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The 7th Panzer
Division was a German elite armored formation which
participated in the Battle of France. General Erwin Rommel
commanded the division, which was nicknamed the "Ghost Division"
because of its speed and independent movement, which even the
German High Command had difficulty following. After service in
France, the division served mainly on the Eastern Front, ending its
days in the defense of Germany and surrendering to the British army
north west of Berlin in 1945.
The 7th Panzer Division in
France
After the successful completion of the invasion of Poland, Hitler allowed Erwin Rommel to choose whatever unit he
would like to command. Although Rommel had no practical experience
in tank warfare, he asked for a
Panzer division and on 15 February 1940 he received command of the
7th Panzer Division. In preparation for the invasion of the low
countries, the 7th Panzer Division became part of the 15th Panzer
Corps under the command of General Hoth.
"Ghost Division" / "Phantom Division" under Erwin
Rommel
The 7th Panzer Division moved with great speed through France and covered vast distance.
During the Battle of France, the 7th Panzer
Division earned the name of the Gespensterdivision
(German:"Ghost/Phantom Division") because of this speed and because
nobody seemed to know where it was, not even the German High
Command. Rommel had a "lead from the front" attitude and would
sometimes cut communications with High Command if he wished to not
be disturbed. His behavior showed confidence in the blitzkrieg concept; his
success and favor with Hitler would prevent repercussions from his
insubordination to the High Command. Nevertheless, Rommel was
criticized by staff for being difficult to contact and locate.
Rommel described the French Campaign in his letters to his wife as
"a lightning Tour
de France".[1]
Timeline
- 7th Panzer Division in Belgium and France
- 12 May 1940 - 7th Panzer Division reaches Dinant.
- 13 May 1940 - Crosses River Meuse after heavy
fighting.
- 15 May 1940 - Reaches Philippeville and continues Westward
passing Avesnes and Le
Cateau.
- 21 May 1940 - Reaches Arras
where counter attacked by 2 British Tank Regiments. British tank
advance stopped by feared Flak 88 "Tank Killers".
- 5 June 1940 - Positioned near Abbeville.
- 8 June 1940 - Reaches outskirts of Rouen.
- 10 June 1940 - Reaches English Channel West of Dieppe.
- 17 June 1940 - Reaches Southern outskirts of Cherbourg.
- 19 June 1940 - Garrison of Cherbourg surrenders to
Rommel.
- 25 June 1940 - Fighting ends for 7th Panzer Division in
France.
Organization / Order of
Battle
Campaign map used by 7th Panzer in
Russia
1940
- 25 Panzer Regiment
- 66 Panzer Battalion
- 7 Motorcycle Battalion
- 6 Motorized Infantry Regiment
- 7 Motorized Infantry Regiment
- 37 Reconnaissance Battalion
- 78 Motorized Artillery Regiment
- 58 Motorized Combat Engineer Battalion
- 42 Antitank Battalion
7th Panzer Division on the Eastern Front - Feb 1941 to May
1942
During Operation Barbarossa, units of 7th
Panzer Division were able to penetrate to within sight of the
towers of St Basil's Cathedral next to
the Kremlin in the center of
Moscow[2]
7th
Panzer Division in France - May 1942 to Feb 1943
7th Panzer Division on the Eastern Front - Feb 1943 to Aug
1944
7th
Panzer Division in the Kurland - Aug 1944 to Nov 1944
7th
Panzer Division in Germany - Nov 1944 to May 1945
Commanding
officers
- Generalmajor Georg
Stumme (18 October 1939 – 5 February 1940)
- Generalmajor Erwin
Rommel (5 February 1940 – 14 February 1941)
- Generalmajor Hans Freiherr von Funck (15
February 1941 – 17 August 1943)
- Oberst Wolfgang Gläsemer (17 August 1943 – 20 August 1943)
- Generalmajor Hasso von Manteuffel (20 August
1943 – 1 January 1944)
- Generalmajor Adelbert Schulz (1 January 1944 – 28
January 1944)
- Oberst Wolfgang Gläsemer (28 January 1944 – 30 January
1944)
- Generalmajor Dr. Karl
Mauss (30 January 1944 – 2 May 1944)
- Generalmajor Gerhard Schmidhuber (2 May 1944 – 9
September 1944)
- Generalmajor Dr. Karl Mauss (9 September 1944 – 31 October
1944)
- Generalmajor Hellmuth Mäder (31 October 1944 – 30
November 1944)
- Generalmajor Dr. Karl Mauss (30 November 1944 – 5 January
1945)
- Generalmajor Max Lemke (5 January 1945 – 23 January 1945)
- Generalmajor Dr. Karl Mauss (23 January 1945 – 25 March
1945)
- Oberst Hans Christern (26 March 1945 – 8 May 1945)
Popular
Culture
Swedish Power Metal group Sabaton have a song on their 2008 album
The Art of War titled
"Ghost Division", which is about the 7th Panzer Division.
References
- ^
Liddell Hart, B.H. (1953). The
Rommel Papers. Collins. pp. 545.
- ^
von Luck, Hans (1989). Panzer
Commander. Praeger. pp. 545. ISBN
0275931153.
Bibliography
- Luck, Hans von (1989). Panzer Commander: The Memoirs of
Colonel Hans von Luck, Cassel Military Paperbacks. ISBN
0-304-36401-0
External
links