| 331st Infantry Division | |
|---|---|
| German:331. Infanterie-Division | |
| Active | 15 December 1941 – 30 December 194316 March 1944 – 7 October 1944 |
| Country | |
| Branch | Heer |
| Type | Infantry |
| Size | Division |
The331st Infantry Division was an infantry division of theGerman army duringWorld War II. It was active between 1941 and 1944, with a brief period of inactivity between 30 December 1943 and 16 March 1944.
The 331st Infantry Division was assembled as one of thevalkyrie divisions of the 17thwave of deployment on 15 December 1941. Initially deployed atKönigsbrück military base using personnel of Division 174 (later174th Reserve Division), it consisted of the Infantry Regiments 557, 558 and 559, as well as Artillery Regiment 331 and the Division Units 331. Infantry Regiment 557 initially consisted of three infantry battalions, whereas the 558th and 559th regiments had two battalions each, for a divisional total of seven infantry battalions. Artillery Regiment 331 was equipped with two artillery detachments.[1] The initial divisional commander wasFritz Hengen, but command quickly passed toFranz Beyer, who oversaw the division between 30 December 1941 and 22 February 1943.[2]
The division marched fromŁuków to the Eastern Front on foot between January and February 1942, where it was placed underXXXX Corps (4th Army,Army Group Center) and was active in theYukhnov area.[1] Here, the division suffered very heavy casualties almost immediately upon entering combat against theRed Army,[2] making its first enemy contact in late January 1941, reinforcing 4th Army troops under pressure by theSoviet 1941–42 winter offensive.[3]
The division remained under XXXX Corps in March and April, before spending time underLVI Corps between May and December. Between May and June, the division was reorganized and several new formations added: Panzerjäger Detachment 331, Reconnaissance Detachment 331, and an additional artillery detachment for Artillery Regiment 331, bringing the regiment to three detachments. Over the course of the fighting of the year 1942, the 3rd Battalion of Infantry Regiment 557 had to be dissolved.[1]

In January 1943, the 331st Infantry Division was shifted from the Yukhnov sector toVelizh, where the division was subordinate toLIX Corps of3rd Panzer Army in February 1943. Between March and April, the division served underXXXXIII Corps (also 3rd Panzer Army).[1] On 22 February 1943, divisional command passed from Beyer toKarl Rhein, who held the command post until 1 January 1944 and briefly reassumed it between April and August 1944.[2] On 17 March 1943, the 557th regiment was fully dissolved and its two remaining battalions given to the 558th and 559th, resulting in a division of two infantry regiments with a total of six battalions. This design was later reverted on 22 September 1943, and the 558th and 559th regiments each gave their third battalions back to a newly formed 557th regiment, preparing a reorganization of the division to fit theDivision Neuer Art 44 archetype. The 331st Infantry Division was assigned toII Corps of16th Army underArmy Group North in theNevel sector between May 1943 and February 1944. Additionally, the Infantry Regiments were redesignated Grenadier Regiments, as was the case for all Infantry Regiments of the German army in 1943.[1]
After heavy casualties in the Nevel sector, the division was ordered on 30 December 1943 to be temporarily dissolved and subsequently reassembled as a division of the 24th wave of deployment using the resources ofWahn Division. The infantry as well as the military equipment remained on the Eastern Front. Grenadier Regiment 557 was dissolved outright, Grenadier Regiment 558 was redesignated Grenadier Regiment 547 and attached to the83rd Infantry Division, and Grenadier Regiment 559 saw its battalions dissolved, whereas the staff went on to form the staff of Grenadier Regiment 358 of the205th Infantry Division.[1]
The 331st Infantry Division was reactivated on 16 March 1944 inKöln-Wahn (inPorz Borough ofCologne), using the personnel of Wahn Division. The new 331st Infantry Division was once again equipped with three grenadier regiments, bearing the previous division's regimental numbers 557, 558 and 559. The personnel of the new Grenadier Regiment 557 was drawn from Grenadier Regiment 567 of the391st Field Training Division, whereas the new Grenadier Regiments 558 and 559 were the renamed Grenadier Regiments 1 Wahn and 2 Wahn of the previous Wahn Division. The new Artillery Regiment 331, with four detachments, was drawn from both the old regiment of the 331st Division and from the materiel of Division Wahn. Division Fusilier Battalion 331 was a new creation, and Pioneer Battalion 331 was a redesignation of the Pioneer Battalion of Division Wahn.[1]
Starting in April 1944, the 331st Infantry Division was deployed inGerman-occupied France, where it was initially assigned to the army reserves of15th Army in theCalais region. After the AlliedNormandy landings in June, the 331st Infantry Division was assigned toLXXIV Army Corps under5th Panzer Army ofArmy Group B. The division was involved in the peripheral fights around theFalaise pocket in late August 1944,[1] suffering casualties during breakthrough attempts.[2] During the retreat, LXXIV Corps covered theLonde-Rouvray Forest south of Rouen to enable armored elements ofLXXXI Corps to withdraw. The 331st Infantry Division, according to statements of its commanderWalter Steinmüller (in command between 1 August and 16 October 1944) in officialCanadian war histories, was one of the final formations to cross the river Seine in the early morning hours of 30 August 1944.[4]
Divisional remnants appear in German records under command ofLXVII Corps (15th Army, Army Group B) for the duration of September 1944.[1]
The 331st Infantry Division was formally dissolved on 7 October 1944. Remaining staff personnel formed az.b.V. divisional staff on 13 November. The 2nd Battalion of Grenadier Regiment 558 became the 2nd Battalion of Grenadier Regiment 857 under346th Infantry Division. The 1st and 2nd Detachments of Artillery Regiment 331 became the 1st and 2nd Detachments of Artillery Regiment 346 (also 346th Infantry Division), whereas the 3rd Detachment of Artillery Regiment 331 became the 3rd Detachment of Artillery Regiment 168 (under168th Infantry Division).[1]
The z.b.V. divisional staff continued service between November 1944 and March 1945. After an initial attachment to 15th Army of Army Group B, it spent the final months of activity withLXXXVIII Corps of25th Army underArmy Group H.[1]
| Year | Month | Army Corps | Army | Army Group | Operational area |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1941 | Dec | In deployment | Wehrkreis VI (Königsbrück) | ||
| 1942 | Jan/Feb | Army Group reserves | AG Centre | viaŁuków to the front | |
| Mar/Apr | XXXX | 4th | Yukhnov | ||
| May–Dec | LVI | ||||
| 1943 | Jan | Army Group reserves | |||
| Feb | LIX | 3rd Panzer | Velizh | ||
| Mar/Apr | XXXXIII | ||||
| May–Dec | II | 16th | AG North | Nevel | |
| 1944 | Jan/Feb (remnants) | ||||
| Dissolution and reassembly ordered on 30 December 1943; reassembly on 16 March 1944 | |||||
| 1944 | Mar | Reassembly in process | Köln-Wahn | ||
| Apr–Jun | Army reserves | 15th | AG B /AG D | Calais | |
| Aug | LXXIV | 5th Panzer | AG B | Normandy | |
| Sep (remnants) | LXVII | 15th | Netherlands | ||
| Dissolution ordered on 7 October 1944; z.b.V. staff continues until March 1945 | |||||
| 1944 | Nov | Army reserves | 15th | AG B | Netherlands |
| 1945 | Feb/Mar | LXXXVIII | 25th | AG H | Netherlands |