20 May Maleme–Chania sector At 08:00 on 20 May 1941, German paratroopers, jumping out of dozens of
Junkers Ju 52 aircraft, landed near Maleme Airfield and the town of
Chania. The
21st,
22nd and
23rd New Zealand battalions held Maleme Airfield and the vicinity. The Germans suffered many casualties in the first hours of the invasion: a company of III Battalion, 1st Assault Regiment lost 112 killed out of 126 men, and 400 of 600 men in III Battalion were killed on the first day. Most of the parachutists were engaged by New Zealanders defending the airfield and by Greek forces near Chania. Many gliders following the paratroops were hit by
mortar fire seconds after landing, and the New Zealand and Greek defenders almost annihilated the glider troops who landed safely. Towards the evening of 20 May, the Germans slowly pushed the New Zealanders back from Hill 107, which overlooked the airfield. Greek police and cadets took part, with the 1st Greek Regiment (Provisional) combining with armed civilians to rout a detachment of German paratroopers dropped at
Kastelli. The 8th Greek Regiment and elements of the Cretan forces severely hampered movement by the 95th Reconnaissance Battalion on
Kolimbari and
Paleochora, where Allied reinforcements from North Africa could be landed.
Rethymno–Heraklion sector transports, 20 May 1941. A second wave of German transports supported by Luftwaffe and
Regia Aeronautica attack aircraft, arrived in the afternoon, dropping more paratroopers and gliders containing assault troops. One group attacked at Rethymno at 16:15 and another attacked at Heraklion at 17:30, where the defenders were waiting for them and inflicted many casualties. The Rethymno–Heraklion sector was defended by the British 14th Brigade, as well as the
2/4th Australian Infantry Battalion and the Greek 3rd, 7th and "Garrison" (ex-5th Crete Division) battalions. The Greeks lacked equipment and supplies, particularly the Garrison Battalion. The Germans pierced the defensive cordon around Heraklion on the first day, seizing the Greek barracks on the west edge of the town and capturing the docks; the Greeks counter-attacked and recaptured both points. The Germans dropped leaflets threatening dire consequences if the Allies did not surrender immediately. The next day, Heraklion was heavily bombed and the depleted Greek units were relieved and assumed a defensive position on the road to
Knossos. As night fell, none of the German objectives had been secured. Of 493 German transport aircraft used during the airdrop, seven were lost to anti-aircraft fire. The bold plan to attack in four places to maximise surprise, rather than concentrating on one, seemed to have failed, although the reasons were unknown to the Germans at the time. Among the paratroopers who landed on the first day was former world heavyweight champion
boxer Max Schmeling, who held the rank of
Gefreiter at the time. Schmeling survived the battle and the war.
21 May Overnight, the 22nd New Zealand Infantry Battalion withdrew from Hill 107, leaving Maleme Airfield undefended. During the previous day, the Germans had cut communications between the two westernmost companies of the battalion and the battalion commander, Lieutenant Colonel
Leslie Andrew VC, who was on the eastern side of the airfield. The lack of communication was assumed to mean that the battalion had been overrun in the west. With the weakened state of the eastern elements of the battalion and believing the western elements to have been overrun, Andrew requested reinforcement by the 23rd Battalion. Brigadier
James Hargest denied the request on the mistaken grounds that the 23rd Battalion was busy repulsing parachutists in its sector. After a failed counter-attack late in the day on 20 May, with the eastern elements of his battalion, Andrew withdrew under cover of darkness to regroup, with the consent of Hargest. Captain Campbell, commanding the westernmost company of the 22nd Battalion, out of contact with Andrew, did not learn of the withdrawal of the 22nd Battalion until early in the morning, at which point he also withdrew from the west of the airfield. This misunderstanding, representative of the failings of communication and co-ordination in the defence of Crete, cost the Allies the airfield and allowed the Germans to reinforce their invasion force unopposed. In Athens, Student decided to concentrate on Maleme on 21 May, as this was the area where the most progress had been made and because an early morning reconnaissance flight over Maleme Airfield was unopposed. The Germans quickly exploited the withdrawal from Hill 107 to take control of Maleme Airfield, just as a sea landing took place nearby. The Allies continued to bombard the area as flew in units of the 5th Mountain Division at night. Hargest also blamed Freyberg for the loss of the airfield.
Axis landing attempt, 21/22 May An Axis convoy of around 20
caïques, escorted by the , tried to land German reinforcements near Maleme.
Force D under Rear-Admiral
Irvine Glennie, with three light cruisers and four destroyers, intercepted the convoy before midnight; the convoy turned back with the loss of more than half of its boats, despite
Lupos defence. The attacking British force suffered only slight damage on cruiser caused by friendly fire. About of the German force of more than 2,000 men was saved by the Italian naval commander,
Francesco Mimbelli, against an overwhelmingly superior Allied naval force. A total of 297 German soldiers, two Italian seamen and two British sailors on
Orion were killed. Eight caiques were caught and sunk, while at least another six managed to get away, along with three Italian escorting motor-sailing boats. and took heavy casualties. Of the German soldiers who landed at Akrotiri, only one managed to get through the British lines and join the German paratroopers already fighting for Chania. According to other authors, only one German officer and 35 men from the 100th Regiment landed from the caïque that arrived in Crete.
22 May Maleme The defending force organised for a night counter-attack on Maleme by two New Zealand battalions, the 20th Battalion of the 4th Brigade and the
28th Maori Battalion of the 5th Brigade. A New Zealand officer present at the battle claimed a long delay ordering the planned counter-attack turned a night attack into a day attack, which led to its failure. The transports were defended by a torpedo charge by
Sagittario, which also laid a smoke screen and traded fire with the British force, While Force C made its attack on the convoy, Force A1 (Rear Admiral
H B Rawlings), Force B (Captain Henry A Rowley) and Glennie's Force D converged west of
Antikythera. Concerned about the level of anti-aircraft ammunition available following repeated air attacks, the combined force was ordered to report on their stock of high-angle ammunition at 09:31. Of the cruisers, had 40 per cent,
Orion 38 per cent,
Fiji 30 per cent, 25 per cent and
Gloucester only 18 per cent.
Ajax,
Orion and
Dido were ordered to return to Alexandria with Glennie's Force D to rearm but
Gloucester and
Fiji remained with Rawlings' Force A1. At 12:25 Force A1, stationed 20 to 30 miles west of Antikythera, received a request from King to support the damaged
Naiad. Force A1 headed east into the
Kythera Channel, rendezvousing with Force C between 13:30 and 14:00. As the more senior admiral, King took command, with air attacks now inflicting damage on both forces. A bomb struck and the destroyer was sunk. King sent and to pick up survivors, while the cruisers
Fiji and
Gloucester were ordered respectively at 14:02 and 14:07 to provide anti-aircraft support. Writing in despatches after the battle, Cunningham stated that King was unaware of the shortage of anti-aircraft ammunition in
Gloucester and
Fiji. At 14:13 King and Rawlings exchanged messages about the shortage of ammunition within both Force C and Force A1, with Rawlings expressing concern about the orders given to
Gloucester and
Fiji. Following this communication, King issued an order to recall both
Gloucester and
Fiji at 14:57. Between 15:30 and 15:50, while attempting to rejoin Force A1,
Gloucester was hit by several bombs and had to be left behind due to the air attacks; the ship was sunk and 22 officers and 700 ratings were killed. Five hundred survivors were rescued by
Kandahar and
Kingston that night. The Royal Navy had lost two cruisers and a destroyer but had managed to force the invasion fleet to turn round. Royal Navy AA gunners shot down five
Junkers Ju 87s and five Ju 88s and damaged sixteen more, some of which crash-landed upon their return to base on the night of 21/22 May.
23–27 May Fighting against fresh German troops, the Allies retreated southward. The 5th Destroyer Flotilla, consisting of , , , and (
Captain, Lord
Louis Mountbatten), was ordered to leave
Malta on 21 May, to join the fleet off Crete, and arrived after
Gloucester and
Fiji were sunk. They were sent to pick up survivors and then diverted to attack a German convoy of about fifty ships and
caïques off Cape Spatha on Rodopou peninsula, western Crete, on the night of 22/23 May and then shell the Germans at Maleme.
Kelvin and
Jackal were diverted to another search while Mountbatten, with
Kelly,
Kashmir and
Kipling, was to go to Alexandria. When rounding the western side of Crete, the three ships were attacked by 24 Ju 87
Stuka dive bombers.
Kashmir was hit and sank in two minutes, and
Kelly was hit and turned turtle soon after and later sank.
Kelly shot down a
Stuka before sinking and another was badly damaged and crashed upon returning to base.
Kipling survived 83 bombs, while 279 survivors were rescued from the ships. (The
Noël Coward film
In Which We Serve was based on this action.) The Royal Navy had suffered so many losses from air attacks that on 23 May Admiral Cunningham signalled his superiors that daylight operations could no longer continue, but the Chiefs of Staff demurred. German search-and-rescue aircraft and Italian motor torpedo boats spotted and rescued the 262 survivors from the German light convoy sunk off Cape Spatha. After air attacks on Allied positions in
Kastelli on 24 May, the 95th
Gebirgs Pioneer Battalion advanced on the town. These air attacks enabled the escape of German paratroopers captured on 20 May; the escapees killed or captured several New Zealand officers assigned to lead the 1st Greek Regiment. The Greeks put up determined resistance but, with only 600 rifles and a few thousand rounds of ammunition available for 1,000 ill-trained men, they were unable to repel the German advance. Fighting by the remnants of the 1st Greek Regiment continued in the Kastelli area until 26 May, hampering German efforts to land reinforcements. Despite the dangers posed by British naval forces, the
Kriegsmarine made another attempt to supply the invasion by sea. On 24 May
Oberleutnant-zur-See Österlin, who had led the Maleme Flotilla, was given the task of transporting two
Panzer II light tanks to
Kastelli Kisamou. Österlin commandeered a small wooden lighter at
Piraeus and arranged for the tanks to be lowered onto it. At dusk the next day, the lighter, towed by the small harbour tug
Kentauros, left Piraeus and headed south towards Crete. Reports of British naval units operating nearby convinced Admiral Schuster to delay the operation and he ordered Österlin to make for a small harbour on the German-occupied island of
Kithira. At a meeting in Athens on 27 May, Luftwaffe Generals Richthofen, Jeschonnek, and Löhr pressed Schuster to get the tanks delivered somehow before "... the Englander claws himself erect again". One of Richthofen's liaison officers had returned from the island on 26 May; the paratroopers were in poor condition, lacking in discipline, and "at loose ends". He stressed the "absolute and immediate need" for "reinforcement by sea shipment of heavy weaponry if the operation is to get ahead at all." Laycock had tried to land the force on 25 May, but had turned back due to bad weather. Command in London decided the cause was hopeless after General Wavell informed the Prime Minister at 0842, 27 May, that the battle was lost, and ordered an evacuation. Freyberg concurrently ordered his troops to withdraw to the south coast to be evacuated.
Italian landing at Sitia . On 26 May, in the face of the stalled German advance, senior Wehrmacht officers requested Mussolini to send Italian Army units to Crete in order to help the German forces fighting there. On the afternoon of 27 May, an Italian convoy departed from
Rhodes with the intention of landing a brigade from the
50th Infantry Division Regina, supported by 13
L3/35 light tanks. At 13:30 on 28 May, the Italians believed that three cruisers and six destroyers of the Royal Navy were steaming up towards the northern coast of Crete in support of Allied troops, but the Royal Navy was fully occupied evacuating the Crete garrison.
Retreat The Germans pushed the British, Commonwealth and Greek forces steadily southward, using aerial and artillery bombardment, followed by waves of motorcycle and mountain troops (the rocky terrain making it difficult to employ tanks). The garrisons at
Souda and
Beritania gradually fell back along the road to
Vitsilokoumos, north of Sfakia. About halfway there, near the village of
Askyfou lay a large crater nicknamed "The Saucer", the only place wide and flat enough for a large parachute drop. Troops were stationed about its perimeter, to prevent a landing that might block the retreat. On the evening of the 27th, a small detachment of German troops penetrated Allied lines near Imbros Gorge threatening a column of retreating unarmed Allied forces. The attack was held off by four men, the only ones with weapons. Led by Cpl Douglas Bignal, the men sacrificed themselves,securing the withdrawal of the remainder. Amongst this group was New Zealander Pte Willy Falconer of the Maori battalion, a hero of 42nd Street and Galatas. Also killed were LCpl Philip Stamp and Pte Andrew Payton. Near Souda, the 5th New Zealand Brigade and the 2/7th Australian Battalion, held off the 141st Mountain Regiment, which had begun a flanking manoeuvre, and on 28 May, at the village of
Stylos, the 5th New Zealand Brigade fought a rearguard action. The Luftwaffe was over Rethymno and Heraklion and they were able to retreat down the road. The retreat of the brigade was covered by two companies of the Māori Battalion under Captain
Rangi Royal, who overran the I Battalion, 141st
Gebirgsjäger Regiment and halted the German advance. When the main unit was safely to the rear, the Māori retreated , losing only two killed and eight wounded, all of whom were recovered. Layforce was the only big unit in this area to be cut off. Layforce had been sent to Crete by way of Sfakia when it was still hoped that reinforcements could be brought from Egypt to turn the tide of the battle.
Evacuation, 28 May – 1 June From 28 May – 1 June, troops were embarked for Egypt, most being lifted from Sfakia on the south coast. More than 4,000 troops were rescued from Heraklion on the night of 28/29 May but that naval force was attacked for hours by Luftwaffe dive bombers on the voyage back, suffering ships sunk and damaged with numerous casualties among naval personnel and troops. Four destroyers carried 1,100 soldiers from Sfakia on the same night. About 6,000 men were withdrawn by cruisers and destroyers from Sfakia on the following night of 29 May. Two destroyers carried another 1,400 soldiers away on the night of the 30/31st. During the night of 31 May, Cunningham sent the cruiser
Phoebe with four smaller vessels to transport more than 3,500 troops to Alexandria. About 18,600 men of the 32,000 British troops on the island were evacuated; 12,000 British and Dominion troops and thousands of Greeks were still on Crete when the island came under German control on 1 June.
Surrender Colonel Campbell, the commander at Rethymno, was forced to surrender his contingent. Rethymno fell and on the night of 30 May, German motorcycle troops linked up with the Italian troops who had landed on Sitia. On 1 June, the remaining 5,000 defenders at Sfakia surrendered. By the end of December, about 500 Commonwealth troops remained at large on the island. While scattered and disorganised, these men and the partisans harassed German troops for long after the withdrawal.
Civilian resistance Cretan civilians joined the battle with whatever weapons were at hand. Most civilians went into action armed only with what they could gather from their kitchens or barns and several German parachutists were knifed or clubbed to death in olive groves. In one recorded incident, an elderly Cretan man clubbed a parachutist to death with his walking cane, before the German could disentangle himself from his parachute. In another recorded incident, a local priest and his teenage son broke into a small village museum and took two rifles from the era of the
Balkan Wars and sniped at German paratroops at landing zones. The Cretans also used captured German small arms. The Crete civilian actions against the Germans were not limited to harassment; mobs of armed civilians joined in the Greek counter-attacks at
Kastelli Hill and Paleochora; the British and New Zealand advisers at these locations were hard pressed to prevent
massacres. Civilians also checked the Germans to the north and west of Heraklion and in the town centre.
Massacres of civilians , Crete, 1941 The Battle of Crete was not the first occasion during the Second World War where the German troops encountered widespread resistance from a civilian population, as similar events took place during the invasion of Poland (
Kłecko); nevertheless it initially surprised and later outraged them. As most Cretan partisans wore no uniforms or insignia such as armbands or headbands, the Germans felt free of all of the constraints of the Hague Conventions and killed armed and unarmed civilians indiscriminately. Even before the end of the battle, civilians were being executed,
such as in Missiria. Immediately after Crete fell,
collective punishments against civilians intensified. Between 2 June and 1 August, 195 persons from the village of Alikianos and its vicinity were killed in mass shootings known as the
Alikianos executions. On 2 June, several male citizens from
Kondomari were executed by a firing squad, with the shootings being captured on film by a German army war correspondent. On 3 June, the village of
Kandanos was razed to the ground and about 180 of its inhabitants killed. After the war, Student, who ordered the shootings, avoided prosecution for
war crimes, despite Greek efforts to have him extradited. The first
resistance movement in Crete was established just two weeks after its capture. Throughout the German occupation in the years that followed, reprisals in retaliation for the involvement of the local population in the Cretan resistance continued. On several occasions, villagers were rounded up and summarily executed. In one of the worst incidents, around 20 villages east of
Viannos and west of the Ierapetra provinces were looted and burnt in September 1943, with
more than 500 of their inhabitants being massacred. These massacres were among the deadliest during the
Axis occupation of Greece during World War II. In August 1944, more than 940 houses in
Anogeia were looted and then dynamited. During the same month, nine villages in the
Amari Valley were destroyed and 165 people killed in what is now known as the
Holocaust of Kedros. All these reprisals were ordered by
Generalleutnant Friedrich-Wilhelm Müller, who was nicknamed "The Butcher of Crete". After the war, Müller was tried by a Greek military court and executed. Further assaults on civilians, albeit with lower death tolls, occurred in
Vorizia,
Kali Sykia,
Kallikratis,
Skourvoula, and
Malathyros. ==Aftermath==