Source :
Die Deutsche Wochenschau No. 720 - 21 June 1944
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e-DzDJmt5F8
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Sunday, May 18, 2025
Rest Village Behind the Front Line
Saturday, February 18, 2023
Why German Soldiers Fought with their Sleeves Rolled up
To date, there are not so many people left who remember and saw with their own eyes the events of the Second World War, and you and I, the descendants, can only observe the events of those years from documentary chronicles, photographs, or from artistic paintings that were shot in Soviet Union or already in our time.
Surely, many of you have noticed how German soldiers appeared in newsreels with a proud expression on their faces, leisurely walking with an MP40 machine gun in their hands. And almost always their sleeves were rolled up to the elbow, while Soviet soldiers never did this.
What is the reason for such wearing of military clothes. I would like to note right away that in this situation we are not talking about any military traditions. It was all about the form itself.
The fabric from which the German uniform was sewn consisted of two-thirds of wool, the rest of viscose. The quality and characteristics of the appearance of the clothes were at a high level. In the cold season, in this form it was quite warm, but this plus turned into a minus at the same time. Heat transfer is disturbed in woolen products and because of this, it was very hot in a woolen military uniform in the warm season, unlike cotton clothes. Toward the middle of the war, the German uniform began to be sewn, it was from cotton, but the rolling up of the sleeves by the Wehrmacht soldiers on the tunic had already become a habit. Apparently, the charter did not prohibit such wearing of a military uniform, and the officers turned a blind eye to this. However, discomfort in warm weather is not the only reason for rolling up sleeves. We all know that natural wool is a rather prickly material, and those who have worn a wool sweater on their naked body at least once understand what is at stake and remember how the skin itches after that.
As for the soldiers of the Red Army, their uniforms were sewn almost entirely from cotton fabric, as a result of which it was much lighter and more practical. Cotton also breathed well, was a versatile fabric for heat and cold. Plus, the tunics of Soviet soldiers were distinguished by a special cut. The sleeves were slightly tapered, so rolling up the sleeves was quite difficult and impractical.
Source :
https://dzen.ru/media/id/5fdf902d0199050378ad334d/pochemu-nemeckie-soldaty-voevali-zasuchiv-rukava-60771d448fb1c273054dd6bb
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:German_troops_in_Russia_-_NARA_-_540156_(cropped).tif
Sunday, January 23, 2022
German Soldiers Put Chains on Truck Tires
Sunday, December 19, 2021
Sunday, October 31, 2021
German Soldiers Enjoying Music through Gramophone

Source :
Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-218-0524-32
http://wehrmachtss.blogspot.com/2021/10/prajurit-jerman-menikmati-musik-dari.html
Sunday, August 1, 2021
Regimentskommandeur Emmanuel von Kiliani in the Winter

Source :
https://www.ebay.de/itm/384289550473?hash=item5979713089:g:qn8AAOSwV6Bg5aUt
Sunday, May 9, 2021
Officers of 79. Infanterie-Division in Stalingrad

Source :
https://www.forum-der-wehrmacht.de/index.php?thread/54669-79-infanterie-division/
http://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/Gliederungen/Infanteriedivisionen/79ID-R.htm
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/375628425149964770/
Sunday, January 10, 2021
Waffen-SS StuG Unit

Source :
https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=10219232699879847&set=gm.751279962465553
Friday, January 1, 2021
The Thousand-Mile Stare of Soldier from Panzergrenadier-Regiment 126
Source :
ECPAD Archives, courtesy of Blanluet Christophe
https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=10158997833213308&set=gm.2748717868728774
SS Soldiers with StG 44 Assault Rifle

Source :
https://equipment.fandom.com/wiki/M44_Erbsenmuster
https://twitter.com/StG44Geek/status/1221936827659116547
https://www.ww2-weapons.com/mp44-stug44-mp43/
Ernst-August Köstring with a Traditional Guitar
General der Kavallerie Ernst-August Köstring holding a traditional Eastern people's guitar. It looks likes a Georgian Panduri. Most likely he was visiting a Georgian-manned unit, in his capacity as "General Officer attached to Army Group A for Caucasian Questions" (from 1942 on).
Source :
https://forum.axishistory.com/viewtopic.php?f=51&t=254527&p=2312393#p2312393
Wednesday, December 30, 2020
German Generals Member of Anti-Nazi BDO - NKFD
8 December 8th 1944: Co-signer of the appeal 'To the people and the Wehrmacht' of the Bundes Deutscher Offiziere (BDO, Federation of German Officers) in the National Committee "Freies Deutschland" (NKFD, Free Germany). It was a German anti-Nazi organization that operated in the Soviet Union during World War II, with members mostly came from German officers and generals in captivity. The identification (with their last rank and position) as follow:
1.Generalleutnant Vincenz Müller (Kommandierender General XII. Armeekorps)
2.Generalmajor Joachim Engel (Kommandeur 45. Infanterie-Division)
3.Generalleutnant Hans Traut (Kommandeur 78. Sturm-Division)
4.Generalmajor Günther Klammt (Kommandeur 260. Infanterie-Division)
5.Generalmajor Alexander Conrady (Kommandeur 36. Infanterie-Division)
6.Generalmajor Herbert Michaelis (Kommandeur 95. Infanterie-Division)
7.Generalmajor Friedrich-Carl von Steinkeller (Kommandeur Panzergrenadier-Division "Feldherrnhalle")
8.Generalmajor Gottfried von Erdmannsdorff (Kommandeur "Festung Mogilev")
9.General der Infanterie Friedrich Gollwitzer (Kommandierender General LIII. Armeekorps)
10.Generalleutnant Rudolf Bamler (Kommandeur 12. Infanterie-Division)
11.Generalmajor Claus Mueller-Bülow (Kommandeur 246. Infanterie-Division)
12.Generalmajor Adolf Trowitz (Kommandeur 57. Infanterie-Division)
13.Generalmajor Aurel Schmidt (Höherer Pionierführer 10 / 9.Armee)
14.General der Infanterie Paul Völckers (Kommandierender General XXVII.Armeekorps)
15.Generalleutnant Kurt-Jürgen Freiherr von Lützow (Kommandierender General XXXV. Armeekorps)
Source :
Photo and ID courtesy of Graveland
https://en.topwar.ru/171615-svobodnaja-germanija-gitlerovcy-protiv-fjurera.html
Friday, December 25, 2020
Staff Officers of IV. SS-Panzerkorps
The IV. SS-Panzerkorps was formed in August 1943 in Poitiers, France. The formation was originally to be a skeleton formation to supervise those SS divisions that were being reformed as SS Panzer divisions.
On 30 June 1944, the formation absorbed the VII. SS-Panzerkorps and was reformed as a headquarters for the SS Division Totenkopf and SS Division Wiking. The Corps was placed under the control of former Wiking commander SS-Obergruppenführer Herbert Otto Gille.
The corps was placed into the line around Warsaw, Poland, where it saw action against the Red Army as a part of the 9th Army. In August, 1944, elements of the corps took part in the suppression of the Warsaw Uprising. After holding the line near Warsaw, the corps was pushed back to the area near Modlin, where it saw heavy fighting until December.
When SS-Obergruppenführer Karl Pfeffer Wildenbruch's IX SS Mountain Corps and large numbers of Hungarian troops were encircled in Budapest in December 1944, the corps was shifted south from Army Group A to join 6th Army and to take part in the relief efforts. The operations were named Konrad. In Operation Konrad III, the largest of the relief operations, IV SS Panzer Corps destroyed all the tanks of the Soviet 3rd Ukrainian Front in an intense two-week battle in Transdanubia but could not relieve the city.
After the failure of Operation Konrad III, the corps was moved west to the area around Lake Balaton, where it was responsible for defending the left flank of the Operation Spring Awakening (Frühlingserwachen), near Stuhlweissenberg. After the failure of this operation, the Soviet Vienna Offensive tore a gap between the IV SS-Panzerkorps and the neighboring Third Hungarian Army. After escaping an encirclement thanks to the efforts of the 9th SS Panzer Division Hohenstaufen, the corps withdrew towards Vienna. The remnants of the corps surrendered to the Americans on 9 May 1945.
Commanders
SS-Obergruppenführer Alfred Wünnenburg (8 June 1943 - 23 Oct 1943)
SS-Obergruppenführer Walther Krüger (23 Oct 1943 - 14 Mar 1944)
SS-Obergruppenführer Matthias Kleinheisterkamp (1 July 1944 - 20 July 1944)
SS-Brigadeführer Nikolaus Heilmann (20 July 1944 - 6 Aug 1944)
SS-Obergruppenführer Herbert Otto Gille (6 Aug 1944 - 8 May 1945)
Chef des Stabes
SS-Standartenführer Nikolaus Heilmann (1 Apr 1943 - 1 Aug 1944)
SS-Obersturmbannführer Manfred Schönfelder (1 Aug 1944 - 8 May 1945)
Area of operations
France (June 1943 - July 1944)
Poland (July 1944 - Jan 1945)
Hungary & Austria (Jan 1945 - May 1945)
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Far less glamorous than the operations and intelligence staff sections but just as important to the success of the corps' engagements and battles were the Administration and Supply staffs, along with some of the specialized staffs that focused on artillery matters, engineering, legal, communications, and propaganda. Here are a few of those senior officers who were responsible for the orderly performance of those mundane tasks so necessary for a successful corps in battle.

Just as important as Panzers, assault guns, and artillery were signal troops. Without the means to communicate orders and messages via radio, land line telephone, or telex, a corps would be virtually unable to adequately coordinate the activities of all of its combat arms. To carry out this specialized function, the corps was authorized its own corps signal battalion, SS-Nachrichten-Abteilung 104. The commander of the battalion for the last several months of the war was Wiking veteran SS-Obersturmbannführer Hubert Hüppe, shown here before the war as an SS Sergeant.

A Panzer Corps, with two or three panzer or mechanized divisions operating under its banner, usually had thousands of motor vehicles assigned, as well as hundreds of armored vehicles, including tanks, assault guns, self-propelled artillery, and armored half-tracks. To keep track of the readiness of these vehicles and their maintenance requirements to keep them combat ready, each corps staff had an officer called a TFK, short for Technischer Führer für Kraftfahrwesen, or simply motor transport maintenance officer. The IV. SS-Panzerkorps' TFK for most of its existence was SS-Sturmbannführer Otto Brandt, shown here before the war in civilian clothes.

The corps staff was authorized a senior engineer advisor, the Korpspionierführer, who was responsible for planning and supervising the execution of various engineering tasks, such as road repair, barrier construction, bridge construction and maintenance, minefield emplacement, and so on. The Corps Engineer Officer for most of the IV. SS-Panzerkorps' existence was SS-Obersturmbannführer Fritz Braune, who was supervised by the corps' chief of staff and who resided in the operations and intelligence staff section.

Just like any military organization, it could not ignore matters that arose in the legal and judge advocate arena. The corps' Staff Judge Advocate, or Korpsrichter, was SS-Obersturmbannführer Hans Heinz, who worked in the Adjutantur under the supervision of the Staff IIa, Karl-Willi Schulze.

The 2nd General Staff Officer, or Ib, was SS-Obersturmbannführer Hans Scharff, another Wiking Division veteran elevated to the corps staff when Herbert Gille was named as the corps commander. The Ib was responsible for coordinating and planning the supply requirements of not only the subordinate divisions, but also that of corps troops, attached army troops, and the corps heaquarters itself.

Within the Ib Staff, was another officer designated as the Officer for Transportation and Traffic Regulation, called the Id or Offizier für Verkehrsregelung. Although he was subornated to the Ib, Hans Scharff. the corps' Id actually worked within the operations and intelligence staff element. The corps' 1d for the first six months of its existence was SS-Obersturmbannführer Wilhelm Honsell, shown here as an SS Captain before the war. By the turn of the year 1944/45, he was designated as the Ib of the Wiking Division.

With an organization encompassing at times more than 40,000 men, the proper administration of the corps' manpower needs and concerns was a very demanding job. The staff officer responsible for personnel administration was SS-Obersturmbannführer (shown here as a Sturmbannführer) Karl-Willy Schulze, another Wiking Division veteran chosen by Gille to follow him to the IV. SS-Panzerkorps at the end of July 1944. Schulze had been the Adjutant of the Wiking, and as such was fully qualified to perform a similar function one level higher.

Hubert Hüppe's predecessor as Corps Signal Officer was SS-Hauptsturmführer Martin Müller, shown here in his prewar Allgemeine SS uniform.
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Two other individuals who performed an important role within the corps headquarters were the two officers who served as Gille's Begleitoffizier, or escort officer, a position designated as the O5. The U.S. Army or British equivalent was the general's aid, or aide-de-camp. These two men, SS Lieutenants Günther Lange and Joachim Barthel, served both the corps commander and chief of staff (the latter was not authorized an O5, but Barthel, who had suffered an incapacitating head wound, performed the role) between the end of July 1944 and the end of the war. Their duties included ensuring that the corps commander's coffee cup was always filled and his cigarettes were always available; ensuring that his staff car and driver (SS Sergeant Pippo) were always ready to go to the front; to make sure that his personal situation maps was always up to date, that Gille's spare uniforms were always cleaned and ready for wear, and that he, as the escort officer, would always know the routes to and from their destination, as well as what the "threat" level ways there and back. A truly demanding job, one that was only given to the most intelligent and experienced young officers.
A
Panzer Corps is more than just staff officers, radios, and motorcycle
messengers; it also consists of divisions, usually two or more. And
these divisions are led by men who have proven themselves in subordinate
positions, such as battalion and regimental commanders who learned
their trade while serving as subalterns before the war or during the war
in the crucible of combat. During the Tank Battle of Praga, the IV.
SS-Pz.Korps was fortunate, in that at one time or another before,
during, and after the battle, it had several of the finest (and one of
the not-so-finest) divisions of the Wehrmacht subordinated to it. These
includes the 4th and 19th Panzer Divisions, the Herman Goering Panzer
Division, the ill-fated 73rd Infantry Division, and Grenadier-Brigade
1131. For most of the next three months, the corps with its two SS
divisions, the Wiking and Totenkopf, would cooperate closely with these
units of the Heer and Luftwaffe, enabling General Gille and the 9th Army
to keep Marshal Rokossovskiy and his armies away from their goal of
Warsaw.

The commander of the 19th Panzer Division was Generalmajor Hans Källner, who brought his division from Holland, where it had recently undergone complete reconstitution, and deployed it quite effectively during the Tank Battle of Praga.

Oberst Franz Schlieper (shown here as a Generalmajor) took command of the ill-fated 73rd Infantry Division only two days before its collapse during the Battle of Praga in September 1944. He later proved to be an adept commander who rebuilt his division and led it competently during the remainder of its existence.

Generalmajor Clemens Betzel, who expertly led the veteran 4th Panzer Division as it conducted its lethal counterattack at a critical moment during the Tank Battle of Praga, sealing the fate of the Soviet III Tank Corps.

Oberst Wilhelm Söth, the Afrika Korps veteran who commanded and expertly led the newly-raised Grenadier Brigade 1131.
Source :
"From the Realm of a Dying Sun. Volume I: IV. SS-Panzerkorps and the Battles for Warsaw, July–November 1944" by Douglas E. Nash, Sr.
https://www.axishistory.com/books/118-germany-waffen-ss/germany-waffen-ss-corps-etc/1227-iv-ss-panzerkorps
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IV_SS_Panzer_Corps
https://www.facebook.com/Latewareasternfront
Thursday, December 24, 2020
Opening of Modlin Soldatenfriedhof
On 9 November 1944, SS-Obergruppenführer und General der Waffen-SS Herbert-Otto Gille (Kommandierender General IV. SS-Panzerkorps) dedicated the new Soldatenfriedhof (wartime cemetery) in Modlin, Poland. In addition to the ceremony itself, a reception was held shortly afterwards inside the Modlin Fortress. Here is a copy of the ceremony's program, which featured a speach by Gille, as well as various tunes played by the regimental band of SS Panzer Regiment 5 "Wiking." Besides Gille, in attendance were the commanders of the Totenkopf and Wiking Divisions, their staffs, and various local dignitaries from the German administration of occupied Poland.
Source :
"From
the Realm of a Dying Sun. Volume I: IV. SS-Panzerkorps and the Battles
for Warsaw, July–November 1944" by Douglas E. Nash, Sr.
https://www.facebook.com/Latewareasternfront
Wednesday, December 23, 2020
1. Skijäger-Brigade Patrol

Source :
ECPAD Archives, courtesy of Blanluet Christophe
https://www.facebook.com/groups/2360048380929060/permalink/2740822902851604/?__cft__[0]=AZWuNFyXPGqbnTji8wcpcT7RyNUsAwMnU8qEFBc0ptTZpYietWzLFlxotJ_jGZ8kwaaYwYHv9c1_vRXv_G1MdNMxZtKq3bsS8-OoIw93gltw2QDdIWfCPm0x7b2m5iGy9JsFtGeF1COK79SuXN2qCq6I&__tn__=%2CO%2CP-R