick, who had tried to maintain a corridor between Königsberg and Pillau.
On April 7, the remnants of Second and Fourth Armies, which had been destroyed in encirclements at Danzig and Heiligenbeil respectively, were combined as Armee Ostpreußen with the task of defending Sambia, the Vistula delta and the Hel Peninsula; Gollnick's troops were incorporated in it.
Most of the units of Armee Ostpreußen were little more than remnants, and the entire formation was very poorly supplied. During the battle for Sambia, its officers were outraged to discover that the Luftwaffe and Kriegsmarine had maintained large underground depots full of stores and fuel in the woods of the peninsula; the supplies had to be destroyed in the retreat.[2]
Deployments
[edit]Red Army
[edit]- Samland Army Group (General Hovhannes Bagramyan)
- 2nd Guards Army (Lieutenant-General Porfiry Chanchibadze)
- 11th Guards Army (General Kuzma Galitsky)
- 5th Army (Colonel-General Nikolay Krylov)
- 49th Army (Lieutenant-General Ivan Grishin)
- 43rd Army (General Afanasy Beloborodov)
Wehrmacht
[edit]- Elements of Armee Ostpreußen (General Dietrich von Saucken)
- XXVI Corps (General Gerhard Matzky) (remnants of 58th, 1st, and 21st Infantry Divisions, 5th Panzer Division, 28th Jäger Division, and 561st Volksgrenadier Division)
- LV Corps / 'Fortress Pillau' (Lieutenant-General Kurt Chill) (remnants of 50th and 286th Infantry Divisions and 558th Volksgrenadier Division)
- IX Corps (General Rolf Wuthmann to April 20, then Lieutenant-General Hermann Hohn) (remnants of 95th, 93rd, and 14th Infantry Divisions, 551st Volksgrenadier Division and Panzergrenadier Division Großdeutschland)
- Elements of Heavy Panzer Battalion 511 and Heavy Panzer Battalion 505
The offensive
[edit]The offensive plan called for the 5th and 39th Armies to break through towards Fischhausen as the main strike force, with the 11th Guards Army in reserve.[3] The 2nd Guards Army would attack in the north, with the 43rd Army breaking through on the southern flank. There would also be amphibious landings in the south of Sambia. The 3rd Belorussian Front's head of intelligence suggested that they faced up to 100,000 defending troops[4] but by shortening the frontage of each unit the attackers were able to achieve a superiority of two to one in men and three to one in artillery.[3] Bagramyan issued a call for the defenders to surrender in exchange for fair treatment and medical assistance for the wounded, but this went unanswered, and the offensive commenced with an artillery barrage and air attacks on April 13.
The initial attack scattered many of the remaining German forces, some falling back towards Pillau. The Soviet 115th Rifle Division broke through and cleared the 551st Volksgrenadier Division from Rauschen on the north-western tip of Sambia; the German forces in the north of the peninsula, including the 95th Infantry Division and parts of Heavy Panzer Battalion 511, were driven southwards into Palmnicken and destroyed.[5]
By April 16, Soviet forces broke through near Fischhausen; parts of XXVI Corps, including the 5th Panzer and 28th Jäger Divisions became cut off on the peninsula at Peyse, and were lost.[6] A defence line, the Tenkitten-Riegel, had been improvised across the narrow strip of land leading to Pillau; to break German resistance, the 11th Guards Army was committed on April 20. Fighting intensified at Tenkitten, where the commander of the 16th Guards Rifle Corps, Major-General S S Gur'ev, was killed by a shell fragment on April 22.[7]
The German defensive perimeter was pushed back towards Pillau, which was defended by elements of the 1st, 21st, 58th and other Infantry Divisions; the remaining German troops were evacuated to the Frische Nehrung. Pillau had been heavily fortified, being described by Bagramyan as "Konigsberg in miniature",[8] and was supported by fire from naval artillery and coastal batteries. After a stubborn defence, it was eventually stormed by units of the 11th Guards Army, including the 31st Guards Rifle Division, on April 25, the town being cleared in around 12 hours.[9] The last German position to fall was a battery commanded by Major-General Karl Henke, which was overrun by the 16th Guards Rifle Corps on April 27.[10]
Aftermath
[edit]The Red Army claimed to have killed or taken prisoner 80,000 German troops during the operations in Sambia.[11]
The remnants of IX Corps resisted on the Frische Nehrung to the end of the war, though the corps staff was removed to Bornholm.
The headquarters of the Zemland Group of Forces later became the headquarters of the Baltic Military District on 9 July 1945.[12]
Footnotes
[edit]- ^ Duffy, p.203
- ^ Duffy, p.384
- ^ a b Bagramyan, p.576
- ^ Bagramyan, p.575
- ^ Schneider, p.91
- ^ Duffy, p.219
- ^ Maslov, p.178
- ^ Bagramyan, p.584
- ^ Bagramyan, p.586
- ^ Duffy, p.219 (who misidentifies Major-General Henke as Major Henke)
- ^ Bagramyan, p.588. This estimate seems high, but may include all prisoners taken on the Frische Nehrung.
- ^ V.I. Feskov et al 2004, Tomsk, p.8.
References
[edit]- *Bagramyan, H. Thus we went to victory, Moscow, 1977. (in Russian) Russian: Баграмян И.X. Так шли мы к победе. – М.: Воениздат, 1977
- *Duffy. C. Red Storm on the Reich, Routledge, 2000, ISBN 978-0-415-22829-9
- *Krylov, N. Разгром земландской группировки противника, ВИЖ, 1972, 4.
- *Maslov, A. Fallen Soviet Generals, Frank Cass, 1998, ISBN 978-0-7146-4346-5
- *Schneider, W. Tigers in Combat, Stackpole, 2004, ISBN 0-8117-3171-5
- "Kronborg, Ove C.: Et hjørne af en hærs sammenbrud - Den tyske 551. Grenaderdivisions fødsel, kampe og undergang i Litauen og Østpreussen 1944 – 45. (2013). Published by Forlaget Als - ISBN 978-87-996754-0-1