List of Soviet military units that lost their standards in World War II
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During World War II each unit of the Red Army had a military standard, as required by the Decree on Revolutionary Red Banners of the WPRA Units from 11 June 1926 (superseded by the Decree on the Red Banner of the Military Units of the Red Army from 21 December 1942).[1] The standards were typically in the form of a rectangular red banner with the Soviet state emblem and the unit's name on the front side. The decree required the standard to be present at the battlefield.[1] The loss of the standard "due to faintheartedness" was punishable by court martial and the disbandment of the military unit.[1] On several occasions the standards were saved at the cost of life or hidden to prevent their capture.[2] However, within months following the invasion of the Soviet Union the Germans captured dozens of Soviet regimental and divisional standards.[2] Some others were later either retrieved or substituted with new ones.
Stolen due to negligence of Lieutenant Pavlov. Captain Rutkovsky, who entrusted the standard to Pavlov, was arrested for 15 days, reduced in rank and had half of his salary withheld[5]
Regiments[]
Unit
Details of the standard's loss
Lost in 1944 during the battle of Nyíregyháza. Because the regiment's personnel had been killed in action while protecting the standard, the People's Commissar of Defense allowed the regiment to receive a new standard and retain its Guards status.[1]
Lost in 1944 during the battle of Nyíregyháza. Alongside 8th Guards Airborne Rifle Regiment, the regiment was allowed by the People's Commissar of Defense to receive a new standard and retain its Guards status, as its personnel had also died while protecting the standard.[1]
Lost in unclear circumstances after the battle on 10 February 1943, the prosecutor's investigation was inconclusive[5]
Became missing in summer 1942 during an encirclement in . The regiment was disbanded, but after it was revealed that the standard had actually been given to a shepherd to prevent its capture, the unit was restored under its original name.[1]
Lost on 26 October 1944 due to internal mismanagement during the battle of Nagykálló. As the result, the regiment was transformed into a penal military unit and its commander, Lieutenant Colonel Yevgeny Danilevich, was reduced in rank to Major. In February 1945 the regiment was restored to its original status. This is the only case of punishment of the entire unit for the loss of standard during the war.[1]
Lost in 1944 during the battle of Nagykálló, retrieved after eight days[1]
Burned down on 24 April 1945 after the staff car transporting it had been fired upon during the Battle of Berlin[5]
24th Samara–Ulyanovsk Rifle Division
Lost within weeks after the invasion of the Soviet Union. Retrieved after the liberation of Smolensk Oblast[1]
44th Guards Rifle Division
Lost during transportation. Private Tuchin, who was ultimately responsible for the standard's transportation, shot himself, two other responsible persons, Captain Ustinov and starshina Pestov, were court-martialed and sentenced to 10 and 7 years in prison, respectively. As the standard had been lost due to negligence and not at the battlefield, the division was ultimately allowed to receive a new standard.[5]
86th Rifle Division
Burned down in the division's headquarters during the German bombing of Ciechanowiec in 1941[13]
181st Rifle Division
Captured in August 1942 when the division's commander Major General and his entourage tried to escape from German encirclement[14]
299th Rifle Division
Captured by Germans during the battle of in 1941[15]