List of infantry divisions of the Soviet Union 1917–1957

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Divisional banner of the 50th Guards Rifle Division

This is a list of infantry divisions of the Soviet Union 1917–1957. It lists

Stalinist era. Mechanized Divisions were formed during 1945–46, and then all remaining Rifle Divisions were converted to Motor Rifle Divisions in 1957. During World War II more than 700 Rifle Divisions were raised.[1]

Divisions of the Russian Civil War

Many infantry (pekhotniye in Russian), literally 'movement', and rifle (strelkoviye in Russian), literally 'sharpshooter', divisions were inherited by the Workers-Peasants Army from the former Imperial Russian Army, but were renamed in the spirit of the Revolutionary times, often with names including words such as "Proletariat", "workers and peasants", or other titles that differentiated them from the past. They employed some of the 48,000 former Tsarist officers and 214,000 Tsarist NCOs along with over 10,000 administrative personnel. Initially the new 'Bolshevik' rifle divisions were composed of rifle brigades, and included:

The division was to have an establishment of 26,972, with 14,220 combat troops, and depended on 10,048 horses to manoeuvre. Due to difficulties with recruiting

volunteers into the armed forces early in the Russian Civil War, conscription
was introduced on 29 May 1918, and all infantry divisions were renamed into rifle divisions on 11 October 1918.

The first six of the 11 formed divisions were those formed in the Petrograd, Moscow, Orel, Yaroslav, Privolzhsk and Ural okrugs. However, the divisions were initially only numbered, eventually 1st through to 47th by 1919. Five of these divisions were also named.

The Russian Civil War divisions were allocated to the various Fronts, including:

  • Internal districts (reserve) – 1st to 11th divisions
  • Northern Front – 18th and 19th divisions
  • Eastern Front – 20th to 22nd, and 24th to 31st divisions
  • Caspian-Caucasus Front – 32nd to 36th divisions
  • Southern Front – 12th to 16th, 23rd, and 37th to 42nd divisions
  • Western' Rifle Divisions
  • In Petrograd headquarters command – 1st and 2nd 'Latvian' divisions
  • In reserve of the Kyiv headquarters command – 'Ukrainian' division

Other Civil War rifle divisions

The structure of the divisions (N 220/34) had changed by the end of 1918 to increase the number of regiments in brigades to three, while eliminating the artillery brigade headquarters, leaving the nine artillery divizions (battalions) and one horse artillery battery to be allocated to rifle brigades. An armoured automobile detachment (otryad) was also added.

By 1921 the establishment of the rifle division had changed substantially in accordance with TO&E N 1400/246 for peace-time, with two brigades and only 15,876 personnel, and the reduction of artillery to two battalions and one battery, and the cavalry from four to three squadron regiment.

From 10 June 1922 the organization of rifle divisions war changed from brigade to regiment structure, with three regiments in each. The establishment of divisions stationed in the border areas was reduced to 8,705 personnel, and those in the interior regions to 6,725, including the reduction to a single cavalry squadron. The number of divisions was increased to 49.

Divisions of the interwar years

Due to increasing economic difficulties in the post-war USSR, the armed forces were substantially reduced, and from 8 August 1923 transferred to the territorial system of organisation. All divisions were reduced to an establishment of 1,437 permanent cadre and 8,084 conscripted personnel. These new divisions were initially called militia-rifle divisions (

service personnel
, the number of territorial-militia divisions quadrupled by summer 1928.

The territorial principle of manning the Red Army was introduced in the mid-1920s. In each region able-bodied men were called up for a limited period of active duty in territorial unit, which comprised about half the Army's strength, each year, for five years.

enlisted personnel
serving two-year stints.

Most of the divisions that participated in the Russian Civil War were disbanded by 1927, however, Leon Trotsky initiated a formation of the new armed force with a professional cadre which was supported in its evolution even after his departure from Soviet Union. The reform in the rifle forces that begun in 1924 did create some notable changes, including commencement of adding names to the regular and newly formed territorial divisions, and creation of national divisions, notably one Belarusian, four Ukrainian, two Georgian, one Armenian, and one Azerbaijanian divisions. In 1928 1st and 3rd Turkestan, and in 1929 an Azerbaijanian divisions were reorganized as mountain-rifle divisions. Of the 70 rifle division, 41 were now territorial in their establishment.

During the 1930s the RKKA infantry forces were not only expanded, but also substantially reorganized, in part due to substantial input of

military theorists into their doctrinal development, such as that of Mikhail Tukhachevsky
whose 1934 report to the Defence Committee included 13 categories for divisional organization of the infantry. On 31 January 1935 the Committee decreed adoption of a single 13 thousand personnel peace-time establishment for a rifle division with the following organization:

This structure more than double the number of combat personnel in the division from the 1929 establishment of 20.2% to 41.7%. In May 1937 the military commissars were added to the establishment of all RKKA military forces.

On 29 November 1937 four types of structures for rifle forces were established:

Far Eastern District divisions – 10,000 establishment
Cadre divisions – 7,000 (6950) establishment
Cadre mountain divisions – 4,000 establishment
Cadre territorial divisions – 6,000 (5,220) establishment. These divisions lacked the communications, reconnaissance and sapper battalions.

The territorial system was reorganized, with all remaining formations converted to 'cadre' divisions, in 1937 and 1938,

Soviet–Japanese Border Wars
.

By 1938 there were plans to increase the number of rifle divisions in the RKKA (Red Army) from 98 to 173. These would include:

17 rifle divisions with 14 thousand personnel
1 rifle divisions with 12 thousand personnel (TO&E 04/400)
33 rifle divisions with 8,900 personnel (TO&E 04/100)
76 rifle divisions with 6 thousand personnel (TO&E 04/120)
33 rifle divisions with 3 thousand personnel
13 mountain-rifle divisions with 4 thousand personnel

The wartime strength of the new rifle division that was intended to include two artillery regiments was to have 18 thousand personnel, but none had been brought up to this strength by 1941.

Divisions of the Second World War

Two events shaped the evolution of the RKKA rifle divisions during the initial period of the Second World War: the decision in 1938 to reorganise the Army, in part due to and following the repressions of the

officer corps in 1937, and the 1939 campaign in Poland, and later war against Finland
.

In the course of the Second World War the Soviet Union's Red Army raised over four hundred and fifty numbered rifle divisions (infantry). Usually the rifle divisions were controlled by the higher headquarters of the rifle corps. But scores of these formations were reformed several times; the total number of divisional formations formed may have been as high as 2,000, according to Craig Crofoot.

On 22 June 1941 the

western military districts
, of which 70 were organised according to peace-time TO&E 04/100 with 10-thousand bayonet strength (actual number of rifles 7,818), but brought up to the 12-thousand strength (TO&E 04/400), with another six at the 11-thousand strength. Another 78 rifle divisions in the interior military districts were organised according to peace-time TO&E 04/120 6-thousand (5,864) bayonet strength (actual number of rifles 3,685). The wartime organisation of the RKKA rifle division was 14-thousand (14,483) with 10,420 rifles, but only 20 western border divisions had been brought up to this establishment when the war begun.

Zaloga notes that the Red Army formed at least 42 'national' divisions during the Second World War, including four Azeri, five Armenian, and eight Georgian rifle divisions and a large number of cavalry divisions in Central Asia, including five Uzbek cavalry divisions.

Note on Designations

During the war, many divisions were formed, destroyed or otherwise disbanded, and reformed several times: A notional example, using imaginary designations, runs:

"The 501st Rifle Division (1st formation), readiness category B organized to 1937 tables may have been disbanded at Vyazma in 1941, and a new 501st Division (2nd formation), readiness category A organized on 1942 tables formed in Rostov thousands of km away, then renamed 200th Guards Rifle Division in 1944, and a new 501st (3rd formation), readiness category A organized to 1944 tables division formed in Minsk".

Rifle Divisions list

1–10

11–20

21–30

31–40

41–50

51–60

61–70

71–80

81–90

91–100

101–110

111–120

121–130

131–140

141–150

151–160

161–170

171–180

  • 171st Rifle Division — established at Kamensk September 1939. Wiped out at Kiev in September 1941. Fought in battle for the Reichstag building in Berlin, Apr 1945.
  • 172nd Rifle Division — established at Simferopol prior to 6.41 and wiped at Mogilev 7.41. Recreated from 3rd Crimean Rifle Division in 1941. Fought and destroyed at Sevastopol 7.42. Created again at Moscow 10.42, fought at Pavlograd, Kursk, and Kielce. With 13th Army of the 1st Ukrainian Front 5.45. Stayed with the 13th Army postwar in the Kiev Military District and became the 172nd MRD in 1965. Disbanded by becoming a weapons and equipment storage base in 1990 just before the collapse of the Soviet Union.
  • 173rd Rifle Division — established at Gjassin in 1940 and wiped out at Uman August 1941. Recreated at Moscow from the 21st People's Militia Rifle Division 9.41. Fought at Tula and Stalingrad, became the 77th Guards Rifle Division 1.3.43. Created again at Staritsa from the 150th Rifle Brigade. Fought at Chernigov, Lenino, and Minsk. With 31st Army of the 1st Ukrainian Front 5.45. Disbanded in the summer of 1945 with the Central Group of Forces.[21]
  • 20th Guards Rifle Division 17.3.42. Created again at Starobelsk from the 130th Motorized Rifle Brigade in April 1942 and became 46th Guards Rifle Division 10.42. Recreated at Kaluga from the 28th Rifle Brigade 4.43, fought at Kursk, and in Belorussia and East Prussia. With 31st Army of the 1st Ukrainian Front 5.45. Disbanded in the summer of 1945 with the Central Group of Forces.[21]
  • 175th Rifle Division — established at Prokladny prior to 6.41, wiped out at Kiev 9.41. Recreated at Tyumen 3.42, fought near Stalingrad and inactivated there 9.42. Recreated again at Sverdlovsk after 10.42, fought at Demyansk and in Belorussia. With 47th Army of the 1st Belorussian Front May 1945.
  • Krivoy Rog in April 1941, with 9th Army in June 1941. Fought at Novorossiysk and became 129th Guards Rifle Division 10.43. Created again at Maselkaya from the 65th and 80th Naval Rifle Brigades 3.44. With 31st Army of the 1st Ukrainian Front 5.45. Disbanded in the summer of 1945 with the Central Group of Forces.[21]
  • Leningrad prior to June 1941. Fought in northern areas of front. With 23rd Army of the Leningrad Front
    ) May 1945.
  • 178th Rifle Division — established at Omsk prior to Jun 1941. With 23rd Army of the Leningrad Front) May 1945.
  • Eleventh Army
    on 22 June 1941. Fought at Kalinin, Gomel, and Vitebsk; with 4th Shock Army of the Kurland Group (Leningrad Front) May 1945.
  • Belgorod-Dnestrovsky
    . After 1992 became Ukrainian 27th Mechanised Brigade.

181–190

191–200

201–210

211–220

  • 211th Rifle Division — established at Zagorsk prior to 6.41 and wiped out at Vyazma 10.41. Recreated at Novossil 1.42 (Goff, 1998, says reformed from 429th RD about 16 Dec 1941), fought at Voronezh, Kursk, and Chenigov. With 1st Guards Army of the 4th Ukrainian Front 5.45.
  • 212th Rifle Division — established at Cherkassy 6.41. In a report of 13 July 1941, the temporary commander of 15th Mechanised Corps said the division, 'with an almost full complement of Red Army soldiers, completely lacked vehicles for transporting personnel and could not even secure auto-transport for supply of ammunition, foodstuffs, and fuel and lubricants and also for the transportation of weapons.'[70] Fought at Moscow, Kharkov, and Stalingrad. Inactivated at Stalingrad 11.42. Recreated at Ssuschinitschi from the 4th and 125th Rifle Brigades 6.43, fought at Kursk. With 61st Army of the 1st Belorussian Front 5.45. Disbanded in the summer of 1945 with the Group of Soviet Forces in Germany.[15]
  • 213th Rifle Division — established at Vinnitsa 3.41 and wiped out at Uman 8.41. Recreated at Katta Kurgan 1.42, fought at Kursk, Targul Frumos, and in the Vistula-Oder Operation. With 52nd Army of the 1st Ukrainian Front 5.45. Disbanded in the summer of 1945 with the Group of Soviet Forces in Germany.
  • 214th Rifle Division — 6,000 establishment (commenced mobilisation at Luhansk on 10 June 1941, Kharkov MD); established at Vorishilovgrad 4.41 and wiped out at Vyazma 10.41. Recreated at Ufa 1.42, fought at Stalingrad, Voronezh, Kremenchug, Kirovograd, and the Puławy Bridgehead. With 52nd Army of the 1st Ukrainian Front 5.45.
  • 215th Rifle Division — Formed May 1942 from 48th Rifle Brigade, fought at Smolensk and Vilnius. With 5th Army of the RVGK 5.45. Moved to the Far East and fought in the Soviet invasion of Manchuria.
  • 34th Rifle Division, but then disbanded 7 July 1956.[32]
  • 217th Rifle Division — established at Voronezh Jun 1941. Fought at Yelnaya and wiped out in Bryansk Pocket. Recreated Pavlograd Oct 1941. Fought at Kaluga, near Kursk, and in Belorussia, East Prussia, and Kurland. With 48th Army of the 3rd Belorussian Front May 1945.
  • 218th Rifle Division — established at Gusyatin prior to 6.41, inactivated 7.42. Recreated at Kiev 11.43, fought at Zhitomir. With 6th Army of the 1st Ukrainian Front 5.45. Disbanded in the summer of 1945 with the Central Group of Forces.[21]
  • 219th Rifle Division — established as motor rifle division at Kharkiv 4.41 and wiped out at Kiev 9.41. Recreated as rifle division at Kirssanov 5.42, fought near Stalingrad. With 22nd Army of the RVGK 5.45.
  • 220th Rifle Division — established at Vyazma in 1941. Arrived from Orel Military District to join 19th Army, seemingly detached from 23rd Mechanised Corps in early July 1941. A report by 19th Army Chief of Staff, Major General Rubtsov, on 24 July 1941 said that the division was 'hardly formed as a motorised rifle division and had no tanks and vehicles and was understrength in artillery.'[71] Fought at Yelnaya, Vyazma, Rzhev, Grodno, and Minsk. With 31st Army of the 1st Ukrainian Front 5.45. Disbanded in the summer of 1945 with the Central Group of Forces.[21]

221–230

231–240

241–250

251–260

261–270

271–280

281–290

291–300

301–310

311–320

321–330

331–340

341–350

351–360

361–370

371–380

381–390

391–400

401–410

411-420

421–440

441–474

Guards Rifle Divisions

1 – 10 Guards Rifle Division

11 – 20 Guards Rifle Division

21 – 30 Guards Rifle Division

31 – 40 Guards Rifle Division

41 – 50 Guards Rifle Division

51 – 60 Guards Rifle Division

61 – 70 Guards Rifle Division

71 – 80 Guards Rifle Division

81 – 90 Guards Rifle Division

91 – 100 Guards Rifle Division

101 – 110 Guards Rifle Division

111 – 120 Guards Rifle Division

121 – 129 Guards Rifle Division

Motor Rifle Divisions

  • Orders of Lenin, Order of the October Revolution Red Banner Separate Motor Rifle Division of special purpose Internal Troops, Ministry of Interior of the USSR in the name of F. 3. Dzerzhinskiy
    created June 1924, still active in Russian Interior Ministry in 2009.
  • 1st Guards Motor Rifle Division formed 1941 – 1943, reformed in 1957.
  • 2nd Guards Mechanized Corps
    in October 1942.
  • 6th Guards Mechanized Corps
    in June 1943.

People's Militia

Leningrad People's Militia Divisions

Leningrad Narodnoe Opolcheniye Army
divisions were used to form Red Army units mostly within the Leningrad Front.

  • 1st (Kirov) People's Militia Division, named for the Kirovsky District (commander Kombrig V.A. Malinnikov) By 15 August, this division had joined the retreating 70th and 237th Rifle Divisions and engaged in the fighting on approaches to Novgorod. On 3 September its 3rd regiment was transferred to the command of the 291st Rifle Division, and replaced by the 76th Latvian Separate Rifle regiment on 14 September.
  • 2nd (Moscow) People's Militia Division named for the Moskovsky District (commander (to July, Colonel N.S. Ugrumov)
  • 3rd (Frunze) Division of People's Militia named for the Frunzensky District (Фрунзенский район) (commander (Colonel А.P. Netreba, from 16 August Z.N. Alekseyev) which from September was receiving volunteers from the Altai and Siberia.
  • 1st Guards Division of People's Militia (18 July 1941) (commander Colonel I.M. Frolov) (deployed next to the 237th Rifle Division) formed in the Kuybishev District
  • 2nd Guards People's Militia Division (18 July 1941) (commander Colonel Sholev, later Colonel V.A. Trubachev) formed in the
    85th Rifle Division
    in Sept 1941.
  • 4th (Dzerzhinsky) Light Division of People's Militia (19 July 1941) named for the Dzerzhinsky District (commander Colonel P.I Radigin) (1st regiment detached on 22 July to the 191st Rifle Division in Narva. This was a "light" division initially formed in the Krasnogvardeysky District, with only 4,257 personnel, but almost entirely motorised, and admitting only volunteers with prior combat experience. The division was allowed a period of extended combat training.
  • 3rd Guards People's Militia Division (24 July 1941) (commander Colonel V.P. Kotelnikov) which later fought with the 402nd Red Banner rifle regiment (commander Colonel Ya.S. Yermakov) of the
    44th Rifle Division
    in Sept 1941.
  • 4th Guards People's Militia Division (27 July 1941) formed in the Kalinin District was never fully formed and on 13 August transferred to Army reserve, its personnel used to complete units of other divisions. However, its three rifle regiments continued to participate in combat under command of other divisions, and the staff of the division was retained, and used to conduct induction training and formation, as well as command of replacement militia battalions.
  • 5th (Kuybishevskaya) People's Militia Division (1 September 1941) (commander Colonel F.P. Utkin) formed early September 1941 from the former 4th division and on 10 September moved to Pulkovo.
  • 6th Division of People's Militia – formed 1 September 1941
  • 7th Division of People's Militia (commander Colonel I.S. Kuznetsov) raised on 17 September 1941 it was re-designated on 30 September as the
    56th Rifle Division
    .

Moscow People's Militia Divisions

Although 25 Narodnoe Opolcheniye divisions were intended for formation, only 16 were formed due to demand for workers in building the fortifications for the defence of Moscow. By 7 July 1941 140,000 volunteers had been accepted into the Moscow People's Militia, and organised into 12 divisions (of establishment (shtat) 11,633) named according to the city rayons. However, on 20 September 1941 they were redesignated as regular rifle divisions (numbers in brackets):

  • 1st Lenin Raion People's Militia Division (60th Rifle Division (2)) First division of Narodnoe Opolcheniye (Первая дивизия народного ополчения) in Russian.[143]
  • 2nd Stalin Raion People's Militia Division (2nd Rifle Division (2))
  • 4th Kuybishev Raion People's Militia Division (
    110th Rifle Division
    (2))
  • 5th Frunze Raion People's Militia Division (113th Rifle Division (2))
  • 6th Dzerzhinsky rayon People's Militia Division
  • 7th Bauman rayon People's Militia Division (
    29th Rifle Division
    (2))
  • 8th Krasnpreensky rayon People's Militia Division (became
    139th Rifle Division
    (2))
  • 13th Rostokino rayon People's Militia Division (became 140th Rifle Division (2))
  • 17th Moskvorets rayon People's Militia Division (became
    17th Rifle Division
    (2))
  • 18th Leningrad rayon People's Militia Division (became 18th Rifle Division (III Formation)) then 11th Guards Rifle Division
  • 21st Kiev rayon People's Militia Division (became
    173rd Rifle Division
    (2))

These divisions were allocated to the

Mozhaisk Defence Line Front (commander General P.A. Artemyev) which consisted of the 32nd Army (General N.K. Klykov) in Vyazma, 33rd Army (Kombrig D.P. Onuprienko) in Spas-Demensk and 34th Army (General N.I. Pronin), and also included five NKVD
divisions (one each in the 32nd and 34th Armies, and three in the 33rd Army).

In October 1941 four more divisions were formed

Other People's Militia Divisions

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "RED ARMY RIFLE DIVISIONS & BRIGADES". tmg110.tripod.com. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  2. ^ Seaton & Seaton 1986, p. 42.
  3. ^ Dvoinykh, Kariaeva, Stegantsev, eds. 1993, p. 44.
  4. ^ a b c Crofoot & Avanzini 2004a, p. 110.
  5. ^ Dvoinykh, Kariaeva, Stegantsev, eds. 1993, p. 55.
  6. ^ Dvoinykh, Kariaeva, Stegantsev, eds. 1993, p. 60.
  7. ^ Crofoot & Avanzini 2004a, p. 103.
  8. ^ Crofoot & Avanzini 2004b, p. 5.
  9. ^ Dvoinykh, Kariaeva, Stegantsev, eds. 1993, p. 114.
  10. ^ Dvoinykh, Kariaeva, Stegantsev, eds. 1993, p. 113.
  11. ^ Crofoot & Avanzini 2005, p. 5.
  12. ^ Dvoinykh, Kariaeva, Stegantsev, eds. 1993, pp. 159–160.
  13. ^ Scott & Scott 1979, p. 12.
  14. ^ Glantz 2005a, p. 717n5.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar Feskov et al 2013, pp. 380–381.
  16. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 478.
  17. ^ a b c d e Feskov et al 2013, p. 566.
  18. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 150.
  19. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 450.
  20. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 565.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw Feskov et al 2013, p. 413.
  22. ^ a b Feskov et al 2013, p. 508.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Feskov et al 2013, p. 408.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i Feskov et al 2013, p. 151.
  25. ^ Dvoinykh, Kariaeva, Stegantsev, eds. 1993, p. 111.
  26. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 468.
  27. ^ a b Feskov et al 2013, p. 497.
  28. ^ Crofoot & Avanzini 2004b, p. 54.
  29. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 397.
  30. ^ Dvoinykh, Kariaeva, Stegantsev, eds. 1993, p. 117.
  31. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 581.
  32. ^ a b Feskov et al 2013, p. 152.
  33. ^ Dvoinykh, Kariaeva, Stegantsev, eds. 1993, p. 118.
  34. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 576.
  35. ^ Dvoinykh, Kariaeva, Stegantsev, eds. 1993, p. 120.
  36. ^ Drig, Yevgeny (20 March 2007). "36 мотострелковая Забайкальская ордена Ленина дивизия" [36th Motor Rifle Transbaikal Order of Lenin Division]. mechcorps.rkka.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 6 April 2012. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  37. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 566–567.
  38. ^ Dvoinykh, Kariaeva, Stegantsev, eds. 1993, p. 123.
  39. ^ a b c Feskov et al 2013, p. 489.
  40. ^ Dvoinykh, Kariaeva, Stegantsev, eds. 1993, p. 127.
  41. ^ a b c d Feskov et al 2013, p. 146.
  42. ^ & # entry43861 47 Mountain Division[permanent dead link]
  43. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 525.
  44. ^ Lensky & Tsybin 2003, p. 100.
  45. ^ 63rd Infantry Division
  46. ^ accessed July 2011[permanent dead link]
  47. ^ Grylev 1970.
  48. ^ Fitisov 2013, p. 273.
  49. ^ history of 77 Infantry Division[permanent dead link] and 77-Rifle Division
  50. ^ Bonn, 2005, says that 82nd Motorised Rifle Division was originally formed in Perm region as 82nd Self-Propelled Gun Division, converted to 82 MRD 1941. Bonn, Slaughterhouse, Aberjona Press, 2005, p.350
  51. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Feskov et al 2013, p. 422.
  52. ^ Velikanov et al. 1980, p. 79.
  53. ^ Kolomiets (2001), p. 58
  54. ^ Erickson, John (1962). The Soviet High Command. p. 554.
  55. ^ Lensky & Tsybin 2003, p. 171.
  56. ^ Боевой путь 108-Бобруйской ордена Ленина краснознаменной дивизии
  57. ^ a b Feskov et al 2013, p. 409.
  58. ^ S.N.Zhilin and others "Under the Guard banner ". Arkhangelsk/Vologda. 1980
  59. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 429.
  60. ^
    ISSN 1681-1941
    / № 1–2 (3657–3658), 19 January 2004
  61. ^ Data of the Red Army in the Winter War, OOB
  62. ^ M.K.Smolnyy "7,000 kilometers in battles and campaigns". Military Publishing, 1982.
  63. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 507.
  64. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 526.
  65. ^ Feskov et al 2013, Table 4.1.5, p.180 (1955–57 rifle division redesignations).
  66. ^ Irregular Units of RKKA
  67. ^ Niehorster, Dr Leo. "12th Army, Kiev Special Military District, Red Army, 22.06.41". niehorster.org. Retrieved 14 April 2022.
  68. ^ Feskov et al 2013, pp 149, 151.
  69. ^ 'A Short description of 15th Mechanised Corps combat operations during the period from 22.6.41 through 12.7.41,' SBDVOV, issue 36, 253, via Glantz, Stumbling Colossus, 136.
  70. ^ David Glantz, Stumbling Colossus, 208, drawing on SBDVOV, issue 37, 226.
  71. ^ Crofoot and Avanzini, Armies of the Bear
  72. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 469.
  73. ^ Форум
  74. ^ a b Feskov et al 2013, p. 431.
  75. ^ a b Feskov et al 2013, p. 377.
  76. ^ Myakushev, S.D. (2015). "История подвига военных медиков на Керченском полуострове в 1942 г. должна быть написана. Комментарий историка" [The History of the feat of the field medics on the Kerch Peninsula in 1942 needs to be written: Comments of a historian]. Otechestvennyye Arkhivy (Archives of the Fatherland) (in Russian) (4): 103–116.
  77. ^ Feskov et al 2013, pp. 525–526.
  78. ^ Feskov et al 2013, p. 577.
  79. ^ a b Feskov et al 2013, p. 471.
  80. ^ "396-я Хинганская стрелковая дивизия – путь к Победе" [396th Khingan Rifle Division: The Road to Victory]. Pobeda (in Russian). 8 September 2015. Retrieved 3 November 2016.
  81. ^ "400-я стрелковая дивизия" [400th Rifle Division]. samsv.narod.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 28 January 2017.
  82. ^ "ArtOfWar. Магерамов Александр Арнольдович. Сноски". artofwar.ru. Retrieved 14 April 2019.
  83. ^ 402 Rifle Division
  84. ^ "78-я Запорожская Краснознаменная стрелковая дивизия". Retrieved 29 December 2015.
  85. ^ Holm, 31st Army Corps
  86. ^ Holm and Feskov et al 2013, 535.
  87. ^ Armenia and Armenians in World War II Archived 2009-08-12 at the Wayback Machine
  88. ^ "2 СТРЕЛКОВАЯ ДИВИЗИЯ 4 ФОРМИРОВАНИЯ". bdsa.ru. Retrieved 29 December 2015.
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  90. ^ 416 Rifle Division
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  142. ^ "Дополнено 6 декабря 2009".
  143. ., and Armies of the Bear.

References