- Wilhelm List
Infobox Military Person
name=Siegmund Wilhelm List
lived=birth date|1880|5|14|df=y — death date and age|1971|8|17|1880|5|14|df=y
placeofbirth=Oberkirchberg nearUlm ,Württemberg ,Germany
placeofdeath=Garmisch-Partenkirchen ,Germany
caption="Generalfeldmarschall Wilhelm List
nickname=
allegiance=flagicon|German EmpireGerman Empire (to 1918)
flagicon|GermanyWeimar Republic (to 1933)
flagicon|Nazi GermanyNazi Germany
serviceyears= 1898 - 1942
rank=Field Marshal
commands=
unit=
battles=World War I World War II
awards=Wound Badge (1918) in blackIron Cross (1914) 2. and 1. classIron Cross (1939) 2. and 1. class
Ritterkreuz des Königlichen Hausordens von Hohenzollern mit SchwerternKnight's Cross (30 September 1939)
laterwork=Siegmund Wilhelm List (
May 14 ,1880 –August 17 ,1971 ), was a Germanfield marshal duringWorld War II , and at the start of the war was based inSlovakia in command of the Fourteenth Army.Early Life and Career
List was born in
Oberkirchberg nearUlm ,Württemberg ,Germany in 1880 and entered theBavarian Army in 1898 as a cadet. In 1900 he was promoted to Lieutenant and in 1913 he joined the general staff as aHauptmann . He served as a staff officer inWorld War I .After the war List stayed in the
Reichswehr and most of his assignments were as an administrator. In 1927 he was promoted to Oberst, in 1930 he was promoted to General-Major and in 1932 he was promoted to General-Leutnant. In 1938 after theAnschluss of Austria he was made responsible for integrating theBundesheer into theWehrmacht .During 1939 List commanded the German 14th Army in the invasion of Poland. From 1939 to 1941 he commanded the German 12th Army in France and
Greece . During 1941 he was Commander-in-Chief South-East. In July 1942 he was Commander-in-Chief ofArmy Group A on the Eastern Front in theSoviet Union .Poland, 1939
It was List's task to advance his army into southern Poland immediately on the outbreak of hostilities, to form the extreme southern wing of an encircling manoevre carried out by the German forces aimed at trapping the Polish field army in the general region of
Warsaw . He fulfilled this mission, meeting advance elements of the German XIX Panzer Corps under the command of General Guderian a short distance south ofBrest-Litovsk , onSeptember 17 1939 .Following the conclusion of the fighting in Poland, which was accelerated by the occupation of the eastern part of the country by Soviet forces, as agreed to in the
Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact , List and his army remained posted as occupying forces on Polish territory. List was promoted to Field-Marshal on the conclusion of the campaign. In early 1941 German troops were being steadily amassed on the Eastern frontier of the Third Reich; in preparation, as is now known, forOperation Barbarossa , the German invasion of the Soviet Union.OKW believed that before Barbarossa could be launched it would be necessary to eliminate the possibility of interference fromGreece by militarily subduing this country, in an operation codenamedOperation Marita . Field-Marshal List was delegated to negotiate with the Bulgarian General Staff, and a secret agreement was signed allowing the free passage of German troops through Bulgarian territory. [German Minutes of Conference, NCA IV, pp272-5] On the night ofFebruary 28 1941 German troops, including List who now commanded the 12th army, took up positions inBulgaria , which the next day joined theTripartite Pact .Greece, 1941
The invasion of
Greece , and ofYugoslavia , started onApril 6 1941 . The 12th army, commanded by List, consisted of four armoured divisions and eleven motorised infantry divisions, and totally overmatched the defending forces.Belgrade was occupied by German forces onApril 13 1941 , andAthens onApril 27 1941 . The Balkan interlude ended with the evacuation of British forces onApril 28 1941 .Caucasus Campaign and Dismissal, 1942
In early July 1942, List took command of
Army Group A , newly formed from the split ofArmy Group South during the Germans' summer offensive namedCase Blue . His orders were to take Rostov and then advance into the Caucasus as far as Baku to capture the oil-rich region. German forces made good progress for two months, advancing almost to Grozny, about 650 kilometers from Rostov.However, by the end of August their advance had ground to halt, chiefly due to critical shortages of fuel and ammunition as the army group outran its supply lines. Russian resistance had also stiffened considerably, and matters were made worse for the Germans by the removal in mid-August of most
Luftwaffe combat units to the north to support to the Sixth Army's drive on Stalingrad.Hitler was angered by the loss of momentum, and when List proposed moving some stalled spearhead units to another, less advanced portion of the front to assist in destroying stubborn Russian forces, Hitler relieved him of command on September 9 and placed himself in charge of Army Group A. List spent the rest of the war at his home and never returned to active duty.
Capture and Trial
List was captured by the Allies after the war. In 1947, List and 11 former subordinates were brought before a U.S. military court,charged with
war crimes andcrimes against humanity - primarily the reprisal killing of hostages in retaliation for partisan activity. List was convicted in thisHostages Trial . He was sentenced to life imprisonment in February 1948. List was released from prison in December 1952, officially because of ill health. However, he lived for another 19 years, dying onAugust 17 1971 .Awards
*
Wound Badge (1918) in black
*Iron Cross (1914) 2. and 1. class
*Iron Cross (1939) 2. and 1. class
* Ritterkreuz des Königlichen Hausordens von Hohenzollern mit Schwertern
*Knight's Cross (30 September 1939)References
*Hayward, Joel S. A. "Stopped At Stalingrad." University Press of Kansas; Lawrence: 1998. ISBN 978-070061146-1
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