Market197th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)
Company Profile

197th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)

The 197th Infantry Division was a Wehrmacht division in World War II. It was activated on 1 December 1939.

Operational history
The division was activated on 1 December 1939 in the Posen region in Wehrkreis XXI as a division of the seventh Aufstellungswelle, using personnel from the replacement personnel of Wehrkreis XII (Wiesbaden) stationed in the Posen area at the time. The division maintained a Hessian, Palatine and Middle Rhenish regional identity. The division initially consisted of the Infantry Regiments 321 and 332 (formed from Infantry Replacement Regiment 33 and Infantry Replacement Regiment 246, respectively) as well as the Light Artillery Detachment 229. With its two infantry regiments, the 197th Infantry Division was initially understrength, but bolstered into full divisional strength by the addition of Infantry Regiment 347, formed from Landwehr Infantry Regiment 183 (Wehrkreis VIII) and initially consisting of two battalions, on 8 January 1940. Additionally, the Light Artillery Detachment 229 became the Artillery Regiment 229 through the addition of staff elements from Artillery Regiment 708 and the third detachment of Artillery Regiment 223. During the Battle of France, the 197th Infantry Division was part of the mostly static Army Group C along the prewar Franco-German border, opposite the French fortifications at the Maginot Line. On 12 May 1940, Infantry Regiment 347 was strengthened from two to three battalions. On 16 May 1940, Artillery Regiment 223 was bolstered to a strength of nine batteries. On 29 November 1941, members of the 197th Infantry Division were involved in the execution of Soviet partisan Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya (and subsequently, likely in the mutilation and desecration of her corpse as well as the attempted cover-up). On 1 April 1942, Meyer-Rabingen was replaced as divisional commander by Ehrenfried-Oskar Boege. The 321st Regiment was subsequently split and its battalions reattached to Grenadier Regiments 332 and 347, resulting in the 197th Infantry Division now consisting of two rather than three regiments. On 2 November 1943, II./321 and II./347 were dissolved as a result of casualties and I./321 was redesignated II./321. Division Group 52 was added to the division. On 5 November, Eugen Wößner took command of the division from Boege; Boege subsequently became the commander of the XXXXIII Army Corps. On 14 March 1944, Colonel Hans Hahne became the divisional commander. The division was smashed by Soviet forces in the cauldron of Vitebsk during the Soviet Vitebsk–Orsha offensive. Its last commander, Hans Hahne, went MIA during the final days of the division; his remains were never found. The remnants of the 197th Infantry Division were merged with the remnants of the 95th and 256th Infantry Division into Corps Detachment H. ==War crimes==
War crimes
According to the testimony of a German prisoner of war, non-commissioned officer of the 10th company of the 332nd Infantry Regiment of the 197th Division, Karl Beierlein, the regiment was involved in the torture and death of Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya. Stalin ordered that the soldiers and officers of the Division, which participated in the execution, should not be taken prisoner. == Order of battle ==
Order of battle
1 December 1939 After its formation on 1 December 1939, the 197th Infantry Division had the following order of battle: • Infantry Regiment 321, with I./321, II./321 and III./321 battalions (formed from Infantry Replacement Regiment 33 Posen, II./321 from Infantry Replacement Regiment 34 Hohensalza, III./321 from Infantry Replacement Regiment 36 Lissa) • Infantry Regiment 332, with I./332, II./332 and III./332 battalions (formed from Infantry Replacement Regiment 246 Pleschen, II./332 from Border Infantry Replacement Regiment 125 Warthelager, III./332 from Infantry Replacement Regiment 263 Sieradz) • Light Artillery Detachment 229 8 January 1940 After the addition of reinforcements on 8 January 1940, the 197th Infantry Division had the following order of battle: • Infantry Regiment 321, with I./321, II./321 and III./321 battalions • Infantry Regiment 332, with I./332, II./332 and III./332 battalions • Infantry Regiment 347, with I./347, II./347 and III./347 battalions (formed from Landwehr Infantry Regiment 347) • Artillery Regiment 229, with I./229, II./229 and III./229 battalions (formed from the staff of Artillery Regiment 708, the Light Artillery Detachment 229 (as I./229) and III./Artillery Regiment 223 (as III./229)) • Division Units 229 30 April 1943 After the major reorganizations of 30 April 1943, the 197th Infantry Division had the following order of battle: • Grenadier Regiment 332, with I./332, II./332 and II./321 battalions • Grenadier Regiment 347, with I./347, II./347 and I./321 battalions • Division Battalion 229 • Artillery Regiment 229, with I./229, II./229, III./229 and I./58 battalions 2 November 1943 After the reorganizations of 2 November 1943, the 197th Infantry Division had the following order of battle: • Grenadier Regiment 332, with I./332 and II./332 battalions • Grenadier Regiment 347, with I./347 and II./321 battalions • Division Group 52, with Regiment Group 163 and Regiment Group 181 • Division Fusilier Battalion 197 • Artillery Regiment 229, with I./229, II./229, III./229 and I./58 • Division Units 229 == Legacy ==
Legacy
After World War II, a Traditionsgemeinschaft (veterans' organization) of the 197th Infantry Division was formed. In 1969, the veterans' organization published a German-language divisional history in Wiesbaden. == Noteworthy individuals ==
Noteworthy individuals
Commanding officers • Generalleutnant Hermann Meyer-Rabingen, 1 December 1939 – 1 April 1942 • General der Infanterie Ehrenfried-Oskar Böge, 1 April 1942 – 5 November 1943 • Generalleutnant Eugen Wößner, 5 November 1943 – 14 March 1944 • Generalmajor Hans Hahne, 14 March 1944 – 24 June 1944, KIA Others Friedrich von Mellenthin, chief of staff (Ia) of the 197th Infantry Division during the Battle of France. == References ==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com