The M42 Anti-Aircraft ‘Division’ (Zenitnaya
Artilleriyskaya Diviziya), established November 1942, totalled only 1,345 men,
in four 320-man AA ‘regiments’ (actually weak battalions), each with three AA
batteries; an AA machine-gun battery, and an AA-MG company, totalling 128 guns.
The 1,973-strong M43 Division of February 1943 had only 116 guns; it lost an AA
regiment and the AA-MG battery but doubled its AA-MG company, and gained a
490-man four-battery AA regiment. By May 1945 there were about 69 AA divisions
numbered in the 1–76 series, plus six Guards AA divisions numbered 1–6; they
served with field armies, or were assigned to the Western or Moscow Fronts of
the PVO stranyi home defence force.
The artillery division was intended to
concentrate massive firepower during a critical stage in a battle. An M42
Artillery Division (Artilleriyskaya Diviziya), established 31 October 1942 and
modified 6 December 1942, was a GHQ Reserve formation with 9,214 men, an
observation battalion and four brigades: a light brigade with three
tank-destroyer regiments (24 guns each), a howitzer brigade with three
regiments (20 howitzers each), a field-gun brigade with two regiments (18 guns
each), and a mortar brigade with four regiments (20 mortars each). In this
period 26 divisions numbered 1–26 were formed. In March 1943 four were
redesignated as Guards formations (original numbers in brackets): 1 (1), 2 (4),
3 (8) and 5 (19). A Gvardeyskaya Artilleriyskaya Diviziya had the same
organization as an artillery division.
In April 1943, the M43 Breakthrough
Artillery Division (Artilleriyskaya Diviziya Proryva) was introduced; this was
organized like the M42 Artillery Division but with a four-battalion heavy
howitzer brigade (32 guns), and a four-battalion super-heavy howitzer brigade.
This formation could deliver overwhelming offensive and defensive firepower; 15
artillery divisions (numbered 2, 3, 5–7, 9, 12, 13, 15–17, 20, 22, 23 and 25)
were converted to this status, leaving seven (numbered 10, 11, 14, 18, 21, 24
and 26) as plain artillery divisions. Four Guards artillery divisions were
re-formed as Guards Breakthrough, three with the same numbers (1, 3, 5), and
the 4th Guards Breakthrough Artillery Division.
The M42 Guards Mortar Division
(Gvardeyskaya Minometnya Diviziya) was actually a rocket-launcher formation,
with two or three M42 Guards mortar brigades and two or three M42 Guards mortar
regiments firing the devastating Katyusha rockets from truck-mounted launchers.
Seven divisions numbered 1–7 were formed, usually being assigned individually
to breakthrough artillery corps. Five tank-destroyer artillery divisions
numbered 1–5 were formed in May–June 1942 to consolidate some of the M42
tank-destroyer brigades (numbered in the 1–43 series), and were assigned to
Front HQs. A brigade had an AT regiment, two AT rifle battalions, mortar, tank,
and minelaying battalions, plus an SMG company. There were also a number of M43
eight-battery AT brigades (numbered in the 1–42 series), which were used to
great effect at Kursk in July 1943.
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