12th Rifle Corps | |
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Active |
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Country | Soviet Union |
Branch | Red Army (Soviet Army from 1946) |
Type | Infantry |
Commanders | |
Notable commanders | Jan Lufi |
The12th Rifle Corps (Russian:12-й стрелковый корпус) was an infantrycorps of theRed Army during theinterwar period andWorld War II, formed four times.
The corps headquarters was briefly active between late 1922 and early 1923 as part of theSeparate Caucasus Army, and again between early 1923 and early 1924 inWestern Siberia. Reformed in 1930 and stationed in theVolga Military District, the corps headquarters moved to theTransbaikal in 1939. There, it was used to form the36th Army in July 1941.
The corps was again reformed in late 1942 as part of theTranscaucasian Front, spending the war guarding the Soviet–Turkish border. From 1946 it was stationed in theNorth Caucasus Military District, and briefly became a mountain rifle corps between 1949 and 1954. The last formation of the 12th Rifle Corps became the12th Army Corps in 1957, and was expanded into the49th Army in 1992.
The corps was formed as part of theSeparate Caucasus Army with headquarters atYerevan by an order of 16 November 1922, and included the3rd Caucasian andArmenian Rifle Divisions. It was disbanded by orders of the army of 15 January and 1 February 1923.[1]
The 12th Rifle Corps was again formed as part of theWestern Siberian Military District by an order of 30 January 1923 with headquarters atNovonikolayevsk. It included the26th and35th Rifle Divisions and fought in the suppression of theYakut revolt between January and December.Kasyan Chaykovsky commanded it between January and September.[2] The corps was disbanded by an order of the district of 14 February 1924.[1]
The 12th Rifle Corps was formed for a third time as part of theVolga Military District by an order of 28 November 1930, headquartered atSaratov at the former headquarters building of the16th Rifle Corps. Its formation was completed by 22 January 1931, when the corps headquarters issued its first order; the corps initially included the31st (Stalingrad) and32nd (Saratov) Rifle Divisions.Georgy Sofronov began the formation of the corps, but was transferred to another unit in December 1930; the formation of the corps was completed bySemyon Turovsky, who commanded it from 9 January 1931. The corps commander also oversaw the XII Corps District, formed to facilitate wartime mobilization inLower Volga Krai, which controlled the localmilitary commissariats.[3]
The corps began forming the53rd (Pugachyov) and61st (Balashov) Territorial Rifle Divisions during September 1931, along with the Saratov-based 12th Artillery Regiment, 12th Separate Communications Battalion, and 12th Separate Sapper Battalion, and the corps artillery range atTatishchevo. These units comprised locals residing closest to their bases, and were fully formed by 31 December. Turovsky transferred on 11 February 1932, being replaced byIvan Tkachev. The corps training center opened in May, ultimately graduating four classes of reserve officers and holding five territorial training camps. During 1933, the 53rd and 61st Divisions were reorganized as experimental territorial brigades, but in September of that year pilot exercises with the latter revealed that they were inadequate for speedy mobilization, and the brigades became divisions again.[3]
The 32nd Division was transferred to theSpecial Red Banner Far Eastern Army during March 1934, leaving the corps with three divisions. The Saratov-based 22nd Aviation Detachment joined the corps on 1 October of that year. Corps units repaired track and restored telegraph communications damaged by a November 1935 landslide at a station of theRyazan-Ural Railway. During the mid-1930s, Tkachev was succeeded in command byMikhail Yefremov,Stepan Kalinin, andVladimir Kolpakchi. By 1935, it included the 31st (Stalingrad) and 53rd (Engels) Territorial Rifle Divisions, in addition to the 12th Corps Artillery Regiment at Saratov.[4] The corps headquarters was transferred to theTransbaikal Military District in September 1939 due torising tensions with Japan and located atBorzya.[1][3] Among its units was the109th Rifle Division, which became a motorized division in early 1940 and transferred to the5th Mechanized Corps in midyear.[5]
It was commanded by Major GeneralDaniil Petrov from 18 January 1941. By 22 June it included the65th and94th Rifle Divisions and was directly controlled by the district headquarters.[6] During a reorganization of the forces stationed in the Transbaikal Military District, the corps was disbanded on 27 July.[7] The units of the corps were used to form the36th Army.[8]
The corps headquarters was formed by an order of 13 October 1942,[9] and by 1 November was assigned the77th,261st,349th, and351st Rifle Divisions, directly controlled by the headquarters of theTranscaucasian Front.[10] In November the406th Rifle Division joined the corps while the 77th transferred to the58th Army.[11] Major GeneralGeorgy Kuparadze, who led it for the rest of the war, took command on 6 December.[7] The corps guarded the Soviet–Turkish border for the remainder of the war.[12] Corps support units included the 132nd Separate Communications Battalion, 126th Field Office of the State Bank, and the 2329th Field Postal Station.[13] The corps joined the45th Army in December with the392nd and 406th Rifle Divisions.[14] The 261st and 349th Rifle Divisions transferred to the corps from direct army subordination during January.[15]
From April, the corps was directly subordinated to the headquarters of theTranscaucasian Front, where it would remain for the rest of the war, with the 392nd and 406th Rifle Divisions, leaving the 261st and 349th with the 45th Army.[18][19] By April, the corps was headquartered atKutaisi with the 392nd atBatumi and the 406th atAkhalkalaki. The 51st (Batumi) and 151st (Akhalkalaki)Fortified Regions were operationally subordinated to the corps.[16] It was 83%Georgian, 9% Russian, 4% Ukrainian, and 4% other nationalities by September.[9] The296th Rifle Division at Kutaisi (operationally subordinated to the corps from its formation in July 1943)[17] transferred to the corps from the13th Rifle Corps during January 1944, and remained with the corps for the rest of the war.[20] The 392nd transferred to the 13th Rifle Corps during August, leaving the corps with the 296th and 406th Rifle Divisions for the rest of the war.[21][22]
In 1946, its headquarters was transferred toOrdzhonikidze in theNorth Caucasus Military District, where it included the 3rd Guards and 11th Separate Rifle Brigades. Between 28 July 1949 and September 1954, it was a mountain rifle corps with the 24th Guards and 19th Mountain Rifle Divisions, formed from the 3rd Guards and 11th Brigades, respectively. When it reverted to the 12th Rifle Corps, the two divisions became rifle divisions again. The corps became the 12th Army Corps on 25 June 1957, with the 24th Guards becoming the42nd Guards Motor Rifle Division and the 19th the92nd Motor Rifle Division.[23]
During the early 1960s, the 42nd Guards became a training unit and was subordinated to the North Caucasus Military District, and by the end of the decade the corps headquarters relocated toKrasnodar, replacing that of the29th Army Corps. At Krasnodar, the corps controlled the9th Motor Rifle Division atMaykop and two mobilization motor rifle divisions – the 62nd (co–located with the 9th) and the 156th atNovorossiysk. After thedissolution of the Soviet Union, the corps became part of theRussian Ground Forces and was expanded into the49th Army in May 1992.[23]
The following officers are known to have commanded the second wartime formation of the 12th Rifle Corps and the 12th Army Corps:[23]