Jump to content

Battle of Changde

Coordinates: 29°02′00″N 111°40′59″E / 29.0333°N 111.6830°E / 29.0333; 111.6830
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.
Battle of Changde
Part of the Second Sino-Japanese War and the Pacific Theater of World War II

Chinese troops in combat at Changde
Date (1943-11-02) (1944-01-05)November 2, 1943 – January 5, 1944
(2 months and 3 days)
Location
Changde and vicinity, Hunan, China
Result Chinese defensive victory
Territorial
changes
Japanese capture the city, but later withdraw in January 1944
Belligerents
Republic of China (1912–1949) Republic of China Empire of Japan Empire of Japan
Commanders and leaders
Republic of China (1912–1949) Sun Lianzhong
Republic of China (1912–1949) Xue Yue
Republic of China (1912–1949) Feng Zhi'an
Republic of China (1912–1949) Li Yutang
Republic of China (1912–1949) Wang Yaowu
Republic of China (1912–1949) Liu Chen-san
Empire of Japan Isamu Yokoyama
Strength
8,000+ (Changde itself was defended by the 8,000-strong 57th Division) 60,000+
Casualties and losses
60,000 losses[1]

Japanese claim:
1,274 dead
2,977 wounded

116th Division Reduction of 7,547 members, most killed in action(According to Japanese statistics)[2]

American and British claims: 40,000+ killed and wounded[3]

Thousands of guns, ammunitions, shells, and prisoners taken and captured.

The Battle of Changde (Battle of Changteh; simplified Chinese: 常德会战; traditional Chinese: 常德會戰; pinyin: Chángdé Huìzhàn) was a major engagement in the Second Sino-Japanese War in and around the Chinese city of Changde (Changteh) in the province of Hunan.

The purpose of the Japanese offensive was to maintain pressure on the Chinese National Revolutionary Army to reduce its combat ability in the region and its ability to reinforce the Burma Campaign.[4][5]

The Japanese were initially successful in their offensive operation by bacteria-infected bombs and captured parts of the city of Changde, which forced civilians to evacuate. The Japanese were pinned down in the city by a Chinese division long enough for other Chinese units to surround them with a counterencirclement. Heavy casualties and the loss of their supply lines then forced the Japanese to withdraw, which returned territorial control to the original status quo.

Some contemporary Western newspapers depicted the battle as a Chinese victory.[6][7][8][9][10] American government film footage showed victorious Chinese troops with Japanese prisoners and captured Japanese flags and equipment on display after the battle. In addition, an American newsreel titled Chinese troops drive Japs from Changteh showed Chinese troops firing, with dead and captured Japanese on display. A British newsreel titled Japs Loose Changteh Aka Japs Lose Changte showed similar footage.

Japanese offensive

Location of Changde within Hunan Province of China

On 2 November 1943 Isamu Yokoyama, commander of the Imperial Japanese 11th Army, deployed the 39th, 58th, 13th, 3rd, 116th and 68th divisions—a total of around 60,000 troops—to attack Changde from the north and the east. The Changde region was defended by the Chinese 6th War Zone's 10th, 26th, 29th and 33rd Army Groups, as well as a river defense force and two other corps, for a total of 14 corps.

On 14 November the Japanese 13th Division, with aid from collaborators, drove south and broke through the defensive lines of the Chinese 10th and the 29th Group Armies. On 16 November, Japanese airborne forces landed in Taoyuan County to support the assault on the city proper. At the same time, the Japanese 3rd and 116th Divisions also joined the combined assault. The city was guarded by one Chinese division - the 74th Corps' 57th. Division commander Yu Chengwan led 8,000 men to fight against the two invading Japanese divisions. Despite being outnumbered by more than three to one, the Chinese stubbornly held onto the city. Eleven days and nights of fierce fighting saw heavy casualties on both sides. When the Chinese reinforcements finally arrived in the city, they managed to evacuate the remaining 100 survivors in the 57th Division, all of whom were wounded, from the city. On 6 December the city of Changde fell to the Japanese control.

While the Chinese 57th Division pinned down the Japanese in the city, the rest of the 74th Corps, as well as the 18th, 73rd, 79th and 100th Corps and the 9th War Zone's 10th Corps, 99th Corps and Jiangxi's 58th Corps, arrived at the battlefield, forming a counter-encirclement on the Japanese forces.

Chinese counteroffensive

Fang Xianjue's 10th Corps was first to strike, successfully retaking Deshan on 29 November before attacking the Japanese positions at Changde from the south. Unable to withstand the fierce Chinese assault, the Japanese utilized chemical weapons.[11] The battle lasted for six days and nights, during which the Chinese Reserve 10th Division's commander Lieutenant General Sun Mingjin received 5 gunshot wounds to the body and was killed in action.

At this time other Chinese units were also pressing onto the Japanese positions. On 11 December Chinese reinforcements broke through the Japanese lines and into the city, which resulted in intense house-to-house fighting. The Chinese then proceeded to cut the Japanese supply lines. Depleted of food and ammunition, the Japanese retreated on 13 December. The Chinese pursued them for more than 20 days. By 5 January 1944 Japanese forces had withdrawn to their original positions before the offensive. Following the battle, the Chinese displayed an array of captured Japanese weapons and equipment, as well as numerous Japanese troops taken as prisoners, for inspection by allied military observers.

During this campaign, apart from the Reserve 10th Division's Sun Mingjin, two other Chinese division commanders were killed: the 44th Corps' 150th Division's Lieutenant General Xu Guozhang was killed at Taifushan in Changde's northwest, aged 37, while the 73rd corps' 5th Division's Lieutenant General Peng Shiliang(zh:彭士量) was killed at the Taoyuan-Shimen line, aged 38.

The Changde campaign saw the largest participation of the Chinese air force since the Battle of Wuhan.

Reporter Israel Epstein witnessed and reported on the battle. Witold Urbanowicz, a Polish fighter ace engaged in air combat over China in 1943, saw the city just after the battle.[4]

Japanese prisoners taken at Changde.

In pop culture

The 2010 Chinese war film Death and Glory in Changde is based on the events in this battle.

See also

Order of Battle: Battle of Changde

References

  1. ^ Shi, Bolin (1989). 从长沙大火到衡阳失陷: 国民党抗战內幕. p. 243.
  2. ^ [Data in English is under preparation] 第116師団” Japan Center for Asian Historical Records (JACAR) Ref.C12121004900, [Data in English is under preparation] 第20軍編制人員表(支那.南支.衡陽) (National Institute for Defense Studies)
  3. ^ "HD Stock Video Footage – Newsreel 'Chinese troops drive Japs from Changteh'". Retrieved 5 June 2016.
  4. ^ a b Hsiung, James C.; Levine, Steven I., eds. (1991). China's Bitter Victory: The War with Japan 1937–1945. Armonk, N.Y.: M. E. Sharp. p. 161. ISBN 9780873327084.
  5. ^ Japanese Monograph No. 71, "Army Operations in China", pp. 170
  6. ^ North, Simon Newton Dexter; Wickware, Francis Graham; Hart, Albert Bushnell (1944). The American Year Book: Volume 29. T. Nelson & Sons. p. 94. Retrieved 2010-06-28.
  7. ^ Creel, George (1949). Russia's Race for Asia. Bobbs-Merrill Co. p. 214.
  8. ^ Free World, Volume 8. Free World, Inc. 1944. p. 309.
  9. ^ Jaffe, Philip J. (1943). Amerasia, Volume 7. Amerasia. Retrieved 2010-06-28.
  10. ^ "Chinese Victory". Life. Time Inc. 21 February 1944. p. 45. Retrieved 5 June 2016 – via Google Books.
  11. ^ Agar, Jon (2012). Science in the 20th Century and Beyond. Polity. p. 281. ISBN 9780745634692.

Sources

  • Long-hsuen, Hsu; Ming-kai, Chang (1971). History of The Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945). Translated by Ha-hsiung, Wen (2nd ed.). Taipei: Chung Wu Publishing. pp. 412–416 Map 38.
  • Barenblatt, Daniel (2004). A Plague Upon Humanity. Harper Collins. pp. 220–221.

29°02′00″N 111°40′59″E / 29.0333°N 111.6830°E / 29.0333; 111.6830