Battle of Sokolovo

Battle of Sokolovo
Part of the Eastern Front of World War II

Czechoslovak army in the Soviet Union
Date March 8 – March 13, 1943
Location Sokolovo, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union
Result Czechoslovak defensive victory
Belligerents
Czechoslovakia
 Soviet Union
Germany
Commanders and leaders
Ludvík Svoboda Walther von Hünersdorff
Strength
350 soldiers
2 anti-tank cannons
16 anti-tank rifles
2400 infantry men
40–60 tanks
20 Armored vehicles
Casualties and losses
86 dead
20 captured and MIA
114 injured
2 anti-tank cannons
7 anti-tank rifles
300–400 men
19 tanks
6 Armored vehicles

The Battle of Sokolovo took place on March 8 and 9, 1943 near the town of Sokolovo near Kharkiv in Ukraine when the on-going attack of the Wehrmacht was halted by joint Soviet and Czechoslovak forces. It was the first time that a foreign military unit, the First Czechoslovak Independent Field Battalion, fought together with the Red Army. Under the command of Ludvík Svoboda, later President of Czechoslovakia, the Czechoslovak soldiers effectively prevented any further advance of Germans across the Mzha river. The Soviet supreme command highly valued both the bravery of the Czechoslovak soldiers and the political significance of the fact that the Soviet people were no longer alone in their struggle against Germany. First Lieutenant Otakar Jaroš, the commander of the 1st company (who was killed in the course of the battle and posthumously promoted to captain) was the first foreign citizen ever to be awarded the highest Soviet military order, the Hero of the Soviet Union. Moreover, one of the local schools in Sokolovo was named in his honor.

The battle became the subject matter of a 1974 Czechoslovak film with the same name, directed by Otakar Vávra.

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