Fortress Crete

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German paratroopers preparing to execute civilians in Kondomari, Crete Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-166-0525-39, Kreta, Kondomari, Erschiessung von Zivilisten.jpg
German paratroopers preparing to execute civilians in Kondomari, Crete
German assault on Crete German assault on Crete.jpg
German assault on Crete
Arm bands of a German soldier who served in Crete and Africa Kreta und Afrikakorps IMG 1719.JPG
Arm bands of a German soldier who served in Crete and Africa

Fortress Crete (German : Festung Kreta) was the term used during World War II by the German occupation forces to refer to the garrison and fortification of Crete.

Contents

Background

The Greek island of Crete was seized by the Axis after a fierce battle at the end of May 1941. The Germans occupied the western three prefectures of the island (the prefectures of Chania, Heraklion, and Rethymno) with their headquarters in Chania, whilst the Italians occupied the easternmost prefecture of Lasithi until the Italian capitulation in September 1943.

Garrison

The first German garrison unit was the 5th Mountain Division, which had seen combat during the capture of Crete. In late autumn 1941, the 5th Mountain Division was replaced by the 713th and 164th Infantry Divisions, which in early 1942 were reorganised as Fortress Division Crete (German : Festungs-Division Kreta - FDK). [1] [2] In the summer of 1942, FDK was split to form the smaller Fortress Brigade Kreta (German : Festungs-Brigade Kreta - FBK) and the 164th Light Afrika Division (German : 164. Leichte Afrika Division) which was sent to North Africa. The 164th was succeeded in 19431944 by the 22nd Infantry Division. In autumn 1944, after the 22nd Division withdrew from Crete, the remaining German units on the island were consolidated under the 133rd Fortress Division (German : 133. Festungs-Division). [3] The Italian garrison units were the 51st Infantry Division "Siena" and LI Special Brigade "Lecce", which surrendered to the Germans after the Italian armistice of 1943.

The garrison's strength rose and fell considerably, depending on the progress of the North African and Russian campaigns, and the perceived threat for invasion. Its peak was 75,000 men in 1943 and its nadir 10,000 at its surrender of 12 May 1945.

After the general retreat from Greece in October 1944, the Germans, along with some Italian battalions, remained in Crete and in the Dodecanese islands. They were cut off, possessed no air power or naval forces, with only some small patrol vessels and landing barges to maintain the links among the islands. The food problem was a serious one both for them and the inhabitants. Links were maintained (mainly postal) by some captured B-24 bombers under Luftwaffe colours which made flights at night from Austria.

Evacuation and surrender

The eastern part of Crete was evacuated during the winter by the Axis forces and was then taken by a very weak mixed Anglo-Greek garrison. There was, then, an unofficial truce between the two parties until the final surrender order issued by the OKW in May 1945 after the unconditional surrender on 8 May. British SOE officer Dennis Ciclitira arranged for Generalmajor Hans-Georg Benthack to formally surrender all German forces on the island to Major-General Colin Callander. [4]

Commanders of the German forces on Crete

Until the Italian armistice of 1943, the Italian occupation forces were commanded by General Angelico Carta.

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References

  1. Mitcham, Samuel W. (2007). German Order of Battle: 291st-999th Infantry divisions, named infantry divisions, and special divisions in World War II. Stackpole Books. p. 126. ISBN   978-0-8117-3437-0.
  2. Thomas, Nigel (2012). The German Army 1939-45 (2): North Africa & Balkans. Osprey Publishing. p. 50. ISBN   9781782004400.
  3. Crete after invasion, Axis History Forum 2006
  4. "Head Shawl (Seraki)". Imperial War Museum. 2016.
  5. "Commanders list of "Festung Kreta", wehrmacht-awards.com 2006". Archived from the original on 2011-07-18. Retrieved 2011-03-11.