From Wikipedia
 | Siege of Leningrad | 
 | Part of the Eastern Front of World War II | 
 |  Diorama of the Siege of Leningrad, in the Museum of the Great Patriotic War, Moscow
 | 
 |  | 
 | Belligerents | 
 |  Germany 
  Finland[1][2] 
  Italy[3] |  Soviet Union | 
 | Commanders and leaders | 
 |  W.R. von Leeb 
  Georg von Küchler 
  C.G.E. Mannerheim[4][5] |  Georgy Zhukov 
  Kliment Voroshilov 
  Leonid Govorov | 
 | Casualties and losses | 
 | unknown | Red Army:[6] 1,017,881 killed, captured or missing
 2,418,185 wounded and sick Civilians:[6]
 642,000 during the siege, 400,000 at evacuations
 
 | 
The 
Siege of Leningrad, also known as the 
Leningrad Blockade (
Russian: 
блокада Ленинграда, 
transliteration: 
blokada Leningrada) was a prolonged military operation resulting from the failure of the German 
Army Group North to capture Leningrad, now known as 
Saint Petersburg, in the 
Eastern Front  theatre of World War II. It started on 8 September 1941, when the last  land connection to the city was severed. Although the Soviets managed to  open a narrow land corridor to the city on 18 January 1943, lifting of  the 
siege  took place on 27 January 1944, 872 days after it began. It was one of  the longest and most destructive sieges in history and one of the 
most costly in terms of casualties.
[7]
 Background
The capture of Leningrad was one of three strategic goals in the German 
Operation Barbarossa and the main target of 
Army Group North. The strategy was motivated by Leningrad's political status as the former capital of Russia and the symbolic capital of the 
Russian Revolution, its military importance as a main base of the Soviet 
Baltic Fleet and its industrial strength, housing numerous arms factories.
[8] By 1939 the city was responsible for 11% of all Soviet industrial output.
[9] It has been reported that 
Adolf Hitler was so confident of capturing Leningrad that he had the invitations to the victory celebrations to be held in the city's 
Hotel Astoria already printed.
[10] The ultimate fate of the city was uncertain in German plans, which ranged from renaming the city to 
Adolfsburg[11] and making it the capital of the new Ingermanland province of the Reich in 
Generalplan Ost, to razing it to the ground and giving areas north of the River Neva to the Finns.
[12][13]
Preparations
German plans
Army Group North under 
Feldmarschall Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb  advanced to Leningrad, its primary objective. Von Leeb's plan called  for capturing the city on the move, but due to strong resistance from  Soviet forces, and also Hitler's recall of 4th 
Panzer Group, he was forced to besiege the city after reaching the shores of 
Lake Ladoga, while trying to complete the encirclement and reaching the Finnish Army under Marshal 
Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim waiting at the 
Svir River, east of Leningrad.
[14]
Finnish military forces were located north of Leningrad, while German forces occupied territories to the south.
[15]  Both German and Finnish forces had the goal of encircling Leningrad and  maintaining the blockade perimeter, thus cutting off all communication  with the city and preventing the defenders from receiving any food or  supplies.
[2][14][16][17][18][19]
 Leningrad fortified region
On 27 June 1941, the Council of Deputies of the Leningrad  administration organised "First response groups" of civilians. In the  next days the entire civilian population of Leningrad was informed of  the danger and over a million citizens were mobilised for the  construction of 
fortifications.  Several lines of defences were built along the perimeter of the city in  order to repulse hostile forces approaching from north and south by  means of civilian resistance.
[2][4]
In the south one of the fortified lines ran from the mouth of the 
Luga River to 
Chudovo, 
Gatchina, 
Uritsk, 
Pulkovo and then through the 
Neva River. Another line of defence passed through 
Peterhof to Gatchina, Pulkovo, 
Kolpino and Koltushy. In the north the defensive line against the Finns, the 
Karelian Fortified Region,  had been maintained in the northern suburbs of Leningrad since the  1930s, and was now returned to service. A total of 190 km (120 mi) of  timber barricades, 635 km (395 mi) of wire entanglements, 700 km  (430 mi) of anti-tank ditches, 5,000 earth-and-timber emplacements and  reinforced concrete weapon emplacements and 25,000 km (16,000 mi)
[citation needed] of open trenches were constructed or excavated by civilians. Even the guns from the cruiser 
Aurora were moved inland to the 
Pulkovo Heights to the south of Leningrad.
 Establishment
The 
4th Panzer Group from 
East Prussia took 
Pskov following a swift advance and reached the neighborhood of 
Luga and 
Novgorod, within operational reach of Leningrad, but it was stopped by fierce resistance south of the city. However, the 
18th Army — despite some 350,000 men lagging behind — forced its way to 
Ostrov and Pskov after the Soviet troops of the 
Northwestern Front retreated towards Leningrad. On 10 July, both Ostrov and Pskov were captured and the 
18th Army reached 
Narva and 
Kingisepp, from where advance toward Leningrad continued from the 
Luga River line. This had the effect of creating siege positions from the 
Gulf of Finland to 
Lake Ladoga,  with the eventual aim of isolating Leningrad from all directions. The  Finnish Army was then expected to advance along the eastern shore of  Lake Ladoga.
[20]
Orders of battle
  
  Map of Army Group North's advance into the USSR in 1941.
  Coral up to July 9.
  Pink up to September 1.
  Green up to December 5.
  Germany
- Army Group North (Feldmarshal von Leeb)[21] - 18th Army (von Küchler) - XXXXII Corps (2 infantry divisions)
- XXVI Corps (3 infantry divisions)
 
- 16th Army (Busch) - XXVIII Corps (2 inf, 1 armoured divisions)
- I Corps (2 infantry divisions)
- X Corps (3 infantry divisions)
- II Corps (3 infantry divisions)
- (L Corps — Under 9. Army) (2 infantry divisions)
 
- 4th Panzer Group (Hoepner) - XXXVIII Corps (1 infantry division)
- XXXXI Motorized Corps (Reinhard) (1 infantry, 1 motorised, 1 armoured divisions)
- LVI Motorized Corps (von Manstein) (1 infantry, 1 motorised, 1 armoured, 1 panzergrenadier divisions)
 
 
 Finland
- Finnish Defence Forces HQ (Finnish Marshal Mannerheim)[22] - I Corps (2 infantry divisions)
- II Corps (2 infantry divisions)
- IV Corps (3 infantry divisions)
 
Soviet Union
- Northern Front (Lieutenant General Popov)[23] - 7th Army (2 rifle, 1 militia divisions, 1 marine brigade, 3 motorised rifle and 1 armoured regiments)
- 8th Army - X Rifle Corps (2 rifle divisions)
- XI Rifle Corps (3 rifle divisions)
- Separate Units (3 rifle divisions)
 
- 14th Army - XXXXII Rifle Corps (2 rifle divisions)
- Separate Units (2 rifle divisions, 1 Fortified area, 1 motorised rifle regiment)
 
- 23rd Army - XIX Rifle Corps (3 rifle divisions)
- Separate Units (2 rifle, 1 motorised divisions, 2 Fortified areas, 1 rifle regiment)
 
- Luga Operation group - XXXXI Rifle Corps (3 rifle divisions)
- Separate Units (1 armoured brigade, 1 rifle regiment)
 
- Kingisepp Operation Group - Separate Units (2 rifle, 2 militia, 1 armoured divisions, 1 Fortified area)
 
- Separate Units (3 rifle divisions, 4 guard militia divisions, 3 Fortified areas, 1 rifle brigade)
 
Of these, the 14th Army defended Murmansk and 7th Army defended  Ladoga Karelia; thus they did not participate in the initial stages of  the siege. The 8th Army was initially part of the Northwestern Front and  retreated through the Baltics. (The 8th army was transferred to  Northern Front on July 14).
On August 23, the Northern front was divided into the Leningrad front  and the Karelian front, as it became impossible for front headquarters  to control everything between Murmansk and Leningrad.
 Severing lines of communication
On 6 August, Hitler repeated his order: "Leningrad first, Donetsk Basin second, Moscow third."
[24] From August 1941 until January 1944, anything that happened between the Arctic Ocean and 
Lake Ilmen concerned the 
Wehrmacht's Leningrad siege operations.
[4] Arctic convoys using the 
Northern Sea Route delivered American 
Lend-Lease  food and war materiel supplies to the Murmansk railhead (although the  rail link to Leningrad was cut off by Finnish armies just north of the  city), as well as several other locations in 
Lapland.
[citation needed]
 Encirclement of Leningrad
Finnish intelligence was particularly helpful for Hitler, as the  Finns had broken some of the Soviet military codes and were able to read  their low-level communications.
[25] He constantly requested intelligence information about Leningrad.
[4] Finland's role in Operation Barbarossa was laid out in Hitler's 
Directive 21,  "The mass of the Finnish army will have the task, in accordance with  the advance made by the northern wing of the German armies, of tying up  maximum Russian strength by attacking to the west, or on both sides, of  Lake Ladoga".
[26] The last rail connection to Leningrad was severed on 30 August, when the Germans reached the 
Neva River. On 8 September, the last land connection to the besieged city was severed when the Germans reached Lake Ladoga at 
Orekhovets. Bombing on 8 September caused 178 fires.
[27] Hitler's directive on 7 October, signed by 
Alfred Jodl, was a reminder not to accept capitulation.
[28]
 Finnish participation
By August 1941, the Finns had advanced to within 20 km of the  northern suburbs of Leningrad at the 1939 Finnish-Soviet border,  threatening the city from the north; they were also advancing through 
East Karelia, east of Lake Ladoga, and threatening the city from the east. The Finnish forces crossed the pre-
Winter War border on the 
Karelian Isthmus by eliminating Soviet 
salients  at Beloostrov and Kirjasalo, thus straightening the frontline so that  it ran along the old border near the shores of Gulf of Finland and Lake  Ladoga, and those positions closest to Leningrad still lying on the  pre-Winter War border. According to Soviet claims the Finnish advance  was stopped in September through resistance by the 
Karelian Fortified Region,
[29]  however Finnish troops had already earlier in August 1941 received  orders to halt the advance after reaching their goals, some of which lay  beyond the pre-Winter War border. After reaching their respective  goals, the Finns halted their advance and started moving troops to East  Karelia.
[30][31] For the next three years, the Finns did little to contribute to the battle for Leningrad, maintaining their lines.
[32] Their headquarters rejected German pleas for aerial attacks against Leningrad
[33] and did not advance farther south from the 
Svir River  in occupied East Karelia (160 kilometers northeast of Leningrad), which  they had reached on 7 September. In the southeast, the Germans captured  
Tikhvin  on 8 November, but failed to complete their encirclement of Leningrad  by advancing further north to join with the Finns at the Svir River. On 9  December, a counter-attack of the Volkhov Front forced the Wehrmacht to  retreat from their Tikhvin positions to the 
River Volkhov line.
[2][4]
On 6 September 1941, Germany's Chief of Staff Alfred Jodl visited  Helsinki. His main goal was to persuade Mannerheim to continue the  offensive. In 1941, 
President Ryti declared to the 
Finnish Parliament  that the aim of the war was to restore the territories lost during the  Winter War and gain more territories in the east to create a "
Greater Finland".
[34][35][36]  After the war, Ryti stated: "On August 24, 1941 I visited the  headquarters of Marshal Mannerheim. The Germans aimed us at crossing the  old border and continuing the offensive to Leningrad. I said that the  capture of Leningrad was not our goal and that we should not take part  in it. Mannerheim and the military minister Walden agreed with me and  refused the offers of the Germans. The result was a paradoxical  situation: the Germans could not approach Leningrad from the north..."  In fact the German and Finnish armies maintained the siege together  until January 1944, but there was little, or no systematic shelling or  bombing from the Finnish positions.
[15]
The proximity of the Finnish positions — 33–35 km (21–22 mi) from  downtown Leningrad — and the threat of a Finnish attack complicated the  defence of the city. At one point the defending Front Commander, 
Popov,  could not release reserves opposing the Finnish forces to be deployed  against the Wehrmacht because they were needed to bolster the 23rd  Army's defences on the Karelian Isthmus.
[37]  Mannerheim terminated the offensive on 31 August 1941, when the army  had reached the 1939 border. Popov felt relieved, and redeployed two  divisions to the German sector on September 5.
[38]
Subsequently, the Finnish forces reduced the 
salients of 
Beloostrov and 
Kirjasalo,
[39] which had threatened their positions at the sea coast and south of the River Vuoksi.
[39] Lieutenant General 
Paavo Talvela  and Colonel Järvinen, the commander of the Finnish Coastal Brigade  responsible for Ladoga, proposed to the German headquarters the blocking  of 
Soviet convoys on Lake Ladoga. The German command formed the 
'international' naval detachment under Finnish command and the 
Einsatzstab Fähre Ost  under German command. These naval units operated against the supply  route in the summer and autumn of 1942, the only period the units were  able to operate as freezing waters then forced the lightly equipped  units to be moved away, and changes in front lines made it impractical  to reestablish these units later in the war.
[15][25][40][41]
Defensive operations
  
  Two Soviet soldiers, one armed with a 
DP machine gun, in the trenches of the Leningrad Front on 1 September 1941.
  The 
Leningrad Front (initially the 
Leningrad Military District) was commanded by Marshal 
Kliment Voroshilov. It included the 
23rd Army in the northern sector between the Gulf of Finland and Lake Ladoga, and the 
48th Army in the western sector between the Gulf of Finland and the 
Slutsk–
Mga position. The Leningrad Fortified Region, the Leningrad garrison, the Baltic Fleet forces, and 
Koporye, 
Southern and Slutsk–
Kolpino operational groups were also present.
 Defence of civilian evacuees
By September 1941, the link with the 
Volkhov Front (commanded by 
Kirill Meretskov) was severed and the defensive sectors were held by four armies: 
23rd Army in the northern sector, 
42nd Army on the western sector, 
55th Army on the southern sector, and the 
67th Army on the eastern sector. The 
8th Army of the Volkhov Front had the responsibility of maintaining the 
logistic route to the city in coordination with the 
Ladoga Flotilla. Air cover for the city was provided by the 
Leningrad military district PVO Corps and Baltic Fleet naval aviation units.
The defensive operation to protect the 1,400,000 civilian evacuees  was part of the Leningrad counter-siege operations under the command of 
Andrei Zhdanov, 
Kliment Voroshilov, and 
Aleksei Kuznetsov. Additional military operations were carried out in coordination with 
Baltic Fleet naval forces under the general command of Admiral 
Vladimir Tributs.  The Ladoga Flotilla under the command of V. Baranovsky, S.V.  Zemlyanichenko, P.A. Traynin, and B.V. Khoroshikhin also played a major  military role in helping with evacuation of the civilians.
Bombardment
  
  Nurses helping wounded people during a German bombardment on 10 September 1941.
  By 8 September, German forces had largely surrounded the city,  cutting off all supply routes to Leningrad and its suburbs. Unable to  press home their offensive, and facing defences of the city organised by  
Marshal Zhukov, the Axis armies laid 
siege to the city for 872 days.
Artillery bombardment of Leningrad began in August 1941, increasing  in intensity during 1942 with the arrival of new equipment. It was  stepped up further during 1943, when several times as many shells and  bombs were used as in the year before. 
Torpedoes were often used for night bombings by the Luftwaffe.
[citation needed] Against this, the Soviet 
Baltic Fleet Navy aviation made over 100,000 air missions to support their military operations during the siege.
[42] German shelling and bombing killed 5,723 and wounded 20,507 civilians in Leningrad during the siege.
[43]
Supplying the defenders
   US propaganda film showing the Leningrad Road of Life during the siege of the city.
     
  Supplies being unloaded from a barge on Lake Ladoga to a narrow-gauge train in 1942.
  To sustain the defence of the city, it was vitally important for the  Red Army to establish a route for bringing a constant flow of supplies  into Leningrad. This route was effected over the southern part of Lake  Ladoga, by means of 
watercraft  during the warmer months and land vehicles driven over thick ice in  winter. The security of the supply route was ensured by the Ladoga  Flotilla, the Leningrad PVO Corps, and route security troops. The route  would also be used to evacuate civilians from the besieged city. This  was because no 
evacuation  plan had been made available in the chaos of the first winter of the  war, and the city literally starved in complete isolation until 20  November 1941, when the ice road over Lake Ladoga became operational.
This road was named the 
Road of Life (
Russian: 
Дорога жизни).  As a road it was very dangerous. There was the risk of vehicles  becoming stuck in the snow or sinking through broken ice caused by the  constant German bombardment. Because of the high winter death toll the  route also became known as the "Road of Death". However, the lifeline  did bring military and food supplies in and took civilians and wounded  soldiers out, allowing the city to continue resisting the enemy.
 Effect on the city
The two-and-a-half year siege caused the greatest destruction and the 
largest loss of life ever known in a modern city.
[15] On Hitler's express orders, most of the palaces of the 
Tsars, such as the 
Catherine Palace, 
Peterhof Palace, 
Ropsha, 
Strelna, 
Gatchina,  and other historic landmarks located outside the city's defensive  perimeter were looted and then destroyed, with many art collections  transported to Nazi Germany.
[44]  A number of factories, schools, hospitals and other civil  infrastructure were destroyed by air raids and long range artillery  bombardment.
  
  The diary of 
Tanya Savicheva,  a girl of 11, her notes about starvation and deaths of her grandmother,  then uncle, then mother, then brother, the last record saying "Only  Tanya is left." She died of progressive 
dystrophy shortly after the siege. Her diary was shown at the 
Nuremberg trials.
  The 872 days of the siege caused unparalleled famine in the Leningrad  region through disruption of utilities, water, energy and food  supplies. This resulted in the deaths of up to 1,500,000
[45]  soldiers and civilians and the evacuation of 1,400,000 more, mainly  women and children, many of whom died during evacuation due to  starvation and bombardment.
[1][2][4] Piskaryovskoye Memorial Cemetery  alone in Leningrad holds half a million civilian victims of the siege.  Economic destruction and human losses in Leningrad on both sides  exceeded those of the 
Battle of Stalingrad, the 
Battle of Moscow, or the 
atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The siege of Leningrad is the 
most lethal siege in world history, and some historians speak of the siege operations in terms of 
genocide,  as a "racially motivated starvation policy" that became an integral  part of the unprecedented German war of extermination against  populations of the Soviet Union generally.
[46][47]
Civilians in the city suffered from extreme 
starvation,  especially in the winter of 1941–1942. For example, from November  1941 – February 1942 the only food available to the citizen was 125 
grams of bread, of which 50–60% consisted of 
sawdust and other inedible admixtures, and distributed through 
ration cards.  For about two weeks at the beginning of January 1942, even this food  was available only for workers and military personnel. In conditions of  extreme temperatures (down to −30 °C) and city transport being out of  service, even a distance of a few kilometers to a food distributing  kiosk created an insurmountable obstacle for many citizens. In  January–February 1942, about 700–1,000
[citation needed] citizens died every day, most of them from 
hunger. People often died on the streets, and citizens soon became accustomed to the sight of death.
Reports of 
cannibalism appeared in the winter of 1941–1942, after all birds, rats and pets had been eaten by survivors.
[48] Hungry gangs attacked and ate defenceless people.
[49] Leningrad police even formed a special unit to combat cannibalism.
[50]
On 9 August 1942, the Symphony No. 7 "
Leningrad" by 
Dmitri Shostakovich was performed by the Radio orchestra of Leningrad.
[51]  The score had passed the German lines by air one night in March 1942.  The concert was broadcast on loudspeakers placed in all the city and  also aimed towards the enemy lines. This date, initially chosen by  Hitler to celebrate the taking of Leningrad, and a few days before the  Sinyavino Offensive, can symbolise the reversal of the dynamics in  favour of the Soviet army.
 Soviet relief of the siege
Sinyavino Offensive
The 
Sinyavino Offensive was a Soviet attempt to break the blockade of the city in early autumn 1942. The 
2nd Shock and the 
8th armies were to link up with the forces of the Leningrad Front. At the same time the German side was preparing an offensive, 
Operation Nordlicht (Northern Light), to capture the city, using the troops freed up after the capture of Sevastopol.
[52] Neither side was aware of the other's intentions until the battle started.
The Sinyavino offensive started on 27 August 1942, with some  small-scale attacks by the Leningrad front on the 19th, pre-empting "
Nordlicht" by a few weeks. The successful start of the operation forced the Germans to redirect troops from the planned "
Nordlicht" to counterattack the Soviet armies. The counteroffensive saw the first deployment of the 
Tiger  tank, though with limited success. After parts of the 2nd Shock Army  were encircled and destroyed, the Soviet offensive was halted. However  the German forces had to abandon their offensive on Leningrad as well.
Operation Iskra
The encirclement was broken in the wake of 
Operation Iskra — (English: Operation Spark) — a full-scale offensive conducted by the 
Leningrad and 
Volkhov Fronts.  This offensive started in the morning of 12 January 1943. After fierce  battles the Red Army units overcame the powerful German fortifications  to the south of Lake Ladoga, and on 18 January 1943 the Leningrad and  Volkhov Fronts met, opening a 10–12 km (6.2–7.5 mi)
[verification needed] wide land corridor, which could provide some relief to the besieged population of Leningrad.
 Lifting the siege
The siege continued until 27 January 1944, when the Soviet 
Leningrad-Novgorod Strategic Offensive  expelled German forces from the southern outskirts of the city. This  was a combined effort by the Leningrad and Volkhov Fronts, along with  the 
1st and 
2nd Baltic Fronts. The Baltic Fleet provided 30% of aviation power for the final strike against the 
Wehrmacht.
[42] In the summer of 1944, the Finnish Defence Forces 
were pushed back to the other side of the 
Bay of Vyborg and the 
Vuoksi River.