Władysław Langner
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Władysław Langner | |
---|---|
Rank | Generał brygady |
Born | June 18, 1896 Jaworów near Lwów, Galicia |
Died | September 28, 1972 Newcastle upon Tyne, Great Britain |
Career | |
In service since: | 1914 |
Later work: | farmer |
Medals | |
Władysław Langner (1896 — 1972) was a Polish general, best known as commander of the Siege of Lwów in 1939.
[edit] Early career
Władysław Langner spent his childhood in the Polish town of Tarnów, where he became a member of a local Independent Youth Union, which he represented at a national congress in Kraków in 1913. In the same year he founded a paramilitary organization in Tarnów together with his brother, in which they regularly organized military exercises and trainings. Later this organization also engaged in recruiting to the Polish National Army.
In the years 1914-1917, he served in the I Brigade of Piłsudski's Polish Legions and became commander of an infantry platoon. In the following years he was commanding officer of, among others, the 5th Infantry Regiment, the 40th Infantry Regiment stationed in Lwów, and the 12th Infantry Division based in Tarnopol. In 1928, Władysław Langner was called to Warsaw, where he worked as Head of the Main Administration Bureau of the Ministry of War. After three years he was promoted to the second Vice Minister of War and Chief of Army Administration, and in 1934 he was promoted to General. Until 1938 he served as a CO of Łódź-based IV Corps Command. Later, until 1939, he served on the same post in the headquarters of the VI Corps Command in Lwów.
[edit] World War II
During the Polish Defensive War of September of 1939, Władysław Langner assumed command of all the Polish forces stationed in and around the city of Lwów. Although most of the regular Polish forces normally stationed in the area were transported to the front, he managed to organize the defence of both the city and its area. With march battalions, rear troops, marauders and raw recruits, he prepared the city for the fight.
He commanded his forces during fights against the Wehrmacht and the Red Army, which later became known as the Battle of Lwów. Although his troops were badly outnumbered, outflanked and underequipped, the defense lasted ten days, after which gen. Langner surrendered the city to the Red Army so as to, according to his own words, "not endanger further the lives of the people and risk the destruction of the city".
After leaving the city, he managed to get through to Romania, and then to France, where he joined the reborn Polish Army, being formed under the auspices of the Polish government in exile. After the fall of France, he retreated to United Kingdom. There he was appointed commander of Polish 3rd Carpathian Rifle Brigade stationed in Scotland. In 1941 he gave up his post and between 1943 and the end of World War II he served as an Inspector of Military Training of Polish Units in Great Britain.
For his deeds during the war, Władysław Langner was distinguished with the Golden and Silver Virtuti Militari Crosses, the Cross of Independence and four times with the Cross of Valorous. In 1945 Władysław Langner retired to a farm near Newcastle upon Tyne, where he died in 1972.