| 11th Tank Division (1940–1941) 11th Tank Corps (1942–1945) 11th Tank Division (1945–1947) | |
|---|---|
| Active | 1940–1941 1942–1947 |
| Country | Soviet Union |
| Branch | Soviet Ground Forces |
| Type | Tank |
| Role | Armored warfare |
| Size | Division,Tank Corps |
| Engagements | World War II Cold War |
| Decorations | |
| Battle honours | Radom Berlin |
The11th Tank Division was a Soviet tank division initially formed in 1940 atTiraspol and destroyed in 1941; it was then formed as atank corps in May 1942.[1] This unit was subsequently reorganized as the second formation of the 11th Tank Division in 1945.
The first (1940) formation of the 11th Tank Division was subordinated to the2nd Mechanized Corps, itself part of the9th (independent) Army.[2] The 11th Tank Division was destroyed nearNovo-Arkhangelsk (Ukraine) in combat against the Germans in August 1941, with remnants escaping encirclement and being reorganized as the 132nd Tank Brigade, which later became the 4th Guards Tank Brigade.[3]
Initiating a separate unit lineage, the 11th Tank Corps was formed on May 19, 1942. By June 1942, the 11th Tank Corps was subordinated to theBryansk Front. Subordinate units at that time included the 53rd and 160th Tank Brigades, and the 12th Motor Rifle Brigade.[4] The corps was never permanently attached to a tank army and was subordinated to several fronts during the course of the war.[5]
11th Tank Corps was in combat near Kharkov in 1942, Orel in 1943, the offensive to drive the Germans from Belorussia in 1944, and the offensive across central Poland in January 1945.
As the Soviet Army approached victory in April 1945 during theBattle of Berlin, the 11th Tank Corps was part of the 1st Belorussian Front.[6] It commanded the 20th, 36th, and 65th Tank Brigades, as well as the 12th Motor Rifle Brigade.[7] During the battle, the corps was used to flank theSeelow Heights from the north, and in the advance into the city from the east.
The 11th Tank Corps, like all Soviet tank corps, was reorganized as a division on 10 June 1945, and was renamed the 11th Tank Division. The 11th Tank Division was part of theGroup of Soviet Forces in Germany, subordinated to1st Guards Tank Army from August of that year.[8] It was soon transferred to the3rd Shock Army.[9] The division was relocated toGusev, Kaliningrad Oblast in theBaltic Military District in early 1947. It was disbanded in February 1947, with its tank regiments becoming part of rifle divisions in the district and the 12th Motor Rifle Regiment, 243rd Mortar Regiment, 1388th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment, 115th Guards Separate Mortar Battalion, 153rd Sapper Battalion, 687th Communications Battalion, 204th Medical-Sanitary Battalion, and 677th Motor Transport Battalion were all disbanded.[10]
An11th Guards Tank Corps also existed but was a different unit.
The following officers commanded the 11th Tank Corps during World War II:[11]