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Rudolf Holste

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Years of service
  
1914–45

Service/branch
  
German Army

Name
  
Rudolf Holste

Rank
  
Generalleutnant


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

Battles/wars
  
World War I World War II

Died
  
December 4, 1970, Baden-Baden, Germany

Awards
  
Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross

Commands held
  
14th Infantry Division, 4. Kavallerie-Division, XXXXI Panzer Corps

Battles and wars
  
World War I, World War II

Rudolf Holste (9 April 1897 – 4 December 1970) was a German general during World War II. He commanded the XLI Panzer Corps during the Battle of Berlin, allegedly abandoning his troops on 1 May 1945, one day before the city capitulated.

Contents

Career

Holste joined the German Army on in August 1914 and was commissioned as an officer in 1915. During World War II, he commanded 14th Infantry Division, the 4th Cavalry Division and the XLI Panzer Corps. On 20 April 1945 he was promoted to major general (Generalleutnant).

Battle of Berlin

On 22 April 1945, Holste became part of a poorly conceived and incredibly desperate plan that Wilhelm Keitel and Alfred Jodl proposed to Adolf Hitler. The plan envisaged for the few remaining German forces in central Germany to attack the Soviet forces encircling Berlin. The plan called for General Walther Wenck's Twelfth Army on the Elbe and Mulde fronts to be turned around and to attack towards the east, then linking up just south of Berlin with General Theodor Busse’s Ninth Army. Then both armies would strike in a northeastern direction towards Potsdam and Berlin. Wenck’s objective would be the autobahn at Ferch, near Potsdam.

Holste's directive was to attack from the area northwest of Berlin with his XLI Panzer Corps across the Elbe between Spandau and Oranienburg. To give Holste as much punch as possible, Steiner was to turn over to Holste his mechanized divisions (the 25th Panzer-Grenadiers and the 7th Panzer). Wenck's army did make a turn around and attacked towards Berlin, but was soon halted outside of Potsdam by strong Soviet resistance. Neither Busse nor Holste made much progress towards Berlin. By the end of the day on 27 April, the Soviet forces encircling Berlin linked up and the forces inside Berlin were cut off.

Late in the evening of 29 April, Hans Krebs contacted Jodl by radio from Berlin and requested an immediate report on the whereabouts of Holste's spearhead. On 30 April, Jodl replied that Holste's Corps was on the defensive. Early on the morning of May 1, Holste is reported to have appeared at Twelfth Army HQ having abandoned his troops. A day later, on 2 May, the Battle for Berlin came to an end when Helmuth Weidling unconditionally surrendered the city to the Soviets. Holste surrendered 8 May 1945. In 1947, he was released.

Awards

  • Iron Cross (1914) 2nd Class (24 July 1915) & 1st Class (16 November 1917)
  • Clasp to the Iron Cross 2nd Class (19 September 1939) & 1st Class (14 October 1939)
  • German Cross in Gold on 24 December 1941 as Oberstleutnant in Artillerie-Regiment 73
  • Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves
  • Knight's Cross on 6 April 1942 as Oberst and commander of Artillerie-Regiment 73
  • Oak Leaves on 27 August 1944 as Oberst and commander of 4. Kavallerie-Brigade
  • References

    Rudolf Holste Wikipedia