The division was reformed at
Sorochinsk, in the
South Urals Military District, from December 1941 to 3 January 1942. It comprised: • 685th Rifle Regiment • 883rd Rifle Regiment • 895th Rifle Regiment • 384th Artillery Regiment • 50th Antitank Battalion • 4th Sapper Battalion • 320th Reconnaissance Company. In June the division went to the
Voronezh Front reserves, but was still far from complete at that time.
Stalingrad On 17 September the division, commanded by Col. F. N. Smekhotvorov, was assigned to the
62nd Army and fought during the
Battle of Stalingrad. On 22 Sept., the 685th Regiment was ferried from the east to the west bank of the Volga into central Stalingrad and five nights later, on the 27th, the other two regiments joined it. The 883rd and 895th were deployed in the Red October factory complex. The following day, the 883rd was attacked by German tanks.
Anti-tank rifleman
Mikhail Panikakha was attempting to defend his position with
Molotov cocktails. A German bullet ignited one of his bombs, setting him alight. He then threw himself against a tank with his remaining bomb and destroyed it, at the cost of his own life. Panikakha was posthumously made a
Hero of the Soviet Union in 1990. The division was mauled and pushed back in a fierce German attack on 1 Oct. A day later, it was defending the western part of the Red October Factory, which included the kitchens, the bath house and workers' flats; it also counter-attacked Hill 107.5. The regiments, down to 200 men, were unequal to the task and were pushed back by German tanks and infantry.
Chuikov, writing in 1963, said that between 13 and 20 Nov. the survivors of the 193rd Rifle Division (Smekhotvorov) were consolidated into the 685th Rifle Regiment - the grand total was 250 soldiers. However the historian
John Erickson says that by 11 Nov. the division was reduced to 1,000 personnel. At 2300 hrs. on November 12, Col. Smekhotvorov received orders from Maj. Gen. N.I. Krylov, chief-of-staff of 62nd Army, to withdraw his divisional headquarters and those of its subordinate regiments to the east bank of the Volga. The composite regiment was subordinated to the
138th Rifle Division, and the divisional artillery likewise to the chief of 62nd Army's artillery. This order officially ended the division's participation in the battle.
Kursk The rebuilding division was assigned to the
65th Army (former
4th Tank Army) in February 1943; it was under the command of Lieutenant General
Pavel Batov, part of Colonel General
K. K. Rokossovski's Central Front. The 193rd would remain under these commanders for the duration of the war. The Front was redeployed to the
Kursk area, where the division, now with a strength of 9,000 troops, made gains in a gap between the German
2nd Army and
2nd Panzer Army until German reserves brought the advance to a halt. The 193rd remained in the Kursk salient through the following months, including Operation
Zitadelle. At this time the division was part of the
27th Rifle Corps, and was commanded by Major General F. N. Zhobrev. Zhobrev was replaced by Colonel A. G. Frolenkov on Aug. 28. Frolenkov was eventually promoted to Maj. Gen. and named a Hero of the Soviet Union; he remained in command for the rest of the war. After the German defeat at Kursk, the Red Army launched its first summer offensive. The 193rd staged a successful assault crossing of the
Dnepr River on October 15, with divisional and army artillery firing 1,000 shells per minute in support. but remained well understrength for some time. The 193rd was joined with the
354th Rifle Division in April to form the
105th Rifle Corps, commanded by General D. F. Alekseev, where it would remain for the duration of the war. ==Advance==