Expand German Heeresgruppe C date January 2010 ArmyGroupC in German, Heeresgruppe C or HGr C was an armygroup of the German Wehrmacht during the Second World War . Career ArmyGroupC was set up from Heeresgruppenkommando 2 in Frankfurt on 26 August 1939. It initially commanded all troops on Germany s western front but after the invasion of Poland Polish campaign it was reduced to commanding the southern half of the battle of France western front , overseeing the frontal breakthrough through the Maginot Line during June 1940. At the end of the battle of France it moved back to Germany then under the title Abschnittsstab Ostpreu en moved to East Prussia on 20 April 1941. On 21 June 1941 it was renamed ArmyGroup North . It was re animated on 26 November 1943 by splitting back off from the staff of Oberbefehlshabers S d Luftwaffe and put in command of the southwestern front and the Italian Campaign World War II Italian Campaign . On 2 May 1945 ArmyGroupC surrendered. Commanders 26 August 1939 Generaloberst Generalfeldmarschall Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb 21 November 1943 Generalfeldmarschall Albert Kesselring 10 March 1945 Generaloberst Heinrich von Vietinghoff Heinrich Gottfried von Vietinghoff already representing it 26 October 1944 15 January 1945 30 April 1945 General der Infanterie Friedrich Schulz 1 May 1945 General der Panzertruppe Hans R ttiger Composition Category Army groups of the German ArmyCArmy Groups Germany be C bg cs Skupina arm d C da Heeresgruppe C de Heeresgruppe C et V egrupp C es Grupo de Ej rcitos C fr Groupe d arm es C it Heeresgruppe C pl Grupa Armii C pt Grupo de Ex rcitos C ru C fi Armeijaryhm C sv Arm grupp C tr Ordular Grubu C uk C ... more details
more footnotes date June 2010 army units Image Armygroup Nato.svg thumb right 200px Standard APP 6A NATO symbol for an ArmyGroup Front Soviet Army Front An armygroup is a military organization consisting ... responsible for a particular geographic area. An armygroup is the largest field organization ... Red Army Soviet Red Army an armygroup was known as a Front Soviet Army Front . The equivalent of an armygroup in the Imperial Japanese Army IJA was a General Army nihongo S gun . Army groups may be multi national formations. For example, during World War II , the U.S. 6th ArmyGroup Southern Group of Armies also known as the U.S. 6th ArmyGroup comprised the U.S. Seventh Army and the French First Army the 21st ArmyGroup comprised the British Second Army , the Canadian First Army and the US Ninth Army . In U.S. Army usage, the number of an armygroup is expressed in Arabic numerals e.g., 12th ArmyGroup , while the number of an army is spelled out e.g., Third Army . World War II China main Army Groups of the National Revolutionary Army main GroupArmy A Chinese armygroup was usually ..., Zhang Zizhong , commander of the 33rd ArmyGroup was killed in action in Hubei province. He was the highest ... multinational, containing armies from several Axis countries. For example ArmyGroup Africa contained ... ArmyGroup Nanpo Gun was the Southern Army , also known as the Southern Expeditionary Army . By November ... were often as large as an armygroup. See Front Soviet Army List of Soviet fronts in World War II ... Groups. The initial two were the 21st ArmyGroup and the 12th ArmyGroup originally the First United States ArmyGroup U.S. 1st ArmyGroup or FUSAG , and in September 1944, operational command of the 6th ArmyGroup Sixth ArmyGroup which had landed in the south of France during Operation Dragoon ... Operation Quicksilver , the original FUSAG was renamed 12th ArmyGroup, and FUSAG continued as a notional armygroup threatening to invade France across the Straits of Dover. Allied Forces Headquarters ... more details
A GroupArmy in traditional Chinese in simplified Chinese , is a major China Chinese military organization . Some may use or translate it loosely to mean the same as ArmyGroup and through various ... ROC or Communist China PRC , Chinese ArmyGroup or GroupArmy could be equivalent to field army or army ... corps size or larger including Army or ArmyGroup as per defined by most international military forces . Adding confusion to multiple Chinese definitions of GroupArmy or ArmyGroup is also made by literal ... military Division , Corps or Field ArmyArmy of any Chinese GroupArmy or ArmyGroup before comparing ... or Group Armies . However, a modern PRC GroupArmy in PRC China are corps sized combined arms ... regions is assigned with 2 or 3 group armies. ref http www.sinodefence.com army default.asp Sino Defence.com ... etc. PLA Group Armies and their headquarters 1st Army People s Republic of China 1st GroupArmy Zhejiang, Nanjing Military Region 12th Army People s Republic of China 12th GroupArmy Jiangsu, Nanjing Military Region 13th Army People s Republic of China 13th GroupArmy Chongqing, Chengdu Military Region 14th Army People s Republic of China 14th GroupArmy Kunming, Chengdu Military Region 16th Army People s Republic of China 16th GroupArmy Jilin, Shenyang Military Region 20th Army People s Republic of China 20th GroupArmy Henan, Jinan Military Region 21st Army People s Republic of China 21st GroupArmy Shaaxi, Lanzhou Military Region 26th Army People s Republic of China 26th GroupArmy Weifang, Shandong, Jinan Military Region 27th Army People s Republic of China 27th GroupArmy Hebei, Beijing Military Region 31st Army People s Republic of China 31st GroupArmy Fujian, Nanjing Military Region 38th Army People s Republic of China 38th Mechanized GroupArmy Baoding, Beijing Military Region 39th Army People s Republic of China 39th Mechanized GroupArmy Liaoning, Shenyang Military Region 40th Army People s Republic of China 40th GroupArmy Jinzhou, Liaoning, Shenyang Military Region 41st ... more details
unreferenced date January 2008 ArmyGroup A was the name of a number of Germany German Army Groups during World War II . Western Front, 1940 During the German invasion of the Low Countries and France ArmyGroup A was under the command of General Gerd von Rundstedt , and was responsible for the break out through the Ardennes. It was composed of 45 divisions, including the 7 panzer division of Panzer Group Kleist . Eastern Front, 1942 In 1942, ArmyGroup South was in southern Russia on the Eastern Front WWII Eastern Front . For Case Blue Fall Blau , the summer offensive of the German Armed Forces Wehrmacht , ArmyGroup South was split into ArmyGroup A and ArmyGroup B . ArmyGroup A was ordered south to capture the oil fields in the Caucasus . ArmyGroup A included the following armies 1st Panzer Army German 1st Panzer Army 11th Army Wehrmacht German 11th Army 17th Army Wehrmacht German 17th Army Fourth Army Romania Romanian 4th Army Eastern Front, 1945 On the 25 January 1945 Hitler renamed three army groups. ArmyGroup North became ArmyGroup Courland ArmyGroup Centre became ArmyGroup North and ArmyGroup A became ArmyGroup Centre. Commanders Info comes from the German Wikipedia ref http de.wikipedia.org wiki Heeresgruppe A ref Generalfeldmarschall Gerd von Rundstedt October 1939 June 1941 Generalfeldmarschall Wilhelm List July September 1942 ref Adolf Hitler personally commanded ArmyGroup A from September to November 1942 ref Generalfeldmarschall Paul Ludwig Ewald von Kleist September 1942 March 1944 Col. Gen. Ferdinand Sch rner April September 1944 Col. Gen. Josef Harpe September 1944 January 1945 References Reflist See also List of World War II military units of Germany Germany WWII stub Army Groups Germany Category Army groups of the German Army be A bg da Heeresgruppe A de Heeresgruppe A et V egrupp A es Grupo de Ej rcitos A fr Groupe d arm es A it Heeresgruppe A hu A Hadseregcsoport no Arm gruppe A pl Grupa Armii A pt Grupo de Ex rcitos ... more details
for the mathematical concept Cgroup The CGroup was a culture in ancient Nubia . It was named by George A. Reisner . With no central site, and no written evidence about what these people called themselves, Reisner assigned it a letter. The CGroup arose after Reisner s A Group and B Group cultures around the time the Old Kingdom was ending in Egypt . While today many scholars see A and B as actually being a continuation of the same group, CGroup is more distinct. The CGroup is marked by its distinctive pottery, and for its tombs. Early CGroup tombs consisted of a simple stone circle with the body .... The origins of the CGroup are still uncertain. Some scholars see it largely being evolved from the A B Group. Others think it more likely that the CGroup was brought by invaders or migrants that mingled with the local culture, with the CGroup perhaps originating in the then rapidly drying Sahara . The CGroup were farmers and semi nomadic herders keeping large numbers of cattle in an area ... might have been constructed by the Egyptians to control the CGroup peoples. Most of what is known about the CGroup peoples comes from Lower Nubia , due to the extensive archaeological work conducted in that region. The northern border of the CGroup was around Kubaniek . The southern border is still uncertain, but CGroup sites have been found as far south as Eritrea . During the Egyptian .... The exact relation between the CGroup and Kerma are uncertain, but early Kerma shows definite similarities to the CGroup culture. Under the Middle Kingdom of Egypt Middle Kingdom much of the CGroup lands in Lower Nubia were conquered by Egypt after the Egyptians left, Kerma expanded north ... century BCE, the CGroup disappears, merged, along with Kerma, into the Egyptianized Kingdom of Kush ... c. 500 BC to AD 1050 publisher Cambridge University Press location Cambridge year 1978 pages 858 ... Ancient Egyptian palettes de C Gruppe ru C ... more details
about the International Sports Car category File GroupC sticker.jpg thumb right 200px A sticker on a race car from the 1984 24 Hours of Le Mans , denoting the car is part of the GroupC category. Unreferenced date May 2008 GroupC was a category of motorsport , introduced by the FIA in 1982 for sports ... sportscar prototypes like Porsche 936 . GroupC was used in the FIA s World Sportscar Championship ... factory and customer built forms in the early 1980s. The roots of the GroupC category lie in both ... applied the same concept in its GroupC rules. It limited cars to a minimum weight of 800  kg and a maximum ... similar regulations. With costs increasing, the FIA introduced a new GroupC Junior class for 1983 .... As in GroupC, engines had to be from a recognized manufacturer which had cars homologated in Group A or Group B. Although it was originally expected that C Junior cars would use two litre normally ..., such as the short lived British BRDC C2 Championship . GroupC Junior was formally renamed Group C2 ... 9 at the Goodwood Festival of Speed , 2008 . By 1989, the GroupC series popularity was nearly as great ... followed was the quick downfall of GroupC, as Ford, Mercedes and Peugeot elected to either concentrate ... race the previous year, the Automobile Club de l Ouest ACO still allowed the GroupC cars ... 24 Hours of Le Mans was the last one in which GroupC cars were permitted. A new category formed especially by race organizers also saw modified GroupC cars without roofs. In fact, a former C1 car ... of competition. Many of the modified open top GroupC cars continued to compete until they wrecked, broke ... again in the mid 1990s. Recently, interest in GroupC cars resurfaced as more of these cars have appeared on historic racing events. GroupC series The FIA s GroupC formula was designed primarily ... series also adapted the GroupC regulations. The Deutsche Rennsport Meisterschaft allowed GroupC ... was reformed as the Supercup . Under the new Supercup series, only GroupC cars would be allowed ... more details
for the culture in ancient Nubia CGroup In mathematical group theory, a Cgroup is a group such that the centralizer of any involution has a normal Sylow 2 subgroup. They include as special cases CIT groups where the centralizer of any involution is a 2 group, and TI groups where any Sylow 2 subgroups have trivial intersection. The simple C groups were determined by harvtxt Suzuki 1965 , and his classification is summarized by harvtxt Gorenstein 1980 loc 16.4 . The classification of C groups was used in Thompson s classification of N group finite group theory N groups . The simple C groups are the projective special linear groups PSL sub 2 sub p for p a Fermat or Mersenne prime the projective special linear groups PSL sub 2 sub 9 the projective special linear groups PSL sub 2 sub 2 sup n sup for n 2 the projective special linear groups PSL sub 3 sub q for q a prime power the Suzuki Ree group Suzuki groups Sz 2 sup 2n 1 sup for n 1 the projective unitary groups PU sub 3 sub q for q a prime power CIT groups The C groups include as special cases the CIT groups, that are groups in which the centralizer of any involution is a 2 group. These were classified by harvs txt last Suzuki year1 1961 year2 1962 , and the simple ones consist of the C groups other than PU sub 3 sub q and PSL sub 3 sub q . The ones whose Sylow 2 subgroups are elementary abelian were classified in a paper of harvtxt Burnside 1899 , which was forgotten for many years until rediscovered by Feit in 1970. TI groups The C groups include as special cases the TI groups trivial intersection groups , that are groups in which any two Sylow 2 subgroups have trivial intersection. These were classified by harvs txt last Suzuki year1 1964 , and the simple ones are of the form PSL sub 2 sub q , PU sub 3 sub q , Sz q for q a power of 2. References Citation last1 Gorenstein first1 D. author1 link Daniel Gorenstein title Finite Groups publisher Chelsea location New York isbn 978 0 8284 0301 6 mr 81b 20002 year 1980 Citation ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 ArmyGroup D Heeresgruppe D was a Germany German ArmygroupArmyGroup which saw action during World War II . ArmyGroup D was formed on 26 October 1940 in France, its initial cadre coming from the disbanded ArmyGroupC . On 15 April 1941, the status of ArmyGroup D was upgraded. From that date on, the commander of ArmyGroup D was also to be considered Oberbefehlshaber West or OB WEST the Commander in Chief for the Western Theatre . As a result of this, ArmyGroup D is sometimes incorrectly referred to as ArmyGroup West. Commanders 25 October 1940 Generalfeldmarschall Erwin von Witzleben 15 March 1942 Generalfeldmarschall Gerd von Rundstedt 2 July 1944 Generalfeldmarschall G nther von Kluge 15 August 1944 Generalfeldmarschall Gerd von Rundstedt 11 March 1945 Generalfeldmarschall Albert Kesselring Orders of battle May 1941 7th Army Wehrmacht Seventh Army 1st Army Wehrmacht First Army 15th Army Wehrmacht Fifteenth Army Commander of all German troops of Occupation in the Netherlands May 1944 ArmyGroup G ArmyGroup B 5th Panzer Army Panzer Group West 1st Parachute Army Germany First Fallschirm Army December 1944 ArmyGroup G ArmyGroup B ArmyGroup H 6th Panzer Army Sixth SS Panzer Army See also German General Staff Wehrmacht Army Groups Germany Category Army groups of the German Army D bg cs Skupina arm d D de Heeresgruppe D et V egrupp D es Grupo de Ej rcitos D fr Groupe d arm es D it Heeresgruppe D pl Grupa Armii D ru D fi Armeijaryhm D tr Ordular Grubu D uk D ... more details
refimprove date October 2008 ArmyGroup B was the name of three different Germany German ArmyGroup s that saw ... bridges after the German airborne actions in Rotterdam. ArmyGroup B had approximately 300,000 men involved in these operations which occurred in May 1940. Eastern Front The second ArmyGroup B was formed when ArmyGroup South was split into two formations for the summer offensive of 1942. ArmyGroup B was given the task of protecting the northern flank of ArmyGroup A, and included the 6th Army Wehrmacht 6th Army s attack on Battle of Stalingrad Stalingrad . In February 1943, the existing ArmyGroup B and ArmyGroup Don were combined to create a new ArmyGroup South . This was done on the Eastern Front World War II Eastern Front . Italy and northern France A new ArmyGroup B was formed in northern ... there. ArmyGroup B was subsequently moved to northern France to defend against the D Day landings ... later, on 17 August, Field Marshal Walter Model replaced von Kluge. From 1944 to 1945, the armygroup fought in the campaigns in France. ArmyGroup B participated in the operation Overlord Battle of Normandy ..., Nordin ref before the armygroup participated in the Battle of the Bulge . Finally, ArmyGroup B ... Order of battle ArmyGroup HQ troops 537th Signals Regiment 605th Signals Regiment 2nd list Subordinated ..., 4th Army, Panzer Group Paul Ludwig Ewald von Kleist Kleist Add. Ref July 1940 7th Army Wehrmacht ... Group, Military commander in the General Government Add. Ref May 1941 9th Army, 4th Army Add. Ref ... Group West Add. Ref August 1944 1st Army Wehrmacht 1st Army , 5th Panzer Army , 7th Army, 15th Army ... , 15th Army Add. Ref November 1944 7th Army, 5th Panzer Army, Kurt Student Student ArmyGroup Add ... from the practice of command and control , RAND, Santa Monica, CA, 1999 See also ArmyGroup D ArmyGroup South 5th Panzer Army German Fifth Panzer ArmyArmy Groups Germany Battle of Stalingrad Category ... 4th Army Wehrmacht 4th Army , 6th Army Wehrmacht 6th Army , 18th Army Wehrmacht 18th Army Add Ref ... more details
The German ArmyGroup G Heeresgruppe G fought on the Western Front WWII Western Front of World War II ..., ArmyGroup G had eleven divisions with which to hold France south of the Loire. ref name Pogue XII ..., on the 17 18 of August the German Armed Forces High Command OKW ordered ArmyGroup G, with the exception ... groups and withdrew eastward toward Dijon . At the same time the 19th Army Wehrmacht German Nineteenth Army , retreated northward through the Rh ne valley toward the Plateau de Langres where it was joined by the 5th Panzer Army German Fifth Panzer Army which was assigned to ArmyGroup G so that a counter attack could delivered against the United States Third Army . ref Pogue references p.228 ref The retreat did not go according to plan, as the Nineteenth Army retreated many personnel of ArmyGroup G were taken prisoner by the Sixth United States ArmyGroup . ref http www.bbc.co.uk ww2peopleswar ... Army , while the much reduced German Nineteenth Army opposed the French First Army and the U.S. Seventh Army under General Alexander M. Patch . ref Pogue references p.230 ref ArmyGroup G fought in the Vosges ... 1944, ArmyGroup G temporarily lost responsibility for the German troops in the Colmar Pocket and on the Rhine River south of the Bienwald to the short lived ArmyGroup Oberrhein Germany ArmyGroup Oberrhein . In January 1945 the armygroup attacked in operation Nordwind Operation Nordwind , the last ... of the Germans from the Colmar Pocket, ArmyGroup Oberrhein was dissolved and ArmyGroup G ... troops that cleared the Rhineland Palatinate and subsequently assaulted over the Rhine River, ArmyGroup G s troops nevertheless managed a spirited defense at the cities of Heilbronn , Crailsheim , Nuremberg and Munich during April 1945. ArmyGroup G surrendered to U.S. forces at Haar, Bavaria ... Schulz Order of battle class wikitable colspan 2 ArmyGroup Headquarters troops colspan 2 Armygroup ... had been in charge of troops in the south west since 1st Army Wehrmacht First Army had been withdrawn ... more details
No footnotes date November 2009 ArmyGroup Centre lang de Heeresgruppe Mitte was the name of two distinct Nazi Germany German strategic armygroup s that fought on the Eastern Front World War II Eastern Front in World War II . The first ArmyGroup Centre was created on 22 June 1941, as one of three German ... Group Centre was renamed ArmyGroup North Heeresgruppe Nord , and ArmyGroup A Heeresgruppe A became ArmyGroup Centre. The latter formation retained its name until the End of World War II in Europe end ... units June 1941 br ArmyGroup HQ troops 537th Signals Regiment 537th Signals Regiment 2nd echelon ... Group Panzer Group 3 Hermann Hoth Hoth V Army Corps Germany V Army Corps Ruoff 5th ID, 35th ID VI Army ... in three geographical directions. The ArmyGroup Centre s initial strategic goal was to defeat the Soviet armies in Belarus , including occupation of Smolensk. To accomplish this, the ArmyGroup ... November. The ArmyGroup s other operational missions were to support the Army Groups to its northern and southern flanks, the ArmyGroup boundary for the later being the Pripyat River . Offensive Campaign in Belorussia ArmyGroup Centre was the strongest of the three German formations. Commanded ... wire in the open. July 1941 br 3rd Panzer Group , 9th Army Wehrmacht 9th Army , 4th Army Wehrmacht 4th Army , 2nd Panzer Group , z. Vfg. 2nd Army Wehrmacht 2nd Army August 1941 br 3rd Panzer Group, 9th Army, 2nd Army, ArmyGroup of Guderian September 1941 br 3rd Panzer Group, 9th Army, 4th Army, 2nd Panzer Group, 2nd Army Wehrmacht 2nd Army Early anti partisan Campaign In spite of terrible losses ... advance for two months due to the L tzen decision . The advance of ArmyGroup Centre was further .... ArmyGroup Centre was driven back out of reach of Moscow by April 1942. It did however hold a narrow ... IX Army Corps Geyer 137th ID, 263rd ID, 183rd ID, 292nd ID 4th Panzer Group Germany Panzer Group ... ID Reserve 161st ID 3rd Panzer Group Panzer Group 3 Hoth , Subordinated to 9th Army LVI Panzer Corps ... more details
Unreferenced date January 2008 ArmyGroup North lang de Heeresgruppe Nord was a German strategic echelon ... War II . The armygroup coordinated the operations of attached separate army corps , reserve formations, rear services and logistics. Formation The ArmyGroup North was created on the 2 September 1939 ... Division . The ArmyGroup was commanded by Fedor von Bock for the operation. After completion ... as the ArmyGroup B , and consisted of 6th Army Wehrmacht 6. Armee 4. Armee Operation Barbarossa In preparation for Operation Barbarossa, ArmyGroup North was reformed from ArmyGroupC on 22 June 1941. ArmyGroup North was commanded by Field Marshal Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb and staged in East Prussia ... republics and securing the northern Flanking maneuver flank of ArmyGroup Centre in Northern Russia between Western Dvina River and Daugavpils Kholm ArmyGroup boundary. On commencement of the Wehrmacht s Baltic offensive operation Wehrmacht Baltic offensive operation the ArmyGroup deployed ... Jelgava 4th Panzer Army Pskov 16th Army Wehrmacht 16th Army Kaunas, Daugavpils ArmyGroup troops ArmyGroup signals regiment 537 ArmyGroup signals regiment 639 2nd echelon The Baltic offensive ... , and the ArmyGroup approached Leningrad, commencing the Siege of Leningrad . However, while ... Blue Division was assigned to ArmyGroup North. Northern Russia offensive operation Composition ... trapped in the Courland Cauldron after 25 January 1945 the ArmyGroup was renamed into ArmyGroup Courland . On the same day in East Prussia a new ArmyGroup North was created by renaming ArmyGroup ... headquarters of the Wehrmacht Heer . Campaign in East Prussia ArmyGroup North old ArmyGroup Centre ... 9, 1945 K nigsberg finally fell to the Red Army, although remnants of ArmyGroup units continued ... renamed three army groups. ArmyGroup North became ArmyGroup Courland , more appropriate as it had been isolated from ArmyGroup Centre and was trapped in Courland, Latvia ArmyGroup Centre became ... more details
ArmyGroup Vistula lang de Heeresgruppe Weichsel was an ArmyGroup of the Wehrmacht , formed on January 24, 1945. It was put together from elements of ArmyGroup A shattered in the Soviet Vistula Oder Offensive , ArmyGroup Centre similarly largely destroyed in the East Prussian Offensive , and a variety ... of a new armygroup as an essentially defensive measure to fill the gap opening in German ... ArmyGroup Vistula was duly formed from an assortment of rebuilt, new and existing units. Guderian ... replaced Himmler as commander of ArmyGroup Vistula on 20 March, subsequent to its participation ... East Pomeranian Offensive . Other than Operation Solstice, the ArmyGroup s only offensive action was a disastrous ... XXXIX Panzer Corps took heavy casualties. Under the command of Heinrici, parts of the armygroup ... until the end of World War II in Europe end of the war in Europe on 8 May 1945. ArmyGroup Vistula ... sources give the group s size as 32 34 divisions, while a good Soviet source identifies it as having 450,000 troops. ref in general, the armygroup was poorly equipped, many of its units being ..., when first set up it was found that the armygroup lacked many essential facilities, such as proper ... telephone. ref name beevorp54 Beevor, p.54 ref Organisation The ArmyGroup was originally formed from The 9th Army Wehrmacht Ninth Army of General Theodor Busse , which had previously been part of ArmyGroup A and had been shattered around Warsaw during the Vistula Oder Offensive . This now held ... Walter Weiss , which as part of ArmyGroup Centre had been defending the line of the Narew river ... through Pomerania . It therefore formed the new armygroup s northern and eastern flank. The Eleventh ... Offensive , the Second Army was finally cut off from the remainder of the armygroup and withdrew into Danzig , where it was eventually destroyed. The rest of ArmyGroup Vistula was forced west of the Oder ... was added to ArmyGroup Vistula. Order of Battle during Soviet Berlin Offensive 3rd Panzer Army German ... more details
Infobox Military Unit unit name 21st ArmyGroup image File 21st armygroup badge large.gif 200px caption Shoulder flash of the 21st ArmyGroup dates July 1943 to August 1945 country allegiance flagicon UK United Kingdom branch type role ArmyGroup headquarters size 2 Field army Field Armies command structure ... The 21st ArmyGroup was a British headquarters formation consisting primarily of United Kingdom British and Canada Canadian forces. The ArmyGroup was an important Allied force in the European Theatre ... Overlord , the invasion of Europe . The 21st ArmyGroup operated in Northern France, Luxembourg ... Montgomery of Alamein Bernard Montgomery , 21st ArmyGroup initially controlled all ground forces in Operation ... Group 12th ArmyGroup was activated, under General Omar Bradley and the 21st ArmyGroup was left ... States ArmyGroup U.S. 6th ArmyGroup , the 21st ArmyGroup formed the left flank of the three ..., and with its port facilities intact. On 1 September 1944, the 21st ArmyGroup was relieved of operational control of the American armies, and those armies formed the 12th ArmyGroup . By mid September, elements of 21st ArmyGroup had reached the Dutch border, but were halted due to lack of supplies ... of the new German salient. However, the headquarters of Twelfth United States ArmyGroup U.S. 12th ArmyGroup lay to the south, and so Eisenhower decided to place American forces north of the Bulge salient under 21st ArmyGroup. They, with the Third United States Army American 3rd Army under ... to Bradley s 12th ArmyGroup. The Ninth United States Army U.S. 9th Army remained under Montgomery .... Rhineland Campaign Allied forces closed up to the Rhine by March 1945. Twenty First ArmyGroup at this time comprised the British Second Army under General Miles Dempsey Miles C Dempsey , the First ... to Omar Bradley Bradley s 12th ArmyGroup. British Army Of the Rhine After the German surrender, 21st ArmyGroup was converted into the headquarters for the British zone of occupation in Germany. It was renamed ... more details
unreferenced date January 2008 ArmyGroup Ostmark Heeresgruppe Ostmark was a German armygroup formed very late in World War II . ArmyGroup Ostmark was formed on 2 April 1945 from the remnants of ArmyGroup South Heeresgruppe S d . ArmyGroup Ostmark was operational in Austria and Czechoslovakia . ArmyGroup Ostmark was one of the last major German military formations to surrender to the Allies. The only commander of this armygroup, Dr. Lothar Rendulic , surrendered it in Saint Martin, Upper Austria, on May 7, 1945. Commander Colonel General Generaloberst Dr. Lothar Rendulic 2 April 1945 8 May 1945 See also Ostmark Austria ArmyGroup Courland ArmyGroup Vistula ArmyGroup Centre Germany WWII stub Army Groups Germany Category Army groups of the German Army Ostmark Category Military units and formations established in 1945 Category Military units and formations disestablished in 1945 bg de Heeresgruppe Ostmark et V egrupp Ostmark fr Groupe d arm es Ostmark it Heeresgruppe Ostmark pl Grupa Armii Ostmark sr tr Ostmark Ordular Grubu uk ... more details
The British Army Aid Group zh c was a para military organisation for British and allied forces in Southern China during the Second World War . The BAAG was officially classified in the British Army s order of battle as a MI9 unit that was responsible for assisting prisoners of war to escape from the Japanese Army s POW camps. Following the Battle of Hong Kong , Lt. Colonel Lindsay Tasman Ride Sir Lindsay Tasman Ride , who was then the Chair of Physiology of the University of Hong Kong was captured. He had been the commander of the HKVDC Field Ambulance, and once hostilities commenced was given command of the Combined Field Ambulance. Shortly after being captured, Ride escaped from Sham Shui Po POW camp to China with three trusted men. There, in order to further the war effort, support the Chinese, and shore up damaged British prestige in the area, he suggested forming a group that became known as the British Army Aid Group. Throughout the war the BAAG provided agents to gather military intelligence in Southern China and Hong Hong and these agents had also facilitated many of the POWs escapes from Hong Kong to the Allied Command Headquarters in Chungking. Escaped POWs were then debriefed by BAAG staff and subsequently rejoined the war effort. 128 men, for example, were re trained for further operations in Burma with the Chindits . At the end of the war the BAAG had also played a vital role in re establishing British sovereignty in Hong Kong. See also British Forces Overseas Hong Kong http www.galaxylink.net john paul paul.html Memoirs of Captain Paul Tsui, MBE, British Army Aid Group Category Military units and formations of the British Army Category Military units and formations of the United Kingdom in World War II Category Groups of World War II zh ... more details
unreferenced date October 2008 ArmyGroup Don was a short lived German armygroup during World War II . ArmyGroup Don was created from the headquarters of the 11th Army Wehrmacht Eleventh Army in the southern sector of the Eastern Front World War II Eastern Front on 22 November 1942. The armygroup only lasted until February 1943 when it was combined with ArmyGroup B and was made into the new ArmyGroup South . The one commander of ArmyGroup Don was Field Marshal Generalfeldmarschall Erich von Manstein . It was created to hold the line between ArmyGroup A and ArmyGroup B . It consisted of the 6th Army Wehrmacht Sixth Army Germany in the Stalingrad pocket, which included the encircled elements of the 4th Panzer Army , together with some remnants of the Romanian 4th Army and the reconstituted 4th Panzer Army which was augmented by four weak Panzer divisions. Army Groups Germany Battle of Stalingrad Category Army groups of the German Army Don Category Military units and formations established in 1942 Category Military units and formations disestablished in 1943 germany mil stub bg cs Skupina arm d Don de Heeresgruppe Don et V egrupp Don es Grupo de Ej rcitos Don fr Groupe d arm es Don it Heeresgruppe Don lv Armiju grupa Don ja pl Grupa Armii Don ru fi Armeijaryhm Don sv Arm grupp Don tr Don Ordular Grubu uk ... more details
unreferenced date December 2007 ArmyGroup South lang de Heeresgruppe S d was the name of a number of Nazi Germany German ArmygroupArmy Groups during World War II . Poland campaign Germany used two army groups to invade Poland in 1939 ArmyGroup North and ArmyGroup South. In this campaign ArmyGroup ... . Eastern Front ArmyGroup South was one of three army groups into which the Germans organised their forces for Operation Barbarossa . ArmyGroup South s principal objective was to capture Ukraine ... required for Hitler s plans for Lebensraum living space . ArmyGroup South was then to advance up to the Volga River , subsequently draining a portion of the Red Army and thus clearing the way for the ArmyGroup North and the ArmyGroup Centre ArmyGroup Center on their approach to Saint Petersburg ... the 1st Panzer Group First Panzer Group and the German 6th Army Wehrmacht Sixth , 17th Army Wehrmacht Seventeenth and 11th Army Wehrmacht Eleventh Armies, and the Romanian Romanian Third Army Third ... Battle of Stalingrad , was later made part of ArmyGroup South. In preparation for Operation Blue , the 1942 campaign in southern Russia and the Caucasus, ArmyGroup South was split into two armies ArmyGroup A and ArmyGroup B . In February 1943, ArmyGroup Don and the existing ArmyGroup B were combined and re designated ArmyGroup South. A new ArmyGroup B became a major formation elsewhere. On 4 April 1944, ArmyGroup South was re designated ArmyGroup North Ukraine . ArmyGroup North Ukraine existed from 4 April to 28 September. In September 1944, ArmyGroup South Ukraine was again re designated ArmyGroup South. Order of Battle for ArmyGroup South, October 1944 border 1 ... align center style background color grey color black ArmyGroupArmy Corps Division Remarks colspan ... in Europe , ArmyGroup South was again renamed. As ArmyGroup Ostmark , the remnants of ArmyGroup South ended the war fighting in and around Austria and Czechoslovakia . ArmyGroup Ostmark was one ... more details
Unreferenced date January 2007 An ArmyGroup Royal Artillery or ArmyGroup Royal Canadian Artillery was a British Commonwealth military formation type during the Second World War and shortly thereafter, generally assigned to corps . An AGRA was mainly composed of medium artillery regiments but heavy regiments and field regiments were also used. They were moved at need from corps to corps within an army. They were created during the war as artillery theory evolved. After the British Expeditionary Force World War II British Expeditionary Force was expelled from France in 1940, the need for flexibility in the control of artillery above the division increased. The idea was to group all artillery above the division in formations which could be switched within the field army at will to meet needs ... and dates formed and disbanded. British 1st ArmyGroup Royal Artillery 1st AGRA Tunisia British 2nd ArmyGroup Royal Artillery 2nd AGRA British 3rd ArmyGroup Royal Artillery 3rd AGRA British 4th ArmyGroup Royal Artillery 4th AGRA British 5th ArmyGroup Royal Artillery 5th AGRA Italy, north west Europe ... 78th Field Regiment, RA 142nd Field Regiment, RA 25pdr Bishop SP British 6th ArmyGroup Royal Artillery ..., RA 75th Medium Regiment, RA 80th Medium Regiment, RA British 7th ArmyGroup Royal Artillery 7th AGRA British 8th ArmyGroup Royal Artillery 8th AGRA 9th ArmyGroup Royal Artillery 9th AGRA north west Europe formed 1 May 1943. British 10th ArmyGroup Royal Artillery 10th AGRA British 11th ArmyGroup Royal Artillery 11th AGRA British 15th ArmyGroup Royal Artillery 15th AGRA British 16th ArmyGroup Royal Artillery 16th AGRA British 17th ArmyGroup Royal Artillery 17th AGRA British 59th ArmyGroup Royal Artillery 59th AGRA British 60th ArmyGroup Royal Artillery 60th AGRA British 61st ArmyGroup Royal Artillery 61st AGRA 1st ArmyGroup Royal Canadian Artillery Italy Brig. W.E. Huckvale 1st Medium Regiment 2nd Medium Regiment 5th Medium Regiment 11th Field Regiment nowiki 2nd ArmyGroup ... more details
See also Yildirim ArmyGroupArmyGroup F lang de Heeresgruppe F was a strategic command formation of the Wehrmacht during the Second World War . The commander of ArmyGroup F served also as the Oberbefehlshaber S dost OB South East . Created 12 August 1943, at Bayreuth WK XIII , it was primarily stationed in the Balkans . Its commander from August 1943 was Maximilian von Weichs promoted to Generalfeldmarschall on 1 February 1943, with General Lieutenant Hermann Foertsch serving as the Chief of Staff ... and most of Yugoslavia in the wake of the Budapest Offensive . The ArmyGroup included for much of the war the 2nd Panzer Army in Yugoslavia and Albania , and the ArmyGroup E in Greece . Order of Battle November 1943 2nd Panzer ArmyArmy Staff units III SS Panzer Corps , SS Obergruppenf hrer Felix ... ArmyGroup E ArmyGroup Staff units XXII Mountain Corps Germany XXII Mountain Corps , General of Mountain troops Hubert Lanz LXVIII Army Germany LXVIII Army , Corps General of Aviation Hellmuth Felmy ... Helge Auleb V SS Mountain Corps , General Lieutenant Arthur Phleps ArmyGroup E ArmyGroup Staff ... Hans Felber For the defence of Serbia, the Commander of ArmyGroup F assembled ArmyGroup Serbia on 26 September 1944. ArmyGroup Serbia lang ger Armee Abteilung Serbien commanded by General Hans Felber . ArmyGroup Serbia was disbanded on 27 October 1944. ArmyGroup F was disbanded 25 March ... S dost General of Infantry Hans Felber Order of Battle July 1944 The subordinate units of the ArmyGroup were predominantly the less capable fortress and reserve divisions, collaborationist foreign ... Infantry Division . ref p.200, Mitcham ref 2nd Panzer ArmyArmy Staff units XV Mountain Corps Germany ... LXVIII Army Germany LXVIII Army , Corps General of Aviation Hellmuth Felmy Troops of the commander of the fortress ... , Andrew, Stephen, Illustrator , The German Army 1939 45 4 Eastern Front 1943 45 Men at Arms 330 , Osprey ... Front of World War II Army Groups Germany Category Army groups of the German Army F bg ... more details
unreferenced date October 2008 ArmyGroup South Ukraine lang de Heeresgruppe S dukraine was a Wehrmacht German armygroup on the Eastern Front World War II Eastern Front during World War II . ArmyGroup South Ukraine was created on 31 March 1944. This armygroup saw action during the Jassy Kishinev Offensive August 1944 Jassy Kishinev Operation and after taking heavy casualties was absorbed into a re formed ArmyGroup South Heeresgruppe S d in September 1944. Commanders General Field Marshal Generalfeldmarschall Ferdinand Sch rner 31 March 1944 to 25 July 1944 Colonel General Colonel General Generaloberst Johannes Frie ner 25 July 1944 to September 1944 Army Groups Germany Category Army groups of the German Army South Ukraine Category Military units and formations established in 1944 Category Military units and formations disestablished in 1944 Germany mil unit stub be bg de Heeresgruppe S dukraine et V egrupp S dukraine fr Groupe d arm es Sud Ukraine it Heeresgruppe S dukraine pl Grupa Armii Po udniowa Ukraina ru sr fi Armeijaryhm Etel Ukraina tr G ney Ukrayna Ordular Grubu uk ... more details
Use dmy dates date May 2011 Infobox military unit unit name 15th ArmyGroup image Image US 15th Army Group.png 150px caption 15th ArmyGroup Shoulder Insignia dates 1943 1945 country United Kingdom & United States allegiance Allies of World War II Allies branch type ArmyGroup role size command structure ... march mascot battles notable commanders Harold Alexander br Mark W. Clark anniversaries The 15th ArmyGroup was an armygroup of the Allies of World War II Allied forces in World War II . History 15th ArmyGroup was activated in 1943 in Algiers , North Africa, to plan the invasion of Sicily codenamed Operation Husky . Its main forces for this job were the British Eighth Army and the U.S. Seventh Army . Following the capture of Sicily the group became responsible for the Allied Invasion of Italy invasion of mainland Italy for which the U.S. Seventh Army was replaced by U.S. Fifth Army . In January 1944 the armygroup was re designated successively Allied forces in Italy and then Allied Central ... the armygroup was under command of British General Harold Alexander, 1st Earl Alexander of Tunis Harold Alexander . By late 1944 the armygroup had pushed northward through Italy , capturing Rome, and driving ... General Mark W. Clark became the new commander and the armygroup was renamed 15th ArmyGroup once again. The Axis forces in Italy were finally defeated in the armygroup s Spring 1945 offensive in Italy , their surrender taking place in May. Order of Battle Order of Battle for 15th ArmyGroup, August 1944 15th ArmyGroup General Sir Harold Alexander ref Source http members.aol.com Custermen85 Units AlliesOrg.htm ref This website has been closed Eighth Army United Kingdom British Eighth Army ... Major General Dudley Russell ArmyGroup Reserve 1st Armored Division United States US 1st Armored Division ... agency army 15ag.htm GlobalSecurity 15th ArmyGroup http www.rothwell.force9.co.uk 6SAdiv.htm ... Division Major General John Hawkesworth British Army officer John Hawkesworth 56th London Infantry ... more details
ArmyGroup E Heeresgruppe E was a Germany German ArmygroupArmyGroup active during World War II . ArmyGroup E was created on 1 January 1943 from the 12th Army Wehrmacht 12th Army . Units from this ArmyGroup were distributed throughout the Mediterranean Sea Eastern Mediterranean area, including Albania , Greece , Serbia , and Croatia . Composition Its principal units were ref p.24, Thomas ref 11th Luftwaffe Field Division Attica garrison Generalleutnant Wilhelm Kohler Rhodes Assault Division amalgamated with the Brandenburgers Brandenburg Division the Balkans Brandenburg Panzergrenadier Division in 1944 LXVIII Army Corps eastern Greece and Peloponnese 117th J ger Division General der Gebirgstruppe Karl von Le Suire 1st Panzer Division Wehrmacht 1st Panzer Division June October 1943 Generalmajor Walter Kr ger Heer officer Walter Kr ger XXII Mountain Corps Germany XXII Mountain Army Corps western Greece General der Gebirgstruppe Hubert Lanz 104th J ger Division General der Infanterie Hartwig ... Germany 22nd Division General der Infanterie Friedrich Wilhelm M ller Also within the ArmyGroup command were 22 penal fortress battalions of the 999 series. Service history The ArmyGroup participated ... . At the same time, the ArmyGroup Dodecanese Campaign successfully repelled the British attempt to seize ... forces from the Balkans, this ArmyGroup withdrew to Hungary , with some units moving to Austria ... Army Corps. ArmyGroup E was joined with what was left of Maximilian von Weichs ArmyGroup F. That armygroup had been dissolved on 25 March 1945. A member of ArmyGroup E who later rose to prominence ... of Distomo Distomo in Greece. Furthermore, during the disarmament of the Italian army in September ..., Stephen, Illustrator , The German Army 1939 45 2 North Africa & Balkans Men At Arms Series, 316 , Osprey Publishing, 1998 ISBN 978 1855326408 See also Wehrmacht Yugoslav Front of World War II Army Groups Germany Category Army groups of the German Army E bg de Heeresgruppe E et V egrupp ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Infobox military unit unit name 18th ArmyGroup image caption dates February 1943 to May 1943 country allegiance flagicon UK United Kingdom branch type role ArmyGroup headquarters size 2 Field army Field Armies command structure Allied Force Headquarters current commander ... 18th ArmyGroup was an Allied formation in the Second World War . It was formed on 20 February 1943 when Eighth Army United Kingdom British Eighth Army advancing from the east and First Army United Kingdom British First Army advancing into Tunisia from the west came close enough to require coordinated command during the Tunisia Campaign . History 18th ArmyGroup was commanded by General Sir Harold ..., Operation Torch . 18th ArmyGroup was faced by two Nazi Germany German Armies, German Panzer Army Afrika Panzer Army Afrika under Generalfeldmarschall Erwin Rommel and 5th Panzer Army under Generaloberst ... ArmyGroup was disbanded in Tunisia on 15 May 1943. Category Army groups of the British Army Category ... Army in World War II 18 ArmyGroup nl 18e Legergroep ... , Commander in Chief AFHQ . Its principal formations were the Eighth Army, under General Bernard Montgomery, 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein Bernard Montgomery and First Army under Lieutenant General Kenneth Arthur Noel Anderson Kenneth Anderson . Eighth Army had three British Army corps under ... after winning a victory at the Second Battle of El Alamein in November 1942. First Army had four ... corps were U.S. II Corps and French XIX Corps . First Army controlled the forces that had landed in Morocco .... Both First Army and Eighth Army had enjoyed very quick initial success in their campaigns ... defended area produced. 1st Army in particular received stinging blows from Rommel at the Battle ... engagement and an Allied consolidation, a fresh attack was launched. First Army lead the main attack, with Eighth Army providing support along the eastern coast of Tunisia. That attack lead eventually ... more details
ArmyGroup H Heeresgruppe H was a German armygroup in the Netherlands and in Nordrhein Westfalen during World War II . ArmyGroup H for Holland was activated on November 11, 1944 in the Netherlands. It contained the 1st Parachute Army Germany 1st Parachute Army and the 15th Army Wehrmacht 15th Army in January 1945 replaced by the 25th Army Wehrmacht 25th Army . It garrisoned the Netherlands with twelve divisions. In March 1945 the armygroup became Oberbefehlshaber Nordwest OB Nordwest, the Northwest High Command under Ernst Busch military Ernst Busch . After being pushed from the Rhine by Operation Varsity , on 4 May 1945 OB Nordwest capitulated on the L neburg Heath L neburger Heide to Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein Montgomery . Commanding generals Generaloberst Kurt Student November 1, 1944 January 28, 1945 Generaloberst Johannes Blaskowitz January 28, 1945 April 15, 1945 Generalfeldmarschall Ernst Busch military Ernst Busch April 15, 1945 May 4, 1945 Army Groups Germany Category Army groups of the German Army Centre be H bg de Heeresgruppe H et V egrupp H es Grupo de Ej rcitos H fr Groupe d arm es H it Heeresgruppe H he H ja H pl Grupa Armii H ru H fi Armeijaryhm H tr Ordular Grubu H uk H ... more details