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44th Rifle Division


The 44th Kievskaya of the Red Banner Rifle Division of Nikolay Shchors, or 44th Kievskaya for short, was an elite military formation of the Soviet Union. Created during the beginnings of the Russian Civil War. It was destroyed during the Winter War, after being ordered to help the 163rd Infantry Division break a Finnish siege on the Raate road as part of the Special Rifle Corps 9th Army, together with the 54th Rifle Division. Afterwards it was levied and dissolved multiple times throughout the 40s and 50s until its final dissolution in 1959.[2]

44th Rifle Division
44th Mountain-Rifle Division
Soldiers and officers of the 44th Kievan Rifle Division, an elite unit of the Ukrainian SSR[1]
Active1918–1957
Country Soviet Union
Branch Red Army (1918-1946)
 Soviet Army (1946-1957)
TypeRifle
SizeDivision
EngagementsUkrainian-Soviet War

Winter War

World War II

DecorationsOrder of Red Banner (1928)
Battle honoursShchors Kievskaya (1920)
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Alexei Vinogradov

Early history edit

Creation edit

The unit is also famous for being one of the first military formations out of which was formed the short-lived Ukrainian Soviet Army (November 30, 1918 – June 1, 1919). It was formed by the order no.6 of the Communist Party (Bolshevik) of Ukraine on September 22, 1918, as the 1st Insurgent Division along with the 2nd Insurgent Division. The 1st Insurgent Division was formed out of insurgent squads of Tarashcha and Novgorod-Sieversky uyezds. The chief of division (nachdiv) was appointed N.Krapivyansky and the chief of staff S.Petrikovsky (Petrenko).

Initial order of battle
  • 1st Red Cossacks Regiment (Vitaly Primakov)
  • 2nd Insurgent Regiment, later called Tarashcha (V.Balyas, later M.Baron, and then V.Bozhenko)
  • 3rd Insurgent Regiment of Bogun, later called simply Bogun (Nikolay Shchors)
  • 4th Insurgent Regiment (Ya.Kisel)

By the end of September, the Division grew to 6700 bayonets, 450 sabers, 14 [artillery] guns, and from 10 to 18 machine guns "Maxim", 5 to 6 Colt, 20 to 30 Lewis. Because of that, selected regiments were reorganized into brigades. However, the name for the units were nominal as the brigade's headquarters were never formed, and functions of kombrigs were performed by the regimental commanders (colonel).

  • 1st Brigade of Red Cossacks (1st Regiment and 2nd Regiment) (Vitaly Primakov)
  • 2nd Brigade (3rd Bogun Regiment and 2nd Tarashcha Regiment) (Nikolay Shchors)

Around that time at the divisional headquarters a security company was formed out of some 700 soldiers. That new unit was planned to be transformed into the 5th Regiment and used as a reserve. Also the 4th Insurgent Regiment was recommissioned as the 6th Insurgent Regiment (commander T.Chernyak) and along with the 1st Regiment of Red Cossacks was soon transferred to the 2nd Insurgent Division. In their places, were created the 3rd Insurgent Regiment, later called Novgorod-Sieversky (T.Chernyak) and the 4th Insurgent Nezhyn Regiment (P.Nesmeyan) transformed out the security company.

Ukrainian-Soviet War edit

During the preparations for an assault on Kharkiv most of the division, however, refused to obey orders except for the Red Cossacks and the 4th Insurgent Nezhyn Regiment. For that the divisional commander N.Krapivyansky was dismissed and court martialed. I Lokatosh was appointed the new chief of division and I. Panafidin the political commissar. The name of the division also changed to the Special Insurgent Division (order of Military Council of Kursk direction group of forces of November 21, 1918) as well as its formation consisting of now only two brigades:

  • 1st brigade (P.Kovtun) (Novgorod-Sieversky Regiment - T.Chernyak and Nezhyn Company - P.Nesmeyan)
  • 2nd brigade (N.Shchors) (Bogun and Tarashcha Regiments)

The 44th Rifle Division, part of the 12th Army, was formed from units of the 1st Ukrainian Soviet Army by a 16 June 1919 order. Reorganized as the 44th Border Rifle Division on 5 August when it absorbed the 3rd Border Division, it merged with the 1st Ukrainian Soviet Division to become the 44th Rifle Division on 16 August.[3]

Winter War (destruction at the Battle of Raate Road) edit

 
Soviet dead along the Raate Road, January 1940

The 44th Rifle Division participated in the Soviet invasion of Poland in autumn 1939. Later, during the Finno-Russian Winter War, the division was sent to the Finnish front as reinforcement for the Soviet 163rd Rifle Division which had attempted to advance into central Finland and become surrounded after capturing the town of Suomussalmi and was suffering heavy casualties.[4] The 163rd Division, which was running short of food, was almost completely annihilated in combat with the Finnish 9th Infantry Division (Winter War) (fi:9._divisioona_(talvisota)) before the 44th Rifle Division could reach its position. With no ski troops, the 44th Rifle Division was completely road bound in the deep snow. The Finns, mounted on skis, and carrying superior arms (Kp-31 submachineguns), were able to break the route of march of the 44th Division on the road leading to Suomussalmi. By breaking the division into pieces along the road, after Finnish radio intelligence had confirmed that the whole division had entered the Raate road,[5] the Finns were able to annihilate the entire unit. According to Robert Edwards, the division's Commander A. Vinogradev managed to escape, but later, on the orders of Stalin's emissary, Lev Mekhlis, he was shot for incompetence following a sham trial. Of the 44th Division's 17,000 troops, 1,000 were captured and 700 escaped. The rest died.[4]

Other records suggest that Commander (kombrig) Alexei Vinogradov was sentenced in January 1940 to the Highest Degree of Punishment (VMN) by the Military Tribunal of the 9th Army.[6] along with his chief of staff Onufri Volkov.[7] On January 11, he was publicly executed in front of formation.

Later history edit

The division was recreated after its destruction and part of 13th Rifle Corps, 12th Army, Kiev Special Military District in June 1941.[8]

'Captured Soviet Generals' says that the division commander, Major General S.A. Tkachenko, was captured by the Germans. The division was immediately caught up in conflict and suffered heavy losses. By 21 July 1941 the division was already short of shtat (establishment or Table of Organization and Equipment) by over 4,000 soldiers, 199 cargo trucks, and over 3,000 rifles and carbines. Divisional morale fell despite some small victories. Ultimately the division was wiped out in combat near the village of Podvyskoe in the Kirovograd and Uman region.[9]

The division was recreated at Leningrad in October 1941. It fought in northern Russia and Kurland with the 54th Army of Volkhov Front in January 1944 and the 67th Army of the Leningrad Front in May 1945.

It was briefly reactivated after the war from 1955[10] at Uralsk in Uralsk Oblast, from the 270th Rifle Division. It was redesignated the 44th Motor Rifle Division on 4 June 1957.[11] In January 1958 it became part of the Turkestan Military District with the dissolution of the South Ural Military District.[12] The division disbanded on 1 March 1959. Its 118th and 126th Motor Rifle Regiments transferred to the 43rd Motor Rifle Division.[13]

Structure edit

 
T-26 tanks of the 44th Rifle Division in Finland prior to an attack

On July 8, 1939:

  • 25th Infantry Regiment
  • 146th Infantry Regiment
  • 305th Infantry Regiment;
  • 122nd Artillery Regiment
  • 179th Howitzer Artillery Regiment
  • 312th Independent Tank Battalion
  • 66th Separate Anti-Aircraft Machine Gun Company
  • 56th Separate Anti-Tank Battalion
  • 61st Separate Battalion
  • 12th Separate Battalion
  • 4th Separate Reconnaissance Battalion
  • 42nd Separate Motor Battalion
  • 5th Separate Decontamination Company
  • 38th Artillery Battalion
  • 113th Separate Repair Company
  • 78th Medical Battalion;
  • Mobile Field Hospital
  • 156th Field Postal Station;

List of commanders edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "71 рік Зимовій війні. Як у карельських снігах загинула елітна українська дивізія". Історична правда.
  2. ^ Leo Niehorster, 9th Army
  3. ^ (in Russian) History of the 44th Mountain Rifle Division 2011-02-06 at the Wayback Machine, accessed September 2012.
  4. ^ a b Edwards, The Winter War, at 152-174.
  5. ^ Militarian maailma nro 13, Radiotiedustelun synty Suomessa 2009-05-26 at the Wayback Machine (in Finnish)
  6. ^ "List of repressed personnel of the Red Army (kombrigs)". rkka.ru.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-03-27. Retrieved 2010-12-06.
  8. ^ Leo Niehorster, 12th Army, 22 June 1941
  9. ^ Aleksander A. Maslov, David M. Glantz, Harold Steven Orenstein, Captured Soviet Generals (via Google Books), p.13-14
  10. ^ Craig Crofoot/Michael Avanzini, Armies of the Bear, 113 (Vol I, No. 2?).
  11. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 151
  12. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 538
  13. ^ Holm, Michael. "44th Motorised Rifle Division". www.ww2.dk. Retrieved 2016-03-21.

Sources edit

  • Neihorster, Leo, World War II Armed Forces, Orders of Battle and Organizations
  • Edwards, Robert, The Winter War, Pegasus Books, New York, 2008 ISBN 978-1-933648-50-7
  • 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.

External links edit

  • (in Ukrainian) How in the Karelian snowfields was lost the elite Ukrainian Division - Ukrayinska Pravda
  • Ukrainian Talvisota: Unknown history of a Ukrainian Volunteer Regiment in the Finnish War
  • (in Russian) Red Army handbook
  • (in Russian) Brief overlook of the 44th Rifle Division at the Winter War memorial website 2010-12-04 at the Wayback Machine
  • (in Russian) Natalia Filipchuk - Голос України №239(4239)

44th, rifle, division, 44th, kievskaya, banner, rifle, division, nikolay, shchors, 44th, kievskaya, short, elite, military, formation, soviet, union, created, during, beginnings, russian, civil, destroyed, during, winter, after, being, ordered, help, 163rd, in. The 44th Kievskaya of the Red Banner Rifle Division of Nikolay Shchors or 44th Kievskaya for short was an elite military formation of the Soviet Union Created during the beginnings of the Russian Civil War It was destroyed during the Winter War after being ordered to help the 163rd Infantry Division break a Finnish siege on the Raate road as part of the Special Rifle Corps 9th Army together with the 54th Rifle Division Afterwards it was levied and dissolved multiple times throughout the 40s and 50s until its final dissolution in 1959 2 44th Rifle Division 44th Mountain Rifle DivisionSoldiers and officers of the 44th Kievan Rifle Division an elite unit of the Ukrainian SSR 1 Active1918 1957Country Soviet UnionBranchRed Army 1918 1946 Soviet Army 1946 1957 TypeRifleSizeDivisionEngagementsUkrainian Soviet War Winter War Battle of Raate Road World War II Battle of Lypovec Siege of LeningradDecorationsOrder of Red Banner 1928 Battle honoursShchors Kievskaya 1920 CommandersNotablecommandersAlexei Vinogradov Contents 1 Early history 1 1 Creation 1 2 Ukrainian Soviet War 2 Winter War destruction at the Battle of Raate Road 3 Later history 4 Structure 5 List of commanders 6 Notes 7 Sources 8 External linksEarly history editCreation edit The unit is also famous for being one of the first military formations out of which was formed the short lived Ukrainian Soviet Army November 30 1918 June 1 1919 It was formed by the order no 6 of the Communist Party Bolshevik of Ukraine on September 22 1918 as the 1st Insurgent Division along with the 2nd Insurgent Division The 1st Insurgent Division was formed out of insurgent squads of Tarashcha and Novgorod Sieversky uyezds The chief of division nachdiv was appointed N Krapivyansky and the chief of staff S Petrikovsky Petrenko Initial order of battle 1st Red Cossacks Regiment Vitaly Primakov 2nd Insurgent Regiment later called Tarashcha V Balyas later M Baron and then V Bozhenko 3rd Insurgent Regiment of Bogun later called simply Bogun Nikolay Shchors 4th Insurgent Regiment Ya Kisel By the end of September the Division grew to 6700 bayonets 450 sabers 14 artillery guns and from 10 to 18 machine guns Maxim 5 to 6 Colt 20 to 30 Lewis Because of that selected regiments were reorganized into brigades However the name for the units were nominal as the brigade s headquarters were never formed and functions of kombrigs were performed by the regimental commanders colonel 1st Brigade of Red Cossacks 1st Regiment and 2nd Regiment Vitaly Primakov 2nd Brigade 3rd Bogun Regiment and 2nd Tarashcha Regiment Nikolay Shchors Around that time at the divisional headquarters a security company was formed out of some 700 soldiers That new unit was planned to be transformed into the 5th Regiment and used as a reserve Also the 4th Insurgent Regiment was recommissioned as the 6th Insurgent Regiment commander T Chernyak and along with the 1st Regiment of Red Cossacks was soon transferred to the 2nd Insurgent Division In their places were created the 3rd Insurgent Regiment later called Novgorod Sieversky T Chernyak and the 4th Insurgent Nezhyn Regiment P Nesmeyan transformed out the security company Ukrainian Soviet War edit During the preparations for an assault on Kharkiv most of the division however refused to obey orders except for the Red Cossacks and the 4th Insurgent Nezhyn Regiment For that the divisional commander N Krapivyansky was dismissed and court martialed I Lokatosh was appointed the new chief of division and I Panafidin the political commissar The name of the division also changed to the Special Insurgent Division order of Military Council of Kursk direction group of forces of November 21 1918 as well as its formation consisting of now only two brigades 1st brigade P Kovtun Novgorod Sieversky Regiment T Chernyak and Nezhyn Company P Nesmeyan 2nd brigade N Shchors Bogun and Tarashcha Regiments The 44th Rifle Division part of the 12th Army was formed from units of the 1st Ukrainian Soviet Army by a 16 June 1919 order Reorganized as the 44th Border Rifle Division on 5 August when it absorbed the 3rd Border Division it merged with the 1st Ukrainian Soviet Division to become the 44th Rifle Division on 16 August 3 Winter War destruction at the Battle of Raate Road editMain article Battle of Raate Road nbsp Soviet dead along the Raate Road January 1940 The 44th Rifle Division participated in the Soviet invasion of Poland in autumn 1939 Later during the Finno Russian Winter War the division was sent to the Finnish front as reinforcement for the Soviet 163rd Rifle Division which had attempted to advance into central Finland and become surrounded after capturing the town of Suomussalmi and was suffering heavy casualties 4 The 163rd Division which was running short of food was almost completely annihilated in combat with the Finnish 9th Infantry Division Winter War fi 9 divisioona talvisota before the 44th Rifle Division could reach its position With no ski troops the 44th Rifle Division was completely road bound in the deep snow The Finns mounted on skis and carrying superior arms Kp 31 submachineguns were able to break the route of march of the 44th Division on the road leading to Suomussalmi By breaking the division into pieces along the road after Finnish radio intelligence had confirmed that the whole division had entered the Raate road 5 the Finns were able to annihilate the entire unit According to Robert Edwards the division s Commander A Vinogradev managed to escape but later on the orders of Stalin s emissary Lev Mekhlis he was shot for incompetence following a sham trial Of the 44th Division s 17 000 troops 1 000 were captured and 700 escaped The rest died 4 Other records suggest that Commander kombrig Alexei Vinogradov was sentenced in January 1940 to the Highest Degree of Punishment VMN by the Military Tribunal of the 9th Army 6 along with his chief of staff Onufri Volkov 7 On January 11 he was publicly executed in front of formation Later history editThe division was recreated after its destruction and part of 13th Rifle Corps 12th Army Kiev Special Military District in June 1941 8 Captured Soviet Generals says that the division commander Major General S A Tkachenko was captured by the Germans The division was immediately caught up in conflict and suffered heavy losses By 21 July 1941 the division was already short of shtat establishment or Table of Organization and Equipment by over 4 000 soldiers 199 cargo trucks and over 3 000 rifles and carbines Divisional morale fell despite some small victories Ultimately the division was wiped out in combat near the village of Podvyskoe in the Kirovograd and Uman region 9 The division was recreated at Leningrad in October 1941 It fought in northern Russia and Kurland with the 54th Army of Volkhov Front in January 1944 and the 67th Army of the Leningrad Front in May 1945 It was briefly reactivated after the war from 1955 10 at Uralsk in Uralsk Oblast from the 270th Rifle Division It was redesignated the 44th Motor Rifle Division on 4 June 1957 11 In January 1958 it became part of the Turkestan Military District with the dissolution of the South Ural Military District 12 The division disbanded on 1 March 1959 Its 118th and 126th Motor Rifle Regiments transferred to the 43rd Motor Rifle Division 13 Structure edit nbsp T 26 tanks of the 44th Rifle Division in Finland prior to an attack On July 8 1939 25th Infantry Regiment 146th Infantry Regiment 305th Infantry Regiment 122nd Artillery Regiment 179th Howitzer Artillery Regiment 312th Independent Tank Battalion 66th Separate Anti Aircraft Machine Gun Company 56th Separate Anti Tank Battalion 61st Separate Battalion 12th Separate Battalion 4th Separate Reconnaissance Battalion 42nd Separate Motor Battalion 5th Separate Decontamination Company 38th Artillery Battalion 113th Separate Repair Company 78th Medical Battalion Mobile Field Hospital 156th Field Postal Station List of commanders editJuly 1919 August 1919 Ivan Naumovich Dubovoy August 1919 Nikolai Shchors August 1919 September 1919 Ivan Naumovich Dubovoy September 1919 October 1919 Mironov October 1919 Petr Volkov October 1919 January 1922 Ivan Naumovich Dubovoy 1930s Dmitry Timofeyevich Kozlov 1930s Yaroslav Shtrombakh January 1939 January 1940 Alexei Vinogradov executed January 11 1940 for the failure in the Battle of Raate Road January 1940 P Furt January 1940 September 1941 Semyon TkachenkoNotes edit 71 rik Zimovij vijni Yak u karelskih snigah zaginula elitna ukrayinska diviziya Istorichna pravda Leo Niehorster 9th Army in Russian History of the 44th Mountain Rifle Division Archived 2011 02 06 at the Wayback Machine accessed September 2012 a b Edwards The Winter War at 152 174 Militarian maailma nro 13 Radiotiedustelun synty Suomessa Archived 2009 05 26 at the Wayback Machine in Finnish List of repressed personnel of the Red Army kombrigs rkka ru List of repressed personnel of the Red Army colonels Archived from the original on 2013 03 27 Retrieved 2010 12 06 Leo Niehorster 12th Army 22 June 1941 Aleksander A Maslov David M Glantz Harold Steven Orenstein Captured Soviet Generals via Google Books p 13 14 Craig Crofoot Michael Avanzini Armies of the Bear 113 Vol I No 2 Feskov et al 2013 p 151 Feskov et al 2013 p 538 Holm Michael 44th Motorised Rifle Division www ww2 dk Retrieved 2016 03 21 Sources editNeihorster Leo World War II Armed Forces Orders of Battle and Organizations Edwards Robert The Winter War Pegasus Books New York 2008 ISBN 978 1 933648 50 7 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 External links edit in Ukrainian How in the Karelian snowfields was lost the elite Ukrainian Division Ukrayinska Pravda Ukrainian Talvisota Unknown history of a Ukrainian Volunteer Regiment in the Finnish War in Russian Red Army handbook in Russian Brief overlook of the 44th Rifle Division at the Winter War memorial website Archived 2010 12 04 at the Wayback Machine in Russian 20 000 of us went and returned 217 people Natalia Filipchuk Golos Ukrayini 239 4239 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 44th Rifle Division amp oldid 1210066523, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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