715th Infantry Division (Germany)

715th Infantry Division (Germany)

The 715th Infantry Division was a German infantry division which fought during World War II.

Composition

As of 1942, the composition of the 715th Infantry Division was as follows:

*715th Infantry Regiment
*735th Infantry Regiment
*671st Artillery Battalion
*715th Reconnaissance Company
*715th Engineer Battalion
*715th Signal Company
*715th Divisional Supply Troops

Unit History

The 715th (Static) Infantry Division was activated on May 8, 1941, and sent to southwestern France that fall. In late summer 1943, it took over the Cannes-Nice sector on the Mediterranean coast when elements of the Italian 4th Army returned home. In January 1944, the 715th was sent to Italy following the allied landings at Anzio and fought there until June, suffering heavy losses when the Allies broke out of the beachhead and took Rome. Sent to the rear, the 715th was rebuilt, largely from troops of the reinforced 1028th Grenadier Regiment and Shadow Division Wildflechen, which it absorbed. The division fought in the Gothic Line battles in September and was transferred to the Adriatic sector soon after. Rebuilt again in February 1945, it now included the 725th, 735th, and 774th Grenadier Regiments (two battalions each), the 671st Artillery Regiment (three battalions), the 715th Fusilier Battalion, the 715th Engineer Battalion, the 715th Tank Destroyer Battalion, the 715th Signal Company and the 715th Field Replacement Battalion. In early 1945, it was sent to the 1st Panzer Army on the Eastern Front, fought in Upper Silesia and surrendered to the Soviets in the Tabor-Pisek area of Czechoslovakia on May 2.

Commanders

*Colonel/Major General Ernst Wening (May 2, 1941)
*Major General/Lieutenant General Kurt Hoffmann (June 1, 1942)
*Major General/Lieutenant General Hans-Georg Hildebrandt (February 5, 1944)
*Colonel/ Major General Hans von Rohr (July 1, 1944)
*Colonel Hans-Joachim Ehlert (September 18, 1944)
*Major General Hans von Rohr (September 30, 1944 - end)

See also

* Division (military), Military unit
* Heer, Wehrmacht, List of German divisions in WWII

References

*German Order of Battle, Volume Two: 291st 999th Infantry Divisions, Named Infantry Divisions, and Special Divisions in WWII


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Blue Division — For other uses, see Blue Division (disambiguation). 250. Infanterie Division (span.) 250th Infantry Division (Spanish) División Española de Voluntarios Spanish Volunteer Division …   Wikipedia

  • List of World War II topics (0-9) — # 1 Alpine Division Taurinense # 1 Alpini Regiment # 1 Cent WWII (Dutch coin) # 1 Mountain Artillery Regiment (Italy) # 1 vs 40 (Zipang manga) # 1. Jagd Division # 1.1 /75 caliber gun # 10 cm K 17 # 10.5 cm FlaK 38 # 10.5 cm leFH 16 # 10.5 cm… …   Wikipedia

  • List of German divisions in World War II — This is a list of German divisions in World War II. Only ground units are covered; divisions of aircraft are not.Upgrades and reorganizations are shown only to identify the variant names for what is notionally a single unit; other upgrades and… …   Wikipedia

  • Structure of the United States Armed Forces — The structure of the United States armed forces is a chain of command leading from the President (as commander in chief) to the newest recruits. The United States armed forces are organized through the United States Department of Defense, which… …   Wikipedia

  • Operation Shingle — Part of World War II US Army troops landing at Anzio late January 1944 …   Wikipedia

  • Gothic Line — This article is about the fighting on the Gothic Line between August and the end of 1944, variously known as Operation Olive or the Battle of Rimini. For the fighting to capture the town of Rimini in September 1944, see Battle of Rimini (1944).… …   Wikipedia

  • Battle of Cisterna — Infobox Military Conflict conflict=Battle of Cisterna partof=Italian Campaign (World War II) caption= date= January 30, 1944 February 2 1944 place= Anzio beachhead, Italy result= German victory combatant1= flag|United States|1912 combatant2=… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”