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This book is a detailed history of the 23rd Waffen-SS
Panzergrenadier Division "Nederland," the Dutch volunteer SS combat
formation. Employed exclusively on the eastern front, except for a
brief period in Croatia, the "Nederland" formations participated in
many of the most difficult defensive battles on the northeastern
front: Leningrad, the Narva bridgehead, the Tannenberg line, Dorpat
in Kurland, Pomerania, and the Oder front, until the desperate
battle of the Halbe Pocket where the remnants of the division
managed to avoid total annihilation, escaping the Soviets and
surrendering to American forces. In all of these battles the
"Nederland" volunteers showed their valor as true Waffen-SS
combatants, always in the front lines and always under constant
enemy pressure. This complete treatment fills a large gap in
Waffen-SS history. Informative appendices not only relate to the
unit's operational history, but also provide details on some of its
members, as well as uniforms and insignia.
Created in 1943 from members of the Hitler Youth born in 1926, the
division was attached to I SS Panzer Corps in March 1944 and
transferred to Normandy. Based around Caen, it was intended to
repel a possible and expected invasion from the sea. When the
invasion came in June, it was one of the two closest panzer
divisions to the landing beaches. The defensive battles that took
place in Normandy, particularly the four battles around the city of
Caen, saw the young soldiers of the Hitlerjugend demonstrate
determined resistance, conceding only due to being greatly
outnumbered. After the battles fought in Normandy, the division was
withdrawn first to the Franco-Belgian border, where it was engaged
in hard defensive fighting and then to Germany for reorganisation.
Other difficult and demanding battles followed during the offensive
in the Ardennes, on the Bastogne front, in Hungary and finally the
last battles fought in Austria, on the sacred ground of the Reich,
where the soldiers of the Hitlerjugend, despite the desperate
situation and the superiority of the enemy, managed to achieve
local success and launch desperate counterattacks even into the
last weeks of the war, in the name and in defense of their
homeland. Packed with photographs, maps and profiles, this Casemate
Illustrated follows the actions of the 12th SS Panzer Division
throughout its existence.
Formed in 1943 with the express purpose of blocking the forthcoming
Allied invasion in the West, the 12th SS Panzer Division
Hitlerjugend carved out a reputation as one of the Wehrmacht’s
foremost panzer divisions, as witnessed by its tenacious defense of
Caen following the Allied invasion of Normandy. The British
Operation Goodwood against Caen in July 1944 was followed by
Totalize in August, which bypassed Caen and attacked the
Hitlerjugend positions. Within a week thousands of German troops
were encircled in the Falaise Pocket. Around ten thousand
Hitlerjugend soldiers escaped piecemeal, regrouping to fight in the
battles along the Maas and the ill-fated Ardennes offensive of
December 1944. Deployed to Hungary in 1945 to stem the Red Army
advance, the division fought against overwhelming odds until the
final battles in Austria, on Reich soil, in late April 1945. There
the soldiers of the Hitlerjugend, despite the desperate situation
and the superiority of the enemy, managed to achieve local success
and launch desperate counterattacks even into the last weeks of the
war. Packed with photographs, maps and profiles, this Casemate
Illustrated title follows the actions of the 12th SS Panzer
Division throughout its existence.
This book begins by examining a number of factors relating to the
Italian army's performance in the desert, including assessments of
the Italian soldier, leadership, training, organization and
structure, equipment, the supply situation in North Africa, the
ability of the Italian air force to support ground operations, and
an appreciation of Italo-German relations in North Africa. The book
then describes the combat operations of Italian forces in the
desert beginning with the early Italian advance from Libya into
Egypt in September 1940 and ending with the final Italian surrender
to the Allies in Tunisia in May 1943. The extensive appendices
focus heavily on organization and equipment, with tables comparing
Italian, British and German armor and artillery in the desert.
Taken as a whole, this book presents an account of Italian ground
operations in North Africa, from the time of their initial
trouncing at the hands of the British Western desert Force in early
1941, through the see-saw battles of 1941 and 1942 when the
combined Italo-German forces battled with the British, through the
decimation of the Italian forces during the El Alamein battles in
late 1942, and finally with the retreat to Tunisia and surrender of
all Axis forces there in May 1943. This book is the first
English-language work to address in a systematic way the
contributions of the Italian army to the North African campaign,
and challenges the conventional wisdom that the German Afrika Korps
was the pre-eminent Axis force in the desert.
From the German occupation of Belgium in May 1940, Flemish recruits
from northern Belgium - considered by the Nazis to be 'Germanic' -
were accepted individually into Waffen-SS units. From Hitler's
invasion of the USSR in June 1941, additional recruits from the
French-speaking south (Wallonia) were drafted. Both communities
formed volunteer 'Legions', to fight (according to Goebbels'
propaganda machine) 'for European civilization against the
Bolshevik threat'; these were a Flemish Legion in the Waffen-SS and
a Walloon Legion in the German Army. Both served on the Russian
Front in 1942-43; the Walloon Legion was then also transferred into
the Waffen-SS, and the decorated Walloon officer Leon Degrelle
became a publicized 'poster boy' for foreign SS volunteers. Both
Legions were then redesignated as SS Assault Brigades, and
thereafter saw extremely hard fighting in the Ukraine and on the
Baltic front. In autumn 1944, their survivors were withdrawn from
the front and incorporated into two new understrength SS Divisions,
27. 'Langemarck' and 28. 'Wallonien'. This new account, featuring
detailed colour plates of uniform and insignia, recounts the battle
history of the French and Flemish-speaking Belgian SS, up to their
final transformation into full divisions in the winter of 1944/45.
The Polizei Division first took shape in 1939, drawing manpower
from the civilian police. In February 1942, the unit was
transferred to the Waffen-SS and redesignated
SS-Polizei-Division(4.SS). The former policemen appeared on the
Western Front in 1940, before being shipped to the Leningrad sector
in 1941. Polizei remained on the Eastern Front for the duration of
the war, including deployments in Greece, the Banat (Romania),
Hungary, and Pomerania, before finally surrendering just northwest
of Berlin. The subject is examined through many personal
recollections, hundreds of photos and maps from private
collections, and period documents, including extracts from official
bulletins and the division's war diary. A brief history of the
Polizei II division is included as an appendix.
The Italian government signed an armistice with the Allies on
September 8, 1943, but that did not mean the war was over in Italy.
Italians continued to fight on both sides for the duration of the
war. This study is focused on Italian volunteers in formations of
the Waffen-SS. These include the SS Legion "Italiana" and 29th
Waffen Grenadier Division "Italienische Nr.1." Beyond the
explicitly Italian units, handfuls of men found their way into
other divisions, such as the 4th SS Panzergrenadier Division
"Polizei," 16th SS Panzergrenadier Division "Reichsfuhrer-SS," the
Karstwehr Battallion (later 24th SS Gebirgsjager Division
"Karstjager"), and even the famous 1st SS Panzer Division
"Leibstandarte." This work includes histories of the Italian Legion
and the 29th Division, extensive interviews with Italian SS
veterans from various units, and many excellent photographs from
private collections in Europe.
Goebbels' 1941 propaganda campaign to present Germany's invasion of
the USSR as a battle for European civilization against Asian
barbarism convinced many men in occupied 'Germanic' European
countries, such as Scandinavia and the Low Countries, to volunteer
to fight on the Russian Front. One of the strongest national
legions of such a kind was raised in the Netherlands, where it was
supported by a large pro-Nazi movement led by Anton Mussert. The
3,000-man Netherlands Volunteer Legion fought on the Leningrad
front in regimental strength, from the Red Army's winter 1941/42
counter-offensive until April 1943. The survivors were then
reinforced to form a 5,500-strong Panzergrenadier Brigade, and
after anti-partisan service in Croatia, they returned to Army Group
North as part of Steiner's III SS Panzer Korps, fighting in the
most arduous battles of 1943-44 until driven back into Pomerania.
In the final months of the war the division formed the nucleus of
the new 23rd SS Volunteer Panzergrenadier Division 'Nederland'. In
this illustrated study of the Dutch Waffen-SS Legion and Brigade,
specialist Massimiliano Afiero explores the full history of this
important formation from its establishment in 1941 until it was
incorporated into the 'Nederland' Division in 1944. Contemporary
photographs and full-colour illustrations support the text and
reveal key details including aspects of uniform and insignia.
This is the complete history of one of the most famous and
well-known divisions of the Waffen-SS. Created as a mountain unit
to be employed exclusively on the Balkan Front against partisan
units, the unit fought with valor and fierceness on the
battlefield. After numerous anti-guerrilla operations in Bosnia,
Croatia, Montenegro, and Serbia, towards the end of the war it was
employed against units of the Bulgarian Army and Red Army forces in
the difficult mission of covering the withdrawal of German forces
retreating from Greece and Albania. It was one of the few Waffen-SS
formations to be used in offensive actions during the final phases
of the war, all of which were carried out successfully. Accused of
having committed numerous crimes against civilians, its members met
with a tragic fate, especially those who ended up in the hands of
communist partisans.
One of the most infamous of all Waffen-SS formations, the 3rd
SS-Panzer-Division "Totenkopf" has always been identified as the
very essence of the notorious "Black Order." Associated with war
crimes in official historiography, formed initially with personnel
coming from guard units from concentration camps, the unit was
nevertheless able to prove itself on the battlefield,
distinguishing itself in all of the main campaigns in which it
fought, from France to the Russian front. This second of two
volumes analyzes the summer 1943 campaign that followed Kursk,
until the end of the war: from its operations on the Mius front, to
the fighting in the Kharkov area, on the Dnieper River, its
transfer to the Polish front, and its subordination to
IV.SS-Panzer-Korps, the fighting on the Hungarian front to liberate
Budapest, and then its participation in the Fruhlingserwachen
("Spring Awakening") offensive, until the final fighting in Austria
and the surrender. The volume includes a series of appendices
covering order of battle, lists of award recipients, and details of
uniforms and insignia pertaining to the division.
This book is a detailed history of the 27th Waffen-SS Division
"Langemarck," the Flemish volunteer SS combat formation.
"Langemarck" was employed chiefly on the Eastern Front, first in
the Ukraine in early 1944, then participating with a combat group
in Estonia along the Tannenberg Line in the summer of 1944,
alongside other European Waffen-SS volunteers subordinate to
III.SS-Pz.Korps--covering themselves with glory and suffering heavy
losses. After transformation into a division, "Langemarck"
participated in the final fighting on the Pomeranian and Oder
fronts, continuing to fight under extreme conditions, and always
holding their assigned positions, counterattacking whenever
possible. Most of the Flemish volunteers were able to surrender to
the Anglo-American forces, thus escaping capture by the Russians.
This complete treatment fills a large gap in Waffen-SS history.
Informative appendices relate to the unit's operational history and
also provide details on some of its members, as well as uniforms
and insignia.
The 17th Waffen-SS Panzergrenadier Division "Goetz von
Berlichingen" was one of the few SS formations to be employed
exclusively on the western front during World War II. From the time
of its formation in France in 1943, "Goetz von Berlichingen" saw
bitter and bloody fighting in Normandy, the Seine front, Metz, the
Saar, the Palatinate, and later the defense of the west wall until
the final battles in Germany. Despite the overwhelming superiority
of Allied forces, the units that comprised the division always
managed to offer dogged resistance, counterattacking ferociously,
and defending every foot of ground with great courage and
determination. The units of "Goetz von Berlichingen" received
praise, not only from the German high command, but also earned the
respect of its Allied adversaries. In addition, the "Goetz von
Berlichingen" division was never involved in any war crimes, nor in
crimes against civilians. Detailed operational history, rare combat
images, maps, and personality profiles make this book the
definitive history of "Goetz von Berlichingen."
Formed in 1942, the 8th SS Cavalry Division "Florian Geyer" was one
of the most controversial units in the Waffen-SS. Created with the
intention of making it an elite unit within the Waffen-SS, it
instead saw its main employment from the beginning of the war in
Russia as a rear area security force against partisans. The SS
cavalrymen carried out these duties with terrible effectiveness,
demonstrating the full capabilities of horse-mounted units in
securing terrain that was militarily difficult. Late in the war,
"Florian Geyer" was employed on the front lines against regular
units of the Red Army. The unit was wiped out during final battle
of Budapest in February 1945. Detailed operational history, rare
combat images, maps, and personality profiles make this book the
definitive history of "Florian Geyer."
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