Blue Division: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Unit of Spanish volunteers in the German Wehrmacht during World War II}} |
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{{Infobox |
{{Infobox military unit |
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| unit_name = 250th Infantry Division ("Blue Division") |
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| native_name = {{langx|es|250.ª División de Infantería ("División Azul")|label=none}}<br>{{langx|de|250. Infanterie-Division ("Blaue Division")|label=none}} |
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| image = <!-- Unsourced image removed: [[Image:Caidosd250.jpg|250px]] --> |
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| image = Arms of the 250th Division of the Wehrmacht.svg |
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| image_size = 150px |
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| caption = Divisional insignia, incorporating [[Symbols of Francoism|Francoist symbols]] |
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| dates = {{Start date|1941|6|24|df=y}} {{en dash}} {{end date|1943|10|10|df=y}} |
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| allegiance = {{flag|Nazi Germany}} |
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| country = {{flagcountry|Francoist Spain|1938}} |
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| allegiance = {{flagcountry|Nazi Germany}} |
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| nickname = Blue Division |
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| type = [[Infantry]] |
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| branch = {{army|Nazi Germany}} |
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| size = 18,000 troops (1941)<br />45,000 troops (total, 1941–44){{sfn|Moreno Juliá|2018|p=193}} |
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| branch = [[Wehrmacht|Heer]] |
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| battles = {{tree list}} |
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* [[World War II]] |
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** [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]] |
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* [[Siege of Leningrad]] |
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* [[ |
*** [[Siege of Leningrad]] |
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**** [[Battle of Krasny Bor]] |
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| notable_commanders = [[Agustín Muñoz Grandes]]<br>[[Emilio Esteban Infantes]] |
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{{tree list/end}} |
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| notable_commanders = [[Agustín Muñoz Grandes]] <br /> [[Emilio Esteban Infantes]] |
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}} |
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The ''' |
The '''250th Infantry Division''' ({{langx|de|'''250. Infanterie-Division'''}}), better known as the '''Blue Division''' ({{langx|es|División Azul}}, {{langx|de|Blaue Division}}), was a unit of volunteers from [[Francoist Spain]] operating from 1941 to 1943 within the [[German Army (1935–1945)|German Army]] ({{lang | de | Heer}}) on the [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]] during [[World War II]]. It was officially designated the '''Spanish Volunteer Division''' ({{langx|es|División Española de Voluntarios|label=none}}) by the [[Francoist Army|Spanish Army]]. |
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[[Francisco Franco]] had secured power in Spain after the [[Nationalist faction (Spanish Civil War)|Nationalist]] victory in the [[Spanish Civil War]] (1936–1939), during which the Nationalists received support from [[Nazi Germany]]. Franco's authoritarian regime remained officially [[non-belligerent]] in World War II but sympathised with the [[Axis powers]]. After lobbying by the Spanish Foreign Minister [[Ramón Serrano Suñer]] and by senior figures within the Spanish Army following the 22 June 1941 launch of [[Operation Barbarossa]], Franco agreed that Spanish people would be permitted to enlist privately in the German Army and undertook to provide tacit support. An [[infantry division]] was raised from [[FET y de las JONS|Falangist]] and Spanish Army cadres and was sent for training in Germany. The unit fought on the Eastern Front, in the 1941–1944 [[siege of Leningrad]], notably in the [[Battle of Krasny Bor]]. They eventually withdrew from the front after [[Allies of World War II|Allied]] political pressure on Spain in October 1943 and returned to Spain shortly afterwards. Several thousand non-returners were incorporated into the 121st Infantry Division, the short-lived [[Blue Legion]], and eventually into the [[Waffen-SS]]. |
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==Origins== |
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Although Spanish leader Field Marshal (''[[Generalísimo]]'') [[Francisco Franco]] did not enter the war on the side of Nazi Germany, he permitted volunteers to join the German Army (''[[Wehrmacht Heer]]'') on the clear and guaranteed condition they would exclusively fight against [[Bolshevism]] ([[Soviet Union|Soviet]] [[Communism]]) on the Eastern Front, and not against the [[Western Allies]] or any [[Western Europe]]an occupied populations. In this manner, he could keep Spain at peace with the Western Allies whilst simultaneously repaying [[Adolf Hitler|Hitler]] for his support during the [[Spanish Civil War]] (see [[Condor Legion]]). Spanish foreign minister [[Ramón Serrano Súñer]] made the suggestion to raise a volunteer corps, and at the commencement of [[Operation Barbarossa]], Franco sent an official offer of help to Berlin. |
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==Background== |
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Hitler approved Spanish volunteers on June 24, 1941. Volunteers flocked to recruiting offices in all the metropolitan areas in Spain. Cadets from the officer training school in [[Zaragoza, Spain|Zaragoza]] volunteered in particularly large numbers. Initially, the Spanish government was prepared to send about 4,000 men, but soon understood that there were more than enough volunteers to fill an entire [[military division|division]]: 18,104 men in all, 2,612 officers and 15,492 soldiers. |
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[[Francisco Franco]] took power at the head of a coalition of [[Nationalist faction (Spanish Civil War)|fascist, monarchist, and conservative political factions]] in the [[Spanish Civil War]] (1936–1939) against the [[Republican faction (Spanish Civil War)|left-leaning Spanish government]] supported by [[Communism|communist]] and [[Anarchism|anarchist]] factions. More than 300,000 people were killed, and lasting damage was done to the country's economy.{{sfn|Moreno Juliá|2018|p=195}} |
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Franco had been supported [[German involvement in the Spanish Civil War|by Nazi Germany]] and [[Italian military intervention in Spain|Fascist Italy]] during the Civil War and Franco sympathised with many aspects of fascist ideology, especially its [[anti-communism]]. |
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Fifty percent of officers and non-commissioned officers ([[non-commissioned officers|NCOs]]) were professional soldiers, many of them veterans of the Spanish Civil War. Many others were members of the [[Falange]] (the Spanish [[Fascist]] party). Others felt pressure to join because of past ties with the Republic or — like [[Luis García Berlanga]], who later became a well-known cinema director — to help their relatives in Franco's prisons. |
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On the other side, the republican army had been supported by [[International response to the Spanish Civil War#Soviet Union|Soviet aid]]. |
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Franco ensured that Spain was [[political neutrality|neutral]] at the start of [[World War II]] but seriously contemplated joining the conflict as a German ally in the aftermath of the [[Battle of France|Fall of France]] in 1940.{{sfn|Moreno Juliá|2018|p=195}} He [[Meeting at Hendaye|met Adolf Hitler on 23–24 October 1940]] at [[Hendaye]] but was unable to gain promises that Spain would gain [[French North Africa|colonial territories from France in North Africa]]. Hitler feared delegitimizing the new [[Vichy France|Vichy regime]] in France.{{sfn|Moreno Juliá|2018|p=196}} Ultimately, Spain remained neutral. |
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==Formation== |
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General [[Agustín Muñoz Grandes]] was assigned to lead the volunteers. Because the soldiers could not use official Spanish army uniforms, they adopted a symbolic uniform comprising the red berets of the [[Carlists]], khaki trousers used in the [[Spanish Legion]], and the blue shirts of the Falangists - hence the nickname ''"Blue Division."'' This uniform was used only while on leave in Spain; in the field, soldiers wore the German Army (''Wehrmacht Heer'') field gray uniform with a shield on the upper right sleeve bearing the word ''"España"'' and the Spanish national colors. Although the Portuguese volunteers were few (Portugal tried to maintain a more neutral position, and only let a limited number of volunteers leave for Germany) they did the same their neighbors did, wearing a field gray uniform with a shield on the very same position with the word "Portugal" and the Portuguese red & green banner. |
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[[File:Spanish soldiers learning to handle a machine gun.jpg|thumb|Blue Division soldiers manning a gun during training in 1941]] |
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The [[Operation Barbarossa|German invasion of the Soviet Union]] led to renewed interest in participating in what Spanish officials saw as an "anti-communist crusade". Within hours of the invasion on 22 June 1941, Foreign Minister [[Ramón Serrano Suñer]] first proposed to Franco the idea of a Spanish contribution,{{sfn|Moreno Juliá|2018|pp=197–198}} publicly declaring [[Rusia es culpable|the Soviet Union guilty of the Spanish Civil War]]. Senior officers of the [[Spanish Army]] supported the proposal. Franco soon agreed to the proposal, directing that the Spanish Army should unofficially co-ordinate the formation of the unit. Although disappointed that Spain had not [[declaration of war|declared war]] on the Soviet Union, the German regime accepted the Spanish offer on 24 June 1941.{{sfn|Moreno Juliá|2018|pp=198–199}} Franco struggled to balance the demands of Spanish Army and [[FET y de las JONS|Falangist factions]], both of which attempted to influence the new unit, himself siding with the former. |
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Recruitment began on 27 June 1941 and 18,373 men had volunteered by 2 July 1941 from within the Spanish Army and Falangist movement.{{sfn|Moreno Juliá|2018|pp=201–202}} Fifty per cent of officers and [[non-commissioned officers|NCOs]] were professional soldiers given leave from the Spanish Army, including many veterans of the Spanish Civil War.{{cn|date=May 2020}} The division was made up mainly of Falangist volunteers and almost a fifth of early volunteers were students.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Beevor|first=Antony|title=The Second World War|year=2014|isbn=978-1-78022-564-7|location=London|pages=489|oclc=884744421}}</ref> General [[Agustín Muñoz Grandes]] was assigned to lead the volunteers. Because the soldiers could not use official Spanish Army uniforms, they adopted a symbolic uniform comprising the red [[beret]]s of the [[Carlism|Carlists]], the [[khaki]] trousers of the [[Spanish Legion]], and the blue shirts of the Falangists—hence the nickname "Blue Division." This uniform was used only while on leave in Spain; in the field, soldiers wore the German Army [[Feldgrau|field grey uniform]] ({{lang|de-DE|Feldgrau}}) with a shield on the upper right sleeve bearing the word "{{lang|es-ES|España}}" and the [[flag of Spain|Nationalist Spanish national colours]]. |
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==Deployment and action== |
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===Germany: training and organization of the Division=== |
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On July 13, 1941, the first train left Madrid for [[Grafenwohr]], [[Bavaria]] for a further five weeks of training. There they became the Heer's 250th Infantry Division and were initially divided into four infantry [[regiment]]s. Following the standard Heer model, one of these regiments was dispersed among the others, which were named after three of the Spanish cities that volunteers largely originated from - [[Barcelona]], [[Valencia (city in Spain)|Valencia]] and [[Seville]]. Each regiment had three [[battalion]]s (of four companies each) and two weapons companies. An [[artillery]] regiment of four battalions (of three batteries each). Aviator volunteers formed a "Blue Squadron" (''Escuadrilla Azul'') which, using [[Bf 109]]s and [[Focke-Wulf 190|FW 190]]s, was credited with 156 Soviet aircraft kills. |
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==Operational history== |
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===Onto the Russian front (August-October 1941)=== |
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===Organization and training=== |
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After swearing a modified military oath to fight Communism on August 20, the Blue Division was assigned to combat duties. It was initially assigned to [[Army Group Center]], the force advancing towards Moscow. |
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[[File:División Azul. Primer Viaje Tren. Verano 1941.png|thumb|The train trip from Madrid to Grafenwöhr]] |
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The division was transported by train to [[Suwałki]], [[Poland]] (August 28), from where it had to continue by foot on a 900 km march. It was scheduled to travel through [[Hrodna|Grodno]] ([[Belarus]]), [[Lida]] (Belarus), [[Vilnius]] ([[Lithuania]]), [[Molodechno]] (Belarus), [[Minsk]] (Belarus), [[Orsha]] (Belarus) onto [[Smolensk]] and from there to the Moscow front. While marching towards the Smolensk front on September 26, the Spanish volunteers were rerouted from [[Vitebsk]] and reassigned to [[Army Group North]] (the force closing on [[Saint Petersburg|Leningrad]]), and became part of German 16th Army. |
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On 13 July 1941 the first train left [[Madrid]] for [[Grafenwöhr]], [[Bavaria]] for a further five weeks of training. There they became the German Army's 250th Infantry Division and were initially divided into four [[infantry]] [[regiment]]s, as in a standard Spanish [[Division (military)|division]]. To aid their integration into the German supply system, they soon adopted the standard German model of three regiments. One of the original regiments was dispersed amongst the others, which were then named after three of the Spanish cities that volunteers largely originated from—Madrid, [[Valencia]] and [[Seville]]. Each regiment had three [[battalion]]s (of four [[Company (military unit)| companies]] each) and two [[weapon]]s companies, supported by an [[artillery]] regiment of four battalions (of three [[Artillery battery|batteries]] each). There were enough men left over to create an assault battalion, mainly armed with [[submachine gun]]s. Later, due to casualties, this unit was disbanded. Aviator volunteers formed a [[Blue Squadron]] (''Escuadrillas Azules'') which, using [[Messerschmitt Bf 109]]s and [[Focke-Wulf Fw 190]]s, claimed to have shot down 156 Soviet aircraft. |
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===Eastern Front=== |
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===Volkhov (October 1941-August 1942)=== |
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[[File:FOTOGRAFÍA DEL EJERCICIO TÁCTICO EN EL FRENTE DE LENINGRADO.jpg|thumb|Division's soldiers at the [[siege of Leningrad]] in 1943]] |
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It was first deployed on the [[Volkhov]] front, with its HQ stationed in [[Grigorovo]], in the outskirts of [[Novgorod]]. It was in charge of a 50 km section of the front north and south of Novgorod, along the banks of the Volkhov river and Lake [[Ilmen]]. According to the museum curator in the church Spasa Preobrazheniya on Ilyin Street, the division used the high cupola as a machine-gun nest. As a result, much of the building was seriously damaged, including many of the medieval icons by Feofan the Greek. [http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&q=&t=k&ll=58.526691,31.264343&spn=0.899111,2.554321&t=k View area] |
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[[File:Soldiers of the Spanish Blue Division.jpg|thumb|right|Soldiers of the Blue Division in skis in 1942 near the [[Volkhov (river)|Volkhov]]]] |
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On 31 July, after taking the [[Hitler Oath]],<ref>[[Arnold Krammer]]. Spanish Volunteers against Bolshevism: The Blue Division. ''Russian Review'', Vol. 32, No. 4 (Oct., 1973), pp. 388–402</ref> the Blue Division was formally incorporated into the German Wehrmacht as the 250th Division.<ref>David Wingeate Pike. Franco and the Axis Stigma. ''Journal of Contemporary History'', Vol. 17, No. 3 (Jul., 1982), pp. 369–407</ref> It was initially assigned to [[Army Group Center]], the force advancing towards [[Moscow]]. The division was transported by train to [[Suwałki]], [[Poland]] (August 28), from where it had to continue by foot on a {{convert|900|km|mi|adj=on}} march. It was scheduled to travel through [[Grodno]], and [[Lida]] in Belarus, [[Vilnius]] ([[Lithuania]]), and [[Maladzyechna]], [[Minsk]], and [[Orsha]] in Belarus to [[Smolensk]], and from there to the Moscow front. While marching towards the Smolensk front on September 26, the Spanish volunteers were rerouted from [[Vitebsk]] and reassigned to [[Army Group North]] (the force closing on [[Saint Petersburg|Leningrad]]), becoming part of the German [[16th Army (Wehrmacht)|16th Army]]. The Blue Division was first deployed on the [[Volkhov (river)|Volkhov]] River front, with its headquarters in [[Grigorovo, Novgorod Oblast|Grigorovo]], on the outskirts of [[Novgorod]]. It was in charge of a {{convert|50|km|mi|adj=on}} section of the front north and south of Novgorod, along the banks of the Volkhov River and [[Lake Ilmen]]. |
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The division's soldiers used the [[iconostasis]] of the Church of Saint Theodore Stratelates on the Brook for firewood. The iconostases of the [[Cathedral of St. Sophia, Novgorod|Cathedral of St. Sophia]], Sts. Peter and Paul Church in Kozhevniki, and the Cathedral of the Nativity of the Mother of God in the [[Antoniev Monastery]] were taken to Germany at the end of 1943.<ref>11th – 19th Century Russian Icons in the Collection of the National Museum Complex in Veliky Novgorod (p. 9), Exhibition Guidebook, Veliky Novgorod – 2018, Saint Petersburg: Lubavich, 216 pages, illustrated, {{ISBN|978-5-86983-862-9}} </ref> According to the museum curator in the [[Church of the Transfiguration on Ilyina Street]], the division used the high cupola as a machine-gun nest. As a result, much of the building was seriously damaged, including many of the medieval icons by [[Theophanes the Greek]]. Vladimir Kovalevskii, one of the division's White Russian emigre interpreters, left a particularly acerbic memoir account describing the low discipline and the crimes committed by the Spanish volunteers.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Kovalevskii |first=Vladimir |title=An Anti-Communist on the Eastern Front: The Memoirs of a Russian Officer in the Spanish Blue Division 1941–1942 |publisher=Pen & Sword Military |year=2023 |isbn=978-1-3990-6208-4 |editor=Núñez Seixas |editor2=Xosé M. |editor3=Beyda, Oleg}}</ref> |
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===Leningrad (August 1942-October 1943)=== |
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{{main|Siege of Leningrad}} |
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In August, 1942 it was transferred North to the Southeastern flank of the [[Saint Petersburg|Leningrad]] [[siege]], just South of the [[Neva]] near [[Pushkin (town)|Pushkin]], [[Kolpino]] and [[Krasny Bor, Leningrad Oblast|Krasny Bor]] in the [[Izhora River]] area. [http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&q=&t=k&ll=59.703958,30.573578&spn=0.108593,0.31929&t=k View Area] |
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In August 1942, the Blue Division was transferred north to the southeastern flank of the [[siege of Leningrad]], just south of the [[Neva]] River near [[Pushkin, Saint Petersburg|Pushkin]], [[Kolpino]] and [[Krasny Bor, Tosnensky District, Leningrad Oblast|Krasny Bor]] in the [[Izhora]] River area. After the collapse of the German southern front following the [[Battle of Stalingrad]], more German troops were deployed southwards. By this time, General [[Emilio Esteban Infantes]] had taken command. The Blue Division faced a major Soviet attempt to break the siege of Leningrad in February 1943, when the Soviet [[55th Army (Soviet Union)|55th Army]], reinvigorated after the victory at Stalingrad, attacked the Spanish positions at the [[Battle of Krasny Bor]], near the main Moscow-Leningrad road. Despite very heavy casualties, the Spaniards were able to hold their ground against a Soviet force seven times larger and supported by tanks. The assault was contained and the siege of Leningrad was maintained for a further year. The division remained on the Leningrad front where it continued to suffer heavy casualties due to weather and to enemy action.<ref>Gavrilov, B.I., Tragedy and Feat of the 2nd Shock Army, defunct site paper</ref> |
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The Blue Division remained on the Leningrad front where they suffered heavy casualties both due to cold and to enemy action at [[Myasnoi Bor]] following an encounter with the Soviet [[305th Rifle Division (Soviet Union)|305th Rifle Division]] during early February.<ref>Gavrilov, B.I., Tragedy and feat of the 2nd Shock Army, defunct site paper</ref> Franco dispatched more reinforcements, which in time included [[conscription|conscripts]] in addition to volunteers. Through rotation, as many as 45,000 Spanish soldiers served on the Eastern Front. They were awarded both Spanish and German military awards, and were the only division to be awarded a medal of their own, commissioned by Hitler. |
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The Blue Division was the only component of the German Army to be awarded [[Blue Division Medal (Germany)|a medal of its own]], commissioned by Hitler in January 1944 after the Division had demonstrated its effectiveness in impeding the advance of the [[Red Army]].<ref>{{cite book|title= España y la Segunda Guerra Mundial|author= Stanley G. Payne|author2= Delia Contreras|page= 85|year= 1996|publisher= Editorial Complutense S.A.|isbn= 978-84-89365-89-6}}</ref> Hitler referred to the division as "equal to the best German ones". During his [[Hitler's Table Talk|table talks]], he said: "...the Spaniards have never yielded an inch of ground. One can't imagine more fearless fellows. They scarcely take cover. They flout death. I know, in any case, that our men are always glad to have Spaniards as neighbours in their sector".<ref>Norman Cameron and R.H. Stevens (translators). ''Hitler's Table Talk 1941–1944: His Private Conversations''. Enigma Books. New York, 2000. p. 179.</ref> |
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After the collapse of the German front following the [[Battle of Stalingrad]], the situation changed and more German troops were deployed southwards. By this time general [[Emilio Esteban Infantes]] had taken command. |
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==Disbandment and the |
===Disbandment and the Blue Legion=== |
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Eventually, the [[Allies |
Eventually, the [[Allies of World War II|Allies]] and many Spaniards began to press Franco to withdraw troops from the [[quasi alliance]] with Germany. Franco initiated negotiations in the spring of 1943 and gave an order to withdraw on October 10. Some Spanish volunteers refused to return. On 3 November 1943 the Spanish government ordered all troops to return to Spain. In the end, the total of "non-returners" was close to 3,000 men, mostly [[FET y de las JONS|Falangists]]. Spaniards also joined other German units, and fresh volunteers slipped across the Spanish border near [[Lourdes]] in [[occupied France]]. The new pro-German Spanish units were collectively called the ''Legión Azul'' ("[[Blue Legion]]"). |
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Spaniards initially remained part of the 121st Infantry Division, but even this meagre force was ordered to return home in March 1944, and was transported back to Spain on March 21. The rest of the volunteers were absorbed into German units. [[Platoon]]s of Spaniards served in the [[3rd Mountain Division (Wehrmacht)|3rd Mountain Division]] and the 357th Infantry Division. One unit was sent to [[Latvia]]. Two companies joined the [[Brandenburger Regiment]] and German [[121st Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)|121st Division]] in [[Nazi security warfare]] in [[Yugoslavia]]. The 101st Company (''Spanische-Freiwilligen Kompanie der SS 101'', "Spanish Volunteer Company of the SS Number 101") of 140 men, made up of four rifle platoons and one staff platoon, was attached to [[28th SS Volunteer Grenadier Division Wallonien]]. |
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Some Spanish soldiers refused to return. Some believe that Franco gave his unofficial blessing as long as their number was below 1,500. But in any event, the Spanish Government on 3 November ordered all troops to return to Spain. In the end the total of 'non returners' was closer to 3,000 (mostly [[Falange|Falangists]]). Spaniards also joined other German units, mainly the [[Waffen-SS]], and fresh volunteers slipped across the Spanish border near [[Lourdes]], occupied France. The new pro-German units were collectively called the [[Blue Legion]] (''Legión Azul''). |
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Through rotation, as many as 45,000 Spanish soldiers served on the Eastern Front.<ref name=Clodfelter/> The casualties of the Blue Division and its successors included 4,954 men killed and 8,700 wounded. Another 372 members of the Blue Division, the Blue Legion, or volunteers of the ''Spanische-Freiwilligen Kompanie der SS 101'' were taken prisoner by the Red Army; 286 of these men remained in captivity until 2 April 1954, when they returned to Spain aboard the ship ''Semiramis'', supplied by the [[International Red Cross]].<ref name="WAIS">{{cite web|url=http://waisworld.org/go.jsp?id=02a&objectType=post&o=76958&objectTypeId=67608&topicId=39|title=Post: Division Azul Histories and Memoirs|last=Candil|first=Anthony J.|publisher=WAIS – [[World Association for International Studies]]|access-date=3 June 2014}}</ref> In action against the Red Army, the Blue Division suffered 22,700 casualties, while inflicting 49,300 casualties.<ref name=Clodfelter> |
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The Spaniards initially remained part of the 121st Infantry Division, but even this meagre force was ordered to return home in March 1944 and was transported back to Spain on March 21. The rest of the volunteers were absorbed into German units. |
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{{cite book |
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| last1= Clodfelter|first1= Micheal |
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| title= Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492–2015 |
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| edition = 4 |
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| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=8urEDgAAQBAJ |
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| date= 2017|publisher= McFarland|isbn= 978-0-7864-7470-7|page= 456 |
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}} |
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</ref> |
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[[File:Cementerio de la Almudena 04jul07 09.JPG|thumb|upright|Vault of the Blue Division, in La Almudena cemetery, Madrid]] |
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==After the war== |
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Platoons of Spaniards served in the 3rd Gebirgs Division and the 357th Infantry Division. One unit was sent to [[Latvia]]. Two companies joined the [[Brandenburger Regiment]] and German 121st Division in [[Yugoslavia]] to fight against [[Josip Broz Tito|Tito]]'s partisans. Fifty pro-Fascist Spaniards entered the French [[Pyrenees]] to combat the [[French Resistance]], of which some members were former Communist milicians of the [[Second Spanish Republic|Republican side]]. |
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Hundreds of Blue Division prisoners of war were held by the Soviet authorities. |
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While most prisoners from other nations would be repatriated after the war, Francoist Spain and the Soviet Union [[Russia–Spain relations#Soviet period|did not have diplomatic relations]]. Soviet camps held together staunch anti-Communist prisoners, those who collaborated with the Soviets either by their previous hidden ideology or after captivity and even those Republican sailors whose Spanish ships had been requisitioned after the [[Final offensive of the Spanish Civil War|fall of the Republic]]. In 1954, after the [[Death and state funeral of Joseph Stalin|death of Stalin]], the [[French Red Cross]] arranged the ship {{Interlanguage link|Semiramis (ship)|es|Semiramis|lt=''Semiramis''}} to bring those prisoners who desired repatriation to Barcelona. |
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== Portuguese volunteers == |
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The 101st company ''Spanische-Freiwilligen Kompanie der SS 101'' of 140 men, made up of four rifle platoons and one staff platoon, was attached to [[28th SS Volunteer Grenadier Division Wallonien|28th SS Volunteer Grenadier Division ''Wallonien'']] and fought in [[Province of Pomerania|Pomerania]] and [[Province of Brandenburg|Brandenburg province]]. Later, as part of [[11th SS Volunteer Panzergrenadier Division Nordland]] and under command of ''Haupsturmführer der SS'' [[Miguel Ezquerra]], it fought the last days of the war against Soviet troops in Berlin. |
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Like Spain, [[Portugal]] under the [[Estado Novo (Portugal)|Salazar regime]] remained neutral during World War II in agreement with the United Kingdom in accordance to the [[Anglo-Portuguese Treaty of 1373]] and more openly sympathized with [[Allies (World War II)|Western Allies]]. There was some popular anti-communist sentiment, and 150 Portuguese volunteers served unofficially in the Blue Division. However, most had roots in Spain or had already fought on the Francoist side in the [[Viriatos|Viriatos division]] during the Spanish Civil War. The Portuguese served in Spanish units and had no separate national presence.{{sfn|Caballero Jurado|2019}} |
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==War cemetery== |
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The number of casualties of the Blue Division and its sequels accounted for 4,954 dead, and 8,700 wounded. In addition, 372 members of the Blue Division, the [[Blue Legion]] or volunteers of the ''Spanische-Freiwilligen Kompanie der SS 101'' were taken as prisoners by the [[Red Army|Soviet forces]]. Of these, 286 were kept in captivity until 1954 when they returned to Spain in the ship Semiramis supplied by the [[International Red Cross]] (2 April 1954). |
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1,900 soldiers of the Blue Division are buried in the war cemetery in [[Veliky Novgorod]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://kriegsgraeberstaetten.volksbund.de/friedhof/nowgorod|title=Kriegsgräberstätte: Nowgorod – Bau, Pflege und Instandsetzung | Volksbund.de|website=kriegsgraeberstaetten.volksbund.de}}</ref> |
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==See also== |
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Soldiers and officers of the Blue Division were awarded |
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* [[Spain in World War II]] |
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==References== |
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2 Knight Crosses (one with Oak Leaves) |
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2 Golden Crosses |
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138 Iron Crosses First Class |
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2,359 Iron Crosses Second Class and |
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2,216 War Merit Crosses with Swords. |
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==Legacy== |
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Although this is yet to be properly studied and assessed, the fact that many (if not most) of Spanish Army high ranking officers in the 1960s and 1970s had served in the ''División Azul'' certainly had an influence on their role in and views about the transition to democracy in Spain in the late 1970s. Many of the generals that took part in the [[23-F|attempted coup d'etat]] on February 23, 1981, both for it and against it, had served in this unit during World War II. Amongst them were generals [[Alfonso Armada]] and [[Jaime Milans del Bosch]]. Other Blue Division veterans, for example José Luis Aramburu Topete, at the time (1981) Director of the [[Guardia Civil (Spain)|Guardia Civil]], and [[José Gabeiras]] remained loyal to the legal democratic government under the young [[King Juan Carlos of Spain|Juan Carlos I]]. |
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===The Cross of Saint Sophia of Novgorod=== |
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During the German occupation of Novgorod, the Kremlin was heavily damaged from the battles. However, the cathedral itself survived. The large cross on the main dome (which has a metal bird attached to it, perhaps symbolic of the [[Holy Spirit]] in the form of a dove) had fallen during one of the shellings of the city while it housed the headquarters of the División Azul during World War II. The cross was carried back to Spain, first to [[Burgos]] and afterwards to the Spanish Army Engineers Academy in [[Hoyo de Manzanares]] near [[Madrid]].<ref>[http://www.nodo50.org/foroporlamemoria/noticias/2004/rusia_16112004.htm# Federación Foros por la Memoria]</ref> For over 60 years it resided in the [[Madrid]]'s Military Engineering Academy Museum, until [[2004]] when it was handed over back to the [[Russian Orthodox Church]] by the Spanish minister of defense [[José Bono Martínez|José Bono]]. In fact, in 2004 [[November 16]], the Spanish Government returned the cross of the [[Saint Sophia Cathedral in Novgorod|Orthodox Cathedral of Saint Sophia]] of [[Velikiy Novgorod]] to the city. |
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[[File:Cementerio de la Almudena 04jul07 09.JPG|thumb|225px|Vault of the Blue Division, in cemetery of the Almudena, Madrid.]] |
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== References == |
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{{reflist|2}} |
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== |
===Bibliography=== |
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* {{cite book|last1=Moreno Juliá|first1=Xavier|editor1-last=Stahel|editor1-first=David|title=Joining Hitler's Crusade: European Nations and the Invasion of the Soviet Union, 1941|date=2018|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=Cambridge|isbn=978-1-316-51034-6|pages=193–212|chapter=Spain}} |
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==See also== |
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*[[Spain in World War II]] |
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*[[Battle of Krasny Bor]] |
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== |
==Further reading== |
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* {{cite book |last1=Caballero Jurado |first1=Carlos |title=La División Azul: Historia completa de los voluntarios españoles de Hitler. De 1941 a la actualidad |date=2019 |publisher=La Esfera de los Libros |location=Spain |isbn=978-84-9164-606-8|language=es}} |
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* Gerald R. Kleinfeld and Lewis A. Tambs. ''Hitler's Spanish Legion: The Blue Division in Russia''. Southern Illinois University Press (1979), 434 pages, ISBN 0-8093-0865-7. |
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* Bowen, Wayne H. (2005) ''Spaniards and Nazi Germany: Collaboration in the New Order''. University of Missouri Press, 250 pages, {{ISBN|0-8262-1300-6}}. |
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* Xavier Moreno Juliá. ''La División Azul: Sangre española en Rusia, 1941-1945''. Barcelona: Crítica (2005). |
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* |
* Kleinfeld, Gerald R. and Lewis A. Tambs (1974) ''Hitler's Spanish Legion: The Blue Division in Russia''. Southern Illinois University Press, 434 pages, {{ISBN|0-8093-0865-7}}. |
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* Morales, Gustavo and Luis Togores "La División Azul: las fotografías de una historia". La Esfera de los Libros, Madrid, second edition. |
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* Moreno Juliá, Xavier (2005). ''La División Azul: Sangre española en Rusia, 1941–1945''. Barcelona: Crític. |
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== External links == |
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* [[Xosé Manoel Núñez Seixas|Núñez Seixas, Xosé M.]] "Russia and the Russians in the Eyes of the Spanish Blue Division soldiers, 1941–4." ''Journal of Contemporary History'' 52.2 (2017): 352–374. [https://epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de/53136/1/0022009416647118.pdf online] |
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*[http://www.feldgrau.com/InfDiv.php?ID=163 The 250. Infanterie-Division by Jason Pipes] |
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* [https://archive.org/details/RusiaNoEsCuestinDeUnDia Rusia no es cuestión de un día...]. Juan Eugenio Blanco. Publicaciones Españolas. Madrid, 1954 |
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*[http://www.axishistory.com/index.php?id=3849 The 250. Infanterie-Division on the Axis History Factbook] |
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{{commonscat}} |
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Latest revision as of 21:58, 10 December 2024
250th Infantry Division ("Blue Division") | |
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250.ª División de Infantería ("División Azul") 250. Infanterie-Division ("Blaue Division") | |
Active | 24 June 1941 | – 10 October 1943
Country | Spain |
Allegiance | Germany |
Branch | German Army |
Type | Infantry |
Size | 18,000 troops (1941) 45,000 troops (total, 1941–44)[1] |
Nickname(s) | Blue Division |
Engagements | |
Commanders | |
Notable commanders | Agustín Muñoz Grandes Emilio Esteban Infantes |
The 250th Infantry Division (German: 250. Infanterie-Division), better known as the Blue Division (Spanish: División Azul, German: Blaue Division), was a unit of volunteers from Francoist Spain operating from 1941 to 1943 within the German Army (Heer) on the Eastern Front during World War II. It was officially designated the Spanish Volunteer Division (División Española de Voluntarios) by the Spanish Army.
Francisco Franco had secured power in Spain after the Nationalist victory in the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939), during which the Nationalists received support from Nazi Germany. Franco's authoritarian regime remained officially non-belligerent in World War II but sympathised with the Axis powers. After lobbying by the Spanish Foreign Minister Ramón Serrano Suñer and by senior figures within the Spanish Army following the 22 June 1941 launch of Operation Barbarossa, Franco agreed that Spanish people would be permitted to enlist privately in the German Army and undertook to provide tacit support. An infantry division was raised from Falangist and Spanish Army cadres and was sent for training in Germany. The unit fought on the Eastern Front, in the 1941–1944 siege of Leningrad, notably in the Battle of Krasny Bor. They eventually withdrew from the front after Allied political pressure on Spain in October 1943 and returned to Spain shortly afterwards. Several thousand non-returners were incorporated into the 121st Infantry Division, the short-lived Blue Legion, and eventually into the Waffen-SS.
Background
[edit]Francisco Franco took power at the head of a coalition of fascist, monarchist, and conservative political factions in the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939) against the left-leaning Spanish government supported by communist and anarchist factions. More than 300,000 people were killed, and lasting damage was done to the country's economy.[2]
Franco had been supported by Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy during the Civil War and Franco sympathised with many aspects of fascist ideology, especially its anti-communism. On the other side, the republican army had been supported by Soviet aid. Franco ensured that Spain was neutral at the start of World War II but seriously contemplated joining the conflict as a German ally in the aftermath of the Fall of France in 1940.[2] He met Adolf Hitler on 23–24 October 1940 at Hendaye but was unable to gain promises that Spain would gain colonial territories from France in North Africa. Hitler feared delegitimizing the new Vichy regime in France.[3] Ultimately, Spain remained neutral.
Formation
[edit]The German invasion of the Soviet Union led to renewed interest in participating in what Spanish officials saw as an "anti-communist crusade". Within hours of the invasion on 22 June 1941, Foreign Minister Ramón Serrano Suñer first proposed to Franco the idea of a Spanish contribution,[4] publicly declaring the Soviet Union guilty of the Spanish Civil War. Senior officers of the Spanish Army supported the proposal. Franco soon agreed to the proposal, directing that the Spanish Army should unofficially co-ordinate the formation of the unit. Although disappointed that Spain had not declared war on the Soviet Union, the German regime accepted the Spanish offer on 24 June 1941.[5] Franco struggled to balance the demands of Spanish Army and Falangist factions, both of which attempted to influence the new unit, himself siding with the former.
Recruitment began on 27 June 1941 and 18,373 men had volunteered by 2 July 1941 from within the Spanish Army and Falangist movement.[6] Fifty per cent of officers and NCOs were professional soldiers given leave from the Spanish Army, including many veterans of the Spanish Civil War.[citation needed] The division was made up mainly of Falangist volunteers and almost a fifth of early volunteers were students.[7] General Agustín Muñoz Grandes was assigned to lead the volunteers. Because the soldiers could not use official Spanish Army uniforms, they adopted a symbolic uniform comprising the red berets of the Carlists, the khaki trousers of the Spanish Legion, and the blue shirts of the Falangists—hence the nickname "Blue Division." This uniform was used only while on leave in Spain; in the field, soldiers wore the German Army field grey uniform (Feldgrau) with a shield on the upper right sleeve bearing the word "España" and the Nationalist Spanish national colours.
Operational history
[edit]Organization and training
[edit]On 13 July 1941 the first train left Madrid for Grafenwöhr, Bavaria for a further five weeks of training. There they became the German Army's 250th Infantry Division and were initially divided into four infantry regiments, as in a standard Spanish division. To aid their integration into the German supply system, they soon adopted the standard German model of three regiments. One of the original regiments was dispersed amongst the others, which were then named after three of the Spanish cities that volunteers largely originated from—Madrid, Valencia and Seville. Each regiment had three battalions (of four companies each) and two weapons companies, supported by an artillery regiment of four battalions (of three batteries each). There were enough men left over to create an assault battalion, mainly armed with submachine guns. Later, due to casualties, this unit was disbanded. Aviator volunteers formed a Blue Squadron (Escuadrillas Azules) which, using Messerschmitt Bf 109s and Focke-Wulf Fw 190s, claimed to have shot down 156 Soviet aircraft.
Eastern Front
[edit]On 31 July, after taking the Hitler Oath,[8] the Blue Division was formally incorporated into the German Wehrmacht as the 250th Division.[9] It was initially assigned to Army Group Center, the force advancing towards Moscow. The division was transported by train to Suwałki, Poland (August 28), from where it had to continue by foot on a 900-kilometre (560 mi) march. It was scheduled to travel through Grodno, and Lida in Belarus, Vilnius (Lithuania), and Maladzyechna, Minsk, and Orsha in Belarus to Smolensk, and from there to the Moscow front. While marching towards the Smolensk front on September 26, the Spanish volunteers were rerouted from Vitebsk and reassigned to Army Group North (the force closing on Leningrad), becoming part of the German 16th Army. The Blue Division was first deployed on the Volkhov River front, with its headquarters in Grigorovo, on the outskirts of Novgorod. It was in charge of a 50-kilometre (31 mi) section of the front north and south of Novgorod, along the banks of the Volkhov River and Lake Ilmen.
The division's soldiers used the iconostasis of the Church of Saint Theodore Stratelates on the Brook for firewood. The iconostases of the Cathedral of St. Sophia, Sts. Peter and Paul Church in Kozhevniki, and the Cathedral of the Nativity of the Mother of God in the Antoniev Monastery were taken to Germany at the end of 1943.[10] According to the museum curator in the Church of the Transfiguration on Ilyina Street, the division used the high cupola as a machine-gun nest. As a result, much of the building was seriously damaged, including many of the medieval icons by Theophanes the Greek. Vladimir Kovalevskii, one of the division's White Russian emigre interpreters, left a particularly acerbic memoir account describing the low discipline and the crimes committed by the Spanish volunteers.[11]
In August 1942, the Blue Division was transferred north to the southeastern flank of the siege of Leningrad, just south of the Neva River near Pushkin, Kolpino and Krasny Bor in the Izhora River area. After the collapse of the German southern front following the Battle of Stalingrad, more German troops were deployed southwards. By this time, General Emilio Esteban Infantes had taken command. The Blue Division faced a major Soviet attempt to break the siege of Leningrad in February 1943, when the Soviet 55th Army, reinvigorated after the victory at Stalingrad, attacked the Spanish positions at the Battle of Krasny Bor, near the main Moscow-Leningrad road. Despite very heavy casualties, the Spaniards were able to hold their ground against a Soviet force seven times larger and supported by tanks. The assault was contained and the siege of Leningrad was maintained for a further year. The division remained on the Leningrad front where it continued to suffer heavy casualties due to weather and to enemy action.[12]
The Blue Division was the only component of the German Army to be awarded a medal of its own, commissioned by Hitler in January 1944 after the Division had demonstrated its effectiveness in impeding the advance of the Red Army.[13] Hitler referred to the division as "equal to the best German ones". During his table talks, he said: "...the Spaniards have never yielded an inch of ground. One can't imagine more fearless fellows. They scarcely take cover. They flout death. I know, in any case, that our men are always glad to have Spaniards as neighbours in their sector".[14]
Disbandment and the Blue Legion
[edit]Eventually, the Allies and many Spaniards began to press Franco to withdraw troops from the quasi alliance with Germany. Franco initiated negotiations in the spring of 1943 and gave an order to withdraw on October 10. Some Spanish volunteers refused to return. On 3 November 1943 the Spanish government ordered all troops to return to Spain. In the end, the total of "non-returners" was close to 3,000 men, mostly Falangists. Spaniards also joined other German units, and fresh volunteers slipped across the Spanish border near Lourdes in occupied France. The new pro-German Spanish units were collectively called the Legión Azul ("Blue Legion").
Spaniards initially remained part of the 121st Infantry Division, but even this meagre force was ordered to return home in March 1944, and was transported back to Spain on March 21. The rest of the volunteers were absorbed into German units. Platoons of Spaniards served in the 3rd Mountain Division and the 357th Infantry Division. One unit was sent to Latvia. Two companies joined the Brandenburger Regiment and German 121st Division in Nazi security warfare in Yugoslavia. The 101st Company (Spanische-Freiwilligen Kompanie der SS 101, "Spanish Volunteer Company of the SS Number 101") of 140 men, made up of four rifle platoons and one staff platoon, was attached to 28th SS Volunteer Grenadier Division Wallonien.
Through rotation, as many as 45,000 Spanish soldiers served on the Eastern Front.[15] The casualties of the Blue Division and its successors included 4,954 men killed and 8,700 wounded. Another 372 members of the Blue Division, the Blue Legion, or volunteers of the Spanische-Freiwilligen Kompanie der SS 101 were taken prisoner by the Red Army; 286 of these men remained in captivity until 2 April 1954, when they returned to Spain aboard the ship Semiramis, supplied by the International Red Cross.[16] In action against the Red Army, the Blue Division suffered 22,700 casualties, while inflicting 49,300 casualties.[15]
After the war
[edit]Hundreds of Blue Division prisoners of war were held by the Soviet authorities. While most prisoners from other nations would be repatriated after the war, Francoist Spain and the Soviet Union did not have diplomatic relations. Soviet camps held together staunch anti-Communist prisoners, those who collaborated with the Soviets either by their previous hidden ideology or after captivity and even those Republican sailors whose Spanish ships had been requisitioned after the fall of the Republic. In 1954, after the death of Stalin, the French Red Cross arranged the ship Semiramis to bring those prisoners who desired repatriation to Barcelona.
Portuguese volunteers
[edit]Like Spain, Portugal under the Salazar regime remained neutral during World War II in agreement with the United Kingdom in accordance to the Anglo-Portuguese Treaty of 1373 and more openly sympathized with Western Allies. There was some popular anti-communist sentiment, and 150 Portuguese volunteers served unofficially in the Blue Division. However, most had roots in Spain or had already fought on the Francoist side in the Viriatos division during the Spanish Civil War. The Portuguese served in Spanish units and had no separate national presence.[17]
War cemetery
[edit]1,900 soldiers of the Blue Division are buried in the war cemetery in Veliky Novgorod.[18]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Moreno Juliá 2018, p. 193.
- ^ a b Moreno Juliá 2018, p. 195.
- ^ Moreno Juliá 2018, p. 196.
- ^ Moreno Juliá 2018, pp. 197–198.
- ^ Moreno Juliá 2018, pp. 198–199.
- ^ Moreno Juliá 2018, pp. 201–202.
- ^ Beevor, Antony (2014). The Second World War. London. p. 489. ISBN 978-1-78022-564-7. OCLC 884744421.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Arnold Krammer. Spanish Volunteers against Bolshevism: The Blue Division. Russian Review, Vol. 32, No. 4 (Oct., 1973), pp. 388–402
- ^ David Wingeate Pike. Franco and the Axis Stigma. Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 17, No. 3 (Jul., 1982), pp. 369–407
- ^ 11th – 19th Century Russian Icons in the Collection of the National Museum Complex in Veliky Novgorod (p. 9), Exhibition Guidebook, Veliky Novgorod – 2018, Saint Petersburg: Lubavich, 216 pages, illustrated, ISBN 978-5-86983-862-9
- ^ Kovalevskii, Vladimir (2023). Núñez Seixas; Xosé M.; Beyda, Oleg (eds.). An Anti-Communist on the Eastern Front: The Memoirs of a Russian Officer in the Spanish Blue Division 1941–1942. Pen & Sword Military. ISBN 978-1-3990-6208-4.
- ^ Gavrilov, B.I., Tragedy and Feat of the 2nd Shock Army, defunct site paper
- ^ Stanley G. Payne; Delia Contreras (1996). España y la Segunda Guerra Mundial. Editorial Complutense S.A. p. 85. ISBN 978-84-89365-89-6.
- ^ Norman Cameron and R.H. Stevens (translators). Hitler's Table Talk 1941–1944: His Private Conversations. Enigma Books. New York, 2000. p. 179.
- ^ a b Clodfelter, Micheal (2017). Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492–2015 (4 ed.). McFarland. p. 456. ISBN 978-0-7864-7470-7.
- ^ Candil, Anthony J. "Post: Division Azul Histories and Memoirs". WAIS – World Association for International Studies. Retrieved 3 June 2014.
- ^ Caballero Jurado 2019.
- ^ "Kriegsgräberstätte: Nowgorod – Bau, Pflege und Instandsetzung | Volksbund.de". kriegsgraeberstaetten.volksbund.de.
Bibliography
[edit]- Moreno Juliá, Xavier (2018). "Spain". In Stahel, David (ed.). Joining Hitler's Crusade: European Nations and the Invasion of the Soviet Union, 1941. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 193–212. ISBN 978-1-316-51034-6.
Further reading
[edit]- Caballero Jurado, Carlos (2019). La División Azul: Historia completa de los voluntarios españoles de Hitler. De 1941 a la actualidad (in Spanish). Spain: La Esfera de los Libros. ISBN 978-84-9164-606-8.
- Bowen, Wayne H. (2005) Spaniards and Nazi Germany: Collaboration in the New Order. University of Missouri Press, 250 pages, ISBN 0-8262-1300-6.
- Kleinfeld, Gerald R. and Lewis A. Tambs (1974) Hitler's Spanish Legion: The Blue Division in Russia. Southern Illinois University Press, 434 pages, ISBN 0-8093-0865-7.
- Morales, Gustavo and Luis Togores "La División Azul: las fotografías de una historia". La Esfera de los Libros, Madrid, second edition.
- Moreno Juliá, Xavier (2005). La División Azul: Sangre española en Rusia, 1941–1945. Barcelona: Crític.
- Núñez Seixas, Xosé M. "Russia and the Russians in the Eyes of the Spanish Blue Division soldiers, 1941–4." Journal of Contemporary History 52.2 (2017): 352–374. online
- Rusia no es cuestión de un día.... Juan Eugenio Blanco. Publicaciones Españolas. Madrid, 1954
- Anti-communism in Spain
- Foreign volunteer units of the Wehrmacht
- Infantry divisions of Germany during World War II
- Military of Francoist Spain
- Divisions of Spain
- Military units and formations of the Soviet–German War
- Military units and formations established in 1941
- Military units and formations disestablished in 1944
- Spain in World War II
- Soviet Union–Spain relations
- Spanish collaborators with Nazi Germany
- Expeditionary units and formations