The newly re-equipped division was subordinated to the
XXXXVIII Panzer Corps, part of
Fourth Panzer Army, and took part in the
Battle of Kursk. During the buildup period, a
regiment of two battalions were equipped with the new
Panther tanks, which were plagued by technical problems, suffering from engine fires and mechanical breakdowns before reaching the battlefield. The division has 4
Panzer II, 23
Panzer III, 68
Panzer IV, 15
Tiger I, 8 command tanks, and 14 Flammpanzer III available. By 7 July, the division had only 80 of its 300 tanks still fit for combat. After the Kursk offensive was canceled, the division was transferred back to
Army Group Center and resumed its role as a mobile reserve. The Tiger I tank company was expanded to a battalion, becoming the III. Battalion of the Panzer Regiment. Großdeutschland saw heavy fighting around
Karachev before being transferred back to XLVIII Panzer Corps in late August. For the rest of 1943,
Großdeutschland retreated across
Ukraine, and in 1944 into Romania, where it took part in the
First Battle of Târgu Frumos. By May 31, 1944, the division had 14 Panzer IV, 90 Panthers, and 40 Tiger I tanks. In early August, the division was transferred to
East Prussia from
Army Group South Ukraine. Over the next months,
Großdeutschland was involved in heavy fighting in both East Prussia, including a counter-attack on
Wilkowischken and the
Baltic States, suffering high casualties in both men and materiel. The division was nearly destroyed during the battles in the
Memel bridgehead. tanks of the division in
Romania, 1944 In November 1944, while the division and several attached units were redesignated as
Panzerkorps Großdeutschland. By March 1945, the Panzer Grenadier Division
Großdeutschland had been reduced to around 4,000 men after the Battle of Memel. It had only 1 StuG III, 1 Panzer IV, 5 Panthers, and 6 Tiger I tanks by March 15, 1945. By 25 April 1945, the division was engaged in heavy fighting in the battles around
Pillau. Eight hundred men of the division were evacuated on ferries via the
Baltic Sea and surrendered to British forces in Schleswig-Holstein on May 9. The rest were either killed or captured during the fighting in
Pillau or surrendered to Soviet forces on May 9 on the Vistula spit. ==War crimes==