Haunting photographs that reveal how 1943’s Battle of Kursk, the decisive face-off between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, helped turn the tide of World War II.
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1 of 29Soviet troops follow their T-34 tanks during a counterattack. TASS/Getty Images 2 of 29Soldiers prepare heavy artillery to launch attack.
Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 3 of 29The Battle of Kursk was fought between German and Soviet forces on the Eastern Front.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 4 of 29Soldiers take aim from the dugouts.
Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 5 of 29Tanks (Tiger I) and infantry enter a burning village. Ullstein Bild/Getty Images 6 of 29The people of Kursk try to reconstruct a depot destroyed during the battle between Germany and the Soviet Union. TASS/Getty Images 7 of 29Children sitting near ruins of their house at the Oktyabrskoye settlement. TASS/Getty Images 8 of 29Historians estimate there were more than 800,000 Soviet casualties and some 200,000 German casualties at Kursk.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 9 of 29Arguably, Germany won the battle of Kursk but were unable to break through the Soviet Army’s defenses.
Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 10 of 29A nurse attends to a wounded soldier of the Red Army during the battle.TASS/Getty Images 11 of 29Soviet soldiers walk and drive past a burning T-34 medium tank during the Battle of Kursk. Hulton Archive/Getty Images 12 of 29Although the conflict between the Soviet and German forces barely lasted two months, the battle of Kursk is considered the largest armoured engagement in history. Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 13 of 29A German soldier sits in despair by a destroyed heavy artillery gun and the corpse of one of his compatriots during the Kursk battle.V. Kinelovsky/Slava Katamidze Collection/Getty Images 14 of 29Soldiers launch attack in the battle of Kursk. TASS/Getty Images 15 of 29Soviet soldiers with residents of a village liberated from German occupation.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 16 of 29Soldiers of the Soviet Union, also known as the Red Army , approach the city of Dmitrov-Orlovsky.TASS/Getty Images 17 of 29Germany amassed over 500,000 men, 10,000 guns and mortars, 2,700 tanks and assault guns, and 2,500 aircraft to take Kursk.Ullstein Bild/Getty Images 18 of 29Red Army soldiers with an anti-tank gun.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 19 of 29In the Battle of Kursk, both the German and Soviet sides were heavily prepared to fight against each other.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 20 of 29Soldiers fire against enemy forces.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 21 of 29The Red Army continues to advance amid hail fire and tank attacks.
Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 22 of 29A tank VI ‘Tiger’ from German forces. Ullstein Bild/Getty Images 23 of 29Tanks fire attack at Kursk.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 24 of 29Tank battle at the Kursk bulge. TASS/Getty Images 25 of 29Soviet t-34 tank driving over a trench with Red Army soldiers.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 26 of 29The battle of Kursk is regarded as one of the biggest artillery battles in history.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 27 of 29Tiger I tanks being brought on railroad low-loaders for the Kursk battle.Atlantic-Press/ullstein bild/Getty Images 28 of 29(Eingeschränkte Rechte für bestimmte redaktionelle Kunden in Deutschland. Limited rights for specific editorial clients in Germany.) 2.WW, campaign against soviet union /eastern front, theater of war: Battle of Kursk (Bjelogorod-Orel 5.-16.7.1943): grenadiers of Pz.Gren.Div. (mechanized inf. Div) ‘Grossdeutschland’ mounted on an assault gun III. about Ullstein Bild/Getty Images 29 of 29Like this gallery?Share it:
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28 Haunting Photos From The Battle Of Kursk: The Clash That Changed WWII View Gallery
The Battle of Kursk, fought in July and August of 1943, was the last German offensive against the Red Army in World War II. In terms of initiative and momentum, it marked the end of the Nazis’ advance on the Eastern Front.
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1 of 29Soviet troops follow their T-34 tanks during a counterattack. TASS/Getty Images 2 of 29Soldiers prepare heavy artillery to launch attack.
Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 3 of 29The Battle of Kursk was fought between German and Soviet forces on the Eastern Front.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 4 of 29Soldiers take aim from the dugouts.
Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 5 of 29Tanks (Tiger I) and infantry enter a burning village. Ullstein Bild/Getty Images 6 of 29The people of Kursk try to reconstruct a depot destroyed during the battle between Germany and the Soviet Union. TASS/Getty Images 7 of 29Children sitting near ruins of their house at the Oktyabrskoye settlement. TASS/Getty Images 8 of 29Historians estimate there were more than 800,000 Soviet casualties and some 200,000 German casualties at Kursk.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 9 of 29Arguably, Germany won the battle of Kursk but were unable to break through the Soviet Army’s defenses.
Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 10 of 29A nurse attends to a wounded soldier of the Red Army during the battle.TASS/Getty Images 11 of 29Soviet soldiers walk and drive past a burning T-34 medium tank during the Battle of Kursk. Hulton Archive/Getty Images 12 of 29Although the conflict between the Soviet and German forces barely lasted two months, the battle of Kursk is considered the largest armoured engagement in history. Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 13 of 29A German soldier sits in despair by a destroyed heavy artillery gun and the corpse of one of his compatriots during the Kursk battle.V. Kinelovsky/Slava Katamidze Collection/Getty Images 14 of 29Soldiers launch attack in the battle of Kursk. TASS/Getty Images 15 of 29Soviet soldiers with residents of a village liberated from German occupation.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 16 of 29Soldiers of the Soviet Union, also known as the Red Army , approach the city of Dmitrov-Orlovsky.TASS/Getty Images 17 of 29Germany amassed over 500,000 men, 10,000 guns and mortars, 2,700 tanks and assault guns, and 2,500 aircraft to take Kursk.Ullstein Bild/Getty Images 18 of 29Red Army soldiers with an anti-tank gun.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 19 of 29In the Battle of Kursk, both the German and Soviet sides were heavily prepared to fight against each other.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 20 of 29Soldiers fire against enemy forces.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 21 of 29The Red Army continues to advance amid hail fire and tank attacks.
Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 22 of 29A tank VI ‘Tiger’ from German forces. Ullstein Bild/Getty Images 23 of 29Tanks fire attack at Kursk.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 24 of 29Tank battle at the Kursk bulge. TASS/Getty Images 25 of 29Soviet t-34 tank driving over a trench with Red Army soldiers.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 26 of 29The battle of Kursk is regarded as one of the biggest artillery battles in history.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 27 of 29Tiger I tanks being brought on railroad low-loaders for the Kursk battle.Atlantic-Press/ullstein bild/Getty Images 28 of 29(Eingeschränkte Rechte für bestimmte redaktionelle Kunden in Deutschland. Limited rights for specific editorial clients in Germany.) 2.WW, campaign against soviet union /eastern front, theater of war: Battle of Kursk (Bjelogorod-Orel 5.-16.7.1943): grenadiers of Pz.Gren.Div. (mechanized inf. Div) ‘Grossdeutschland’ mounted on an assault gun III. about Ullstein Bild/Getty Images 29 of 29Like this gallery?Share it:
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And if you liked this post, be sure to check out these popular posts:
36 Photos Of The Battle Of Stalingrad, The Biggest Clash In The History Of War
33 Captivating Photos From The Battle Of Guadalcanal, America’s First Offensive Of WWII
54 Battle Of The Bulge Photos That Capture The Nazis’ Brutal Last Ditch Counteroffensive
1 of 29Soviet troops follow their T-34 tanks during a counterattack. TASS/Getty Images 2 of 29Soldiers prepare heavy artillery to launch attack.
Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 3 of 29The Battle of Kursk was fought between German and Soviet forces on the Eastern Front.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 4 of 29Soldiers take aim from the dugouts.
Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 5 of 29Tanks (Tiger I) and infantry enter a burning village. Ullstein Bild/Getty Images 6 of 29The people of Kursk try to reconstruct a depot destroyed during the battle between Germany and the Soviet Union. TASS/Getty Images 7 of 29Children sitting near ruins of their house at the Oktyabrskoye settlement. TASS/Getty Images 8 of 29Historians estimate there were more than 800,000 Soviet casualties and some 200,000 German casualties at Kursk.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 9 of 29Arguably, Germany won the battle of Kursk but were unable to break through the Soviet Army’s defenses.
Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 10 of 29A nurse attends to a wounded soldier of the Red Army during the battle.TASS/Getty Images 11 of 29Soviet soldiers walk and drive past a burning T-34 medium tank during the Battle of Kursk. Hulton Archive/Getty Images 12 of 29Although the conflict between the Soviet and German forces barely lasted two months, the battle of Kursk is considered the largest armoured engagement in history. Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 13 of 29A German soldier sits in despair by a destroyed heavy artillery gun and the corpse of one of his compatriots during the Kursk battle.V. Kinelovsky/Slava Katamidze Collection/Getty Images 14 of 29Soldiers launch attack in the battle of Kursk. TASS/Getty Images 15 of 29Soviet soldiers with residents of a village liberated from German occupation.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 16 of 29Soldiers of the Soviet Union, also known as the Red Army , approach the city of Dmitrov-Orlovsky.TASS/Getty Images 17 of 29Germany amassed over 500,000 men, 10,000 guns and mortars, 2,700 tanks and assault guns, and 2,500 aircraft to take Kursk.Ullstein Bild/Getty Images 18 of 29Red Army soldiers with an anti-tank gun.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 19 of 29In the Battle of Kursk, both the German and Soviet sides were heavily prepared to fight against each other.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 20 of 29Soldiers fire against enemy forces.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 21 of 29The Red Army continues to advance amid hail fire and tank attacks.
Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 22 of 29A tank VI ‘Tiger’ from German forces. Ullstein Bild/Getty Images 23 of 29Tanks fire attack at Kursk.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 24 of 29Tank battle at the Kursk bulge. TASS/Getty Images 25 of 29Soviet t-34 tank driving over a trench with Red Army soldiers.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 26 of 29The battle of Kursk is regarded as one of the biggest artillery battles in history.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 27 of 29Tiger I tanks being brought on railroad low-loaders for the Kursk battle.Atlantic-Press/ullstein bild/Getty Images 28 of 29(Eingeschränkte Rechte für bestimmte redaktionelle Kunden in Deutschland. Limited rights for specific editorial clients in Germany.) 2.WW, campaign against soviet union /eastern front, theater of war: Battle of Kursk (Bjelogorod-Orel 5.-16.7.1943): grenadiers of Pz.Gren.Div. (mechanized inf. Div) ‘Grossdeutschland’ mounted on an assault gun III. about Ullstein Bild/Getty Images 29 of 29Like this gallery?Share it:
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36 Photos Of The Battle Of Stalingrad, The Biggest Clash In The History Of War
33 Captivating Photos From The Battle Of Guadalcanal, America’s First Offensive Of WWII
54 Battle Of The Bulge Photos That Capture The Nazis’ Brutal Last Ditch Counteroffensive
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1 of 29Soviet troops follow their T-34 tanks during a counterattack. TASS/Getty Images 2 of 29Soldiers prepare heavy artillery to launch attack.
Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 3 of 29The Battle of Kursk was fought between German and Soviet forces on the Eastern Front.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 4 of 29Soldiers take aim from the dugouts.
Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 5 of 29Tanks (Tiger I) and infantry enter a burning village. Ullstein Bild/Getty Images 6 of 29The people of Kursk try to reconstruct a depot destroyed during the battle between Germany and the Soviet Union. TASS/Getty Images 7 of 29Children sitting near ruins of their house at the Oktyabrskoye settlement. TASS/Getty Images 8 of 29Historians estimate there were more than 800,000 Soviet casualties and some 200,000 German casualties at Kursk.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 9 of 29Arguably, Germany won the battle of Kursk but were unable to break through the Soviet Army’s defenses.
Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 10 of 29A nurse attends to a wounded soldier of the Red Army during the battle.TASS/Getty Images 11 of 29Soviet soldiers walk and drive past a burning T-34 medium tank during the Battle of Kursk. Hulton Archive/Getty Images 12 of 29Although the conflict between the Soviet and German forces barely lasted two months, the battle of Kursk is considered the largest armoured engagement in history. Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 13 of 29A German soldier sits in despair by a destroyed heavy artillery gun and the corpse of one of his compatriots during the Kursk battle.V. Kinelovsky/Slava Katamidze Collection/Getty Images 14 of 29Soldiers launch attack in the battle of Kursk. TASS/Getty Images 15 of 29Soviet soldiers with residents of a village liberated from German occupation.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 16 of 29Soldiers of the Soviet Union, also known as the Red Army , approach the city of Dmitrov-Orlovsky.TASS/Getty Images 17 of 29Germany amassed over 500,000 men, 10,000 guns and mortars, 2,700 tanks and assault guns, and 2,500 aircraft to take Kursk.Ullstein Bild/Getty Images 18 of 29Red Army soldiers with an anti-tank gun.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 19 of 29In the Battle of Kursk, both the German and Soviet sides were heavily prepared to fight against each other.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 20 of 29Soldiers fire against enemy forces.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 21 of 29The Red Army continues to advance amid hail fire and tank attacks.
Laski Diffusion/Getty Images 22 of 29A tank VI ‘Tiger’ from German forces. Ullstein Bild/Getty Images 23 of 29Tanks fire attack at Kursk.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 24 of 29Tank battle at the Kursk bulge. TASS/Getty Images 25 of 29Soviet t-34 tank driving over a trench with Red Army soldiers.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 26 of 29The battle of Kursk is regarded as one of the biggest artillery battles in history.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images 27 of 29Tiger I tanks being brought on railroad low-loaders for the Kursk battle.Atlantic-Press/ullstein bild/Getty Images 28 of 29(Eingeschränkte Rechte für bestimmte redaktionelle Kunden in Deutschland. Limited rights for specific editorial clients in Germany.) 2.WW, campaign against soviet union /eastern front, theater of war: Battle of Kursk (Bjelogorod-Orel 5.-16.7.1943): grenadiers of Pz.Gren.Div. (mechanized inf. Div) ‘Grossdeutschland’ mounted on an assault gun III. about Ullstein Bild/Getty Images 29 of 29Like this gallery?Share it:
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1 of 29Soviet troops follow their T-34 tanks during a counterattack. TASS/Getty Images
2 of 29Soldiers prepare heavy artillery to launch attack.
Laski Diffusion/Getty Images
3 of 29The Battle of Kursk was fought between German and Soviet forces on the Eastern Front.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images
4 of 29Soldiers take aim from the dugouts.
Laski Diffusion/Getty Images
5 of 29Tanks (Tiger I) and infantry enter a burning village. Ullstein Bild/Getty Images
6 of 29The people of Kursk try to reconstruct a depot destroyed during the battle between Germany and the Soviet Union. TASS/Getty Images
7 of 29Children sitting near ruins of their house at the Oktyabrskoye settlement. TASS/Getty Images
8 of 29Historians estimate there were more than 800,000 Soviet casualties and some 200,000 German casualties at Kursk.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images
9 of 29Arguably, Germany won the battle of Kursk but were unable to break through the Soviet Army’s defenses.
Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images
10 of 29A nurse attends to a wounded soldier of the Red Army during the battle.TASS/Getty Images
11 of 29Soviet soldiers walk and drive past a burning T-34 medium tank during the Battle of Kursk. Hulton Archive/Getty Images
12 of 29Although the conflict between the Soviet and German forces barely lasted two months, the battle of Kursk is considered the largest armoured engagement in history. Laski Diffusion/Getty Images
13 of 29A German soldier sits in despair by a destroyed heavy artillery gun and the corpse of one of his compatriots during the Kursk battle.V. Kinelovsky/Slava Katamidze Collection/Getty Images
14 of 29Soldiers launch attack in the battle of Kursk. TASS/Getty Images
15 of 29Soviet soldiers with residents of a village liberated from German occupation.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images
16 of 29Soldiers of the Soviet Union, also known as the Red Army , approach the city of Dmitrov-Orlovsky.TASS/Getty Images
17 of 29Germany amassed over 500,000 men, 10,000 guns and mortars, 2,700 tanks and assault guns, and 2,500 aircraft to take Kursk.Ullstein Bild/Getty Images
18 of 29Red Army soldiers with an anti-tank gun.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images
19 of 29In the Battle of Kursk, both the German and Soviet sides were heavily prepared to fight against each other.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images
20 of 29Soldiers fire against enemy forces.Laski Diffusion/Getty Images
21 of 29The Red Army continues to advance amid hail fire and tank attacks.
Laski Diffusion/Getty Images
22 of 29A tank VI ‘Tiger’ from German forces. Ullstein Bild/Getty Images
23 of 29Tanks fire attack at Kursk.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images
24 of 29Tank battle at the Kursk bulge. TASS/Getty Images
25 of 29Soviet t-34 tank driving over a trench with Red Army soldiers.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images
26 of 29The battle of Kursk is regarded as one of the biggest artillery battles in history.Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images
27 of 29Tiger I tanks being brought on railroad low-loaders for the Kursk battle.Atlantic-Press/ullstein bild/Getty Images
28 of 29(Eingeschränkte Rechte für bestimmte redaktionelle Kunden in Deutschland. Limited rights for specific editorial clients in Germany.) 2.WW, campaign against soviet union /eastern front, theater of war: Battle of Kursk (Bjelogorod-Orel 5.-16.7.1943): grenadiers of Pz.Gren.Div. (mechanized inf. Div) ‘Grossdeutschland’ mounted on an assault gun III. about Ullstein Bild/Getty Images
29 of 29Like this gallery?Share it:
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28 Haunting Photos From The Battle Of Kursk: The Clash That Changed WWII View Gallery
28 Haunting Photos From The Battle Of Kursk: The Clash That Changed WWII View Gallery
28 Haunting Photos From The Battle Of Kursk: The Clash That Changed WWII View Gallery
28 Haunting Photos From The Battle Of Kursk: The Clash That Changed WWII View Gallery
28 Haunting Photos From The Battle Of Kursk: The Clash That Changed WWII
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By some accounts, it was the largest tank battle in history, involving an estimated 7,500 tanks and well over 2 million troops from both sides.
At Kursk, Germany’s superior technology and military training were defeated by the Soviets’ sheer numbers and industrial capacity. After the battle, the German forces never regained the advantage in the East or made any significant breaks through Soviet lines — the tide had turned. This is the story of the most important World War II battle most people have never heard of.
Germany’s Pre-Kursk Defeat At Stalingrad
Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone/Getty ImagesChief Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels was forced to deliver the news of the German defeat at Stalingrad.
Before the Battle of Kursk, there was the Battle of Stalingrad, the largest confrontation of World War II. It lasted from August 1942 to February 1943 and destroyed the German Sixth Army, with 91,000 German soldiers surrendering to Soviet troops on the last day of the battle.
The losses at Stalingrad had been so staggering that they were impossible to deny to the point that it was the first time the Nazi propaganda machine admitted any defeat to its own public.
Dr. Joseph Goebbels, Hitler’s minister of propaganda, threw Germany into a period of official state mourning. The radio broadcast the military funeral march “Ich Hatt Einen Kameraden” (I Had A Comrade) three times in a row after the announcement. Theaters and restaurants closed for days.
On February 18, 1943, Goebbels gave the most famous speech of his career in his Total War Speech, also known as the Sportpalast Speech, in which he rallied a carefully curated audience of “soldiers, doctors, scientists, artists,” and more to completely devote themselves to the war effort.
According to Goebbels, Germany was in danger of losing the war unless all Germans — men and women — worked all day, every day in the effort to defeat the Allies.
He announced that German citizens must prepare to “devote [their] entire strength to providing the Eastern front with the men and materials it needs to give Bolshevism its mortal blow.” It was an apparent effort from the Nazis to turn the loss at Stalingrad into the rallying cry for a new offensive effort.
To boost its numbers, the German Army recruited World War I veterans up to age 50 and young men from the Hitler Youth program, all of whom were previously exempt from service.
But the German Army had been losing momentum and desperately needed a victory more than a call to arms from its Nazi leaders. After Stalingrad, the Soviet troops, known as the Red Army, continued to march 450 miles west through the winter until a German victory at Kharkov, in present-day northeastern Ukraine, stopped them.
The movements had left a “bulge” in the German-Soviet front lines centered around Kursk, about 120 miles north of Kharkov and 280 miles south of Moscow, which would later be referred to as the bulge of Kursk.
This meant that Kursk was under Soviet control but was essentially surrounded by German enemies to the west, north, and south. Readying their next strategy to resume victory in battle, Germany’s generals believed Kursk was the best point to attack.
But while Germany was planning to attack Kursk, the Red Army was preparing to be attacked. Both sides summoned droves of fresh soldiers and tons of artillery for the Battle of Kursk.
The Battle Of Kursk
Ullstein Bild/Getty ImagesSoviet Guardsmen Corps during the Battle of Kursk. The Soviet Union amassed more than a million men to fight in the conflict.
From March through June of 1943, both sides poured all their might into preparing for Kursk. The Germans amassed about 600,000 troops and 2,700 tanks and assault guns while the Soviets pushed 1.3 million troops and 3,500 tanks to the same area.
The significance of the German operations in Kursk led to the offensive to be named Operation Citadel, a move to obliterate the Soviet Army by way of a two-pronged attack from the north and the south in areas near Kursk.
“Every officer and every man must recognize the significance of this attack. Victory at Kursk must serve as a beacon to the world,” Hitler announced to his men.
But privately, Hitler was far less confident about his army’s chances at Kursk. “The thought of this attack makes my stomach queasy,” he told Nazi General Heinz Guderian on May 10, knowing the Soviet Army greatly outnumbered his own.
Germany’s goal with the attack became less ambitious: Instead of defeating the Red Army, Germany’s best hope was to weaken or even just distract it so that the Nazis could devote more resources to the Western Front.
Germany’s northern and southern attacks began on July 5, with German infantry and armor breaking through the first lines of Soviet infantry and penetrating to their deeper defensive positions.
But just two days in, the northern advance led by Field Marshal Günther von Kluge was bogged down in Ponyri, a small town roughly 40 miles north of Kursk. Soviet Marshal Konstantin Rokossovsky had evacuated all civilians from Ponyri beginning in April and had prepared a strong defense there in anticipation of the Germans.
Soviet veterans recall the situation on the Eastern front.
Over several days, Ponyri became a “mini Stalingrad” of the Battle of Kursk, with intense, house-to-house fighting and the same ground trading hands several times each day. After five days, the Germans lost thousands of men and hundreds of tanks.
Soviet veterans recall the situation on the Eastern front.
The southern prong of Operation Citadel was commanded by German Field Marshal Erich von Manstein.
Racing to Kursk, the southern faction was expected to break through the Red Army’s defense within 24 hours and to have advanced halfway to the city within 48 hours. But there were more difficulties on the battlefield than German General Hermann Hoth expected.
To the Germans’ surprise, the Soviets quickly immobilized 36 of their Panther tanks as the machines became entangled in a hotbed of Soviet field mines that brought the panzer division to a halt.
Eventually, by July 11, von Manstein’s forces reached a point about two miles south of the town of Prokhorovka, about 50 miles southeast of Kursk. This set the stage for the battle that would make or break the southern attack: the Battle of Prokhorovka, one of the biggest tank battles in history.
In the span of a few hours, 306 German tanks fought 672 Soviet tanks, according to Russian military historian Valeriy Zamulin.
Commander Rudolf von Ribbentrop, the son of German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop, recalled:
Vasili Bryukhov, a T-34 commander on the Soviet side, later recalled the difficulty of maneuvering one of a sea of tanks:
It’s generally agreed that — remarkably — the Germans came out on top. A whopping 400 Soviet tanks were destroyed, compared to about 80 German ones. But even a tactical victory wasn’t enough to change the course of Operation Citadel.
A Battle Of Brute Strength
A look at how the Red Army’s massive force and industrial strength defeated Germany.
In many ways, the Battle of Kursk was a showdown of sheer size and power between the forces of Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union. On the German side, 2,451 tanks and assault guns, and 7,417 guns and mortars were rounded up for the troops in Kursk. On the other hand, the Red Army assembled 5,128 tanks and self-propelled guns, 31,415 guns and mortars, and 3,549 aircraft.
A look at how the Red Army’s massive force and industrial strength defeated Germany.
German infantryman Raimund Rüffer remembered the chaotic hellfire at the start of the Kursk offensive:
The heavy tank force played a massive role in the Battle of Kursk. Hitler had placed such faith in Germany’s new Panther medium tanks that he pinned Operation Citadel’s launch date on the arrival of the new tanks, despite concerns about their mechanical reliability and his army’s lack of training on the new machines.
In contrast, the Soviets’ T-34 tanks were time-tested and cost-efficient. By mid-1941, the Soviets had more tanks than all the armies of the world combined; they manufactured 57,000 T-34 tanks by the end of World War II. Size and strength like this ultimately helped the Soviets prevail at Kursk.
The Finale And Aftermath Of The Battle Of Kursk
TASS/Getty ImagesResidents clear the rubble on Lenin Street after a German air raid on the Eastern Front.
By July 12, with the northern German prong having already been turned back at Ponyri, Hitler and his men realized that Operation Citadel was on the verge of failure. Hitler met with Kluge and von Manstein to discuss discontinuing the offensive. Allied forces had just invaded Sicily, and he thought his army could be put to better use on the Western Front.
They continued their southern offensive for a few days. But by July 17, all offensive operations ceased and the German Army was ordered to withdraw. Operation Citadel was done.
The attacking German force at Kursk consisted of 777,000 Nazi forces battling almost 2 million Soviets. In this battle of brawn, the Red Army won by a landslide — the combined strength of Soviet troops on the Central and Voronezh Fronts alone was 1,337,166 men. They also had twice the number of tanks and aircraft as the Germans and four times the artillery.
Roughly a million casualties were counted on both sides after the Battle of Kursk ended.
Losses on the field were sharply lopsided, some estimates counting only 200,000 German casualties compared to between 700,000 to 800,000 losses for the Soviets.
Roughly a million casualties were counted on both sides after the Battle of Kursk ended.
In the end, the Germans, already decimated at Stalingrad and threatened by the invasion of Italy, could not continue fighting against the never-ending waves of Soviet troops and tanks. Ponyri and Prokhorovka had been as far as they would go, and the Nazi war machine never again took the offensive in the Soviet Union.
Hitler’s forward push was over. The tide in the East — and truly, the war against the Nazis as a whole — had forever turned.
Now that you’ve learned about the Battle of Kursk, take a look at 54 photos from the Battle of the Bulge that capture the Nazis’ brutal last-ditch counteroffensive. Then, check out vintage Soviet propaganda posters from World War II and the Stalin era.