430th Infantry Division

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430th Infantry Division
Heer (Wehrmacht)
TypeInfantry
Sizemultiple Battalions (officially: Division)

The 430th Infantry Division for Special Deployment (

infantry division of the Heer, the ground forces of the German Wehrmacht, during World War II
. The division was active from October 1939 to July 1940. Its structure diverged immensely from the usual German infantry division, as it was used mainly to oversee guard battalions and did not contain its own dedicated infantry regiments, as infantry divisions usually did.

History

The 430th Infantry Division was formed on 24 October 1939 in

Wehrkreis III for General Command XXI (the later XXI Corps),[1]: 158  as an aide formation to ease the guidance of multiple Landesschützen (conscript militia) forces.[2]: 272  In March 1940, the division had four Landesschützen Battalions (301, 310, 319, 723) under its supervision, leaving it well short of the nine infantry battalions (organized into three regiments, which the 430th Infantry Division also did not have) that a regular German infantry division typically had at this time.[1]: 158  The initial divisional commander was Kurt Schreiber, who was replaced on 1 December 1939 by Maximilian Renz.[3]

During its occupation duties in German-occupied Poland, the 430th Infantry Division served opposite the Brody sector along the German-Soviet frontier.[3]

On 20 May 1940, shortly after the beginning of the

Higher Command XXXVII. The division was subsequently dissolved on 25 July 1940; its military postal address was instead given to the Wehrmacht Command in Utrecht (German-occupied Netherlands) for continued use.[1]
: 158 

The division's personnel was divided between the 429th and 431st z.b.V. divisions, both disbanded on 26 March 1943.[4]: 338f. 

References

  1. ^ a b c Tessin, Georg (1975). Die Landstreitkräfte 501–630. Verbände und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen-SS im Zweiten Weltkrieg 1939–1945. Vol. 11. Biblio.
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