The
4th Panzer Group from
East Prussia took
Pskov after a swift advance and reached
Novgorod by 16 August. After the capture of Novgorod, General Hoepner's 4th Panzer Group continued its progress toward Leningrad. But the
18th Armydespite some 350,000 men lagging behindforced its way to
Ostrov and Pskov after the Soviet troops of the
Northwestern Front retreated toward Leningrad. On 10 July, both Ostrov and Pskov were captured and the 18th Army reached Narva and Kingisepp, from where advance toward Leningrad continued from the Luga River line. This created siege positions from the
Gulf of Finland to
Lake Ladoga, with the eventual aim of isolating Leningrad from all directions. The Finnish Army was then expected to advance along Lake Ladoga's eastern shore. The last rail connection to Leningrad was cut on 30 August, when the German forces reached the River Neva. In early September, Leeb was confident Leningrad was about to fall. Having received reports on the evacuation of civilians and industrial goods, Leeb and the OKH believed the Red Army was preparing to abandon the city. Consequently, on 5 September, he received new orders, including the destruction of the Red Army forces around the city. By 15 September, Panzer Group 4 was to be transferred to Army Group Centre so it could participate in a renewed offensive toward Moscow. The expected surrender did not materialise, although the renewed German offensive cut off the city by 8 September. Lacking sufficient strength for major operations, Leeb had to accept that the army group might not be able to take the city, although hard fighting continued along his front throughout October and November.
Orders of battle Germany •
Army Group North (Feldmarschall
Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb) •
18th Army (
Georg von Küchler) •
XXXXII Corps (2 infantry divisions) •
XXVI Corps (3 infantry divisions) •
16th Army (
Ernst Busch) •
XXVIII Corps (
Mauritz von Wiktorin) (2 infantry, 1 armoured divisions) •
I Corps (2 infantry divisions) •
X Corps (3 infantry divisions) •
II Corps (3 infantry divisions) • (
L Corps – Under
9th Army) (2 infantry divisions) •
4th Panzer Group (
Erich Hoepner) •
XXXVIII Corps (
Friedrich-Wilhelm von Chappuis) (1 infantry division) •
XXXXI Motorized Corps (
Georg-Hans Reinhardt) (1 infantry, 1 motorised, 1 armoured divisions) •
LVI Motorized Corps (
Erich von Manstein) (1 infantry, 1 motorised, 1 armoured, 1
panzergrenadier divisions)
Finland •
Finnish Defence Forces HQ (Finnish marshal
Mannerheim) • I Corps (2 infantry divisions) • II Corps (2 infantry divisions) • IV Corps (3 infantry divisions)
Italy •
XII Squadriglia MAS (''Mezzi d'Assalto'') (Italian for "12th Assault Vessel Squadron") ( Giuseppe Bianchini)
Regia Marina Spain •
Blue Division, officially designated as
250. Infanterie-Division by the
German Army and as the
División Española de Voluntarios by the Spanish Army; General
Esteban Infantes took command of this unit of
Spanish volunteers at the
Eastern Front during World War II.
Soviet Union •
Northern Front (Lieutenant General
Popov) •
7th Army (2 rifle, 1 militia divisions, 1 naval infantry brigade, 3 motorised rifle and 1 armoured regiments) •
8th Army •
10th Rifle Corps (2 rifle divisions) •
11th Rifle Corps (3 rifle divisions) • Separate units (3 rifle divisions) •
14th Army •
42nd Rifle Corps (2 rifle divisions) • Separate units (2 rifle divisions, 1 fortified area, 1 motorised rifle regiment) •
23rd Army •
19th Rifle Corps (3 rifle divisions) • Separate units (2 rifle, 1 motorised divisions, 2 fortified areas, 1 rifle regiment) • Luga Operation Group • 41st Rifle Corps (3 rifle divisions) • Separate units (1 armoured brigade, 1 rifle regiment) • Kingisepp Operation Group • Separate units (2 rifle, 2 militia, 1 armoured divisions, 1 fortified area) • Separate units (3 rifle divisions, 4 guard militia divisions, 3 fortified areas, 1 rifle brigade) The 14th Army of the Soviet Red Army defended Murmansk and the 7th Army defended Ladoga Karelia; thus they did not participate in the initial stages of the siege. The 8th Army was initially part of the Northwestern Front and retreated through the Baltics. It was transferred to the Northern Front on 14 July when the Soviets evacuated Tallinn. On 23 August, the Northern Front was divided into the
Leningrad Front and the
Karelian Front, as it became impossible for front headquarters to control everything between Murmansk and Leningrad. Marshal
Georgy Zhukov said, "Ten volunteer
opolcheniye divisions were formed in Leningrad in the first three months of the war, as well as 16 separate artillery and machine-gun
opolcheniye battalions."
Severing the lines of communication On 6 August, Hitler repeated his order: "Leningrad first,
Donetsk Basin second, Moscow third."
Arctic convoys using the
Northern Sea Route delivered American
Lend-Lease and British food and war
materiel supplies to the Murmansk railhead (although the rail link to Leningrad was cut off by Finnish armies just north of the city), as well as several other locations in
Lapland.
Encirclement of Leningrad Finnish intelligence broke some Soviet military codes and read their low-level communications. This was particularly helpful for Hitler, who constantly requested intelligence information about Leningrad. Finland's role in Operation Barbarossa was laid out in Hitler's
Directive 21: "The mass of the Finnish army will have the task, in accordance with the advance made by the northern wing of the German armies, of tying up maximum strength by attacking to the west, or on both sides, of Lake Ladoga." The last rail connection to Leningrad was severed on 30 August 1941, when the Germans reached the Neva River. On 8 September, the road to the besieged city was severed when the Germans reached Lake Ladoga at
Shlisselburg, leaving just a corridor of land between Lake Ladoga and Leningrad which remained unoccupied by
Axis forces. Bombing on 8 September caused 178 fires. On 21 September 1941, German High Command considered how to destroy Leningrad. Occupying the city was ruled out "because it would make us responsible for food supply". The resolution was to lay the city under siege and bombardment, starving its population. "Early next year, we [will] enter the city (if the Finns do it first we do not object), lead those still alive into inner Russia or into captivity, wipe Leningrad from the face of the earth through demolitions, and hand the area north of the Neva to the Finns." On 7 October, Hitler sent a further directive signed by
Alfred Jodl reminding Army Group North not to accept capitulation.
Finnish participation and President
Risto Ryti meeting in
Imatra in 1942 By August 1941, the Finns advanced to within of the northern suburbs of Leningrad at the 1939 Finnish-Soviet border, threatening the city from the north; they were also advancing through
East Karelia, east of Lake Ladoga, and threatening the city from the east. The Finnish forces crossed the pre-Winter War border on the
Karelian Isthmus by eliminating Soviet
salients at Beloostrov and Kirjasalo, thus straightening the frontline so that it ran along the old border near the shores of Gulf of Finland and Lake Ladoga, and those positions closest to Leningrad still lying on the pre-Winter War border. According to Soviet claims, the Finnish advance was stopped in September by resistance in the Karelian Fortified Region, but in August 1941 Finnish troops had already received orders to halt the advance after reaching their goals, some of which lay beyond the pre-Winter War border. After reaching their respective goals, the Finns halted their advance and started moving troops to East Karelia. For the next three years, the Finns did little to contribute to the battle for Leningrad, maintaining their lines. Their headquarters rejected German pleas for aerial attacks against Leningrad and did not advance farther south from the
Svir River in occupied East Karelia (160 kilometres northeast of Leningrad), which they had reached on 7 September. In the southeast, the Germans captured
Tikhvin on 8 November, but failed to complete their encirclement of Leningrad by advancing further north to join with the Finns at the Svir River. On 9 December, a counterattack of the Volkhov Front forced the
Wehrmacht to retreat from their Tikhvin positions in the
Volkhov River line. On 6 September 1941, Germany's chief of staff, Alfred Jodl, visited Helsinki. His main goal was to persuade Mannerheim to continue the offensive. In 1941,
President Ryti told the
Finnish Parliament that the aim of the war was to restore the territories lost during the Winter War and gain more territories in the east to create a "
Greater Finland". After the war, Ryti said: "On 24 August 1941 I visited the headquarters of Marshal Mannerheim. The Germans aimed us at crossing the old border and continuing the offensive to Leningrad. I said that the capture of Leningrad was not our goal and that we should not take part in it. Mannerheim and Minister of Defense
Walden agreed with me and refused the offers of the Germans. The result was a paradoxical situation: the Germans could not approach Leningrad from the north". There was little or no systematic shelling or bombing from the Finnish positions. The proximity of the Finnish border from downtown Leningradand the threat of a Finnish attack complicated the defence of the city. At one point, the defending front commander,
Popov, could not release reserves opposing the Finnish forces to be deployed against the
Wehrmacht because they were needed to bolster the 23rd Army's defences on the Karelian Isthmus. Mannerheim terminated the offensive on 31 August 1941, when the army had reached the 1939 border. Popov felt relieved, and redeployed two divisions to the German sector on 5 September. Subsequently, the Finnish forces reduced the salients of
Beloostrov and
Kirjasalo, which had threatened their positions at the seacoast and south of the River Vuoksi. Lieutenant General
Paavo Talvela and Colonel Järvinen, the commander of the Finnish Coastal Brigade responsible for Ladoga, proposed to the German headquarters the blocking of
Soviet convoys on Lake Ladoga. The idea was proposed on their own behalf, bypassing both Finnish Navy HQ and General HQ. The Germans responded favorably and informed the slightly surprised Finnswho apart from Talvela and Järvinen had very little knowledge of the propositionthat transport of the equipment for the Ladoga operation was already arranged. The German command formed the
international naval detachment (which also included the Italian
XII Squadriglia MAS) under Finnish command and the
Einsatzstab Fähre Ost under German command. These naval units operated against the supply route in the summer and autumn of 1942, the only period the units were able to operate as freezing waters forced the lightly equipped units to be moved away, and changes in front lines made it impractical to reestablish these units later in the war.
Defensive operations , in the trenches of the Leningrad Front on 1 September 1941 The Leningrad Front (initially the
Leningrad Military District) was commanded by Marshal
Kliment Voroshilov. It included the
23rd Army in the northern sector between the Gulf of Finland and Lake Ladoga, and the 48th Army in the western sector between the Gulf of Finland and the
Slutsk–
Mga position. The Leningrad Fortified Region, the Leningrad garrison, the Baltic Fleet forces, and
Koporye, Pulkovo, and Slutsk–Kolpino operational groups were also present. ==Defence of civilian evacuees==