World War II Between September 1 and October 1, 1941, the 83rd Cavalry Division was formed in the city of
Samarkand,
Uzbekistan. The division consisted of the following units: • 215th Cavalry Regiment • 226th Cavalry Regiment • 231st Cavalry Regiment • Separate Chemical Squadron From September 5, 1941, the commanding officer of the division was Lieutenant General Selivanov. On November 7, 1941, the division was sent to the
Volga Military District where it was assigned to the newly forming
Cavalry mechanized group of the
61st Army. Until December 28, 1941, the division was fortifying near the
station of Lysi Gory
Saratov Oblast. The first battle that the division took part in was near the city of
Ryazhsk,
Ryazan Oblast as part of the
Cavalry mechanized group of the
61st Army as part of the
Bryansk Front and the Soviet winter counter offensive in front of Moscow. In January 1942 the division was assigned to the
7th Cavalry Corps and was assigned to be a Mobile Group in the
Moscow Defense Zone for the 61st Army. The division remained with the 7th Cavalry Corps for the rest of 1942 and when the Corps was redesignated as the
6th Guards Cavalry Corps in January 1943 the division became the 13th Guards Cavalry Division on 19 January 1943. The division was under the command of General Major
Pyotr Zubov. The 13th Guards Cavalry Division fought at
Dubno in 1944, as well as at the
Battle of Debrecen and was with 6th Guards Cavalry Corps of the
2nd Ukrainian Front in May 1945.
Cold War Feskov et al. trace the unit's history as follows. At the beginning of June, the division relocated to
Novohrad-Volynskyi. On 1 August 1945, the division was converted into the 11th Guards Mechanized Division. During November and December 1956, the division fought in the crushing of the
Hungarian Revolution of 1956. 44 soldiers of the division were killed during the campaign in Hungary. The division moved back to Novohrad-Volynskyi in January 1957. On 4 June 1957 it became the 30th Guards Tank Division,
1990–present The 30th Guards Tank Division, along with the rest of the
8th Tank Army and the
Carpathian Military District, became part of the
Ukrainian Ground Forces according to the order of Ukraine
About Armed Forces of Ukraine from December 6, 1991. In February 1992, all units of the division pledged their allegiance to Ukraine. It was still designated a tank division as of Decree N 350/93 (August 21, 1993). On October 20, 1999, the division was awarded the
Novohrad-Volynskyi designation. On July 30, 2004, the division was reformed into a brigade. As of 2006, the brigade was the only mechanized brigade that did not have any conscripts. It is also a part of Joint Rapid Reaction Forces. Over a hundred soldiers from the brigade have served in peacekeeping missions in
Sierra Leone,
Lebanon,
Iraq and
Kosovo. A battalion of the brigade was part of
POLUKRBAT in the 2006 rotation. As of October 12, 2007, the 2nd Mechanized Battalion of the brigade was deployed in
Kosovo as part of the POLUKRBAT. The commander of the brigade served as a commander of the
5th Mechanized Brigade in Iraq. == Russo-Ukrainian War ==