*** Welcome to piglix ***

Leonid Petrovsky

Leonid Grigorevich Petrovsky
Born 11 June 1897
Shcherbinovka, Bakhmutsky Uyezd, Yekaterinoslav Governorate, Russian Empire
Died 17 August 1941(1941-08-17) (aged 44)
Staraya Rudnya, Zhlobin District, Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, Soviet Union
Allegiance Soviet Union
Years of service 1918–1938, 1940–1941
Rank Lieutenant general
Commands held 6th Rifle Division
1st Guards Motor Rifle Division
Central Asian Military District
63rd Rifle Corps
Battles/wars

Leonid Grigorevich Petrovsky (11 June 1897 – 17 August 1941) was a Soviet lieutenant general. He was the oldest son of Grigory Petrovsky. He was born in what is now Donetsk Oblast in Ukraine. He was promoted to Komkor from Komdiv in 1937. While in command of forces in Central Asia, he was removed from command and expelled from the army. He was not executed like many of his colleagues. In 1940, he was reinstated in the army. He was a recipient of the Order of the Red Banner, the Order of the Red Star and the Order of the Patriotic War. Less than a month after his death, his younger brother, Peter was executed on September 11, despite a request from his father for his release.

After the German invasion of the Soviet Union, Operation Barbarossa, began on 22 June 1941, the 63rd Rifle Corps was rushed to the front as part of the 21st Army of the Western Front, and fought in the defense of eastern Belarus against the German advance. On 6 July, the 63rd's 117th Rifle Division attacked across the Dnieper at night in what was planned as a reconnaissance-in-force. However, the attack surprised the XXIV Motorized Corps' 10th Motorized Division, and pushed the German troops back to the Bobruisk-Rogachev road. During the Battle of Smolensk, Petrovsky used his corps to temporarily halt the German advance in the Rogachev area, one of the first successful Soviet counterattacks of the war. The 13 July counterattack across the Dnieper penetrated 8–10 kilometers into the defenses of the LIII Army Corps' 52nd and 255th Infantry Division, and captured Rogachev and Zhlobin. However, its success was fleeting, as the 63rd's advance was soon halted, and within a week, Rogachev and Zhlobin had fallen to the German troops again.


...
Wikipedia

...