1st Parachute Corps (Germany) explained

Unit Name:I Fallschirmkorps
Dates:1944–45
Type:Fallschirmjäger
Notable Commanders:Alfred Schlemm
Richard Heidrich
Disbanded:1945

The I Fallschirmkorps (1st Parachute Corps) was one of the main German Luftwaffe Corps during World War II.

History

This Corps was formed on 1 January 1944 in Rome from Alfred Schlemm's headquarters staff, including from the II Luftwaffe Field Corps and the XIII Luftwaffe Air Corps. The Corps fought exclusively in Italy. During it existence, it was composed of the 1st and 4th Parachute Divisions and several Infantry Divisions.

The 1st Parachute Corps were initially dispatched from Rome to bolster the Winter Line along the Garigliano River, but were urgently transferred to oppose the Allied beachhead at Anzio as part of Operation Shingle.[1] By 18 January 1944, under orders from Field Marshal Alfred Kesselring, their role specifically involved protecting the coastal sector near Rome.[2] The 1st Parachute Corps were made headquarters in charge of the operation to defend the coastal area of Anzio for three days until passing command to Colonel General Eberhard von Mackensen, commander of the Fourteenth Army in northern Italy. And at 0830 on the 22nd, Kesselring directed General Heinrich von Vietinghoff to transfer the headquarters and all combat troops that could be spared of the I Parachute Corps to the Anzio area as quickly as possible.

Allied troops landed in Anzio on 22 January 1944. At 1700, the I Parachute Corps established a defensive line at the Anzio beachhead and took command of all arriving troops, by which point it was clear a major landing was taking place.[3] Of the 1st Parachute Corps, only the 29th Panzer Division were reported to put up significant resistance during the landing.[4] The Corps fought at Anzio for the next three months. Schlemm was cited in the official Armed Forces Communiqué and received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross for his efforts.[5]

Later on, the Corps fought in the Battle of Monte Cassino and Battle of Bologna. The Corps capitulated on 3 May 1945 in the Trento – Bolzano – Belluno area in Northern Italy.[6]

Commanding officer

Sources

  1. Vigo. Milan. 2014. The Allied Landing at Anzio-Nettuno, 22 January–4 March 1944: Operation SHINGLE. Naval War College Review. 67.
  2. Book: The German Operation at Anzio: A Study of the German Operations at Anzio Beachhead from 22 Jan 44 to 31 May 44. German Military Documents Section. April 1946. Alexandria, VA.
  3. Vigo. Milan. 2014. The Allied Landing at Anzio-Nettuno, 22 January–4 March 1944: Operation SHINGLE. Naval War College Review. 67.
  4. Book: The German Operation at Anzio: A Study of the German Operations at Anzio Beachhead from 22 Jan 44 to 31 May 44. German Military Documents Section. April 1946. Alexandria, VA.
  5. Book: Clark, Lloyd. Anzio : the friction of war : Italy and the battle for Rome 1944. 2006. Headline Review. 978-0-7553-1420-1. London. 69022358.
  6. Book: Kurowski, Franz. Jump into hell : German paratroopers in World War II. 2010. Stackpole Books. 978-0-8117-4323-5. Mechanicsburg, PA. 774393101.