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The Devil's General: The Life of Hyazinth Graf von Strachwitz, “The Panzer Graf” (Repost)

Posted By: DZ123
The Devil's General: The Life of Hyazinth Graf von Strachwitz, “The Panzer Graf” (Repost)

Raymond Bagdonas, "The Devil's General: The Life of Hyazinth Graf von Strachwitz, “The Panzer Graf”"
English | 2016 | ISBN: 1612004326 | EPUB | pages: 376 | 2.8 mb

This is the story of the most highly decorated German regimental commander of World War II, known as the “Panzer Graf” (Armored Count). An aristocratic Silesian, whose ancestors had faced the Mongols at Leipzig, Strachwitz first won the Iron Cross in the Great War. After fighting with the Freikorps and in between the wars, he was serving with the 1st Panzer Division when the Polish campaign inaugurated World War II.
Leading from the front, his exploits as commander of a panzer battalion earned him further decorations during the French campaign. Transferred to the newly formed 16th Panzer Division, he participated in the invasion of Yugoslavia and then Operation Barbarossa where he earned the Knight’s Cross. The following year, during the advance on Stalingrad, he won the Oak Leaves for destroying 270 Soviet tanks at Kalach. Now commander of a regiment, he reached the Volga and fought ferociously on the northern rim of Sixth Army’s perimeter. Severely wounded during the battles, he was flown out of the Stalingrad pocket and was thus spared the fate of the rest of Sixth Army.
Upon recuperation, he was named commander of the Grossdeutschland Division’s panzer regiment, and won the Swords to the Knight’s Cross during Manstein’s counteroffensive at Kharkov. After fighting through Kursk and the ensuing defensive battles, he was transferred the next year to Army Group North where he won the Diamonds to the Knight’s Cross at Narva.
For the rest of the war, sandwiched around a stay in hospital, he commanded ad hoc battlegroups, and pioneered the formation of “tank hunter brigades,” consisting of deep-penetration infantry armed with panzerfausts and other demolitions who would ambush Soviet tanks. Wounded 12 times during the war, and barely surviving a lethal car crash, he was finally able to surrender to the Americans in May 1945.
Australian author/researcher Raymond Bagdonas, though impaired by the disappearance of 16th Panzer Division’s official records at Stalingrad, and the fact that many of the Panzer Graf’s later battlegroups never kept them, has nevertheless written an intensely detailed account of this combat leader’s life, as well as ferocious armored warfare in World War II.
Ray Bagdonas a retired businessman and former local Government Councilor, has had a decades long interest in WW2 particularly with the Russian Front. His other interest lies in the Military Orders and he is a Knight Commander of both the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre, a Knight of the Order of Mercy and the Military Order of St. Maurice and St. Lazarus. He lives in Brisbane on the Brisbane River with his wife Gail and two dogs Plato and Anouk, a Maltese and Bichon Frise, who sat in the study with him while he wrote.
Table of Contents
Introduction
1 Early Years
2 World War I and Captivity
3 Post-war Freikorps Actions
4 Joining the Nazi Party and SS
5 The Inter-war Years and the Invasion of Poland
6 The Battle of France
7 Romania and Yugoslavia
8 Operation Barbarossa
9 The Battles of Dubno and Uman
10 The Battle of Nikolayev
11 The Battle of Kiev
12 The Battle of Kalach
13 The Road to Stalingrad
14 Inside the Cauldron
15 The Grossdeutschland Division
16 The third Battle of Kharkov
17 To Kill Hitler
18 Operation Citadel
19 The Battle of Kursk
20 Operations Strachwitz
21 The Battle of Tukum
22 The Battle for Germany
23 Captivity and Post-war Years
Appendix 1 The Awards of Hyazinth Graf von Strachwitz
Appendix 2 Rank Equivalents
Appendix 3 Civil Ranks and titles of Nobility
Appendix 4 Holders of the Panzer Assault Badge in Gold
Appendix 5 Aces of the Panzerwaffe
Appendix 6 German Army List of Civil Courage
Bibliography
Index