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TheCrimean campaign was conducted by theAxis as part ofOperation Barbarossa duringWorld War II. The invading force was led byGermany with support fromRomania andItaly, while theSoviet Union took up defensive positions throughout theCrimean Peninsula. The Axis offensive routed theRed Army and enabled the three-year-longGerman occupation of Crimea.
Crimean campaign | |||||||||
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Part ofOperation Barbarossa | |||||||||
![]() Soviet POWs inAxis-occupiedCrimea, 6 November 1941 | |||||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||||
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Commanders and leaders | |||||||||
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Units involved | |||||||||
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Casualties and losses | |||||||||
30,000 killed, wounded, or missing | 65,000 captured 212 vehicles destroyed 672 guns destroyed |

Beginning on 26 September 1941, the German11th Army and the RomanianThird Army andFourth Army were involved in the fighting.[1] They were opposed by the Soviet51st Army and elements of theBlack Sea Fleet. After the campaign, Crimea was occupied by Germany'sArmy Group A, with the17th Army as a major subordinate formation.[2]
Sevastopol andKerch were the only Crimean cities that were not occupied by Axis forces during this campaign; the former was honoured by the Soviet government as aHero City for resisting against the German and Romanian armies, and the latter was briefly recaptured by the Soviets during an amphibious operation near the end of 1941 before being taken again by the Germans duringOperation Bustard Hunt on 8 May.[1][3] TheSiege of Sevastopol lasted 250 days, from 30 October 1941 to 4 July 1942, when the Axis finally captured the city.
In the early hours of 6 November, the Romanian submarineDelfinul, commanded byConstantin Costăchescu, torpedoed and sank the Soviet 1,975-ton cargo shipUralets 6.4 kilometres (4 mi) to the south ofYalta. The submarine was subsequently attacked by Soviet forces, but she followed a route along theTurkish coast and managed to evade up to 80 depth charges before safely arriving atConstanța on 7 November.[4][5][6]
Sevastopol, the main object of the campaign, was surrounded by German forces and assaulted on 30 October 1941. However, the Germans were repulsed by a Soviet counterattack. Later, many troops who had beenevacuated from the city ofOdessa contributed to defending Sevastopol. The Germans then began an encirclement of the city. Other attacks on 11 November and 30 November, in the eastern and southern sections of the city, failed. German forces were then reinforced by several artillery regiments, one of which included the railway gunSchwerer Gustav.[citation needed] Another attack on 17 December was repulsed at the last moment with the help of reinforcements, and Soviet troops landed on theKerch Peninsula one day afterChristmas to relieve Sevastopol. They remained in the area until being subject to a German counterattack on 9 April and being eliminated by 18 May. With the distraction removed, German forces renewed their assault on Sevastopol, penetrating the inner defensive lines on 29 June.[citation needed] Soviet commanders had been flown out or evacuated by submarine towards the end of the siege and the city surrendered on 4 July 1942, although some Soviet troops held out in caves outside of the city until 9 July.[1][additional citation(s) needed]
In 1944, Crimea was recaptured by the4th Ukrainian Front during theCrimean offensive (8 April 1944 – 12 May 1944), which consisted of three sub-operations:[citation needed]
- Kerch–Eltigen Operation (31 October 1943 – 11 December 1943)
- Perekop–Sevastopol Offensive Operation (8 April 1944 – 12 May 1944)
- Kerch–Sevastopol Offensive Operation (11 April 1944 – 12 May 1944)
Notes
edit- ^abcp. 62, Keegan
- ^p. 71, p. 79, Bishop
- ^see Kerch in Osvobozhdeniye gorodov on www.soldat.ru
- ^Antony Preston,Warship 2001-2002, Conway Maritime Press, 2001. p. 76
- ^Richard Compton-Hall,Submarines at War 1939-1945, Periscope Publishing, 2004, p. 127
- ^Florian Bichir,Corsarii uitați ai adâncurilor, p. 101 (in Romanian)
Bibliography
edit- Bishop, Chris, The Military Atlas of World War II, Igloo Books, London, 2005ISBN 1-904687-53-9
- http://www.soldat.ru/spravka/freedom/1-ssr-3.html Dudarenko, M.L., Perechnev, Yu.G., Yeliseev, V.T., et.el., Reference guide "Liberation of cities": reference for liberation of cities during the period of the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945, Moscow, 1985 (Дударенко, М.Л., Перечнев, Ю.Г., Елисеев, В.Т. и др., сост. Справочник «Освобождение городов: Справочник по освобождению городов в период Великой Отечественной войны 1941–1945»)
- Keegan, John, The Times Atlas of the Second World War, Crescent Books, New York