Eduard Dietl (21 July 1890 - 23 June 1944) was a German general of World War II. He was born in Bad Aibling, Bavaria.
Eduard Dietl was the son of a Bavarian finance official1 . In 1909, at his second attemp to join 5. Bavarian Infanterie Regiment, he entered as an officer cadet. After studying at the Kriegschule in Munich, he was commissioned Leutnant in October 1911. In October 1915 he was promoted to Oberleutnant and served as a company commander with his regiment. In March 1918, he was promoted to Hauptmann. He was wounded four times during his actions in the first world war.
Dietl commanded the German 3rd Mountain Division that participated in the German invasion of Norway on April 9 and 10, 1940. Most of this division was landed at Narvik by a German naval force of ten destroyers, commanded by Commodore Friedrich Bonte, on 9 April 1940. British naval forces led by the battleship HMS Warspite destroyed all ten destroyers that had ferried Dietl's troops to Narvik and managed to recapture the town, but Dietl's mountaineers withdrew into the hills and later retook the town when Britain abandoned her efforts to evict the Germans from Norway due to Nazi aggression on the western front (the French-German border).
A convinced Nazi and one of Hitler's favorite generals, he was the first German soldier to receive, on 19 June 1940, the oak leaves cluster to the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross.
Dietl subsequently commanded German forces in Norway and Finland and in Eastern Europe and rose to the rank of Generaloberst (equivalent to a US four-star general), commanding the 20th Mountain Army on the northern Eastern Front, where the results of the German Arctic campaign were disappointing. On June 23, 1944, Ju 52 aircraft carrying Dietl, General der Infanterie Thomas-Emil von Wickede, General der Gebirgstruppe Karl Eglseer, Generalleutnant Franz Rossi and three other passengers crashed in the vicinity of the small village of Rettenegg, Styria; there were no survivors.
Summary of military career
Dates of rank
- Gefreiter: January 29, 1910
- Unteroffizier: March 11, 1910
- Fähnrich: May 04, 1910
- Leutnant: October 26, 1911
- Oberleutnant: July 09, 1915
- Hauptmann: August 29, 1919
- Major: February 01, 1930
- Oberstleutnant: February 01, 1933
- Oberst: January 01, 1935
- Generalmajor: April 01, 1938
- Generalleutnant: April 01, 1940
- General der Gebirgstruppe: July 19, 1940
- Generaloberst: June 01, 1942
Notable decorations
References
- ^ Williamson, Gordon and McGregor, Malcom, German Commandors in World War II (1), Osprey publishing, ISBN 1-84176-596-1.
Further reading
- Berger, Florian, Mit Eichenlaub und Schwertern. Die höchstdekorierten Soldaten des Zweiten Weltkrieges. Selbstverlag Florian Berger, 2006. ISBN 3-9501307-0-5.
- Fellgiebel, Walther-Peer. Die Träger des Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939-1945. Friedburg, Germany: Podzun-Pallas, 2000. ISBN 3-7909-0284-5.
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