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Volksmarine

The Volksmarine (VM, German pronunciation: [ˈfɔlksmaˌʁiːne]; English: People's Navy) was the naval force of the German Democratic Republic (GDR) from 1956 to 1990. The Volksmarine was one of the service branches of the National People's Army and primarily performed a coastal defence role along the GDR's Baltic Sea coastline and territorial waters.

People's Navy
Volksmarine
Insignia of the Volksmarine
Active1 March 1956 – 2 October 1990
Country East Germany
BranchMinistry of National Defence
TypeNavy
RoleCoastal defence
Size27,300
Part of Nationale Volksarmee
HeadquartersRostock
MarchPräsentiermarsch der Volksmarine
EngagementsCold War
DecorationsSee article
Commanders
Commanders
See list
Insignia
Naval ensign (1960–1990)
Naval jack (1960–1990)[1]
Cap of an Officer of the Volksmarine - (With cap cover) - 1962

History

 
Koni-class frigate Berlin underway on 1 October 1985, observing NATO ships participating in "Exercise BALTOPS '85"

Soon after the end of World War II and the beginning of the Cold War, the Soviet Union initiated the rearming of the German Democratic Republic (GDR), which had been founded in October 1949 as a satellite state from the Soviet Zone of Occupation. Beginning in 1950, Soviet Navy officers helped to establish the Hauptverwaltung Seepolizei (Main Administration Sea Police), which was renamed Volkspolizei–See (VP–See) (People's Police – Sea) on 1 July 1952. At the same time parts of the erstwhile maritime police were reorganized into the new Grenzpolizei–See (Border Police –– Sea), to guard the sea frontiers, and incorporated into the Deutsche Grenzpolizei (German Border Police) that had been set up in 1946. By 1952 the VP–See is estimated to have numbered some 8,000 personnel.

On 1 March 1956, the GDR formally created its armed forces, the National People's Army (Nationale Volksarmee, NVA), and the VP–See became the Verwaltung Seestreitkräfte der NVA (Maritime Forces Administration of the NVA) with about 10,000 men. In November 1960, these maritime forces of the National People's Army were officially designated Volksmarine (People's Navy). Over the next years the navy gradually received a number of new ships, mostly built in the GDR. Only the coastal protection ships and some of the fast torpedo boats were provided by the Soviet Union, as were all helicopters, and some auxiliary craft were purchased from Poland.

Following the erection of the Berlin Wall on 13 August 1961, the Grenzbrigade Küste der Grenzpolizei (GBK) (Coastal Border Brigade of the Border Police) was incorporated into the Volksmarine. With the reorganization of 1965 all attack forces, i.e., the fast torpedo boats, were combined into a single flotilla (the 6th Flotilla) and stationed on the Bug peninsula of the island of Rügen. In the 1970s, the Volksmarine had grown to about 18,000 men. In the 1980s some of the ships were replaced and the Volksmarine acquired Soviet-built fighter-bombers. During 1985 – 1989, the Volksmarine caused about 180 reported incidents due to a maritime border dispute with Poland in the Pomeranian bay; in subsequent negotiations about two thirds of the disputed maritime area were allocated to the GDR.[2][3]

The Volksmarine was dissolved, like all other branches of the former National People's Army, on 2 October 1990 – the day before the official reunification of Germany. Some of its staff was absorbed into the Bundesmarine (which was henceforth called the Deutsche Marine), some by the German Border Police. Most of the ships and other equipment were scrapped or sold; about one third of the ships went to the Indonesian Navy.[4] Few if any former Volksmarine vessels remain in service with the modern-day German Navy. The last commander of the Volksmarine, Vizeadmiral Hendrik Born, wrote a multi-paragraph commentary for Dieter Flohr and Peter Seemann's 2009 book, Die Volksmarine, a comprehensive and picture-oriented history of the Volksmarine.

Operative tasks

The Volksmarine was first and foremost a coastal defence force, but offensive action and amphibious assaults against NATO were also included in its training and plans. It was operationally incorporated into the United Baltic Sea Fleets of the Warsaw Pact states, intended to serve alongside them in the event of war. Its designated area of operations was the Baltic Sea and the entrances to the Baltic Sea. If open warfare had erupted between the Warsaw Pact and NATO, the primary mission of the Volksmarine was to keep the sea lanes open for Soviet reinforcements and to participate in offensive actions against the coasts of hostile nations in the Baltic Sea. For these purposes, it was equipped with light forces such as anti-submarine ships, fast torpedo boats, minesweepers as well as landing craft. Routine duty was heavily focused on extensive reconnaissance activities, carried out mainly by the minesweepers and specialized electronic surveillance boats.

The 6th Border Brigade (Coast) had a special responsibility for the prevention of "Republikflucht" (people leaving the GDR without official permission). With effect from 1 November 1961, it was subordinated to the Volksmarine. It had a substantial number of small patrol boats and surveillance posts along the coast.

Commanders

Organization

 
Organization of the Volksmarine in 1988[5]

The Volksmarine was headed by the Kommando der Volksmarine (People's Navy HQ Command) in Rostock-Gehlsdorf. It was structured as follows (in 1985):

Shore-based forces consisted of:

  • one Torpedo Technical Support Company (TTK-18) in Sassnitz (servicing anti-submarine torpedoes)
  • one Naval Helicopter Wing (MHG-18) in Parow near Stralsund
  • one Naval Flight Wing (MFG-28) in Laage
  • one Navy Engineering Battalion (MPiB-18) in Sassnitz
  • one Combat Swimmer Command (KSK-18) in Kühlungsborn
  • one Coastal Missile Regiment (Ground Support) (KRR-18) in Schwarzenpfost
  • one Coastal Defense Regiment (Ground Support) (KVR-18) in Rostock (from 1988)
  • one Naval Propaganda Company (PRK-18) in Rostock-Warnemünde
  • the Maritime Hydrographic Service of the GDR (SHD) in Rostock
  • testing and other special facilities

Training facilities

  • Naval Officers Academy "Karl Liebknecht" in Stralsund (training of naval officers)
  • Naval NCO Academy "Walter Steffens" in Parow (naval training of NCOs and seamen)
  • NCO School for Support Services at Dänholm near Stralsund (technical training of NCOs)

Equipment

 
Frosch II-class support ship Nordperd
 
Kondor-class minesweeper Ueckermuende (transferred to Malta as P30)

The Volksmarine was equipped with:

Music

The People's Navy's band played a number of specially-composed musical pieces. Most notable is the "Präsentiermarsch der Volksmarine", which was composed by Ludwig Schmidt for use at ceremonial events. "Unsere Volksmarine" was also written for use at parades, while "Matrosen von Kronstadt" was an East German adaptation of the 1926 Soviet Navy song "Forward, Red Marines". The instrumental pieces written for the Volksmarine fell out of use after the reunification of Germany, and are not used by the modern German Navy.

Volksmarine admirals

 
Flag of chief of the Volksmarine

There were 37 admirals in the history of the Volksmarine and its predecessor organizations. They were:

Flottenadmiral

No one was awarded this rank.

Admiral

Vizeadmiral

Konteradmiral

  • Felix Scheffler
     
    Simple Logo of the VM
  • Richard Fischer
  • John Streubel
  • Rudi Wegner
  • Heinz Irmscher
  • Lothar Heinecke
  • Heinrich Jordt
  • Walter Kühn
  • Werner Henninger
  • Klaus Kahnt
  • Hans-Joachim Dönitz
  • Joachim Münch
  • Wolfgang Laue
  • Hans Heß
  • Werner Kotte
  • Rolf Rödel
  • Herbert Städtke
  • Günther Pöschel
  • Helmut Milzow
  • Friedrich Elchlepp
  • Eberhard Grießbach
  • Egon Nitz
  • Dr. Karl Weiß
  • Hans Partzsch
  • Herbert Bernig
  • Gerhard Müller
  • Peter Miethe

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Arrangement concerning the carrying of flags, pennants and standards on ships and boats of the People's Navy - Flag array 'of 12 July 1979 , § 2 (3).
  2. ^ The Border controversy between the Polish People’s Republic and the German Democratic Republic in the Pomeranian Bay, Natalia Jackowska, 2008.
  3. ^ NRD kontra PRL (GDR contra Poland), Tomasz Ślepowroński, 2005.
  4. ^ "Indonesia buying 42 East German warships, adding two naval bases". UPI. Retrieved 2022-04-15.
  5. ^ "Die Nationale Volksarmee und die Grenztruppen der Deutschen Demokratischen Republik Ende 1988" (PDF). relkite.com. Alterfritz. Retrieved 5 February 2017.

References

  • Douglas Peifer (2002), The Three German Navies; Dissolution, Transition, and New Beginnings, 1945-1960, University of Florida Press, ISBN 0-8130-2552-2
  • Douglas Peifer (1998),· “Staffing and Training the East German Navy during its Founding Years: Party Loyalists, Kriegsmarine Veterans, and Communist Youth Activists.” In New Interpretations in Naval History: Selected Papers from the Thirteenth Naval History Symposium, ed. William McBride. Annapolis MD:  Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-5575-0648-5.
  • Siegfried Breyer, Peter Joachim Lapp: Die Volksmarine der DDR, Bernard & Graefe Verlag, ISBN 3-7637-5423-7
  • Robert Rosentreter: Im Seegang der Zeit, Vier Jahrzehnte Volksmarine, Ingo Koch Verlag, ISBN 3-935319-07-X
  • Klaus Froh, Rüdiger Wenzke: Die Generale und Admirale der NVA. Ein biographisches Handbuch. 4. Auflage. Ch. Links, Berlin 2000, ISBN 3-86153-209-3

External links

  • Marinekameradschaft KSS e.V. site - Includes information on 1st & 4th Flotillas (in German)

volksmarine, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, january, 2013, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, germ. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations January 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Volksmarine VM German pronunciation ˈfɔlksmaˌʁiːne English People s Navy was the naval force of the German Democratic Republic GDR from 1956 to 1990 The Volksmarine was one of the service branches of the National People s Army and primarily performed a coastal defence role along the GDR s Baltic Sea coastline and territorial waters People s Navy VolksmarineInsignia of the VolksmarineActive1 March 1956 2 October 1990CountryEast GermanyBranchMinistry of National DefenceTypeNavyRoleCoastal defenceSize27 300Part ofNationale VolksarmeeHeadquartersRostockMarchPrasentiermarsch der VolksmarineEngagementsCold WarDecorationsSee articleCommandersCommandersSee list Felix Scheffler 1956 Waldemar Verner 1957 1959 Wilhelm Ehm 1959 1961 1963 1987 Heinz Neukirchen 1961 1963 Theodor Hoffmann 1987 1989 Hendrik Born 1989 1990 InsigniaNaval ensign 1960 1990 Naval jack 1960 1990 1 Cap of an Officer of the Volksmarine With cap cover 1962 Contents 1 History 2 Operative tasks 3 Commanders 4 Organization 5 Training facilities 6 Equipment 7 Music 8 Volksmarine admirals 8 1 Flottenadmiral 8 2 Admiral 8 3 Vizeadmiral 8 4 Konteradmiral 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksHistory Edit Koni class frigate Berlin underway on 1 October 1985 observing NATO ships participating in Exercise BALTOPS 85 Soon after the end of World War II and the beginning of the Cold War the Soviet Union initiated the rearming of the German Democratic Republic GDR which had been founded in October 1949 as a satellite state from the Soviet Zone of Occupation Beginning in 1950 Soviet Navy officers helped to establish the Hauptverwaltung Seepolizei Main Administration Sea Police which was renamed Volkspolizei See VP See People s Police Sea on 1 July 1952 At the same time parts of the erstwhile maritime police were reorganized into the new Grenzpolizei See Border Police Sea to guard the sea frontiers and incorporated into the Deutsche Grenzpolizei German Border Police that had been set up in 1946 By 1952 the VP See is estimated to have numbered some 8 000 personnel On 1 March 1956 the GDR formally created its armed forces the National People s Army Nationale Volksarmee NVA and the VP See became the Verwaltung Seestreitkrafte der NVA Maritime Forces Administration of the NVA with about 10 000 men In November 1960 these maritime forces of the National People s Army were officially designated Volksmarine People s Navy Over the next years the navy gradually received a number of new ships mostly built in the GDR Only the coastal protection ships and some of the fast torpedo boats were provided by the Soviet Union as were all helicopters and some auxiliary craft were purchased from Poland Following the erection of the Berlin Wall on 13 August 1961 the Grenzbrigade Kuste der Grenzpolizei GBK Coastal Border Brigade of the Border Police was incorporated into the Volksmarine With the reorganization of 1965 all attack forces i e the fast torpedo boats were combined into a single flotilla the 6th Flotilla and stationed on the Bug peninsula of the island of Rugen In the 1970s the Volksmarine had grown to about 18 000 men In the 1980s some of the ships were replaced and the Volksmarine acquired Soviet built fighter bombers During 1985 1989 the Volksmarine caused about 180 reported incidents due to a maritime border dispute with Poland in the Pomeranian bay in subsequent negotiations about two thirds of the disputed maritime area were allocated to the GDR 2 3 The Volksmarine was dissolved like all other branches of the former National People s Army on 2 October 1990 the day before the official reunification of Germany Some of its staff was absorbed into the Bundesmarine which was henceforth called the Deutsche Marine some by the German Border Police Most of the ships and other equipment were scrapped or sold about one third of the ships went to the Indonesian Navy 4 Few if any former Volksmarine vessels remain in service with the modern day German Navy The last commander of the Volksmarine Vizeadmiral Hendrik Born wrote a multi paragraph commentary for Dieter Flohr and Peter Seemann s 2009 book Die Volksmarine a comprehensive and picture oriented history of the Volksmarine Operative tasks EditThe Volksmarine was first and foremost a coastal defence force but offensive action and amphibious assaults against NATO were also included in its training and plans It was operationally incorporated into the United Baltic Sea Fleets of the Warsaw Pact states intended to serve alongside them in the event of war Its designated area of operations was the Baltic Sea and the entrances to the Baltic Sea If open warfare had erupted between the Warsaw Pact and NATO the primary mission of the Volksmarine was to keep the sea lanes open for Soviet reinforcements and to participate in offensive actions against the coasts of hostile nations in the Baltic Sea For these purposes it was equipped with light forces such as anti submarine ships fast torpedo boats minesweepers as well as landing craft Routine duty was heavily focused on extensive reconnaissance activities carried out mainly by the minesweepers and specialized electronic surveillance boats The 6th Border Brigade Coast had a special responsibility for the prevention of Republikflucht people leaving the GDR without official permission With effect from 1 November 1961 it was subordinated to the Volksmarine It had a substantial number of small patrol boats and surveillance posts along the coast Commanders EditKonteradmiral Felix Scheffler 1 March 1956 31 December 1956 Vizeadmiral Waldemar Verner 1 January 1957 31 July 1959 Konteradmiral Wilhelm Ehm 1 August 1959 31 July 1961 25 February 1963 30 November 1987 Konteradmiral Heinz Neukirchen 1 August 1961 24 February 1963 Vizeadmiral Theodor Hoffmann 1 December 1987 17 November 1989 Vizeadmiral Hendrik Born 11 December 1989 2 October 1990 Organization Edit Organization of the Volksmarine in 1988 5 The Volksmarine was headed by the Kommando der Volksmarine People s Navy HQ Command in Rostock Gehlsdorf It was structured as follows in 1985 1st Flotilla in Peenemunde 4th Flotilla in Rostock Warnemunde 6th Flotilla at Bug on Rugen Island 6th Border Brigade Coast in Rostock Shore based forces consisted of one Torpedo Technical Support Company TTK 18 in Sassnitz servicing anti submarine torpedoes one Naval Helicopter Wing MHG 18 in Parow near Stralsund one Naval Flight Wing MFG 28 in Laage one Navy Engineering Battalion MPiB 18 in Sassnitz one Combat Swimmer Command KSK 18 in Kuhlungsborn one Coastal Missile Regiment Ground Support KRR 18 in Schwarzenpfost one Coastal Defense Regiment Ground Support KVR 18 in Rostock from 1988 one Naval Propaganda Company PRK 18 in Rostock Warnemunde the Maritime Hydrographic Service of the GDR SHD in Rostock testing and other special facilitiesTraining facilities EditNaval Officers Academy Karl Liebknecht in Stralsund training of naval officers Naval NCO Academy Walter Steffens in Parow naval training of NCOs and seamen NCO School for Support Services at Danholm near Stralsund technical training of NCOs Equipment Edit Koni class frigate Rostock Intelligence ship Jasmund Frosch II class support ship Nordperd Kondor class minesweeper Ueckermuende transferred to Malta as P30 The Volksmarine was equipped with Landing craft Minelayers and minesweepers Fast torpedo and missile boat like Project 131 Libelle Coastal defense ships Submarine hunters Three Koni class frigates Rostock 141 Berlin Haupstadt der DDR 142 and Halle 143 Purchased from the Soviet Navy in the 1980s Intelligence ships Training ships Support craft Three squadrons of combat helicopters Mil Mi 4MA Hound Mil Mi 8 Hip Mi 14PL Haze A and Mil Mi 14BT Haze B Fighter bombers Sukhoi Su 22M4 Fitter KMusic EditThe People s Navy s band played a number of specially composed musical pieces Most notable is the Prasentiermarsch der Volksmarine which was composed by Ludwig Schmidt for use at ceremonial events Unsere Volksmarine was also written for use at parades while Matrosen von Kronstadt was an East German adaptation of the 1926 Soviet Navy song Forward Red Marines The instrumental pieces written for the Volksmarine fell out of use after the reunification of Germany and are not used by the modern German Navy Volksmarine admirals Edit Flag of chief of the Volksmarine There were 37 admirals in the history of the Volksmarine and its predecessor organizations They were Flottenadmiral Edit No one was awarded this rank Admiral Edit Waldemar Verner Wilhelm Ehm Theodor HoffmannVizeadmiral Edit Hendrik Born Bruno Wansierski Gustav Hesse Heinz Neukirchen William Nordin Gunter Kutzschebauch Hans HofmannKonteradmiral Edit Felix Scheffler Simple Logo of the VM Richard Fischer John Streubel Rudi Wegner Heinz Irmscher Lothar Heinecke Heinrich Jordt Walter Kuhn Werner Henninger Klaus Kahnt Hans Joachim Donitz Joachim Munch Wolfgang Laue Hans Hess Werner Kotte Rolf Rodel Herbert Stadtke Gunther Poschel Helmut Milzow Friedrich Elchlepp Eberhard Griessbach Egon Nitz Dr Karl Weiss Hans Partzsch Herbert Bernig Gerhard Muller Peter MietheSee also EditBaltic Fleet National People s Army Orders decorations and medals of East GermanyNotes Edit Arrangement concerning the carrying of flags pennants and standards on ships and boats of the People s Navy Flag array of 12 July 1979 2 3 The Border controversy between the Polish People s Republic and the German Democratic Republic in the Pomeranian Bay Natalia Jackowska 2008 NRD kontra PRL GDR contra Poland Tomasz Slepowronski 2005 Indonesia buying 42 East German warships adding two naval bases UPI Retrieved 2022 04 15 Die Nationale Volksarmee und die Grenztruppen der Deutschen Demokratischen Republik Ende 1988 PDF relkite com Alterfritz Retrieved 5 February 2017 References EditDouglas Peifer 2002 The Three German Navies Dissolution Transition and New Beginnings 1945 1960 University of Florida Press ISBN 0 8130 2552 2 Douglas Peifer 1998 Staffing and Training the East German Navy during its Founding Years Party Loyalists Kriegsmarine Veterans and Communist Youth Activists In New Interpretations in Naval History Selected Papers from the Thirteenth Naval History Symposium ed William McBride Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 5575 0648 5 Siegfried Breyer Peter Joachim Lapp Die Volksmarine der DDR Bernard amp Graefe Verlag ISBN 3 7637 5423 7 Robert Rosentreter Im Seegang der Zeit Vier Jahrzehnte Volksmarine Ingo Koch Verlag ISBN 3 935319 07 X Klaus Froh Rudiger Wenzke Die Generale und Admirale der NVA Ein biographisches Handbuch 4 Auflage Ch Links Berlin 2000 ISBN 3 86153 209 3External links EditMarinekameradschaft KSS e V site Includes information on 1st amp 4th Flotillas in German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Volksmarine amp oldid 1143139730, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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