Battle of Voronezh (1942)

Battle of Voronezh (1942)
Part of World War II

The Eastern Front at the time of the Battle of Voronezh. (click to enlarge)
Date 28 June - 24 July 1942
Location Voronezh, Soviet Union
Result Decisive Axis victory
Belligerents
Nazi Germany
Hungary
 Soviet Union
Commanders and leaders
Hermann Hoth
Gusztáv Vitéz Jány
Filipp Golikov
Casualties and losses
unknown 568,347
370,522 killed or captured
197,825 wounded[1]

The Battle of Voronezh was a battle on the Eastern Front of World War II, fought in and around the strategically important city of Voronezh on the Don river, 450 km (280 mi) south of Moscow, from 28 June-24 July 1942, as opening move of the German summer offensive in 1942.

The city was defended by the troops of the 40th Army as part of the Valuiki-Rossosh Defensive Operation (28 June-24 July 1942) of the General of Army Nikolai Fyodorovich Vatutin's Southwestern Front.[2]

The German assault was conducted by the element of the 4th Panzer Army′s forces of Army Group South under commanded by General Hermann Hoth.

Hoth, under strict instructions not to get bogged down in street-to-street fighting, the armored units of the 4th Panzer Army partly captured Voronezh on 6 July by occupying the western river-bank suburbs, however German troops were subjected to a Red Army counter-attack. The 4th Panzer Army was to be followed by the Sixth Army, and when Voronezh was occupied the former was to wheel south-eastward and move down the right bank of the Don towards Stalingrad as part of Operation Blau.[3] It took two days for infantry divisions from the Army Group South to reach Voronezh to hold the line and free the Panzer troops; Adolf Hitler later came to believe that these two days, when combined with other avoidable delays on the drive south, allowed Marshal Semyon Timoshenko to reinforce the forces in Stalingrad before the 4th Panzer Army could arrive to allow taking of Stalingrad.

The Soviets recaptured the city in 1943.

References

  1. ^ Glantz (1995), p. 295
  2. ^ Vatutin was born in the Voronezh area.
  3. ^ Fuller, J.F.C. A Military History of the World: Vol III, p. 522 ISBN 0306803062

References