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3rd SS Panzer Division Totenkopf

The 3rd SS Panzer Division "Totenkopf" (German: 3. SS-Panzerdivision "Totenkopf")[1] was an elite division of the Waffen-SS of Nazi Germany during World War II, formed from the Standarten of the SS-TV. Its name, Totenkopf, is German for "death's head" – the skull and crossbones symbol – and it is thus sometimes referred to as the Death's Head Division.[2]

3rd SS Panzer Division Totenkopf
3. SS-Panzerdivision "Totenkopf"
Divisional insignia
Active1939–45
Country Nazi Germany
Branch Waffen-SS
TypePanzer
RoleArmoured warfare
SizeDivision
Nickname(s)Death's Head Division
EngagementsWorld War II
Commanders
Notable
commanders

The division was formed through the expansion of Kampfgruppe Eicke, a battle group named – in keeping with German military practice – after its commander, Theodor Eicke. Most of the battle group's personnel had been transferred to the Waffen-SS from concentration camp guard units, which were known collectively as SS-Totenkopfverbände; others were former members of Selbstschutz: ethnic German militias that had committed war crimes in Poland.

The division became notorious for its brutality, and committed numerous war crimes, including the Le Paradis and Chasselay massacres. The remnants of the division surrendered on 9 May 1945 to American forces in Czechoslovakia.

Formation edit

The SS Division Totenkopf was formed in October 1939.[3] The division had close ties to the camp service and its members. When it was first formed a total of 6,500 men from the SS-Totenkopfverbände (SS-TV) were transferred into the Totenkopf Division.[4] The Totenkopf was initially formed from concentration camp guards of the 1st ("Oberbayern"), 2nd ("Brandenburg") and 3rd ("Thüringen") Standarten (regiments) of the SS-Totenkopfverbände and men from the SS Heimwehr Danzig. Members of other SS militias were also transferred into the division in early 1940; these units had been involved in multiple massacres of Polish civilians, political leaders and prisoners of war.[5] The division had officers from the SS-Verfügungstruppe (SS-VT), of whom many had already seen action in Poland. The division was commanded by SS-Obergruppenführer Theodor Eicke.[6] At the time of the Battle of France, the division was equipped with ex-Czech weapons.[7]

Battle of France edit

Totenkopf was initially held in reserve during the Battle of France and invasion of the Low Countries in May 1940.[8] The division was committed on 16 May to the front in Belgium. Later, it was decided that Totenkopf would reinforce the breakthrough of Erwin Rommel's 7th Panzer Division in the Cambrai area. Reaching the Bazuel area straddling both sides of the river it arrived on the front on 19 May, facing elements of the French 1st Moroccan Infantry Division, 5th North African Infantry Division, and 9th Motorized Division. Totenkopf suffered 16 dead and 53 wounded while killing 200 Moroccan soldiers in its first day in action.[9] In its first major battle it captured the town of Catillon-sur-Sambre and its associated canal in fierce house-to-house fighting, blocking the exits of the town and trapping the Moroccan force in the center around the market square, eventually captured thousands of remaining troops. Soldiers from Totenkopf executed many captured Moroccans, due to Arabs being considered "racially inferior".[10] On the morning of the next day, May 20 it contained a major Moroccan counter attack near Ribeauville, driving it back with its own counter attack, before crossing the Selle river and linking up with Rommel's division in the outskirts of Cambrai.[11] Overall in the actions around the Cambrai/Sambre area the division captured 16,000 troops.

Whilst subsequently trying to drive through to the coast, Totenkopf was involved in the Battle of Arras. On 21 May units of the 1st Army Tank Brigade, supported by the 50th (Northumbrian) Infantry Division, overran some of Totenkopf's positions, their standard anti-tank gun, the 3.7 cm PaK 36, being no match for the British Matilda tank[12] although they quickly halted the British. In the following days, the unit committed several large-scale massacres of French civilians, most notable the Berles-Monchel and Aubigny-en-Artois massacres.[13] On 27 May, the 4 Company of the Totenkopf under the command of Hauptsturmführer Fritz Knöchlein, committed the Le Paradis massacre, where 97 soldiers of the 2nd Battalion, Royal Norfolk Regiment were machine-gunned after surrendering, with survivors killed with bayonets. Only two men survived.[14][15]

Invasion of the Soviet Union edit

 
Motorized troops of the division during Operation Barbarossa in September 1941

In April 1941, the division was ordered East to join Field Marshal Wilhelm von Leeb's Army Group North. Leeb's force was tasked with advancing on Leningrad and formed the northern wing of Operation Barbarossa. Totenkopf took part in the advance through Lithuania and Latvia, and by July had breached the Stalin Line. The division then advanced past Demyansk to Leningrad where it was involved in heavy fighting in August.

During Soviet winter counter-offensive, the division was encircled for several months near Demyansk in what became known as the Demyansk Pocket. During the fighting in the pocket, it was re-designated "Kampfgruppe Eicke" due to its reduced size. In April 1942, the division broke out of the pocket. At Demyansk, about 80% of its men were killed, wounded or missing in action. The division was sent to France to be refitted in late October 1942. While there, the division took part in Case Anton, the takeover of Vichy France in November 1942. For this operation, the division was supplied with a tank battalion and redesignated 3rd SS Panzergrenadier Division Totenkopf. The division remained in France until February 1943, when its previous commander, Theodor Eicke, resumed control.

Battle of Kursk and retreat on the Eastern Front edit

In February 1943 the division was moved back to the Eastern Front as part of Erich von Manstein's Army Group South. The division, as a part of SS-Obergruppenführer Paul Hausser's II SS Panzer Corps, took part in the Third Battle of Kharkov, blunting the Soviet offensive. During this campaign, Theodor Eicke was killed when his spotter aircraft was shot down. Hermann Priess succeeded Eicke as commander. The SS Panzer Corps, including the division, was then shifted north to take part in Operation Citadel, the offensive aimed at reducing the Kursk salient. It was during February 1943 that the 3rd SS Panzer Regiment received a company of Tiger I heavy tanks.

The attack was launched on 5 July 1943 with the II SS Panzer Corps attacking the southern flank of the salient as the spearhead for Generaloberst Hermann Hoth's 4th Panzer Army. The division covered the advance on the left flank of the II SS Panzer Corps, with the SS Division Leibstandarte forming the spearhead. With the advance slower than had been planned, Hausser ordered his II SS Panzer Corps to split in two, with the Totenkopf crossing the Psel River northwards and then continuing on towards the town of Prokhorovka. In the early morning of 9 July, 6th SS Motorised Regiment Theodor Eicke attacked northwards, crossing the Psel and attempted to seize the strategic Hill 226.6, but failed to do so until the afternoon. This meant that the northern advance slowed and the majority of the division was still south of the Psel, where elements of 5th SS Motorised Regiment 5 Thule continued to advance towards Prokhorovka and cover the flank of the Leibstandarte.

By 11 July, elements of the division crossed the Psel and secured Kliuchi. In the afternoon of 12 July, near the village of Andreyevka on the south bank of the Psel, the Soviet forces launched a major counterattack against Regiment Thule and the division's battalion of assault guns during the Battle of Prokhorovka.[16] Elements of the division engaged lead units of the 5th Guards Tank Army, halting the Soviet advance and inflicting severe damage to the Soviet forces, but at the cost of the majority of the division's remaining operational tanks. While the II SS Panzer Corps had halted the Soviet counteroffensive, it had exhausted itself. Citadel was called off on 14 July.

Along with the SS Division Das Reich, the division was reassigned to General Karl-Adolf Hollidt's reformed 6th Army in southern Ukraine. The 6th Army was tasked with eliminating the Soviet bridgehead over the Mius River. The division was involved in heavy fighting over the next several weeks. During the July–August battles for Hill 213 and the town of Stepanovka, the division suffered heavy losses, and over the course of the campaign on the Mius-Front, it suffered more casualties than it had during Operation Citadel. By the time the Soviet bridgehead was eliminated, the division had lost 1,500 troops; the Panzer regiment was reduced to 20 tanks.

The division was then moved north, back to Kharkov. Along with Das Reich, Totenkopf took part in the battles to halt Operation Rumyantsev and to prevent the Soviet capture of the city. The city was abandoned on 23 August due to the threats on the German flanks. In October 1943, the division was reformed as a Panzer division. The Panzer battalion was officially upgraded to a regiment, and the two motorised regiments were given the titles "Theodor Eicke" and "Totenkopf". The division, along with other Axis formations, continued its retreat towards the Romanian border. By November, the division was engaged in fighting against Red Army's attacks over the vital town of Krivoi Rog to the west of the Dniepr.

Warsaw edit

In January 1944, Totenkopf was still engaged in heavy defensive fighting east of the Dniepr near Krivoi Rog. In February 1944, Totenkopf took part in the relief attempt of German troops encircled in the Korsun Pocket. In the second week of March, after a fierce battle near Kirovograd, the Totenkopf fell back behind the Bug River. Totenkopf took up new defensive positions. After two weeks of heavy fighting, again alongside the Panzer-Grenadier-Division Grossdeutschland, the Axis forces were retreated to the Dniestr on the Romanian border near Iaşi. In the first week of April, the division received replacements and new equipment, including Panther tanks. In the second week of April, Totenkopf took part in fighting against a heavy Soviet Army attacks towards Second Battle of Târgu Frumos. By 7 May, the front had quietened and the Totenkopf resumed its reorganizing.

In the Second Battle of Târgu Frumos, elements of the division, together with elements of the Großdeutschland, managed to halt an armoured assault by the Red Army. The assault, which in many aspects bore similarities to those of the later British Operation Goodwood, was carried out by approximately 500 tanks.[17][need quotation to verify] In early July, the division was ordered to the area near Grodno in Poland, where it formed a part of SS-Obergruppenführer Herbert Gille's IV SS Panzer Corps, covering the approaches to Warsaw near the Modlin Fortress.

After the Soviet Operation Bagration and the destruction of Army Group Centre the German lines had been pushed back over 480 kilometres, to the outskirts of the Polish capital. The division arrived at the Warsaw front in late July 1944. After the collapse of the German Army Group Centre, the IV SS Panzer Corps was one of the few functioning formations on the central section of the Eastern Front. On 1 August 1944, the Armia Krajowa (the Polish Home Army) launched the Warsaw Uprising. A column of Totenkopf Tiger tanks were caught up in the fighting, and several were lost. The Totenkopf itself was not involved in the suppression of the uprising, instead guarding the front lines, and fighting off several Red Army probe attacks into the city's eastern suburbs.

In several battles near the town of Modlin in mid-August, the Totenkopf, fighting alongside the SS Division Wiking and the Hermann Göring Division destroyed the Soviet 3rd Tank Corps. The terrain around Modlin is excellent for armour, and Totenkopf's panzers exploited this to their advantage, engaging Soviet tanks from a range where the superiority of the German optics and the 75 mm high-velocity gun gave the Panthers an edge over the T-34s.

Budapest relief attempts edit

The efforts of the Totenkopf, "Wiking" and "Hermann Göring" divisions allowed the Germans to hold the Vistula line and establish Army Group Vistula. In December 1944, the IX SS Mountain Corps (Alpine Corps-Croatia) was encircled in Budapest. Hitler ordered the IV SS Panzer Corps to redeploy south to relieve the 95,000 Germans and Hungarians trapped in the city. The corps arrived just before New Year's Eve. The relief attempts were to be codenamed Operation Konrad. The first attack was Konrad I. The plan was for a joint attack by the Wiking and Totenkopf from the town of Tata attacking along the Bicske-Budapest line. The attack was launched on New Year's Day, 1945.

Despite initial gains, Konrad I ran into heavy Red Army opposition near Bicske and during the battle the 1st Battalion, 3rd SS Panzer Regiment's commander, SS-Sturmbannführer Erwin Meierdress was killed. After the failure of the first operation, Totenkopf and Wiking launched an assault aimed at reaching the city centre. Named Operation Konrad II, the attack was launched on 7 January from just south of Esztergom. It reached as far as Budapest's northern suburbs, by 12 January motorised infantry of the Wiking division spotted the Hungarian capital's skyline. However, Gille's corps was overextended and vulnerable, so it was ordered to fall back.

Operation Konrad III got underway on 20 January 1945. Attacking from the south of Budapest, it aimed at encircling 10 Red Army divisions. However, the relief forces could not achieve their goal, despite making a 24-kilometre bulge in the Soviet forces line and destroying the 135th Rifle Corps. The encircled troops capitulated in mid-February. The division was pulled back to the west, executing a fighting withdrawal from Budapest to the area near Lake Balaton, where the 6th SS Panzer Army under SS-Oberstgruppenführer Josef Dietrich was massing for the upcoming Operation Spring Awakening.

Gille's corps was too depleted to take part in the assault, instead it provided flank support to assaulting divisions during the beginning of the operation. Totenkopf, together with Wiking, performed a holding action on the left flank of the offensive, in the area between Lake Velence-Székesfehérvár. Dietrich's army made "good progress" at first, but as they drew near the Danube, the combination of the muddy terrain and strong Soviet resistance ground them to a halt.[18] As the offensive stalled, the Soviets forces counterattacked in strength on 16 March. The Germans were driven back to the positions they had held before Operation Spring Awakening began.[19] Attacking the line between the Totenkopf and the Hungarian 2nd Armoured Division, contact was lost between the two formations. The 6th Army commander, General der Panzertruppe Hermann Balck, recommended moving the I SS Panzer Corps north to plug the gap and prevent the encirclement of the IV SS Panzer Corps, however, by the time the divisions finally began moving, it was too late.

On 22 March, the Red Army encirclement of the Totenkopf and Wiking was almost complete. The 9th SS Panzer Division Hohenstaufen held open a route which could be used to withdraw – the Berhida Corridor – and Gille's corps escaped the encirclement. The Red Army then launched the Vienna Offensive which destroyed any resemblance of an organised German line of defence. The remnants of the division retreated into Czechoslovakia where it surrendered to the American forces on 9 May.

War crimes edit

Poland edit

 
1943 Picture of Jewish prisoners in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising; the SS man at right has the "Totenkopf" insignia on his collar

With the invasion of Poland, Theodor Eicke – who was the commandant of the Dachau concentration camp, inspector of the camps, and murderer of Ernst Röhm – joined the fray with one cavalry and four infantry regiments. Three of his regiments, "Oberbayern", "Brandenburg" and "Thuringen", formed the basis of the first Einsatzgruppen; the Oberbayern and Thuringen (EG II and EG z. B.V) followed the Tenth Army in Upper Silesia; the Brandenburg (EG III) followed the Eight Army across Warthegau.[20] His Totenkopfverbände troops were called on to carry out "police and security measures" in the rear areas. What these measures involved is demonstrated by the record of SS Totenkopf Standarte "Brandenburg". It arrived in Włocławek on 22 September 1939 and embarked on a four-day "Jewish action" that included the burning of synagogues and the execution en masse of the leaders of the Jewish community. On 29 September the Standarte travelled to Bydgoszcz to conduct an "intelligentsia action".[21] The German Intelligenzaktion resulting in the mass murder of approximately 100,000 Poles, was a major step in the implementation of Sonderaktion Tannenberg (Operation Tannenberg a.k.a. Unternehmen Tannenberg) of installing Nazi officials from SiPo, Kripo, Gestapo and SD to head an administrative machine in occupied Poland, leading to the Generalplan Ost colonization programme.[22] In October 1939, these Totenkopfverbände troops formed the core of the 3 Totenkopf Division, of which Eicke became the commander.[3] During the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising the training Battalion of the 3rd Panzer Division Totenkopf took part in the suppression of the uprising.

France edit

Le Paradis Massacre edit

 
British prisoners of war with a Pz.Kpfw Ib German tank in Calais in May, 1940

While the Totenkopf Division committed numerous massacres of French Arab and African troops, the most infamous remains the murders at Le Paradis. The Le Paradis massacre was a war crime committed by members of the 14th Company, SS Division Totenkopf, under the command of Hauptsturmführer Fritz Knöchlein. It took place on 27 May 1940, during the Battle of France, at a time when the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) was attempting to retreat through the Pas-de-Calais region during the Battle of Dunkirk.

Soldiers of the 2nd Battalion, the Royal Norfolk Regiment, had become isolated from their regiment. They occupied and defended a farmhouse against an attack by Waffen-SS forces in the village of Le Paradis. After running out of ammunition, the defenders surrendered to the German troops. The Germans machine-gunned the men after they surrendered, with survivors killed with bayonets. Two men survived with injuries, and were hidden by locals until they were captured by German forces several days later. After the war, Knöchlein was tried for war crimes by a British military court. He was found guilty, sentenced to death, and executed in 1949.[14]

Chasselay massacre edit

Thereafter, the division worked together with Großdeutschland Division to carry out racially motivated murders of hundreds of captured black African members of the French Army. They murdered captured black soldiers on account of their race, which they believed to merit their separation and execution. For example, on 19 and 20 June 1940, Totenkopf and Großdeutschland together carried out a series of massacres of captured African soldiers in the Chasselay area, murdering about captured 100 Senegalese Tirailleurs.[23] They are today buried in the Tata of Chasselay.

Commanders edit

No. Portrait Commander Took office Left office Time in office
1
 
Eicke, TheodorSS-Gruppenführer
Theodor Eicke
(1892–1943)
1 November 19397 July 19411 year, 248 days
2
 
Kleinheisterkamp, MatthiasSS-Oberführer
Matthias Kleinheisterkamp
(1893–1945)
7 July 194118 July 194111 days
3
 
Keppler, GeorgSS-Brigadeführer
Georg Keppler
(1894–1966)
18 July 194119 September 194163 days
1
 
Eicke, TheodorSS-Obergruppenführer
Theodor Eicke
(1892–1943)
19 September 194126 February 1943 †1 year, 160 days
4
 
Priess, HermannSS-Gruppenführer
Hermann Priess
(1901–1985)
[24]
26 February 194327 April 194360 days
5
 
Lammerding, HeinzSS-Gruppenführer
Heinz Lammerding
(1905–1971)
27 April 19431 May 19434 days
4
 
Priess, HermannSS-Gruppenführer
Hermann Priess
(1901–1985)
1 May 194320 June 19441 year, 50 days
6
 
Ullrich, KarlSS-Standartenführer
Karl Ullrich
(1910–1996)
Acting
[25]
20 June 194413 July 194423 days
7
 
Becker, HellmuthSS-Brigadeführer
Hellmuth Becker
(1902–1953)
13 July 19448 May 1945311 days

Organisation edit

The main organisation structure of this SS formation was as follows:[26]

Designation (English)[27] Designation (German)[28]
  • SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment 5 "Thule"
  • SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment 6 "Theodor Eicke"
  • SS Panzer Regiment 3
  • SS Panzer Artillery Regiment 3
  • SS-Panzergrenadierregiment 5 "Thule"
  • SS-Panzergrenadierregiment 6 "Theodor Eicke"
  • SS-Panzerregiment 3
  • SS-Panzerartillerieregiment 3

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Official designation in German language as to "Bundesarchiv-Militärarchiv* in Freiburg im Breisgau, stores of the Wehrmacht and Waffen-SS.
  2. ^ Mann, Chris (2015). SS-Totenkopf: The History of the 'Death's Head' Division, 1940–45 (Waffen-SS Divisional Histories). MBI Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0760310151.
  3. ^ a b Stein 1984, pp. 32–35.
  4. ^ Stein 1984, p. 259.
  5. ^ Sydnor 1990, pp. 37, 44.
  6. ^ Stein 1984, p. 34.
  7. ^ Niehorster, Leo W. G. German World War II Organizational Series, Vol. 2/II: Mechanized GHQ units and Waffen-SS Formations (10 May 1940), 1990
  8. ^ Flaherty 2004, p. 152.
  9. ^ "Soldiers of Destruction: The SS Death's Head Division, 1933–1945" p. 93
  10. ^ "Hitler's Elite: The SS 1939–45" p. 170
  11. ^ Afiero, Massimiliano (19 June 2020). The Axis Forces 14. Soldiershop Publishing. pp. 30–45. ISBN 978-88-9327-612-2. Retrieved 6 September 2022.
  12. ^ Harman 1980, p. 100.
  13. ^ Leleu, Jean-Luc (2001). "La division SS-Totenkopf face à la population civile du Nord de la France en mai 1940". Revue du Nord. 342 (4): 821–840. doi:10.3917/rdn.342.0821.
  14. ^ a b Cooper 2004.
  15. ^ Jackson 2001, pp. 285–288.
  16. ^ Schranck, David (19 January 2014). Thunder at Prokhorovka: A Combat History of Operation Citadel, Kursk, July 1943. Helion and Company. ISBN 9781909384545.
  17. ^ Tamelander M, Zetterling, N, Avgörandets Ögonblick, p. 279.
  18. ^ Stein 1984, p. 238.
  19. ^ Dollinger 1967, p. 182.
  20. ^ Sydnor, Charles (1990) [1977]. Soldiers of Destruction: The SS Death's Head Division, 1933–1945. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 37–38. ISBN 0691008531.
  21. ^ Maria Wardzyńska (2009). [The year was 1939. Operation of German security police in Poland. Intelligenzaktion] (PDF) (in Polish). Institute of National Remembrance, IPN (Portal edukacyjny Instytutu Pamięci Narodowej). 8-10/356. ISBN 978-83-7629-063-8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 23 March 2016. Oblicza się, że akcja "Inteligencja" pochłonęła ponad 100 tys. ofiar. Translation: It is estimated that Intelligenzaktion took the lives of 100,000 Poles.
  22. ^ Prof. Dietrich Eichholtz (2004), »Generalplan Ost« zur Versklavung osteuropäischer Völker. 24 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine PDF file, direct download 74.5 KB.
  23. ^ Raffael Scheck: Hitler's African victims. The German Army massacres of Black French soldiers in 1940. Cambridge UP 2006, ISBN 978-0-521-85799-4, hier besonders S. 124–126 und 154–157; deutsch: Hitlers afrikanische Opfer. Die Massaker der Wehrmacht an schwarzen französischen Soldaten. Assoziation A, Berlin 2009. Rezension von Bernhard Schmid, in Dschungel, Beilage zu jungle world 14. Jan. 2010, S. 2–6 (Inhalt englisch).
  24. ^ SS-Oberführer Max Simon was the "official" commander (on paper) of the 3rd SS-Panzer Division from 26 February 1943 to 22 October 1943, but in reality it was SS-Oberführer Hermann Priess who commanded the division in the field during those dates.
  25. ^ Ullrich, Karl "Wie Ein Fels Im Meer" pg. 13
  26. ^ GORDON WILLIAMSON: "The SS Hitler's Instrument of the power"; published by KAISER; appendix, page 244, "Schlachtordnung der Waffen-SS / Waffen-SS order of battle"; copyright 1994 by Brown Packaging Books Ltd., London.
  27. ^ MILITÄRISCHES STUDIENGLOSAR ENGLISCH Teil II/ Teil III, Deutsch – Englisch, Abkürzung Begriff, Bundessprachenamt (Stand Januar 2001).
  28. ^ Official designation as to "Bundesarchiv-Militärarchiv" in Freiburg im Breisgau, stores of the Wehrmacht and Waffen-SS.

Bibliography edit

  • Cooper, D. (22 February 2004). "WW2 People's War: Le Paradis: The murder of 97 soldiers in a French field on the 26/27th May 1940". BBC History. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
  • Dollinger, Hans (1967) [1965]. The Decline and Fall of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan. New York: Bonanza. ISBN 978-0-517-01313-7.
  • Flaherty, T. H. (2004) [1988]. The Third Reich: The SS. Time-Life Books. ISBN 1-84447-073-3.
  • Harman, Nicholas (1980). Dunkirk: The Necessary Myth. Hodder and Stoughton. ISBN 0-340-24299-X.
  • Jackson, Julian (2001). The Fall of France: The Nazi Invasion of 1940. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-280550-9.
  • Tamelander M, Zetterling N; Niklas Zetterling (2003). Avgörandes ögonblick. Stockholm: Norstets Förlag. ISBN 978-91-7001-203-7.
  • Stein, George (1984) [1966]. The Waffen-SS: Hitler's Elite Guard at War 1939–1945. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-9275-4.
  • Sydnor, Charles (December 1973). "The History of the SS Totenkopfdivision and the Postwar Mythology of the Waffen SS". Central European History. 6 (4): 339–362. doi:10.1017/s0008938900000960. JSTOR 4545684. S2CID 144835004.
  • Sydnor, Charles (1 May 1990). Soldiers of Destruction: The SS Death's Head Division, 1933–1945. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-00853-0.

External links edit

  • Pride of the Fatherland: The Impact of Nazi Ideology on SS Division Totenkopf, Penn State baccalureate thesis

panzer, division, totenkopf, confused, with, totenkopfverbände, organization, responsible, administering, german, nazi, concentration, camps, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, re. Not to be confused with SS Totenkopfverbande the SS organization responsible for administering the German Nazi concentration camps This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources 3rd SS Panzer Division Totenkopf news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message The 3rd SS Panzer Division Totenkopf German 3 SS Panzerdivision Totenkopf 1 was an elite division of the Waffen SS of Nazi Germany during World War II formed from the Standarten of the SS TV Its name Totenkopf is German for death s head the skull and crossbones symbol and it is thus sometimes referred to as the Death s Head Division 2 3rd SS Panzer Division Totenkopf3 SS Panzerdivision Totenkopf Divisional insigniaActive1939 45Country Nazi GermanyBranchWaffen SSTypePanzerRoleArmoured warfareSizeDivisionNickname s Death s Head DivisionEngagementsWorld War II Operation Konrad III Operation Spring AwakeningCommandersNotablecommandersTheodor EickeMax Simon The division was formed through the expansion of Kampfgruppe Eicke a battle group named in keeping with German military practice after its commander Theodor Eicke Most of the battle group s personnel had been transferred to the Waffen SS from concentration camp guard units which were known collectively as SS Totenkopfverbande others were former members of Selbstschutz ethnic German militias that had committed war crimes in Poland The division became notorious for its brutality and committed numerous war crimes including the Le Paradis and Chasselay massacres The remnants of the division surrendered on 9 May 1945 to American forces in Czechoslovakia Contents 1 Formation 2 Battle of France 3 Invasion of the Soviet Union 4 Battle of Kursk and retreat on the Eastern Front 5 Warsaw 6 Budapest relief attempts 7 War crimes 7 1 Poland 7 2 France 7 2 1 Le Paradis Massacre 7 2 2 Chasselay massacre 8 Commanders 9 Organisation 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Notes 11 2 Bibliography 11 3 External linksFormation editThe SS Division Totenkopf was formed in October 1939 3 The division had close ties to the camp service and its members When it was first formed a total of 6 500 men from the SS Totenkopfverbande SS TV were transferred into the Totenkopf Division 4 The Totenkopf was initially formed from concentration camp guards of the 1st Oberbayern 2nd Brandenburg and 3rd Thuringen Standarten regiments of the SS Totenkopfverbande and men from the SS Heimwehr Danzig Members of other SS militias were also transferred into the division in early 1940 these units had been involved in multiple massacres of Polish civilians political leaders and prisoners of war 5 The division had officers from the SS Verfugungstruppe SS VT of whom many had already seen action in Poland The division was commanded by SS Obergruppenfuhrer Theodor Eicke 6 At the time of the Battle of France the division was equipped with ex Czech weapons 7 Battle of France editTotenkopf was initially held in reserve during the Battle of France and invasion of the Low Countries in May 1940 8 The division was committed on 16 May to the front in Belgium Later it was decided that Totenkopf would reinforce the breakthrough of Erwin Rommel s 7th Panzer Division in the Cambrai area Reaching the Bazuel area straddling both sides of the river it arrived on the front on 19 May facing elements of the French 1st Moroccan Infantry Division 5th North African Infantry Division and 9th Motorized Division Totenkopf suffered 16 dead and 53 wounded while killing 200 Moroccan soldiers in its first day in action 9 In its first major battle it captured the town of Catillon sur Sambre and its associated canal in fierce house to house fighting blocking the exits of the town and trapping the Moroccan force in the center around the market square eventually captured thousands of remaining troops Soldiers from Totenkopf executed many captured Moroccans due to Arabs being considered racially inferior 10 On the morning of the next day May 20 it contained a major Moroccan counter attack near Ribeauville driving it back with its own counter attack before crossing the Selle river and linking up with Rommel s division in the outskirts of Cambrai 11 Overall in the actions around the Cambrai Sambre area the division captured 16 000 troops Whilst subsequently trying to drive through to the coast Totenkopf was involved in the Battle of Arras On 21 May units of the 1st Army Tank Brigade supported by the 50th Northumbrian Infantry Division overran some of Totenkopf s positions their standard anti tank gun the 3 7 cm PaK 36 being no match for the British Matilda tank 12 although they quickly halted the British In the following days the unit committed several large scale massacres of French civilians most notable the Berles Monchel and Aubigny en Artois massacres 13 On 27 May the 4 Company of the Totenkopf under the command of Hauptsturmfuhrer Fritz Knochlein committed the Le Paradis massacre where 97 soldiers of the 2nd Battalion Royal Norfolk Regiment were machine gunned after surrendering with survivors killed with bayonets Only two men survived 14 15 Invasion of the Soviet Union edit nbsp Motorized troops of the division during Operation Barbarossa in September 1941 In April 1941 the division was ordered East to join Field Marshal Wilhelm von Leeb s Army Group North Leeb s force was tasked with advancing on Leningrad and formed the northern wing of Operation Barbarossa Totenkopf took part in the advance through Lithuania and Latvia and by July had breached the Stalin Line The division then advanced past Demyansk to Leningrad where it was involved in heavy fighting in August During Soviet winter counter offensive the division was encircled for several months near Demyansk in what became known as the Demyansk Pocket During the fighting in the pocket it was re designated Kampfgruppe Eicke due to its reduced size In April 1942 the division broke out of the pocket At Demyansk about 80 of its men were killed wounded or missing in action The division was sent to France to be refitted in late October 1942 While there the division took part in Case Anton the takeover of Vichy France in November 1942 For this operation the division was supplied with a tank battalion and redesignated 3rd SS Panzergrenadier Division Totenkopf The division remained in France until February 1943 when its previous commander Theodor Eicke resumed control Battle of Kursk and retreat on the Eastern Front editIn February 1943 the division was moved back to the Eastern Front as part of Erich von Manstein s Army Group South The division as a part of SS Obergruppenfuhrer Paul Hausser s II SS Panzer Corps took part in the Third Battle of Kharkov blunting the Soviet offensive During this campaign Theodor Eicke was killed when his spotter aircraft was shot down Hermann Priess succeeded Eicke as commander The SS Panzer Corps including the division was then shifted north to take part in Operation Citadel the offensive aimed at reducing the Kursk salient It was during February 1943 that the 3rd SS Panzer Regiment received a company of Tiger I heavy tanks The attack was launched on 5 July 1943 with the II SS Panzer Corps attacking the southern flank of the salient as the spearhead for Generaloberst Hermann Hoth s 4th Panzer Army The division covered the advance on the left flank of the II SS Panzer Corps with the SS Division Leibstandarte forming the spearhead With the advance slower than had been planned Hausser ordered his II SS Panzer Corps to split in two with the Totenkopf crossing the Psel River northwards and then continuing on towards the town of Prokhorovka In the early morning of 9 July 6th SS Motorised Regiment Theodor Eicke attacked northwards crossing the Psel and attempted to seize the strategic Hill 226 6 but failed to do so until the afternoon This meant that the northern advance slowed and the majority of the division was still south of the Psel where elements of 5th SS Motorised Regiment 5 Thule continued to advance towards Prokhorovka and cover the flank of the Leibstandarte By 11 July elements of the division crossed the Psel and secured Kliuchi In the afternoon of 12 July near the village of Andreyevka on the south bank of the Psel the Soviet forces launched a major counterattack against Regiment Thule and the division s battalion of assault guns during the Battle of Prokhorovka 16 Elements of the division engaged lead units of the 5th Guards Tank Army halting the Soviet advance and inflicting severe damage to the Soviet forces but at the cost of the majority of the division s remaining operational tanks While the II SS Panzer Corps had halted the Soviet counteroffensive it had exhausted itself Citadel was called off on 14 July Along with the SS Division Das Reich the division was reassigned to General Karl Adolf Hollidt s reformed 6th Army in southern Ukraine The 6th Army was tasked with eliminating the Soviet bridgehead over the Mius River The division was involved in heavy fighting over the next several weeks During the July August battles for Hill 213 and the town of Stepanovka the division suffered heavy losses and over the course of the campaign on the Mius Front it suffered more casualties than it had during Operation Citadel By the time the Soviet bridgehead was eliminated the division had lost 1 500 troops the Panzer regiment was reduced to 20 tanks The division was then moved north back to Kharkov Along with Das Reich Totenkopf took part in the battles to halt Operation Rumyantsev and to prevent the Soviet capture of the city The city was abandoned on 23 August due to the threats on the German flanks In October 1943 the division was reformed as a Panzer division The Panzer battalion was officially upgraded to a regiment and the two motorised regiments were given the titles Theodor Eicke and Totenkopf The division along with other Axis formations continued its retreat towards the Romanian border By November the division was engaged in fighting against Red Army s attacks over the vital town of Krivoi Rog to the west of the Dniepr Warsaw editIn January 1944 Totenkopf was still engaged in heavy defensive fighting east of the Dniepr near Krivoi Rog In February 1944 Totenkopf took part in the relief attempt of German troops encircled in the Korsun Pocket In the second week of March after a fierce battle near Kirovograd the Totenkopf fell back behind the Bug River Totenkopf took up new defensive positions After two weeks of heavy fighting again alongside the Panzer Grenadier Division Grossdeutschland the Axis forces were retreated to the Dniestr on the Romanian border near Iasi In the first week of April the division received replacements and new equipment including Panther tanks In the second week of April Totenkopf took part in fighting against a heavy Soviet Army attacks towards Second Battle of Targu Frumos By 7 May the front had quietened and the Totenkopf resumed its reorganizing In the Second Battle of Targu Frumos elements of the division together with elements of the Grossdeutschland managed to halt an armoured assault by the Red Army The assault which in many aspects bore similarities to those of the later British Operation Goodwood was carried out by approximately 500 tanks 17 need quotation to verify In early July the division was ordered to the area near Grodno in Poland where it formed a part of SS Obergruppenfuhrer Herbert Gille s IV SS Panzer Corps covering the approaches to Warsaw near the Modlin Fortress After the Soviet Operation Bagration and the destruction of Army Group Centre the German lines had been pushed back over 480 kilometres to the outskirts of the Polish capital The division arrived at the Warsaw front in late July 1944 After the collapse of the German Army Group Centre the IV SS Panzer Corps was one of the few functioning formations on the central section of the Eastern Front On 1 August 1944 the Armia Krajowa the Polish Home Army launched the Warsaw Uprising A column of Totenkopf Tiger tanks were caught up in the fighting and several were lost The Totenkopf itself was not involved in the suppression of the uprising instead guarding the front lines and fighting off several Red Army probe attacks into the city s eastern suburbs In several battles near the town of Modlin in mid August the Totenkopf fighting alongside the SS Division Wiking and the Hermann Goring Division destroyed the Soviet 3rd Tank Corps The terrain around Modlin is excellent for armour and Totenkopf s panzers exploited this to their advantage engaging Soviet tanks from a range where the superiority of the German optics and the 75 mm high velocity gun gave the Panthers an edge over the T 34s Budapest relief attempts editThe efforts of the Totenkopf Wiking and Hermann Goring divisions allowed the Germans to hold the Vistula line and establish Army Group Vistula In December 1944 the IX SS Mountain Corps Alpine Corps Croatia was encircled in Budapest Hitler ordered the IV SS Panzer Corps to redeploy south to relieve the 95 000 Germans and Hungarians trapped in the city The corps arrived just before New Year s Eve The relief attempts were to be codenamed Operation Konrad The first attack was Konrad I The plan was for a joint attack by the Wiking and Totenkopf from the town of Tata attacking along the Bicske Budapest line The attack was launched on New Year s Day 1945 Despite initial gains Konrad I ran into heavy Red Army opposition near Bicske and during the battle the 1st Battalion 3rd SS Panzer Regiment s commander SS Sturmbannfuhrer Erwin Meierdress was killed After the failure of the first operation Totenkopf and Wiking launched an assault aimed at reaching the city centre Named Operation Konrad II the attack was launched on 7 January from just south of Esztergom It reached as far as Budapest s northern suburbs by 12 January motorised infantry of the Wiking division spotted the Hungarian capital s skyline However Gille s corps was overextended and vulnerable so it was ordered to fall back Operation Konrad III got underway on 20 January 1945 Attacking from the south of Budapest it aimed at encircling 10 Red Army divisions However the relief forces could not achieve their goal despite making a 24 kilometre bulge in the Soviet forces line and destroying the 135th Rifle Corps The encircled troops capitulated in mid February The division was pulled back to the west executing a fighting withdrawal from Budapest to the area near Lake Balaton where the 6th SS Panzer Army under SS Oberstgruppenfuhrer Josef Dietrich was massing for the upcoming Operation Spring Awakening Gille s corps was too depleted to take part in the assault instead it provided flank support to assaulting divisions during the beginning of the operation Totenkopf together with Wiking performed a holding action on the left flank of the offensive in the area between Lake Velence Szekesfehervar Dietrich s army made good progress at first but as they drew near the Danube the combination of the muddy terrain and strong Soviet resistance ground them to a halt 18 As the offensive stalled the Soviets forces counterattacked in strength on 16 March The Germans were driven back to the positions they had held before Operation Spring Awakening began 19 Attacking the line between the Totenkopf and the Hungarian 2nd Armoured Division contact was lost between the two formations The 6th Army commander General der Panzertruppe Hermann Balck recommended moving the I SS Panzer Corps north to plug the gap and prevent the encirclement of the IV SS Panzer Corps however by the time the divisions finally began moving it was too late On 22 March the Red Army encirclement of the Totenkopf and Wiking was almost complete The 9th SS Panzer Division Hohenstaufen held open a route which could be used to withdraw the Berhida Corridor and Gille s corps escaped the encirclement The Red Army then launched the Vienna Offensive which destroyed any resemblance of an organised German line of defence The remnants of the division retreated into Czechoslovakia where it surrendered to the American forces on 9 May War crimes editPoland edit nbsp 1943 Picture of Jewish prisoners in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising the SS man at right has the Totenkopf insignia on his collar With the invasion of Poland Theodor Eicke who was the commandant of the Dachau concentration camp inspector of the camps and murderer of Ernst Rohm joined the fray with one cavalry and four infantry regiments Three of his regiments Oberbayern Brandenburg and Thuringen formed the basis of the first Einsatzgruppen the Oberbayern and Thuringen EG II and EG z B V followed the Tenth Army in Upper Silesia the Brandenburg EG III followed the Eight Army across Warthegau 20 His Totenkopfverbande troops were called on to carry out police and security measures in the rear areas What these measures involved is demonstrated by the record of SS Totenkopf Standarte Brandenburg It arrived in Wloclawek on 22 September 1939 and embarked on a four day Jewish action that included the burning of synagogues and the execution en masse of the leaders of the Jewish community On 29 September the Standarte travelled to Bydgoszcz to conduct an intelligentsia action 21 The German Intelligenzaktion resulting in the mass murder of approximately 100 000 Poles was a major step in the implementation of Sonderaktion Tannenberg Operation Tannenberg a k a Unternehmen Tannenberg of installing Nazi officials from SiPo Kripo Gestapo and SD to head an administrative machine in occupied Poland leading to the Generalplan Ost colonization programme 22 In October 1939 these Totenkopfverbande troops formed the core of the 3 Totenkopf Division of which Eicke became the commander 3 During the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising the training Battalion of the 3rd Panzer Division Totenkopf took part in the suppression of the uprising France edit Le Paradis Massacre edit Main article Le Paradis massacre nbsp British prisoners of war with a Pz Kpfw Ib German tank in Calais in May 1940 While the Totenkopf Division committed numerous massacres of French Arab and African troops the most infamous remains the murders at Le Paradis The Le Paradis massacre was a war crime committed by members of the 14th Company SS Division Totenkopf under the command of Hauptsturmfuhrer Fritz Knochlein It took place on 27 May 1940 during the Battle of France at a time when the British Expeditionary Force BEF was attempting to retreat through the Pas de Calais region during the Battle of Dunkirk Soldiers of the 2nd Battalion the Royal Norfolk Regiment had become isolated from their regiment They occupied and defended a farmhouse against an attack by Waffen SS forces in the village of Le Paradis After running out of ammunition the defenders surrendered to the German troops The Germans machine gunned the men after they surrendered with survivors killed with bayonets Two men survived with injuries and were hidden by locals until they were captured by German forces several days later After the war Knochlein was tried for war crimes by a British military court He was found guilty sentenced to death and executed in 1949 14 Chasselay massacre edit Thereafter the division worked together with Grossdeutschland Division to carry out racially motivated murders of hundreds of captured black African members of the French Army They murdered captured black soldiers on account of their race which they believed to merit their separation and execution For example on 19 and 20 June 1940 Totenkopf and Grossdeutschland together carried out a series of massacres of captured African soldiers in the Chasselay area murdering about captured 100 Senegalese Tirailleurs 23 They are today buried in the Tata of Chasselay Commanders editNo Portrait Commander Took office Left office Time in office1 nbsp Eicke Theodor SS GruppenfuhrerTheodor Eicke 1892 1943 1 November 19397 July 19411 year 248 days 2 nbsp Kleinheisterkamp Matthias SS OberfuhrerMatthias Kleinheisterkamp 1893 1945 7 July 194118 July 194111 days 3 nbsp Keppler Georg SS BrigadefuhrerGeorg Keppler 1894 1966 18 July 194119 September 194163 days 1 nbsp Eicke Theodor SS ObergruppenfuhrerTheodor Eicke 1892 1943 19 September 194126 February 1943 1 year 160 days 4 nbsp Priess Hermann SS GruppenfuhrerHermann Priess 1901 1985 24 26 February 194327 April 194360 days 5 nbsp Lammerding Heinz SS GruppenfuhrerHeinz Lammerding 1905 1971 27 April 19431 May 19434 days 4 nbsp Priess Hermann SS GruppenfuhrerHermann Priess 1901 1985 1 May 194320 June 19441 year 50 days 6 nbsp Ullrich Karl SS StandartenfuhrerKarl Ullrich 1910 1996 Acting 25 20 June 194413 July 194423 days 7 nbsp Becker Hellmuth SS BrigadefuhrerHellmuth Becker 1902 1953 13 July 19448 May 1945311 daysOrganisation editThe main organisation structure of this SS formation was as follows 26 Designation English 27 Designation German 28 SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment 5 Thule SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment 6 Theodor Eicke SS Panzer Regiment 3 SS Panzer Artillery Regiment 3 SS Panzergrenadierregiment 5 Thule SS Panzergrenadierregiment 6 Theodor Eicke SS Panzerregiment 3 SS Panzerartillerieregiment 3See also editList of Waffen SS divisions SS Panzer Division order of battle Waffen SS in popular cultureReferences editNotes edit Official designation in German language as to Bundesarchiv Militararchiv in Freiburg im Breisgau stores of the Wehrmacht and Waffen SS Mann Chris 2015 SS Totenkopf The History of the Death s Head Division 1940 45 Waffen SS Divisional Histories MBI Publishing Company ISBN 978 0760310151 a b Stein 1984 pp 32 35 Stein 1984 p 259 Sydnor 1990 pp 37 44 Stein 1984 p 34 Niehorster Leo W G German World War II Organizational Series Vol 2 II Mechanized GHQ units and Waffen SS Formations 10 May 1940 1990 Flaherty 2004 p 152 Soldiers of Destruction The SS Death s Head Division 1933 1945 p 93 Hitler s Elite The SS 1939 45 p 170 Afiero Massimiliano 19 June 2020 The Axis Forces 14 Soldiershop Publishing pp 30 45 ISBN 978 88 9327 612 2 Retrieved 6 September 2022 Harman 1980 p 100 Leleu Jean Luc 2001 La division SS Totenkopf face a la population civile du Nord de la France en mai 1940 Revue du Nord 342 4 821 840 doi 10 3917 rdn 342 0821 a b Cooper 2004 Jackson 2001 pp 285 288 Schranck David 19 January 2014 Thunder at Prokhorovka A Combat History of Operation Citadel Kursk July 1943 Helion and Company ISBN 9781909384545 Tamelander M Zetterling N Avgorandets Ogonblick p 279 Stein 1984 p 238 Dollinger 1967 p 182 Sydnor Charles 1990 1977 Soldiers of Destruction The SS Death s Head Division 1933 1945 Princeton NJ Princeton University Press pp 37 38 ISBN 0691008531 Maria Wardzynska 2009 Byl rok 1939 Operacja niemieckiej policji bezpieczenstwa w Polsce Intelligenzaktion The year was 1939 Operation of German security police in Poland Intelligenzaktion PDF in Polish Institute of National Remembrance IPN Portal edukacyjny Instytutu Pamieci Narodowej 8 10 356 ISBN 978 83 7629 063 8 Archived from the original PDF on 29 November 2014 Retrieved 23 March 2016 Oblicza sie ze akcja Inteligencja pochlonela ponad 100 tys ofiar Translation It is estimated that Intelligenzaktion took the lives of 100 000 Poles Prof Dietrich Eichholtz 2004 Generalplan Ost zur Versklavung osteuropaischer Volker Archived 24 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine PDF file direct download 74 5 KB Raffael Scheck Hitler s African victims The German Army massacres of Black French soldiers in 1940 Cambridge UP 2006 ISBN 978 0 521 85799 4 hier besonders S 124 126 und 154 157 deutsch Hitlers afrikanische Opfer Die Massaker der Wehrmacht an schwarzen franzosischen Soldaten Assoziation A Berlin 2009 Rezension von Bernhard Schmid in Dschungel Beilage zu jungle world 14 Jan 2010 S 2 6 Inhalt englisch SS Oberfuhrer Max Simon was the official commander on paper of the 3rd SS Panzer Division from 26 February 1943 to 22 October 1943 but in reality it was SS Oberfuhrer Hermann Priess who commanded the division in the field during those dates Ullrich Karl Wie Ein Fels Im Meer pg 13 GORDON WILLIAMSON The SS Hitler s Instrument of the power published by KAISER appendix page 244 Schlachtordnung der Waffen SS Waffen SS order of battle copyright 1994 by Brown Packaging Books Ltd London MILITARISCHES STUDIENGLOSAR ENGLISCH Teil II Teil III Deutsch Englisch Abkurzung Begriff Bundessprachenamt Stand Januar 2001 Official designation as to Bundesarchiv Militararchiv in Freiburg im Breisgau stores of the Wehrmacht and Waffen SS Bibliography edit Cooper D 22 February 2004 WW2 People s War Le Paradis The murder of 97 soldiers in a French field on the 26 27th May 1940 BBC History Retrieved 22 March 2016 Dollinger Hans 1967 1965 The Decline and Fall of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan New York Bonanza ISBN 978 0 517 01313 7 Flaherty T H 2004 1988 The Third Reich The SS Time Life Books ISBN 1 84447 073 3 Harman Nicholas 1980 Dunkirk The Necessary Myth Hodder and Stoughton ISBN 0 340 24299 X Jackson Julian 2001 The Fall of France The Nazi Invasion of 1940 Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 280550 9 Tamelander M Zetterling N Niklas Zetterling 2003 Avgorandes ogonblick Stockholm Norstets Forlag ISBN 978 91 7001 203 7 Stein George 1984 1966 The Waffen SS Hitler s Elite Guard at War 1939 1945 Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 9275 4 Sydnor Charles December 1973 The History of the SS Totenkopfdivision and the Postwar Mythology of the Waffen SS Central European History 6 4 339 362 doi 10 1017 s0008938900000960 JSTOR 4545684 S2CID 144835004 Sydnor Charles 1 May 1990 Soldiers of Destruction The SS Death s Head Division 1933 1945 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00853 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to 3rd SS Panzer Division Totenkopf Pride of the Fatherland The Impact of Nazi Ideology on SS Division Totenkopf Penn State baccalureate thesis Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 3rd SS Panzer Division Totenkopf amp oldid 1208827219, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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