Battle of Velikiye Luki

Battle of Velikiye Luki
Part of the Eastern Front of World War II

Velikiye Luki (red, upper left) and the nearby rail trunks, in the context of the Soviet 1942–1943 offensives. (click to enlarge)
Date19 November 1942 – 16 January 1943
Location
Result Soviet victory
Belligerents
 Germany  Soviet Union
Commanders and leaders
Nazi Germany Kurt von der Chevallerie Soviet Union Maksim Purkayev
Soviet Union Kuzma Galitsky
Strength
LIX Korps – ~50,000 (on 19 Nov)
Reinforcement forces: ~50,000[1]
3rd Shock Army – 95,608 (on 19 Nov)
Reinforcement forces: 86,700[2]
Casualties and losses
Western estimate:[3]
5,000 KIA and MIA;
15,000 WIA
Soviet estimate: ~60,000
killed, missing or wounded, 4,500 captured[4]
104,022
31,674 killed or missing
72,348 wounded[5]
Situation after the initial Soviet advance.

The Battle of Velikiye Luki, also named Velikiye Luki offensive operation (Russian: Великолукская наступательная операция), started with the attack by the forces of the Red Army's Kalinin Front against the Wehrmacht's 3rd Panzer Army during the Winter Campaign of 1942–1943 with the objective of liberating the Russian city of Velikiye Luki as a previous part of the northern pincer of the Rzhev-Sychevka Strategic Offensive Operation (Operation Mars).

Sometimes known as "The Little Stalingrad of the North", the Soviet forces encircled the city on 27 November 1942, but were unable to make much progress against German units further west nor retake a key railway to Leningrad. The German garrison in the city was ordered to hold out for a relief force and put up a concerted defense. As was the case at Stalingrad, repeated German counterattacks were unable to reach the city, and the garrison surrendered on 16 January 1943.

  1. ^ Oldwitg von Natzmer. Operations of Encircled Forces. German Experiences in Russia. – Department of the Army, Washington, DC 1952. (Oldwitg von Natzmer). Washington DC. 1952
  2. ^ Галицкий К. Н. Годы суровых испытаний. 1941—1944 (записки командарма) – М.: Наука, 1973. стр.185
  3. ^ R. Forczyk, VELIKIYE LUKI 1942–43, 2020, p. 90
  4. ^ Великая Отечественная война. 1941—1945 гг. Справочное пособие/ Автор-составитель И. И. Максимов. – М.: Издательство «ДИК», 2005. ISBN 5-8213-0232-3
  5. ^ Glantz (1995), p. 296