Guides to German Records Microfilmed at Alexandria, Va

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Guides to German Records Microfilmed at Alexandria, Va GUIDES TO GERMAN RECORDS MICROFILMED AT ALEXANDRIA, VA. No. 59. Records of German Field Commands: Corps (Part IV) The National Archives National Archives and Records Service General Services Administration Washington: 1968 This finding aid has been prepared "by the National Archives as part of its program of facilitating the use of records in its custody. The microfilm described in this guide may be consulted at the National Archives, where it is identified as Microcopy No. T-31^» A price list appears on the last pages. Those desiring to purchase microfilm should write to the Publications Sales Branch, The National Archives, Washington, D.C. 20ko8. Some of the papers reproduced on the microfilm referred to in this and other guides of the same series may have been of private origin. The fact of their seizure is not believed to divest their original owners of any literary property rights in them. Anyone, therefore, who publishes them in whole or in part without permission of their authors may be held liable for infringement of such literary property rights. GUIDES TO GERMAN RECORDS MICROFILMED AT ALEXANDRIA, VA. No. 59. Records of German Field Commands: Corps (Part IV) (XVIII - XXVII Corps) The National Archives National Archives end Records Service General Services Administration Washington: 1968 R E A This CXiide is one of a series of finding aids describing Havy, on German-Italian-Japanese relations, and on the war the seiaed German records deposited in the National Archives. in the Pacific. The series was initiated by the Microfilming Project of the Committee for the Study of Wsr Documents of the American His- The provenance to which the documents are attributed is torical Association in cooperation with the National Archives the army headquarters that originally kept the file, although and the Department of the Army. With the termination of the a large proportion of the items had in fact been retired "07 AHA project in July 1963 > the National Archives assumed sole the units to the Heeresarchiv Potsdam for permanent retention. responsibility for the reproduction of records and the pre- There an accession number was stamped or written on tne cover, paration of Guides. and it is by this numbering system that the folders were organ- ized in the World War II Records Division and its predecessor, is one of a number of Guides describing the records the Departmental Records Branch of the Department of the /jrmy, of the German Army field commands. These records fall into which office administered the records before the assumption five categories: Records of Army Groups, Records of Armies, of these duties by the National Archives. All folders acces- Records of Corps, Records of Divisions, and Occupational and sioned by the Heeresarchiv were assigned numbers in sequence Other Records. and logged in by unit in the Potsdam Catalog. All such ^ald- ers bear numbers below 75,000. Folders that had no: gone This Guide, which constitutes Part IV of records of the through the Heeresarchiv accessioning process befort carture corps, describes the contents of 230 rolls of microfilm re- or had never been retired to the Heeresarchiv were giver, producing records of the XVIII - XXVII Corps. The records in- folder numbers in an extension of the Heeresarchiv system clude material on the annexation of Austria and the occupation of using numbers above 75,000, but otherwise following ~^B the Sudetenland in 1938, the campaign in Poland in 1939, the Potsdam pattern. campaigns in Norway and western Europe in 1940, the campaigns in the Balkans and Crete in 1941* and the campaign against the Considerable information on the fate of Germany*: mili- Soviet Union, 1941-44, including the fighting in Finland. There tary records during World War II, including information on are also records on the occupation of Hungary in 1944, anti- several destructive fires and subsequent efforts to recon- partisan warfare in the Balkans, and occupation duty in France. struct records that were burned, may be found in the files of the Chef der Heeresarchive in the German Army Hip Rolls 1631-1665 reproduce the Military Propaganda Archives Command. (These records were filmed as Microcopy N?. T-78, of the Intelligence Branch of the XVIII Corps ( Generalkommando Rolls 1-38, and are described in Guide No. 12 of this series.) XVIII Armeekcrps, Ic Wehrpropaganda Archiv) comprising photo- graphs, experience reports, essays, press reports, newspaper The descriptive material for the units was prepared on clippings, and other material covering most of the campaigns cards and each card has been filmed before the foldsr it de- mentioned in the above paragraph and smaller amounts of material scribes. The cards for all folders on one roll of film are on World War I and earlier military history, on military and also filmed at the beginning of that roll. The basic infor- political events between the two world wars, on the campaign mation contained on these cards was used in compiling the in North Africa and Italy during World War II, on the German entries for the Guide. iii A short unit history precedes the file item listing for The original records have been returned to the Federal each corps. The unit's history has also been filmed at the Republic of Germany. The microfilm has been deposited with beginning of each roll of who unit's records. the Publications Sales Branch, National Archives, Washington, D.C. 20408, as Microcopy T-3H. The microfilm may be con- The term "Roll" in the Guide refers to the sequence of sulted at the National Archives or copies may be ordered. the film. "1st Frsme" gives the frame nu&ber of the first A price list is included at the end of the Guide. page of the folder. The "Item No." is the identification symbol on the original folder. The "Item" provides (a) the The descriptions were written by John Strekel, Steven abbreviation of the staff section that originated the docu- Pinter, Cleveland E. Collier, Ignaz Ernst, Thomas L. Lor- ment, (b) the title appearing on the folder cover, and (c) palen, Thomas W. Power, and Walter Szopiak under the super- additional information providing a general idea of the con- vision of Donald E. Spencer. Petronilla Hawes prepared th^ tents. The inclusive dates of the file item are given under draft of the Guide and typed the stencils. a "Date" Column. IV TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Preface iii German Military Symbols and Abbreviations vii Organization of German Army Staffs x Records of Corps: XVIII. Gebirgskorps (XVIII Mountain Corps) 1 XVIII. A.K« Ic //bhrpropaganda Archiv (XVIII Corps Military Propaganda Archives). ... 9 XIX. Armeekorps (XIX Army Corps) 42 XIX. Gebirgskorps (XIX Mountain Corps) 47 XX. Armeekorps (XX Army Corps) 58 XXI. Armeekorps (XXI Army Corps) 65 XXII. Armeekorps (XXII Army Corps) 71 XXII. Gebirgskorps (XXII Mountain Corps) 74 XXIII. Armeekorps (XXIII Army Corps) 77 XXIV. Panzerkorpe (XXIV Panzer Corps 92 XXV. Armeekorps (XXV Army Corps) 106 XXVI. Armeekorps (XXVI Army Corps) 115 XXVII. Armeekorps (XXVII Army Corps) 127 Previously Published Guides to German Records Microfilmed at Alexandria, Va 139 Price List 14-3 GERMAN MILITARY SYMBOLS AND ABBREVIATIONS la Operationsabteilung Baupi Baupioniere Ic Feindnachrichtenabteilung Bd. Band Ic/A.O. Feindnachrichtenwesen u. Abwehroffizier Beob. Beobachtung Id AusbiIdungs offiz ier bes. besondere I la 1. Adjutant betr. betreffend lib 2. Adjutant Betr.St. Betriebsstoff III Richter Brig. Brigade IVa Intendant Bt. Bataillon IVb Arzt B.V. Betriebsstoffversorgung IVc Veterinar Bv.T.O. Bevollmachtigter Transportoffizier IVd Gruppe Seelsorge bzw. beziehungsweise IVd/Ev. Evangelischer Kriegspfarrer Ch.d.Gen.St. Chef des Generalstabes IVd/Kath. Katholischer Kriegspfarrer Div. Division V Kraftfahrwesenoffiz ier Eisenb. Eisenbahn vr Nationalsozialistischer Fuhrungsoffizier (NSFO) Fahrtr. Fahrtruppen VII Chef der Zivilverwaltung Fallsch. Fallschirm feindl. feindliche Abt. Abteilung Feldgend. Feldgendarmerie Abw. Abwehr Feldkdtr. Feld koimnandantur A.K. Armeekorps Feldlaz. Feldlazarett ftllg. allgemein Feld.V.St. Feldvorschriftenstelle A.Na.Fu. Armeenachrichtenfiihrer Fest. Festung Anl. Anlage FK FeIdkommandantur Anordn, Anordnung Fl. Flieger A.O. Abwehroffizier Flak Fliegerabwehrkanone AOK Arme e ober kommando Flivo Flie gerverbindungs offiz ier A.O.Kraft Abwehroffizier des Kraftfahrwesens FPM Feldpostmeister A.Pi.Fu. Armeepionierfiihrer freiw, freiwillig Arfii. Artilleriefuhrer Fu. Fiihrer Arko Artilleriekommandeur Gabo Gasabwehroffiz ier Armeegeb. Armeegebiet Geb. Gebirgs- Art., Artl. Artillerie Gen.d.Inf. General der Infanterie Aufkl. Aufklarung Gen.Kdo. Generalkommando A.V.L. Armeeverpflegungslager Genlt. Generalleutnant Batl. Bataillon Genmaj. Generalmajor Battr. Batterie Genobst, Generaloberst vii GERMAN MILITARY SYMBOLS AND ABBREVIATIONS (cont'd.) Genstb.d.H. Generalstab des Heeres Kps. Korps G. P. P. Geheime Feldpolizei Krad Kraftfahrrad Grenztr. Grenztruppen KTB, Ktb. Kriegstagebuch grdlg. grundlegend Lkw. Lastkraftwagen Grz.Tr. Grenztruppen Lt. Leutnant Harko Hbherer Artilleriekommandeur Lw. Luftwaffe H.Gp. Heeresgruppe Mess. Karten- u. Vermessungswesen H.Gr.Kdo. Heeresgruppenkommando M.G. Mas chinengewehr H.Mot. Heeresmotories ierung mil. milit'arische Hoh. Hoherer Mob. Mobilmachung Hbh.Art.Kdr. Hoherer Artilleriekommandeur mot. motorisiert H.O.Kraft. Hoherer Offizier des Kraftfahrwesens Mun. Munition Hptm. Hauptmann MVO Marineverbindungsoffiz ier H.Qu. Hauptquartier Nachr. Nachrichten H.Streif.Dst. Heeresstreifendienst Nachsch. Nachschub I.D. Infanterie Division Nahaufkl.Gr.
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