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The Reserve Front was a Front, or roughly Army group-sized military formation, of the Soviet Army during the Second World War.

First Formation[]

The Reserve Front describes either of two distinct organizations during the war. The first version was created on July 30, 1941 in a reorganization of the earlier Front of Reserve Armies. STAVKA Order No.003334, of 14 July, directed that the Front of Reserve Armies include:[1]

  • 24th Army, with ten divisions, three gun, one howitzer, and three corps artillery regiments, and four anti-tank artillery regiments;
  • 28th Army, with nine divisions, one gun, one howitzer, and four corps artillery regiments, and four anti-tank artillery regiments;
  • 29th Army, with five divisions, five regiments of artillery, and two regiments and one squadron of aviation;
  • 30th Army, with five divisions, one corps artillery regiment, and two AA artillery regiments;
  • 31st Army, with six divisions, one corps artillery regiment, and two anti-tank artillery regiments; and
  • 32nd Army, with seven divisions (apparently including the 8th Rifle Division), and one anti-tank artillery regiment.

This Front was encircled and destroyed at Vyazma. The surviving forces transferred to the Western Front on October 10, 1941.

2nd Formation[]

The second version of this Front was created on April 6, 1943. It incorporated the:

It was reorganized as the Steppe Military District on April 15, 1943 and eventually designated the Steppe Front.

Commanders[]

  • Lieutenant General of NKVD I.A. Bogdanov [Front of Reserve Armies] (14 July 1941 - 30 July 1941)
  • General Georgy K. Zhukov (August 1941 - September 1941)
  • Marshal Semyon M. Budenny (September 1941 - 10 October 1941)
  • Lieutenant General Markian M. Popov (6–15 April 1943)

Notes[]

  1. STAVKA Order 003334, Collection of Combat Documents of the Great Patriotic War, ('SBDVOV'), Moscow, Voenizdat, 1958(?), Issue 37, p.13, cited in Glantz, Stumbling Colossus, p.215

References[]

  • David Glantz, Stumbling Colossus, University Press of Kansas, 1998
  • David Glantz, Colossus Reborn: The Red Army at War 1941-43, University Press of Kansas, 2005


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The original article can be found at Reserve Front and the edit history here.
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