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Τετάρτη 6 Απριλίου 2016

Today in History: 6 April 1941, "Operation Marita", the nazi invasion of Greece


Research and text by Lt. Col. (ret.) Ilias Kotridis

On this day today, April 6, 1941, the Germans initiated "Operation Marita", the invasion of Greece.

The Germans, confident because of their rapid advance through western Europe and Yugoslavia, believed that the bunkers at the northern borders of Greece with Bulgaria would offer minimal resistance.

They were proved to be wrong.

The nazis were greeted with a storm of artillery and machine gun fire, sustaining many casualties.

The assault started in the early hours of April 6th, with attacks against the "Metaxas Line",  a series of fortresses and bunkers located on the mountainous northern borders of Greece with Bulgaria.



The offensive was undertaken by the 12th German Army. 

In Petritsi-Marinoupolis area the attack was initiated by the 5th and 6th Mountain Divisions, the 2nd Armored Division and the 125th Independent Regiment. 



In Nevrokopi area, the 72nd Division, in Xanthi area the 164th, in Komotini area the 50th. 

North of Petritsi the 9th Armoured Division, the 73rd and the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler.








On the fisrst day of hostilities, despite the combined air and land attacks, the Germans did not manage to break the Greek defensive lines.



The bunker complexes of Rupel, Paliouriones and Lisse successfully held back the Germans, causing many casualties among their attacking forces.


On the second day, April 7, the germans managed to subdue some strongholds, forcing the Greeks in Istibey and Kelkaya fortresses to surrender. The Germans used chemicals and gas, in order to suffocate the greeks inside the bunkers. A penetration attempt though, through Struma river, failed, with most of the Germans who tried to cross the river killed or wounded. 


The Germans decided to circumvent the defensive positions of "Metaxas Line" and through Yugoslavia, which collapsed within a short period of time, they entered Thessaloniki, while at the same time fierce fighting continued in the borders with Bulgaria, an ally of nazi Germany. 


When on April 9 the fall of Thessaloniki became officially known, the Greeks followed orders and had to abandon the fortresses they defended successfully for 3 days and nights.


The number of casualties during those three days of fighting, including dead, injured and missing in action, according to a variety of sources, is over 2,500 Germans and approximately 1,000 Greeks.


XVIII Corps reported 555 killed, 2,134 wounded and 170 missing (officers not included).

XXX Corps' total casualties are not known, but the 164th Infantry Division suffered 18 killed and 92 wounded and the 50th Infantry Division 26 killed, 22 missing and 177 wounded (plus 4 drowned on 14 April in an accident).


The Metaxas Line consists of 21 independent fortification complexes, the largest of which is Fort Roupel as it covers 6.1 out of the 155 km of the full line and had been constructed at a height of 322 m. 


Lighting was initially mostly provided by oil-lamps, although generators were also installed. (Currently, the fortifications are supplied with public electricity, but they are also equipped with generators). 

Ventilation was achieved both naturally and artificially. Water was supplied via water-mains. The fortification works lasted four years and their cost at the time reached 100,400,000 drachmas.


German General Wilhelm List, who led the attack against the Metaxas Line, admired the bravery and courage of these soldiers. He refrained from taking the Greek soldiers prisoner and declared that the army was free to leave with their war flags, on condition that they surrender their arms and supplies. 


He also ordered his soldiers and officers to salute the Greek soldiers (Beevor 2005, p. 20). The line was also poorly manned as most of the Greek Army was fighting against the Italians, at the Albanian front.


WW2 Greek Army 1940 Reenacting Team - Bringing History to life, 76 years after





Story in Greek - ΣΤΑ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΑ ΚΑΝΤΕ "ΚΛΙΚ" ΕΔΩ

Λένε "ΟΧΙ" και φωνάζουν "ΑΕΡΑ!" 74 χρόνια μετά - Η Ομάδα Αναβίωσης ΕΣ 1940

The last soldiers who fought in the mountains of Greece and Albania against the fascist Italian invaders back in 1940 are slowly disappearing, as most of them are now in their ninth decade of life. 

Fond memories and faded black and white photographs capture the moments experienced by Greek soldiers who were fighting at the front and crashed the fascist hordes of Mussolini, giving a message of dignity and courage.

Today, 76 years after the saga of the Albanian front, a group of Greek reenactors wants to keep these memories alive and give a new life in an important page of the country's recent history.

Although reenactment is widespread in countries such as the US, UK, France, Poland and Germany, covering various historical periods, from antiquity to today, reenactment in Greece is still in its infancy.

A group of Greeks simulates the conditions that Greek soldiers experienced at that time, and see it as an alternative way to remind those historic times and also highlight the contribution of the Greek Army in the early years of the Second World War, when Greece was the last bastion of freedom in Europe, as, apart from Britain, all other countries had already capitulated to the nazis.

"The message we want to spread is that when the Greeks are working together and are getting organized, they can achieve their goals and the historical period we chose to reenact is a typical example", the reenactment team says, adding: 


"Initially, our knowledge was limited, but with research and with the assistance of people who knew details, we managed to create uniforms, equipment and accessories. We were lucky to borrow from friends and collectors who believed and supported our difficult task, at least one authentic piece of equipment, which, thanks to the skills of our team, we were able to reconstruct at our own cost."