The 9th
Luftwaffe Field Division, one of several
such divisions of the
Luftwaffe (German Air Force), was formed in October 1942 in Eastern Prussia, in the Arys Troop Maneuver Area. It served as part of
Army Group North on the
Eastern Front from late 1942 to June 1944. From February 1943, along with the
10th Luftwaffe Field Division it was partly responsible for holding the
Oranienbaum Bridgehead as part of the newly established
III Luftwaffe Field Corps. In December 1942, it was assigned to
Georg Lindemanns
18th Army (Wehrmacht) and part of
Army Group North on the
Eastern Front. Posted to a sector at the
Oranienbaum Bridgehead near
Leningrad, it defended its frontlines for over 12 months. On 4 December 1943 SS-Pioneer-Battalion 11 and the engineer companies of SS-Regiment-Norge and SS-Regiment-Danmark (which had been subordinated to SS-Pioneer-Battalion 11) arrived at Klopitsy as part of the
III (Germanic) SS Panzer Corps and assumed new mine laden defensive positions from Field Division 10 (L), on the boundary between it, and the Field Division 9 (L) at the
Oranienbaum Bridgehead. The Soviet
Krasnoye Selo–Ropsha offensive began on the night of the 13/14 January 1944 and after a 65 minute barrage, Field Division 9 (L) was attacked by Six Russian Divisions. It fell apart leaving a gap through which the Red Army poured with tanks and infantry. The SS-Pioneer-Battalion 11, which had been stationed between the two Luftwaffe units was quickly surrounded and had to fight its way out of a sea of Red Army tanks & infantry. The Nordland units which had been deployed in the vicinity of the Luftwaffe Field Divisions suffered most on the first day of the offensive. Whilst absorbing the full force of the initial Soviet assault, parts of the battalion held on to their positions in vicious hand to hand fighting. 2 Kompanie SS-Pioneer-Battalion 11 lost over a 100 men killed & wounded on 14 January 1944 alone, as they doggedly held on. The Division was destroyed between 14 & 18 January during the Soviet offensive of January 1944
Krasnoye Selo–Ropsha offensive near
Leningrad. Remnants of the Division were distributed to the
61st Infantry Division, the
225th Infantry Division Hans Erdmann. & the
227th Infantry Division. The Division was Officially Disbanded & struck from the records in July 1944 but had long since ceased to exist by that stage. ==Commanders==