Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of Imperial German artillery regiments [1] before and during World War I. In peacetime, the Imperial German Army included 100 regiments of Field artillery (plus the Lehr instruction unit) and 24 regiments of Foot artillery (plus another Lehr instruction unit) who operated the heavier pieces.
Pages in category "World War II artillery of Germany" The following 107 pages are in this category, out of 107 total. This list may not reflect recent changes.
List of Imperial German artillery regiments; 0–9. 2nd Guards Field Artillery Regiment This page was last edited on 13 June 2020, at 20:23 (UTC). Text is ...
This is a list of German military units during World War II which contains all military units that served with the German Armed Forces . Major units above corps level are listed here. For smaller units, see list of German corps in World War II and list of German divisions in World War II .
The cap badge of the Royal Artillery. This list of regiments of the Royal Artillery covers the period from 1938, when the RA adopted the term 'regiment' rather than 'brigade' for a lieutenant-colonel's command comprising two or more batteries, to 1947 when all RA regiments were renumbered in a single sequence.
Staff formed from Artillery Regiment Staff z.b.V. (mot.) 140 on 28 February 1943 with 6th Army in the immediate aftermath of the Battle of Stalingrad. [9]: 40 Heeres-Artillerie-Brigade 288: Army Artillery Brigade 288 Formed in July 1944 from Artillery Regiment 288. Under 4th Panzer Army and near Krakow towards the end of the war. [35]: 23
The Crisbecq Battery (sometimes called Marcouf Battery) was a German World War II artillery battery constructed by the Todt Organization near the French village of Saint-Marcouf in the department of Manche in the north-east of Cotentin peninsula in Normandy. It formed a part of Nazi Germany's Atlantic Wall coastal fortifications.
A Volksartilleriekorps (People's Artillery Corps) was a brigade-sized massed artillery formation employed by the German Army in World War II from late 1944 until the end of the war. A Volksartilleriekorps (VAK) was typically composed of five or six battalions of differing kinds of howitzers and guns, including antitank and anti-aircraft guns.