9th Artillery Breakthrough Division. Encyclopedia of the Chelyabinsk region. I. Artillery corps

Armed Forces of the USSR after the Second World War: from the Red Army to the Soviet Feskov Vitaly Ivanovich

Annexes to Chapter 8

Annexes to Chapter 8

Appendix 8.1. Connections and parts missile troops, artillery and air defense ground forces in 1945-1991

I. Artillery corps

At the end of the Second World War, the Red Army had 10 directorates of breakthrough artillery corps, but by the end of 1953 they were all disbanded. The composition of these corps was constantly changing (however, as in the war years), but usually it included 2-3 artillery divisions, incl. one cannon.

1st Artillery Corps (military unit 38301) after the war was in the PribVO (Mitava), in May 1946 he was transferred to Primorye (Razdolnoye village), where in March 1948 his department was disbanded. By the time of disbandment, 2 artillery divisions were subordinate to him: the 3rd Guards (in Pyongyang, then in Voroshilov-Ussuriysky) and the 38th Cannon (Razdolnoye settlement). Commander: Major General art. Frolov Boris Andreevich - from December 30, 1944 to August 1946.

2nd Artillery Corps (military unit 38330) after the war was in the South GV, was withdrawn to the OdVO (Kotovsk), in August 1947 moved to the PrikVO (Ternopil), where in November 1953 it ceased to exist. At that time, 3 artillery divisions were subordinate to him: the 9th Guards Cannon (Zolochev), the 1st Guards (Nesterov) and the 7th (Gaysin). Commanders: lieutenant general art. Nesteruk Vladimir Stepanovich - from 01/28/1945 to June 1946; lieutenant general art. Korolkov Pavel Mikhailovich - from June 1946 to June 1949.

3rd Artillery Leningrad Order of Suvorov Corps (military unit 73693) after the war at the beginning of 1946 he was transferred from Germany to the Leningrad Military District (Pushkin) and disbanded in January 1951. When based near Leningrad, the corps included 2 artillery divisions: the 2nd Guards (Pushkin) and the 27th Cannon (Luga). Commanders: Major General art. Likhachev Vladimir Matveevich - from 12/13/1944 to April 1949, major general, from 08/03/1953 lieutenant general art. Kulikov Grigory Stepanovich - from February 1952 to November 1953.

4th Artillery Berlin Red Banner Corps after the war he remained in Germany, where he was disbanded in 1953. At that time, 2 artillery divisions were subordinate to him: the 6th (Ratenov) and the 34th cannon (Potsdam). Commanders: major general art., from 11/02/1944 lieutenant general art. Ignatov Nikolai Vasilyevich - from 06/02/1943 to June 1946, and from January 1947 to May 1950; lieutenant general art. Rojanovich Pyotr Mikhailovich - from June 1946 to January 1947; major general art. Sanko Ivan Fedoseevich - from May 1950 to October 1953.

5th Artillery Corps (military unit 29954) after the war was in China (Port Arthur), where in March 1947 he was disbanded. He had 2 artillery divisions: the 6th Guards (Jinzhou) and the 8th Guards Cannon (Port Arthur). Commander: major general, from 09/08/1945 lieutenant general art. Alekseev Leonid Nikolaevich - from 04/06/1945 to March 1947.

6th Artillery Order of Kutuzov Corps (military unit 02139) remained in Germany after the war, where in 1946 he was disbanded. He had 3 artillery divisions: the 32nd cannon and the 29th. Commander: major general, from 04/20/1945 lieutenant general art. Rojanovich Pyotr Mikhailovich - from 11/20/1944 to June 1946.

7th Artillery Lvov Red Banner Order of the Suvorov Corps (military unit 32015) after the war was in the TsGV, where he was disbanded in January 1947. He had 2 artillery divisions: the 9th Guards Cannon and the 17th. Commanders major general, from 11/16/1943 lieutenant general art. Korolkov Pavel Mikhailovich - from 05/08/1943 to 11/14/1945; lieutenant general art. Kozhukhov Leonid Iustinovich - from 11/15/1945 to January 1947.

8th Artillery Corps after the war he was in the SGV, from where he was transferred to Transcaucasia in April 1946 and disbanded in November 1953. It consists of 2 artillery divisions: 4th and 10th Guards Cannon Commanders: Major General art. Pyadusov Ivan Mironovich - from 07/19/1944 to November 1946; major general art. Gusarov Nikolai Alekseevich - from April 1949 to October 1952, major general art. Krasnokutsky Daniil Mikhailovich - from October 1952 to 11/05/1953.

9th Artillery Corps (military unit 46116) after the war was in the South-GV, from where in February 1946 he was transferred to the Lvov district (the village of Zimna Voda), and in June 1946 his department was moved to the Moscow Military District, where in 1953 he was disbanded. Until 1946, he included the 7th and 30th artillery divisions, and in the Moscow Military District other artillery divisions were already subordinate to him: the 7th Guards Cannon and the 12th. Commanders: Major General art. Pavlov Alexander Fedorovich - from 10/10/1944 to October 1946; lieutenant general art. Alekseev Leonid Nikolaevich - from March 1947 to June 1949.

10th Artillery Silesian Corps (military unit 46140) after the war was in the SGV and was disbanded on May 6, 1946. He had 2 artillery divisions: the 35th cannon and the 31st. Commanders: major general art., from 11/18/1944 lieutenant general art. Kozhukhov Leonid Iustinovich - from 09/20/1944 to 11/14/1945; lieutenant general art. Korolkov Pavel Mikhailovich - until 05/06/1946.

Up until 1990, corps directorates were not created, until a directorate 66th Artillery Corps(v. Novye Belokorovichi). The 26th and 81st artillery divisions were subordinated to him, as well as a number of separate units - the 188th heavy howitzer artillery brigade, the 980th anti-tank and 440th reconnaissance artillery regiments and some others, including the 1596th property storage base (artillery) - it is the 72nd artillery division of the frame until 01.12.1987, then until 1989 the 701st TUTs.

II. Artillery and anti-aircraft artillery divisions

By May 1945, the Ground Forces had 110 directorates of artillery divisions.

- 37 artillery divisions - breakthrough and cannon (from the 1st to the 6th guards, from the 1st to the 31st);

- 7 guards mortar artillery divisions (from the 1st to the 7th);

- 66 anti-aircraft artillery divisions (from the 2nd to the 6th guards, from the 2nd to the 7th, from the 9th to the 14th, from the 17th to the 49th, from the 64th to the 67th yu, from 69th to 74th and 76th).

But already in the summer of 1945, the formation of new divisions began, and in the fall of 1945, the 8th cannon division was transformed into the 7th guards division. By the beginning of 1946, directorates of 10 new cannon artillery divisions were created (8th, 9th, 10th Guards and 32nd, 33rd, 34th, 35th, 36th, 37th , 38th), most of them included in the artillery corps. At the same time, all these divisional directorates were formed again, uniting, as a rule, 3 already existing cannon artillery brigades. There were more brigades in each of the artillery divisions of the breakthrough - 6: cannon, 3 howitzer (including 1 heavy and 1 high power - sometimes it was called heavy destruction), 2 mortar (heavy and guards jet). Compared to the war years, each of the divisions lost its mortar and light artillery brigades - the mortar brigades, as a rule, were disbanded (its regiments were transferred to the divisional artillery brigades being formed), and the light brigades were reorganized into heavy mortar or heavy howitzer brigades (however, like a number of cannon ), for example:

- The 3rd Guards Light Artillery Kiev-Bakhmachev Order of Suvorov and Kutuzov Brigade (military unit 25616) of the 1st Guards Artillery Division was reorganized into the 3rd Guards Heavy Howitzer Artillery Brigade;

- The 4th Guards Light Artillery Sevastopol Red Banner Brigade (military unit 25756) of the 2nd Guards Artillery Division on 08/05/1945 was reorganized into the 42nd Guards Heavy Mortar Brigade;

- The 11th light artillery Svirskaya orders of Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky brigade (military unit 24772) of the 7th artillery division was reorganized into the 11th heavy howitzer artillery brigade;

- The 21st Light Artillery Red Banner Orders of Kutuzov and Alexander Nevsky Brigade (military unit 40375) of the 6th Artillery Division was reorganized into the 65th Heavy Mortar Brigade;

- The 33rd Guards Light Artillery Sevastopol Order of Lenin and Kutuzov Brigade (military unit 66867) of the 10th Artillery Division was reorganized into the 43rd Guards Heavy Mortar Brigade;

- The 37th light artillery Proskurov order of the Suvorov brigade (military unit 32051) of the 17th artillery division was reorganized into the 63rd heavy mortar brigade, etc.

But already from the middle of 1946, the disbandment and reduction of these divisions began, the apotheosis of which was the end of the 1950s, when many of the surviving artillery divisions, brigades and regiments went under the knife to create missile units. As a result of all these reductions by the beginning of the 1950s. The following artillery divisions were disbanded:

- 1st Pomeranian, military unit 38276 - disbanded in June 1946 in Poland;

- 2nd Ostrovskaya Red Banner, military unit 26094 - in January 1946, it was disbanded in the GSOVG;

- 3rd Zhytomyr Order of Lenin Red Banner Order of Suvorov, military unit 30743 - from the Central Guard Command in November 1945 was withdrawn to the Carpathians (Zhmerinka), and in July 1946 transferred to Turkestan, where a year later it was disbanded;

- 3rd Guards Vitebsk-Khingan Red Banner Order of Suvorov and Kutuzov, military unit 31740 - until June 1947 was based in Korea (Pyongyang), then it was withdrawn to Primorye and disbanded in the spring of 1948;

- 4th Berlin Order of Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky, military unit 70976 - in the spring of 1946, it was withdrawn from the TsGV in Transcaucasia as part of the 8th artillery corps and disbanded in November 1953;

- 5th Kalinkovichskaya Red Banner, military unit 68541 - was part of the 4th artillery corps of the GSOVG and in May 1947 was disbanded in Chemnitz;

- 5th Guards Stalingrad Red Banner Order of Suvorov, military unit 25750 - from Romania (Sibiu) in March 1946 was withdrawn to Fastov (KVO), where it was disbanded in 1952;

- 6th Guards Riga-Khingan, military unit 24202 - disbanded in July 1955 as part of the 39th combined arms army in Jinzhou (Port Arthur region, China);

- 8th Guards Cannon Red Banner Order of Suvorov - created in October 1945 in Port Arthur on the basis of the 29th Guards Cannon Artillery Brigade, and in the summer of 1946 it was reorganized into the 26th Guards Machine Gun Artillery Brigade;

- 9th Zaporizhzhya Red Banner Order of Suvorov, military unit 35715 - in February 1946, disbanded in the Southern Group of Forces;

- 9th Guards Cannon, military unit 78251 - was created in October 1945 in the Central Group of Military Forces from army cannon brigades (34th and 40th Guards, 127th and 159th), withdrawn from the disbanded combined arms armies ( 3rd Guards, 6th, 21st and 59th), in the spring of 1946 it was withdrawn to Zolochev (PrikVO), where it was disbanded in 1952;

- 11th (since September 1945 cannon) Kirovograd Red Banner Orders of Suvorov, Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky, military unit 25720 - disbanded in February 1946 in the South-GV;

- 13th Kyiv Red Banner Order of Kutuzov, military unit 89501 - disbanded in June 1946 in Belarus;

- 14th Berlin Red Banner, military unit 32126 - in March 1946, it was withdrawn from the GSOVG to Velikie Luki and disbanded in the summer of the same year;

- 15th Leningrad Red Banner Order of Suvorov, military unit 07135 - disbanded in July 1946 in Poland;

- 17th Kiev-Zhytomyr Order of Lenin Red Banner Order of Suvorov, military unit 26175 - originally part of the 7th Artillery Corps of the Central Group of Armed Forces in Austria, in July 1946 transferred to the Crimea (Simferopol) and disbanded in May 1947;

- 18th Gatchina Red Banner Order of Suvorov, military unit 07876 - disbanded in June 1946 in the GSOVG;

- 19th Vienna Order of Kutuzov, military unit 38278 - originally part of the Central Command Forces in Austria, in the fall of 1945 transferred to the 2nd Artillery Corps in Bulgaria, from where it was withdrawn to the North Caucasus and disbanded on 06/30/1946;

- 20th Orsha, military unit 43711 - in October 1945 in the PribVO it was reorganized into a cannon (which was part of the 1st artillery corps), which was disbanded in August 1946;

- 21st Dukhovshchinskaya Red Banner, military unit 43683 - was part of the 1st artillery corps of the PribVO and was disbanded in July 1946;

- 22nd Gomel Red Banner Orders of Suvorov, Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky, military unit pp 26055 - disbanded in July 1946 in the GSOVG;

- 23rd Krasnoselskaya Red Banner, military unit 34077 - disbanded in July 1946 in the Baltic states;

- 24th Order of Suvorov, military unit 70964 - disbanded in May 1946 in the village. Sudova Cherry Chernivtsi region (PrikVO);

- 25th Berlin Order of Bohdan Khmelnitsky, military unit 43728 - from July 1945 was part of the 7th Guards. OA in Hungary (stationed near Lake Balaton), in March 1946 it was withdrawn to the KVO (Fastov) and disbanded on May 6;

- 28th, military unit 38284 - disbanded in November 1945 in the Baltic States;

- 29th Red Banner, military unit 38279 - disbanded in June 1946 in the GSOVG;

- 30th Vienna, military unit 70959 - disbanded in the spring of 1951 in the PrikVO;

- 31st Dresden Order of Suvorov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky, military unit 38281 - disbanded in November 1946 in the SGV;

- 32nd cannon, military unit 78254 - created in September 1945 from army cannon brigades (38th guards, 62nd, 142nd, 143rd), withdrawn from the combined arms armies disbanded in Germany (33 -th, 49th, 61st and 69th) - disbanded in the summer of 1947 in the GSOVG;

- 33rd cannon military unit 98960, Dalniy, 39th OA PrimVO - created in October 1945 from the army cannon artillery brigades of the former 1st Far Eastern Front (214th, 224th, 225th, 226th) - disbanded in the spring of 1947 in China;

- 35th cannon, military unit 78259 - created in September 1945 from army cannon brigades (24th guards, 33rd, 146th, 204th), withdrawn from the combined arms armies disbanded in Poland (1 -th Guards, 18th, 19th and 60th) - disbanded in August 1946 in the Baltic States;

- 36th cannon, military unit 78258 - created in September 1945 from army cannon brigades (137th, 138th, 151st and 161st), withdrawn from the combined arms armies disbanded in the Baltic States (1- th and 4th Shock, 8th and 51st) - disbanded on 11/11/1945;

- 37th cannon, military unit 78261 - created in Belarus in August 1945 from army cannon brigades (44th, 68th, 14+th, 150th), withdrawn from the disbanded combined arms armies (2- th Guards, 3rd, 48th and 50th) and disbanded in July 1946.

The brigades that make up these divisions were also overwhelmingly disbanded, but some survived, albeit in a slightly modified state: for example, the brigades of the 3rd artillery division were sent to form artillery regiments of rifle divisions of the Turkestan military district:

- 25th Guards Howitzer Artillery Brigade - reorganized into the 1072nd Guards Howitzer Artillery Regiment of the 344th Infantry Division;

- 1st howitzer artillery brigade - reorganized into the 1061st howitzer artillery regiment of the 357th rifle division;

- 116th heavy howitzer artillery brigade - reorganized into the 1074th howitzer artillery regiment of the 201st rifle division.

In addition, in August - September 1945, all 7 departments of mortar divisions were disbanded:

- 1st Guards Krasnoselskaya Red Banner, military unit 02316;

- 2nd Guards Gorodok Red Banner Order of Alexander Nevsky, military unit 07381;

- 3rd Guards Kyiv Red Banner Orders of Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky, military unit 93311;

- 4th Guards Sivash Order of Alexander Nevsky, military unit 93331;

- 5th Guards Kalinkovichskaya Red Banner Order of Suvorov, military unit 49586;

- 6th Guards Bratislava, military unit 11884;

- 7th Guards Kovno Red Banner Orders of Suvorov and Kutuzov, military unit 32083.

As a result of all cuts by the second half of the 1950s. in Soviet army only 14 divisions survived:

- 1st Guards Glukhovskaya Order of Lenin Red Banner Orders of Suvorov, Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky, military unit 25736, Nesterov, PrikVO - arrived in the spring of 1946 from the TsGV;

- 2nd Guards Perekop Red Banner Order of Suvorov, military unit 25780, Pushkin, LVO;

- 4th Guards Cannon Smolensk Order of Suvorov and Kutuzov, Vilnius, PribVO;

- 6th Mozyr Order of Lenin of the Red Banner, military unit 08718, GSVG;

- 7th Guards (former 8th) cannon Vitebsk Red Banner, military unit 24377, Vladimir, Moscow Military District;

- 7th Zaporozhye Red Banner Order of Suvorov and Kutuzov, military unit 22120, Berezino, OdVO - in 1947 transferred to Gaisin, PrikVO;

- 10th Guards Cannon, military unit 78252, Telavi, ZakVO - created in October 1945 in the South of the Army from army cannon brigades (45th and 46th Guards, 160th and 205th), withdrawn from the composition combined arms armies, and in April 1946 transferred to Transcaucasia;

- 10th Gumbinnen Order of Suvorov, military unit 03273, Starye Dorogi settlement, BVO;

- 12th Red Banner Order of Suvorov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky, military unit 39938, Kalinin, Moscow Military District;

- 16th Kirovograd Red Banner Order of Suvorov, military unit 55341, Zaporozhye, OdVO;

- 26th Sivash-Stettin twice Red Banner Order of Suvorov, military unit 43160, Kovel, PrikVO - arrived in the spring of 1946 from Poland;

- 27th (since November 1945 cannon) Rezhitskaya Order of Suvorov, military unit 26102, Luga, LVO;

- 34th cannon, military unit 78253, Potsdam, GSVG - created in September 1945 from army cannon and corps artillery brigades (30th, 38th guards and 148th cannon, 4th corps);

- 38th cannon, military unit 98961, Razdolnoye village, Far East Military District - created in October 1945 from army cannon artillery and howitzer brigades of the former 1st Far Eastern Front (235th, 236th, 237th, 238 th).

However, since the mid-1950s. new artillery divisions began to be created - so in 1956 the 81st, and in 1957 - the 15th guards division was created.

Approximately the same situation developed with anti-aircraft artillery formations and units: by the end of the 1950s. not a single anti-aircraft artillery division remained - all of them were gradually either disbanded or reorganized into anti-aircraft artillery (anti-aircraft missile) brigades (regiments), and a number of them became part of the Air Defense Forces. For the period up to the end of the 1950s. the following anti-aircraft artillery divisions ceased to exist (i.e. were disbanded without reorganization into other formations or units): 2nd Sivash Order of Kutuzov (military unit 44090), 3rd Kiev-Nikopol Order of Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky (military unit h 35608), 4th Lower Dniester Order of Bohdan Khmelnitsky (military unit 22004), 5th Guards Simferopol Order of Bogdan Khmelnitsky and the Red Star (military unit 44790), 5th Bratislava Red Banner Order of Kutuzov (military unit 74109), 6th Korsun Red Banner Order of Suvorov (military unit 32167), 7th Pushkinskaya Red Banner Order (military unit 09445), 9th Budapest Order of Bohdan Khmelnitsky (military unit 20106), 10th Oder Red Banner Order of Kutuzov (military unit h 51016), 11th Yasskaya Order of Alexander Nevsky (military unit 77171), 12th Brest Order of Kutuzov (military unit 51181), 14th Riga (military unit 06437), 18th Simferopol Red Banner Order of Kutuzov, Bogdan Khmelnitsky and Alexander Nevsky (military unit 07400), 19th Crimean Order of Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky (military unit 26750 ), 20th Nemanskaya (military unit 05219), 21st Kiev Order of Kutuzov (military unit 36968), 24th Warsaw-Sedletskaya Red Banner Order of Kutuzov and Alexander Nevsky (military unit 32070), 25th Carpathian Order Bogdan Khmelnitsky (military unit 07180), 26th Bratislava Red Banner Order (military unit 17986), 27th Yasskaya Red Banner Order of Suvorov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky (military unit 59847), 28th Volkovysk Red Banner Order of Kutuzov (military unit 28334 ), 29th May Day Red Banner Orders of Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky (military unit 17860), 30th Khinganskaya (military unit 36247), 34th Neman Order of Kutuzov (military unit 03734), 35th Lower Dniester (military unit 03734), h 04071), 36th (military unit 18668), 37th Lviv Order of Bogdan Khmelnitsky (military unit 16168), 38th Cherkasy Red Banner Order of Kutuzov (military unit 15993), 39th Order of Kutuzov (military unit h 04194), 40th Pechenga Red Banner (military unit 45575), 41st Riga (military unit 37400), 43rd Order of Bogdan Khmelnitsky (military unit 58076), 44th Order of Kutuzov (military unit 08866 ), 45th Riga Order of Kutuzov (military unit 77636), 46th Order of Kutuzov (military unit 37231), 49th Smolensk Red Banner Order of Suvorov (military unit 05368), 64th Prague-Brandenburg Red Banner Order (military unit 51848), 65th Pomeranian Order of Kutuzov and Alexander Nevsky (military unit 51948), 67th Koenigsberg (military unit 92006), 70th (military unit 41574), 71st Berlin Order of Kutuzov (military unit 41749), 72nd (military unit 09553), 73rd (military unit 09599) , 74th Order of Bohdan Khmelnitsky (military unit 10905), 76th Perekopskaya (military unit 38152).

The following anti-aircraft artillery divisions survived by the end of the 1950s, although they were modified:

- 2nd Guards Baranovichi Order of Lenin Red Banner Order of Alexander Nevsky (military unit 19250) - stationed in the GSVG (Rehagen), where on 03/20/1958 it was folded into the 109th brigade;

- 3rd Guards Rechitsko-Brandenburg Red Banner Orders of Suvorov and Kutuzov (military unit 03547) - stationed in the GSVG (Magdeburg, 3rd Combined Arms Army), where on March 20, 1958 it was turned into the 134th Army Brigade, which in 1961 was withdrawn to the LVO and reorganized into the 196th Guards Anti-Aircraft Missile Regiment, later deployed into the 204th Guards Anti-Aircraft Missile Brigade of the country's Air Defense Forces;

- 4th Guards Kiev-Lodz Red Banner Orders of Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky (military unit 51106) - stationed in the GSVG (Koenigsbrück, 1st Guards Tank Army), where on March 20, 1958 it was turned into the 135th Army Brigade, which in 1961 was withdrawn to the LVO and reorganized into the 169th Guards Anti-Aircraft Missile Regiment, deployed on February 22, 1980 into the 86th Guards Anti-Aircraft Missile Brigade of the country's Air Defense Forces;

- 6th Guards Lviv-Berlin Order of Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky (military unit 92092) - stationed in the GSVG (Chemnitz, 20th Guards Combined Arms Army), where on 03/20/1958 it was reorganized into the 138th Army Brigade (in / h 50547), which after 2 years was withdrawn to the territory of the country (Tatishchevo, Saratov region) and disbanded on 08/01/1960 - 12/21/1961. 41st Guards Rocket Division);

- 13th Rogachevskaya Red Banner (military unit 55316) - until 1958 it was stationed in the GSVG (Weimar, 8th Guards Combined Arms Army), where on 03/20/1958 it was folded into the 136th army brigade, which in 1961 . was withdrawn to the TurkVO and reorganized into the 2nd anti-aircraft missile regiment, in 1975 deployed into the 132nd anti-aircraft missile brigade of the country's air defense forces;

- 17th Shavlinskaya Order of Kutuzov (military unit 36411) - in 1946 it was folded into the 452nd brigade, which on 05/17/1951 was again deployed to the 17th division, and on 08/30/1960 it was reorganized into the 209th anti-aircraft missile regiment - in 1971 it was deployed to the 8th anti-aircraft missile air defense brigade of the Ground Forces (5th combined arms army of the Far Eastern Military District);

- 22nd Zaporozhye Orders of Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky (military unit 36836) - after the war it was part of the Southern Group of Forces, where in 1946 it was folded into the 449th brigade (from November 1955 - 98th) of the Special Mechanized Army , which was reorganized on August 22, 1956, deployed into the 86th division, and on July 30, 1960 - into the 108th anti-aircraft missile air defense brigade of the Ground Forces as part of the 1st Separate Army;

- 23rd (from 09.09.1955 - 97th) Ternopil-Berlin Orders of Bohdan Khmelnitsky and the Red Star (military unit 43793) - after the war it was part of the Central State Military Command (Korneuburg, Austria), in September 1955 it was withdrawn in PrikVO (Shepetovka), and on 08/30/1960 it was directed to the formation of the 206th missile brigade of the Strategic Missile Forces (hereinafter - the 52nd missile division);

- 31st Warsaw Red Banner Order of Bohdan Khmelnitsky (military unit 26047) - until 1958 it was stationed in the GSVG (Schönvalde, 2nd Guards Tank Army), where on 03/20/1958 it was folded into the 137th army brigade, which in 1962 it was withdrawn to the PribVO and later reorganized into the 169th anti-aircraft missile brigade of the country's air defense forces:

- 32nd Gatchina Red Banner (military unit 17871) - stationed in the GSVG (Frankfurt an der Oder), where on 03/20/1958 it was folded into the 139th army brigade, which was disbanded in 1961;

- 33rd Vitebsk Order of Alexander Nevsky (military unit 44007) - in 1946 it was folded into the 448th brigade of the 1st combined arms Red Banner Army, which was disbanded in 1953 along with the army;

- 42nd Order of Kutuzov (military unit 20159) - in 1946 it was folded into the 43rd brigade, which was transferred to the Air Defense Forces and reorganized into the 42nd Air Defense Division;

- 47th Verkhnedneprovskaya Order of Bogdan Khmelnitsky (military unit 48849) - in 1946 it was folded into the 210th brigade of the SGV, which on 11/25/1955 was again deployed to the 47th division, 07/01/1960 disbanded;

- 48th Orsha Order of Kutuzov (military unit 08374) - in 1959 in the Far Eastern Military District it was reorganized into an anti-aircraft artillery regiment, which was later deployed into the 180th anti-aircraft missile air defense brigade of the Ground Forces;

- 66th Borisovskaya Order of Kutuzov (military unit 51964) - in 1958 in the SGV it was reorganized into the 189th anti-aircraft artillery regiment, which was later deployed into the 140th anti-aircraft missile air defense brigade of the Ground Forces;

- 69th Dresden Order of Bogdan Khmelnitsky (military unit 92079) - in TurkVO it was reorganized into the 229th anti-aircraft artillery brigade, later - the 2nd anti-aircraft missile air defense brigade of the Ground Forces.

In addition, in the fall of 1945, the 101st, 102nd and 103rd anti-aircraft artillery divisions were created in Transbaikalia and the Amur region - they were formed both on the basis of existing units and newly created ones. For example, the 103rd division was formed on 10/04/1945 as part of the 6th Guards Tank Army from the 1588th and 1718th regiments, which are part of the 1st Combined Arms Red Banner Army, and the newly created 2548th and 2549th th regiment - 04/02/1948, it was folded into the 429th (since 1955 - 92nd) army brigade, which in the period 08/22/1956 - 04/01/1957 was again reorganized into the 103rd division. But the 102nd division of the 17th army was disbanded in the summer of 1946.

The massive post-war disbandment of anti-aircraft artillery units led to the fact that from the end of the 1940s. I had to recreate them. So, for example, anti-aircraft artillery divisions appeared:

- 44th - formed on 05/07/1956 in the GSVG, on 03/20/1958 it was folded into the 142nd brigade, which was later reorganized into an anti-aircraft missile regiment, and then into the 18th air defense brigade of the Ground Forces;

- 57th - formed on March 29, 1949 in the BVO, on March 15, 1958 it was folded into the 111th army brigade;

- 62nd - formed on 01/25/1949 in the GSVG, 04/15/1958 was disbanded;

- 63rd - formed on 04/23/1949 in the GSVG, on 03/15/1958 it was folded into the 156th army brigade.

The creation of the Strategic Missile Forces at the end of 1959 led to new reductions in artillery formations, but now they were not indiscriminately disbanded, but were mainly directed to the creation of Strategic Missile Forces formations. So, for example, with the use of artillery divisions and brigades, 8 missile brigades were formed, which were then reorganized into divisions:

- The 7th Guards Rocket Rezhitskaya Division - also known as the 7th Brigade (military unit 14245) - was created on the basis of the 19th Guards Cannon Artillery Brigade of the 2nd Guards Artillery Division;

- The 10th Guards Missile Order of the Suvorov Division - also known as the 165th Brigade (military unit 34029) - was created on the basis of the 26th Guards Cannon Artillery Brigade of the 7th Guards Cannon Artillery Division;

- 14th Rocket Kiev-Zhytomyr Order of Kutuzov - aka 201st Brigade (military unit 34096) - created on the basis of the 234th Artillery Brigade and the 222nd Corps Artillery Regiment;

- The 18th Guards Rocket Smolensk Order of Suvorov and Kutuzov Division - it is also the 205th Brigade (military unit 54084) - was created on the basis of the 4th Guards Cannon Artillery Division;

- 19th Missile Zaporozhye Red Banner Order of Suvorov and Kutuzov (military unit 33874) - former 7th Artillery Division;

- 28th Guards Rocket Red Banner Division - also known as the 198th Brigade (military unit 54055) - the former 28th Guards Cannon Artillery Brigade of the 7th Guards Cannon Artillery Division;

- 32nd rocket Kherson Red Banner - it is also the 12th rocket brigade (military unit 14153) - the former 154th heavy howitzer artillery brigade of the 10th artillery division;

- 33rd Guards Rocket Svirskaya Red Banner Orders of Suvorov, Kutuzov and Alexander Nevsky - it is also the 15th Rocket Brigade (military unit 14225) - the former 7th Guards Mortar Brigade (reactive);

- The 35th Missile Red Banner Order of Suvorov and Kutuzov - it is also the 46th Missile Brigade (military unit 52929) - was created on the basis of parts of the 6th Artillery Division withdrawn from the GSVG, and the division received regalia from the 65th Heavy Mortar Brigade ( into the war - the 21st light artillery) of this division;

- 37th Guards Rocket Sevastopol Order of Lenin, Red Banner - also known as the 22nd Rocket Brigade (military unit 43195) - the former 43rd Guards Heavy Mortar Brigade (during the war - the 33rd Guards Light Artillery) of the 10th Artillery Division ;

- 39th missile Svirskaya orders of Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky - it is also the 212th missile brigade (military unit 34148) - the former 11th heavy howitzer artillery brigade (during the war - 11th light) of the 7th artillery division; On 10/17/1961, the divisions were transferred the regalia of the disbanded 1st Guards Artillery Division - Guards Glukhovskaya Order of Lenin Red Banner Orders of Suvorov, Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky;

- 40th Missile Krasnoselskaya Red Banner Order of Suvorov - she is also the 8th Missile Brigade (military unit 14297) - the former 51st Cannon Artillery Brigade;

- The 41st Guards Missile Lviv-Berlin Order of Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky Division - it is also the 216th Missile Brigade (military unit 34159) - was created on the basis of the 138th Guards Anti-Aircraft Artillery Brigade (during the war - the 6th guards division) and the 10th Guards Cannon Artillery Division;

- The 42nd missile division - it is also the 202nd missile brigade (military unit 34103) - was created on the basis of the 316th heavy howitzer artillery brigade of the 7th artillery division;

- 52nd Missile Ternopil-Berlin Order of Bohdan Khmelnitsky and the Red Star Division - it is also the 206th Missile Brigade (military unit 54090) - the former 97th (23rd) Anti-Aircraft Artillery Division;

- 53rd Missile Brest Order of Suvorov - it is also the 97th Missile Brigade (military unit 33938) - the former 3rd Corps Artillery Brigade;

- The 54th Guards Missile Order of Kutuzov Division - it is also the 197th Missile Brigade (military unit 34048) - the former 27th Guards Cannon Artillery Brigade of the 7th Guards Cannon Artillery Division.

In addition to divisions and brigades, many missile regiments of the Strategic Missile Forces were created on the basis of artillery units, but this is beyond the scope of this publication.

In the 1960s-1980s. new divisions were created (including anti-aircraft missile and artillery personnel), so by the end of the 1980s. the Ground Forces had more than two dozen artillery divisions, but only a few of them were deployed and relatively completed, namely:

2nd Guards Artillery Perekop Red Banner Order of the Suvorov Division preserved in the LVO (Pushkin), where she arrived after the war from the Baltic states. The composition of its brigades after the war underwent some changes, and their numbering also changed - in 1946 it included 5 brigades: the 4th light guards remaining in its composition since the war (which became the 42nd heavy mortar guards), 5- I howitzer and 6th heavy howitzer, 19th cannon, as well as transferred from the 28th artillery division 165th howitzer of high power and 39th guards mortar. By the beginning of the 1960s. all these brigades were either disbanded or reduced to regimental level. However, in the 1970s and 1980s some of its regiments were again deployed into brigades ( see ch. 16).

12th Prague Artillery Red Banner Order of the Suvorov Division was created in the Moscow Military District (Kalinin) in December 1974 on the basis of the 104th howitzer artillery brigade during the war (then part of the 12th artillery division) and in 1982 transferred to Transbaikalia ( see ch. thirty).

15th Guards Artillery Neman Red Banner Orders of Suvorov and Kutuzov Division retained the number of the guards army cannon artillery brigade during the war, which she completed as part of the 5th combined arms army in Primorye. was created on 05/17/1957 and was stationed in Ussuriysk for the entire post-war period - first as an army brigade and division, and then as a district artillery division - from the end of the 1950s. abbreviated composition ( see ch. 31).

20th training artillery division It was created on 06/12/1975 in the Moscow Military District (the village of Mulino, Gorky Region) on the basis of the 41st artillery brigade, which was left over from the 12th division that had departed in Transbaikalia. And on September 12, 1987, it was reorganized into the 468th District Training Center training of junior artillery specialists ( see ch. 22).

26th Artillery Sivash-Stettin twice Red Banner Order of the Suvorov Division preserved in PrikVO (Sarny, where it was withdrawn from Poland in 1946, since 1956 - to Kovel, then to Ternopil) since the war with the same number, but in an increased composition, and its units changed numbering. In the period from 07/02/1949 to 04/19/1956 it was called the 305th cannon artillery brigade. Subordinated to the 66th Artillery Corps and in 1992 withdrew to Ukraine ( see ch. 19).

34th Artillery Division was created in the GSOVG in the fall of 1945 as part of the 4th artillery corps from separate artillery brigades and existed there all the post-war period. Upon withdrawal in September 1994, it was placed in the Moscow Military District (p. Mulino) in place of the disbanded 20th training division ( see ch. 12).

51st Guards Artillery Orsha Red Banner Order of Alexander Nevsky Division - its history, thanks to the popularization by the official information bodies of the Republic of Belarus, is quite well known, and it can be cited as an example of various transformations of artillery units in the post-war period:

- 09/12/1949 on the basis of the directive of the Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the USSR No. 1 / 120227 of 07/02/1949 in Grodno, on the basis of the 83rd Guards Artillery Regiment, the 347th Guards Corps Artillery Orsha Red Banner Order of Alexander Nevsky Brigade was formed;

- 05/25/1955 on the basis of the directive of the Chief of the General Staff No. 1 / 463177 of 03/04/1955, the 347th brigade was renamed the 39th guards corps artillery brigade;

- 12/01/1955 on the basis of the directive of the Commander-in-Chief SV No. 1 / 1364207ss dated 09/01/1955, the 39th brigade was reorganized into the 1127th Guards Corps Artillery Regiment;

- 07/01/1956 on the basis of the directive of the Commander-in-Chief SV No. 1 / 290044 dated 04/19/1956, the 1127th regiment was reorganized into the 121st Guards Cannon Artillery Brigade (deployment - Baranovichi);

- 07/01/1960, in accordance with the directive of the commander of the BVO troops No. 03/00711 dated 05/13/1960, the 121st gun brigade was reorganized into an artillery brigade and redeployed to Osipovichi;

- 08/25/1972, on the basis of the directive of the commander of the troops of the BVO No. 03/00990, the 121st brigade was reorganized into the 51st guards artillery division (reduced composition), which in July 1984 was awarded the combat banner ( see ch. eighteen).

55th Artillery Budapest Red Banner Orders of Bogdan Khmelnitsky and Alexander Nevsky Division was created from the 52nd howitzer brigade (military unit 07861), which during the war years was part of the 16th artillery division. This division, at the end of hostilities, was withdrawn to Zaporozhye, where it was reduced to the size of a brigade. In the late 1960s this brigade again received the status of a division, but with a different number. In 1991, withdrew to Ukraine ( see ch. twenty).

81st Artillery Division was a post-war formation created on 06/16/1956 as a reduced division. Stationed in Transcarpathia (Vinogradov), since 1990, subordinate to the 66th Artillery Corps ( see ch. 19).

110th Guards Artillery Kuban Red Banner Division . After the war, in the spring of 1946, the 32nd Guards Howitzer Artillery Kuban Red Banner High Power Brigade arrived in the North Caucasus as part of the 19th breakthrough artillery division, 20 years later deployed into a division - stationed in Buynaksk ( see ch. 25);

149th Artillery Neman Red Banner Orders of Suvorov, Kutuzov and Alexander Nevsky Division traces its history from the 149th Cannon Artillery Brigade, which during the years and after the war was part of the 11th Guards Army, was constantly stationed in Kaliningrad, changing its status to a division ( see ch. 17).

III. Brigades of Missile Forces and Artillery, Air Defense of the Ground Forces

Since the summer of 1945, the mass formation of new corps, divisional and anti-aircraft artillery brigades began, as well as the reorganization (disbandment) of light, anti-tank and mortar brigades, and the regiments of the disbanded brigades were reorganized and included, as a rule, in the corps and divisional brigades, as well as mechanized and tank divisions. For example:

- The 24th Guards Army Heavy Cannon Artillery Kyiv Red Banner Order of the Suvorov Brigade (military unit 24941) was reorganized into the 24th Guards Corps Artillery Brigade (without an honorary name and awards) of the 48th Rifle Corps of the 52nd Army of the PrikVO. At the same time, the divisions of the brigade were reorganized into the 443rd Guards Cannon Kyiv Red Banner Order of the Suvorov Artillery Regiment, and it additionally included the 16th Guards Howitzer Mogilev Artillery Regiment (military unit 41110) and the 62nd Guards Mortar-Artillery Zaporozhye Red Banner Orders of Kutuzov and Alexander Nevsky (military unit 03565);

- The 35th Guards mortar Rechitsa-Brandenburg Red Banner Order of Bohdan Khmelnitsky (military unit 43684) was reorganized into the 75th Guards Corps Artillery Brigade (without regalia) of the 26th Guards Rifle Corps of the 5th Shock Army of the GSOVG. At the same time, all regiments of the 35th brigade were reorganized into one 439th guards cannon Rechitsko-Brandenburg Red Banner Order of Bogdan Khmelnitsky artillery regiment.

But there were not enough brigades’ directorates, as well as regiments for new corps brigades, so a number of brigades were formed as a symbiosis of pre-existing and newly created units, for example:

- The 339th corps artillery brigade (military unit 54089) of the 78th rifle corps of the PrikVO was created by incorporating the newly created 766th cannon artillery regiment, as well as the 81st howitzer Novorossiysk Red Banner Orders of Suvorov, Kutuzov and Alexander, who went through the crucible of war Nevsky Artillery Regiment (military unit 39499) and the 89th Guards Mortar-Artillery Verkhnedneprovsky Red Banner Orders of Bogdan Khmelnitsky and Alexander Nevsky Regiment (military unit 56810);

- The 637th corps artillery brigade (military unit 74317) of the 56th rifle corps of the Far Eastern Military District was formed with the inclusion of the 52nd cannon (military unit 19936) and the 433rd howitzer Sakhalin (military unit 29236) artillery regiments, as well as the 310th Guards mortar and artillery Bezhitsky Red Banner Regiment (military unit 16409), which went through both wars.

In the late 1940s new army anti-aircraft artillery brigades appeared:

- 110th (military unit 96869) - created on 12/01/1948 as part of the 5th Guards Mechanized Army of the BVO, 11/11/1955 deployed to the 56th division, which on 07/02/1960 was turned into the 160th anti-aircraft missile regiment, in 1972 reorganized into the 147th anti-aircraft missile air defense brigade of the Ground Forces;

- 111th (military unit 96872) - created on 03/29/1949 as part of the 28th combined arms army of the BVO, on 11/11/1955 the 57th division was deployed, which on 07/02/1960 was folded into the 472nd anti-aircraft missile regiment, 01/31/1963, which departed to the 3rd combined arms army of the GSVG, where it was reorganized on 08/01/1974 into the 202nd anti-aircraft missile air defense brigade of the Ground Forces;

- 114th (military unit 96873) - created on 03/29/1949 as part of the 13th combined arms army of the PrikVO, 11/11/1955 deployed to the 59th division, which was disbanded on 08/15/1960;

- 120th (military unit 96875) - created on 03/29/1949 as part of the 38th combined arms army of the PrikVO, on 11/11/1955 it was deployed to the 61st division, which was disbanded on 06/09/1960.

In the same period, a number of the same brigades were created - the 57th, 64th, 65th, 70th, 92nd, 94th, 97th, etc. Almost all of them were disbanded before the end of the 1950s. - while some of them were previously deployed in the division:

- 57th Army Brigade - 11/04/1956 deployed to the 71st division, which was disbanded on 08/06/1960;

- 64th Army Brigade - 11/04/1955 deployed to the 40th division, which was disbanded on 04/09/1960;

- 70th Army Brigade - 09/20/1956 deployed to the 55th division, which was disbanded on 09/01/1960;

- 94th Army Brigade - 11/01/1955 deployed to the 104th division (from 11/12/1955 - 70th), which was disbanded on 09/01/1960;

- 97th Army Brigade - 11/14/1955 deployed to the 37th division, which was disbanded on 04/27/1958.

In table. 8.1.1, 8.1.2, 8.1.3 are only brigades with honorary titles and awards, information about which the authors have. Their deployments, as well as information about other brigades, are indicated in the respective groups of troops and districts.

Table 8.1.1

1. Artillery brigades in the 1980s

brigade In 1945-1960. Type of As part of Honorary titles and awards
161st 149 popes Cannon LVO, 6 OA Kirkenes Red Banner
162nd 4 cabar Cannon DVO, 35 OA Prague Red Banner Order of Suvorov
184th 1039 gap Howitzer OdVO Orders of Suvorov and Kutuzov
192nd 153 pabr Howitzer QUO Yasskaya Red Banner Orders of Bohdan Khmelnitsky and Alexander Nevsky
211th Guards. 35 Guards. pabr / 238 guards. dad Cannon CHF Sandomierz Order of Lenin Red Banner
227th 58 gabr Cannon SKVO Tallinn Red Banner Order of Suvorov
268th Guards. 6 Guards pabr / 458 guards. dad Cannon LVO, 2nd Guards hell Sevastopol Red Banner Orders of Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky
273rd 51 popes Cannon MVO Kirkenes Red Banner
286th Guards. 30 Guards pabr Howitzer GSVG, 34 hell Prague Red Banner Orders of Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky
287th Guards. 20 Guards pabr / 316 guards. tgap Howitzer LVO, 2nd Guards hell Sevastopol Red Banner Order of Kutuzov im. K.E. Voroshilov
288th 10 pabr/245 tgap Howitzer GSVG, 34 hell Warsaw Red Banner Order of Kutuzov
290th 198 pabr Cannon GSVG, 2nd Guards TA Warsaw-Lodz Red Banner Orders of Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky
291st 103 gabr BM Cannon SKVO Order of Suvorov
303rd 38 Guards. pabr Howitzer GSVG, 34 hell Kalinkovichskaya Twice Red Banner Orders of Suvorov and Kutuzov
305th 20 tap Howitzer DVO, 5 OA Gumbinenskaya (since February 22, 1968 - Order of the Red Star)
307th 2 minbr/17 tap Reactive GSVG, 34 hell Brandenburg Order of Kutuzov
308th 197 pabr Cannon GSVG, 1st Guards. TA Lodz Order of Suvorov and Kutuzov
337th Guards. 98 Guards. minp / 904 guards. reap Reactive PrikVO, 26 hell Kyiv Order of Lenin Red Banner Order of Bohdan Khmelnitsky I st. and Alexander Nevsky
338th Guards. 72 Guards. minp / 653 guards. reap Reactive DVO, 15th Guards. hell Dvinskaya Order of Alexander Nevsky
352nd 1 gabr Cannon TurkVO, 36 AK Starokonstantinovskaya Red Banner Order of Bogdan Khmelnitsky
353rd Guards. 55 Guards. gap Cannon TurkVO Mogilev Orders of Bogdan Khmelnitsky and Alexander Nevsky
380th Guards. 301 Guards minp Reactive LVO, 2nd Guards hell Krivoy Rog Red Banner Orders of Suvorov, Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky
387th Guards. 71 Guards. pabr / 113 guards. dad Cannon GSVG, 20th Guards. OA Kielce-Berlin Orders of Kutuzov, Bogdan Khmelnitsky, Alexander Nevsky and the Red Star
390th Guards. 43 Guards. pabr / 112 guards. dad Cannon GSVG, 8th Guards. OA Zaporozhye-Odessa Order of Lenin Red Banner Orders of Suvorov and Kutuzov

Appendices to Chapter 8 Appendix 8.1. Formations and units of the missile troops, artillery and air defense of the Ground Forces in 1945-1991.I. Artillery corpsAt the end of World War II, the Red Army had 10 breakthrough artillery corps directorates, but until the end of 1953 they all

From the author's book

Appendices to Chapter 9 Appendix 9.1. Formations and units of the Engineering Troops in 1945-1991. By the end of the war in engineering troops The Red Army had 3 main types of formations and units - brigades, regiments and separate battalions of various types. Immediately after the war, the Engineering Brigades

From the author's book

Appendices to Chapter 18 Appendix 18.1. The 5th Guards Tank Red Banner (since 1974) Army in 1945-1991 The army was created on February 22, 1943 as the 5th Guards Tank Army. Having passed the roads of war, the army completed the piles of the battle path in the north of Germany, from where it was

From the author's book

Appendices to Chapter 19 Appendix 19.1. The 8th Tank Red Banner (since 1974) Army in 1946-1991 The history of the army began on August 23, 1941, when the 52nd Separate Army was formed on the northwestern direction of the Soviet-German front. Having gone through the whole war, the army (already as combined arms)

From the author's book

Appendices to Chapter 20 Appendix 20.1. Special Mechanized Army - 1st Separate Combined Arms Army - 1st Guards Combined Arms Red Banner (since 1968) Army in 1947-1991. The history of the army goes back to June 1945, when the Southern Group of Forces was created (see. chapter 15),

From the author's book

Appendices to Chapter 21 Appendix 21.1. The 14th Guards (since 1967) Combined Arms Red Banner (since 1974) Army in 1956-1992. management

From the author's book

Appendices to Chapter 25 Appendix 25.1. The 12th Army Corps in 1945-1991. The corps was created on October 13, 1942 as the 12th Rifle Corps and was part of the Transcaucasian Front throughout the war, having by May 1945 in its composition the 296th and 406th Rifle divisions. In 1946, the corps administration was

From the author's book

Appendices to Chapter 26 Appendix 26.1. The 4th Combined Arms Red Banner (since 1974) Army in 1945-1992. The Army was formed on 07/18/1941 as the 34th Combined Arms as part of the Reserve Front. In November 1943, after completing fighting on the northwestern front, its administration was withdrawn to

From the author's book

Appendices to Chapter 27 Appendix 27.1. The limited contingent of Soviet troops in Afghanistan and the 40th combined arms army in 1979-1989 The limited contingent of Soviet troops in Afghanistan (OKSVA) is the name in 1979-1989. worn by the grouping of the Armed Forces of the USSR in the Republic

From the author's book

Appendices to Chapter 28 Appendix 28.1. 32nd Combined Arms Army (1st Army Corps) in the period 1945-1991 having gone through the whole war, he finished it as part of the 1st

From the author's book

Appendices to Chapter 30 Appendix 30.1. 44th Army Corps - 29th Combined Arms Army - 57th Army Corps in 1951-1991. The history of the army comes from the 44th Special (until August 29, 1961) Rifle (from June 1957 - Army) Corps, created on 06/29/1951 on the basis of the liquidated department

From the author's book

Appendices to Chapter 31 Appendix 31.1. The 5th Combined Arms Red Banner (since 1968) Army in 1945-1991. The 5th Combined Arms Army (I formation), created back in 1939, died in September 1941, surrounded near Kyiv. It is noteworthy that the last commander of this army, Major General

9th breakthrough artillery division, 9th Aporozhskaya Red Banner Orders of Suvorov and Kutuzov 2nd Class Breakthrough Artillery Division (Reserve of the Supreme High Command). Formed in July 1943 in Zlatoust, Kuvashi, Medvedevka, Chebarkul. In the div. included brigades: 10th mortar, 30.115 and 123rd cannon, 23rd howitzer and 113th howitzer high power art. brigades. Commanded div. gen.-m. A. I. RATOV. Div. started fighting in Aug. 1943 in the Donbass will come. operations (Aug. 13 - September 22, 1943) as part of the 8th Guards. Army of the Southwest. front; liberated the city of Barvenkovo. For participation in the liberation of Zaporozhye (October 1943) she was awarded honor. hiring Zaporozhye. She fought for many populated points of Donetsk, Kharkov, Zaporozhye and Odessa regions; fought on the territory Moldova, Romania, Yugoslavia, Hungary, Austria. For distinction in the battles for Belgrade (20 Oct. 1944) 23rd howitzer art. brigade div. awarded the hiring Belgrade. Div. twice participated in the capture of the Hungarian city of Szekes Fehervar: in the Budapest (December 23, 1944) and Vienna (March 22, 1945) operations; in full composition - in the liberation of Vienna (April 13, 1945); completed hostilities in the territory. Austria. Order awarded. Cr. Banner, Suvorov and Kutuzov 2nd degree; marked with 12 thanks Commander-in-Chief. Thousand warrior divas. awarded an order. and honey; the title of Hero of the Soviet The Union was awarded to A. I. Ratov and V. V. Shitov.

The 9th Plastun Rifle Krasnodar, Red Banner, Order of Kutuzov and the Red Star Volunteer Division named after the Supreme Soviet of the SSR of Georgia was formed on the basis of the disbanded 9th Caucasian Mountain Rifle Division of the Red Banner and Order of the Red Star.

Combat strength of the division:

36th Plastun Rifle Regiment

121st Red Banner Scout Regiment

193rd Plastun Rifle Regiment

1448th self-propelled artillery regiment

256th Artillery Regiment

55th separate anti-tank battalion

26th separate reconnaissance company

140th separate engineer battalion

232nd separate communications battalion (1432nd separate communications company)

123rd Separate Medical and Sanitary Battalion

553rd separate company of chemical protection

161st transport company of delivery

104th field bakery

156th Divisional Veterinary Infirmary

203rd field post station

216th field cash desk of the State Bank.

In the active army from 09/05/1943 to 05/12/1945.

Admission personnel to the division was made from conscripts Krasnodar Territory, which arrived during the period from 12 to 23 September 1943 6425 people.

In early September 1943, the division was withdrawn to the reserve of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command and reorganized into the 9th Plastun Rifle Division of the Krasnodar Red Banner Order of the Red Star named after the Central Executive Committee of the SSR of Georgia, mainly from the Kuban Cossacks. The regiments of the division were divided into plastun battalions and hundreds.

According to the combat order of the headquarters of the Separate Primorsky Army No. 0165 / OP dated February 25, 1944, the division marches to the station. Krymskaya, from where during 29.2-09.3.1944 it is transported by rail to the station. Fertility, where, according to the combat order of the 69th Army No. 003 / OP dated 2.3.1944, it is part of the 69th Army, remaining in the reserve of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command. Parts of the division are deployed:

36th Plastunsky Regiment - Pervomaisky, Oktyabrsky, Kostheim.

121st checkpoint - Fertility, Novo-Nikolaevka, Mariamgeim, Alexandrogeim.

193rd Plastunsky Regiment - Wasserau, Razdolny, Joyful.

256th Artillery Regiment and 140th Separate Engineer Battalion - Rozovka, Smirnaya.

1448th self-propelled artillery regiment and 55th separate anti-tank battalion - Dmitrov.

544th Separate Anti-Aircraft Artillery Battalion - with two batteries at the Reichenfeld OP.

The rear of the division is the eastern outskirts of Reichenfeld.

The headquarters of the division and special forces - Leitershausen.

In the new area of ​​concentration, the division continued to engage in combat training.

On April 15, 1944, in accordance with the directive of the General Staff of the Red Army No. Org / 2/357 dated April 2, 1944, a separate anti-aircraft machine gun company was formed in the division according to the state No. 04/578, numbering 97 people, 18 heavy machine guns and 19 vehicles.

On May 4, 1944, on the basis of the combat order of the headquarters of the 4th Ukrainian Front No. 09229 dated 04/10/1944, the division was loaded into echelons at the Fertility and Prishib stations from 16/4/1944 from 16/04/1944 and had the task, remaining in the reserve of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command, to concentrate in the Novozybkov area. On the way to Novozybkov, the route of the division was changed and the unloading station Kamenetz-Podolsky was assigned, where the last echelon arrived on May 1, 1944. Here the 9th PKD is part of the 95th Rifle Corps.

On the basis of the combat order of the 95th SC No. 02 dated April 26, 1944, parts of the division from April 27, 1944 make a march in marching order along the route: Kamenetz-Podolsk, Khotin, Klishkovtsy, Malintsy, Altzuchka, Novo-Mamevtsy.

In the new concentration area, parts of the division were engaged in combat training in readiness for the defense of the occupied area. They conducted reconnaissance and combing the area south-west of Chernivtsi with the task of fighting the bands of "Bendera".

At the end of April, as part of the 18th Army, and from August 20, the 1st Ukrainian Front. Participated in the Lvov-Sandomierz, Vistula-Oder, Upper Silesian, Moravian-Ostrava and Prague operations, the liberation of the cities of Krakow, Ratibor Racibórz, Leobschütz (Glubchitse), Troppau (Opava), Moravska-Ostrava (Ostrava).

In August 1944, the division, together with the Soviet troops, entered Poland.

On August 21, the division as part of the 33rd Guards Rifle Corps of the 5th Guards Army of the 1st Ukrainian Front began hostilities in the Krakow direction.
On August 21, on the way to the combat area, the division received an order to take the site from the 14th Guards and 78th Rifle Divisions and, together with the 4th tank corps, advancing in the direction of Debica, to capture the city by the end of the day.

The division had 5-6 hours to prepare for the offensive. Its 256th artillery regiment had not yet returned from the location of the 14th Guards Rifle Division, to which it was temporarily subordinated, the 1448th self-propelled artillery regiment, due to lack of gasoline, remained in the forest east of Tshesnia. Thus, by the beginning of the offensive, the division actually lost its artillery, and due to limited time, it was not possible to study the terrain and the grouping of enemy troops.
At two o'clock in the afternoon, the 9th Division went on the offensive. To the right, the 14th Guards Rifle Division was advancing. The area was a plain overgrown with shrubs, with groves and rare settlements. Despite the weak support of artillery in the first days of the offensive, the division advanced quite successfully. The enemy retreated from one strong point to another, often turning into counterattacks. By the end of August 22, units of the division, together with units of the 15th Rifle Corps, stormed the city of Dsmbica.

Parts of the 371st Infantry and 18th Panzer German divisions acted directly against the Cossack formation, which launched a powerful counterattack on the Soviet troops on August 23. However, despite the fact that up to 60 enemy tanks participated in it, supported by an infantry battalion, the attack was stopped. Having lost 9 tanks and 200 personnel, the enemy rolled back.

On August 23, having taken fuel somewhere, the 1448th self-propelled artillery regiment unexpectedly appeared in positions. This allowed the command of the division to put together a task force from the 36th Plastun, 256th artillery and 1448th self-propelled artillery regiments under the command of the commander of the 36th regiment, Lieutenant Colonel A.K. Orlov. Cutting off the grouping of Germans defending on the left bank of the Wisloka River and in the area of ​​​​Dembica, the 36th regiment broke far ahead, went 30 km deep into the German defenses and was surrounded along with fire support units.

The night passed relatively calmly. At 8 o'clock in the morning, the enemy opened heavy artillery and mortar fire and attacked the scouts from three directions at once: in the center - on Borova, through the right flank of the Vevyurk regiment, on the left flank - on the Charny station. This and subsequent attacks were repulsed by scouts with the support of artillerymen and self-propelled gunners. All the next night, German loudspeakers were shouting in front of the front line, promising "one hundred thousand marks, their own stone house and three hectares of land" to whoever goes over to the Germans and delivers "dead or alive" the regiment commander Orlov. The Nazis began artillery preparation of the attack only at three o'clock in the afternoon. Then dozens of tanks and motorized infantry were thrown into the center of the regiment's defenses. The fierce battle continued for more than eleven hours straight. The first wave of attackers was stopped by scouts in front of the leading edge. Of the 12 light tanks, eight were on fire, the infantry, clinging to the ground, began to retreat. However, through the smoke of burning vehicles, the second wave of attackers was already moving - 12 medium tanks. They managed to wedge into the defense of the 36th regiment at the junction of the 1st and 3rd battalions. Artillerymen and self-propelled gunners fired at direct fire, scouts crawled towards the tanks with grenades in their hands.

In the midst of the battle, when Lieutenant Colonel A.K. Orlov, having collected everything that was at hand, tried to restore the defense of the regiment dismembered by the enemy, a third wave of fascist tanks appeared. Four of them were hit, but the enemy managed to set fire to several of our self-propelled guns and break through to the firing positions of one of the battalions of the 256th artillery regiment. Self-propelled gunners under the command of Major V.Ya. Gumenchuk and artillerymen led by Major D.I. Teplov fought courageously and stubbornly, but the forces were too unequal. Twilight has come. Burning cars lit up the battlefield. Communication with the battalions was interrupted. The 2nd and 3rd battalions continued to fight stubbornly on the former line of defense, but the 1st battalion, having suffered very heavy losses, withdrew south, to the Charny station. Eight German tanks broke through to the command post of Lieutenant Colonel A.K. Orlov. The regiment commander called fire on himself, and thus forced the German tankers to retreat. By two o'clock in the morning the battle subsided, and Lieutenant Colonel Orlov managed to restore control of the 2nd and 3rd battalions. However, the 1st battalion was surrounded by the Nazis at the Charny station. For two days the battalion under the command of Captain Ya.S. Nosaev was surrounded. When the ammunition began to run out, they decided to make their way to their own. Soldiers armed with daggers hand-to-hand broke through the German encirclement. Later, due to the threat of a flank bypass, the German troops were forced to leave their positions.

And here is what the gun commander of the 121st regiment, senior sergeant M.I. Yakhin, said about the battles near Debica on August 23-25: “On August 23, we enter the battle in the evening. On the move, we take up firing positions and, not having time to dig in, repel the counterattack of the Nazis. On the morning of August 24, the enemy launched a "shell squadron" against us: 2 "Tigers", 30 light tanks and 15 armored personnel carriers, and all this against our one battalion. The battlefield was shrouded in smoke, the terrible rattling of machine guns and machine guns, gun shots and explosions of shells and mines continuously rumble. The scouts not only did not retreat a single step, realizing that the enemy was trying to cut off our units operating to the south, but also moved forward. True, we all had to work hard: under continuous shelling, we fired, sometimes turning 180 degrees, both direct fire and from hidden positions. In just 2 hours, from only one of our guns, we fired 79 shells. And so the fierce battle smoldered until evening. In the evening, by a cunning maneuver, moving with the “grandmothers” of the sheaves in the order they stood on the compressed field, and thus approaching the enemy, the scouts rushed to the attack and took the line of defense.

At the end of the offensive, in the Krakow direction near the city of Tarnow, units of the 371st Infantry, 18th Panzer Division, as well as a number of separate battalions and units acted against the 9th Plastun Cossack Division. None of the formations of the 5th Guards Army, Lieutenant General A.S. Zhadov, had such a numerous enemy at that moment!

In January 1945, the Soviet troops went on the offensive again. During the offensive period from January 12 to January 19, 1945, the 9th Plastunskaya defeated the 304th Infantry Division in stubborn battles, inflicted significant losses on the 359th and 344th infantry divisions of the enemy. The successful actions of the division in the Krakow direction deserve attention in that it had to conduct a rapid offensive with a virtually open left flank. The offensive under these conditions required great flexibility from the command, frequent regroupings.

On January 23, units of the division as part of the 5th Guards Army again went on the offensive and, overcoming stubborn resistance and enemy counterattacks, approached the center of the Dąbrowski coal basin, the city of Khzhanów, and on January 25, to the Pshemsha River.

On January 29, after a five-minute artillery raid along the front line of the enemy’s defense, the scouts captured a number of settlements including the Auschwitz concentration camp. Tens of thousands of barely alive prisoners from all over Europe languished in the camp. When the Scouts broke the gate and told the people that they were free, they wept for joy. None of them expected to stay alive. The mountains of ashes and clothes left in the camp spoke without words about what fate awaited them.

In early February 1945, the division entered Germany. On February 9, the Cossack unit was given the task of reaching the highway linking the large industrial cities of Rybnik and Ratibor, and thereby cutting off the path of enemy troops retreating to the Oder. And the enemy this case was completely special. In contrast to the battered German 712th Infantry and 97th Mountain Infantry Divisions, as well as the remnants of the 2nd Panzer Division (almost without tanks), which had to be dealt with in the last stage of the battles in Poland, the scouts were opposed by fully equipped 1 and the 2nd ski regiments, reinforced with mortars and even tanks. The skiers were well equipped, had white insulated suits, snowshoes and other equipment that allowed them to be active in winter conditions.

According to the memoirs of the participants in the battles, including the division commander P.I.Metalnikov, to this day it is believed that such bloody battles as in the Oder bridgeheads, the division did not have a chance to fight either in Poland or in the Kuban. For example, the settlement of Neudorf changed hands several times - either scouts with grenades and automatic fire threw the Germans out of the town, then German skiers, recovering from the blow, returned the city under their control. In these battles there were so many mutual penetrations that it was difficult to make out who surrounded whom. The Plastunskaya division numbered only 4148 people, and everyone who could carry weapons was thrown into the battles. People acted to the limit of their strength. There was a case when the artillerymen of the 121st regiment, breaking into a German town and checking the lower floors and the basement of a house suitable for an overnight stay, immediately went to bed. At this time, sleeping on the upper floors German soldiers. In the morning, the “lodgers” met, and the battle began to boil with renewed vigor. At the end of February, the division was assigned to rest, but already on March 12 it again advanced to the front.

On the night of March 13, the division took up its starting position on the bridgehead in the area of ​​​​the settlements of Pol-Gross-Neukirch, Grefenstein, Odervilde and received the task, in cooperation with the 31st Panzer Corps, to break through the enemy’s defenses north of Pol-Gross-Neukirch and together with units of 302- 1st Infantry Division to capture the city of Leobschütz. The 67th infantry regiment 371st German infantry division, 39th motorized regiment, sapper battalion of the 18th motorized division, battalion of penalists and battalion of the 1st ski regiment. The enemy's defense consisted of several continuous trenches and centers of resistance, covered with barbed wire, anti-personnel and anti-tank minefields.

The resistance of the Germans was very stubborn, besides, enemy units were seen on the front line in front of the division: the 14th Assault Regiment, the battalion of the 17th Panzer Division, the reserve regiment of the SS Panzer Division “SS Life Standard Adolf Hitler”. On the site of the 36th regiment, the enemy repelled four attacks. For the fifth time, the commander of the regiment, Colonel Orlov, himself led the scouts. With the exclamation "For the Motherland!" soldiers and officers quickly rushed to storm the fortified settlement and occupied it. Orlov was wounded by an enemy bullet. The commander of the 1st battalion, Major Nosaev, and the commander of the 3rd battalion, Major Pronkin, were killed. The assistant chief of staff of the regiment, Captain Gutman, was mortally wounded.Both sides suffered heavy losses in these battles, but they were especially great for the enemy, who often acted recklessly, trying to stop our further advance. The prisoners testified that everywhere on the walls of houses one can find slogans such as: “This is our last industrial area. If you give him up, you will give up Germany."But still, the SS men were thrown back, and at the end of April 1945, by order of the commander of the 60th Army, the 9th Plastun Division, as part of the 28th Rifle Corps, entered Czechoslovakia, where, until the end of hostilities, it participated in the liberation of the cities of Moravska-Ostrava and the suburbs capital of the country - Prague.

In September 1945, the 9th Cossack Plastun Division returned to its homeland in the Krasnodar Territory.

For the exemplary performance of command assignments and the valor and courage shown at the same time, on April 26, 1945, the division was awarded the Order of Kutuzov, 2nd degree.

For feats of arms during the war, more than 14 thousand soldiers of the division were awarded orders and medals.

Division commanders during the Great Patriotic War:

Colonel Dzabakhidze Valerian Sergeevich - 10/16/1941 - 03/15/1942.

Colonel Evstigneev Mikhail Vasilyevich - 03/16/1942 - 03/06/1943.

Colonel Shapovalov Afanasy Efimovich - 03/07/1943 - 04/04/1943.

Lieutenant Colonel, from 03/31/1943 Colonel Cherny Stepan Makarovich - from 04/05/1943-07/01/1943.

Colonel, from 10/14/1943 Major General Pyotr Ivanovich Metalnikov - 09/05/1943 - 05/12/1945.

TsAMO RF, fund 988, inventory 1, case 8, https://ru.wikipedia.org,http://cossac-awards.narod.ru

MILESTONES OF THE BATTLE PATH

The 78th Rifle Division was formed on June 6, 1939 in Novosibirsk. After 5 days, it is loaded into trains and on June 29 arrives at the station. Guberovo, Primorsky Territory, occupies the defense along the line of the state border. In October 1939, it was relocated to Khabarovsk and later existed as a territorial division, consisted of one rifle regiment and support units (6,000 people).
In the spring of 1941, she was relocated to Primorsky Krai and deployed to full staff (12,000 people). It included the 1st Rifle Brigade (2 rifle regiments), stationed in Vladivostok on the First River. The division headquarters was also located in Vladivostok. The main forces of the division were deployed to cover the border of Primorye along the Ussuri River from Iman (Dalnerechensk) to st. Burlit (90 km along the front) and were involved in the many-month-long exercises of the Far Eastern Front. The field headquarters is located in the village. Badge of the Pozharsky district. These exercises on the eve of the war, in conditions close to combat, played an important role in the formation of the division as a strong combat-ready military unit.
In October 1941, the division was transferred from Far East near Moscow, in the region of the city of Istra, and became part of the 16th Army under the command of Lieutenant General K.K. Rokossovsky.

“The transfer was controlled by the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command. We felt it all the way. The railroad opened a green street for us. Accurate schedule, tight control. As a result, all thirty-six echelons of the division crossed the country from east to west at the speed of courier trains. The last echelon left Vladivostok on October 17, and on October 28 our units were already unloading in the Moscow region, in the city of Istra and at the stations closest to it.
(Beloborodov A.P., Always in battle. M .: Military Publishing House, 1978).

COMPOSITION OF THE DIVISION
40th Rifle Regiment
131st Rifle Regiment
258th Rifle Regiment
159th Light Cannon Artillery Regiment
210th howitzer artillery regiment
Special units and divisions: 139th separate anti-tank battalion, 435th separate anti-aircraft artillery battalion,
60th reconnaissance battalion, 89th engineer battalion, 140th separate communications battalion, 104th medical and sanitary battalion, motor transport company, field postal station, field cash desk of the State Bank.
Total in the division: 14 thousand people, 23 light tanks, 53 artillery pieces, 22 howitzers, 59 mortars, 6 anti-aircraft guns, 441 vehicles, 3400 horses.

November 1941. From left to right: head of the political department of the 78th rifle division, battalion commissar M.M. Vavilov, division commander Colonel A.P. Beloborodov and the head of the operational department of the division headquarters, Lieutenant Colonel A.I. Vitevsky.
Combat order No. 2 for the 78th division of 10/31/1941 Point 2 of the order attracts attention - the division that has just arrived near Istra has to act alone. (TsAMO, f. 208, op. 2511, d. 34)


MAP OF BATTLE ACTIONS NEAR MOSCOW. November 1941
The dividing red line is the junction of the 16th (commanded by Lieutenant General K.K. Rokossovsky) and the 5th armies (Major General D.D. Lelyushenko) of the Western Front.
The map clearly shows that at the junction of these armies a void has formed, into which the enemy rushed. To cover this void was the task of the 258th Infantry Regiment of the 78th Division, which had just arrived from Primorye. The map also shows how stretched the front of the regiment that replaced the 27th tank brigade. (TsAMO, F. 1066, op. 1, d. 4, l. 130)

The first to join the battle with the enemy fell to the fighters and commanders of the Vladivostok 258th Infantry Regiment of the division. The regiment not only covered the huge gap between the defending 16th and 5th armies of the Western Front. He was given the task of attacking - to drive the enemy out of the populated points of Mikhailovskoye and Fedchino and cut the road along which the Nazis were preparing to transfer reinforcements to their troops advancing on the Volokolamsk highway.
The regiment managed to partially complete the combat mission: on the western bank of the Ozerna River, in the area of ​​​​the village of Fedchino, a bridgehead was created, but the village of Mikhailovskoye could not be taken.
On November 6 and 7, the enemy counterattacked the positions of the 258th regiment in the Fedchino region, introducing units of the SS Reich division into battle. During these two days and the next week, the Germans unsuccessfully tried to dislodge the regiment from the bridgehead at Fedchino. In these battles, parts of the regiment suffered serious losses: in some companies there were 40-50 people each.
Shoulder to shoulder with the Panfilov heroes, the 78th Rifle Division defended stubbornly for a month in one of the most critical areas - the Volokolamsk Highway.
The most intense fighting took place at the end of November 1941. The 40th, 131st and 258th rifle regiments of the division at that time occupied the defense on the eastern bank of the Istra River in the Trusovo, Istra, Sannikovo strip. Their actions were supported by fire from the 159th and 210th artillery regiments. The enemy struck here with the forces of the 10th Panzer and Motorized Divisions of the SS "Reich", the 252nd and 87th Infantry Divisions along the Volokolamsk Highway. Artillery fire, massive air strikes, continuous tank attacks - everything was used by the Nazis. But the Far East survived. The enemy did not manage to break through their defenses this time either.


Extract from the petition of the commander Western Front G.K. Zhukov about awarding the 258th Infantry Regiment of the 78th Division with the country's highest award - the Order of Lenin. December 31, 1941 (TsAMO, f. 208, op. 2511, d. 34, l. 30)

November 26, 1941 - just 3 weeks after entering the battle near Moscow - for courage in battle, stamina and courage, the 78th rifle division was transformed into 9th Guards Rifle Division.

The division retreated 40 km under the onslaught of the enemy. But not a single frontier was left without stubborn resistance. Only on November 29 and 30, its soldiers destroyed 1950 fascists, 13 tanks, 11 vehicles, suppressed the fire of one artillery and three mortar batteries, and shot down three aircraft.
On December 2, the fascist German command threw two tank divisions with aviation support. More than 50 German tanks and armored personnel carriers with infantry rushed to Nefediev. The battalions defending the village fought heroically. No less stubborn battles flared up in other sectors of the division's defense. Four times passed from hand to hand the village of Selivanikha in the area of ​​the 40th Infantry Regiment. The Nazis lost more strength here than during the capture of Paris.

The counter-offensive of the Soviet troops near Moscow began on December 5-6, 1941, when it became clear that the enemy's offensive forces were exhausted. Despite severe frosts, deep snow cover, and most importantly - despite the fact that Hitler gave the order to cling to every meter of the earth and in no case retreat, it developed successfully. Soviet troops for the first time wrested the initiative from the enemy. One by one, the cities of the Moscow region were liberated from the temporary occupation - Rogachevo, Istra, Solnechnogorsk, Volokolamsk, Klin and others.
During the counteroffensive, the 9th Guards Rifle Division with the 17th Tank Brigade, the 89th Separate Tank Battalion, the 36th and 90th Rifle Brigades formed the 16th Army's shock group. On the morning of December 8, the troops of the group under the command of Major General A.P. Beloborodov went on the offensive on the left flank in the direction of Istra. Widely using detours of defense units, the attackers liberated Trukholovka, Snegiri, and on the morning of December 11 broke into Istra. At the end of the month, the regiments of the division reached the Ruza River in the Tsarev area.
“The Nazis blew up the dam of the reservoir. The gushing water formed a powerful stream, which created enormous difficulties for our troops ... Before my eyes, the Siberians A.P. Beloborodov in severe frost under enemy fire forced a raging ice stream. All available means were used - logs, fences, gates, straw rafts, rubber boats - in a word, everything that could float on the water. And with these improvised means, the Siberians overcame such a serious obstacle and put the enemy to flight. The assault was well provided by the artillerymen and mortarmen, who covered our infantry during the crossings.”
(Rokossovsky K.K. Soldier's debt. M .: Voenizdat, 1997)

In early January 1942, the counteroffensive in the western strategic direction was completed. More than 11 thousand settlements were liberated from the invaders, and units of the Red Army entrenched themselves on the lines 100-250 kilometers away from Moscow.


The battle flag of the division is now in the museum. Russian Army in Moscow among the banners of the most famous military units


Extract from the order of the NPO (Newspaper "Red Star" dated 11/27/41)

In February 1942, the division was part of the 33rd Army, since March - as part of the 43rd Army. Since May, in the reserve of the headquarters of the Supreme High Command as part of the 58th Army.

On May 3, 1942, by the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, the 9th Guards Rifle Division was awarded the Order of the Red Banner, and its 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment was awarded the Order of Lenin.

In May 1942, the 9th Guards Division was transferred to the Southwestern Front to defend Kharkov, located to the east of it. At the same time, the division became part of the 38th Army, commanded by General K.S. Moskalenko. There were a lot of examples of iron steadfastness on the defensive and high fighting impulse on the offensive. In the hot summer of 1942, the division took part in fierce battles beyond the Don, in the area of ​​Serafimovich.
On July 17, 1942, the division was transferred to the disposal of the Stalingrad Front as part of the 21st Army. In September, he was part of the 4th reserve army of the reserve of the headquarters of the High Command. In October, as part of the Moscow Military District.
In November 1942, as part of the 43rd Army of the Kalinin Front, since December, as part of the 5th Guards Rifle Corps of the 3rd Shock Army. Under Velikiye Luki, the division moved forward at a low pace, but uncontrollably, through forests, swamps and enemy fire. Then two reinforced infantry divisions of the enemy acted against the 9th Guards. A division of six-barreled mortars hit the regiments and battalions, and almost fifty tanks opposed them. But the enemy defense was broken through, the division cut railway Novosokolniki - Velikiye Luki. In offensive battles from November 25 to November 29, 1942, the division liberated 18 settlements, destroyed 2200 officer soldiers, 8 tanks, dozens of weapons (division losses: 420 people were killed, 2009 were wounded).
From December 10, 1942 to January 27, 1943, the division was in defensive battles near Velikiye Luki. In this confrontation in the division's defense sector, the Nazis had 13 times superiority in infantry, completely in motorized infantry, 1.5 times in artillery, and 10 times in tanks. It was extremely necessary for him to keep the strategic node - Velikie Luki with all his might, so he pulled up large reserves and prepared to deliver a powerful blow in order to break through the front line and connect with the encircled grouping.
In the fiercest deadly confrontation, the guardsmen of the division not only survived, but also inflicted huge damage on the enemy. 7580 Nazis, 33 tanks, 10 guns, 5 aircraft, 34 vehicles, 61 machine guns were destroyed. (Our losses - 1921 people were killed and wounded).
In June 1943, the division became part of the 2nd Guards Rifle Corps of the Kalinin Front, since August, together with the corps as part of the 39th Army. In October, the division returned to the 5th Guards Rifle Corps of the 39th Army.
Since November 1943, as part of the 1st Baltic front, from February to March 1944, the division was in front-line subordination.
Since April 1944, as part of the 2nd Guards Rifle Corps of the 6th Guards Army, in which the division fought until the end of the war.
In the summer of 1944, the division took part in the Belarusian strategic operation. From June 12 to August 1, she covered 810 km in offensive operations, cleared an area of ​​227 square meters from the enemy. km., having fought 55 km. It liberated 58 large settlements, inflicting significant damage on the enemy (1164 soldiers and officers were destroyed, a large amount of equipment and weapons were captured).
Later, the division took part in the liberation of the Latvian SSR. She advanced in the direction of Daugavpils, pursuing the retreating enemy.
In early October 1944, she took part in the Memel offensive operation, from the area northwest of Siauliai to the Libau direction.
Over the next seven months, she fought stubborn battles with a grouping of Nazi troops pressed to the sea and cut off on the Courland Peninsula, a sector of the front east of Libava between the river. Venta and Priekule area.
In April 1945, as part of the Leningrad Front, she was preparing for a decisive offensive with the aim of finally defeating the enemy's Courland grouping.
Since May 9, 1945, the 9th Guards Red Banner Rifle Division has been receiving enemy units, their weapons, military equipment and property in the Aizpute area.

Sergeant major from Spassk: one against fourteen
The heroic feat of the foreman of the company Vladimir Suvertey (before the front he lived in the city of Spassk-Dalniy) is recorded in the combat log of the 78th division, stored in TsAMO. And here is how this is stated in the award list, signed by the division commander Beloborodov and commissar Bronnikov.

As can be seen from the award list, the 23-year-old foreman of the company got into trouble on the battlefield, one might say, unexpectedly - he organized meals for his soldiers. But desperately acting with a grenade, a pistol and a bayonet, he destroyed all 14 attacking Nazis. It is worth recalling that in 1941 they were rarely awarded, and the highest award of the country - the Order of Lenin - was awarded only for special merits.
We do not know how and where the heroic guy from Spassk-Dalny fought after being wounded near Moscow. The documents preserved only a sad fact: as part of the 17th motorized rifle brigade Vladimir Suvertei died a heroic death in August 1942 near Smolensk.

Diploma of the Presidium of the Supreme Council on awarding the 9th Guards Rifle Division with the Order of the Red Banner

03.04.1932 - 09.05.1945

The 78th Rifle Division was formed on April 3, 1932 in Tomsk on the basis of the 40th Infantry Regiment and the Tomsk Infantry Division. In 1940 she was relocated to Khabarovsk.

At the beginning of the Great Patriotic War, it was stationed in the Ussuri region, was part of the Far Eastern Front.

In October 1941, the division was transferred from the Far East near Moscow, in the area of ​​the city of Istra, and became part of the 16th Army of the Western Front.

On November 1, the 258th Infantry Regiment of the division occupied the front on the line Mary - Sloboda - Settlement along the Ozerna River with the task of covering volokolamskoe highway. The rest of the division was left as a reserve of the 16th Army. On November 4 and 5, the 258th Rifle Regiment, supported by artillery units of the division, took part in a private offensive operation of the 16th Army.

On November 26, 1941, for courage in battles, fortitude and courage, the 78th Rifle Division was reorganized into the 9th Guards Rifle Division.

In February 1942, the division was part of the 33rd Army, since March as part of the 43rd Army. Since May, in the Reserve of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command as part of the 58th Army, since June, the 7th Reserve Army.

On May 3, 1942, by the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, the 9th Guards Rifle Division was awarded the Order of the Red Banner, and its 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment was awarded the Order of Lenin.

On July 2, 1942, the division became subordinate to the 38th Army. Southwestern Front, took up defense on the east bank of the river. Oskol, 5'th of July forcing the river Oskol near the village of Kamenka, July 9 to the border Naked - Poddubnoye - Ozerov - zap. env. Rovenki - Shiyanov - Dubovoy - Belokurakino, where it went on the defensive, on July 10 with battles retreated to a new defensive line along the river. Derkul, July 14, the division was in Novogrigorevskaya.

On July 17, 1942, the division was transferred to the disposal of the Stalingrad Front as part of the 21st Army. In September, he was part of the 4th Reserve Army of the Reserve Headquarters of the Supreme High Command. In October, as part of the Moscow Military District.

In June 1943, the division became part of the 2nd Guards Rifle Corps, subordinate to the Kalinin Front, since August, together with the corps as part of the 39th Army. In October, the division returned to the 5th Guards Rifle Corps of the 39th Army.

From November 1943, as part of the 1st Baltic Front, from February to March 1944, the division was subordinated to the front.

In August 1944 she took part in the battles on the river memel, at the end of August, the division was transferred to the area southwest of Mitava (Jelgava), took positions on the outskirts of the city on the line Dobele - Žagare preparing for defensive battles.

At the beginning of October 1944, she took part in the Memel offensive operation, from the area northwest Siauliai on the libava direction.

Over the next seven months, she fought stubborn battles with a grouping of Nazi troops pressed to the sea and cut off on the Courland Peninsula, a sector of the front east of Libava (Liepaja) , between R. Venta and Priekule area .

In April 1945, as part of the Courland Group of Forces of the Leningrad Front, she was preparing for a decisive offensive with the aim of finally defeating the Courland grouping of the enemy.

Since May 9, 1945, the 9th Guards Red Banner Rifle Division has been receiving enemy units, their weapons, military equipment and property in Aizpute area .

Commanders:

  • Colonel Kindyukhin Vasily Arkadyevich from March 4, 1941 to July 11, 1941
  • Major General Beloborodov Afanasy Pavlantievich from July 12, 1941 to October 14, 1942
  • Major General Prostyakov Ignatiy Vasilyevich from October 15, 1942 to January 30, 1944
  • Colonel Gudz Porfiry Martynovich from January 31, 1944 to June 6, 1944
  • Major General Babakhin Nikolai Ivanovich from 7 to 29 June 1944
  • Colonel Verbov Yakov Yakovlevich from June 30 to July 21, 1944
  • Colonel Savchuk Valery Ivanovich from July 22 to November 1, 1944
  • Major General Dmitry Kuropatenko from November 2 to December 20, 1944
  • Lieutenant Colonel Krivomlin Fedor Grigorievich from December 21, 1944 to January 27, 1945
  • Colonel Baurjan Mamysh-Uly from January 28, 1945 to May 9, 1945

Compound :

  • 18th Guards Red Banner Rifle Regiment
  • 22nd Guards Rifle Order of Lenin Regiment
  • 31st Guards Red Banner Rifle Regiment
  • 28th Guards Artillery Regiment
  • 2nd separate guards anti-tank battalion
  • 12th Guards Reconnaissance Company
  • 3rd Separate Guards Sapper Battalion
  • 51st (4th) Separate Guards Signal Battalion
  • 479th (11th) separate medical and sanitary battalion
  • 5th separate guards company of chemical protection
  • 479th motor transport company (70th motor transport battalion, 168th and 10th motor transport companies)
  • 608th (1st) field bakery
  • 566th (14th) divisional veterinary infirmary
  • 05337 (485th) field post station
  • 451st field cash desk of the State Bank

Settlements:

  • X. Jurkalne - 15-17.05.1945
  • X. Vartaya 24-26.03.1945
  • X. Lainieki 03/20-26/1945
  • X. Priednieki 21-25.02.1945
  • X. Spindeni 24-27.03.1945
  • X. Abelnieki 23.01-29.03.1945
  • mz. Baga Asite 26.01-24.02.1945
  • X. Zhibaly 20-23.02.1945
  • X. Priednieki 27.02-03.03.1945
  • 14.02-15.03.1945
  • plmz. Elka 20-22.02.1945
  • X. Arai 21-27.01.1945
  • X. Perkoni 01/21/1945
  • X. Bridges - 14.10-30.11.1944
  • Art. Vaynode - 13-21.02.1945
  • X. Pirtkuri - 26-30.10.1944
  • X. Yunkureni - 10/29/1944
  • mz. Elkuzeme - 27-28.10.1944

Personnel

Total: 646

Officers:

machine gun platoon leader

1st Infantry Battalion, 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment

1914 - 25.02.1945

  • guards Captain Volobuev Akim Ivanovich, commander of the PTR company of the 18th GSP 1918 - 02/24/1945
  • guards Lieutenant Gulyai Ivan Savelyevich, commander of a rifle platoon of a rifle battalion of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1913 - 02/27/1945
  • guards ml. Lieutenant Drozdov Fedor Zinovievich, commander of a rifle platoon of the 31st GSP 1924 - 02/20/1945
  • guards Captain Zubrev Grigory Petrovich, commander of the commandant's platoon of the division, born in 1912
  • guards ml. lieutenant Ivanov Arsenty Grigorievich, commander of a rifle platoon of the 31st GSP 1925 - 02/21/1945
  • guards Lieutenant Ikonnikov Nikolai Gennadievich, commander of the 4th rifle platoon of the 4th rifle company of the 18th GSP 1924 - 02/27/1945
  • guards ml. lieutenant Ilyichev Sergey Dmitrievich, commander of a rifle platoon of the 31st GSP 1923 - 02/23/1945
  • guards ml. Lieutenant Kalinin Viktor Alexandrovich, platoon commander of a battery of 76 mm guns of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1923
  • guards ml. Lieutenant Karalitsky Semyon Moiseevich, commander of a rifle platoon of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment
  • guards ml. lieutenant Karpov Ilya Fedorovich, commander of a rifle platoon of the 31st GSP 1926 - 02/27/1945
  • guards ml. Lieutenant Kovalev Victor Egorovich, commander of a rifle platoon of the 1st rifle battalion of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment __.09.1916 - 02.13.1945
  • guards ml. Lieutenant Kosor Dmitry Fedorovich, commander of a sapper platoon of the 3rd OGSB, born in 1905
  • guards Art. Lieutenant Kudryashov Ivan Petrovich, commander of a rifle company of the 31st GSP 1913 - 02/21/1945
  • guards ml. Lieutenant Lavrenov Vasily Petrovich, commander of a foot reconnaissance platoon of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment
  • guards Art. Lieutenant Lavrentiev Pavel Alekseevich, regimental engineer of the 31st GSP 1913 - 02/23/1945
  • guards ml. Lieutenant Lutsenko Ivan Matveyevich, commander of a machine-gun platoon of the 18th GSP 1924 - 02/20/1945
  • guards Art. Lieutenant Natekin Nikolai Alexandrovich, commander of a platoon of 45 mm guns of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1923
  • guards Lieutenant Noskov Ivan Andreevich, commander of a rifle company of the 1st page b-on the 22nd GSP __.07.1912 - 02.14.1945
  • guards ml. Lieutenant Panfilov Fedor Vasilievich, commander of a rifle platoon of a rifle battalion of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1916 - 02/24/1945
  • guards Lieutenant Podolsky Fedor Andreevich, commander of a platoon of anti-tank weapons of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1904
  • guards Captain Popov Andrey Mikhailovich, commander of a machine-gun company of the 22nd GSP 1922 - 02/27/1945
  • guards lieutenant Radzyuk Vladimir Petrovich, party organizer of the rifle battalion of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1908
  • guards Captain Rozhko Pavel Grigorievich, Art. adjutant of the rifle battalion of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1922 - 02/26/1945
  • guards ml. Lieutenant Rychkov Mikhail Pavlovich, commander of a rifle platoon of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1924
  • guards ml. Lieutenant Sadykov Ishankul Kanaevich, commander of a machine-gun platoon of the 31st GSP 1923 - 02/24/1945
  • guards ml. Lieutenant Samsonenko Mikhail Fedorovich, platoon commander of a battery of 120 mm mortars of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1923
  • guards Lieutenant Skidan Ivan Denisovich, commander of a machine-gun platoon of the 1st rifle battalion of the 22nd GSP 1923 - 02/25/1945
  • guards ml. Lieutenant Sokolov Vladimir Alekseevich, commander of a rifle platoon of the 31st GSP 1925 - 02/24/1945
  • guards ml. Lieutenant Spolnikov Savely Fedorovich, commander of a rifle platoon of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1914
  • guards Lieutenant Sukhov Egor Ivanovich, commander of a rifle platoon of the 18th GSP 1925 - 02/21/1945
  • guards ml. Lieutenant Chepenko Dmitry Grigorievich
  • guards ml. Lieutenant Chernykh Pavel Ivanovich, commander of a machine-gun platoon of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1924
  • ml. Lieutenant Chipenko Dmitry Grigorievich, commander of a rifle platoon of the 31st GSP 1926 - 02/21/1945
  • guards Captain Shaimardanov Garey Sultanovich, commander of a machine-gun company of the 18th GSP 1903 - 02/23/1945
  • guards ml. Lieutenant Shevel Dmitry Demyanovich, commander of a rifle platoon of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1918
  • guards ml. Lieutenant Shumakov Ilya Petrovich, commander of a machine-gun platoon of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment __.08.1922 - 02.13.1945

Ordinary composition:

scout of the 12th OGRR

1923 - 27.10.1944

  • guards red Army soldier Alexei Yakovlevich Belyaev, signalman of the 22nd GSP 1913 - 02/28/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Beskorovayny Grigory Fedoseevich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1897 - 02/20/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Biveev Zurunta Doronevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1900 - 03/25/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Bilyugin Vasily Fedorovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1914 - 02/14/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Bogdanov Alexei Iosifovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1909 - 03/25/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Bogdanov Viktor Karpovich, scout of the 12th OGRR, born in 1913
  • guards Corporal Bogdanov Dmitry Deomidovich
  • guards Red Army soldier Bogomazov Nikolai Fedorovich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1924 - 02/21/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Bolgov Ivan Zakharovich
  • guards red Army soldier Bolotov Vasily Yakovlevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1906 - 02/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Bondarev Vasily Fedorovich
  • guards ml. Sergeant Bondarenko Alexander Fedotovich, squad leader of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 02/23/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Mikhail Terentyevich Bondar, sapper of the 3rd OGSB, born in 1899
  • guards red Army soldier Borzykh Alexander Alexandrovich
  • guards Sergeant Borisov Vladimir Ivanovich, machine gunner of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1923
  • guards red Army soldier Borodavkin Konstantin Pavlovich, telephone operator of the 28th GAP? - 20.02.1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Borodaev Stanislav Pavlovich, head of the communications department of the 22nd GSP, born in 1917
  • guards Art. Sergeant Borodin Vasily Sergeevich, head of the radio station of the Republic of Belarus of the 51st OGBS, born in 1919
  • guards red Army soldier Andrey Naumovich Burdin, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Burlakov Vasily Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1914 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Burnusenko Vladimir Vasilyevich
  • guards Corporal Butorin Arkady Petrovich
  • guards Red Army soldier Bydru Ivan Georgievich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1902 - 03/27/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Bykov Alexander Tarasovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1911 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Vaganov Alexander Petrovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Vashch Aleksey Antonovich
  • guards foreman Vanyukov Egor Ivanovich, crew commander b-120 of the 22nd GSP 1902 - 02/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Varyukhin Nikolai Timofeevich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1924 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Vasilyenkov Vasily Emelyanovich, scout of the 12th OGRR 1924 - 01/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Vasiliev Prokop Isaevich, machine gunner of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1903
  • guards Art. Sergeant Vasiliev Semyon Vasilievich, commander of the department of the 51st OGBS, born in 1919
  • guards Sergeant Vasin Savely Kirillovich, commander of a machine gun crew of the 31st GSP 1926 - 01/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Verlan Maxim Ivanovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1902 - 03/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Vigurin Alexander Iosifovich
  • guards red Army soldier Virchin Fedor Gerasimovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1924 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Vitalinysh Karlis Martynovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1919 - 03/26/1945
  • guards Sergeant Vobornov Anatoly Vasilyevich, commander of the page of the department of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 02/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Voznyarsky Vasily Fedorovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1909 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Volkov Philip Efimovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1898 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Volchenkov Alexander Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1918 - 02/14/1945 (missing)
  • guards red Army soldier Petr Stepanovich Vorobyov, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1923
  • guards ml. Sergeant Vshivkov Alexander Stepanovich, commander of the rifle squad of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1908
  • guards Red Army soldier Vyborny Vladimir Ivanovich, gunner of the 2nd OGIPTD 1926 - 02/23/1945
  • guards Sergeant Gabidulin Georgy Talipovich, commander of the 31st GSP 1917 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Gavdey Grigory Ivanovich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1904 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Gavdonik Nikolai Anisimovich
  • guards red Army soldier Andrey Vasilievich Gavrilov, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1897 - 03/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Gavrilyuk Korney Efimovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1900 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Gaevsky Mikhail Ivanovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1908 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Gashchenko Vasily Ivanovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1904 - 02/21/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Gayunov Fedor Grigorievich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 10/26/1944
  • guards Sergeant Alexey Danilovich Gerasev, squad leader of the 31st GSP 1907 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Andrey Ivanovich Gerasimov, shooter of the 31st GSP 1909 - 02/20/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Gerasimov Vasily Nikolaevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1907 - 02/26/1945
  • guards Red Army German Stepan Nikolaevich
  • guards Sergeant Gilev Pavel Efimovich, scout of the 12th OGRR, born in 1921
  • guards Sergeant Gilfus Arkady Markovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1914 - 02/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Gilyazev Zufar Mizgazovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1925 - 02/20/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Golubev Egor Yakovlevich, sapper of the 3rd OGSB, born in 1913
  • guards red Army soldier Golubev Fedor Alekseevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1912 - 02/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Goncharov Alexei Vasilyevich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1907 - 02/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Gorbunov Boris Fedorovich
  • guards Red Army soldier Gorbunov Ivan Pavlovich, nurse-porter of the 31st GSP 1914 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Gordeev Nikolai Kuzmich, scout of the 12th OGRR, born in 1925
  • guards foreman Gorchakov Nikolai Vasilyevich, commander of the department of the 12th OGRR 1918 - 01/26/1945
  • guards Corporal Grabovsky Ivan Dmitrievich, crew commander b-120 of the 22nd GSP 1920 - 02/25/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Grachev Nikolai Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1912 - 03/29/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Grachev Petr Ivanovich, telephone operator of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1902
  • guards foreman Grebennikov Alexey Andrianovich, mortar crew commander of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1913
  • guards Art. Sergeant Gromov Nikolai Mikhailovich, commander of a machine-gun crew of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1915
  • guards Sergeant Gryaznov Evgeny Andreevich, scout of the 12th OGRR 1922 - 01/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Guyda Mikhail Kuzmich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1909 - 03/25/1945
  • guards Sergeant Gulin Yakov Evgenievich, scout of the 12th OGRR 1922 - 10/14/1944
  • guards ml. Sergeant Gulkin Semyon Fedotovich, squad leader of the 31st GSP 1922 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red army soldierGurin Alexander Nikolaevich , shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1923
  • guards red Army soldier Gusev Dmitry Semenovich, shooter of the 18th GSP1926 - 02/21/1945
  • guards ml. Sergeant Gusev Ivan Agafonovich
  • guards Sergeant Gusev Pavel Ivanovich, mortar gunner of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1925
  • guards red Army soldier Gusev Sergey Mikhailovich, signalman of the 22nd GSP 1897 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Daimbaev Nurkasym
  • guards red Army Danilov Makar Egorovich, shooter of the 22nd GSP 1906 - 02/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Jetpisov Ural

shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment

1921 - 24.01.1945

shooter

5th rifle company of the 22nd GSP

1926 - 23.01.1945

  • guards Red Army soldier Grigory Nikolaevich Zeleny, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1907 - 02/25/1945
  • guards Sergeant Zemlyansky Alexander Vasilyevich, commander of the rifle squad of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1911
  • guards red Army soldier Zinchenko Mikhail Semenovich, scout of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 03/25/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Zotochkin Vasily Kuzmich, commander of the 31st GSP 1919 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Zubritsky Dmitry Pavlovich, machine gunner of the 22nd GSP 1926 - 01/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Zykov Andrey Georgievich
  • guards Art. Sergeant Zyubin Ivan Fedorovich, gun commander batteries of 76 mm guns 22nd GSP 1921 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Ivanov Alexander Antonovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1902 - 02/24/1945
  • guards Sergeant Ivanov Vasily Dmitrievich, squad leader of the 31st GSP 1919 - 03/25/1945
  • guards Red Army Ivanov Konstantin Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1921 - 03/26/1945
  • guards Red Army Ivanov Mikhail Vasilyevich
  • guards red Army soldier Ivishev Zabit, shooter of the 18th GSP 1897 - 03/11/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Ilashchuk Ilya Fedorovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1916 - 03/27/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Ilyinsky Vasily Ivanovich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Induchny Petr Antonovich
  • guards Corporal Isadchenko Nikolai Efimovich
  • guards red Army soldier Ismailov Satualde, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1924 - 02/24/1945
  • guards ml. Sergeant Kabeshkin Vasily Petrovich, squad leader of the 31st GSP 1905 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Kadnikov Vladimir Konstantinovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1914 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red army soldierKadyrbaev Faizdrakhmat , machine gunner of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1913
  • guards Sergeant Kalashnikov Alexander Ivanovich, commander of the rifle squad of the 18th GSP 1925 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Kalenobrodsky Leon Pavlovich
  • guards Corporal Kalinin Fedor Alexandrovich, Art. telephone operator of the 51st OGBS, born in 1917
  • guards red Army soldier Kalinichenko Petr Petrovich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Kanavkin Dmitry Vasilyevich, commander of the department of the 22nd GSP 1901 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Kanishev Nikolai Konstantinovich, mortar operator of the 22nd GSP 1924 - 02/25/1945
  • guards ml. Sergeant Kapitanov Vladimir Nikolaevich, squad leader of a foot reconnaissance platoon of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1915
  • guards Sergeant Karpov Ivan Andreevich, machine gunner of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1917
  • guards red Army soldier Kapustenok Vladimir Semenovich
  • guards red Army soldier Fedot Fomich Kapustin
  • guards red Army soldier Karasaev Dair, shooter of the 31st GSP 1907 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Karas Stepan Stepanovich
  • guards Red Army soldier Karvatsky Ivan Kazimirovich, medical instructor of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1903
  • guards Sergeant Karev Alexey Vasilyevich, commander of the 31st GSP 1908 - 03/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Kareev Petr Ivanovich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1908 - 03/26/1945
  • guards ml. Sergeant Karelin Yury Vasilievich, scout of the 12th OGRR, born in 1926
  • guards Art. Sergeant Kartavtsev Viktor Andreevich, head of the TsTS of the 51st OGBS, born in 1916
  • guards ml. Sergeant Karsheev Abdes, squad leader of the 18th GSP 1913 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Kachev Vasily Nikiforovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 02/24/1945
  • guards Sergeant Kashin Serafim Ivanovich, commander of the rifle squad of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1924 - 01/23/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Kashcheev Kirill Sergeevich, commander of the rifle squad of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1921
  • guards red army soldier Kvashnin Alexander Evdokimovich, submachine gunner of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1925
  • guards Sergeant Kinev Dmitry Davydovich, machine gunner of the 22nd GSP 1918 - 02/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Kirillov Mikhail Yakovlevich
  • guards ml. Sergeant Kishulka Ivan Iosifovich, commander of the page of the department 1913 - 02/23/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Kleshnin Leonty Moiseevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1902 - 03/24/1945
  • guards Sergeant Klimov Vasily Alekseevich, squad leader of the 31st GSP 1926 - 03/26/1945
  • guards foreman Klyuev Ivan Semenovich, foreman of the page of the company of the 31st GSP 1917 - 02/23/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Klyasny Andrey Ivanovich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1904 - 03/25/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Knyazev Grigory Ivanovich
  • guards red Army soldier Kobelev Vasily Dementievich, sapper of the 3rd OGSB, born in 1912
  • guards Corporal Kovalev Afanasy Aleksandrovich, PTR number of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1926
  • guards Sergeant Kovalev Vladimir Mikhailovich, telephone operator of the 51st OGBS, born in 1925
  • guards red Army soldier Kovalev Petr Fedorovich, telephone operator of the 28th GAP 1917 - 02/22/1945
  • guards red army soldier Kovalev Semyon Dmitrievich, machine gunner of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1924
  • guards red Army soldier Kovalchuk Dmitry Mikhailovich
  • guards red Army soldier Kozhukha Anikey Fedotovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1921 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Kozhukhar Vasily Vasilyevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1923 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Kozarenko Vladimir Antonovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 02/14/1945 (missing)
  • guards Red Army soldier Kozlov Ivan Vasilyevich, sapper-carpenter of the 3rd OGSB 1903 - 02/24/1945
  • guards ml. Sergeant Komar Semyon Matveyevich, squad leader of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1916 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Konev Matvey Sergeevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1898 - 03/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Konovalov Mikhail Vasilyevich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1906 - 02/20/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Hemp Sergey Fedorovich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1906 - 02/21/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Kopylov Danil Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1901 - 03/25/1945
  • guards Sergeant Koreshkov Fedor Sergeevich, machine gun number of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1926
  • guards red Army soldier Koryavkin Afanasy Pavlovich, light machine gunner of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1906
  • guards ml. Sergeant Koryagin Vitaly Nikolaevich, scout of the 12th OGRR, born in 1926
  • guards red Army soldier Kosteltsev Nikolai Petrovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1924 - 03/25/1945
  • guards ml. Sergeant Kostrov Viktor Ivanovich
  • guards Sergeant Kotenov Dmitry Ivanovich, pom. platoon commander of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1912 - 01/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Kotorbay Alexander Kononovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1902 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Kotuno Afanasy Vasilyevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1913 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Kotsava Stepan Mikhailovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1902 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Semyon Stepanovich Kochaban, shooter of the 18th GSP 1903 - 03/25/1945
  • guards Corporal Kravtsov Nikolai Sidorovich, machine gunner of the 18th GSP 1926 - 02/25/1945
  • guards Sergeant Kravchenko Egor Andreevich
  • guards Red Army soldier Fedor Ilyich Kreshch, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1922 - 03/24/1945
  • guards Corporal Krissalny Alexey Fedorovich, telephone operator of the 51st OGBS, born in 1908
  • guards Sergeant Krishtal Vasily Nikolaevich, driver of the 2nd OGIPTD 1924 - 02/22/1945
  • guards Corporal Krupin Alexey Ivanovich, telephone operator of the 51st OGBS, born in 1921
  • guards red Army soldier Kruchinin Georgy Zakharovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 03/24/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Kubrakov Ivan Mikhailovich
  • guards red Army soldier Kuvshinov Ivan Kuzmich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1910 - 01/28/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Kudryashov Ivan Petrovich, Art. telephonist-morseman of the 51st OGBS, born in 1920
  • guards Art. Sergeant Andrey Kuzin, submachine gunner of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1915
  • guards red Army soldier Kuznetsov Viktor Andreevich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 01/24/1945
  • guards Sergeant Kuznetsov Grigory Parfenovich, scout of the 12th OGRR 1914 - 01/26/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Kuznetsov Ivan Grigorievich, pom. commander of a rifle platoon of the 18th GSP 1909 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Kuznetsov Pavel Vasilyevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1904 - 03/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Kuzmenko Dmitry Efimovich
  • guards red Army soldier Andrey Kukolev, radio operator of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1918
  • guards red Army soldier Kulemin Nikolai Yakovlevich
  • guards red Army soldier Alexey Dmitrievich Kulikov, shooter of the 18th GSP 1917 - 02/21/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Kunitsky Ivan Ignatievich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1899 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Kurbanov Dzhuma, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1914 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army Kurenkov Mikhail Egorovich, reconnaissance platoon of foot reconnaissance of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1924
  • guards Art. Sergeant Kurenkov Fedor Grigorievich, pom. platoon commander of the 31st GSP 1907 - 01/26/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Kurochkin Nikolai Mikhailovich
  • guards red Army soldier Amvrosy Parfiryevich Kurydze, shooter of the 31st GSP 1907 - 03/28/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Kuchin Alexey Timofeevich
  • guards foreman Kuchumov Vasily Egorovich, medical instructor of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1905
  • guards ml. Sergeant Lavneev Dmitry Petrovich
  • guards red Army soldier Lebedenko Petr Fadeevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 03/27/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Levchuk Boris Matveyevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 02/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Pavel Vasilyevich Lekarev
  • guards red army soldierLemtyugov Stepan Leonovich , shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1909
  • guards red Army soldier Leshchenkov Stepan Demyanovich, sapper of the 3rd OGSB, born in 1911
  • guards red Army soldier Livar Dorofey Martynovich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1910 - 02/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Lisikh Semyon Aleksandrovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1906 - 03/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Yakov Pavlovich Litvinov, scout of the 12th OGRR 1911 - 10/14/1944
  • guards Sergeant Lobanov Boris Alekseevich, commander of the page of the department of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 02/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Lobanov Vlas Andreevich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1911 - 02/23/1945
  • guards Sergeant Lukin Vasily Egorovich, squad leader of the 31st GSP 1918 - 01/25/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Lukichev Petr Mikhailovich, foreman of the PA battery of the 18th GSP, born in 1912
  • guards red Army soldier Lukyanov Vasily Fedotovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1917 - 01/25/1945
  • guards Sergeant Lyskov Iosif Martynovich, squad leader of the 31st GSP 1918 - 03/26/1945
  • guards foreman Liuty Prokopiy Naumovich, commander of the communications department of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1924
  • guards Sergeant Lyalashvili Nikolay Sharkovich, commander of the rifle squad of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1924 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Makar Georgy Ivanovich
  • guards Red Army soldier Makarov Nikolai Vasilyevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 02/25/1945
  • guards foreman Makarovsky Polinariy Ilyich, platoon commander of the 51st OGBS, born in 1919
  • guards red Army soldier Andrey Ivanovich Makovey
  • guards red Army soldier Makovoz Alexander Nikolaevich
  • guards red Army soldier Maksimov Konstantin Fedorovich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1907 - 03/26/1945
  • guards Corporal Makulin Ivan Tikhonovich, machine gunner of the 31st GSP 1926 - 02/21/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Malkov Nikolai Aleksandrovich
  • guards red Army soldier Pavel Frolovich Markov, signalman of the communications company of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1917
  • guards Sergeant Maryin Alexander Ivanovich, commander of the page of the department of the 22nd GSP 1910 - 02/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Masalev Pavel Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1913 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Matveev Nikolai Fedorovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1921 - 02/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Matveev Stepan Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1915 - 02/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Makhiyanov Zakiriya, shooter of the 31st GSP 1906 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Matsko Prokopy Vasilyevich
  • guards Art. Sergeant Mashinskiy Petr Anfimovich, scout of the 12th OGRR 1919 - 01/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Mashutin Timofey Mikhailovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1918 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Medvedev Vladimir Nikandrovich 1923 - 17.03.1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Medvedev Mikhail Afanasevich, mortar gunner of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1923
  • guards foreman Merkushev Nikolai Fedorovich, pom. platoon commander of the 31st GSP 1907 - 05/17/1945
  • guards Corporal Merlinyuk Grigory Andreevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1926
  • guards red Army soldier Metemish Alexey Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1905 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Mesharikov Alexander Mikhailovich, signalman of the 22nd GSP 1926 - 02/24/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Minogorov Vasily Petrovich, pom. platoon commander of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1911 - 02/21/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Minchuk Ivan Grigorievich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1911 - 03/26/1945
  • guards ml. Sergeant Misyura Mikhail Ivanovich, gunner of an easel machine gun of the 31st GSP 1908 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Mikhailovsky Arson Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1910 - 03/15/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Mikheev Anatoly Alexandrovich, scout of the 12th OGRR, born in 1925
  • guards ml. Sergeant Mikheev Petr Petrovich, radio telegraph operator of the 51st OGBS, born in 1920
  • guards ml. Sergeant Mishchenko Alexander Ivanovich
  • guards ml. Sergeant Mishcheryakov Vladimir Ivanovich, squad leader of the 31st GSP 1926 - 01/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Mogilevsky Alexey Semenovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1914
  • guards foreman Mogoltsekov Adolf Petrovich, pom. platoon commander of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1920 - 02/20/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Moiseev Pantelei Vasilievich, commander of the 51st OGBS, born in 1924
  • guards red Army soldier Moroz Alexey Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1919 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Morozov Evgeny Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 02/24/1945
  • guards Sergeant Moskalev Pavel Maksimovich, commander of the sapper department of the 3rd OGSB 1911 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Mokhin Mikhail Aleksandrovich
  • guards red Army soldier Muravitsky Mikhail Vasilyevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1918 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Muratov Trofim Grigorievich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1910 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Murashkin Vasily Osipovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1911 - 02/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Murgevilov Dmitry Filafanovich, sapper-carpenter of the 3rd OGSB 1909 - 02/24/1945
  • guards Sergeant Mukharentsev Viktor Nikolaevich, signalman of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1925
  • guards Red Army soldier Myasnikov Ivan Demyanovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1907 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Nazemkin Agafon Romanovich, sapper of the 3rd OGSB, born in 1899
  • guards red Army soldier Narzakulov Pardakul, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Nakhankov Petr Ustinovich, gunner of the 31st GSP 1908 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Nepushkin Vladimir Illarionovich, castle 31st GSP 1908 - 02/21/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Nestin Alexander Alekseevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1901 - 03/24/1945
  • guards Corporal Nikitin Kapiton Artemyevich, telephone operator of the 51st OGBS, born in 1921
  • guards red Army soldier Nikitin Petr Vasilyevich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1905 - 02/21/1945
  • guards ml. Sergeant Nikitushin Pavel Fedorovich, commander of the rifle squad of the 18th GSP 1926 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Nikiforov Alexander Nikolaevich
  • guards Art. Sergeant Nikolaev Ivan Timofeevich
  • guards ml. Sergeant Nikulin Vasily Ivanovich, commander of the 3rd OGSB, born in 1921
  • guards red Army soldier Nimbuev Tyashet, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1922 - 01/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Novik Vladimir Fedorovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 02/21/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Novikov Nikolai Anisimovich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1916 - 10/30/1944
  • guards Art. Sergeant Novikov Nikolai Yakovlevich, commander of the page of the department of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1911 - 02/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Novoselov Petr Trofimovich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1909 - 03/22/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Nunkin Vladimir Zakharovich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 01/25/1945
  • guards ml. Sergeant Ovsyannikov Vasily Fedorovich, commander of the department of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1917 - 03/26/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Ovsyannikov Nikolai Nikolaevich, sapper of the 3rd OGSB, born in 1922
  • guards ml. Sergeant Ovchinnikov Fyodor Karpovich, scout of the 12th OGRR 1912 - 11/31/1944
  • guards Sergeant Nikolai Ogurtsov, scout of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Odinets Andrey Korneevich
  • guards Sergeant Odinets Ivan Markovich, squad leader of the 31st GSP 1903 - 03/26/1945
  • guards Sergeant Ozerov Grigory Karpovich, commander of the communications department of the 51st OGBS, born in 1922
  • guards red Army soldier Oleznitsky Yakov Yakimovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1911 - 01/27/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Olyunin Petr Mikhailovich
  • guards Red Army soldier Grigory Kharlamovich Orbu, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1922 - 03/25/1945
  • guards Red Army Orel Grigory Mikhailovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 03/27/1945
  • guards foreman Orekhov Alexander Konstantinovich, pom. platoon commander 1924 - 02/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Osipov Alexander Vasilyevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1901 - 02/14/1945
  • guards foreman Oskolkov Dmitry Aleksandrovich, pom. platoon commander of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1923 - 01/28/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Ostapyuk Davyd Pavlovich
  • guards red Army soldier Otchich Petr Moiseevich
  • guards Red Army soldier Okhlopkov Nikolai Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1904 - 02/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Oshchepkov Ivan Alekseevich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 03/26/1945
  • guards ml. Sergeant Pavlusenko Anatoly Tikhonovich, Art. radiotelegraph operator of the 51st OGBS, born in 1923
  • guards red Army soldier Padyshev Pavel Matveyevich
  • guards red Army soldier Palekh Terenty Protasovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment? - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Panasyuk Stepan Efimovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1924 - 01/23/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Pankov Boris Ivanovich, commander of the rifle squad of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1924
  • guards red Army soldier Perepelitsa Dmitry Vasilyevich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1919 - 03/25/1945
  • guards foreman m / s Pesterov Yakov Mikhailovich, sanitary instructor of the 31st GSP 1917 - 01/25/1945
  • guards foreman Pestov Ilya Mikhailovich, platoon commander of the 51st OGBS, born in 1920
  • guards Art. Sergeant Petrenko Elizaveta Ivanovna, foreman of the communications company of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1919
  • guards red Army soldier Petrenko Nikolai Sergeevich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 02/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Petrov Ivan Petrovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1924 - 02/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Petrov Pavel Petrovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1920 - 03/25/1945

scout of the 12th OGRR

09/21/1923

  • guards red Army Petukhov Grigory Danilovich , shooter of the 31st GSP 1905 - 01/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Pizhuk Alexey Vasilyevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1904 - 01/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Pikelny Vasily Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1909 - 02/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Pipkin Ivan Trofimovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1922 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Pirgar Nikolai Ivanovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1911 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Pisika Alexander Ivanovich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1922 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Plachinta Leon Nikiforovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Pleshka Ivan Nesterovich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1900 - 03/25/1945
  • guards Sergeant Pluzhnik Boris Pavlovich, machine gunner of the 31st GSP 1914 - 03/27/1945
  • guards ml. Sergeant Plyut Vladimir Tomasovich, commander of the page of the department of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1919 - 02/25/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Pogorelov Nikonor Ivanovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1904 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Podik Alexey Dmitrievich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Pozdeev Viktor Vasilyevich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 03/24/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Politsin Grigory Timofeevich, scout of the 12th OGRR, born in 1915
  • guards Sergeant Polozov Petr Semenovich, gun commander of the 31st GSP 1924 - 05/12/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Poluektov Ivan Azarovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 03/25/1945
  • guards Corporal Polyakov Nikolai Grigorievich, commander of the department of the 18th GSP 1910 - 02/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Pomogaev Fedor Andreevich, scout of the 12th OGRR, born in 1915
  • guards red Army soldier Ponamarash Ivan Semenovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1917 - 03/24/1945
  • guards ml. sergeant Ponomarev Ivan Nikolaevich, commander of the calculation of the 18th GSP 1926 - 01/06/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Popovich Gavriil Afanasyevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1921 - 02/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Poroskiv Andrey Gavrilovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1911 - 03/25/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Postolaki Konstantin Vasilyevich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1922 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Potapenko Ivan Zakharovich, submachine gunner of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1918
  • guards Sergeant Potapov Alexander Vasilyevich, commander of the 45 mm guns of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1924
  • guards Red Army soldier Pochebut Leonid Grigorievich, scout of the 12th OGRR, born in 1925
  • guards red Army soldier Pratsko Dmitry Vasilyevich, artilleryman of the 31st GSP 1903 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Prendetsky Konstantin Demidovich
  • guards red Army soldier Pribylsky Ivan Dmitrievich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1923 - 01/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Prikhozhaev Alexander Timofeevich, scout of the 12th OGRR, born in 1925
  • guards red Army soldier Prokurat Ivan Semenovich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1902 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Prots Ivan Ivanovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 02/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Pugachev Ilarion Lazarevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1911 - 02/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Pustamlinov Anton Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1910 - 03/25/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Pushkin Valentin Vasilyevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1920 - 02/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Pchelintsev Pavel Semenovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1908 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Rakov Ilya Alekseevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1917 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Ratnikov Alexander Petrovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1913 - 02/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Ratnikov Vasily Petrovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1908 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Ratynsky Timofey Nikitovich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1904 - 02/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Rakhmetov Ismail, shooter of the 22nd GSP 1901 - 01/23/1945
  • guards foreman Relizov Alexander Nikolaevich, pom. platoon commander of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1913 - 02/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Rimar Anton Esipovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 02/25/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Rodionov Ivan Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1909 - 01/24/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Rodionov Nikolai Mikhailovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1923 - 01/23/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Stepan Ivanovich Rodionov, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1904 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Rozhko Evdokim Efimovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1899 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Romanenko Grigory Danilovich
  • guards red Army soldier Romanchuk Panteleimon Vasilyevich
  • guards Art. Sergeant Rostov Egor Ivanovich, commander of the anti-tank gun of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1907
  • guards red Army soldier Rudakov Sergey Kuzmich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1911 - 01/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Rudenko Boris Spiridonovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1923 - 10/29/1944
  • guards Art. Sergeant Rusanov Fedor Ivanovich, scout of the 12th OGRR, born in 1926
  • guards red Army soldier Rusnak Mikhail Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1906 - 01/23/1945
  • guards ml. Sergeant Rutskikh Alexander Pavlovich, squad leader of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 01/23/1945
  • guards Sergeant Ryzhkov Nikifor Ivanovich, commander of the 31st GSP 1908 - 01/25/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Sabyanin Luka Eremeevich, gun commander of the 28th GAP 1914 - 12/27/1944
  • guards Sergeant Sabrikov Khakim Bukhamizyan, squad leader of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1924 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Savelyev Nikita Stepanovich, signalman of the 22nd GSP 1911 - 02/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Savin Nikolai Konstantinovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1908 - 02/24/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Savoskin Alexander Gavrilovich, commander of the economic department of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1918
  • guards Red Army soldier Sadrakov Kamal Sondedin., shooter of the 18th GSP 1902 - 01/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Salikov Nikolai Gavrilovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1904 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Salnev Nikolai Grigorievich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Salyuk Grigory Gerasimovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1900 - 03/26/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Samygin Mikhail Filipovich, pom. commander of a rifle platoon of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Alexei Petrovich Sanin, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1908 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Sapegin Viktor Mikhailovich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1924 - 03/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Sapozhnikov Grigory Vasilyevich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1905 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Fedor Konstantinovich Sapunov, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1914 - 03/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Safonov Petr Erofeevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1905 - 01/24/1945
  • guards Sergeant Safonov Yakov Iosifovich, commander of the rifle squad of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1910
  • guards red Army soldier Safronov Alexei Konstantinovich, scout of the 12th OGRR 1922 - 03/29/1945
  • guards Corporal Alexander Sedelnikov, telephone operator of the 51st OGBS, born in 1920
  • guards Red Army soldier Sedlovsky Nikolai Nikolaevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 01/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Seliverstuk Ivan Petrovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1919 - 01/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Semyonov Viktor Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Semenov Ivan Fedorovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1910 - 02/23/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Sepkin Alexander Stepanovich, scout of the 12th OGRR, born in 1914
  • guards red Army soldier Serbu Anton Tikhonovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1919 - 03/26/1945
  • guards ml. Sergeant Sergeev Evgeny Trofimovich, orderly of the 18th GSP 1922 - 02/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Sergeev Efim Sergeevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1915 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Sergeev Ivan Alekseevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1895 - 02/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Sergeev Mikhail Illarionovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1909 - 01/27/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Sivinsky Roman Semenovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Silanov Ivan Avdeevich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1912 - 03/24/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Sinitsin Ivan Efimovich, gun commander of the 2nd OGIPTD 1920 - 02/22/1945
  • guards Corporal Sirotkin Nikolay Vasilievich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1914 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Sitdikov Gabrakhman Zakirovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1922
  • guards ml. Sergeant Siyukov Ivan Aleksandrovich, gunner of the 31st GSP 1920 - 01/21/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Skorodumov Flaviy Nikolaevich, gun commander of a battery of 76 mm guns of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1925
  • guards Sergeant Skorokhodov Vasily Leontyevich, commander of a communications platoon of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1924
  • guards ml. Sergeant Skotnikov Fedor Egorovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Violin Afanasy Seliverstovich
  • guards red Army soldier Skrypka Afanasy Selverstovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1903 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Skyabus Vyacheslav Aleksandrovich
  • guards Red Army soldier of Slary Ivan Nikitovich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Slastushinsky Anatoly Petrovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1915 - 02/14/1945 (missing)
  • guards Sergeant Slepenky Akim Nikitovich, telephone operator of the 1st mortar company of the 31st GSP, born in 1911
  • guards red Army soldier Slobodenyuk Petr Stratonovich
  • guards red Army soldier Slyusar Dmitry Iosifovich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1906 - 02/25/1945
  • guards Corporal Smargovsky Vladimir Danilovich, gun number of the 2nd OGIPTD 1921 - 02/22/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Smelov Vasily Alexandrovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1902 - 02/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Smirnov Alexander Timofeevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1897 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Smolin Anatoly Vsevolodovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1909 - 03/15/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Smolyak Vladimir Prokopevich, commander of the calculation of the 31st GSP 1922 - 01/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Smuk Fedor Nikolaevich, artilleryman of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1910 - 02/25/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Sokolov Ivan Ivanovich
  • guards Red Army soldier Alexei Grigorievich Solarev, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1923 - 03/27/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Soldaev Ivan Efimovich, scout of the 12th OGRR, born in 1923
  • guards ml. Sergeant Soldatenkov Petr Filippovich, squad leader of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 01/24/1945
  • guards Sergeant Solmanov Atakan Nasitovich, squad leader of the 31st GSP 1921 - 02/21/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Solovyov Dmitry Pavlovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1909 - 03/24/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Sorokeev Pantelei Nikolaevich, pom. platoon commander of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Sotenko Sergey Sergeevich, orderly of the 31st GSP 1906 - 02/21/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Sochnev Alexander Evdokimovich, mortar crew commander of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1918
  • guards red Army soldier Thank you Vladimir Dmitrievich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1898 - 01/24/1945
  • guards foreman Stavitsky Vsevolod Leonidovich, commander of the communications department of the headquarters platoon of the 51st OGBS, born in 1917
  • guards red Army soldier Staromuzhev Dmitry Konstantinovich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1915 - 02/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Stasenko Pavel Konstantinovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1915 - 05/15/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Stegarescu Vasily Fedorovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1921 - 03/25/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Stepanov Konstantin Semenovich, scout of the 12th OGRR, born in 1918
  • guards Sergeant Stepnov Ivan Prokopevich, squad leader of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 01/24/1945
  • guards Sergeant Stolbovsky Ivan Nikitovich, commander of the 12th OGRR, born in 1915
  • guards red Army soldier Strakhov Fedor Nikolaevich
  • guards red Army soldier Stuzhenko Kuzma Fedorovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1904 - 01/24/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Grigory Kharitonovich Suvorov, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1907 - 02/24/1945
  • guards Sergeant Suvorov Nikolai Ivanovich, pom. commander of a rifle platoon of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1924
  • guards red Army soldier Surzhko Grigory Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1916 - 01/14/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Surkov Vladimir Kuzmich, commander of a machine-gun crew of the 31st GSP 1924 - 01/27/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Pavel Egorovich Sutormin, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1911 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Sukhanov Karp Stepanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 02/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Sukhov Vasily Stepanovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 01/26/1945
  • guards ml. Sergeant Suchkov Alexander Vasilievich, castle 31st GSP 1926 - 02/21/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Sysoev Mikhail Yakovlevich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1915 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Sych Savva Efimovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1902 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Tabashnikov Grigory Akimovich, sapper of the 3rd OGSB, born in 1925
  • guards red Army soldier Taksheev Fedor Vasilyevich, telephone operator of the 51st OGBS, born in 1920
  • guards Sergeant Talalay Danil Ivanovich, medical instructor of the 31st GSP 1895 - 03/26/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Taranovsky Ivan Antonovich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 03/03/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Tarasov Yegor Ivanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1917 - 01/23/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Tenderov Vladimir Filimonovich, commander of the rifle squad of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 03/05/1945
  • Sergeant Terentyev Khariton Terentyevich, commander of the page of the department of the 22nd GSP 1915 - 02/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Timoshchenko Vasily Fedorovich, commander of the communications company of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1923
  • guards Corporal Tikhonov Ivan Vasilyevich, machine gunner of the 31st GSP 1926 - 03/26/1945
  • guards Sergeant Tikhonov Nikolay Ivanovich, squad leader of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment? - 01/24/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Tkachuk Ivan Kharitonovich, artilleryman of the 31st GSP 1900 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Tolochko Tikhon Alexandrovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1914 - 10/29/1944
  • guards Red Army soldier Topalo Konstantin Ivanovich
  • guards red Army soldier Tregub Mikhail Yakovlevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1903 - 02/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Tregubenko Stepan Emelyanovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1899 - 01/27/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Trofimov Sergey Alekseevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1903 - 02/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Tuktomisov Kostay Utyumevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1924 - 03/12/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Thousand Alexander Sidorovich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 01/25/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Tychinsky Grigory Leontyevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1911 - 03/25/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Tyumin Ignat Nikolaevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1909 - 01/23/1945
  • guards Sergeant Tyurnev Vladimir Vasilievich, commander of the page b-on the 18th GSP 1924 - 02/21/1945
  • guards Corporal Ursu Ivan Stepanovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1912 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Urudzhev Urudzh Abakurovich, telephone operator of the 18th GSP 1918 - 03/25/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Usoltsev Grigory Grigorievich, commander of the page of the department of the 22nd GSP 1914 - 02/25/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Ushakov Fedor Petrovich, pom. platoon commander of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1919 - 02/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Farvazitdinov Sirazitdin, shooter of the 31st GSP 1907 - 02/21/1945
  • guards ml. Sergeant Feoktistov Dmitry Egorovich, gun number of the 2nd OGIPTD 1924 - 02/22/1945
  • guards foreman Filipenkov Matvey Yakovlevich, pom. platoon commander of the 31st GSP 1910 - 02/20/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Filippov Savoniy Antonovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1920 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Filiptsov Nikolai Mikhailovich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Fishtik Nikolai Grigorievich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 02/27/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Flora Petr Georgievich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1900 - 03/24/1945
  • guards ml. Sergeant Khabibulin Gibai Kalimovich, deputy squad leader of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 01/25/1945
  • guards Sergeant Khazhin Khayakhmat Akhmedovich, scout of the 12th OGRR 1920 - 01/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Khanbekov Akhmetsha Ainulovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 02/25/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Aleksey Ivanovich Kharitonov, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 02/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Khojaev Ishamkul, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1910 - 01/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Khozyaykin Alexey Yakovlevich, telephone operator of the 51st OGBS, born in 1923
  • guards Red Army soldier Fedor Ivanovich Holondash, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 01/27/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Khomraev Kurban, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1901 - 01/02/1945
  • guards Corporal Khokhlov Yakov Antonovich, telephone operator of the 51st OGBS, born in 1916
  • guards red Army soldier Khramtsov Afanasy Alexandrovich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 03/27/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Khudaiberdenov Sato, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1923 - 03/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Khudaiberdiev Ana, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1897 - 01/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Khusnetdinov Shaikhutdin, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1907 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Tsapesh Mikhail Yakovlevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1909 - 01/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Tsarev Ivan Alekseevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1903 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Tsarev Ilya Andreevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1902 - 02/23/1945
  • guards Corporal Alexey Mitrofanovich Tsymbar
  • guards Corporal Alexey Chaly Abramovich, machine gunner of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1925
  • guards Corporal Chashnikov Vitaly Pavlovich, radio telegraph operator of the 2nd OGIPTD 1923 - 02/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Chebotarev Ivan Egorovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1913 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Chebotar Mikhail Georgievich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1921 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Chekan Boris Mikhailovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1915 - 02/24/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Chepurnov Ivan Pavlovich, commander of the department of the 51st OGBS, born in 1916
  • guards red Army soldier Chepurnoy Alexei Iosifovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1919 - 02/25/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Cherenkov Ivan Mikhailovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1908 - 02/21/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Cherentaev Nikolai Andreevich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1924 - 01/26/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Cherepyany Valentin Vasilyevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 03/27/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Cherkas Vladimir Petrovich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1906 - 03/25/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Cherkashin Vasily Ivanovich, foreman of a rifle company of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1907
  • guards red Army soldier Chernetsov Ivan Markovich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1910 - 03/26/1945
  • guards ml. Sergeant Chernitsky Vasily Pavlovich, commander of the machine gun department of the 18th GSP 1911 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Chigintsov Alexander Mikhailovich, scout of the 12th OGRR, born in 1925
  • guards Art. Sergeant Chirkunov Andrey Ivanovich, commander of the rifle squad of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1914
  • guards red Army soldier Chichvarin Alexander Ivanovich, loading the 31st GSP born in 1923
  • guards red Army soldier Chora Vasily Trifonovich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1912 - 03/26/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Chubarev Nikolai Fedorovich, gun number of the battery of 76 mm guns of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1926
  • guards red Army soldier Shabanov Egor Demyanovich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 02/21/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Shabanov Ivan Petrovich, reconnaissance platoon of foot reconnaissance of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1924
  • guards red Army soldier Shablinsky Vasily Alekseevich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1897 - 02/25/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Shalnov Ivan Nikiforovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 01/23/1945
  • guards Art. Sergeant Shangin Nikolai Egorovich, pom. platoon commander of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1916 - 01/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Shantimurov Pavel Timofeevich, radio telegraph operator of the 28th GAP 1911 - 01/21/1945
  • guards Sergeant Shaparov Nikolai Maksimovich, commander of the 3rd OGSB, born in 1912
  • guards Corporal Shapovalov Nikolai Panteleevich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1918 - 02/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Shaporenko Nikolay Ignatievich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1922 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Sharbinsky Milenty Nikolaevich, machine gunner of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1922
  • guards red Army soldier Shvatchenko Davyd Petrovich, shooter of the 5th rifle company of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1905
  • guards Sergeant Shvets Ivan Emelyanovich, squad leader of the 31st GSP 1926 - 02/20/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Shiman Alexey Semenovich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 02/20/1945
  • guards Corporal Shishkin Ivan Ivanovich, Art. telephone operator of the 51st OGBS, born in 1918
  • guards red Army soldier Shklyansky Alexei Stepanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1907 - 01/24/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Shklyaruk Alexander Ilyich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 01/24/1945
  • guards ml. Sergeant Shuvalov Sergey Danilovich, gun commander of the 28th GAP 1921 - 02/21/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Shcherbakov Ivan Karpovich, shooter of the 18th Guards Rifle Regiment 1923 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Shcherbakov Foma Demyanovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1906 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Schok Petr Andreevich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Eisman Alexander Grigorievich, shooter of the 31st GSP 1904 - 02/20/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Yuldashev Irgash, machine gunner of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1925
  • guards red Army soldier Yumakov Petr, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1911 - 03/24/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Yumakulov Zainula, scout of the 12th OGRR, born in 1924
  • guards red Army soldier Yuryev Nikolai Aleksandrovich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1926 - 01/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Yakubov Abdukadyr, shooter of the 18th GSP 1900 - 02/21/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Yakushev Georgy Alexandrovich, shooter of the 18th GSP 1912 - 02/24/1945
  • guards Red Army soldier Yanin Vladimir Alekseevich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1920 - 03/25/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Yanushkevich Vasily Grigorievich, shooter of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment 1923 - 03/26/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Yarimchuk Maxim Iosifovich, shooter of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1905 - 01/23/1945
  • guards red Army soldier Yashin Alexander Mikhailovich, mortar gunner of the 31st Guards Rifle Regiment, born in 1923
  • guards ml. Sergeant Yashchuk Mitrofan Antonovich, squad leader of the 22nd Guards Rifle Regiment 1925 - 01/24/1945

If your family archive contains photographs of your relative and you send his biography, this will give us the opportunity to perpetuate the memory of a soldier, a participant in the hostilities of the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945, on the territory of the Republic of Latvia.

The feat that the soldiers performed during the defense and liberation of the Republic of Latvia led to Our Victory, and the memory of the people who gave their lives for this will not be forgotten.