125th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)
125th Infantry Division | |
---|---|
Division insignia | |
Active | October 1940 – March 1944 |
Country | Nazi Germany |
Branch | Heer |
Type | Infantry |
Size | Division |
Garrison/HQ | Münsingen |
Nickname(s) | "Weasel Division" |
Engagements |
|
Commanders | |
5 Oct 1940 – 24 Dec 1942 | General der Infanterie Wilhelm Schneckenburger |
24 Dec 1942 – 31 Mar 1944 | Generalleutnant Helmut Friebe |
The 125th Infantry Division (German: 125. Infanteriedivision) was a German Army infantry division in World War II.
History
The 125th Infantry Division was raised on October 5, 1940, independent of wave,[1] in October 1940, where it remained in Münsingen until April 1941, when it was moved to the Balkans as part of the 2nd Army's 52nd Corps[2][3] in preparation for Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of the Soviet Union. The following June, the Army attacked through the Ukrainian SSR.
Barbarossa
Moving to the front from Austria, where the division was registered with Höheres Kommando XXXIV, it was now organized into the 17th Army, part of Army Group South.[3] For the remainder of the year the 125th Division stayed with Army Group South in the Ukraine, assisting in both the battles at Uman and Kiev.[1]
Case Blue
In July 1942 the division returned to the 17th Army from the 1st Panzer Army, now as Army Group A's 5th Corps, as it began an assault on the Black Sea city of Novorossiysk.[3] Moving into the Caucasus, the division, along with the 3rd Romanian Army, served under Colonel-General Richard Ruoff in "Army Group Ruoff".[2] Outside Rostov, Ruoff's forces were joined by the 5th SS-Panzer Regiment.[4] Quickly eliminating the Soviets in Rostov, the division made its way into the outskirts of Krasnodar, some 300 kilometers away, in just over two weeks.[2] The successes in Rostov have been linked to the work of Colonel Alois Eisele, an Iron Cross recipient. Injured after the battle, Eisele later found himself in command of the 61st Grenadier Regiment of the 7th Infantry Division.[5] Continuing with Army Group A on its mission to capture or destroy the Baku oilfields, the 125th division arrived in August.[6] Pushed back in the winter again, the division retreated to the Ukraine.
Capitulation
Throughout the majority of 1943, the 125th remained along the Crimean city Novorossiysk with the 17th Army before being transferred to Kuban in May.[3] Despite some successes in Kuban with the Romanian units, the 125th was pulled back into the Lower Dnieper Sector.[1] By October, 1943, the division was under heavy fire from Soviet forces in the Crimea, evident by five Tiger tanks being sent to their assistance on 2 October,[7] and a group of the 653rd Heavy Tank Destroyer Battalion's Elefants a week later.[8] Pulled back to Nikopol in the Ukraine with the 6th Army, the division came under further fire, eventually losing its distinction as a division, referred to instead as "divisiongruppe 125".[1]
Aftermath
The remnants of the 125th were incorporated into the 302nd Infantry Division, becoming part of the 420th Grenadier Regiment,[1] which only lasted until August, when the division met its own end in Romania.[1] Lieutenant General Friebe, on the other hand, was moved over to the 22nd Airborne Division, where it was crushed by Titoist partisans in Yugoslavia.[9]
Further reading
- Dr. Helmut Breymayer, Das Wiesel – Geschichte der 125. Infanterie-Division 1940 bis 1944
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Mitcham, Samuel W. (2007). German Order of Battle: 1st–290th Infantry divisions in World War II. Stoddart.
- 1 2 3 Bishop, Chris (2008). German Infantry in World War II. MBI Publishing Company.
- 1 2 3 4 Tessin, Georg (1979). Verbände und Truppen der Deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen-SS im Zweiten Weltkrieg 1939–1945. Band 6. Die Landstreitkräfte 71 – 130. Biblio-Verlag.
- ↑ Klapdor, Ewald (2011). Viking Panzers: The German 5th SS Tank Regiment in the East in World War II. Stackpole Books.
- ↑ Berger, Florian (2011). The Face of Courage: The 98 Men Who Received the Knight's Cross and the Close-Combat Clasp in Gold. Stackpole Books.
- ↑ Tieke, Wilhelm; Welsh, Joseph G. (1995). The Caucasus and the oil:the German-Soviet War in the Caucasus 1942/43. J.J. Fedorowicz Publishing.
- ↑ Schneider, Wolfgang (2004). Tigers in Combat, Volume 1. Stackpole Books.
- ↑ Münch, Karlheinz (1997). The Combat History of German Heavy Anti-Tank Unit 653 in World War II. Stackpole Books.
- ↑ Quarrie, Bruce; Anderson, Duncan; Cowper, Marcus; Bogdanovic, Nikolai (2004). German airborne divisions: Blitzkrieg 1940–1941. Osprey Publishing.