298th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)


The 298th Infantry Division was an infantry division of the German Heer during World War II.

History

The 298th Infantry Division was formed as a division of the eighth Aufstellungswelle at Neuhammer military base on 6 February 1940. Initially headquartered at Breslau, the 298th Infantry Division was made of up three infantry regiments numbered 525 through 527, the Artillery Regiment 298, as well as the Division Units 298, comprising various support formations. The division was built around battalion-sized cadres supplied by the 7th, 8th, 28th, 62nd, 252nd, and 253rd Infantry Divisions, as well as recruits from the Silesia region. The initial divisional commander was Walther Graeßner, appointed on 6 February 1940.
On 6 November 1940, the division passed a third of its strength to the 335th Infantry Division of the fourteenth Aufstellungswelle. The transferred forces, which included the first battalions of each of the infantry regiments, were later replaced with fresh recruits.
In June 1941, the 298th Infantry Division saw its first combat on the Eastern Front.
On 1 January 1942, Arnold Szelinski took command of the division.
Over the course of 1942, three battalions were dissolved due to casualties.
Between October 1942 and January 1943, while under the supervision of the 8th Italian Army, the division suffered crushing casualties, rendering it ineffective as a fighting formation.
On 27 December 1942, Herbert Michaelis replaced Szelinski as divisional commander.
Subsequently, a military directive of 30 March 1943 instructed the merger of the remnants of the battered 298th, 385th, and 387th Infantry Divisions to a new 387th Infantry Division. For that purpose, three battalions of the 298th Infantry Division were merged into a new Grenadier Regiment 525, and the strength of the Artillery Regiment 298 was reformed into the 1st and 4th batteries of the new Artillery Regiment 387. The staff of the 298th Infantry Division became the staff of the new 389th "Rheingold" Infantry Division.

Superior formations

Noteworthy individuals