Misplaced Pages

Third Army (Romania)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

A field army (also known as numbered army or simply army ) is a military formation in many armed forces, composed of two or more corps . It may be subordinate to an army group . Air armies are the equivalent formations in air forces , and fleets in navies . A field army is composed of 80,000 to 300,000 soldiers.

#76923

31-759: The 3rd Army (Armata a 3-a Română) was a field army of the Romanian Land Forces active from the 19th century to the 1990s. It fought as part of the German Army Group B during World War II , in Ukraine , the Crimea , and the Caucasus . General Petre Dumitrescu commanded the 3rd Army for much of that time. The 3rd Army contained the only Romanian divisions trained by the Germans, and as

62-431: A headquarters, and usually controls at least two corps, beneath which are a variable number of divisions . A battle is influenced at the field army level by transferring divisions and reinforcements from one corps to another to increase the pressure on the enemy at a critical point. NATO armies are commanded by a general or lieutenant general . 4th Army Corps (Romania) The 4th Territorial Army Corps previously

93-792: A numerical name, such as the British Army of the Rhine , Army of the Potomac , Army of the Niemen or Aegean Army (also known as the Fourth Army). The Roman army was among the first to feature a formal field army, in the sense of a very large, combined arms formation, namely the sacer comitatus , which may be translated literally as "sacred escort". The term is derived from their being commanded by Roman emperors (who were regarded as sacred), when they acted as field commanders . While

124-758: A result, it was a significantly better fighting force than the fellow 4th Army during the Battle of Stalingrad . After Romania entered World War I in August 1916 on the side of the Allies , the Third Army defended the border with Bulgaria , while the rest of the Romanian Army engaged in the Battle of Transylvania . When a Bulgarian-German army under August von Mackensen invaded Romania in September 1916,

155-835: The 1st Army Corps ( 2nd Mountain Division and German 298th Infantry Division ). The 3rd Army was subordinated to the German 17th Army . It also had 3 observation squadrons assigned to it. However, after reorganization, on 7 August, only the Cavalry Corps remained with it. Along with the Romanian Fourth Army , the Third Army bore the brunt of the Soviet Operation Uranus , which saw the German Sixth Army encircled and destroyed during

186-547: The 4th Army Corps was a corps of the Romanian Land Forces active from at least 1941 to 2000. Army corps general Constantin Prezan transferred from command of the 3rd Army Corps in 1914 to command of the 4th Army Corps in 1915–1916. The 4th Army Corps was active during the most intense phases of Romanian actions on the Eastern Front of World War II . On June 22, 1941, at the start of Operation Barbarossa , it

217-542: The Battle of Stalingrad . The Romanian Third Army, commanded by General Petre Dumitrescu , was transferred from the Caucasus and replaced five Italian and two German divisions between Blij Perekopa and Bokovkaya, with the task of defending a front 138 km (86 mi) long, far beyond its capabilities. To make things worse, the Soviets had two bridgeheads over the Don River , at Serafimovich and Kletskaya, which

248-467: The "General Lascăr" Group (40,000 men). At this point, the command point of the Third Army began moving to Morozovskaya . On 21 November, the 22nd Panzer Division tried to advance towards Perelasovsky in order to make the junction with the 1st Armored Division and to relieve the "General Lascăr" Group, but failed and was stopped the next day between Bol. Donschynka and Perelasovky. The 1st Romanian Armored Division advanced towards Bol. Donschynka, where it

279-583: The 112th Liaison Squadrons (Fleet 10G) were also at its disposal. In November came the German XLVIII Panzer Corps , composed of the 22nd German Panzer Division and the 1st Romanian Armored Division, which also was put in reserve. It also had the 2nd, 4th, 5th, and 8th Motorized Heavy Artillery Regiments and the 41st Independent Motorized Heavy Artillery Battalion. Opposite the 3rd Army was the Southwestern Front , comprising

310-417: The 15th Infantry Division but were repulsed by evening with heavy losses. Meanwhile, the 7th Cavalry Division unsuccessfully tried to block the enemy's advance; the right wing of the division, which had fully received the blow, retreated south while the left wing was reassigned to the 9th Infantry Division. Also, the 1st Cavalry Division had to retreat towards Stalingrad and was subordinated to the 6th Army. At

341-743: The 1st Romanian Armored Division reached Sirkovsky, making preparations to attack Bolsoy the next day. In the first day of the offensive, the Soviet forces succeeded in making two large breaches in the defences of the Third Romanian Army: one in the center, 16–18 kilometres (9.9–11.2 miles) wide and 15 km (9.3 mi) deep and one in the right wing, between the Third Romanian Army and the German Sixth Army, 10–12 km wide and 35–40 km deep. On 20 November,

SECTION 10

#1732772256077

372-645: The Cavalry Corps (5th and 6th Cavalry Brigades) had been subordinated directly to the German Eleventh Army . In fact the 3rd Army command did not have any operative attributes until 2 July 1941, when the ground offensive started also in the Romanian sector. In 1942 in the Battle of the Caucasus , the 3rd Army initially consisted of the Cavalry Corps (5th, 6th and 9th Cavalry Divisions) and

403-714: The Cavalry Corps (5th and 8th Cavalry Brigades), the Mountain Corps (1st, 2nd, and 4th Mountain Brigades), two separate artillery battalions, a target acquisition battery, and the Air Forces 's 3rd Army Cooperation Command. For Operation München , in the north, the 3rd Army was reduced only to the Mountain Corps (the 1st, 2nd and 4th Mountain Brigades, 8th Cavalry Brigade and 7th Infantry Division), because

434-648: The German High Command ignored, despite repeated requests by General Dumitrescu for permission to eliminate them. At the start of the Soviet offensive in November 1942, the Third Army had a nominal strength of 152,492 Romanian troops and 11,211 German troops, being made up from 1st , 2nd , 4th , and 5th Corps in a single echelon (1st Cavalry , 5th, 6th, 7th, 9th, 11th, 13th, and 14th Infantry Divisions) from West to East, with 7th Cavalry and 15th Infantry Divisions in reserve. The Long Range Recon (DO-17M) and

465-550: The Roman comitatensis (plural: comitatenses ) is sometimes translated as "field army", it may also be translated as the more generic "field force" or "mobile force" (as opposed to limitanei or garrison units). In some armed forces, an "army" is or has been equivalent to a corps-level unit . Prior to 1945, this was the case with a gun ( 軍 ; 'army') within the Imperial Japanese Army , for which

496-399: The Soviet 1st Guards Army , 5th Tank Army , and 21st Army , with a force of 5,888 artillery pieces, 728 tanks, and 790 planes. On 19 November at 0530, in the sector of the Third Romanian Army, a violent artillery barrage battered the entire front line. The weather conditions were harsh: blizzards, snow, −20 °C (−4 °F), which made close air support impossible. The Soviets assaulted

527-403: The Soviet armored and motorized forces advanced towards Kalach , with the intention of encircling the 6th Army embroiled in ferocious fighting at Stalingrad. The 22nd Panzer Division , overwhelmed at Petshany by the large number of Soviet tanks, withdrew north to Bol. Donschynka. The Romanian 1st Armored Division, without any available radio contact, tried to advance to Petshany in order to make

558-493: The Soviet proposal to surrender they were entirely destroyed. Only the 1st Battalion of the 15 Infantry Regiment (6th infantry Division), commanded by Major Gheorghe Răscănescu , succeeded in getting to the Chir River with all its soldiers and equipment. His battalion had managed to prevent the Soviet 8th Cavalry Division from capturing the vital German airfield at Oblivskaya from 26 November to 3 December. On 23 November,

589-573: The Soviet troops of the South-Western Front and of the Stalingrad Front met at Kalach-na-Donu , completing the encirclement of the German 6th Army, parts of the Romanian 4th Army, and six other Romanian infantry divisions as well as one cavalry division. It later fought as part of a Soviet Front after Romania changed sides. From 1947, all four Armies of Romania were transformed into "Military Regions". The 3rd Military Region

620-557: The Third Army made attempts to withstand the enemy offensive at Silistra , Bazargic , Amzacea and Topraisar , but had to withdraw under the pressure of superior enemy forces after the Second Battle of Cobadin . After the Flămânda Offensive , the Third Army was disbanded. The commanders of the 3rd Army during that time were : On 22 June 1941 the 3rd Army comprised the 4th Army Corps (6th and 7th Infantry Divisions),

651-477: The advance and destroy some tanks, but later they had to retreat or face encirclement. The Soviets also attacked west of Sarisa Valley and at Raspopinskaya, but were repulsed. In response to the situation that developed south of Kletskaya, the German 48th Panzer Corps was ordered to move towards the Soviet main thrust and shortly afterwards, the 22nd Panzer Division was redirected to the northwest towards Bolsoy and, reaching Petshany, it engaged Soviet armor. By evening,

SECTION 20

#1732772256077

682-422: The end of the day, the defensive position of the Third Romanian Army had a 70 km wide gap in the centre. In this pocket were encircled the 1st Armored Division, three infantry divisions (5th, 6th, and 15th), and remains of other two infantry divisions (13th and 14th). The former commander of the 6th Infantry Division, Major General Mihail Lascăr , took command of the troops from the infantry divisions and formed

713-612: The formation equivalent in size to a field army was a hōmen-gun ( 方面軍 ; 'area army'). In the Soviet Red Army and the Soviet Air Forces , an army was subordinate in wartime to a front (an equivalent of army group ). It contained at least three to five divisions along with artillery, air defense, reconnaissance and other supporting units. It could be classified as either a combined arms army (CAA) or tank army (TA); and while both were combined arms formations,

744-458: The former contained a larger number of motorized rifle divisions while the latter contained a larger number of tank divisions . In peacetime, a Soviet army was usually subordinate to a military district . Modern field armies are large formations which vary significantly between armed forces in size, composition, and scope of responsibility. For instance, within NATO a field army is composed of

775-479: The junction with the 22nd Panzer Division, but was forced to stop a few kilometers west of Korotovsky by stiff Soviet resistance and numerous counterattacks by Soviet tanks, flowing between the German 22nd and the Romanian 1st, occupying the Varlamovsky and Peralasovsky villages and making the junction with forces coming from Gromsky, thus encircling the 5th Corps. In the 4th Corps' sector, 40 Soviet tanks attacked

806-418: The positions of the 14th Infantry Division with the 5th Tank Army and the junction between the 13th Infantry Division and the 1st Cavalry Division with the 21st Army, with a total of 338,631 men against three weak divisions. The 37mm and 47mm AT guns were useless against Soviet T-34 tanks, so the Romanian troops had to use grenades, anti-tank mines and Molotov cocktails . In the first hours, they managed to delay

837-418: The sense of an entire national defence force or land force. In English , the typical orthographic style for writing out the names field armies is word numbers , such as "First Army"; whereas corps are usually distinguished by Roman numerals (e.g. I Corps) and subordinate formations with ordinal numbers (e.g. 1st Division). A field army may be given a geographical name in addition to or as an alternative to

868-613: Was headquartered in Cluj. In 1960 the Military Regions were reorganized in two armies: the 2nd and the 3rd Army. Following the 1980 restructure of the Romanian Army, four armies were once again created from the previous two. The 1989 order of battle of the Third Army was: 3rd Army Command – Craiova with General Dumitru Roșu  [ de ] as Army Commander, had: Field army Specific field armies are usually named or numbered to distinguish them from "army" in

899-457: Was hoping to find the German division, but the village was under Soviet control and then headed south and, after grim fighting, crossed the Chir River on 25 November. On 22 November, the encircled "General Lascăr" Group, which had been ordered to resist at any cost, was attacked and transmitted its last message. They had run out of food and each gun had only 40 rounds left and after refusing

930-579: Was part of the Third Army and comprised the 6th and 7th Infantry Divisions. By the time the Siege of Odessa was underway, it was part of the Fourth Army , with the 8th and 14th Infantry Divisions under its command. By October-November 1942, approaching the Battle of Stalingrad , it comprised the 1st Cavalry Division and 13th Infantry Division. Its commanders were : In 2000 4th Army Corps

961-482: Was reformed from 4th Army , and became 4th Territorial Army Corps " Mareșal Constantin Prezan " ( Corpul 4 Armată Territorial "Mareșal Constantin Prezan" ). By 2008 it comprised the 18th Infantry Brigade, 81st Mechanized Brigade , 61st Mountain Troops Brigade , 4th Logistics Base, 69th Mixed Artillery Brigade , 50th Anti-Aircraft Missile Regiment , plus combat service support battalions. Corps headquarters

Third Army (Romania) - Misplaced Pages Continue

#76923