The 388th began forming on August 19, 1941, at
Kutaisi in the Transcaucasus Military District. Its order of battle, based on the first wartime
shtat (
table of organization and equipment) for rifle divisions, was as follows: • 773rd Rifle Regiment • 778th Rifle Regiment • 782nd Rifle Regiment • 953rd Artillery Regiment • 104th Antitank Battalion • 181st Antiaircraft Battery (later 677th Antiaircraft Battalion) • 675th Mortar Battalion • 452nd Reconnaissance Company • 671st Sapper Battalion • 841st Signal Battalion • 475th Medical/Sanitation Battalion • 468th Chemical Protection (Anti-gas) Company • 505th Motor Transport Company • 240th Field Bakery • 815th Divisional Veterinary Hospital • 1448th Field Postal Station • 719th Field Office of the State Bank Col. Aleksandr Dmitrievich Ovseenko was assigned to command of the division on the day it formed, and he would remain in command until March 6, 1942. It continued forming under the military district headquarters into September and late that month was transferred to
Transcaucasus Front. As of December 1 it was under command of the
46th Army. Beginning on December 7 it was shipped from several of the Transcaucasus Black Sea ports into Sevastopol to join the Soviet forces besieged there.
Siege of Sevastopol On the night of December 7/8 the cruisers
Krasnyi Kavkaz and
Krasnyi Krym escorted a convoy of five transports carrying, among other men and supplies, 1,200 men of the 782nd Rifle Regiment, which had embarked at
Poti. When its arrival was complete by December 15 the division added 11,197 personnel to the fortress garrison, along with artillery (18
76-millimeter regimental guns, 16
76-millimeter mountain guns, and eight
12-millimeter howitzers), 146
50-millimeter and
82-millimeter mortars, plus antitank guns. Personnel replacements and new weapons also arrived in this convoy, allowing the commander of
Coastal Army, Maj. Gen.
Ivan Petrov, to partly restore his existing forces in the front lines and retain the 388th as a central reserve, based at
Inkerman. The Eleventh Army launched its second assault on the fortress on December 17 with a short artillery barrage at 0610 hours to the surprise of the Soviet forces who were not expecting an attack during winter. While the assault struck all four of the Sevastopol defense sectors it soon became apparent that the main thrust was against Sectors III and IV, north and northeast of the port. The
40th Cavalry Division and the 773rd Rifle Regiment were sent to Sector IV, while the 778th moved to Sector III. The Sector IV commander, Maj. Gen. V. F. Vorobev, planned a counterattack before dawn on the 18th and had his coastal batteries and field artillery shell the German positions. However the Germans got their attack in first, hitting the 40th Cavalry and the 8th Naval Infantry Brigade. The 773rd was in an isolated position on the right flank of the 8th Brigade and came under attack around 0900 hours, first by aircraft and artillery and then by the 16th Infantry Regiment of
22nd Infantry Division, supported by
assault guns, and was routed, falling back nearly 5 km and losing contact with the 241st Rifle Regiment of
95th Rifle Division on its right, which soon found itself surrounded. At dawn on December 19 the assault was resumed, particularly against Sector III, where the 778th Regiment held positions in the Kamyshly Ravine. The next day the Germans broke through at several points defended by the 40th Cavalry and the 773rd Regiment. At the end of the day General Petrov assigned the 778th and 782nd Regiments to Sector IV to bolster the 773rd. The German attacks on December 21 were intended to complete the conquest of the fortress, but failed to do so. Again concentrating on sectors III and IV, they attacked Hill 192, overlooking the Kamyshly Ravine. This was contested by elements of the 778th and 782nd Regiments and the hill changed hands several times. The Germans had to bring in fresh troops and armor to finally recapture and hold the hill while the two regiments pulled back 1.5 km southwest of the village of Kamyshly. In this fighting the Soviet regiments suffered about 40 percent casualties. Overall, since December 17, the Sevastopol garrison had lost approximately 2,000 men killed and 6,000 wounded, while German casualties were also high. The next day the German 22nd,
24th and
132nd Infantry Divisions attacked on a 9 km front, driving a wedge between the 388th and the newly-arrived 79th Naval Rifle Brigade. A counterattack was launched towards Kamyshly and the gap was closed. Meanwhile, the 773rd Regiment, with the 40th Cavalry, maintained its positions north of the in the face of heavy attacks. By this point General Petrov ordered the forces defending Sector IV to pull back to shorter lines. The 388th was moved back towards Inkerman to strengthen the defenses in the Black River valley. The German offensive resumed on December 24, but was concentrated mainly in the north. On December 26 the Soviet landings on the
Kerch peninsula began, diverting German forces from the siege, and the division saw little additional action before the German assault ended on December 31. During the lull in operations during the winter and spring, on March 7, 1942, Kombrig
Semyon Monakhov took over command of the division from Colonel Ovseenko. At about this time the overdue antiaircraft battalion of the division was lost at sea. During this period the 388th was concentrated in Defense Sector I, among landmarks familiar from the
Crimean War. The First Turkish Redoubt on Canrobert Hill contained the command post of 1st Battalion, 782nd Regiment, which was shelled by German artillery on the night of May 23. Two days after this Kombrig Monakhov gave up his command; he would later command the
319th Rifle Division. His replacement, Col. Nikolai Aleksandrovich Shvarev, arrived from the 79th Naval Brigade on June 1, and would remain in command for the duration of the 1st formation. The third and final assault began on June 7. In general the 388th was in reserve positions backing up the
109th Rifle Division, whose commander, Maj. Gen.
P. G. Novikov, also led Defense Sector I. The 773rd and 778th Regiments were holding the area around the village of Kamary, while the 782nd had been redeployed to the
Sapun Heights. On the first day part of the 782nd was attacked, but held. By June 10 German forces had driven a wedge into the Soviet lines in the area of the Mekenzievy Mountain railway station and the nearby barracks. The 778th was ordered north to take part in a counterattack that followed an artillery barrage at 0800 hours on June 11. What followed was savage fighting at about 50m range, but the Red Army forces were outnumbered two-to-one and unable to regain the ground. On the same day the German
XXX Army Corps began more active operations against Sector I. A two-battalion attack near Kamary gained a few hundred yards before being stopped by counterattacks from the 782nd Regiment. The village was held by two battalions of the 778th, which came under heavy artillery fire on June 12, causing significant losses, before being attacked from the east and south. General Novikov decided the regiment was in poor shape and ordered a relief-in-place overnight, but German troops detected the movement and the 778th didn't leave sufficient rearguards to cover the barbed wire and mines in front of the village. A surprise attack at 0430 hours on the 13th cleared the obstacle belts by 0700 while artillery fire disrupted the relief effort. Novikov's line was beginning to buckle. Late that afternoon the 401st Infantry Regiment was massed north of Kamary with armor support facing the veteran 602nd Rifle Regiment of 109th Division, which was soon overwhelmed and forced to fall back. This soon turned into a rout and by 1745 hours German forces reached the outskirts of Fort Kuppe, which contained the headquarters of both the 602nd and 782nd Regiments. By nightfall both the village and the fort had been captured and a huge salient had been driven into the center of Sector I's lines, while the flanks held firm. Over the next two days XXX Corps continued its advance, albeit at a slower pace, and on the 16th Novikov had no choice but to withdraw 1–1.5 km to a shorter line centered on Kadykovka. In the course of this fighting his forces lost about 6,000 men, including 1,800 captured, and the 388th was "virtually demolished". XXX Corps also incurred well over 5,000 casualties and went over to the defense on June 22. On June 29 German troops landed on the south coast of Sevastopol Bay. In the area of the Suzdal Heights the remnants of the 9th Naval Rifle Brigade and the 388th and 109th Divisions held the last line east of
the Chersonese. The division's remnants, the 773rd and 782nd Rifle Regiments and 953rd Artillery Regiment, took up positions to cover the last remaining airfield on June 30, holding their positions until finally surrendering on July 2. Colonel Shvarev was evacuated; he went on to command the
317th Rifle Division and the
20th Rifle Corps. On August 5 the 388th was finally stricken from the Red Army order of battle. ==2nd Formation==