Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Erwin Jaenecke

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Years of service
  
1911–45

Commands held
  
Service/branch
  
German Army


Name
  
Erwin Jaenecke

Rank
  
Generaloberst

Erwin Jaenecke www389iddePersonenJaeneckejaenecke4jpg


Allegiance
  
German Empire (to 1918) Weimar Republic (to 1933) Nazi Germany (to 1945)

Battles/wars
  
World War IWorld War II

Died
  
July 3, 1960, Cologne, Germany


Battles and wars
  
World War I, World War II

Erwin Jaenecke (22 April 1890 – 3 July 1960), was a general in the Wehrmacht of Nazi Germany during World War II who commanded the 17th Army.

Jaenecke served on the Eastern Front as commander of the 389th infantry Division and later the IV Army Corps. He was wounded at the Battle of Stalingrad and flown out as one of the last higher officers.

In April 1943 he commanded the LXXXII Army Corps, and from 25 June the 17th Army in the Caucasus and later the Crimean Peninsula. In a 29 April 1944 meeting with Adolf Hitler in Berchtesgaden, Jaenecke insisted that Sevastopol should be evacuated. He was relieved of his command afterward.

Later, he was held responsible for the loss of Crimea, arrested in Romania and court-martialed. Heinz Guderian was appointed as a special investigator in the case. Guderian proceeded slowly and eventually Jaenecke was quietly acquitted in June 1944. Jaenecke was dismissed from the army on 31 January 1945. On 15 June 1945 he was arrested by the Soviet authorities and sentenced to death for war crimes committed under his army command in 1942. His sentence was commuted to 25 years of hard labor. He was released in 1955.

Awards

  • Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 9 October 1942
  • References

    Erwin Jaenecke Wikipedia