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Original German WWII ID dogtag - 6./J.R.132 (Battle of Stalingrad) (44 I.D.)

$ 58.47

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Theme: Militaria
  • Condition: See attached photos
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • Conflict: WW II (1939-45)
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

    Description

    This dogtag was found near the former Khutor Baburkin settlement, about 35 km to the west from
    Stalingrad
    .
    https://www.google.com/maps/place/48°47'37.0"N+44°01'53.0"E
    Battle of Stalingrad
    was one of the major battles of the WWII. The goal of Wermacht was to capture the city and block the transport routes of the river Volga and then proceed further deep into the Soviet territory. However the 6th Army, which was tasked with capturing the city failed to wipe out the Soviet forces completely and got stuck in Stalingrad. The Red Army seized this opportunity and encircled the 6th Army in the city, eventually forcing it to surrender.
    This victory of the Soviet forces marked the turning point in the war - Wermacht lost
    over 300 000 men
    in Stalingrad and Manstein's
    Army Group South was forced to rapidly retreat
    in the following months.
    6./J.R.132
    stands for
    6./ Infanterie-Regiment 132
    (
    6th Company of the 132nd Infantry Regiment
    ).
    http://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/Gliederungen/Infanterieregimenter/IR132.htm
    Infanterie-Regiment 132
    w
    as set up on August 1, 1938 in
    Wehrkreis XVII
    . It was formed from the elements of the Infanterie-Regiment 6 and the Austrian
    Bundesheeres.
    Regiment's staff and its I. and II. battalions were set up in
    Znojmo
    . III. Battalion was set up in
    Horn
    . The regiment was assigned to the
    44th Infantry Division
    .
    44th Infantry Division
    (also known as
    Reichsgrenadier-Division Hoch- und Deutschmeister
    )
    was formed on 1 April 1938 in
    Vienna
    , about two weeks after the Anschluss of Austria.
    It first saw combat at the start of the war in the
    Invasion of Poland
    , and also took part in the
    Battle of France
    in 1940. After a 9-month period of coastal defence the division was transferred East.
    On 22 June 1941, the division took part in the
    invasion of the Soviet Union
    , attached to
    Army Group South
    . It remained in the east after the failure of "Operation Barbarossa", taking part in defensive actions for the winter against the Soviet Army offensives near
    Izum and Kharkov
    .
    Refurbished, the division participated in the German summer offensive, and was subsequently destroyed with the
    6th Army in Stalingrad in January 1943
    .
    Insingia of the 44th Infantry Division (Source: Wikipedia)