Battle of Ilomantsi | |||||||
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Part of the Winter War | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Finland | Soviet Union | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Paavo Talvela Per Ole Ekholm | Peter Alexandrov | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
400 initially [2] 4,300 when Group Talvela formed (includes defense at Battle of Tolvajärvi) | Approximately 18,000 [3] | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
422 total casualties [4] 125 killed 275 wounded 22 missing | Approximately 5,000 total casualties [5] |
The Battle of Ilomantsi was fought from 10 December to 16 December 1939, between Finland and the Soviet Union during the Winter War. Fighting took place near the village of Ilomantsi, in North Karelia, Finland.
The Finnish defense initially consisted of ErP 11 ("ErP" stands for "separate battalion", or "erillinen pataljoona" in Finnish) located in the border village of Megri. ErP 11, led by Major Vilho Nikoskelainen, [6] would later form part of newly created Task Force A, led by Major Per Ole Ekholm. Task Force A would in turn be subordinate to newly created Group Talvela, under the command of General Paavo Talvela. Group Talvela would form the defense in both Ilomantsi and Tolvajärvi and was assigned to the Finnish IV Army. The defense of Ilomantsi was the responsibility of Task Force A. [7]
The 155th Rifle Division, led by Brigade Commander Peter Alexandrov, [8] crossed the Soviet-Finnish border at three points and headed toward Ilomantsi. Capturing the Ilomantsi road junction would allow it to threaten Korpiselkä, located 25 miles to the south, which in turn was 15 miles to the rear of the Finnish defenses at Tolvajärvi. [9]
The Soviet 155th Division opened artillery fire at the Finnish border village of Megri on 30 November 1939 at 8:00 a.m., and proceeded to cross the border at 8:30 a.m. The Finnish defense in this area consisted of one battalion, ErP 11. Being heavily outnumbered by the 155th Division, ErP 11 retreated toward the villages of Möhkö and Kallioniemi while engaging in delaying tactics. [10] [11]
The Finns formed Group Talvela in order to reinforce the defenses in Ilomantsi and Tolvajärvi, and Colonel Talvela arrived in the area on 7 December to take command. Meanwhile, the Soviet 155th Division continued its advance and had taken the high ground overlooking Möhkö on the same day. Major Nikoskelainen requested permission from Colonel Ekholm to withdraw his ErP 11 battalion, exhausted from their retreating fight from the frontier, to Oinaansalmi. Ekholm granted him permission to do so, but was overruled by Talvela, who emphatically intervened by phone to insist on holding Möhkö. ErP 11 repelled several attacks from the 155th Division over the next few days, but was finally forced to withdraw to Oinaansalmi on 9 December, whereby the 155th Division promptly occupied Möhkö. Oinaansalmi provided the Finns with a favorable defensive position, located behind a watercourse and on high ground. [12]
On the same day, a Soviet battalion of 300-350 men slipped through unnoticed near Kallioniemi Ferry in the evening. Discovered by a Finnish patrol, the defenders encircled the Soviet battalion with automatic weapons under the cover of darkness. Just before dawn on 10 December, the Finns opened fire, killing every Soviet soldier. It was the first complete victory of the war for the Finns, and Group Talvela received a much-needed morale boost. [13]
On evening of 10 December, Talvela issued orders to Ekholm for a major counteroffensive on the following day. However, it was the Soviets that would be attacking. The Soviet attacks on 11 December were repelled by the Finns, and the Finns planned their counteroffensive for the following day, 12 December. The objective of the counteroffensive was to retake Möhkö. Three battalions would attack Möhkö from the front and from both flanks. As the attack progressed, the two flanking battalions reached the western edge of the village from the north and south. But instead of turning toward the enemy's rear, they returned in their tracks, and the attack failed. The battalions' inability to maintain tactical contact with each other led to the failed attack, according to Talvela. [14]
The 155th Division launched attacks of their own on 12 December, but these failed as well. Additional Soviet attacks on 13 December were also repelled by the Finns. The Soviets in turn repelled Finnish attacks on the same day. [15]
During fighting on 14 December, the Finns obtained maps and other documents from fallen Soviet officers, giving them insight into the composition of the Soviet 155th Division and its future attack plans. A succession of Soviet attacks over the next few days were repelled by the Finns. [16] [17]
The situation had developed into a stalemate. [18] Though the Finns had halted the progress of the 155th Division and prevented it from reaching the Ilomantsi road junction, they were unable to retake Möhkö, and the village would remain under Soviet control until the end of the war in March 1940. The lines around Ilomantsi stabilized as both armies concentrated on other fronts. [19] Sporadic fighting would nonetheless continue in the Ilomantsi sector. The fact that the 155th Division did not have skis would essentially immobilize the division as winter progressed and snow depth increased. [20] [21]
The casualties of Task Force A included 125 killed, 275 injured, and 22 missing (these figures are for the entire duration of the war). The 155th Division's total number of casualties was estimated at around 5,000 at the end of December 1939. This included 1,700 killed, wounded, and missing, and 3,300 due to sickness and freezing. [22]
The Battle of Tolvajärvi was fought on 12 December 1939 between Finland and the Soviet Union. It was the first large offensive victory for the Finns in the Winter War.
Paavo Juho Talvela was a Finnish general of the infantry, Knight of the Mannerheim Cross and a member of the Jäger movement. He participated in the Eastern Front of World War I, the Finnish Civil War, the Finnish Kinship Wars, the Winter War and the Continuation War.
Karl Lennart Oesch was one of Finland's leading generals during World War II. He held a string of high staff assignments and front commands, and at the end of the Continuation War commanded three Finnish army corps on the Karelian Isthmus. He received numerous awards, including the Finnish Mannerheim Cross during his service. Following the end of the Continuation War, he was tried and convicted for war crimes relating to the treatment of Soviet prisoners-of-war.
The III Corps was a corps of the Finnish Army during the Continuation War, where Finland fought alongside Nazi Germany against the Soviet Union. Formed from the peacetime V Corps and subordinated to the German Army High Command Norway, III Corps fought initially in northern Finland on the flank of the German XXXVI Corps, participating in the Finno-German Operation Arctic Fox. In February 1944, it was moved to the Karelian Isthmus just prior to the launch of the Soviet Vyborg–Petrozavodsk offensive. Following the Moscow Armistice, III Corps took overall command of the Finnish forces participating in the Lapland War, the removal of German forces from northern Finland.
The Ryti–Ribbentrop letter of agreement was a personal letter from President of Finland Risto Ryti to German Führer Adolf Hitler signed on 26 June 1944. It was sent during the Soviet Vyborg–Petrozavodsk Offensive, which had started on 9 June and threatened to knock Finland out of the Continuation War.
The IV Corps was a formation of the Finnish Army during the Winter War against the Soviet Union. It defended the area north of Lake Ladoga against Soviet attacks. It was commanded by Major General Juho Heiskanen and from 4 December 1939 by Major General Woldemar Hägglund. The IV Corps defeated superior Soviet troops by using motti tactics.
The Battle of Ilomantsi was a part of the Svir–Petrozavodsk Offensive of the Continuation War (1941–1944). It was fought from 26 July to 13 August 1944, between Finland and the Soviet Union in an area roughly 40 kilometers wide and 30 kilometers deep, near the Finnish-Soviet border, close to the Finnish village of Ilomantsi, in North Karelia. The battle ended with a Finnish victory—the last major Soviet attack against Finland was stopped here.
The Finnish invasion of Ladoga Karelia was a military campaign carried out by Finland in 1941. It was part of what is commonly referred to as the Continuation War. Early in the war Finnish forces liberated the Ladoga Karelia. It had been ceded to the Soviet Union on 13 March 1940, in the Moscow Peace Treaty, which marked the end of the Winter War. Later, in the summer of 1944, the Soviet Union reconquered the eastern part of Ladoga Karelia in the Vyborg–Petrozavodsk Offensive.
Johan Woldemar Hägglund was a Finnish lieutenant general during the Second World War, and an early volunteer of the Jäger Movement. He participated in the Eastern Front of World War I, the Finnish Civil War, the Winter War and the Continuation War, commanding army corps in the latter two. In 1944 and 1945, he was in charge of a committee investigating Finnish war crimes, especially those committed against prisoners of war.
Roman Ivanovich Panin was a Soviet major general from during World War II. An Imperial Russian Army junior officer in World War I, he joined the Red Army in 1919. Panin fought in the Russian Civil War and continued to serve after the end of the Russian Civil War. He was an advisor to the National Revolutionary Army between 1938 and 1939. Later he participated in the Soviet-Finnish war as a corps commander, and during World War II as the commander of the 14th Army, commanding the defense of Murmansk during Operation Silver Fox. Panin became commander of the 2nd Reserve Army in May 1942 and two months later became a lecturer at the Frunze Military Academy. In February 1943 he became Volkhov Front chief of combat training and in September led the 7th Rifle Corps. After participating in the Leningrad–Novgorod Offensive, Panin briefly led the 99th Rifle Corps. In July 1944, Panin became deputy commander of the 5th Army. Hospitalized in February 1945 during the East Prussian Offensive, Panin did not see further action. After recovering he became an instructor at the Frunze Military Academy and retired in 1949. He died shortly afterwards.
7th Division was a Finnish Army division in the Continuation War. The division was formed Savo-Karjala military province from the men in Pohjois-Savo and Pohjois-Karjala civil guard districts.
Antero Johannes Svensson was a Finnish major general, a member of the Jäger Movement and a recipient of the Mannerheim Cross. He participated in the Eastern Front of World War I as a volunteer of the 27th Royal Prussian Jäger Battalion, in the Finnish Civil War as a platoon and squadron commander, the Winter War as a brigade and division commander, and the Continuation War as a division and corps commander.
Einar Nikolai Mäkinen was a Finnish lieutenant general and a member of the Jäger movement. He participated in the Eastern Front of World War I, the Finnish Civil War, the Winter War and the Continuation War. Before the Continuation War, he participated in negotiations with the Germans regarding plans for the war.
The II Corps was a unit of the Finnish Army during the Continuation War. During the war the corps participated in combat first northwest of Lake Ladoga and on the Karelian Isthmus before moving to the Povenets–Lake Segozero region by late 1941. During the Soviet offensive of 1944, the corps conducted a fighting retreat to the region of Ilomantsi, with parts of its forces participating in the subsequent Battle of Ilomantsi.
The IV Corps was a unit of the Finnish Army during the Continuation War. During the 1941 Finnish invasion of the Karelian Isthmus, it encircled three Soviet divisions in the area south of Vyborg before being renamed as Isthmus Group.
The V Corps was a unit of the Finnish Army during the Continuation War of 1941–1944. It was first active for a brief time in 1941, and was reactivated in 1942 in the Svir sector during the trench warfare phase of the war. Following the Soviet Vyborg–Petrozavodsk offensive, the corps was moved to the Karelian Isthmus, where it fought in the Battle of Vyborg Bay, stopping a Soviet amphibious operation to cross the Vyborg Bay.
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