19th Guards Mechanized Brigade
2nd Guards Mechanized Corps (1942-1945) 2nd Guards Mechanized Division (1945-1957) 19th Guards Tank Division (1957-1990s) 19th Guards Storage Base (?-2008) 19th Guards Mechanized Brigade (2008-present) | |
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Active | 1942 - Present |
Country | Soviet Union, Belarus |
Branch | Ground Forces |
Type | Tank and Mechanized Infantry |
Role | Armored warfare |
Size | Division, Mechanized Corps, Brigade |
Engagements |
World War II Cold War |
Commanders | |
Notable commanders | K. Z. Sviridov (1942 - 1945) |
The 19th Guards Mechanized Brigade is a formation of the Armed Forces of Belarus based in Zaslonovo (ru:Заслоново), a few kilometers east of Lepiel. The 19th Guards Brigade traces its history back to the 1942 formation of the 2nd Guards Mechanized Corps of the Soviet Army during World War II. Subsequent designations during the Cold War included 2nd Guards Mechanized Division and 19th Guards Tank Division. Following the Cold War, the 19th Guards Tank Division was relocated to Belarus and became part of their armed forces in 1992. Thereafter, the unit was reduced to a personnel and equipment cadre unit and titled the 19th Guards Base for Storage of Weapons and Equipment[1] before being upgraded to a mechanized brigade in 2008.
Formed in the Tambov area on 15 October 1942 from elements of the 22nd Guards Rifle Division,[2] the 2nd Guards Mechanized Corps was under the command of Major General K. Z. Sviridov and subordinated to the Southern Front and the 2nd Guards Army until late 1943, at which time the corps became a front-level asset and supported the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th Ukrainian Fronts for the rest of the war. By the end of the war, the 2nd Guards Mechanized Corps commanded the 4th, 5th, and 6th Guards Mechanized Brigades, as well as the 37th Guards Tank Brigade.[3] The corps fought at Stalingrad in 1942-43, at Melitopol in 1943, Odessa and Budapest in 1944, and Vienna in 1945.[4] The 2nd Guards Mechanized Corps finished the war as part of the 6th Guards Tank Army in the area of Benešov, Czechoslovakia, on 9 May 1945.[5][6]
The 2nd Guards Mechanized Corps, like all Soviet mechanized corps, was reorganized as a division in mid-late 1945, and was renamed the 2nd Guards Mechanized Division. The 2nd Guards Mechanized Division was part of the Southern Group of Forces based at Esztergom, Hungary. The division was part of the Soviet forces that crushed the Hungarian Revolution of 1956.[7] In 1957, the division was reorganized as a tank division and renamed the 19th Guards Tank Division.[8] Among other veterans of the unit, Yuri Budanov served with the division in the postwar period in Hungary.
Following the end of the Cold War, the unit was withdrawn to Zaslonovo in Belarus 1992 and then became part of the Armed Forces of Belarus. At some point following relocation, the division was reorganized and became a Base for Storage of Weapons and Equipment, a partial-strength mechanized infantry formation. "One of the equipment storage bases is the 19th, the former 19th Guards Tank Division at Zaslonovo in the Lepiel region. On October 1, 2003, the base was considerably strengthened. From other bases of storage of arms and techniques now we are distinguished favorably by new structure. Besides a battalion of protection, storage and service, motor-rifle and tank battalions were added."[9]
In 2008 the base for storage of weapons and equipment was again upgraded into a brigade; 2012 reports suggest one-two established manoeuvre battalions.[9]
A 19th Tank Corps also existed but has no lineage connection to the 19th Guards Mechanized Brigade.
Notes
- ↑ Feskov et al 2004, Table 2.5, Part 3: Tank Divisions, p. 106.
- ↑ Glantz, p. 256.
- ↑ БОЕВОЙ СОСТАВ ВОЙСК НА 1 ЯНВАРЯ 1944 г.
- ↑ Poirier, pp. 91-92.
- ↑ БОЕВОЙ СОСТАВ ВОЙСК НА 1 МАЯ 1945 г.
- ↑ Ustinov, Map 151.
- ↑ Feskov, p. 97.
- ↑ Feskov, p. 97.
- 1 2 http://www8.brinkster.com/vad777/sng/belorussia%5Cbelorusia.htm.
Sources
- V.I. Feskov et al., The Soviet Army in the period of the Cold War, Tomsk University Publishing House, 2004.
- Glantz, David, Colussus Reborn, University Press of Kansas, 2005.
- Poirier, Robert G., and Conner, Albert Z., The Red Army Order of Battle in the Great Patriotic War, Novato: Presidio Press, 1985.
- Ustinov, D. F. - Geschichte des Zweiten Welt Krieges (German translation of the Soviet official history, Volume 10), 1981
- http://www8.brinkster.com/vad777
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