201st Rifle Division (first formation) The division was formed as Red Army national unit on 3 August 1941 in
Gorokhovets,
Vladimir Oblast,
Moscow Military District from remains of the
24th Territorial Rifle Corps. It was originally designated as the 201st Latvian Rifle Division, the first of three "national" divisions of the recently
occupied Baltic states by the Soviets. The basis of the division was the 76th Independent Latvian Rifle Regiment which was in turn formed from the two Latvian volunteer battalions that participated in the retreats of the Red Army, including the defence of Tallinn. It had been established in August 1941 at
Gorki (today Nizhny Novgorod) Gorokhovetz Army Camp. In addition to the much depleted 76th regiment (about 1200 troops), were added 2500 Latvian speaking members of the state militia (police) and NKVD, as well as the predominantly Latvian speaking 582nd Construction Battalion, and members of the 24th Corps which was the territorial reserve formation in
Latvia which failed to form due to rapid German advance. At this time the composition of the division included the 92nd, 122nd and 191st Rifle Regiments, 220th Artillery Regiment, 10th Independent AAA Battery, 170th Independent Signals Battalion, and other support units. By December 1941 the division had 10,348 personnel, of whom 51% were ethnic Latvians, 26% ethnic Russians, 17% Jews and 6% others. This caused some problems since most Jews spoke
Yiddish only, and the Latvians published the divisional paper
Latvijas strēlnieks (
Latvian Rifleman) in Latvian. At least 70 Jewish members of the division were members of the Zionist
Beitar organisation that had been training members for travel to the then Palestine to defend Jewish settlements there before Latvia was annexed by Soviet Union. The first combat the division experienced was during the counter-offensive at Moscow in the areas of
Naro-Fominsk and Borovsk where it suffered 55% casualties. By June 1942 only 36% of the division were Latvian-speaking, and a year later this figure was reduced to 32%. However, in part this was due to the formation of a second Latvian division, the
308th Latvian Rifle Division. The division was reflagged as the
43rd Guards Rifle Division in October 1942. The division joined in combat for
Moscow (from 20 December 1941 until 20 January 1942), for
Staraya Russa (from 16 February 1942 until 4 April),
Demjansk bridgehead (from 6 April 1942 until 9 April 1943; see also
Demyansk Shield); from 10 April 1943 until 15 October the division was in Staraya Russa region, from 18 October 1943 until 26 June 1944 in
Velikiye Luki and
Novorzhev region. From 26 June 1944 until 11 July the division was included with the
130th Latvian Riflemen Corps until crossing the Latvian border (
22nd Army). From 18 July 1944
Šķaune region and joined combat on Latvian soil on 7 November 1944. The division also included other Latvian citizens who were behind the Soviet front line and a large number of Russia's Latvians. Beginning strength was about 2,100 men. In September 1941 the division had about 10,000 men. The division contained the 92nd, 122nd and 191st Rifle Regiments and 220th Artillery Regiment. On 5 October 1942 it became the
43rd Latvian Guard Riflemen Division. Regiments assigned to this division were the 121st, 123rd, and 125th Guard Rifle Regiments and the 94th Guard Artillery Regiment, the 270th Artillery Battalion which was renamed to the 55th Guard Artillery Battalion, the 48th Guard Antitank Artillery Battalion, the 100th Antiaircraft Battery which was renamed to the 44th Guard Antiaircraft Battery, the 53rd
Sapper Battalion which was renamed to the 47th Guard Sapper Battalion. The division was commanded by Guard Major General
Jānis Veikins, Regiment Commander L. Paegle, Regiment Commander A. Frolovs, Guard Major General
Detlavs Brantkalns and Alfrēds Kalniņš.
201st Rifle Division (2nd formation) Border detachments of the People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs (the NKVD) had been resisting the Finnish advance from June 22, 1941. On September 21, 1941, the combined detachment of Border Guards, including the 3rd Border Guard Detachment, became a separate rifle brigade of the
NKVD Border Troops by
23rd Army Headquarters Order No. 88. On August 14, 1942, in pursuance of the Decree of the State Defense Committee of the USSR No. 2100-ss, dated July 26, 1942,, directives of the headquarters of the Leningrad Front No. 1/18949 of July 30, 1942, and the headquarters of the 23rd Army No. 001002 of August 5, 1942, the separate rifle brigade of the border troops of the NKVD guarding the rear of the Leningrad Front was transferred to the Red Army and reorganized into the 27th separate rifle brigade in accordance with
Shtat No. 04/330 - 04/342. The 201st Rifle Division was formed in accordance with the directive of the commander of the Leningrad Front, General of the Army L.A. Govorov No. 1/15885 of May 25, 1943. The formation of the division took place north of Leningrad in the village of
Lekhtusi (,
Lehtusi) combining the 27th Independent Rifle Brigade and the 13th Brigade of the defence forces of Leningrad. Another report says the brigade was raised at
Shlisselburg, near
Leningrad, in November 1943 within the 23rd Army. It served in the Leningrad and Baltic coast areas. Aside from the usual components of the rifle division in 1943, the division also had a separate battalion equipped with
snow skis, and each regiment had a snow ski equipped company to serve as advance detachments. In September the division was transferred to the 3rd Army. The initial composition of the division included: • 92nd Rifle Regiment (former 3rd, 5th, 33rd and 102nd Border Guard detachments from the Karelian peninsula Border Guard Brigade) • 122nd Rifle Regiment (former 13th Leningrad Internal Security Brigade) • 191st Rifle Regiment (was created from detachments of a naval infantry brigade of the Baltic Fleet) • 220th Artillery Regiment • 256th Separate Communications Battalion • 119th Separate Reconnaissance Company • 122nd Separate Reconnaissance Company(ski) • 198th Separate Anti-Tank Division • 51st Separate Sapper Battalion • 53rd Separate Sapper Battalion • 49th Separate Medical-Sanitary Battalion • 20th Separate Auto-Delivery Company • 136th Separate Chemical Company The division's first commander was Colonel Vyacheslav Petrovich Yakutovich. In January 1944 the division was assigned to the
122nd Rifle Corps. The division received the title
Gatchina for its role in breaking the
siege of Leningrad and received its first
Order of the Red Banner during the war. Following the relief of the siege the division incorporated several partisan detachments and groups which were used to strengthen the reconnaissance and ski equipped units. In February the division was transferred to the
117th Rifle Corps, and soon after was awarded the Order of the Red Banner for the capturing of
Luga. In June 1944 the division was serving with the
8th Army before moving to participate in the assault on
Narva, for which the 191st regiment was awarded the honorific
Narvsky. On 5 August 1944 the division was transferred to the
2nd Shock Army, and participated in the battles to break the
Panther Line, after which it was withdrawn for a brief reconstitution, and a movement by train to the Pskov area of operations with the rest of the army. During the further battles in the Baltic republics the 191st Rifle Regiment was awarded the
Order of Alexander Nevsky for destroying the German 23rd Infantry Regiment (
12th Infantry Division) and two Latvian SS battalions. In the process of these battles the 1st and 2nd Battalions of the regiment at one time were reduced to 20–30 men while the 3rd Battalion ceased to exist. In October 1944 the division participated in the Soviet re-occupation of
Riga after which the division was transferred to the
1st Baltic Front and participated in the containment of the Courland encirclement of Wehrmacht forces. From March 1945 the division was in the
1st Rifle Corps of the
1st Shock Army of the Kurland Group (
Leningrad Front). However, by May 1945 it had joined the
119th Rifle Corps. On 1 October 1945 the division completed its movement to Dushanbe in Tajikistan. ==Cold War and post-independence==