

Reinforced with the XXXIII Rifle Corps and X Tank Corps, Katukov launched continuous attacks on the Totenkopf units on the north bank of the river.ĭuring the evening of July 11, Hausser readied his divisions for an assault on Prochorovka. What was left of Katukov’s armor regrouped to oppose the XLVIII Panzer Corps below Oboyan or counterattack the Psel bridgehead. By July 11, the division’s panzer group had crossed the river on pontoon bridges and reached the bridgehead. Hermann Priess, had established a bridgehead over the Psel, west of Prochorovka. On July 10, the 3rd SS Division Totenkopf, commanded by SS Maj. His VI Tank Corps, originally equipped with more than 200 tanks, had only 50 left by July 10 and 11, and the other two corps of Katukov’s army also had sustained serious losses. Katukov’s army had been unable to prevent the Germans from reaching the river, however. Katukov’s First Tank Army, was already in action against Hoth’s Fourth Panzer Army south of the Psel. The Soviet operational armored reserve, General Mikhail E. The Fifth Guards was the Soviet strategic armored reserve in the south, the last significant uncommitted armored formation in the sector, with more than 650 tanks. Opposing Hausser at Prochorovka was the newly arrived and reinforced Fifth Guards Tank Army, commanded by Lt. Knobelsdorff’s corps was composed of the 167th and 332nd infantry divisions, the 3rd and 11th panzer divisions, Panzergrenadier Division Grossdeutschland and Panther Brigade Decker, and Ott’s corps contained the 25th and 57th infantry divisions. Although all three were technically Panzergrenadier divisions, each had more than 100 tanks when Citadel began. Hausser’s corps was made up of three panzer divisions–the 1st Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler (Adolf Hitler’s bodyguard), 2nd SS Das Reich (The Empire) and 3rd SS Totenkopf (Death’s Head). The Fourth Panzer Army’s attack on the town was led by SS General Paul Hausser’s II SS Panzer Corps, General Otto von Knobelsdorff’s XLVIII Panzer Corps and General Ott’s LII Army Corps. The Psel was the last natural barrier between Manstein’s panzers and Kursk. By July 11, however, Hoth’s Fourth Panzer Army was in position to capture the town of Prochorovka, secure a bridgehead over the Psel River and advance on Oboyan. On the southern flank, Kempf’s III Panzer Corps, commanded by General Hermann Breith, also encountered tough Soviet resistance. Model’s Ninth Army never came close to breaking the Soviet defenses in the north, however, and soon became deadlocked in a war of attrition that it could not win. Such a victory would have forced the Soviets to delay their operations and might have allowed the Wehrmacht desperately needed breathing room on the Eastern Front. If their plan succeeded, the Germans would encircle and destroy more than five Soviet armies. Konev’s Steppe Military District (renamed Steppe Front on July 10, 1943) was to hold German breakthroughs, then mount the counteroffensive. Chistyakov, and the Seventh Guards Army, led by Lt. To the south, the Voronezh Front faced the German Army Group South with three armies and two in reserve. Galinin’s Seventeenth Army, was to defend the northern sector. The Central Front, with the right wing strengthened by Lt. Rokossovsky, and the Voronezh Front, led by General Nikolai F. Opposing the German forces were the Soviet Central Front, led by General Konstantin K. Hermann Hoth’s Fourth Panzer Army and the Kempf Army, commanded by General Werner Kempf. General Joachim Lemelsen’s XLVII Panzer Corps planned to drive toward Kursk and meet up with Field Marshal Erich von Manstein’s Army Group South, Col. Josef Harpe’s XLI Panzer Corps on the left. Field Marshal Günther von Kluge’s Army Group Center would attack from the north flank of the bulge, with Colonel General Walther Model’s Ninth Army leading the effort, General Hans Zorn’s XLVI Panzer Corps on the right flank and Maj. The Germans’ goal during Citadel was to pinch off a large salient in the Eastern Front that extended 70 miles toward the west. But while historians have categorized Prochorovka as a victory of improved Soviet tactics over German firepower and heavy tanks, new evidence casts the struggle at the ‘gully of death’ in a very different light. The high-water mark of the battle was the massive armor engagement at Prochorovka (also spelled Prokhorovka), which began on July 12. The climax of Operation Citadel, the Battle of Kursk, involved as many as 6,000 tanks, 4,000 aircraft and 2 million fighting men and is remembered as the greatest tank battle in history.

Battle of Kursk: Germany's Lost Victory in World War II | HistoryNet Closeįollowing their disastrous defeat at Stalingrad during the winter of 1942-43, the German armed forces launched a climactic offensive in the East known as Operation Citadel on July 4,1943.
