fbpx
Wikipedia

227th Rifle Division

The 227th Rifle Division was an infantry division of the Red Army, originally formed in the months just before the start of the German invasion, based on the shtat (table of organization and equipment) of September 13, 1939. It arrived at the front in July and was assigned to 26th Army along the Dniepr, but was fortunate to escape that Army's encirclement in September. During the next several months, the division fought as part of 40th Army in the Kursk region, operating toward Prokhorovka and Oboyan during the winter counteroffensive. It made noteworthy gains during the May 1942 offensive north of Kharkiv but these went for naught when the southern wing of the offensive collapsed. When the main German summer offensive began in late June, the division's 21st Army was directly in the path of the German 6th Army and the depleted 227th was soon destroyed on the open steppes.

227th Rifle Division (March 1, 1941 - July 13, 1942)
227th Rifle Division (August 23, 1943 - July 1946)
Active1941–1946
Country Soviet Union
Branch Red Army
TypeDivision
RoleInfantry
EngagementsOperation Barbarossa
Battle of Kiev (1941)
Kursk-Oboyan operation
Second Battle of Kharkov
Case Blue
Kuban bridgehead
Kerch–Eltigen operation
Crimean offensive
Second Jassy–Kishinev offensive
Budapest offensive
Siege of Budapest
Bratislava–Brno offensive
Prague offensive
Soviet invasion of Manchuria
Decorations Order of the Red Banner (2nd formation)
Battle honoursTemryuk (2nd formation)
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Col. Fyodor Vasilievich Maltsev
Col. Efrem Fyodoseevich Makarchuk
Col. Gevork Andreevich Ter-Gasparian
Maj. Gen. Georgii Nikolaevich Preobrazhenskii
Col. Stepan Zotovich Petrov

A new 227th was formed in August 1943 in North Caucasian Front on the basis of two rifle brigades in 9th Army. In early October, it earned a battle honor for its part in the liberation of Temryuk. It landed in the Crimea in November as part of 56th Army (soon redesignated as Separate Coastal Army) and after the main offensive began in April 1944 it was awarded the Order of the Red Banner and all three of its rifle regiments would win battle honors for the liberation of Sevastopol in May. In August, it rejoined the active front as part of 7th Guards Army in 2nd Ukrainian Front. After taking part in the campaign that drove Romania out of the Axis, it advanced into Hungary, eventually taking part in the operations that encircled and reduced Budapest. Following this the 227th advanced with 53rd Army into Czechoslovakia and after the German surrender it was moved with the rest of this Army to the far east where it was intended to take part in the Soviet invasion of Manchuria, although in the event it saw little, if any, actual combat. It remained in the far east until July 1946 when it was disbanded.

1st Formation

The division began forming on March 1, 1941 at Slavyansk-na-Kubani in the North Caucasus Military District. When completed it had the following order of battle:

  • 777th Rifle Regiment
  • 789th Rifle Regiment
  • 794th Rifle Regiment
  • 678th Light Artillery Regiment
  • 711th Howitzer Artillery Regiment (until October 4, 1941)[1]
  • 72nd Antitank Battalion
  • 410th Antiaircraft Battery (later 235th Antiaircraft Battalion)
  • 536th Mortar Battalion (from November 20, 1941)
  • 305th Reconnaissance Battalion
  • 395th Sapper Battalion
  • 604th Signal Battalion
  • 371st Medical/Sanitation Battalion
  • 325th Chemical Defense (Anti-gas) Company
  • 699th Motor Transport Company
  • 356th Field Bakery
  • 53rd Divisional Veterinary Hospital
  • 656th Field Postal Station
  • 581st Field Office of the State Bank

Col. Fyodor Vasilievich Maltsev was appointed to command on the day the division began forming. On June 22 the 227th was assigned to the 45th Rifle Corps, unattached to any Army, in the Reserve of the Supreme High Command, but by July 1 it had been left behind in the Kharkov Military District[2] as the Corps went forward to the front; even after four months it was not completely formed or equipped.[3] On the same date Colonel Maltsev was succeeded in command by Col. Efrem Fyodoseevich Makarchuk. By July 10 the division had been placed "at the disposal of the Southwestern Direction",[4] which consisted of the Southwestern and Southern Fronts. It soon settled in the former Front as part of 26th Army along the Dniepr River in the CherkasyKaniv area.[5]

Battle of Kiev

At the beginning of September, as the German operation started that would eventually encircle most of Southwestern Front, the 227th was still on the Dniepr, sparring with its artillery against elements of 17th Army on the west bank. On the 5th it began moving east toward Romodan[6] because it still had a prewar shtat and assets that had to be reorganized and redistributed. On October 4 the 76mm cannon and crews of the 678th Light Artillery were removed to form a separate antitank regiment while its command cadre went to the 711th which had its 152mm howitzers placed under higher command and was then converted to a standard divisional artillery regiment with a mix of 76mm cannon and 122mm howitzers.[7] This move undoubtedly saved it from the fate of the rest of 26th Army which was largely surrounded and destroyed by mid-September. By the end of the month the division was under command of 40th Army to the west of Mykolaivka.[8] On October 1 Colonel Makarchuk was succeeded in command by Col. Gevork Andreevich Ter-Gasparian. Makarchuk would go on to command the 91st and 302nd Rifle Divisions before he was killed in an air attack in January 1943. Ter-Gasparian had previously commanded the 55th Rifle Division and would remain in command for the duration of the 1st formation.

Kursk-Oboyan Operation

By the start of November 40th Army had fallen back to the vicinity of Kursk and was attempting to hold an extensive line with just two rifle divisions (227th and 293rd), two rifle regiments and three airborne brigades.[9] At the time the main battles were near Moscow and Rostov-na-Donu and the German 2nd Army also had limited forces along this front. During this period most of the division's rifle regiments' mortars were gathered together to form the 536th Mortar Battalion.

The right wing forces of Southwestern Front began the Kursk-Oboyan operation on December 20 as part of the overall Soviet winter counteroffensive. By the end of the month the 227th had been transferred to the 21st Army. From the outset the division was tasked with taking Prokhorovka, and especially its railway station, but although the village was occupied the station held out. During these battles one battalion of the 777th Rifle Regiment, under command of Sr. Lt. Khachatur Beglyarovich Melikyan, staged a daring 40km raid behind German lines beginning on January 5, 1942. The battalion seized four German-held positions: the village of Orlovka; the farms of Zorinsky Dvory and Vesely in the Ivnyan district; and Peresyp in the Oboyan district. In the fighting near Oboyan alone the battalion accounted for 21 German vehicles with ammunition, two batteries of artillery, eight machine guns and 22 rifles. On January 8 Melikyan was killed in action at Oboyan. On November 5, 1942 he would be posthumously awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.[10] In March the 227th was briefly moved to 38th Army but it soon returned to 21st Army for the next offensive.[11]

Second Battle of Kharkov

Southwestern Front began regrouping its forces at the end of March. This was a complex process made more difficult by the arrival of the spring rasputitsa. The division had been in the Pyatnitskoye area while with 38th Army but it now shifted south to join the shock group being formed by 21st Army. While in the former Army it had been involved in an operation in the Staryi Saltiv area which had created a bridgehead on the west bank of the Donets River but had suffered losses and required rest and replenishment before the new offensive could begin. The shock group would also include the 293rd and 76th Rifle Divisions and was supported by the 10th Tank Brigade plus the 338th Light, 538th Heavy, and 135th and 156th Artillery Regiments. The remainder of 21st Army would not be actively involved in the offensive so the shock group formed the northern wing of Southwestern Front's attack, with the 227th adjacent to 28th Army to its south.[12]

The offensive began at 0630 hours on May 12 with a 60-minute artillery preparation, during the last 15-20 minutes of which Soviet air attacks struck German artillery positions and strongpoints in the main defensive belt. The infantry and direct support tanks kicked off at 0730. While the 28th Army was expected to make the greatest progress due to having the most armor support, in the event its attacks made minimal progress while 21st and 38th Armies made greater gains. All three divisions of the 21st Army's shock group forced crossings of the Donets; the 227th and 293rd penetrated the defensive belt and by the end of the day had captured Ohirtseve, Bugrovatka and Starytsya, having advanced 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) to the north and 6-8km to the northwest. The 293rd was unable to link up with the 76th to form one general bridgehead. The defending 294th Infantry Division took significant losses during the day.[13]

On May 13, while the 293rd and 76th achieved their link-up they made little additional progress. The 227th, on the other hand, bypassed the German positions at Murom from the south, advanced as much as 12km with support of 10th Tank Brigade and captured a line from Hill 217 to Vysokii. Due to the lagging attack of the northern forces of 28th Army the division was increasingly vulnerable to attack from three sides. The following day the division left one rifle battalion to hold Hill 217 as the 293rd attempted to surround and reduce Murom. The remainder of the division continued pushing westward, routing German units and advancing another 6km and capturing the villages of Vergelevka and Pylnaya, aided by the 28th Army's forces finally gaining traction. Meanwhile the right-flank forces of 38th Army were being counterattacked by the 3rd and 23rd Panzer Divisions out of Kharkiv. During the day Colonel Ter-Gasparian was wounded and evacuated, handing over his command to Col. G. M. Zaitsev.[14]

As the German counteroffensive developed on May 15 the 21st Army's shock group and the north flank forces of 28th Army continued to press their attacks northeast of Kharkiv. Meeting increasing resistance, these were unsuccessful; in particular the newly-arriving 168th Infantry Division moved to stave off the loss of Murom. The next day the 21st Army commander, Lt. Gen. V. N. Gordov, was ordered to carry out his earlier assigned missions. As a result of the operations of his division's forward detachments Colonel Zaitsev realized that the German forces on his front had fallen back to the line of the Kharkiv River. Taking advantage of this withdrawal the 227th, along with the neighboring 175th Rifle Division of 28th Army, advanced to the west bank of the Lipets River and the villages of Ustinka, Morokhovets and Bednyi. Lead elements of the division pushed nearly as far as the town of Cheremoshnoe before running into the 168th. This would prove to be the deepest penetration made by the northern group of Soviet forces in this offensive.[15]

These gains proved to be short-lived as on May 17 Marshal S. K. Timoshenko, commander of Southwestern Direction, decided to halt further offensive activity by 21st Army in favor of redeploying the shock group to new positions running from Krasnaya Alekseeva to Pylnaya; this was largely due to ongoing pressure from the 168th Infantry. Also, by this time the 1st Panzer Army's attack against Southern Front's positions in the IziumBarvinkove salient were well underway and Timoshenko's entire offensive was facing disaster. Three Soviet armies were encircled there by May 24 and soon destroyed. The 227th escaped this fate, but had been significantly depleted during the offensive.[16]

Case Blue

In the wake of this offensive the 227th, now back under command of Colonel Ter-Gasparian, was redeployed northward, still in 21st Army, to positions northeast of Belgorod. As a result it missed the preliminary operations of the main German summer offensive. On June 28 it was facing the XXIX Army Corps on the north flank of German 6th Army. The division was in the Army's first echelon, along the Oskol River, with little support in the second echelon. The German attack planned to collapse the 28th Army and drive it southward, after which the 21st and 40th Armies would be encircled and destroyed west of Voronezh. By June 30 the 227th, along with the 301st Rifle Division and the 10th Tank Brigade had been pocketed southwest of Korocha.[17] While individual soldiers and small groups were able to escape, by July 11 the German spearheads were over 150km east of the original Soviet lines and the division had ceased to exist. It was officially disbanded by the STAVKA on July 13.[18] Colonel Ter-Gasparian escaped the debacle and went on to command the 96th Rifle Division, then to serve as chief of staff of 60th Army as a major general, and rose to the rank of lieutenant general in 1949.

2nd Formation

A new 227th was officially formed on August 23, 1943 in the 9th Army in North Caucasian Front, based on two rifle brigades.

19th Rifle Brigade

This had been formed from September to November 1941 at Tambov in the Oryol Military District[19] with the following order of battle:

  • 1st, 2nd, 3rd Rifle Battalions, each with seven or more 82mm mortars;
  • Antitank Battalion (eight 57mm ZiS-2 guns)
  • Artillery Battalion (mixed 76mm and 45mm guns)

It was a "student" brigade, based on personnel from the Oryol District training establishment. It was sent to the Volga Military District in November to finish gathering its personnel and heavy weapons before being assigned to Western Front in December. It entered the fighting as part of 49th Army at Serpukhov. In February 1942 the brigade was transferred to 16th Army which had been moved to the Sukhinichi area in an effort to overcome a German position there that was blocking the Soviet advance toward Spas-Demensk and Roslavl. In April the 19th Brigade was assigned to 5th Guards Rifle Corps in the same Army and it stayed in that Corps until July 6 when it was pulled out of this Front and began moving by rail southward to Astrakhan.[20]

After being ferried across the Caspian Sea to the Transcaucasus the brigade was assigned to the reserves of Transcaucasian Front and then to 9th Army in the Front's Northern Group, defending the line of the Terek River. In November the 19th joined 11th Rifle Corps in 9th Army. As the fighting moved north after the battle of Stalingrad the Army became part of North Caucasian Front in January 1943. From February to August the brigade faced the northern part of the Kuban bridgehead (Gotenkopfstellung) held by German 17th Army. In July its order of battle was as follows:

  • 3 rifle battalions
  • 1 submachine gun (assault) battalion
  • 1 machine gun battalion
  • 1 mortar battalion (120mm mortars)
  • 1 antitank battalion (45mm guns)
  • 1 artillery battalion (76mm cannon)

It was soon merged with the 84th Naval Rifle Brigade to create the new 227th.[21]

84th Naval Rifle Brigade

The 84th formed during October/November 1941 in the Volga Military District,[22] at Ulyanovsk, Ufa and Kuibyshev, based on a cadre from the Black Sea Fleet. On November 27 it detrained at Rzazhske Station near Moscow and it was soon assigned to the new 1st Shock Army of Western Front, with which it went over to the offensive on December 6. The 84th remained in 1st Shock until the Army was transferred to Northwestern Front; in March it went into 11th Army, and later 27th Army, both of which were involved in the dismal battles on the north flank of the Demyansk Pocket. It left the latter Army in August and followed a similar path to that of the 19th Brigade until it also reached the 11th Corps of 9th Army along the Terek River line in November. By early 1943 it consisted of:

4 rifle battalions, each with -

  • 4 rifle companies
  • 1 mortar company (82mm)
  • 1 machine gun company
  • 1 antitank rifle company
  • 1 sapper company
  • 1 signal platoon

Artillery battalion (76mm and 122mm, partly motorized); Mortar battalion; Machine Gun battalion; Antitank battalion (3 batteries of 45mm guns, 1 antitank rifle company); Sapper company; Signal platoon. The brigade remained in this configuration and under these commands until it merged with the 19th Brigade.[23]

The new division came under command of Col. Ivan Vasilevich Terekhin on the day it formed. Its order of battle, based on the shtat of December 10, 1942, was similar to that of the 1st formation:

  • 570th Rifle Regiment
  • 777th Rifle Regiment
  • 779th Rifle Regiment
  • 711th Artillery Regiment[24]
  • 524th Self-propelled Artillery Battalion (from August 9, 1945)
  • 72nd Antitank Battalion
  • 305th Reconnaissance Company
  • 395th Sapper Battalion
  • 604th Signal Battalion (later 1456th Signal Company)
  • 371st Medical/Sanitation Battalion
  • 325th Chemical Defense (Anti-gas) Company
  • 281st Motor Transport Company
  • 553rd Field Bakery
  • 53rd Divisional Veterinary Hospital
  • 1632nd Field Postal Station
  • 1622nd Field Office of the State Bank

Kuban Bridgehead

From April 1 to July 5 the 9th Army's efforts were focused on the liberation of the port of Temryuk, but although some ground was taken the defenders, primarily of the 50th Infantry Division, held on. From this point the fighting became a battle of attrition until just before the 227th was formed. On September 3 Hitler was finally convinced to evacuate the bridgehead in what would be called Operation Brunhild. It was not until three days later that the gradual withdrawal became clear to the commander of North Caucasian Front, Lt. Gen. I. Ye. Petrov, and he began to implement more aggressive measures to block it.[25]

On the night of September 25/26 the Army mounted a major attack near the village of Kurchanskaya from the east in conjunction with a landing near Temryuk by a battalion of the 389th Rifle Division, but both were repulsed. The waterlogged terrain in the area prevented the use of tanks and made it difficult to bring heavy artillery forward. By now the evacuation was well underway and continued until October 9.[26] On September 27 Colonel Terekhin was replaced in command and his successor's name appears in the following battle honor citation:

TEMRYUK... 227th Rifle Division (Col. Preobrazhenskii, Georgii Nikolaevich)... The troops participating in the battles for the liberation of the Taman Peninsula, during which they captured Temryuk and other settlements, by the order of the Supreme High Command of 9 October 1943, and a commendation in Moscow, are given a salute of 20 artillery salvoes from 224 guns.[27]

This officer had previously served as deputy commander of 22nd Rifle Corps in 18th Army in the same Front, and as acting commander in March and April.

Crimean Offensive

By the start of October the division had left 11th Corps but was still under 9th Army. Later that month the Army was effectively disbanded and its rifle divisions were redistributed, with the 227th going to the 16th Rifle Corps of 56th Army, still in North Caucasian Front.[28] After two false starts this Army began landing operations overnight on November 3/4 on the west side of Kerch Strait, supported by heavy artillery fire from the east side. The 2nd and 55th Guards Rifle Divisions landed 4,000 men on the first day and significant reinforcements followed until the Army launched a major breakout effort on November 5-6, but this was contained. Days later the 56th was redesignated as Separate Coastal Army and on November 10 it attacked the German line again, driving it back up to 3km, and even with very limited tank support by the 12th it was on the outskirts of Kerch. At this point the situation became deadlocked for several months.[29] In February 1944 Coastal Army came under command of Army Gen. A. I. Yeryomenko. During the same month the 227th was removed from 16th Corps and came under direct Army command, where it remained at the start of the main Crimean operation.[30]

The overland aspect of the operation was entrusted to 4th Ukrainian Front's 2nd Guards and 51st Armies, while Coastal Army would initially be responsible pinning the German V Army Corps at Kerch before securing the Kerch Peninsula. The main attack began on April 8 and by the 10th the defending German and Romanian forces were falling back from the Perekop Isthmus and the Soviet bridgehead across the Syvash toward Sevastopol. Overnight the V Corps began its withdrawal from Kerch; it would have to cover 160km mostly along a single road to reach the same objective with the 10 rifle divisions and 204 tanks of Coastal Army on its heels. The Corps reached the Parpach Narrows on April 12 but could not attempt to hold there because 2nd Guards Army was closing on Simferopol, threatening its rear. The Corps commander, Gen. der Inf. K. Allmendinger, was ordered to reach Feodosia or Sudak for evacuation by sea.[31]

April 13 saw the Soviet pursuit in full flood. General Yeryomenko formed a mobile group with the 227th and the 257th Tank Regiment in the lead and these reached and cleared Feodosia.[32] The division would be awarded the Order of the Red Banner on April 24 for its role in this victory.[33] The mobile group caught up with the tail end of Allmendinger's Corps near Staryi Krym and threatened to overwhelm the rearguard; Gebirgs-Jäger-Regiment Krim was ordered to take a stand in hilly terrain and sacrificed itself in temporarily halting the pursuit. This allowed about 10,000 troops of V Corps to reach Sudak for transport to Balaklava, coming under heavy air attacks in the process. The remainder had to continue the retreat through the Yaila Mountains. Much of the German horse-drawn artillery had to be abandoned because it could not keep pace through this terrain. Early on April 15 Yeryomenko's vanguard encircled and destroyed a Romanian rearguard of two battalions while the main body of V Corps reached Yalta. It arrived at the eastern outskirts of Sevastopol the following day, but the pursuit had cost it thousands of its troops, over 70 percent of its heavy weapons and the Corps was no longer combat-effective.[34] The 227th occupied Yalta that day and later Bakhchysarai as well.[35]

Sevastopol's defenses were no longer capable of supporting a prolonged battle for the port although this was not immediately apparent to the Soviet command. Despite Hitler's orders to hold, evacuations by sea of "non-essential personnel" began on April 12 but this included many who did not fit this definition.[36] By the first of May the 227th was back in 16th Corps,[37] and on the morning of May 7 the Corps attacked V Corps west of Balaklava following a very heavy artillery preparation and quickly achieved a penetration in the center of the sector held by the 73rd Infantry Division; V Corps was so badly damaged that it had no choice but to fall back to its second line. On May 8, following advances by 2nd Guards and 51st Armies as well, Hitler finally authorized a full evacuation. The next day 16th Corps, backed by 19th Tank Corps, crashed through the retreating 73rd Infantry and pursued into the Chersonese. This was mopped up the following day,[38] and the three rifle regiments of the 227th won battle honors:

SEVASTOPOL... 570th Rifle Regiment (Lt. Col. Aleksandrov, Vasilii Aleksandrovich)... 777th Rifle Regiment (Lt. Col. Volinskii, Iosif Issakovich)... 779th Rifle Regiment (Maj. Duboshin, Aleksei Abramovich)... The troops participating in the battles for the liberation of Sevastopol, by the order of the Supreme High Command of 10 May 1944, and a commendation in Moscow, are given a salute of 24 artillery salvoes from 324 guns.[39]

The Coastal Army remained in Crimea as a garrison force for the next few months.[40] In recognition of his leadership of the division Colonel Preobrazhenskii was made a Hero of the Soviet Union on May 16 and promoted to the rank of major general on June 3.

Into the Balkans

As of the beginning of August the 227th was still in 16th Corps of Coastal Army, but it soon began moving north to join 7th Guards Army in 2nd Ukrainian Front as a separate division.[41] At the outset of the Second Jassy–Kishinev Offensive the division constituted the Army's reserve. Strategically the Army was to launch a supporting attack but with important objectives: in cooperation with Gorshkov's Cavalry-Mechanized Group it was to capture the town of Roman on the third day and Bacău on the fifth to unhinge Axis defenses along the Siret River. The 25th Guards Rifle Corps, backed by the 227th, would form the Army's shock group. Although the main offensive was to begin on August 20 the Army's attack was to wait until the neighboring 27th Army had broken the German front on its sector. A 30-minute artillery preparation would precede the attack.[42]

27th Army's breakthrough came quickly and by 1100 hours it had forced the Bahlui River. By 1900 the 7th Guards' shock group had taken up its jumping-off positions along the left bank of this river. Its objective for August 21 was to seize the Târgu Frumos fortified area that had stymied 2nd Ukrainian Front during the spring. With the help of artillery assets transferred from 27th Army and the 23rd Tank Corps the shock group, led by 36th Guards Rifle Division, crushed Axis resistance and carried out its mission for the day, creating conditions for the commitment of Gorshkov's Group. The following day most of the 24th Guards Rifle Corps joined the offensive as the shock group continued in the direction of Roman, advancing through the night against Romanian forces retreating hastily to avoid encirclement. By the end of August 24 the shock group had reached the line Bacău–RacovaBibirești–Bota.[43]

Budapest Campaign

As 7th Guards Army entered the Balkans in September the 227th was still serving under direct Army command but in October it was assigned to 27th Guards Rifle Corps, still in the same Army, joining the 303rd Rifle Division.[44] On October 28 the STAVKA directed the 2nd and 3rd Ukrainian Fronts to begin an offensive toward the Hungarian capital. 2nd Ukrainian planned to advance between the Danube and Tisza Rivers with the 46th Army and 2nd Guards Mechanized Corps to clear the west bank of the latter river, then cross 7th Guards Army to the east bank; subsequently it would advance on Budapest with 4th Guards Mechanized Corps.[45]

The Army began its attack on October 30 with four rifle divisions, including the 227th, against elements of the reconstructed German 6th Army. It was expected to capture the line SzolnokAbony–Hartany by the morning of November 2. In the event this timeline could not be met and it was November 4 when 27th Guards Corps stormed Szolnok, an important Axis strongpoint on the Tisza.[46] On November 19 the 570th Rifle Regiment would be rewarded with the Order of the Red Banner, while the 777th Rifle Regiment and 395th Sapper Battalion were each awarded the Order of Alexander Nevsky.[47] The German-Hungarian command was increasingly concerned that Budapest could be seized off the march and began transferring units of III Panzer Corps to this axis until it had concentrated a powerful grouping of about 200 tanks. While 46th Army and the two mechanized corps were halted on the outer ring of the city's defenses, 7th Guards Army pressed the offensive toward Jászapáti and Jászberény, but it was not until the 14th that the latter was partly captured by 27th Guards Corps.[48]

With the failure to take Budapest by coup-de-main the STAVKA ordered it to be encircled and reduced. 7th Guards Army was to break through the Axis defense on December 5 on a front from Harvan to Aszód and attack in the direction of Verseg, Csővár and Nőtincs in order to support the commitment of 6th Guards Tank Army and Pliyev's Cavalry-Mechanized Group into the breakthrough. The artillery of 227th and 303rd Divisions would be supplemented with the 41st Cannon-Artillery Brigade and part of the guns of Pliyev's Group, for a total of 261 pieces (76mm or greater calibre). The attack began at 1015 hours and soon achieved a breakthrough, advancing as much as 8km during the day. Led by units of 6th Guards Tanks the Army continued at an average rate of about 16km per day until reaching the Danube between December 8-9 in the Vác area.[49] In order to complete the encirclement of Budapest the Danube had to be forced and as a result of this success the 779th Rifle Regiment would be decorated with the Order of Suvorov, 3rd Degree, on January 6, 1945.[50] By this time the 227th had been transferred to the 57th Rifle Corps in 53rd Army.[51]

Into Czechoslovakia

In December both the 7th Guards and 53rd Armies had entered Slovakia in the Šahy area and along the Hron River.[52] The 53rd pushed on toward Lučenec before going over to the defense in late February. The Bratislava–Brno Offensive began on March 25; by this time the division had left 57th Corps and was operation under direct Army command. The Army pushed through the hilly terrain of central Slovakia and crossed the Morava River near Hodonín on April 13; the 227th had by now returned to 57th Corps.[53] On April 24 General Preobrazhenskii was directed to attend the K. Е. Voroshilov Higher Military Academy and he was replaced the next day by Col. Stepan Zotovich Petrov. This officer would remain in command for the duration of the war. Preobrazhenskii was appointed as deputy commander of 13th Rifle Corps in February 1946. He moved to the training establishment in April 1950 and retired to Moscow in 1955 before his death on March 19, 1958.

Manchurian Campaign and Postwar

53rd Army was selected for transfer to the far east for the campaign against the Japanese Kwantung Army in Manchuria, largely due to its experience in fighting through the Carpathian Mountains during 1944-45. After crossing the continent via the Trans-Siberian Railway it joined Transbaikal Front but by the beginning of August the 227th was detached from the Army and was in reserve at the disposal of the Front.[54][55] Although it had the 524th Self-propelled Artillery Battalion (SU-76s) added to its order of battle to provide more mobile firepower, in the event the division was not committed to combat.[56]

By the conclusion of hostilities, the division had been awarded the full title of 227th Rifle, Temryuk, Order of the Red Banner Division (Russian: 227-я стрелковая Темрюкская Краснознамённая дивизия). The division was based in Krasnoyarsk with the 49th Rifle Corps, and was disbanded there in July 1946 to form the basis of the 49th Rifle Brigade.[57]

References

Citations

  1. ^ Charles C. Sharp, "Red Legions", Soviet Rifle Divisions Formed Before June 1941, Soviet Order of Battle World War II, vol. VIII, Nafziger, 1996, p. 98. This source misnumbers the 678th as the 595th.
  2. ^ Combat Composition of the Soviet Army, 1941, pp. 11, 19
  3. ^ Sharp, "Red Legions", p. 98
  4. ^ Combat Composition of the Soviet Army, 1941, p. 24
  5. ^ Sharp, "Red Legions", p. 98
  6. ^ David Stahel, Kiev 1941, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 2012, p. 210
  7. ^ Sharp, "Red Legions", p. 98
  8. ^ Stahel, Kiev 1941, p. 262-63
  9. ^ Combat Composition of the Soviet Army, 1941, p. 64
  10. ^ https://warheroes.ru/hero/hero.asp?Hero_id=4312. In Russian. Retrieved May 2, 2022.
  11. ^ Combat Composition of the Soviet Army, 1942, pp. 66, 85
  12. ^ David M. Glantz, Kharkov 1942, Ian Allan Publishing Ltd., Hersham, UK, 2010, pp. 64, 81-82, 123-24, 164
  13. ^ Glantz, Kharkov 1942, pp. 163-65, 174
  14. ^ Glantz, Kharkov 1942, pp. 177-78, 185, 188
  15. ^ Glantz, Kharkov 1942, pp. 204-05, 218-20
  16. ^ Glantz, Kharkov 1942, pp. 238, 245-46, 249, 262, 282
  17. ^ Glantz, To the Gates of Stalingrad, University Press of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, 2009, pp. 91, 111, 128, 134
  18. ^ Sharp, "Red Legions", p. 98
  19. ^ Walter S. Dunn, Jr., Stalin's Keys to Victory, Stackpole Books, Mechanicsburg, PA, 2007, p. 86
  20. ^ Sharp, "Red Volunteers", Soviet Militia Units, Rifle and Ski Brigades 1941 - 1945, Soviet Order of Battle World War II, vol. XI, Nafziger, 1996, pp. 15-16
  21. ^ Sharp, "Red Volunteers", p. 16
  22. ^ Dunn, Jr., Stalin's Keys to Victory, p. 86
  23. ^ Sharp, "Red Death", Soviet Mountain, Naval, NKVD, and Allied Divisions and Brigades 1941 to 1945, Soviet Order of Battle World War II, vol. VII, Nafziger, 1995, pp. 46-47. Soviet sources differ as to whether or not it was still designated as a Naval (Morskaya) brigade at this time.
  24. ^ Sharp, "Red Swarm", Soviet Rifle Divisions Formed From 1942 to 1945, Soviet Order of Battle World War II, vol. X, Nafziger, 1996, p. 90
  25. ^ Robert Forczyk, The Kuban 1943 - The Wehrmacht's Last Stand in the Caucasus, Osprey Publishing, Oxford, UK, 2018, Kindle ed.
  26. ^ Forczyk, The Kuban 1943 - The Wehrmacht's Last Stand in the Caucasus, Kindle ed.
  27. ^ http://www.soldat.ru/spravka/freedom/1-ssr-6.html. In Russian. Retrieved May 6, 2022
  28. ^ Combat Composition of the Soviet Army, 1943, pp. 255, 283
  29. ^ Forczyk, Where the Iron Crosses Grow, Osprey Publishing, Oxford, UK, 2014, pp. 252, 255-58
  30. ^ Combat Composition of the Soviet Army, 1944, pp. 80, 111
  31. ^ Forczyk, Where the Iron Crosses Grow, pp. 270, 272, 276-77
  32. ^ Forczyk, Where the Iron Crosses Grow, p. 278
  33. ^ Affairs Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of the Soviet Union 1967a, p. 330.
  34. ^ Forczyk, Where the Iron Crosses Grow, pp. 278-80
  35. ^ https://warheroes.ru/hero/hero.asp?Hero_id=6055. In Russian. Retrieved May 8, 2022.
  36. ^ Forczyk, Where the Iron Crosses Grow, pp. 280, 283-84
  37. ^ Combat Composition of the Soviet Army, 1944, p. 141
  38. ^ Forczyk, Where the Iron Crosses Grow, pp. 287-89
  39. ^ http://www.soldat.ru/spravka/freedom/1-ssr-5.html. In Russian. Retrieved May 8, 2022
  40. ^ Sharp, "Red Swarm", p. 90
  41. ^ Combat Composition of the Soviet Army, 1944, pp. 231, 260
  42. ^ Soviet General Staff, The Iasi-Kishinev Offensive, ed. & trans. R. W. Harrison, Helion & Co., Ltd., Solihull, UK, 2017, p. 33
  43. ^ Soviet General Staff, The Iasi-Kishinev Offensive, pp. 97-99, 102-03, 108, 117, 125
  44. ^ Combat Composition of the Soviet Army, 1944, pp. 289, 320
  45. ^ Soviet General Staff, The Budapest Operation 1945, ed. & trans. R. W. Harrison, Helion & Co., Ltd., Solihull, UK, 2017, p. 26
  46. ^ Soviet General Staff, The Budapest Operation 1945, pp. 28-29, 31
  47. ^ Affairs Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of the Soviet Union 1967a, p. 524.
  48. ^ Soviet General Staff, The Budapest Operation 1945, pp. 31-34
  49. ^ Soviet General Staff, The Budapest Operation 1945, pp. 44-46, 101-02
  50. ^ Affairs Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of the Soviet Union 1967b, p. 36.
  51. ^ Combat Composition of the Soviet Army, 1945, p. 23
  52. ^ Soviet General Staff, The Budapest Operation 1945, p. 53
  53. ^ Combat Composition of the Soviet Army, 1945, pp. 93, 129
  54. ^ Glantz, August Storm, the Soviet Strategic Offensive in Manchuria, Verdun Press, 2015, Kindle ed., ch. 7
  55. ^ Combat Composition of the Soviet Army, 1945, p. 195
  56. ^ Sharp, "Red Swarm", p. 90
  57. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 557.

Bibliography

  • Affairs Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of the Soviet Union (1967a). [Collection of orders of the RVSR, RVS USSR and NKO on awarding orders to units, formations and establishments of the Armed Forces of the USSR. Part I. 1920–1944] (PDF) (in Russian). Moscow. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-03-27. Retrieved 2022-05-01.
  • Affairs Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of the Soviet Union (1967b). Сборник приказов РВСР, РВС СССР, НКО и Указов Президиума Верховного Совета СССР о награждении орденами СССР частей, соединениий и учреждений ВС СССР. Часть II. 1945 – 1966 гг [Collection of orders of the RVSR, RVS USSR and NKO on awarding orders to units, formations and establishments of the Armed Forces of the USSR. Part II. 1945–1966] (in Russian). Moscow.
  • Feskov, V.I.; Golikov, V.I.; Kalashnikov, K.A.; Slugin, S.A. (2013). Вооруженные силы СССР после Второй Мировой войны: от Красной Армии к Советской [The Armed Forces of the USSR after World War II: From the Red Army to the Soviet: Part 1 Land Forces] (in Russian). Tomsk: Scientific and Technical Literature Publishing. ISBN 9785895035306.
  • Grylev, A. N. (1970). Перечень № 5. Стрелковых, горнострелковых, мотострелковых и моторизованных дивизии, входивших в состав Действующей армии в годы Великой Отечественной войны 1941-1945 гг [List (Perechen) No. 5: Rifle, Mountain Rifle, Motor Rifle and Motorized divisions, part of the active army during the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945] (in Russian). Moscow: Voenizdat. p. 104
  • Main Personnel Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of the Soviet Union (1964). Командование корпусного и дивизионного звена советских вооруженных сил периода Великой Отечественной войны 1941–1945 гг [Commanders of Corps and Divisions in the Great Patriotic War, 1941–1945] (in Russian). Moscow: Frunze Military Academy. p. 216

External links

  • Gevork Andreevich Ter-Gasparian
  • Georgii Nikolaevich Preobrazhenskii
  • HSU Georgii Nikolaevich Preobrazhenskii

227th, rifle, division, infantry, division, army, originally, formed, months, just, before, start, german, invasion, based, shtat, table, organization, equipment, september, 1939, arrived, front, july, assigned, 26th, army, along, dniepr, fortunate, escape, th. The 227th Rifle Division was an infantry division of the Red Army originally formed in the months just before the start of the German invasion based on the shtat table of organization and equipment of September 13 1939 It arrived at the front in July and was assigned to 26th Army along the Dniepr but was fortunate to escape that Army s encirclement in September During the next several months the division fought as part of 40th Army in the Kursk region operating toward Prokhorovka and Oboyan during the winter counteroffensive It made noteworthy gains during the May 1942 offensive north of Kharkiv but these went for naught when the southern wing of the offensive collapsed When the main German summer offensive began in late June the division s 21st Army was directly in the path of the German 6th Army and the depleted 227th was soon destroyed on the open steppes 227th Rifle Division March 1 1941 July 13 1942 227th Rifle Division August 23 1943 July 1946 Active1941 1946Country Soviet UnionBranchRed ArmyTypeDivisionRoleInfantryEngagementsOperation BarbarossaBattle of Kiev 1941 Kursk Oboyan operationSecond Battle of KharkovCase BlueKuban bridgeheadKerch Eltigen operationCrimean offensiveSecond Jassy Kishinev offensiveBudapest offensiveSiege of BudapestBratislava Brno offensivePrague offensiveSoviet invasion of ManchuriaDecorations Order of the Red Banner 2nd formation Battle honoursTemryuk 2nd formation CommandersNotablecommandersCol Fyodor Vasilievich MaltsevCol Efrem Fyodoseevich MakarchukCol Gevork Andreevich Ter GasparianMaj Gen Georgii Nikolaevich Preobrazhenskii Col Stepan Zotovich Petrov A new 227th was formed in August 1943 in North Caucasian Front on the basis of two rifle brigades in 9th Army In early October it earned a battle honor for its part in the liberation of Temryuk It landed in the Crimea in November as part of 56th Army soon redesignated as Separate Coastal Army and after the main offensive began in April 1944 it was awarded the Order of the Red Banner and all three of its rifle regiments would win battle honors for the liberation of Sevastopol in May In August it rejoined the active front as part of 7th Guards Army in 2nd Ukrainian Front After taking part in the campaign that drove Romania out of the Axis it advanced into Hungary eventually taking part in the operations that encircled and reduced Budapest Following this the 227th advanced with 53rd Army into Czechoslovakia and after the German surrender it was moved with the rest of this Army to the far east where it was intended to take part in the Soviet invasion of Manchuria although in the event it saw little if any actual combat It remained in the far east until July 1946 when it was disbanded Contents 1 1st Formation 1 1 Battle of Kiev 1 2 Kursk Oboyan Operation 2 Second Battle of Kharkov 3 Case Blue 4 2nd Formation 4 1 19th Rifle Brigade 4 2 84th Naval Rifle Brigade 4 3 Kuban Bridgehead 5 Crimean Offensive 6 Into the Balkans 6 1 Budapest Campaign 6 2 Into Czechoslovakia 7 Manchurian Campaign and Postwar 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Bibliography 9 External links1st Formation EditThe division began forming on March 1 1941 at Slavyansk na Kubani in the North Caucasus Military District When completed it had the following order of battle 777th Rifle Regiment 789th Rifle Regiment 794th Rifle Regiment 678th Light Artillery Regiment 711th Howitzer Artillery Regiment until October 4 1941 1 72nd Antitank Battalion 410th Antiaircraft Battery later 235th Antiaircraft Battalion 536th Mortar Battalion from November 20 1941 305th Reconnaissance Battalion 395th Sapper Battalion 604th Signal Battalion 371st Medical Sanitation Battalion 325th Chemical Defense Anti gas Company 699th Motor Transport Company 356th Field Bakery 53rd Divisional Veterinary Hospital 656th Field Postal Station 581st Field Office of the State BankCol Fyodor Vasilievich Maltsev was appointed to command on the day the division began forming On June 22 the 227th was assigned to the 45th Rifle Corps unattached to any Army in the Reserve of the Supreme High Command but by July 1 it had been left behind in the Kharkov Military District 2 as the Corps went forward to the front even after four months it was not completely formed or equipped 3 On the same date Colonel Maltsev was succeeded in command by Col Efrem Fyodoseevich Makarchuk By July 10 the division had been placed at the disposal of the Southwestern Direction 4 which consisted of the Southwestern and Southern Fronts It soon settled in the former Front as part of 26th Army along the Dniepr River in the Cherkasy Kaniv area 5 Battle of Kiev Edit At the beginning of September as the German operation started that would eventually encircle most of Southwestern Front the 227th was still on the Dniepr sparring with its artillery against elements of 17th Army on the west bank On the 5th it began moving east toward Romodan 6 because it still had a prewar shtat and assets that had to be reorganized and redistributed On October 4 the 76mm cannon and crews of the 678th Light Artillery were removed to form a separate antitank regiment while its command cadre went to the 711th which had its 152mm howitzers placed under higher command and was then converted to a standard divisional artillery regiment with a mix of 76mm cannon and 122mm howitzers 7 This move undoubtedly saved it from the fate of the rest of 26th Army which was largely surrounded and destroyed by mid September By the end of the month the division was under command of 40th Army to the west of Mykolaivka 8 On October 1 Colonel Makarchuk was succeeded in command by Col Gevork Andreevich Ter Gasparian Makarchuk would go on to command the 91st and 302nd Rifle Divisions before he was killed in an air attack in January 1943 Ter Gasparian had previously commanded the 55th Rifle Division and would remain in command for the duration of the 1st formation Kursk Oboyan Operation Edit By the start of November 40th Army had fallen back to the vicinity of Kursk and was attempting to hold an extensive line with just two rifle divisions 227th and 293rd two rifle regiments and three airborne brigades 9 At the time the main battles were near Moscow and Rostov na Donu and the German 2nd Army also had limited forces along this front During this period most of the division s rifle regiments mortars were gathered together to form the 536th Mortar Battalion The right wing forces of Southwestern Front began the Kursk Oboyan operation on December 20 as part of the overall Soviet winter counteroffensive By the end of the month the 227th had been transferred to the 21st Army From the outset the division was tasked with taking Prokhorovka and especially its railway station but although the village was occupied the station held out During these battles one battalion of the 777th Rifle Regiment under command of Sr Lt Khachatur Beglyarovich Melikyan staged a daring 40km raid behind German lines beginning on January 5 1942 The battalion seized four German held positions the village of Orlovka the farms of Zorinsky Dvory and Vesely in the Ivnyan district and Peresyp in the Oboyan district In the fighting near Oboyan alone the battalion accounted for 21 German vehicles with ammunition two batteries of artillery eight machine guns and 22 rifles On January 8 Melikyan was killed in action at Oboyan On November 5 1942 he would be posthumously awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union 10 In March the 227th was briefly moved to 38th Army but it soon returned to 21st Army for the next offensive 11 Second Battle of Kharkov EditSouthwestern Front began regrouping its forces at the end of March This was a complex process made more difficult by the arrival of the spring rasputitsa The division had been in the Pyatnitskoye area while with 38th Army but it now shifted south to join the shock group being formed by 21st Army While in the former Army it had been involved in an operation in the Staryi Saltiv area which had created a bridgehead on the west bank of the Donets River but had suffered losses and required rest and replenishment before the new offensive could begin The shock group would also include the 293rd and 76th Rifle Divisions and was supported by the 10th Tank Brigade plus the 338th Light 538th Heavy and 135th and 156th Artillery Regiments The remainder of 21st Army would not be actively involved in the offensive so the shock group formed the northern wing of Southwestern Front s attack with the 227th adjacent to 28th Army to its south 12 The offensive began at 0630 hours on May 12 with a 60 minute artillery preparation during the last 15 20 minutes of which Soviet air attacks struck German artillery positions and strongpoints in the main defensive belt The infantry and direct support tanks kicked off at 0730 While the 28th Army was expected to make the greatest progress due to having the most armor support in the event its attacks made minimal progress while 21st and 38th Armies made greater gains All three divisions of the 21st Army s shock group forced crossings of the Donets the 227th and 293rd penetrated the defensive belt and by the end of the day had captured Ohirtseve Bugrovatka and Starytsya having advanced 10 kilometers 6 2 miles to the north and 6 8km to the northwest The 293rd was unable to link up with the 76th to form one general bridgehead The defending 294th Infantry Division took significant losses during the day 13 On May 13 while the 293rd and 76th achieved their link up they made little additional progress The 227th on the other hand bypassed the German positions at Murom from the south advanced as much as 12km with support of 10th Tank Brigade and captured a line from Hill 217 to Vysokii Due to the lagging attack of the northern forces of 28th Army the division was increasingly vulnerable to attack from three sides The following day the division left one rifle battalion to hold Hill 217 as the 293rd attempted to surround and reduce Murom The remainder of the division continued pushing westward routing German units and advancing another 6km and capturing the villages of Vergelevka and Pylnaya aided by the 28th Army s forces finally gaining traction Meanwhile the right flank forces of 38th Army were being counterattacked by the 3rd and 23rd Panzer Divisions out of Kharkiv During the day Colonel Ter Gasparian was wounded and evacuated handing over his command to Col G M Zaitsev 14 As the German counteroffensive developed on May 15 the 21st Army s shock group and the north flank forces of 28th Army continued to press their attacks northeast of Kharkiv Meeting increasing resistance these were unsuccessful in particular the newly arriving 168th Infantry Division moved to stave off the loss of Murom The next day the 21st Army commander Lt Gen V N Gordov was ordered to carry out his earlier assigned missions As a result of the operations of his division s forward detachments Colonel Zaitsev realized that the German forces on his front had fallen back to the line of the Kharkiv River Taking advantage of this withdrawal the 227th along with the neighboring 175th Rifle Division of 28th Army advanced to the west bank of the Lipets River and the villages of Ustinka Morokhovets and Bednyi Lead elements of the division pushed nearly as far as the town of Cheremoshnoe before running into the 168th This would prove to be the deepest penetration made by the northern group of Soviet forces in this offensive 15 These gains proved to be short lived as on May 17 Marshal S K Timoshenko commander of Southwestern Direction decided to halt further offensive activity by 21st Army in favor of redeploying the shock group to new positions running from Krasnaya Alekseeva to Pylnaya this was largely due to ongoing pressure from the 168th Infantry Also by this time the 1st Panzer Army s attack against Southern Front s positions in the Izium Barvinkove salient were well underway and Timoshenko s entire offensive was facing disaster Three Soviet armies were encircled there by May 24 and soon destroyed The 227th escaped this fate but had been significantly depleted during the offensive 16 Case Blue EditIn the wake of this offensive the 227th now back under command of Colonel Ter Gasparian was redeployed northward still in 21st Army to positions northeast of Belgorod As a result it missed the preliminary operations of the main German summer offensive On June 28 it was facing the XXIX Army Corps on the north flank of German 6th Army The division was in the Army s first echelon along the Oskol River with little support in the second echelon The German attack planned to collapse the 28th Army and drive it southward after which the 21st and 40th Armies would be encircled and destroyed west of Voronezh By June 30 the 227th along with the 301st Rifle Division and the 10th Tank Brigade had been pocketed southwest of Korocha 17 While individual soldiers and small groups were able to escape by July 11 the German spearheads were over 150km east of the original Soviet lines and the division had ceased to exist It was officially disbanded by the STAVKA on July 13 18 Colonel Ter Gasparian escaped the debacle and went on to command the 96th Rifle Division then to serve as chief of staff of 60th Army as a major general and rose to the rank of lieutenant general in 1949 2nd Formation EditA new 227th was officially formed on August 23 1943 in the 9th Army in North Caucasian Front based on two rifle brigades 19th Rifle Brigade Edit This had been formed from September to November 1941 at Tambov in the Oryol Military District 19 with the following order of battle 1st 2nd 3rd Rifle Battalions each with seven or more 82mm mortars Antitank Battalion eight 57mm ZiS 2 guns Artillery Battalion mixed 76mm and 45mm guns It was a student brigade based on personnel from the Oryol District training establishment It was sent to the Volga Military District in November to finish gathering its personnel and heavy weapons before being assigned to Western Front in December It entered the fighting as part of 49th Army at Serpukhov In February 1942 the brigade was transferred to 16th Army which had been moved to the Sukhinichi area in an effort to overcome a German position there that was blocking the Soviet advance toward Spas Demensk and Roslavl In April the 19th Brigade was assigned to 5th Guards Rifle Corps in the same Army and it stayed in that Corps until July 6 when it was pulled out of this Front and began moving by rail southward to Astrakhan 20 After being ferried across the Caspian Sea to the Transcaucasus the brigade was assigned to the reserves of Transcaucasian Front and then to 9th Army in the Front s Northern Group defending the line of the Terek River In November the 19th joined 11th Rifle Corps in 9th Army As the fighting moved north after the battle of Stalingrad the Army became part of North Caucasian Front in January 1943 From February to August the brigade faced the northern part of the Kuban bridgehead Gotenkopfstellung held by German 17th Army In July its order of battle was as follows 3 rifle battalions 1 submachine gun assault battalion 1 machine gun battalion 1 mortar battalion 120mm mortars 1 antitank battalion 45mm guns 1 artillery battalion 76mm cannon It was soon merged with the 84th Naval Rifle Brigade to create the new 227th 21 84th Naval Rifle Brigade Edit The 84th formed during October November 1941 in the Volga Military District 22 at Ulyanovsk Ufa and Kuibyshev based on a cadre from the Black Sea Fleet On November 27 it detrained at Rzazhske Station near Moscow and it was soon assigned to the new 1st Shock Army of Western Front with which it went over to the offensive on December 6 The 84th remained in 1st Shock until the Army was transferred to Northwestern Front in March it went into 11th Army and later 27th Army both of which were involved in the dismal battles on the north flank of the Demyansk Pocket It left the latter Army in August and followed a similar path to that of the 19th Brigade until it also reached the 11th Corps of 9th Army along the Terek River line in November By early 1943 it consisted of 4 rifle battalions each with 4 rifle companies 1 mortar company 82mm 1 machine gun company 1 antitank rifle company 1 sapper company 1 signal platoonArtillery battalion 76mm and 122mm partly motorized Mortar battalion Machine Gun battalion Antitank battalion 3 batteries of 45mm guns 1 antitank rifle company Sapper company Signal platoon The brigade remained in this configuration and under these commands until it merged with the 19th Brigade 23 The new division came under command of Col Ivan Vasilevich Terekhin on the day it formed Its order of battle based on the shtat of December 10 1942 was similar to that of the 1st formation 570th Rifle Regiment 777th Rifle Regiment 779th Rifle Regiment 711th Artillery Regiment 24 524th Self propelled Artillery Battalion from August 9 1945 72nd Antitank Battalion 305th Reconnaissance Company 395th Sapper Battalion 604th Signal Battalion later 1456th Signal Company 371st Medical Sanitation Battalion 325th Chemical Defense Anti gas Company 281st Motor Transport Company 553rd Field Bakery 53rd Divisional Veterinary Hospital 1632nd Field Postal Station 1622nd Field Office of the State BankKuban Bridgehead Edit From April 1 to July 5 the 9th Army s efforts were focused on the liberation of the port of Temryuk but although some ground was taken the defenders primarily of the 50th Infantry Division held on From this point the fighting became a battle of attrition until just before the 227th was formed On September 3 Hitler was finally convinced to evacuate the bridgehead in what would be called Operation Brunhild It was not until three days later that the gradual withdrawal became clear to the commander of North Caucasian Front Lt Gen I Ye Petrov and he began to implement more aggressive measures to block it 25 On the night of September 25 26 the Army mounted a major attack near the village of Kurchanskaya from the east in conjunction with a landing near Temryuk by a battalion of the 389th Rifle Division but both were repulsed The waterlogged terrain in the area prevented the use of tanks and made it difficult to bring heavy artillery forward By now the evacuation was well underway and continued until October 9 26 On September 27 Colonel Terekhin was replaced in command and his successor s name appears in the following battle honor citation TEMRYUK 227th Rifle Division Col Preobrazhenskii Georgii Nikolaevich The troops participating in the battles for the liberation of the Taman Peninsula during which they captured Temryuk and other settlements by the order of the Supreme High Command of 9 October 1943 and a commendation in Moscow are given a salute of 20 artillery salvoes from 224 guns 27 This officer had previously served as deputy commander of 22nd Rifle Corps in 18th Army in the same Front and as acting commander in March and April Crimean Offensive EditBy the start of October the division had left 11th Corps but was still under 9th Army Later that month the Army was effectively disbanded and its rifle divisions were redistributed with the 227th going to the 16th Rifle Corps of 56th Army still in North Caucasian Front 28 After two false starts this Army began landing operations overnight on November 3 4 on the west side of Kerch Strait supported by heavy artillery fire from the east side The 2nd and 55th Guards Rifle Divisions landed 4 000 men on the first day and significant reinforcements followed until the Army launched a major breakout effort on November 5 6 but this was contained Days later the 56th was redesignated as Separate Coastal Army and on November 10 it attacked the German line again driving it back up to 3km and even with very limited tank support by the 12th it was on the outskirts of Kerch At this point the situation became deadlocked for several months 29 In February 1944 Coastal Army came under command of Army Gen A I Yeryomenko During the same month the 227th was removed from 16th Corps and came under direct Army command where it remained at the start of the main Crimean operation 30 The overland aspect of the operation was entrusted to 4th Ukrainian Front s 2nd Guards and 51st Armies while Coastal Army would initially be responsible pinning the German V Army Corps at Kerch before securing the Kerch Peninsula The main attack began on April 8 and by the 10th the defending German and Romanian forces were falling back from the Perekop Isthmus and the Soviet bridgehead across the Syvash toward Sevastopol Overnight the V Corps began its withdrawal from Kerch it would have to cover 160km mostly along a single road to reach the same objective with the 10 rifle divisions and 204 tanks of Coastal Army on its heels The Corps reached the Parpach Narrows on April 12 but could not attempt to hold there because 2nd Guards Army was closing on Simferopol threatening its rear The Corps commander Gen der Inf K Allmendinger was ordered to reach Feodosia or Sudak for evacuation by sea 31 April 13 saw the Soviet pursuit in full flood General Yeryomenko formed a mobile group with the 227th and the 257th Tank Regiment in the lead and these reached and cleared Feodosia 32 The division would be awarded the Order of the Red Banner on April 24 for its role in this victory 33 The mobile group caught up with the tail end of Allmendinger s Corps near Staryi Krym and threatened to overwhelm the rearguard Gebirgs Jager Regiment Krim was ordered to take a stand in hilly terrain and sacrificed itself in temporarily halting the pursuit This allowed about 10 000 troops of V Corps to reach Sudak for transport to Balaklava coming under heavy air attacks in the process The remainder had to continue the retreat through the Yaila Mountains Much of the German horse drawn artillery had to be abandoned because it could not keep pace through this terrain Early on April 15 Yeryomenko s vanguard encircled and destroyed a Romanian rearguard of two battalions while the main body of V Corps reached Yalta It arrived at the eastern outskirts of Sevastopol the following day but the pursuit had cost it thousands of its troops over 70 percent of its heavy weapons and the Corps was no longer combat effective 34 The 227th occupied Yalta that day and later Bakhchysarai as well 35 Sevastopol s defenses were no longer capable of supporting a prolonged battle for the port although this was not immediately apparent to the Soviet command Despite Hitler s orders to hold evacuations by sea of non essential personnel began on April 12 but this included many who did not fit this definition 36 By the first of May the 227th was back in 16th Corps 37 and on the morning of May 7 the Corps attacked V Corps west of Balaklava following a very heavy artillery preparation and quickly achieved a penetration in the center of the sector held by the 73rd Infantry Division V Corps was so badly damaged that it had no choice but to fall back to its second line On May 8 following advances by 2nd Guards and 51st Armies as well Hitler finally authorized a full evacuation The next day 16th Corps backed by 19th Tank Corps crashed through the retreating 73rd Infantry and pursued into the Chersonese This was mopped up the following day 38 and the three rifle regiments of the 227th won battle honors SEVASTOPOL 570th Rifle Regiment Lt Col Aleksandrov Vasilii Aleksandrovich 777th Rifle Regiment Lt Col Volinskii Iosif Issakovich 779th Rifle Regiment Maj Duboshin Aleksei Abramovich The troops participating in the battles for the liberation of Sevastopol by the order of the Supreme High Command of 10 May 1944 and a commendation in Moscow are given a salute of 24 artillery salvoes from 324 guns 39 The Coastal Army remained in Crimea as a garrison force for the next few months 40 In recognition of his leadership of the division Colonel Preobrazhenskii was made a Hero of the Soviet Union on May 16 and promoted to the rank of major general on June 3 Into the Balkans EditAs of the beginning of August the 227th was still in 16th Corps of Coastal Army but it soon began moving north to join 7th Guards Army in 2nd Ukrainian Front as a separate division 41 At the outset of the Second Jassy Kishinev Offensive the division constituted the Army s reserve Strategically the Army was to launch a supporting attack but with important objectives in cooperation with Gorshkov s Cavalry Mechanized Group it was to capture the town of Roman on the third day and Bacău on the fifth to unhinge Axis defenses along the Siret River The 25th Guards Rifle Corps backed by the 227th would form the Army s shock group Although the main offensive was to begin on August 20 the Army s attack was to wait until the neighboring 27th Army had broken the German front on its sector A 30 minute artillery preparation would precede the attack 42 27th Army s breakthrough came quickly and by 1100 hours it had forced the Bahlui River By 1900 the 7th Guards shock group had taken up its jumping off positions along the left bank of this river Its objective for August 21 was to seize the Targu Frumos fortified area that had stymied 2nd Ukrainian Front during the spring With the help of artillery assets transferred from 27th Army and the 23rd Tank Corps the shock group led by 36th Guards Rifle Division crushed Axis resistance and carried out its mission for the day creating conditions for the commitment of Gorshkov s Group The following day most of the 24th Guards Rifle Corps joined the offensive as the shock group continued in the direction of Roman advancing through the night against Romanian forces retreating hastily to avoid encirclement By the end of August 24 the shock group had reached the line Bacău Racova Bibirești Bota 43 Budapest Campaign Edit As 7th Guards Army entered the Balkans in September the 227th was still serving under direct Army command but in October it was assigned to 27th Guards Rifle Corps still in the same Army joining the 303rd Rifle Division 44 On October 28 the STAVKA directed the 2nd and 3rd Ukrainian Fronts to begin an offensive toward the Hungarian capital 2nd Ukrainian planned to advance between the Danube and Tisza Rivers with the 46th Army and 2nd Guards Mechanized Corps to clear the west bank of the latter river then cross 7th Guards Army to the east bank subsequently it would advance on Budapest with 4th Guards Mechanized Corps 45 The Army began its attack on October 30 with four rifle divisions including the 227th against elements of the reconstructed German 6th Army It was expected to capture the line Szolnok Abony Hartany by the morning of November 2 In the event this timeline could not be met and it was November 4 when 27th Guards Corps stormed Szolnok an important Axis strongpoint on the Tisza 46 On November 19 the 570th Rifle Regiment would be rewarded with the Order of the Red Banner while the 777th Rifle Regiment and 395th Sapper Battalion were each awarded the Order of Alexander Nevsky 47 The German Hungarian command was increasingly concerned that Budapest could be seized off the march and began transferring units of III Panzer Corps to this axis until it had concentrated a powerful grouping of about 200 tanks While 46th Army and the two mechanized corps were halted on the outer ring of the city s defenses 7th Guards Army pressed the offensive toward Jaszapati and Jaszbereny but it was not until the 14th that the latter was partly captured by 27th Guards Corps 48 With the failure to take Budapest by coup de main the STAVKA ordered it to be encircled and reduced 7th Guards Army was to break through the Axis defense on December 5 on a front from Harvan to Aszod and attack in the direction of Verseg Csovar and Notincs in order to support the commitment of 6th Guards Tank Army and Pliyev s Cavalry Mechanized Group into the breakthrough The artillery of 227th and 303rd Divisions would be supplemented with the 41st Cannon Artillery Brigade and part of the guns of Pliyev s Group for a total of 261 pieces 76mm or greater calibre The attack began at 1015 hours and soon achieved a breakthrough advancing as much as 8km during the day Led by units of 6th Guards Tanks the Army continued at an average rate of about 16km per day until reaching the Danube between December 8 9 in the Vac area 49 In order to complete the encirclement of Budapest the Danube had to be forced and as a result of this success the 779th Rifle Regiment would be decorated with the Order of Suvorov 3rd Degree on January 6 1945 50 By this time the 227th had been transferred to the 57th Rifle Corps in 53rd Army 51 Into Czechoslovakia Edit In December both the 7th Guards and 53rd Armies had entered Slovakia in the Sahy area and along the Hron River 52 The 53rd pushed on toward Lucenec before going over to the defense in late February The Bratislava Brno Offensive began on March 25 by this time the division had left 57th Corps and was operation under direct Army command The Army pushed through the hilly terrain of central Slovakia and crossed the Morava River near Hodonin on April 13 the 227th had by now returned to 57th Corps 53 On April 24 General Preobrazhenskii was directed to attend the K E Voroshilov Higher Military Academy and he was replaced the next day by Col Stepan Zotovich Petrov This officer would remain in command for the duration of the war Preobrazhenskii was appointed as deputy commander of 13th Rifle Corps in February 1946 He moved to the training establishment in April 1950 and retired to Moscow in 1955 before his death on March 19 1958 Manchurian Campaign and Postwar Edit53rd Army was selected for transfer to the far east for the campaign against the Japanese Kwantung Army in Manchuria largely due to its experience in fighting through the Carpathian Mountains during 1944 45 After crossing the continent via the Trans Siberian Railway it joined Transbaikal Front but by the beginning of August the 227th was detached from the Army and was in reserve at the disposal of the Front 54 55 Although it had the 524th Self propelled Artillery Battalion SU 76s added to its order of battle to provide more mobile firepower in the event the division was not committed to combat 56 By the conclusion of hostilities the division had been awarded the full title of 227th Rifle Temryuk Order of the Red Banner Division Russian 227 ya strelkovaya Temryukskaya Krasnoznamyonnaya diviziya The division was based in Krasnoyarsk with the 49th Rifle Corps and was disbanded there in July 1946 to form the basis of the 49th Rifle Brigade 57 References EditCitations Edit Charles C Sharp Red Legions Soviet Rifle Divisions Formed Before June 1941 Soviet Order of Battle World War II vol VIII Nafziger 1996 p 98 This source misnumbers the 678th as the 595th Combat Composition of the Soviet Army 1941 pp 11 19 Sharp Red Legions p 98 Combat Composition of the Soviet Army 1941 p 24 Sharp Red Legions p 98 David Stahel Kiev 1941 Cambridge University Press Cambridge UK 2012 p 210 Sharp Red Legions p 98 Stahel Kiev 1941 p 262 63 Combat Composition of the Soviet Army 1941 p 64 https warheroes ru hero hero asp Hero id 4312 In Russian Retrieved May 2 2022 Combat Composition of the Soviet Army 1942 pp 66 85 David M Glantz Kharkov 1942 Ian Allan Publishing Ltd Hersham UK 2010 pp 64 81 82 123 24 164 Glantz Kharkov 1942 pp 163 65 174 Glantz Kharkov 1942 pp 177 78 185 188 Glantz Kharkov 1942 pp 204 05 218 20 Glantz Kharkov 1942 pp 238 245 46 249 262 282 Glantz To the Gates of Stalingrad University Press of Kansas Lawrence KS 2009 pp 91 111 128 134 Sharp Red Legions p 98 Walter S Dunn Jr Stalin s Keys to Victory Stackpole Books Mechanicsburg PA 2007 p 86 Sharp Red Volunteers Soviet Militia Units Rifle and Ski Brigades 1941 1945 Soviet Order of Battle World War II vol XI Nafziger 1996 pp 15 16 Sharp Red Volunteers p 16 Dunn Jr Stalin s Keys to Victory p 86 Sharp Red Death Soviet Mountain Naval NKVD and Allied Divisions and Brigades 1941 to 1945 Soviet Order of Battle World War II vol VII Nafziger 1995 pp 46 47 Soviet sources differ as to whether or not it was still designated as a Naval Morskaya brigade at this time Sharp Red Swarm Soviet Rifle Divisions Formed From 1942 to 1945 Soviet Order of Battle World War II vol X Nafziger 1996 p 90 Robert Forczyk The Kuban 1943 The Wehrmacht s Last Stand in the Caucasus Osprey Publishing Oxford UK 2018 Kindle ed Forczyk The Kuban 1943 The Wehrmacht s Last Stand in the Caucasus Kindle ed http www soldat ru spravka freedom 1 ssr 6 html In Russian Retrieved May 6 2022 Combat Composition of the Soviet Army 1943 pp 255 283 Forczyk Where the Iron Crosses Grow Osprey Publishing Oxford UK 2014 pp 252 255 58 Combat Composition of the Soviet Army 1944 pp 80 111 Forczyk Where the Iron Crosses Grow pp 270 272 276 77 Forczyk Where the Iron Crosses Grow p 278 Affairs Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of the Soviet Union 1967a p 330 Forczyk Where the Iron Crosses Grow pp 278 80 https warheroes ru hero hero asp Hero id 6055 In Russian Retrieved May 8 2022 Forczyk Where the Iron Crosses Grow pp 280 283 84 Combat Composition of the Soviet Army 1944 p 141 Forczyk Where the Iron Crosses Grow pp 287 89 http www soldat ru spravka freedom 1 ssr 5 html In Russian Retrieved May 8 2022 Sharp Red Swarm p 90 Combat Composition of the Soviet Army 1944 pp 231 260 Soviet General Staff The Iasi Kishinev Offensive ed amp trans R W Harrison Helion amp Co Ltd Solihull UK 2017 p 33 Soviet General Staff The Iasi Kishinev Offensive pp 97 99 102 03 108 117 125 Combat Composition of the Soviet Army 1944 pp 289 320 Soviet General Staff The Budapest Operation 1945 ed amp trans R W Harrison Helion amp Co Ltd Solihull UK 2017 p 26 Soviet General Staff The Budapest Operation 1945 pp 28 29 31 Affairs Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of the Soviet Union 1967a p 524 Soviet General Staff The Budapest Operation 1945 pp 31 34 Soviet General Staff The Budapest Operation 1945 pp 44 46 101 02 Affairs Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of the Soviet Union 1967b p 36 Combat Composition of the Soviet Army 1945 p 23 Soviet General Staff The Budapest Operation 1945 p 53 Combat Composition of the Soviet Army 1945 pp 93 129 Glantz August Storm the Soviet Strategic Offensive in Manchuria Verdun Press 2015 Kindle ed ch 7 Combat Composition of the Soviet Army 1945 p 195 Sharp Red Swarm p 90 Feskov et al 2013 p 557 Bibliography Edit Affairs Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of the Soviet Union 1967a Sbornik prikazov RVSR RVS SSSR NKO i Ukazov Prezidiuma Verhovnogo Soveta SSSR o nagrazhdenii ordenami SSSR chastej soedineniij i uchrezhdenij VS SSSR Chast I 1920 1944 gg Collection of orders of the RVSR RVS USSR and NKO on awarding orders to units formations and establishments of the Armed Forces of the USSR Part I 1920 1944 PDF in Russian Moscow Archived from the original PDF on 2019 03 27 Retrieved 2022 05 01 Affairs Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of the Soviet Union 1967b Sbornik prikazov RVSR RVS SSSR NKO i Ukazov Prezidiuma Verhovnogo Soveta SSSR o nagrazhdenii ordenami SSSR chastej soedineniij i uchrezhdenij VS SSSR Chast II 1945 1966 gg Collection of orders of the RVSR RVS USSR and NKO on awarding orders to units formations and establishments of the Armed Forces of the USSR Part II 1945 1966 in Russian Moscow Feskov V I Golikov V I Kalashnikov K A Slugin S A 2013 Vooruzhennye sily SSSR posle Vtoroj Mirovoj vojny ot Krasnoj Armii k Sovetskoj The Armed Forces of the USSR after World War II From the Red Army to the Soviet Part 1 Land Forces in Russian Tomsk Scientific and Technical Literature Publishing ISBN 9785895035306 Grylev A N 1970 Perechen 5 Strelkovyh gornostrelkovyh motostrelkovyh i motorizovannyh divizii vhodivshih v sostav Dejstvuyushej armii v gody Velikoj Otechestvennoj vojny 1941 1945 gg List Perechen No 5 Rifle Mountain Rifle Motor Rifle and Motorized divisions part of the active army during the Great Patriotic War 1941 1945 in Russian Moscow Voenizdat p 104 Main Personnel Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of the Soviet Union 1964 Komandovanie korpusnogo i divizionnogo zvena sovetskih vooruzhennyh sil perioda Velikoj Otechestvennoj vojny 1941 1945 gg Commanders of Corps and Divisions in the Great Patriotic War 1941 1945 in Russian Moscow Frunze Military Academy p 216External links EditGevork Andreevich Ter Gasparian Georgii Nikolaevich Preobrazhenskii HSU Georgii Nikolaevich Preobrazhenskii Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 227th Rifle Division amp oldid 1124250959, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.