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{{Short description|German infantry division (1934 – 1945)}} | |||
The '''17th Infantry Division''' was a ] of ], active before and during the ]. Formed in ], it took part in most of the campaigns of the ] and was decimated in January of ]. Reconstituted in Germany, it surrendered to the Allies in May of that year. | |||
{{Not to be confused with||text=the ] ]}} | |||
{{more citations needed|date=November 2016}} | |||
'''Note''': A German 17th Infantry Division also existed in the army of the ] before ] and took part in the ]. | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2024}} | |||
{{Infobox military unit | |||
| unit_name = 17th Infantry Division | |||
| native_name = {{langx|de|17. Infanterie-Division}} | |||
| image = 17th Infanterie Division Logo.svg | |||
| image_size = 150 | |||
| caption = | |||
| dates = 1 October 1934 – 8 May 1945 | |||
| country = {{flag|Nazi Germany|name=Germany}} | |||
| branch = ] ] ('']'') | |||
| type = ] | |||
| role = | |||
| size = ] | |||
| garrison = | |||
| garrison_label = | |||
| nickname = | |||
| motto = | |||
| colors = | |||
| colors_label = | |||
| march = | |||
| mascot = | |||
| battles = {{tree list}} | |||
*] | |||
**] | |||
**] | |||
**] | |||
**] | |||
**] | |||
{{tree list/end}} | |||
| anniversaries = | |||
| decorations = | |||
| battle_honours = | |||
| disbanded = <!-- Commanders --> | |||
| commander1 = | |||
| commander1_label = | |||
| commander2 = | |||
| commander2_label = | |||
| commander3 = | |||
| commander3_label = | |||
| commander4 = | |||
| commander4_label = | |||
| notable_commanders = <!-- Insignia --> | |||
| identification_symbol = | |||
| identification_symbol_label = | |||
| identification_symbol_2 = | |||
| identification_symbol_2_label = | |||
| identification_symbol_3 = | |||
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| identification_symbol_4 = | |||
| identification_symbol_4_label = | |||
}} | |||
{{command structure | |||
|name= German 17th Infantry Division | |||
|date= 15 October 1935 – January 1943 | |||
|parent=] | |||
|subordinate= Infantry Regiment 21<br>Infantry Regiment 55<br>Infantry Regiment 95<br>Divisional units 17 | |||
}} | |||
{{command structure | |||
|name= German 17th Infantry Division | |||
|date= January 1943 – 8 May 1945 | |||
|parent=] | |||
|subordinate= Grenadier Regiment 21<br>Grenadier Regiment 55<br>Grenadier Regiment 95<br>Divisional units 17 | |||
}} | |||
The '''17th Infantry Division''' was an ] of the ], active before and during ]. Formed in 1934, it took part in most of the campaigns of the ] and was decimated in January 1945. Reconstituted in Germany, it surrendered to the Allies in May of that year. The division was responsible for a number of ]s.<ref name="Kulesza">{{cite journal |author=Witold Kulesza |title=Zbrodnie Wehrmachtu w Polsce – Wrzesień 1939 (The Crimes of Wehrmacht in Poland – September 1939) |journal=Biuletyn ] |volume=8–9 |issue=43–44 |pages=19–31 |url=http://www.ipn.gov.pl/biuletyn8-9_43-44.pdf |format=pdf |access-date=24 July 2006 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060421155425/http://www.ipn.gov.pl/biuletyn8-9_43-44.pdf |archive-date=21 April 2006 |issn=1641-9561 |date=August–September 2004 |language=pl |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }}</ref> | |||
==History== | ==History== | ||
The unit was formed in October |
The unit was formed in October 1934 in ] under the designation ''Wehrgauleitung Nürnberg''. Shortly after its creation it was renamed ''Artillerieführer VII''.<ref group ="Note" name="Artillerieführer">Literally "artillery commander No. 7", a covert name for the commander of artillery of the former 7th Infantry of the Reichswehr who took command of the newly formed unit of the Wehrmacht and after whom the unit was named in order to conceal its size, and to camouflage its numbers</ref> Although created as an '']'' division from the very beginning, both names were intended to suggest much smaller units, as German military strength was still restricted by the ]. After ] renounced the treaty, and officially announced the creation of the ] in October 1935, the unit was renamed to the ''17th Infantry Division''. | ||
The organic regimental units of this division were formed by the expansion of the 21st Bavarian Infantry Regiment of the 7th Infantry Division of the ]. The division participated in the ] in March 1938. During the ] it was reinforced by the ] and attached to the ] of Gen. ]. Under command of Gen. ], the division took part in heavy fighting in ], then in the vicinity of ]. At Pabianice it faced elements of the ] and the ]. After the war, the Poles accused the division of committing atrocities. | |||
] and Herbert Loch 1941, Tschernigow]] | |||
===War crimes=== | |||
Throughout the war, the soldiers of the 17th division committed a number of war crimes, notably in Poland during the 1939 campaign.<ref name="Kulesza"/> In a war crime investigation by the KBZPNP commission, the predecessor of the ], it was established that the first major war crime occurred between 3 and 4 September 1939 in the vicinity of ]. In a large scale mass murder, the soldiers of the 17th Division burnt approximately 80% of buildings in the town and killed without a trial approximately 200 Polish citizens of Polish and Jewish ethnicity, out of whom only 71 people were identified after the war, while the identity of the remaining victims was impossible to establish as they were war refugees unknown to local inhabitants.<ref name="Kulesza-Złoczew">Witold Kulesza, op.cit., pp.22–24</ref> Some of the victims were burnt alive, while the bodies of other people were thrown into burning houses. After the war the Polish authorities presented the ] prosecutors' office with the documents of the investigation, as well as the detailed information on the 71 identified victims. However, the latter declined to prosecute the war crimes on various grounds. The German authorities argued that it was impossible to determine which units of the 17th Division took part in the crimes as the 1st chapter of the war diary of Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler Regiment was missing. Moreover, the German prosecutors argued, that ''the deeds described by the witnesses must have been directly related to warfare, notably struggle against the partisans'' ]"] and that all of the civilian victims were ''hostile towards the German forces''.<ref name="Kulesza-Złoczew"/> The only two cases excluded from that reasoning was the murder of a 1½ year old child murdered with a butt of a German soldiers' rifle and the case of a wounded woman thrown into a burning house. The earlier case was explained as a common crime (and as such subject to ]), while the latter case was turned down due to ''inability to find the direct responsible''.<ref name="Kulesza-Złoczew"/> The same reasoning was given for the case of 10 Polish peasants executed in the nearby village of Grójec Wielki after a Polish reconnaissance plane appeared in the area.<ref name="Bojarska">{{cite journal | author =Barbara Bojarska | title =Zbrodnie Wehrmachtu w Złoczewie (Crimes of the Wehrmacht in Złoczew) | journal =Dziennik Zachodni | issue =3 |year= 1962|language=pl}}; as cited in: {{cite web | author=Tomasz Bartosik | title=Złoczew i Solec we wrześniu 1939 r. (Złoczew and Solec in September 1939) | publisher=Złoczew.bazagmin.pl | year=2002 | work=Baza Gmin | url=http://www.bazagmin.pl/menu/zakladki.php?id_klienta=1F0950&id_zakladki=5049 | access-date=24 July 2006 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060301131937/http://www.bazagmin.pl/menu/zakladki.php?id_klienta=1F0950&id_zakladki=5049 | archive-date=1 March 2006 | url-status=dead | df=dmy-all }}</ref> | |||
In a separate case investigated by the after the war, the KBZPNP commission requested the prosecution of the commanders of the 10th and 17th Divisions, which took part in a mass murder of several dozen Poles in the village of Włyń near ].<ref name="Włyń">{{cite news | author=sta/ kaj/ itm/ reo/ | url=http://www.url.com/ | title=Wystawa o zbrodniach Wehrmachtu w Polsce na Zamku Królewskim (An exhibition on war crimes of the Wehrmacht opened in Warsaw's Royal Castle) | publisher=] | date=23 August 2004 | access-date=24 July 2006| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20060903111727/http://www.url.com/| archive-date=3 September 2006<!--Added by DASHBot-->|language=pl}}</ref><ref group="Note" name="Włyń-explanation">In fact the Polish commission presented the German authorities with documents only on cases of six Polish citizens murdered that day, who were known by name and whose cases could be sufficiently investigated</ref> All cases of the murder of Polish civilians in that village were turned down by the German prosecutors' office on 22 April 1974.<ref name="Kulesza-Oczekiwiania">{{cite journal | author =Witold Kulesza | title =Norymberga – oczekiwania a prawo: efekty działalności śledczej Głównej Komisji w świetle postanowień prokuratur niemieckich (Nuremberg: expectations and the law; the effects of the investigations of the Main Commission in the light of decisions of German prosecutors) | journal =Biuletyn ] | issue =40 | pages =18–25 | issn =1641-9561 |date= 1997–1998|language=pl}}</ref> The German authorities argued, that ''it is not impossible that all the civilians trying to escape from the German forces were in fact partisans''. This was the reasoning in the case of certain Ochecki who was shot to death while trying to rescue his cattle from a barn set in flames by the German soldiers. The German authorities argued that ''it was fair to assume that he was trying to escape from the German soldiers''.<ref name="Kulesza-24">Witold Kulesza, op.cit., p.24</ref> The same reasoning was given in the case of a mentally sick person shot the same day. In the case of Wawrzyn Piecyk, who was killed while being wounded and unconscious, it was argued that ''he might have been pretending to be unconscious in order to escape from the German soldiers'',<ref name="Włyń"/><ref name="Kulesza-24"/> while the case of Józef Jawor, a man who did not stop when requested to and instead hid in his house, where he was shot through the doors, was explained as ''a killing done during a fight''.<ref name="Kulesza-24"/> The case of Maria Konieczna, a deaf woman who was shot after not responding to a German soldier, was considered a ] (and thus subject to non-claim), while the killing of Józef Gałka was explained as legitimate, since a picture of his brother in Polish military uniform found in Gałka's wallet ''was a proof that he might have been a partisan himself''.<ref name="Kulesza-24"/> In the same decision, the German authorities declared that the patients of the mental institution in the town of ], killed by the soldiers of the 17th Division in the hospital and dressed in hospital pyjamas, were victims of a common crime rather than a war crime or a murder, and thus subject to non-claim. | |||
In addition to that, the '']'' regiment attached to the 17th Division was notorious for burning all villages it passed through.<ref name="Butler">{{cite book | author =Rupert Butler | title =SS-Leibstandarte: The History of the First Division 1934–1945 | year =2001 | publisher =Zenith Imprint | isbn =0-7603-1147-1 | url =https://books.google.com/books?id=Jmga9yWKeFgC&pg=RA3-PA23-IA22&lpg=RA3-PA23-IA22&dq=17th+division | page =23 | access-date= 16 June 2010 <!--Added by DASHBot-->}}</ref> | |||
===After the invasion of Poland=== | |||
The organic regimental units of this division were formed by the expansion of the 21st Bavarian Infantry Regiment of the 7th Infantry Division of the ]. The division participated in the ] in March of 1938. During the ] it was reinforced by the infamous ] and attached to the ] of Gen. ]. Under command of Gen. ], the division took part in heavy fights in ], then in the vicinity of ]. At Pabianice it faced elements of the ] and the ]. During the war against Poland, the division was involved in a number of ]. | |||
After the war against Poland, the unit was withdrawn to Germany and then took part in the ], as part of XIIIth Corps. Afterwards, in the summer of 1940, the division trained for taking part in the abortive ]. In 1941 it participated in ] as part of ]. In the fall of 1941 it took part in the ]. After sustaining heavy losses, it was withdrawn to France in June 1942. The division returned to the ] in April 1943, fighting around river ], ], ], ] and ]. In August 1944 the unit was shifted to Poland and fought to contain Soviet bridgeheads on the ] river, around ] and ]. | |||
On 1 January 1945, the 17th Infantry Division (then part of ] under ]) had a strength of 10,828 men.<ref name="Lakowski 2008">{{Cite book |last=Lakowski, Richard |title=Die Militärische Niederwerfung der Wehrmacht |publisher=Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt |year=2008 |isbn=9783421062376 |editor-last=Müller, Rolf-Dieter |series=Das Deutsche Reich und der Zweite Weltkrieg |volume=10/1 |location=München |pages=491–681 |language=de |chapter=Der Zusammenbruch der deutschen Verteidigung zwischen Ostsee und Karpaten}}</ref>{{Rp|page=504}} | |||
===Claims of War Crimes=== | |||
Soldiers from the German 17th Infantry Division were accused of having taken part in atrocities during ]. | |||
In a war crime investigation after ], authorities in Communist Poland established that between ], ] and ], ], in the town of ], circa 200 people died . However, no members of this division were charged for any crimes concerning these events or any other war crimes as they could not be directly tied to events. Both ethnic Poles and Polish citizens of Jewish background were killed in this event. Of the dead, only 71 victims were later identified; the rest were refugees, and establishing their identities was impossible. German investigators refused to prosecute those accused of being responsible, citing that there was not enough evidence to prove that any units of the division took part in the massacre. | |||
The division remained in the Warka—Radom sector until it was heavily damaged in the course of the Soviet ] in January 1945. The division was then reconstituted from its remnants and fought in April and May 1945 in the area around ]. At the end of the war it was located in the ] mountains (today Karkonosze). | |||
===After the Invasion of Poland=== | |||
After the war against Poland, the unit was withdrawn to Germany and then took part in the ], as part of XIIIth Corps. Afterwards, in the summer of ], the division trained for taking part in the abortive ]. In ] it participated in ] as part of ]. In the fall of ] it took part in the ]. After sustaining heavy losses, it was withdrawn to France in June, ]. The division returned to the ] in April, ], fighting around river ], ], ], ] and ]. In August, ] the unit was shifted to Poland and fought to contain Soviet bridgeheads on the ] river, around ] and ]. It remained in this sector until it was heavily damaged in the course of the Soviet ] in January, ]. The division was then reconstituted from its remnants and fought in April and May of ] in the area around ]. At the end of the war it was located in the ] mountains (today Karkonosze). | |||
== |
==Commanding officers== | ||
*Generalleutnant ], 1 September 1939 | |||
*Infanterie-Regiment 21 | |||
*Generalleutnant Ernst Güntzel, 28 October 1941 | |||
*Infanterie-Regiment 55 | |||
*Generalleutnant ], 25 December 1941 | |||
*Infanterie-Regiment 95 | |||
*Generalmajor ], 1 April 1943 | |||
*Artillerie-Regiment 17 | |||
*Oberst Scheiker, December 1943 | |||
*Aufklärungs-Abteilung 17 | |||
*Generalmajor Paul Schricker, January 1944 | |||
*Panzerjäger-Abteilung 17 | |||
*Oberst ], February 1944 | |||
*Pionier-Bataillon 17 | |||
*Oberst ], 15 March 1944 | |||
*Nachrichten-Abteilung 17 | |||
*Oberst ], 1 April 1944 | |||
*Generalleutnant Richard Zimmer, April 1944 | |||
*Generalmajor ], 4 September 1944 | |||
==Notes== | |||
==References and footnotes== | |||
{{Reflist|group="Note"}} | |||
# {{note|Artillerieführer}} Literally ''artillery commander No. 7'', a covert name for the commander of artillery of former 7th Infantry of the Reichswehr who took command of the newly-formed unit of the Wehrmacht and after whom the unit was named in order to conceal its size. | |||
# {{note|IPN}} Witold Kulesza – Zbrodnie Wehrmachtu w Polsce – wrzesień 1939. Biuletyn Instytu Pamięci Narodowej nr. 8-9(August-September) 2004. | |||
== |
==References== | ||
;Citations | |||
*Pipes, Jason. "" Retrieved November 30, 2005. | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
*Polish ] Bulletin, Issue 8-9(August-September) 2004. | |||
;Bibliography | |||
{{refbegin}} | |||
* Burkhard Müller-Hillebrand: ''Das Heer 1933–1945. Entwicklung des organisatorischen Aufbaues.'' Vol.III: ''Der Zweifrontenkrieg. Das Heer vom Beginn des Feldzuges gegen die Sowjetunion bis zum Kriegsende''. Mittler: Frankfurt am Main 1969, p. 286. | |||
* Georg Tessin: ''Verbände und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen-SS im Zweiten Weltkrieg, 1939 – 1945''. Vol. Iv: ''Die Landstreitkräfte 15 -30''. Mittler: Frankfurt am Main 1970. | |||
{{refend}}{{Numbered infantry divisions of the Wehrmacht}}{{Knight's Cross recipients of the 17th ID}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:17th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)}} | |||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
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Latest revision as of 03:49, 21 October 2024
German infantry division (1934 – 1945) Not to be confused with the Imperial German 17th Division.This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "17th Infantry Division" Wehrmacht – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (November 2016) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
17th Infantry Division | |
---|---|
German: 17. Infanterie-Division | |
Active | 1 October 1934 – 8 May 1945 |
Country | Germany |
Branch | German Army (Heer) |
Type | Infantry |
Size | Division |
Engagements |
German 17th Infantry Division (15 October 1935 – January 1943) | |
---|---|
Parent unit | Wehrkreis VII |
Components | Infantry Regiment 21 Infantry Regiment 55 Infantry Regiment 95 Divisional units 17 |
German 17th Infantry Division (January 1943 – 8 May 1945) | |
---|---|
Parent unit | Wehrkreis VII |
Components | Grenadier Regiment 21 Grenadier Regiment 55 Grenadier Regiment 95 Divisional units 17 |
The 17th Infantry Division was an infantry division of the German Army, active before and during World War II. Formed in 1934, it took part in most of the campaigns of the Wehrmacht and was decimated in January 1945. Reconstituted in Germany, it surrendered to the Allies in May of that year. The division was responsible for a number of war crimes.
History
The unit was formed in October 1934 in Nuremberg under the designation Wehrgauleitung Nürnberg. Shortly after its creation it was renamed Artillerieführer VII. Although created as an en cadre division from the very beginning, both names were intended to suggest much smaller units, as German military strength was still restricted by the Treaty of Versailles. After Adolf Hitler renounced the treaty, and officially announced the creation of the Wehrmacht in October 1935, the unit was renamed to the 17th Infantry Division.
The organic regimental units of this division were formed by the expansion of the 21st Bavarian Infantry Regiment of the 7th Infantry Division of the Reichswehr. The division participated in the annexation of Austria in March 1938. During the Invasion of Poland it was reinforced by the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler and attached to the German Eighth Army of Gen. Johannes Blaskowitz. Under command of Gen. Herbert Loch, the division took part in heavy fighting in Silesia, then in the vicinity of Łódź. At Pabianice it faced elements of the Polish 28th Infantry Division and the Wołyńska Cavalry Brigade. After the war, the Poles accused the division of committing atrocities.
War crimes
Throughout the war, the soldiers of the 17th division committed a number of war crimes, notably in Poland during the 1939 campaign. In a war crime investigation by the KBZPNP commission, the predecessor of the Institute of National Remembrance, it was established that the first major war crime occurred between 3 and 4 September 1939 in the vicinity of Złoczew. In a large scale mass murder, the soldiers of the 17th Division burnt approximately 80% of buildings in the town and killed without a trial approximately 200 Polish citizens of Polish and Jewish ethnicity, out of whom only 71 people were identified after the war, while the identity of the remaining victims was impossible to establish as they were war refugees unknown to local inhabitants. Some of the victims were burnt alive, while the bodies of other people were thrown into burning houses. After the war the Polish authorities presented the West German prosecutors' office with the documents of the investigation, as well as the detailed information on the 71 identified victims. However, the latter declined to prosecute the war crimes on various grounds. The German authorities argued that it was impossible to determine which units of the 17th Division took part in the crimes as the 1st chapter of the war diary of Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler Regiment was missing. Moreover, the German prosecutors argued, that the deeds described by the witnesses must have been directly related to warfare, notably struggle against the partisans and that all of the civilian victims were hostile towards the German forces. The only two cases excluded from that reasoning was the murder of a 1½ year old child murdered with a butt of a German soldiers' rifle and the case of a wounded woman thrown into a burning house. The earlier case was explained as a common crime (and as such subject to non-claim), while the latter case was turned down due to inability to find the direct responsible. The same reasoning was given for the case of 10 Polish peasants executed in the nearby village of Grójec Wielki after a Polish reconnaissance plane appeared in the area.
In a separate case investigated by the after the war, the KBZPNP commission requested the prosecution of the commanders of the 10th and 17th Divisions, which took part in a mass murder of several dozen Poles in the village of Włyń near Łódź. All cases of the murder of Polish civilians in that village were turned down by the German prosecutors' office on 22 April 1974. The German authorities argued, that it is not impossible that all the civilians trying to escape from the German forces were in fact partisans. This was the reasoning in the case of certain Ochecki who was shot to death while trying to rescue his cattle from a barn set in flames by the German soldiers. The German authorities argued that it was fair to assume that he was trying to escape from the German soldiers. The same reasoning was given in the case of a mentally sick person shot the same day. In the case of Wawrzyn Piecyk, who was killed while being wounded and unconscious, it was argued that he might have been pretending to be unconscious in order to escape from the German soldiers, while the case of Józef Jawor, a man who did not stop when requested to and instead hid in his house, where he was shot through the doors, was explained as a killing done during a fight. The case of Maria Konieczna, a deaf woman who was shot after not responding to a German soldier, was considered a common crime (and thus subject to non-claim), while the killing of Józef Gałka was explained as legitimate, since a picture of his brother in Polish military uniform found in Gałka's wallet was a proof that he might have been a partisan himself. In the same decision, the German authorities declared that the patients of the mental institution in the town of Warta, killed by the soldiers of the 17th Division in the hospital and dressed in hospital pyjamas, were victims of a common crime rather than a war crime or a murder, and thus subject to non-claim.
In addition to that, the Leibstandarte regiment attached to the 17th Division was notorious for burning all villages it passed through.
After the invasion of Poland
After the war against Poland, the unit was withdrawn to Germany and then took part in the battle of France, as part of XIIIth Corps. Afterwards, in the summer of 1940, the division trained for taking part in the abortive invasion of England. In 1941 it participated in Operation Barbarossa as part of Army Group Center. In the fall of 1941 it took part in the Battle of Moscow. After sustaining heavy losses, it was withdrawn to France in June 1942. The division returned to the Eastern Front in April 1943, fighting around river Mius, Nikopol, Uman, Kishinev and Jassy. In August 1944 the unit was shifted to Poland and fought to contain Soviet bridgeheads on the Vistula river, around Warka and Radom.
On 1 January 1945, the 17th Infantry Division (then part of 9th Army under Army Group A) had a strength of 10,828 men.
The division remained in the Warka—Radom sector until it was heavily damaged in the course of the Soviet Vistula-Oder offensive in January 1945. The division was then reconstituted from its remnants and fought in April and May 1945 in the area around Görlitz. At the end of the war it was located in the Riesengebirge mountains (today Karkonosze).
Commanding officers
- Generalleutnant Herbert Loch, 1 September 1939
- Generalleutnant Ernst Güntzel, 28 October 1941
- Generalleutnant Gustav-Adolf von Zangen, 25 December 1941
- Generalmajor Richard Zimmer, 1 April 1943
- Oberst Scheiker, December 1943
- Generalmajor Paul Schricker, January 1944
- Oberst Otto-Hermann Brücker, February 1944
- Oberst Georg Haus, 15 March 1944
- Oberst Theodor Preu, 1 April 1944
- Generalleutnant Richard Zimmer, April 1944
- Generalmajor Max Sachsenheimer, 4 September 1944
Notes
- Literally "artillery commander No. 7", a covert name for the commander of artillery of the former 7th Infantry of the Reichswehr who took command of the newly formed unit of the Wehrmacht and after whom the unit was named in order to conceal its size, and to camouflage its numbers
- In fact the Polish commission presented the German authorities with documents only on cases of six Polish citizens murdered that day, who were known by name and whose cases could be sufficiently investigated
References
- Citations
- ^ Witold Kulesza (August–September 2004). "Zbrodnie Wehrmachtu w Polsce – Wrzesień 1939 (The Crimes of Wehrmacht in Poland – September 1939)" (PDF). Biuletyn IPN (in Polish). 8–9 (43–44): 19–31. ISSN 1641-9561. Archived from the original (pdf) on 21 April 2006. Retrieved 24 July 2006.
- ^ Witold Kulesza, op.cit., pp.22–24
- Barbara Bojarska (1962). "Zbrodnie Wehrmachtu w Złoczewie (Crimes of the Wehrmacht in Złoczew)". Dziennik Zachodni (in Polish) (3).; as cited in: Tomasz Bartosik (2002). "Złoczew i Solec we wrześniu 1939 r. (Złoczew and Solec in September 1939)". Baza Gmin. Złoczew.bazagmin.pl. Archived from the original on 1 March 2006. Retrieved 24 July 2006.
- ^ sta/ kaj/ itm/ reo/ (23 August 2004). "Wystawa o zbrodniach Wehrmachtu w Polsce na Zamku Królewskim (An exhibition on war crimes of the Wehrmacht opened in Warsaw's Royal Castle)" (in Polish). Polish Press Agency. Archived from the original on 3 September 2006. Retrieved 24 July 2006.
- Witold Kulesza (1997–1998). "Norymberga – oczekiwania a prawo: efekty działalności śledczej Głównej Komisji w świetle postanowień prokuratur niemieckich (Nuremberg: expectations and the law; the effects of the investigations of the Main Commission in the light of decisions of German prosecutors)". Biuletyn IPN (in Polish) (40): 18–25. ISSN 1641-9561.
- ^ Witold Kulesza, op.cit., p.24
- Rupert Butler (2001). SS-Leibstandarte: The History of the First Division 1934–1945. Zenith Imprint. p. 23. ISBN 0-7603-1147-1. Retrieved 16 June 2010.
- Lakowski, Richard (2008). "Der Zusammenbruch der deutschen Verteidigung zwischen Ostsee und Karpaten". In Müller, Rolf-Dieter (ed.). Die Militärische Niederwerfung der Wehrmacht. Das Deutsche Reich und der Zweite Weltkrieg (in German). Vol. 10/1. München: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt. pp. 491–681. ISBN 9783421062376.
- Bibliography
- Burkhard Müller-Hillebrand: Das Heer 1933–1945. Entwicklung des organisatorischen Aufbaues. Vol.III: Der Zweifrontenkrieg. Das Heer vom Beginn des Feldzuges gegen die Sowjetunion bis zum Kriegsende. Mittler: Frankfurt am Main 1969, p. 286.
- Georg Tessin: Verbände und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen-SS im Zweiten Weltkrieg, 1939 – 1945. Vol. Iv: Die Landstreitkräfte 15 -30. Mittler: Frankfurt am Main 1970.
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See also: List of German divisions in World War II, Aufstellungswelle |
Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross recipients of the 17th Infantry Division | |
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Units |
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Knight's Cross and Oak Leaves with Jäger-Regiment 75 (5th Jäger Division). |