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The incident prompted false reports of Polish cavalry attacking German tanks, after journalists saw the bodies of horses and cavalrymen. Nazi propaganda [ 3 ] took advantage to suggest that the Poles attacked intentionally since they had believed the Germans still had the dummy tanks permitted by the Versailles Treaty 's restrictions.
Polish Armament in 1939–45 article is a list of equipment used by Polish army before and during the Invasion of Poland, foreign service in British Commonwealth forces and last campaign to Germany with the Red Army in 1945. [1] The list includes prototype vehicles.
The Polish cavalry did not discard the lance as a weapon until 1934 or 1937 and continued to use it for training purposes up to the outbreak of World War II. Although the cavalrymen retained their Szabla wz. 1934 sabres, after 1934 [ 4 ] or 1937 [ 5 ] the lance ceased to be issued as a combat weapon and was retained for training purposes only.
A T-70 light tank. After World War II, Polish T-70s were used in combat against the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (nationalists) units in years 1945-1947. A T-70 was found in the Bieszczady forest and restored. It is now exhibited in Armoured Warfare Museum in Poznań, in running condition since 2013.
The following is a list of all equipment, armament, men and means of transport in use by a cavalry regiment and a cavalry brigade of the Polish Army, as of 1939.The figures for brigades are based on official Polish Army instructions prepared in late 1930s.
Polish Independent Highland Brigade - Gen. Zygmunt Bohusz-Szyszko; 10th Armoured Cavalry Brigade (10éme Brigade de cavalerie motorisée) - Gen. Stanisław Maczek; Polish Independent Carpathian Rifle Brigade - Gen. Stanisław Kopański
The 1st "Warsaw" Independent Cavalry Brigade was then employed against the German position. Two squadrons (companies [2]) of cavalry supported by the elements of the horse--artillery company, having used a ravine to cover their approach to their infantry and tanker brothers-in-arms, charged through the smoke of burning tanks, [3] and achieved tactical surprise with a swift mounted assault that ...
Polish cavalry maneuvers, late 1930s. The Polish Army and its tactics were influenced by the mobile Polish-Soviet War where cavalry was the decisive force. [68] At the onset of war Poland fielded 38 cavalry regiments organized into 11 cavalry and 2 mechanized brigades [31] (though only one, the 10th Motorized, was actually deployed [68]).