Clever Geek Handbook
📜 ⬆️ ⬇️

1st shooting building (2nd formation)

1st Infantry Corps ( 1st SK ) - combined-arms tactical formation ( infantry corps ) of the Armed Forces of the USSR .

Red Army flag.svg 1st shooting case
1st sk
Type of:shooting corps
Type of army:Rifle troops
Number of formations:2
In the composition of the armies:43rd Army →
→ 39th Army →
→ 43th Army →
→ 2nd Guards. Army →
→ 4th beats. Army →
→ 51st Army →
→ 1st beats. army
Commanders
Kotelnikov, Vasily Petrovich
Vasilyev, Nikolai Alekseevich
Combat operations
Operation Bagration
Baltic operation
Kurland offensive operation

Content

History

Great Patriotic War

The 1st Infantry Corps (2nd formation) was created in September 1943 in the Moscow Military District .

The corps participated in strategic operations to liberate Belarus and the Baltic states .

From September 3, 1943, the corps was in the Kaliningrad Front as part of the Army in action . Since October of that year - as part of the 43rd Army .

In November 1943, the corps was transferred to the 1st Baltic Front . In December 1943 he was included in the 39th Army .

In January 1944, the 1st Rifle Corps was part of the 43rd Army .

In December 1944, the corps was included in the 2nd Guards Army .

In January 1945 the corps was subordinate to the 4th Shock Army .

In February 1945 as part of the 51st Army .

From April 1945 until the end of hostilities in Germany, the 1st Rifle Corps, which included 3 rifle divisions, was part of the 1st Shock Army of the Courland Group of Forces of the Leningrad Front [1] [2] .

In different periods of the war, the 1st Infantry Corps included:

  • For September 1943:
  • 97th Infantry Division ;
  • 204th Infantry Division;
  • 219th Infantry Division .
  • for November 1943:
  • 145th Infantry Division ;
  • 204th Infantry Division;
  • 262nd Infantry Division .
  • for April 1944:
  • 179th Infantry Division ;
  • 204th Infantry Division;
  • 145th Infantry Division;
  • 262nd Infantry Division;
  • 306th Infantry Division .
  • for September 1944:
  • 145th Infantry Division;
  • 179th Infantry Division;
  • 204th Infantry Division;
  • 357th Infantry Division ;
  • 262nd Infantry Division;
  • 306th Infantry Division .
  • for December 1944:
  • 145th Infantry Division;
  • 357th Infantry Division;
  • 262nd Infantry Division;
  • 306th Infantry Division.
  • on January 1945:
  • 145th Infantry Division;
  • 357th Infantry Division;
  • 306th Infantry Division.
  • for March 1945:
  • 145th Infantry Division;
  • 344th Infantry Division ;
  • 357th Infantry Division;
  • 306th Infantry Division.
  • on May 9, 1945:
  • 306th Infantry Ribshevskaya Red Banner Division ;
  • The 344th Infantry Division of the Roslavl Red Banner Division ;
  • 357th Rifle Order of the Suvorov Division .

Post-war corps history

At the end of World War II, the 1st Rifle Corps was redeployed along with the administration of the 1st Shock Army as part of the Turkestan Military District , with the headquarters of the corps in Ashgabat, Turkmen SSR . As part of the corps, the rifle divisions that were in its composition at the time the war ended (306th, 344th and 357th) were declining in Central Asia.

In 1955, the 1st Rifle Corps was renamed the 1st Army Corps .

In connection with the re-creation of the Central Asian Military District , in 1970 the 1st Army Corps was redeployed in the city of Semipalatinsk of the Kazakh SSR , after which it was transformed into the 32nd All-Army Army , which after the collapse of the USSR became part of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Kazakhstan [3 ]

Connection commanders

During the war, the compound was commanded by two generals [4] :

  • Kotelnikov Vasily Petrovich - September 3, 1943 - May 27, 1944
  • Vasilyev Nikolai Alekseevich - May 28, 1944 - July 1945

Notes

  1. ↑ 1st Rifle Corps on the site "Our Victory"
  2. ↑ Feskov V.I., Golikov V.I., Kalashnikov K.A. "The Red Army in the victories and defeats of 1941-1945." / Ed. Chernyak E.I .. - Tomsk: Publishing House of Tomsk University, 2003. - P. 20. - 631 p. - ISBN 5-7511-1624-0 .
  3. ↑ Feskov V.I., Golikov V.I., Kalashnikov K.A., Slugin S.A. Appendix to Chapter 28. “The 32nd Combined-Arms Army (1st Army Corps) in the Period 1945–1991” // “The Armed Forces of the USSR after the Second World War: from the Red Army to the Soviet. Part 1: Ground Forces. - Tomsk: Tomsk University Press, 2013. - p. 553-554. - 640 s. - 500 copies - ISBN 978-5-89503-530-6 .
  4. ↑ Zalessky K. A. "The Great Patriotic War. Great biographical encyclopedia. - M .: AST, 2013 .-- 640 p. - 3000 copies - ISBN 978-5-17-078426-4 .
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1-y_strelkovy_korpus_(2-th_forming )&oldid = 101082731


More articles:

  • Kamenka (Gorshechensky district)
  • Martina (Empress of Byzantium)
  • Yurkevich, Evgeny Nikolaevich
  • Taras. Return
  • Pyzhikova, Natalya Ivanovna
  • Philippe de Lannoy-Cebur
  • Kalinina (Mikhnevskoe Rural Settlement)
  • Santa Park
  • Cholek, Wenceslaw
  • Pacheco, Carlos

All articles

Clever Geek | 2019