216th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)
216th Infantry Division | |
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216. Infanterie-Division | |
Army | |
Type | 3rd Mobilization Wave Infantry Division (Infanterie-Division "Alter Art") |
Size | Nine Battalions, 17,200 men total |
Engagements | Defense of the Westwall 1939 – 1940 Invasion of Holland June 1940 Atlantic Coast Defense July 1940 – December 1941 Eastern Front December 1941 – November 1943
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The 216th Infantry Division (
Operational history
The division was created on 26 August 1939 by reorganizing several Border Defense and Army Reserve units from Lower Saxony, primarily in the area surrounding the city of Hannover. It was organized under the pre-war infantry division "alter Art," structure; consisting of three 3-battalion infantry regiments (brigades), an artillery regiment of four battalions, a combat engineer battalion, a signal battalion, and an antitank battalion, as well as divisional services. Its total strength was approximately 17,200 men. The division was based at
The 216th Infantry Division did not participate in the
Following the success of the Soviet winter counteroffensive of December 1941, the Division was rushed to the Eastern Front as reinforcement and was soon split into several smaller battlegroups urgently needed for defending key localities. One of these battlegroups, formed from the 348th Infantry Regiment, was surrounded by the Soviet 10th Army in January 1942, outside of the town of Sukhinitchi. The regiment managed to hold out for several weeks until relief forces of the XXIV Panzer Corps broke through to the beleaguered troops on January 24, 1942.
There followed over a year of positional warfare in Army Group Center, where the division took part in battles at Rshev, Briansk, Orel, Spass Demensk and Gomel. In July 1943, the 216th Infantry Division participated in the Battle of Kursk, where it sustained heavy casualties while fighting on the northern shoulder of the Kursk salient as part of Generalfeldmarschall Model's Ninth Army.
The division was disbanded on 17 November 1943 after suffering heavy casualties during the retreat to the Dnieper River Defensive Line. The division's staff, most of the 348th Grenadier Regiment, the Artillery Regiment, the Combat Engineer Battalion and supply units were moved to Belgium, where they were used to form the framework for the new
Commanding officers
- Lieutenant General Hermann Böttcher 26 August 1939
- Lieutenant General Kurt Himer 8 September 1940
- General of the Infantry Werner Freiherr von und zu Gilsa, 1 April 1941
- General of the Infantry Friedrich August Schack, 7 May 1943
- Lieutenant General Egon von Neindorff, 3 October 1943
- Major General Gustav Gihr, 20 October 1943
Order of battle
- Division Headquarters
- 348th Infantry Regiment
- 396th Infantry Regiment
- 398th Infantry Regiment
- 216th Artillery Regiment
- Panzerabwehr/Schnelle Abteilung 216
- Pionier (Combat Engineer) Battalion 216
- Infantrie-Nachrichten Abteilung 216
- Infantrie-Division Nachschubfuehrer 216
- Feldersatz Battalion 216
See also
- Military unit, List of German divisions in World War II
- Army, Wehrmacht
- 272nd Infantry Division
- 272nd Volksgrenadier Division
References
- Hogg, Ivan V., German order of battle 1944, Arms and Armour Press, London, 1975
- Jenner, Martin: Die niedersächsiche 216./272. Infanterie-Division 1939–1945. (Nauheim: Podzun-Pallas Verlag, 1964)
- Wendel, Marcus (2004). "216. Infanterie-Division".
- 216. Infanterie-Division". German language article at www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de. Retrieved March 17, 2008.