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Gustav Krukenberg (8 March 1888 – 23 October 1980) was a high-ranking member of the Waffen-SS and commander of the SS Charlemagne Division and the remains of the SS Division Nordland during the Battle of Berlin in April 1945. After Krukenberg surrendered to Soviet Red Army troops, he was tried, convicted and sentenced to prison by a Soviet ...
The Gustav Sonata is a novel by English author Rose Tremain published in 2016 by Chatto & Windus. It won the National Jewish Book Award in 2016 [1] and the Ribalow Prize in 2017 [2] and it was also shortlisted for the Costa Book Awards [3] and the Walter Scott Prize [4] in 2016 and longlisted for the Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction in 2017. [5]
SS-Brigadeführer Gustav Krukenberg was appointed to command the division, while Edgar Puaud, who had commanded the LVF, was the nominal French commander. [7] The two main infantry regiments were designated as the 57th and 58th Regiments. Members of the LVF were the nucleus of the former and Sturmbrigade formed the core of the latter. [7]
Otto Wächter (also: Baron Otto Gustav von Wächter) Governor of the Kraków District and, later, the District of Galicia in the General Government: 1901–1949: also: Generalleutnant der Waffen-SS: Waldemar Wappenhans: SS- und Polizeiführer Wolhynien-Brest-Litovsk; Nicolajew; Dnjepropetrowsk-Krivoi Rog: 1893–1967: also: Generalleutnant der ...
Gustav Krukenberg: 28 February 1945 – 25 April 1945 SS-Standartenführer: Walter Zimmermann: 25 April 1945 – 8 May 1945 34th SS Volunteer Grenadier Division ...
Although Puaud was the official commander, actual control was exercised by SS-Brigadeführer Gustav Krukenberg, who spoke fluent French. [ 4 ] After spending late 1944 training, the Charlemagne Brigade was upgraded to a division, with the title 33 Waffen-Grenadier-Division der SS "Charlemagne" (französische Nr 1), [ 5 ] Krukenberg was ...
Ziegler was gravely wounded after the break out group he was in came under heavy Soviet fire. He died on 2 May. Krukenberg made it to Dahlem, where he hid out in an apartment for a week, before surrendering to Soviet troops. [16] On 2 May hostilities officially ended by order of General Helmuth Weidling, commander of the Defence Area Berlin. [17]
Twenty-four extant sonatas and sonata fragments are listed in the 1978 version of the Deutsch catalogue: D 154, Piano Sonata in E major (1815, fragment; similarity with the first movement of the Piano Sonata in E major, D 157) I. Allegro (fragment) D 157, Piano Sonata in E major (1815, unfinished – first three movements are extant)