11th Guards Berlin-Carpathian Mechanized Brigade

6th Tank Corps (1942-1943)
11th Guards Tank Corps (1943-1945)
11th Guards Tank Division (1945-1992)
11th Guards Mechanized Brigade (1990s-Present)
Active 1942 - Present
Country Soviet Union, Belarus
Branch Ground Forces
Type Tank and Mechanized Infantry
Role Armored warfare
Size Division, Tank Corps, Brigade
Garrison/HQ Slonim
Engagements World War II
Cold War
Decorations

Order of the Red Banner

Order of Suvorov 2nd class
Battle honours Carpathian-Berlin
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Hamazasp Babadzhanian
Andrei Getman
Kalinin
Formation
Slonim
At present
Key unit locations

The 11th Guards Mechanized Brigade is a unit of the Armed Forces of Belarus based in Slonim. The 11th Guards Brigade traces its history back to the 1942 formation of the 6th Tank Corps of the Soviet Army during World War II.

World War II

Formed in the Kalinin area on 19 April 1942, the 6th Tank Corps was under the command of Major General A. L. Getman and subordinated to the Western Front until March 1943, at which time the corps was subordinated to the 1st Tank Army, remaining under the command of this formation until 1992. The corps fought at Rzhev in 1942 and Kursk in 1943.[1] The 6th Tank Corps commanded the 22nd, 100th, and 200th Tank Brigades, as well as the 6th Motor Rifle Brigade.[2] Also attached at some periods was the 112th Tank Brigade, later to become the 44th Guards Tank Brigade.[3]

On 23 October 1943, the 6th Tank Corps was officially recognized as a skilled combat formation and 'ranged among the Guards' as the 11th Guards Tank Corps.[4] The 11th Guards Tank Corps was in combat near Kharkov in 1943, the offensive to drive the Germans from Belorussia in 1944 (Operation Bagration), and the offensive across central Poland in January 1945.

In April 1945 during the Battle of Berlin, the 11th Guards Tank Corps was part of the 1st Guards Tank Army.[5] It commanded the 40th, 44th, and 45th Guards Tank Brigades, as well as the 27th Guards Motor Rifle Brigade.[6]

Cold War

The 11th Guards Tank Corps, like all Soviet tank corps, was reorganized as a division in mid-late 1945, and was renamed the 11th Guards Tank Division. The 11th Guards Tank Division was part of the Group of Soviet Forces in Germany, subordinated to 1st Guards Tank Army (known as the 1st Guards Mechanized Army from 1946 to 1957) at Glauchau.[7]

Composition

In 1988, the 11th Guards Tank Division was composed of the following units.[8]

Post Cold War

The 11th Guards Tank Division remained in the German Democratic Republic until 1992,[9] when, with the end of the Cold War, the division was relocated to Slonim and became part of the Armed Forces of Belarus. The division's 44th Guards Tank Regiment went to Vladimir in the Russian Federation, joining the 467th Guards District Training Centre (ex 26th Guards Tank Training Division) in the Moscow Military District. On its arrival it absorbed the 9th Tank Training Regiment.[10]

On 11 August 1992, the division was reorganized and renamed the 11th Guards Mechanized Brigade. The brigade is currently part of the Belarusian Western Operational Command.[11]

An 11th Tank Corps also existed but was a different unit.

Commanders of the 6th Tank Corps and the 11th Guards Tank Corps

Notes

  1. Poirier, p. 128.
  2. БОЕВОЙ СОСТАВ ВОЙСК НА 1 МАЯ 1942 г. [Combat Composition of the Red Army 1 May 1942]
  3. Getman, Andrei (1973). Танки идут на Берлин [Tanks go to Berlin] (in Russian). Moscow: Nauka.
  4. Glantz, p. 85.
  5. Combat composition of the Soviet Army (Боевой состав Советской Армии) на 1 апреля 1945 г. and Боевой состав Советской Армии на 1 мая 1945 г.
  6. Leo Niehorster, 11th Guards Tank Corps
  7. Feskov, p. 96, and Poirier, p. 108.
  8. Holm, Michael. "11th Guards Tank Division". www.ww2.dk. Retrieved 2015-12-28.
  9. Feskov, p. 105.
  10. Holm, 53rd Guards Motor Rifle Division, 2015.
  11. "11-Я ГВАРДЕЙСКАЯ ОТДЕЛЬНАЯ МЕХАНИЗИРОВАННАЯ БРИГАДА | Во славу Родины – Свежий выпуск" [11th Guards Mechanized Brigade - "To the glory of the motherland - fresh release"]. vsr.mil.by (in Russian). Retrieved 2015-12-28.
  12. Glantz, pp. 85 and 92.

References

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