In March the 382nd was reassigned to
8th Army, still in Volkhov Front. On June 11 Colonel Vitoshkin was assigned to the Military Academy of the General Staff for training, and eight days later the division came under the command of Maj. Gen. Pyotr Nikolaevich Chernyshev. By July it was judged sufficiently restored that it was assigned a minor role in the fifth Sinyavino Offensive. This began on July 22 with 8th Army attacking east of
Mga, on an attack front of 13.6 km in the Voronovo region and aiming to link up with
67th Army at or near Mga while detaching two rifle divisions and a tank brigade to strike at Sinyavino from the south. In order to penetrate the strong German defenses the Army commander, Lt. Gen.
F. N. Starikov, organized his main forces into two shock groups. The 382nd, along with the
265th Rifle Division and the 1st and 22nd Rifle Brigades, was to put in a supporting attack on the left. The offensive was preceded by six days of artillery fire on the enemy positions, which were held by the
132nd Infantry Division. Despite the careful preparations the attack stalled after capturing the forward German trenches. Starikov made several efforts to renew the drive but was forced to call a halt on August 16, and his Army went over to the defense on August 22. By this time one soldier of the 132nd Infantry wrote that his division was "reduced by casualties and exhausted to the point of incoherence", but losses on the Soviet side were also heavy.
Battle for Novgorod During September and most of October the 382nd was in the reserves of Volkhov Front, then was assigned to the
7th Rifle Corps in
54th Army of the same Front. At the start of 1944 it was still in 7th Corps, but back in the Front reserves. In the plan for the Leningrad-Novgorod Offensive, 59th Army was assigned the main role in the liberation of
the latter city. On January 14, after pulverizing the German defenses by firing 133,000 artillery shells during its preparation, the Army's leading corps deployed assault detachments at 1050 hours.
6th Rifle Corps stalled after advancing only 1,000 metres, but a premature attack by
14th Rifle Corps' 378th Rifle Division scored a surprise success. By late on January 16 these two corps, with reinforcements, had torn a gaping 20 km hole in the Germans' main defensive belt. At about this time 7th Corps was subordinated to 59th Army. Over the next two days it continued a slow but inexorable advance, enveloping the German Novgorod grouping from north and south. On January 18 the
XXXVIII Army Corps was ordered to abandon the city and withdraw along the only remaining road to the west. At 0930 hours on January 20 the 382nd, along with the
191st and
225th Rifle Divisions of 14th Corps, liberated Novgorod without a fight after the last Germans out destroyed the bridge over the Volkhov. In recognition of this success, the division received a battle honor:Following this victory the next objective for 59th Army was the town of
Luga. Seizing this would cut off both the XXXVIII and
XXVIII Army Corps but it would require an advance through difficult terrain with significant engineer support. The 6th, 7th and
112th Rifle Corps set out on January 21. Two days later the 382nd was involved in heavy fighting for the village of Zhmurova. Jr. Sgt. Timofei Titovich Makarenko was a
gun layer on an antitank gun of the 319th Battalion. Despite the deaths of the other members of his crew and his own severe wounds he held his position until reinforcements arrived. On August 26 he was recognized with the award of the Gold Star of a
Hero of the Soviet Union (Medal No. 4423), although he later had it revoked, then restored. Over the following days while the 6th and 112th Corps advanced at a snail's pace, 7th and 14th Corps made significantly greater progress on the Army's left flank. On January 27 the 382nd captured Medved from the
8th Jäger Division and cut the road from Luga to
Shimsk. By this time 7th Corps had penetrated the Germans' entire second defensive belt, had advanced up to 35 km to the west and southwest in five days and threatened to cut the Leningrad -
Dno railroad. A regrouping soon assigned 7th Corps to 8th Army, and by the beginning of February the division was part of 14th Rifle Corps. Volkhov Front was disbanded on February 15, and the 382nd went into the Leningrad Front reserves. It was briefly transferred to
3rd Baltic Front in April before moving back to Leningrad Front in preparation for the offensive against Finland. ==Vyborg-Petrozavodsk Offensive==