Battle of Bautzen (1945)

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Battle of Bautzen (1945)
Part of World War II

A Memorial stone in Bautzen
Date 21-30 April 1945
Location Bautzen, Germany and surrounding rural areas
Result German victory (last successful German tank-offensive)
Combatants
Nazi Germany Poland,
Soviet Union
Commanders
several leaders of smaller units Karol Świerczewski
Strength
50,000
nearly 300 tanks
600 guns
Polish Army: 90,000
? tanks (at least 200)
? guns
Soviet Army: unknown
Casualties
unknown
over 350 civilians killed (these are only the civilians of the city of Bautzen and do not include civilians of the rural areas)
Poland: 5,000 killed
2,800 missed
10,500 wounded
150 tanks
Soviet Union: unknown
Eastern Front
BarbarossaBaltic SeaFinlandLeningrad and BalticsCrimea and CaucasusMoscow1st Rzhev-Vyazma2nd KharkovStalingradVelikiye Luki2nd Rzhev-SychevkaKursk2nd SmolenskDnieper2nd KievKorsunHube's PocketBelorussiaLvov-SandomierzBalkansHungaryVistula-OderKönigsbergBerlinPrague


This is about the World War II battle, for the battle of the Napoleonic Wars see Battle of Bautzen

The Battle of Bautzen (April 1945) saw days of pitched street fighting between Polish-Soviet forces and Germans, and the last successful German armoured offensive of the Second World War.

The battle was fought in the town of Bautzen and the rural areas to the northeast situated primarily along the line Bautzen - Niesky. Combat began on April 21, 1945, and continued up to April 26. There were still isolated engagements up to April 30. In particular, the Polish Second Army (Druga Armia Wojska Polskiego) under Karol Świerczewski suffered high losses.

[edit] The opponents

For the battle, the Germans had the 1. Fallschirm-Panzer-Division "Hermann Göring" and the 2. Fallschirm-Panzergrenadier-Division "Hermann Göring" - around 50,000 men. These units were a mix of combat veterans and new recruits. They still had about up to 300 tanks and 600 guns. The 2nd Polish army consisted of about 90,000 men, with a large part of its soldiers unexperienced in combat.

The Germans succeeded in expelling their opponents from Bautzen after several days of bloody house-to-house combat. The Polish 5th Infantry Division and 16th Tank Brigade were struck in the rear, taking severe losses, and resulting in the death of the commanding general of the Polish 5th Infantry Division, Aleksander Waszkiewicz (captured, wounded, tortured and executed by the Germans). The Polish units were saved from complete destruction by Soviet units that Marshal Ivan Konev had pulled back from his thrust to the west and sent to support them. But the Soviet troops also suffered heavy losses in subsequent combat.

In a relatively short time the 2nd Polish Army lost more than 22% of its personnel and 57% of its tanks and armoured vehicles. According to Polish sources there has been no single military operation except the Warsaw uprising in which more Poles died. The Germans and the Soviets suffered heavy losses as well.

[edit] External links

[edit] Further Reading

  • von Ahlfen, Hans (1977 edition). "Der Kampf um Schlesien 1944/1945". Motorbuch Verlag, Stuttgart. ISBN 3-87943-480-8.
  • Grzelak, Czesław; Stańczyk, Henryk; and Zwoliński, Stefan (2002). "Armia Berlinga i Żymierskiego". Wydawnictwo Neriton, Warszawa. ISBN 83-88973-27-4.
  • Eberhard Berndt: Die Kämpfe um Bautzen 18. bis 27. April 1945, in: Kriegsschauplatz Sachsen 1945. Daten, Fakten, Hintergründe, Altenburg/Leipzig 1995
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