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二战德军装甲师编制

介绍

是时候看看二战中的德国小队战术了。两个要点,首先,一个小队很少在战场上单独行动,它与其排和/或连的其他班协调使用。其次,主要来源是2年1943月发布的军事情报局的美国手册“德国战斗小队”。这是对德国出版物的部分翻译,并使用其他来源,我可以纠正一些小错误和不一致之处,但对所有内容都持保留态度,特别是因为手册和战斗现实经常不同。

德国队

让我们从组织和军备开始。

结构和武器装备

第二次世界大战中的德国步兵小队大部分由2名班长和1名步兵组成,因此总共有9人。
最初,除了机枪手和他的助手之外,所有人都配备了“Karabiner 10 kurz”,德国标准步枪,甚至是班长,但在 98 年左右,他获得了一把 MP1941 冲锋枪,有 40 个弹匣,每个弹匣 6 发。
机枪手配备了MG 32,后来又配备了MG34,他还获得了一把手枪和一个42发子弹的弹药筒。
助理炮手携带 50 个弹药鼓,共 4 发子弹,每个弹药筒的重量为 50.2 公斤。此外,还有一个装有 45 发子弹的弹药箱,重 300.11 公斤。他还得到了一把手枪。

还有一辆弹药运输车分配给机枪手,其工作是携带和供应弹药。他携带了两个弹药箱,每个弹药箱有 300 发子弹。与助手不同,他得到了一支步枪而不是一把手枪。

请注意,“战斗中的德国小队”表示手枪而不是步枪作为弹药载体的武器,但这似乎是不正确的,可能来自旧布局,当时小队由 LMG 和步枪队组成。(资料来源:Buchner, Alex and http://www.wwiidaybyday.com/kstn/kstn131c1feb41.htm)
现在,每个步枪手的步枪大约有 9 个弹夹,每个弹夹有 5 发子弹,因此 45 发子弹。这是常规金额,根据布赫纳的说法,在发生战斗情况时会发出更多子弹。此外,副指挥官的武装方式与普通步枪手相同。
请注意,除了班长之外,其他人都有编号,而机枪手是“Schütze 1”或1号步枪手,这很好地表明了他的重要性。

因此,该班总共有1挺轻机枪,1支冲锋枪,2支手枪,7支步枪和几枚手榴弹,这些手榴弹是根据情况发放的。(资料来源:布赫纳,亚历克斯:《步兵手册1939-1945》,第15-16页;战斗中的德国小队: p.1-3 ;特普弗:第5-7页;公牛:第23-24页)

角色/职责和责任

每个班员的角色/职责和责任如下:
班长指挥部队,他指示LMG应该与哪些目标交战,如果战斗情况允许,步枪射击。他在战斗之外的职责包括部队的装备井井有条,弹药充足。“(《战斗中的德国小队》第1页)
副指挥官是他的助手,在班长不在的时候指挥。他的职责是与排长和相邻的小队沟通,因此他对协调至关重要。“(《战斗中的德国小队》第3页)
接下来是机枪手,他操作轻机枪并负责照顾武器。“(《战斗中的德国小队》第2页)
他的助手会帮助他设置MG,提供弹药并协助他战斗。通常他会留在炮手或他的后方。他必须做好准备并足够接近,以支持炮手完成更换枪管或修复卡纸等任务。如果炮手无法继续操作LMG,助手将扮演他的角色。他还负责照顾武器。“(《战斗中的德国小队》第2-3页)
弹药运输车负责检查弹药,重新填充发射的弹药带,并在位置改变时检查剩余弹药。他通常留在后方和掩体中,但如有必要,可以充当步枪手。(战斗中的德国小队:第2-3页;Töpfer:第6页)
常规步枪手的职责是带着他的步枪和刺刀参加战斗。步枪兵组成了小队的突击部分。因此,如有必要,用手榴弹和刺刀攻击敌方阵地。虽然没有正式指定,但它们也将在不同程度上充当弹药运输船。此外,有些人被指定为榴弹携带者和/或投掷者。(战斗中的德国小队:第2-3页;特普弗:第6页)

地层

现在让我们来看看阵型。基本的紧密顺序阵型是小队线或“Reihe”,小队纵队或“凯特”,基本上是前一个的 90 度转弯,当然还有三月的小队顺序。“(《战斗中的德国小队》第4页)
如您所见,机枪手和他的助手总是在最前面,他是小队的关键成员,这也从他的称号“Schütze 1”或“步兵 1 号”中可以看出。(基地人)“(《战斗中的德国小队》第5页)
这些是不适合危险情况的紧密秩序编队。

小队纵队扩展顺序 – 舒岑雷赫

如果由于地形、敌对活动或其他情况而改变情况,则放弃封闭式编队。基本的扩展秩序编队是小队纵队或“Schützenkette”和小规模战线或“Schützenreihe”。扩展顺序的班纵队不是直线,而是士兵使用地形作为掩护,尽管该线的主要顺序仍然存在。请注意,副指挥官在最后,确保小队保持团结。“(《战斗中的德国小队》第5-6页)

遭遇战线 – 舒岑凯特

如果需要整个小队的火力,则使用散兵线。在这种情况下,步枪手移动到机枪手的左右两侧,机枪手保持在中央位置。步枪兵的前半部分向右移动,另一半向左移动。或者,也可以进行梯队的右或左部署,在这种情况下,所有人都移动到机枪手的右侧或左侧。两人之间的距离约为3.5米(12.5英尺)(原始:5步)。请注意,班长在编队中没有固定的位置。
一般来说,一切都有一个标准的方法,比如小队线的形成或如何部署到散兵线。这意味着必须明确规定与标准的任何偏差。“(《战斗中的德国小队》第5-8页)

领导

在领导力方面,翻译后的手册指出,以身作则是必不可少的。它明确指出:“
为了成为该领域的领导者,上级必须在危险时刻在他的手下面前表现出模范的举止,并在必要时愿意为他们而死。然后,软弱和摇摆不定的人以他的榜样和他无视自我接受贫困和危险为指导。“(《战斗中的德国小队》第10页)

进攻性战斗中的小队

现在,让我们来看看球队在进攻行动中的表现。值得注意的是,进攻性战斗中的小队不会单独行动,而是作为其排的一个组成部分。请注意,每个排通常包含 4 个小队。因此,让我们看看进攻战斗的不同阶段。

攻击阶段

阶段如下:开发、部署、推进、攻击和渗透。请注意,大多数其他源使用较少的阶段,从一个阶段到另一个阶段的过渡可能非常流畅或模糊。“(《战斗中的德国小队》第32-47页)

发展

开发阶段是准备攻击的第一步。步枪连离开了他们的行军路线,分成了 3 个排。这些排自己分成4个小队。然而,小队仍然保持着紧密的队形。机枪和其他重要设备现在不再用手和手推车携带。“(《战斗中的德国小队》,第32-33页)

部署

接下来是部署阶段,即将部队组织成战斗编队。通常,小队是在排部署后立即部署的。班长可能是直接从排长那里接到命令的,也可能是根据排长的任务独立行动的。“(《战斗中的德国小队》,第35-36页)

推进

现在,由于部队现在处于战斗编队,推进阶段开始了。推进最好是在班纵队中进行的,轻机枪在前面。这将允许后方支援机枪和其他武器安全地射击,越过前进的小队。
如果小队处于敌人的有效火力之下,小队需要使用自己的火力通过获得火力优势来支持其移动。应该使用火力和移动,这意味着小队的一部分开火以掩护小队另一部分的运动。这个原则也可以在更大的范围内使用,其中一个小队覆盖另一个小队。“(《战斗中的德国小队》,第36页;Töpfer:第 20-21 页)
如果区域被敌人的炮火覆盖,如果可能的话,它们会被避开,如果不是这些区域需要在快速冲刺的射击暂停期间越过。一般来说,建议在情况和敌人火力允许的情况下使用匆忙。“(《战斗中的德国小队》,第36-37页)

攻击

在小队成功推进后,攻击阶段开始了。虽然一开始区别并不那么明显,因为这两个阶段都可能包括向敌人开火和前进。然而,在前进阶段,只在必要时使用射击,而在攻击阶段,射击通常是一个关键因素。

最初,交火是由支援部队的重型武器开始的,如火炮、步兵大炮和重机枪,这些武器的重点是摧毁或消灭据点。还使用了小队的机枪,步枪兵视情况而定。然而,有人指出:“
[...]为了获得火力优势而进行长时间的交火不是步枪手的任务。在进攻中,归根结底,是用刺刀的步枪兵的强大冲击力战胜了敌人。“(《战斗中的德国小队》,第39-40页)

因此,在这一点上,小队仍然前进。一般来说,小队应该尽可能多地向前移动而不开火,只有在这不再可能的情况下,它才应该与敌人交战。(德国战斗小队,第39-41页)

渗透

最后阶段是渗透到敌人阵地。它通常在距离敌方阵地约 100 m 的地方启动。“(特普弗:第21页)
“在渗透中,整个团队作为一个整体冲刺或开火。如果可能的话,排长会雇佣几个小队从各个方向向目标推进。这样,敌人的防御火力就会分散。这种形式的攻击不再由小队进行,而是由排执行。“(《战斗中的德国小队》,第42页)

重要的是在攻击期间提供最大的火力。出于这个原因,LMG 的位置应该在不冒友军开火的风险的情况下向敌人的位置开火。如果无法达到这样的位置,则应在攻击期间使用 LMG 并从臀部发射。此外,邻近单位应提供额外的火力和/或通过来自另一个方向的补充攻击来支持攻击。
一旦步枪兵接近敌人阵地,指挥的指定榴弹投掷者将使用手榴弹,小队在班长的带领下冲进阵地。“(特普弗:第21页;战斗中的德国小队,第42-43页)

攻击敌方阵地的示例

为了给你一个更好的想法,两个有支援元素的小队将如何攻击敌人的阵地,这里有一个小插图,基于我能说的原始德国手册,但我得到它的文件没有提供直接参考。

在这里,您可以看到左侧的德军阵地和右侧的虚构敌人。两个位置都由带刺铁丝网加固。有一个带有轻型迫击炮的迫击炮坑,在不可见的后部位置可以使用另一种轻型和重型迫击炮。迫击炮将攻击敌方阵地的以下区域。为了支援攻击,两挺重机枪将部署在侧翼。在中央,一个拿着轻机枪的小队将向敌人的阵地开火。突击本身将由两个由轻机枪支援的突击小队执行,第一个小队将直接攻击敌人的阵地,而第二个小队将攻击后方并切断其与增援的联系。“(特普弗:第21页)
一旦攻击成功,班长将确保纪律并为潜在的反击做好准备。

来源

军事情报局:战斗中的德国小队

特普弗,哈利:德国战术手册

公牛,斯蒂芬:第二次世界大战步兵战术 - 小队和排

詹姆斯·伯恩的二战德国地图符号

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pace_(单位)

Oberkommando des Heeres: Hinweise für die Ausbildung der Ausbildung der Infanterie auf Grund der Erfahrungen des Ostfeldzuges, H. Qu. O.K.H., 1.3.1942
http://wwii.germandocsinrussia.org/de/nodes/1212#page/2/mode/inspect/zoom/4

德国装甲掷弹兵第44师和摩托化步兵师1939

介绍

在本视频中,我将介绍德国装甲掷弹兵师的设置,以及其前身 1939 年的摩托化步兵师。请注意,装甲掷弹兵这个词的字面翻译是“坦克掷弹兵”,但现在正确的术语是机械化步兵甚至装甲步兵,但在第二次世界大战中,大多数装甲掷弹兵实际上是摩托化步兵。
在第二次世界大战中基本上有2个装甲掷弹兵师布局,装甲掷弹兵-2和2师。后者只有效几个月,直到它被移除,因为所有德国装甲师和装甲掷弹兵师都在装甲师 - 43组织布局中重组。因此,44组织是战争的最后一个摩托化步兵师布局。(凯利格,沃尔夫:45-44年格利德隆,Bl. 1939 – V- 1945)

摩托化步兵师 1939

那么,让我们从机动部门开始。

组织

它由一个带有装甲车和摩托车部队的混合侦察营,3个摩托化步兵团组成,每个团由3个步兵营,1个反坦克连和1个步兵炮连组成。此外,1个反坦克营,1个重型MG连和3个反坦克连。请注意,重型MG连配备了2厘米高射炮,没有机枪。此外,还有一个工兵营,一个摩托化炮兵团,由3个轻型炮兵营,1个重炮营和1个观察营组成。最后是一个信号营。

主要的后方服务包括供应和运输单位、行政和医疗服务。

数字 – 人力

现在,让我们看一下数字,并尝试保持组织在视野中。请注意,这些数字是针对单个子单元的,因此显示的数字并不总是相加,因为在某些情况下,它们需要相乘。排甚至更小的子单位也看不到。
侦察营大约有386人,一个步兵团共有3106人,反坦克营有708人,工兵营有831人,炮兵团有2837人,信号营有424人。

现在是步兵团的分队,2个步兵营各有864人,反坦克连和步兵炮连约有200人。对于反坦克营的子单位,有一个重型MG连,每个反坦克连有189人和约170人。炮兵团的分队是3个轻型炮兵营,每个营540人,1个重炮营554人,炮兵观察营574人。

对于非战斗单位,供应单位有984人,行政单位有208人,医疗单位有531人。
该师共有16445人,其中军官492人,官员133人,士官2456人,士兵13364人。

1939/1940年的变化

在波兰战役之后和法国战役之前,摩托化步兵师略有变化。每个师减少一个摩托化步兵团和一个轻型野战炮兵营。(凯利格,沃尔夫:1939-1945年格利德隆,Bl. 102 – I- 5)
现在,既然我们知道早期的战争摩托化步兵师是什么样子的,让我们来看看 1944 年这种单位类型的最后一个官方组织,装甲掷弹兵 - 44 师。

装甲掷弹兵-第44师

现在这个名字可能很有误导性,因为通常当有人提到装甲掷弹兵这个词时,他们会展示德国半履带车内或旁边的士兵的照片或视频片段。然而,现实与宣传镜头大相径庭。

即使在战争后期,第44装甲掷弹兵师的基本布局也只使用卡车,没有步兵部队的半履带。毕竟,整个师只有7个装甲半履带。

当然,也有装甲掷弹兵充当机械化步兵并使用半履带,但这些是有限的,通常分配给装甲师和一些罕见的精英部队。所以装甲掷弹兵通常是摩托化步兵,而不是机械化步兵。有些东西,在做这个视频之前,我也不完全意识到。我们来看看部门布局。

组织

它由一个装甲车侦察营,2个摩托化步兵团组成,每个团由3个步兵营,1个重步兵炮连和1个工兵连组成。此外,还有一个工兵营,1个反坦克营,2个坦克歼击连和1个重型反坦克连。一个突击炮营,有3个突击炮连。一个陆军高射营,一个摩托化炮兵团,由2个轻型炮兵营和1个重炮营组成。最后是一个信号营。
主要的后方服务包括供应和运输单位、行政、医疗服务、一个替换营和一个维修单位。现在,让我们看一下数字。

数字 – 人力

侦察营大约有1005人,一个步兵团共有3107人,工兵营835人,反坦克营有708人,突击炮营有602人,陆军高射营有635人(最少607人),炮兵团有1580人,信号营有427人。

现在步兵团的子单位,3个步兵营各有868人,重步兵炮连有102人,工兵连有217人。对于反坦克营的子单位,57个坦克歼击连各有2人,重型反坦克连有117人。3个突击炮连各有64人。炮兵团的分队是2个轻型炮兵营,每个营486人,1个重炮营,516人。

就非战斗部队而言,补给单位有667人,行政单位有233人,医疗单位有530人,预备队/后备营有973人,维修部队有281人。

该师共有14732人,其中军官402人,官员83人,士官2766人,士兵11487人,志愿者690人。请注意,这些志愿者是该师官方布局的一部分,而不是前线的临时补充。

比较

因此,让我们比较一下这两个单元。我不会涵盖所有变化,因为有些变化非常明显,例如小的更换,但在组织、设备和总体数量方面有一些重大变化。

组织

侦察元素

首先在组织方面,两个师都有侦察布局,但内部变化相当大。1939版本由一个摩托车公司和一个拥有10辆装甲车的装甲车公司组成。而1944版本有一个总部公司,根据布局,有17或20辆装甲车。此外,3个轻型摩托化步兵连,每个连的武器数量相同,就像摩托车连一样,还有一个重型连,迫击炮的数量增加了一倍。因此,设备和人力的数量都大不相同。1939年的版本有386名男性,而1944年的版本有1005名男性。

步兵单位

现在就步兵团而言,1939 年的版本有 3 个,而在 1940 年这个数字已经减少到 2 个。1944 年的版本只有 2 个步兵团也是如此。步兵营的数量没有变化。然而,步兵炮连改为重步兵炮连,而反坦克炮连则被撤职。然而,增加了一个工程公司,该公司拥有 18 辆火焰喷射器车辆可供使用。

反坦克单位

让我们来看看反坦克部队。1939年的版本只有可用的牵引设备,主力位于3个反坦克连,而1944年的版本只有一个拖曳式反坦克炮连,但有2个连拥有坦克歼击车。请注意,战争早期的反坦克炮可以在战术上由步兵移动,这在75毫米火炮上不再可能,因此引入坦克歼击车对于在战术层面上提供机动反坦克能力是必要的。(维特斯坦,阿德里安:Stumartillerie)

工程单位

工兵营在人数和装备上几乎保持不变。

炮兵部队

炮兵部队有两个变化,小的变化是少了一个轻型炮兵营,但火炮总数是一样的,因此这主要是整体结构的变化。最初的设置有炮兵观察营。这支部队被分配到陆军部队,并在波兰战役后从该师中撤出。(凯利格,沃尔夫:1939-1945年格利德隆,102 – I- 2)

防空

在防空部队方面发生了重大变化,1939年只有一家拥有12门小型高射炮的公司可用,即重型MG公司。1944 年,这种设置发生了重大变化,根据设置的不同,有一个专门的陆军防空营,有一个重型连和一个额外的轻型或中型连。

不同的aa炮不仅位于高射营中,每个步兵营中都有几门,在炮兵营的总部连中,自行式AA炮位于突击炮营中。

突击枪

这个突击炮营,是一个重大变化。1939年只有24门轻步兵炮,1944年这个数字改为8门重步兵炮,但增加42门突击炮显然增加了大口径直接火力武器的数量,以支持步兵的战斗。

其他更改

还有许多其他变化,单个单位的补给连数量增加,此外还增加了维护和其他单位,这是履带式车辆数量增加的直接结果,尤其是坦克歼击车和突击炮。

数字 – 设备

现在,总结一下,对设备数量进行简短比较,我选择了变化很大的各种数字,也显示了某些领域的演变。
1939年,该师只有31支冲锋枪,1944年增加到1230支。就轻机枪而言,数量几乎翻了一番,从 374 挺机枪或我应该说斯潘道斯增加到 732 挺轻机枪。在高射炮方面,轻型高射炮从12门增加到63门轻型高射炮和12门重型高射炮。装备数量也有所减少,1939年师有1323辆摩托车,而1944年的布局只有153辆。然而,在1944年,该师拥有322辆Kettenkräder,这基本上是半履带式摩托车。在反坦克能力方面,最初的设置有72门反坦克炮,而1944年只有19门更高口径的反坦克炮,因为现在有31辆坦克歼击车用于反坦克角色。另外还有 42 门突击炮可以类似地使用。

摘要更改

总而言之,最大的差异是在设备方面是摩托车数量的减少。防空武器的大量增加,突击炮的增加以及大部分反坦克能力从拖曳式反坦克炮转变为坦克歼击车。

铁之心IV

现在,对于所有等待钢铁之心IV分区布局的人,别担心,我没有忘记你们。不久将有一个关于步兵师的更新视频,可能还有一个关于本视频中提到的单位的更新视频。

来源

凯利格,沃尔夫:1939-1945年德国赫勒德隆,特别行动队,斯泰伦贝塞宗。(亚马逊会员链接 - 德国 - 英国)

Wettstein, Adrian: Sturmartillerie – Geschichte einer Waffengattung 或下载 (pdf).

amazon.com amazon.co.uk amazon.ca amazon.de

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链接

志愿者 – HiWi

纳夫齐格布局

装甲掷弹兵师

Kurzchronik(检查一些单位名称)

HOI 4 – 历史步兵师布局 – 早期战争 #Hearts 铁

Intro

In this video I will cover several Infantry Division Layouts from World War II. Although certain parts of the content is tailored for Hearts of Iron players most of the information is military history, only the initial remarks are mostly Hearts of Iron and methodology specific, so just skip ahead on click on the annotation on the screen.

Hearts of Iron IV

Be aware though that these layouts are aimed at being as historical as possible within the Hearts of Iron division builder, thus I am not sure how well they work in HOI 4. This is first and foremost a military history channel, thus I am mainly here for the historical flavor, the German accent and not to support your ambitions in conquering the world, at least for now.
I won’t use the division builder, since I generally try to avoid any copyrighted material and it would actually make everything more complicated and time-consuming. Yet, you will get in one shot the proposed HOI 4 setup and the historical setup together, so you can basically copy it and also learn a bit about the real units too. On the homepage, you can find the proper high resolution screenshots of these layouts see the link on screen and in the description.

Methodology & Accuracy

Some words about methodology and accuracy, if you want to discuss these layout listen to this section very carefully and if you can’t wait for the layouts, you might skip ahead by clicking the button on screen.

Well, figuring out the correct layouts can be quite complicated. Here are a few reason why. You need to be aware that some divisions – especially tank divisions – changed quite considerably throughout the war, thus I usually provide a date for each layout. Another major pitfall is the naming, what one country called a regiment was sometimes something different in another, thus this it was not as straightforward as it seems. Also there were even quite some difference within each country, e.g., a German tank division in 1939 had way more tanks than in 1941, or an US Army Battalion in 1942 was usually larger than an US Army Battalion after the reorganization of September 1943, well, except for two divisions of sixteen armored divisions.
Hence my approach was as follows, it consisted of looking at the data in hearts of Iron, checking the historical division layouts then compare these information to equipment and manpower tables to see if the numbers match for different units.

This process revealed quite some interesting information about hearts of Iron too. First I looked at the data of Hearts of Iron, namely how many manpower and equipment each unit had. This confirmed my assumption that the so called support companies are more like support battalions, only the three smallest ones the engineer, AA and artillery company have 300 men, the others have 400 or even 500 men. Whereas companies were usually around 100 to 200 men. Furthermore, the number of artillery guns for an artillery battalion in game is 36, whereas in real life this was the number of three battalions at least for the German and US Army Infantry division. I don’t know if this is an error on behalf of paradox or if an artillery battalion in game actually should represent a regiment or maybe it is for gameplay balancing reasons. For this video I assume that an artillery battalion in game, is also an artillery battalion historically, if this is not the case, just divide the number of proposed artillery battalions by 3 and you should be fine.

The second step was to look at the organization of these units and the third step was to look at the number of equipment tables and compare if it matches the organization, because the organization can sometimes be misleading. As an example. although an US Army infantry division didn’t have a dedicated anti-tank battalion like a German infantry division, but it had 57 anti-tank guns whereas the German division had only a few more with 75, but some these were also part of the recon battalion, so one might argue that the US Army Infantry division should have a dedicated anti-tank unit in-game if the German Infantry division has one or both should have none.
As you can see it is a bit complicated, thus, take all the following information with a grain of salt, because I had to use a wide variety of sources of different quality and level of detail, which is problematic in itself, but additionally the chances for errors increases due the variety and amount of data. To balance this, I usually added a short explanation why or why not I went with the proposed setup and provide the basic data for my reasoning.

German Infantry Division 1940

So, let’s get started, the Allied Grand Strategy in World War II was “Germany First” and it worked out, so let’s begin with a German Infantry Division from 1940.
It consisted of an Engineer Battalion, an Anti-Tank Battalion, a Recon battalion, an artillery regiment, which consisted of a heavy artillery battalion and 3 artillery battalions, additionally a signal battalion and finally 3 infantry regiments each with 3 infantry battalions. Now the division didn’t have a dedicated medical battalion, but it had 2 medical companies, a field hospital and two medical transport columns with almost 700 men in total, thus I would say this qualifies as a medical battalion. Additionally, it also had maintenance and logistics units attached. So this unit was very well equipped, the only unit type it definitely didn’t possess was an anti-aircraft unit, the division used solely heavy machine guns for anti-air defense. Now, the German infantry division had almost 17 000 men, whereas most other divisions have less than 15 000 men, thus my proposed HOI setup would be as follows:

For support units, an engineer, anti-tank, recon, signal and medical unit. The regular 3 times 3 infantry battalions should get an addition of 2 battalions due to the large amount of men in the division and finally 4 artillery battalions.
Note that for all divisions the non-combat units: logistics, medical and maintenance are the most debatable, because in my sources this information is often not included or limited. Furthermore, their functions sometimes were performed by non-divisional units in several armies.

Source: Buchner, Alex: The German Infantry Handbook 1939-1945 (amazon.com affiliate link)

Soviet Rifle Division 1941

I hope you have your Hammer and Sickle ready, next is a Soviet Rifle Division from April 1941.
It consisted of an a signal battalion, a medical battalion, a supply battalion, an Anti-tank Battalion, an anti-aircraft battalion, a Light Artillery Regiment with 2 battalions, a sapper battalion, one Howitzer Regiment with 2 battalions and 1 heavy battalion, a recon battalion and 3 infantry regiments with 3 battalions each. Yeah, this one seems to tick off all boxes. Yet, in total the division had only around 14500 (14454) men.

But let’s take a closer look at the data, now the number of five artillery battalions sound impressive and the firepower is also clearly more than that of the US and German unit. The number of heavy artillery above 150mm is the same, yet whereas the US and German units use 105 mm guns, the Soviets used 122mm howitzers although 4 less, but additionally they had several 76mm howitzers and cannons, which means that the firepower in artillery at least equal if not greater than the German division. Furthermore, the total number of 54 anti-tank guns is lower than the German division, but similar to the US setup.

Based on this data my proposed HOI setup is as follows:
For support units, an engineer, medical, recon, signal and logistical unit. Then the regular 3 times 3 infantry battalions, to these add one anti-tank and one anti-aircraft battalion. Finally, definitely 4 if not 5 artillery battalions.

Source: Sharp, Charles: Soviet Order of Battle World War II – Volume VIII

US Army Infantry Division 1943

Time for a little bit of freedom, so let’s look at the US Army Infantry division layout from July 1943. It consisted of a Medical Battalion, an Engineer battalion, a divisional artillery unit with a heavy artillery battalion and three artillery battalions. And finally 3 infantry regiments each with 3 infantry battalions. In total this division had around 13000 men.
Now, here is the problem the US Army division had a recon unit, a signal company, a quartermaster company and a maintenance company, but all these units had less than 200 men unlike the German units before. Yet, looking at the data I realized that the division in total had 57 anti-tank guns, which was just short of the 75 from the German division that had some in deployed in their recon battalion, hence my proposed HOI setup is as follows:

For support units, an engineer, an optional anti-tank and a field hospital unit. Then the regular 3 times 3 infantry battalions and finally 4 artillery battalions. Now, the German recon unit consisted to large part of cavalry and only a few armored cars, whereas the US unit had halftracks and 13 armored M8 cars, thus only could also argue that a recon unit could be added as an additional support unit.

Source: Stanton, Shelby: Order of Battle of the US Army in World War II

British Infantry Division 1939

Next up something for those people that love tea, the British Infantry Division in 1939 of the British Expeditionary Force. Now the British unit names were a bit different, they used the names Brigades and Regiments, although those units were usually had the manpower of Regiments and Battalions, I will use the original names, but symbols that are closing in representing their actual strength.

The division consisted of a Division Cavalry Regiment that was mechanized, an Engineer Battalion, a Divisional Artillery Unit that consisted of 3 field artillery regiments and one anti-tank regiment, furthermore a Supply Unit and a medical unit. And finally 3 infantry Brigades each with 3 infantry battalions. In total the division had a bit short of 14000 men.

Based on this information my proposed HOI 4 setup would be:
For support units, an engineer, a medical, a recon, an anti-tank and a logistics unit. Now, although the number of anti-tank guns was only 48, the unit had a large amount of anti-tank rifles and the French provided anti-tank guns for the British divisions, thus an anti-tank unit seem justified. Then the regular 3 times 3 infantry battalions and finally 3 or maybe 4 artillery battalions, because the British division fielded 72 field guns of the 18 and/or 25 pounder type. Furthermore, the unit was quite well motorized and even mechanized with 140 Bren carriers, thus one actually could replace the regular infantry with motorized or mechanized infantry.

Source: Nafziger (Note: that it lists 147 pieces of the 25mm anti-tank gun, a number that seems completely off and likely is, because it was a French anti-tank gun and I doubt they received so many of them.)

Japanese Infantry Division 1940 Standard B

Now the war situation may not necessarily develop to your advantage, nevertheless let’s look at the Japanese Infantry division Standard B around 1940, note that these division varied to a certain degree.

It consisted of an engineer regiment, a transport regiment, a recon or cavalry regiment, Division medical services, a field artillery regiment with 3 field artillery battalions and three infantry regiments with 3 battalions. Note that these artillery battalions were equipped with 75mm guns, thus having far less firepower than all other nations. Yet, these divisions had a very high amount of manpower, depending on the setup between 18000 to 21000 men, thus even outnumbering the German division by far.

Based on this data my proposed HOI setup is as follows:
For support units, an engineer, a medical, a recon and a logistical unit. The regular 3 times 3 infantry battalions should get probably an additional 6 battalions. Finally, I think one artillery battalion or at most 2 battalions considering the rather weak firepower of the 75mm howitzer in contrast to the equipment of other nations.

Source: Rottmann, Gordon: Japanese Army in World War II – Conquest of the Pacific 1941-1942

Italian Infantry Division 1940

Everyone loves Pizza, but I only can offer you one slice, time to look at the Italian Infantry division of 1940.
It consisted of an engineer battalion, a legion of fascist militia that consisted of two battalions, a regiment of artillery with light gun battalion, a light howitzer battalion and a regular howitzer battalion, finally two infantry regiments, which consisted of three battalions each. Yes, only two infantry regiments, this was the so called binary division layout the Italians used. It also had an anti-tank company, but in total just 24 anti-tank guns. In total this division had 13000 men. (In terms of artillery it had 12 guns with 100mm and 24 with 75mm.)
Now, my sources on this one are a bit varied, I have good German source with the overall numbers and high-level organization, but for more detailed information I rely on the Handbook on the Italian Military Forces from 1943, which was created by the US Military Intelligence during the war, so it might not be 100 % accurate, but so far these handbooks are usually quite reliable in terms of unit organizations.

Based on this information my proposed HOI 4 setup would be:
For support units, an engineer unit and with three eyes closed an anti-tank unit. For infantry, we use the 2 times 3 infantry battalions and add an additional 2 battalions, but maybe a third or even fourth, because the total number of men is similar to that of an US Army infantry division, which had way more support units. Finally, I think one or maybe two artillery battalions, because in total there were 24 guns with 75mm and 12 howitzers with 100mm present.

Source: Schreiber, Gerhard: S.56-62, in Deutsche Reich und der Zweite Weltkrieg, Band 3; Germany and the Second World War – Volume 3: The Mediterranean, South-East Europe, and North Africa 1939–1942 (amazon.com affiliate link)

Soruce: Handbook on the Italian Military Forces, August 1943, Military Intelligence Service – TME 30-420

French Infantry Division 1940

Well, after some Pizza, who doesn’t want to enjoy a baguette? So, let’s look at a French Infantry division of 1940:
It consisted of a recon group, a field gun regiment with 3 battalions, a howitzer regiment with one heavy howitzer battalion and a regular one, 3 infantry regiments with 3 battalions each. Additionally, there were several anti-tank companies with a total of 58 anti-tank guns and 2 engineer companies, which were originally organized in a battalion but reorganized in 1939.
In total the division had around 17 500 men. But note that in this case my sources are quite sparse and of limited quality.

Hence my proposed HOI 4 layout is as follows:
For support units, an engineer unit, an anti-tank unit and a recon unit. The regular 3 times 3 infantry battalions should get an additional 3 battalions, because the division has more men than the German division and also less support units. For the artillery battalions, I think three are in order, because it had 36 field guns with 75mm, 12 howitzers with 105mm and 12 howitzer with 155mm.
Source: Sumner, Ian; et. al: The French Army: 1939-45

Source: Nafziger

Polish Infantry Division 1939

So, in case you want to go into space, here is the Polish infantry division organization for 1939. In this case my data is way more limited than with the previous divisions, especially in terms of the support units, so keep a bit more salt ready.

The division consisted an Engineer Battalion, a light artillery regiment consisting of two light artillery battalions and one regular artillery battalion. Yet, it also had a small detachment with bigger guns, but overall it couldn’t compete with the US or German division in this regard. And as usually it had 3 infantry regiments each with 3 infantry battalions. It had several medical units, but I have no numbers, nevertheless I assume it would be sufficient for a medical battalion. Similar to the German division the Polish division has more than other countries with around 16 500 men.

The division had quite many companies attached, like several anti-tank, a bicycle, an MG, and a cavalry company. Thus, one could argue that these units qualify together as a recon and/or anti-tank unit, although the total number of anti-tank guns was only 27 guns, which is less than half of the US Infantry division anti-tank guns. Based on that data my proposed HOI setup is as follows:
For support units, an engineer, a medical, maybe a recon and with two eyes closed an anti-tank unit. The regular 3 times 3 infantry battalions should get two additional battalions, 2 artillery battalions and maybe a third artillery battalion.

Sources:
Ellis, Johen World War II – A Statistical Survey – The Essential Facts & Figures for All the Combatants, Edition: 1995 reprinted with corrections

Niehorster

Nafziger

Romanian Infantry Division 1941

And the last division layout for this video, the setup of the Romanian Infantry Division of 1941.
It consisted of a recon battalion, an engineer battalion, a field artillery regiment with 2 light battalions and a regular battalion, an artillery regiment with a light field artillery battalion and regular battalion and 3 infantry regiments with 3 infantry battalions each.
Additionally, it had an anti-tank and anti-aircraft company, furthermore each of the regiments had an anti-tank company, but these units were usually not sufficiently equipped. In total it would be around 30 anti-tank guns. About the signal and medical units, my source for the layout on the Romanian units is good, but it doesn’t include any non-combat units. Yet, since the author notes that the communication and many equipment was quite poor, one can assume that there was no state-of-the art signal unit present and the medical services were probably lacking. The division in total was a bit short of 17 000 men, thus it is quite a large force, especially considering the low numbers of additional units. (Source: Axworthy, Mark: Third Axis, Fourth Ally: Romanian Armed Forces in the European War, 1941-1945, p. 39-42)

Based on this information my proposed HOI 4 setup would be:
For support units, an engineer, a recon and with two eyes closed an anti-tank unit. The regular 3 times 3 infantry battalions should get probably an additional 3 battalions. Finally, I think two artillery battalions, because in total there were 36 field guns with 75mm and 16 howitzers with 100mm present.

Source: Axworthy, Mark: Third Axis, Fourth Ally: Romanian Armed Forces in the European War, 1941-1945

Sources

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Bernhard Kast is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com.

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Bernhard Kast is a participant in the Amazon EU Associates Programme, an affiliate advertising programme designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.co.uk.

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Bernhard Kast is a participant in the Amazon.com.ca, Inc. Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.ca.

Disclaimer amazon.de

Bernhard Kast ist Teilnehmer des Partnerprogramms von Amazon Europe S.à.r.l. und Partner des Werbeprogramms, das zur Bereitstellung eines Mediums für Websites konzipiert wurde, mittels dessen durch die Platzierung von Werbeanzeigen und Links zu amazon.de Werbekostenerstattung verdient werden können.

Online Resources

US Army Armored Division – Organization & Structure – World War 2 #Visualization

Intro

In total the United States raised 16 armored division in World War 2. In September 1943 fourteen of those were reorganized, these are sometimes called the „light“ armored divisions, although this name is a bit misleading, because the main difference was in size and not the equipped tanks. So let’s take a closer look. (Source: Stanton, Shelby L.: Order of Battle US Army World War II, p. 15-20)

Numbers

Such a “light” division in total consisted of around:
11 000 men
54 M8 Armored Cars
54 M7 Priest Self-Propelled Artillery
460 2 ½ Trucks,
450 M3 Halftracks
465 .30 cal Machine guns
404 .50 cal Machine guns
30 57mm anti tank guns
77 Light Tanks like the M5A1 Stuart(, which were later on replaced by the M24 Chaffee)
168 Medium M4 Sherman Tanks
18 Medium Tanks with 105 mm Howitzers
30 M32 Tank Recovery Vehicles
449 Jeeps

Organization

The structure of the September 1943 divisions was without regiments, hence the largest sub-unit is the battalion. The division consisted of 1 Signal Company, 3 Tank Battalions, 3 Armored Infantry Battalions, the divisional Artillery consisting of 3 armored field artillery battalions, 1 Mechanized Cavalry Recon Squadron, 1 Armored Division Trains with a Medical Battalion and an Armored Maintenance Battalion. And 1 Armored Engineer Battalion.

Now every of these Tank Battalions consisted of three Medium Tank Companies and One light Tank Company. Let’s take a closer look.
The Medium Tank Company consisted of an HQ section and 3 Medium Tank Platoons. The HQ Section consisted of two M4 Shermans, one M4 with a 105 howitzer and a jeep. Each of the Medium Tank platoons consisted of 5 M4 Shermans.

The Light Company was quite similar. It consisted also of one HQ section and three platoons. The HQ section consisted of two M5A1 Stuart tanks and one jeep. Each Platoon consisted of 5 tanks. Note that from late 1944 onwards the Stuarts were replaced by the M24 Chaffee Light tank. (Source: Stanton, Shelby L.: Order of Battle US Army World War II, p. 19)

Sources

Books

Zaloga, Steven J.: US Armored Divisions, European Theater of Operations, 1944-45 (amazon.com affiliate link)

Stanton, Shelby L.: Order of Battle US Army World War II (amazon.com affiliate link)

amazon.com amazon.co.uk amazon.ca amazon.de

Disclaimer amazon.com

Bernhard Kast is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com.

Disclaimer amazon.co.uk

Bernhard Kast is a participant in the Amazon EU Associates Programme, an affiliate advertising programme designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.co.uk.

Disclaimer amazon.ca

Bernhard Kast is a participant in the Amazon.com.ca, Inc. Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.ca.

Disclaimer amazon.de

Bernhard Kast ist Teilnehmer des Partnerprogramms von Amazon Europe S.à.r.l. und Partner des Werbeprogramms, das zur Bereitstellung eines Mediums für Websites konzipiert wurde, mittels dessen durch die Platzierung von Werbeanzeigen und Links zu amazon.de Werbekostenerstattung verdient werden können.

Online Resources

M4 Sherman

British Infantry Division 1914/1916 – Visualization – Organization & Structure

Basic Numbers of a 1914 British Infantry Division

In 1914 a British infantry division consisted of about 18100 (18073) men. The division was equipped with 5600 (5592) horses. 24 Machine guns, 54 18 pounder field guns, 18 4.5 in howitzers and 4 60 pounder heavy field guns. (Source: Richard Rinaldi: Order of Battle of the British Army 1914 and others see links below)

Organization of 1914 Division

Now in terms of organization and structure, the division in 1914 consisted of 3 Infantry brigades, which themselves consisted of 4 Infantry battalions each, which consisted of themselves of 4 rifle companies and 1 MG Section each. Furthermore, the division had one cavalry squadron for recon, one signal company, 3 field ambulances, 2 Field Companies of Royal Engineers, 3 Brigades of the Royal Field Artillery each with 3 Batteries, one Brigade of Field Artillery with 3 Howitzer Batteries and finally one Heavy Battery of the Royal Garrison Artillery.

Now, you probably noticed there are no regiments in this structure, and in case of the artillery, there are also no battalions. Furthermore the number of Artillery Brigades is 4, in contrast a German Infantry Division in 1914 had only 1 Artillery Brigade. Yet, those 4 British Brigades have a total of only 72 guns, which is exactly the same number as the German Brigade, which had 4 Battalions. So basically, a British Artillery Brigade is about the same as a German Artillery Battalion in 1914. Now, let’s take a closer look at one of the three Royal Field Artillery Brigades.

Royal Field Artillery Brigade

Such a Brigade consisted of three Batteries, each of this batteries had 6 18 pounder field guns. In total the Brigade consisted of 772 Men, 23 Officers and 748 Horses. Yet, the mainstay of an infantry divisions are always the infantry or rifle companies, so let’s take a look at those.

Rifle Company comparison with German Infantry Company

Each rifle company consisted of 227 Men and in total there were 48 Infantry Companies, which means that almost 11000 (10896) men of the 18100 (18073) served in the Rifle Companies. Similar to the number of artillery pieces in a German Infantry Division from 1914, the number infantry companies was also 48. Yet, a German company had 270 men. Although the total number of men in both division layouts was almost exactly the same, the German division had an additional 2000 men more serving in infantry companies than the British.

Organization in 1916

During the war there were many reorganizations in terms of the division layout. Let’s take a look at original 1914 layout and see what had changed til September 1916. The cavalry squadron, the MG section and the Royal Garrison Artillery Battery had been removed. Meanwhile one additional Engineer Company was added, furthermore, each infantry brigade had now one MG Company and one Light Mortar Battery attached. Additionally, there was one Battalion of Pioneers, 3 Batteries of Medium Mortars and one Battery of Heavy Mortars added. Which is similar to the German developments that also increased the number of machine guns and added mortars to their infantry divisions.

Accuracy

Now, take all these values with a grain of salt, because usually every division was a bit different even without considering combat losses. Furthermore, I combined several different sources here and the author of my main source notes the following: “However, the number of discrepancies among the sources is amazing; even two official history volumes give different numbers for a Regular infantry division in 1914.” (-Richard A. Rinaldi: Order of Battle of the British Army 1914, p. 432)

Related

German Infantry Division 1914/18 – Visualization – Organization & Structure

Infographic – German Infantry Division 1914/1918 – Organization, Structure & Numbers

Sources

Books

Richard A. Rinaldi: Order of Battle of the British Army 1914 (amazon.com affiliate link)

Bruce Gudmundsson: The British Expeditionary Force 1914-15 (amazon.com affiliate link)

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Bernhard Kast is a participant in the Amazon.com.ca, Inc. Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.ca.

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Bernhard Kast ist Teilnehmer des Partnerprogramms von Amazon Europe S.à.r.l. und Partner des Werbeprogramms, das zur Bereitstellung eines Mediums für Websites konzipiert wurde, mittels dessen durch die Platzierung von Werbeanzeigen und Links zu amazon.de Werbekostenerstattung verdient werden können.

Online Resources

Nafziger Collection

British Army WW1 – Organization (Wikipedia)

Infographic – German Infantry Division 1914/1918 – Organization, Structure & Numbers

German Infantry Division 1914/18 – Visualization – Organization & Structure

Infographic – German Infantry Division 1914/1918 – Organization & Structure

German Infantry Division 1914/1918 Organization & Structure- 1,049px × 2,499px

Intro – Basic Numbers of 1914 Division

In 1914 a German infantry division consisted of about 18000 men. The division was equipped with 4600 horses. 24 heavy Machine guns and 72 light field guns. (Source: Stachelbeck: Deutschland Heer und Marine im Ersten Weltkrieg (S. 120) – amazon.de affiliate link)

Organization of 1914 Division

Now in terms of organization and structure, a German Infantry division in 1914 consisted of 2 Infantry brigades, which themselves consisted of 2 Infantry regiments each, which consisted of themselves of 3 infantry battalions and 1 MG Company. Furthermore, the division had one artillery brigade, which consisted of 2 artillery regiments, which consisted of 2 artillery battalions each. Additionally in some cases there were also cavalry, engineer and medical units attached.

Infantry Company in 1914

This structure is quite abstract, so to get a better grasp on it in terms of men, let’s get one level lower. Each Infantry battalion consisted of 4 infantry companies. Since a division had 12 infantry battalions there was a total of 48 infantry companies. Such a company itself consisted of 150 men in peacetime, yet was increased to 270 during wartime. This meant that around 13000 (12960) of the 18000 men served in the Infantry companies.

This Layout was soon changed for various reasons. One was to get a more uniform structure, the structure of 2 subunits levels was replaced with a structure of 3 sub-units. This structure of 3 was still the determining in World War 2 infantry divisions. (Note that changing this structure didn’t necessarily lead to a change in total men or equipment, for instance the numbers of guns for a battery was changed from 6 to 4. (S. 123-124))

Changes during the War

There were many other changes throughout the war concerning the division layout, some were to deal with the change in necessities of the war and others about strategy. To note a few changes, there was the addition of a permanent medical company in 1916 and the increase engineer companies throughout the war. But probably the greatest change was in terms of equipment.

Comparison 1914 – 1918

To give you a short impression on how much an early-war Infantry Division was different from a late-war Infantry division, let’s revisit the initial numbers and compare them to a division that was intended for offensive operations in 1918, the so called “Mob-Division” or “Angriffsdivision”.

The early war division had around 18000 men, whereas the late war had 15000 to 16000 men, note that the second number is an estimate by an expert on this topic.
In terms of horses there was a decrease from 4600 to 4300, since the attack divisions received more horses than regular divisions the number of horses in overall decreased to greater extent than this display might suggest.

In terms of light machine guns there was an increase from 0 to 180.

Furthermore, the number of heavy machine guns also increased from 24 to 108.

Whereas in terms of light field guns the number of 72 was halved to 36.

Yet, there was a significant change in other artillery weapons, whereas the early war division relied solely on light field guns the 1918 division had: 12 heavy artillery guns, 18 light mine launchers and 6 medium mine launchers. Note that the mine launcher in German is called “Minenwerfer” meaning literally “mine thrower”, which is the old German name for a mortar.
(Source: Stachelbeck: Deutschland Heer und Marine im Ersten Weltkrieg (S. 120) – amazon.de affiliate link)

End Note – Visualization of the men to machine gun ratio

As you can clearly see, the number of machine guns increased substantially by more than 10 times from 24 to 288 machine guns, thus several times multiplying the amount of firepower of the division.

To illustrate in 1914 there was one machine gun for every 750 men. Whereas in 1918 there was a machine gun for every 56 men.
The number of artillery pieces in total didn’t change and stayed at 72, but the number of types was increased and thus resulted in a far more versatile artillery force. The heavy artillery provided more firepower and the mortars allowed for short range indirect fire in close coordination with the infantry, thus the overall flexibility and effectiveness of the division was increased without increasing the total number of artillery pieces itself.

Sources

Books

Stachelbeck, Christian: Deutschland Heer und Marine im Ersten Weltkrieg (amazon.com link)

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Bernhard Kast is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com.

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Bernhard Kast ist Teilnehmer des Partnerprogramms von Amazon Europe S.à.r.l. und Partner des Werbeprogramms, das zur Bereitstellung eines Mediums für Websites konzipiert wurde, mittels dessen durch die Platzierung von Werbeanzeigen und Links zu amazon.de Werbekostenerstattung verdient werden können.

Online Resources

Reorganization of the German Army, 1914-1918

Artillery of the Great War

Imperial Roman Army – Organization & Structure

Intro

The Roman Imperial Army consisted of

  • Provincial Armies
  • Garrison in Rome
  • And the Navy

The brunt of the forces was in the Provincial armies that were made up by the legions and their auxiliaries in total around 240k men. The Garrison in Rome was about 15k men, although few in numbers these units were the most powerful in political terms. Finally, the Navy consisted of about 45k men.

Base Organization

  • Garrison in Rome
    • Praetorian Cohorts
    • Urban Cohorts
    • The Vigiles
  • Provincial Armies
    • Legions
    • Auxiliaries
  • Navy

Garrison in Rome

Let’s start with the Garrison in Rome. They consisted of the Praetorian Cohorts, the Urban Cohorts and the Vigiles.

Praetorian Cohorts

The Praetorian Cohorts were the guards of the Emperor and went on campaigns with him. These were elite soldiers that were ideally suited for peaceful and less peaceful duties. Due to their proximity to the Emperor and military power they had a major influence on who became the next Emperor. Thus, the first act of an Emperor usually consisted in ensuring the loyalty of the Praetorians, this was done in different ways such as paying large donations or replacing them with loyal legion units. [4 Symbols]
The number of Praetorians ranged widely from about 5 000 to 10 000 men.

These cohorts were under the orders of one of two prefects. Each cohort was lead by a tribune and six centurions.

Urban Cohorts

Additionally to the Praetorians there were another 3 cohorts in the vicinity of Rome the so called Urban Cohorts. Each consisted of 500 men each. They mainly served as a police force within Rome, e.g., they dealt with the control of slaves and unruly citizens. Originally they were under the authority of the city administration, but in the 2nd century this was changed and they were more closely linked to the Emperor.

Vigiles

Finally, the vigils was a force of 7 cohorts with 1000 men each. Their main function was firefighting and patrolling the streets at night, nevertheless they were lead as a military unit.

Provincial Armies

Whereas the units in Rome were the most important in political terms, the most important military units were the provincial armies consisting of the legions and auxiliaries.

Legions

Every province that bordered to barbarian region had one or more legions stationed in it. They were commanded by a legate who also was the governor of the province. If a province had several legions stationed in it, the governor was also the army legate that had command over the legates for each legion. The legates were chosen carefully depending on the circumstances of the province, because being a legate was a step in political career not a military one. The other officers in the legion command were six military tribunes and the camp prefect. The military tribunes were split in two groups, one of them was from the highest social class and this was basically his apprenticeship in command. The other five tribunes were form the upper class and had no command authority but fulfilled administrative duties. The third in command was the camp prefect, which was a senior position in a military career and usually held by men in their fifties.
The number of legions only varied a little bit and was usually around 25 to 30 legions. A few were lost or disbanded. Probably the most notable loss occurred in the early Empire, when the Germans were less welcoming to other civilized cultures and destroyed three legions in the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest.

A legion consisted of around 5000 men of mostly heavy infantry and some cavalry. The infantry was made up by 10 cohorts each with 6 centuries consisting of 80 men each. The attached cavalry unit had 120 men. Note that these numbers varied later on. Most notably, is doubling the number of soldiers in the first cohort.

Contubernia (8 men) x 10 = century; 2 x century = maniple (160). Century basic unit of the legion. Cohort = 6 centuries. 10x cohorts = Legion;
First cohort, 5 x double centuries; 5 x 180 = 800

Now a legion was an elite unit of mostly heavy infantry, thus it was important to conserve its forces and also to support it with more agile troops.

This is where the Auxiliaries come in.

Auxiliaries

Each legion had its own Auxiliaries attached. These were made up by men from the lower class that had no Roman citizenship. that was free, but had no Roman citizenship.
Their manpower was about equal to that of the legion, but without a central command structure beyond the cohort. Auxiliaries units were lighter, more mobile and also more expandable. They usually made first contact with the enemy, allowing the legate to conserve his legionnaires for the decisive engagements.

The Navy

Now, to the final the part to the Roman Navy, which was permanently established in beginning of the Empire. Nevertheless, it was never was as important as the legions. Furthermore, the information about the Navy in certain areas is scarce and quite disputed. Its main functions were securing the seas and to support the legions in various campaigns.
The Navy was organized into fleets, each fleet was commanded by a prefect and consisted of squadrons of probably 10 ships each. A captain commanded a ship, whereas a centurion was in charge of the crew.

Unlike in most movies, the rowers of Roman galleys usually were not slaves and were expected to take part in combat at sea and on land.
The two major fleets, where based on the Eastern coast and Western Coast. Each fleet consisted of about 50 ships mostly triremes. There were several smaller fleets mostly in important areas like Egypt, Rhodos and Sicily. But the Navy wasn’t limited to the sea. There were river fleets too, e.g., on the Danube. These rivers fleets were used for patrolling the borders and various support duties.

Some fleets were established temporarily to support campaigns of the Legion, e.g., a fleet used on the Rhine and German North Sea.

Summary & Conclusion

The Imperial Roman Army had to maintain order in a vast area with various different challenges and enemies. To adapt to these challenges a diverse force was needed, ranging from elite troops on the fringes of the Empire to firefighters within the walls of Rome. Considering the secondary role of the fleet in an Empire that covered the whole Mediterranean underlines that Rome was first and foremost a land power. Thus the quote “all roads lead to Rome” is not without merit.

Related Articles

Recruitment of the Imperial Roman Army
Imperial Roman Army – Training

Sources

Books

amazon.com amazon.co.uk amazon.ca amazon.de

Disclaimer amazon.com

Bernhard Kast is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com.

Disclaimer amazon.co.uk

Bernhard Kast is a participant in the Amazon EU Associates Programme, an affiliate advertising programme designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.co.uk.

Disclaimer amazon.ca

Bernhard Kast is a participant in the Amazon.com.ca, Inc. Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.ca.

Disclaimer amazon.de

Bernhard Kast ist Teilnehmer des Partnerprogramms von Amazon Europe S.à.r.l. und Partner des Werbeprogramms, das zur Bereitstellung eines Mediums für Websites konzipiert wurde, mittels dessen durch die Platzierung von Werbeanzeigen und Links zu amazon.de Werbekostenerstattung verdient werden können.

US Army Infantry Battalion Structure & Attack Tactics World War 2 (1944)

This is the script for the video, not an article.

US Army Infantry Battalion Numbers

In 1944 an US Army infantry battalion roughly consisted of 900 men.
These were divided up in the HQ Company with 120 men.
Three rifle companies with 190 men each.
A weapons company with 160 men and
a medical detachment with 30 men.

The HQ Company was equipped with

  • 8 bazookas
  • 3 57mm anti-tank guns
  • 2 .50 cal and
  • 6 .30 cal machine guns.

Each rifle company had

The weapons company had

  • 6 bazookas
  • 8 81mm mortars
  • One .50 cal and
  • 8 water cooled .30 cals for supporting the other companies

And finally the medical detachment had bandages, probably.

Tactics: Attack against an organized position

Before we take a closer look at how an infantry battalion attacks an organized position, Some basics: artillery and smoke were used to support the attack. The Field Manual states that “in the presence of the enemy, fire must be used to protect all movements not masked by cover, or by fog, smoke, or other conditions of reduced visibility.”
The attack against the enemy position would consist of a main and secondary attack. Depending on the situation, each of those would be performed by a different set of units. The battalion consisted of 3 rifle companies, let’s call them Able, Bravo and Charlie. In this case Able company carries out the main attack, Bravo company performs the secondary attack and Charlie company is kept as reserve to exploit any breakthrough or to fight off counter-attacks. Finally, the weapons company would support the main attack.

The main attack was usually directed against the weakest point of the enemy defense. In order to increase power of the main attack, it was conducted on a narrower zone than the secondary attack.
The main purpose of the secondary attack is to prevent the enemy from providing a concentrated defensive effort. This could be done in two ways, either by advancing or by simply providing fire support. In this video we only look at the advancing version.

Secondary attack with advance

Here is the situation, the German positions are at the top. The main attack is directed against a position on the left side performed by Able Company, which will be supported by the weapons company with its mortars and machine guns.

Ideally the secondary attack should mislead the enemy, into committing reserves away from the main attack. Thus Bravo Company is assigned a terrain objective which it should attack with full force. Finally, Charlie Company is staying in cover ready to exploit any breakthroughs.
We can assume that the company commanders usually weren’t informed on what kind of attack they were performing, because the Field Manual states: “In attack orders, however, the battalion commander does not distinguish between nor use the terms “main attack” and “secondary attack.” Although, practice and field manuals usually deviate from each other.

The main and secondary attack are performed in conjunction, thus the enemy can’t focus his defense on one point. The narrower attack space of the main attack and the support from the weapons company allow for a breakthrough in the enemy line.

Able Company now attacks the flanks of the enemy line, while Charlie Company is brought through the gap in the line to exploit the situation. Meanwhile the weapons company moves up to continue its support of the attacking units, if necessary. Depending on the situation and objectives the companies would continue to attack the flanks or break into the rear areas.

Sources

Books

Amazon.com (affiliate link): Stephen Bull: World War II Infantry Tactics: Company and Battalion
Amazon.de (affiliate link): Stephen Bull: World War II Infantry Tactics: Company and Battalion

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Websites & Online materials

Authorized Organization – 1944 Infantry Division – Infantry Battalion (niehorster.org)

Field Manual 7-20 Infantry Battalion 1944

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German Tank Division (1939) – Organization and Structure – Visualization

Video

Below is the Script to video, note that this is not an article and is probably not really meaningful without the video.

Intro – Distribution of Men

A German Tank division in 1939 consisted of about 12000 men. 3000 of them were assigned to the Tank Brigade, 3200 to the motorized infantry brigade and 1200 to the artillery regiment.
The remaining 5600 were assigned to supply, recon, engineering, anti-tank, signaling and staff units.

Tank Brigade – Intended Composition

Now let’s take a look at the composition of the tank brigade. It consisted of 90 Panzer II, 162 Panzer III, 60 Panzer IV and 12 Panzerbefehlswagen – a command tank. Hence, a total number of 324 tanks. But this was the intended composition. So let’s take a look at actual composition.

Tank Brigade – Historical Composition for the 1st Tank Division – “1. Panzer Division”

These are the numbers for the “Erste Panzer Division” the First tank division. It had 93 Panzer I, a tank never intended for combat and only armed with machine guns. 122 Panzer II, a mere 26 Panzer III, 56 Panzer IV and 12 Panzerbefehlswagen. Thus, giving a total of 309 tanks, slightly below the intended size, but numbers without context are like most politicians, quite useless and untrustworthy.

Comparison Intended vs. Historical Setup

On the left side the intended setup, with a lot of Panzer III, which was back in 1939 the main battle tank of the German Army. Yet on the others side we have a lot of Panzer I, a tank never intended to see combat. But the Panzer I needed to fill most the ranks of the missing Panzer III. Also the Panzer II was no proper substitute for the Panzer III or Panzer IV in terms of combat performance.

Now, a closer look on the planned organization and structure of the Panzer formations.

Structure of the Tank Brigade – Panzer Brigade

The Tank brigade consisted of 2 regiments with 2 battalions each and each of these battalions consisted of a staff company, two light companies and a medium company.
The “Stabskompanie” or Staff Company, consisted of a Signaling Platoon with two Panzerbefehlswagen and a Panzer III. Note that the Panzerbefehlswagen looks like a Panzer III, but it only had a fake gun and turret was welded to the hull. Yet, it was crucial to the performance of the German Panzer units, because it provided important command & control facilities.
Furthermore, the company had one platoon of light tanks consisting of 5 Panzer II.

Light Tank Company – “Leichte Panzerkompanie”

So let’s take a look at the two light tank Companies or “Leichte Panzerkompanie”.
They consisted of a Company Section with two Panzer III. A Light platoon with 5 Panzer II and three platoons of 5 Panzer III each.

Medium Tank Company – “Mittlere Panzerkompanie”

Finally, the Medium Tank Company or “Mittlere Panzerkompanie”.
The Company section with two Panzer IV and the light platoon with Panzer IIs are almost identical to the light companies. But the three platoons all consist of 4 tanks each instead of 5 tanks.
Time to take a look at the big picture again.

Brigade and Battalion View

These companies made up one battalion with 71 tanks. Thus with 4 battalions for the Brigade there is a total of 284 tanks for frontline duty, since some tanks were kept for reserve and command duties.
Now, again this was the intended setup, the number of available Panzer III was very low, thus their roles needed to be filled by other tanks like the Panzer I and Panzer II.

Complete View

So far for the tank brigade, time to take a look at the division as a whole again. Since the tank brigade was supported by an infantry brigade,
90 armored cars, 48 anti-tank guns, 12 anti-air guns and 24 pieces of artillery. Which was a quite considerable amount of equipment

Notes & References

References:
(1) The number of tanks for 1939 in the 1. Panzer Division is from Jentz p. 90 (see sources).
(2) The Numbers of men is according to Müller-Hillebrand S. 163 (see sources) and Niehorster (see sources).

Notes on accuracies:
(1) This is the „ideal/planned“ layout of German Panzer Division in World War 2 as orderd for the 1. Panzer Division. With the Kriegsstärkenachweisungen (K. St. N.) 1103 (Sd), 1194 (Sd), 1168 (Sd), 1107 (Sd), 1171 (Sd), 1175 (Sd), 1178 (Sd) from the 1st September 1939, due to the war and a general lack of tanks on the German side the division probably never reached this setup, especially since the Panzer Division got restructured again and again. From 1939 to 1941 the number of tanks in a Panzer Division decreased by almost 50 %.
(2) Furthermore, the types of armored cars represented in the video is simplified. I know there were around 90 armored cars (Niehorster link) in the division, but I could only determine the exact types and numbers for 56 of those 90. They were Sdkfz 221, Sdkfz 222, Sdkfz 223, Sdkfz 231, Sdkfz 232, Sdkfz 274, Sdkfz 260, Sdkfz 261, Sdkfz 263.

Sources

Books

Müller-Hillebrand, Burkhart: Das Heer – Band 1 – 1933-1939 (S. 163: IV. Panzerdivision)

Jentz, Thomas: Panzertruppen – The Complete Guide to the Creation & Combat Employment of Germanys Tank Force 1933-1942
Jentz, Thomas: Die deutsche Panzertruppe, Bd.1, 1933-1942

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Amazon Associates Program: “Bernhard Kast is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com.”

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Websites

1st Panzer Division In accordance with the 1939/40 Mobilization Plan

This homepage is from the author of this book (series):
Mechanized Army Division and Waffen SS Units – 1st September 1939 (German World War II Organizational Series)

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