Army Group South Ukraine

Army Group South Ukraine (German: Heeresgruppe Südukraine, Romanian: Grupul de Armate Ucraina de Sud) was a joint German-Romanian group on the Eastern Front during World War II.

Army Group South Ukraine
Active5 April – 23 September 1944
Country Nazi Germany
 Romania
BranchArmy
Size905,000[1]
  • 500,000 Germans
  • 405,000 Romanians

400 tanks and assault guns[2][3]

7,600 artillery pieces[4]
810 aircraft[5]
EngagementsEastern Front
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Ferdinand Schörner
Johannes Frießner

Army Group South Ukraine was created on 5 April 1944 by renaming Army Group A.[6] This army group saw action during the Jassy-Kishinev Operation and after taking heavy casualties was redesignated Army Group South (Heeresgruppe Süd) at midnight on 23 September 1944.[7][lower-alpha 2]

Geographically, Army Group South Ukraine – headquartered at Slănic-Moldova – held 392 miles (680 km) of front, of which 160 were held by Romanians.[8] Its operational area covered all of Eastern Romania, from a line 40 km (25 miles) east of Bucharest.[9]

Order of Battle, 15 August 1944[10] (Army HQ[11])

Commanders[lower-alpha 3]

No. Portrait CommanderTook officeLeft officeTime in office
1
Ferdinand Schörner
Schörner, FerdinandGeneralfeldmarschall
Ferdinand Schörner
(1892–1973)
31 March 194425 July 194486 days
2
Johannes Frießner
Frießner, JohannesGeneraloberst
Johannes Frießner
(1892–1971)
25 July 194423 September 194490 days

Notes

  1. most of them in the Romanian armored division
  2. Edwald Klapdor. 2011, Viking Panzers: The German 5th SS Tank Regiment in the East in World War II, pg 383 states that it was redesignated Army Group South on 15 September, 1944.
  3. Army Group South Ukraine could not take major operational decisions without securing Ion Antonescu's approval.[12]


Bibliography

Citations

References

  • Ziemke, Earl F. (2002). Stalingrad to Berlin: The German Defeat in the East. Washington, D.C: Center of Military History, US Army. ISBN 9781780392875.
  • Klapdor, Ewald (2011). Viking Panzers: The German 5th SS Tank Regiment in the East in World War II. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books.


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