73rd Infantry Division (Germany)
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The German 73rd Infantry Division was a German military unit which served during World War II. The division consisted of more than 10,000 soldiers, primarily of the infantry branch, with supporting artillery. The division was not motorized, but instead relied on marching for the infantry units and horse-drawn transport for the support equipment.
The division was designated 73.Infanterie-Division in Germany.
The 73rd Infantry participated in the Invasion of Poland of 1939 as a reserve division of Army Group North.
It fought on the Eastern Front in the southern areas from July 1941 through May 1944. As part of the 11th Army, it participated in the Crimean campaign in late '41 including the initial assaults near Perekop and the "Tartar Ditch" as well as Sevastopol.
In the spring of 1944 it was cut-off by the Soviet forces in the Crimea and destroyed in Sevastopol in May of 1944. Reformed soon after in Hungary, it participated in battles around Warsaw in the summer, where it was destroyed by the Soviets during their assault on the Praga suburb of Warsaw in September, 1944. The Army Group Center requested that the division be dissolved permanently as punishment for bad battlefield performance, but the request was rejected. Reformed again, the division was completely destroyed for the final time in the fighting around Danzig (Gdańsk) in 1945. The division staff went down with the liner Goya on April 17, 1945.