Anzio order of battle

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Italian Campaign
Invasion of Sicily
  • Corkscrew
  • Mincemeat
  • Barclay
  • Animals
  • Chestnut
  • Narcissus
  • Fustian
  • Ladbroke
  • Gela
  • Troina
  • Centuripe

Invasion of Italy

Winter Line

Gothic Line

1945 Spring Offensive


Italian Civil War

Anzio order of battle is a listing of the significant formations that were involved in the fighting for the Anzio bridgehead south of Rome, January 1944 – June 1944

Allied forces and organization

Allied Armies in Italy

C-in-C: General Sir Harold Alexander

US Fifth Army

Commander:

Lieutenant-General Mark Wayne Clark
US VI Corps
US VI Corps as organized during the Battle of Anzio 22 January to 31 March 1944[1]
Major-General John P. Lucas (until February 23)
Major-General Lucian K. Truscott (from February 23)
Deputy commander: Major-General Lucian K.Truscottt (from 16 February to February 23)
Deputy commander: Major-General Vyvyan Evelegh (from 16 February to 18 March)
U.S. II Corps (from 25 May 1944)
Major-General Geoffrey Keyes
  • 88th Infantry Division (Major-General John E. Sloan)
  • 85th Infantry Division (Major-General John B. Coulter)
  • 3rd Infantry Division (Brigadier John W. O'Daniel)

Axis forces and organization

Army Group C

Commander:

Generalfeldmarschall Albert Kesselring

German Fourteenth Army

Commander: General Eberhard von Mackensen (until end May 1944, then under direct command of Kesselring)
I Parachute Corps
General Alfred Schlemm
  • 4th Parachute Division (Major-General Heinrich Trettner)
  • 29th Panzergrenadier Division (Lieutenant-General Walter Fries)
  • 65th Infantry Division (Major-General Hellmuth Pfeifer)
  • 715th Infantry Division (Major-General Hans-Georg Hildebrandt)
  • 114th Jäger Division (Lieutenant-General Karl Eglseer)
German LXXVI Panzer Corps
General Traugott Herr
Decima Flottiglia MAS
Captain Junio Valerio Borghese[3]
  • Barbarigo Battalion (Captain Umberto Bardelli)

Notes

  1. ^ Nafziger, George. "US VI Corps Invasion of Anzio 22 January to 31 March 1944" (PDF). U.S. Army Combined Arms Research Library. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 August 2016. Retrieved 4 August 2016.
  2. ^ Designated regiments on paper, the Force actually totalled about 2,000 men at full strength.
  3. ^ The RSI's Decima Flottiglia MAS units in Anzio as a whole was under the command of Borghese.As the German High Command in Italy let Borghese build a personal army to fight for the Italian Social Republic. However at the Anzio front, the Barbarigo Battalion was put under the tactical command of the German 715th Infantry Division.

Sources

  • Clark, Lloyd (2006). Anzio: The Friction of War. Italy and the Battle for Rome 1944. London: Headline Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-7553-1420-1.
  • "Orders of Battle.com". Archived from the original on 17 July 2007. Retrieved 2007-07-23.
  • Houterman, Hans; Koppes, Jeroen. "World War II unit histories and officers". Archived from the original on 26 June 2007. Retrieved 2007-07-23.
  • Wendell, Marcus. "Axis History Factbook: German army order of battle". Archived from the original on 2006-10-29. Retrieved 2007-07-23.