Adolf Hamann | |
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General Adolf Hamann. |
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Born | September 3, 1885 Groß Laasch, Mecklenburg-Schwerin, German Empire |
Died | December 30, 1945 Bryansk, Soviet Union |
(aged 60)
Buried at | German prisoner-of-war cemetery, Bryansk |
Allegiance | German Empire (1901-1918) Weimar Republic (1919-1933) Nazi Germany (1933-1944) |
Service/branch | Heer |
Years of service | 1901-1944 |
Rank | Generalleutnant |
Battles/wars | World War I World War II |
Awards | Iron Cross 2nd class Iron Cross 1st class Clasp to the Iron Cross |
Adolf Hamann (September 3, 1885 - December 30, 1945) was a German general.
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Hamann joined the Schwerin 89th Grenadier Regiment in 16 July 1901. He was promoted to corporal on 27 January 1904 and to Unteroffizier at 27 January the following year. Hamann became a Sergeant on 3 March 1908, and a Feldwebel at 1 October 1911. In 1914, during the first year of WWI, he was twice awarded the Iron Cross. At 7 August 1916, he was promoted to a Warrant Officer and appointed as a platoon commander.[1]
At 7 August 1919, Hamann was commissioned as a second Lieutenant and transferred to the 17th Infantry Regiment of the newly-created Reichswehr, where he served as the commander's adjutant. At 1 October 1920, he was assigned to the 6th Infantry Regiment as a company's operations officer. On 15 January 1921 he was promoted to Lieutenant, and on 1 April 1923 he was given the rank of a Captain and the command over a company.[2]
At 1 July 1933, he was promoted to Major and assigned to staff duty. From 1 July to 1 October 1934, he commanded the Flensburg Infantry Battalion. Afterwards, he headed the 3rd Battalion of the Neumünster Regiment, and was transferred to the 46th Regiment on 15 October 1935, in which he commanded the 3rd Battalion, as well. At 1 March 1936 he was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel. From 1 February 1937 until 3 January 1939, he commanded the Stablak training area in East Prussia. While holding that office, he was promoted to Colonel on 1 August 1938. From January to 1 September 1939, he commanded the Tiborlager training area near Schwiebus.[1]
Immediately after the German invasion of Poland, Hamann was given the command of a frontier defense zone on the Polish border, which he held until 8 January 1940. Afterwards, he commanded the 3rd Reserve Infantry Battalion until 25 July 1941. From 4 August until 14 January the following year, he headed the 239 Infantry Division's 327 Regiment. After the division was dissolved, he was transferred to the Führerreserve, where he remained until 1 April. Then he was posted as the commander of the 370th Division's 666th Regiment, stationed at Reims, in the French Zone occupée. He held the office for only six weeks and was recalled to the reserve on 14 May.[3]
On 1 June 1942, he was promoted to Major General and sent to serve as the governor of Oryol, in the German-occupied area of the Soviet Union. During the Battle of Kursk, while still commandnat of Oryol, he was the chief of Gruppe Hamann - a support formation which consisted mainly of the 3rd Brandendburg Regiment and existed from 20 July to 1 August as part of General Lothar Rendulic's XXXV Corps. On 4 August, after Oryol's liberation in Operation Kutuzov, he was made commandant of Bryansk. When it was retaken by the Red Army on 17 September, he became the governor of Bobruisk, in Belorussia.[4]
On 1 June 1944, an order to promote Hamann to Lieutenant General was issued, though it was not implemented. At 20 June, he was given command of the 383rd Infantry Division, replacing General Edmund Hoffmeister, while retaining his position as commandat of what was now the Fortified Area (Fester Platz) Bobruisk.[5]
On 22 June 1944, the Soviets initiated Operation Bagration. The Red Army soon overwhelmed the German forces stationed near Bobruisk, and encircled the city on the 27th. At 28 June 1944, Hamann - along with the rest of the Bobruisk garrison - was taken prisoner.[5] On 17 July, he was paraded through the streets of Moscow with 50,000 other captured German soldiers.[6] He was officially promoted to Lieutenant General while in Soviet captivity, on 20 August 1944.[1]
At 30 December 1945, a Soviet court convicted him of war crimes[7] against the civilian populations of Bryansk [8] and Bobruisk.[9] Hamann was sentenced to death, and hanged on the same day.[1][5]