46th Division (Imperial Japanese Army) explained

Unit Name:46th Division
Dates:1944–1945
Country:Empire of Japan
Type:Infantry
Garrison:Kumamoto
Nickname:Serene Division
Battles:World War II
46th Division
Date:1943
Parent:2nd Area Army
Subordinate:
  • 123. Infantry regiment (Kumamoto)
  • 145. Infantry regiment
  • 147. Infantry regiment (Miyakonojō)
  • 46. Artillery regiment (36 x 75-mm guns)
  • 46. Tank company
  • 46. Signals company
  • 46. Transport company
  • 46. Ordnance company
  • 46. Labour company
  • 46. Field hospital
46th Division
Date:1945
Parent:2nd Area Army
Subordinate:
  • 123. Infantry regiment (Kumamoto)
  • 147. Infantry regiment (Miyakonojō)
  • 46. Tank company
  • 46. Signals company
  • 46. Transport company
  • 46. Ordnance company
  • 46. Labour company
  • 46. Field hospital

The was an infantry division of the Imperial Japanese Army. Its call sign was the .

Origins

The 46th Division was formed in Kumamoto, simultaneously with the 42nd, 43rd and 47th divisions. The formation nucleus was the 66th Independent Infantry Brigade and headquarters of the 6th division. Troops were drawn from the Kumamoto Divisional District (Shikanku), which consisted of the Kumamoto, Oita, Miyazaki, and Kagoshima prefectures.

Deployment

The 46th division was initially assigned to the Western District Army to strengthen the mainland defenses.

The 46th division was temporarily assigned to the 16th Army and ordered to move south in October 1943.[1] The 46th artillery regiment was detached and left behind that time.[2]

The Division's 123rd Regiment landed in Sumba of the Lesser Sunda Islands in late November 1943. Soon the 46th division was reassigned to the 19th army. In February 1944, the 147th Regiment landed in nearby Sumbawa island. The divisional headquarters were established on the Sumbawa island. The remaining 145th Regiment was unable to be transported and instead was diverted from Saipan in June 1944 to Iwo Jima under the Lieutenant General Tadamichi Kuribayashi's Ogasawara Corps, where it was wiped out in the Battle of Iwo Jima in February - March 1945.

The 19th Army was disbanded on 1 March 1945 and the 46th division was transferred to the 7th Area Army. Consequently, the 123rd and 147th infantry regiments were removed from Sumba and Sumbawa islands, respectively, and sent to Malay Peninsula in April 1945, landing in Singapore. These were disbanded at Kluang, Johor province after the surrender of Japan .

Commanders

Headquarters and senior staff at disbandment

See also

Reference and further reading

Notes and References

  1. http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/Japan/Monos/JM-45/ Japanese monograph No45, History of Imperial General Headquarters - Army Section (Revised Edition)
  2. Web site: Organization of Japanese Infantry Divisions, 1941-1945 . 2016-05-31 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160304205038/http://www.cgsc.edu/CARL/nafziger/939JXAA.PDF . 2016-03-04 . dead .