| 93rd Rifle Division | |
|---|---|
| Active | 1936–1942 |
| Country | |
| Branch | |
| Type | Infantry |
| Engagements | Battle of Moscow |
| Battle honours | East Siberian |
| Commanders | |
| Notable commanders | Konstantin Erastov |
The93rd Rifle Division (Russian:93-я стрелковая дивизия) was an infantry division of theRed Army that fought inWorld War II. Formed in 1936, the division served in theTransbaikal region before the war began. In October 1941, it was transferred west to fight in theBattle of Moscow. For its actions in the Soviet counteroffensive during the battle, the division became the26th Guards Rifle Division in April 1942.
The 93rd Rifle Division was formed in May 1936 in the military garrison of Antipikha nearChita with cadre from the 106th Rifle Regiment of the36th Rifle Division of theTransbaikal Military District. The division included the 277th, 278th and 279th Rifle Regiments. 35th Rifle Division assistant commanderKombrig Aleksey Meshkov was appointed division commander. The division received the East Siberian honorific on 31 October 1936. Meshkov was relieved of command in October 1937, arrested during theGreat Purge, and died in prison.[1] His successor, Kombrig Nikolay Ivanovich Nikitin, shot himself on 14 July 1938 to avoid arrest.[2] Other division officers repressed included assistant commander Colonel Tikhon Davydov, imprisoned, and chief of artillery Colonel Sergey Figurin, dismissed from the army for political reasons. All three regimental commanders were arrested and two of them later released.[3]
The division was mobilized from conscripts and transferred toDauriya to defend against a possible Japanese attack from Manchuria during May and June 1939. The mobilization ended in June 1939, and the division historical form considered this event the beginning of the division.[4] ColonelKonstantin Erastov, who was promoted to the rank ofkombrig on 4 November 1939 and became a major general on 4 June 1940, was appointed division commander on 14 August 1939.[5] During theBattles of Khalkhin Gol, the division sent ninemarch battalions of replacements to the front. After the end of the fighting, the 93rd returned to winter quarters at Antipikha in October. The division formed a ski battalion selected from its best personnel for theWinter War that went to the front in November. The battalion returned to the division after the war ended, with 77 of its soldiers having been decorated.[6]
After the end of the Battles of Khalkin Gol and the mid-1940 reorganization of the command arrangements in the Transbaikal, the 93rd came under the direct control of the Transbaikal Military District. WhenOperation Barbarossa began, the 93rd included the following units:[7]
AfterOperation Barbarossa began on 22 June 1941, the division was moved forward to theDauriya steppes where it spent two months digging border defenses in the stony soil along a 56-kilometer line.[6] The relocation of the 93rd from the Transbaikal to theEastern Front began on 7 October, and on arrival it was concentrated in thePodolsk area. It was ordered to eliminate the German breakthrough of the front of the 43rd Army in the area of Kamenka on 20 October, entering battle on 26 October. The division stopped the German advance and pushed the German troops back to the line of theNara river. During October and November the division fought in defensive battles as part of the 43rd Army on theMaloyaroslavets andNaro-Fominsk axis. From mid-December, the division fought in the Soviet winter counteroffensive during theBattle of Moscow. Initially remaining part of the 43rd Army for this operation, it was shifted to the33rd Army on 26 December. The division advanced up to 150 kilometers during the counteroffensive, fighting its way to theVorya river nearVyazma by the end of the counteroffensive in late March. The division went on the defensive on the line of the Vorya when the counteroffensive came to a halt.[8]
The division took up defensive positions southwest of Podolsk on 24 October, assigned to the43rd Army of theWestern Front, and entered battle on 26 October, stopping the German advance on theNara river line. The 93rd fought its way to theVorya river by the end of the counteroffensive.[8] Erastov, who received theOrder of the Red Banner for his leadership of the division, was transferred to command another division.[9] The division's chief of staff, Colonel Nikolay Korzhenevsky, succeeded him as its commander on 31 March.[5] In recognition of its performance during the counteroffensive, the division was reorganized as an eliteGuards unit, the26th Guards Rifle Division, on 20 April 1942.[7]
The following officers commanded the division:[10]