7th Rifle Division (Soviet Union)

7th Rifle Division
Active

I Formation: 1918-1941

II Formation: 1941-1945
Country  Soviet Union
Branch Red Army
Type Infantry
Engagements

Russian Civil War

Soviet invasion of Poland
Winter War
World War II

Decorations

Order of the Red Banner (2; 1st formation) (1; 2nd formation)

Order of the Red Banner of Labour (1st formation)
Battle honours

Chernigov (1st formation)
In the name of Frunze (1st formation)

Tallinn (2nd formation)
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Ivan Sovetnikov

The 7th Rifle Division was an infantry division of the Soviet Union's Red Army, formed twice.

History

The division was first formed in September 1918 at Vladimir in the Moscow Military District.

After reorganisation, probably as part of forming new divisions, the division was re-formed for the second time in August 1939 at Poltava in the Kiev Special Military District. In September–October, 1939 the division took part in the Soviet invasion of Poland (1939) as part of the 6th Rifle Corps, 6th Army, Ukrainian Front. From the Kiev Special MD it was sent to Finland around the middle of January 1940. The division arrived in Perk-yarvi (Перк-ярви) around the end of January or the start of February and moved to lake Mikkelin-yarvi. From 3 February 1940 it joined the 50th Rifle Corps, and advanced with the Corps from 13.02.1940 as part of the 7th Army. It was then shifted to the 10th Rifle Corps about 20 February 1940, on the Hotinen (Хотинен) direction. It was then shifted again, to the 34th Rifle Corps in February–March and awarded the Order of the Red Banner.

Returned to the Kiev Special Military District in April 1940, it participated in the Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina in June–July 1940. In August 1940 it was reformed as the 7th Motorized Division. During the Soviet-Finnish campaign the division consisted of the 27th, 257th, and 300th Rifle Regiments, the 23rd Reconnaissance Battalion, and the 405th Separate Tank Battalion. Fighting as part of the 8th Mechanized Corps, 26th Army, Southwestern Front,[1] from June 1941, the division was decimated in attempting to halt the German advance. It was engaged in the Lutsk-Rovno area soon after the German invasion began.[2][3]

The division was reformed on 27 December 1941 for the third time from remnants of the 22nd Estonian Territorial Rifle Corps. It was reformed at Sverdlovsk in the Ural MD in 1942, as an Estonian national formation, which later joined the 8th Estonian Rifle Corps of the Red Army. It took part in operations from 7 November 1942 as part of the 3rd, 1st Shock, 8th and 42nd Armies. Its first combat was the Battle of Velikiye Luki. On 1 December 1942 it was part of the 8th Rifle Corps, subordinated directly to the Kalinin Front alongside other Estonian formations.[4] On 22 September 1944 elements of the division, along with the 45th Estonian Tank Regiment and the 952nd SU Regiment (SU-76s), formed the forward detachment of 8th Rifle Corps and liberated Tallinn, for which all three units received the name of that city as a battle honor.[5] The 7th Estonian Rifle Division was with 1st Shock Army of the Kurland Group (Leningrad Front) in May 1945. On 28.06.1945 it became the 118th Guards Rifle Division by NKO Order № 0126.

Feskov et al. 2013 does not, despite earlier publications, list the division among those reformed in the 1950s.[6]

Honorifics and awards

See also

Notes

  1. Orbat.com/Niehorster
  2. "The Battle of Lutsk - Rovno". theeasternfront.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2012-04-06. Retrieved 4 September 2016.
  3. Ryabyshev, Dmitry (19 September 2011). "On the role of the 8th Mechanized Corps in the June 1941 counteroffensive mounted by the South-Western Front". english.battlefield.ru. Retrieved 4 September 2016.
  4. Combat composition of the Soviet Army, 1 December 1942.
  5. Charles C. Sharp, "Red Hammers", Soviet Self-Propelled Artillery and Lend Lease Armor 1941 - 1945, Soviet Order of Battle World War II, vol. XII, Nafziger, 1998, pp 50-51
  6. Feskov et al 2013, p.150, Table 4.1.5, contradicting Feskov et al 2004 and, through translation, Avanzini and Crofoot, 'Armies of the Bear'.

External links

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