
Wittmann's
Tiger at Kursk
by
Barry Spicer
In this second print in
his Wittmann Trilogy, artist Barry Spicer has depicted in a panorama
that tells of the scale of the battle about to be joined, Michael Wittmann
in his Tiger I as he pauses before leading his third platoon of the
13th schwere SS Panzer-Kompanie to take part in a clash of armour the
magnitude and ferocity of which the world has never before witnessed.
The day was 60 years ago on the
12th July, 1943, near an erstwhile obscure hamlet called Prokhorovka,
on the Kursk salient some 300 miles south of Moscow. This was the eighth
day of the Battle of Kursk or Operation Citadel, Hitler's desperate
bid to preempt the anticipated Russian Summer Offensive and so to stabilise
the worsening situation on the Eastern Front. A success here would eliminate
the Kursk Salient, and stiffen the resolve of his wavering allies after
the recent disaster at Stalingrad and the lost of North Africa.
The time was 7.30am. Thunderstorms
had raged the night before and a few rain squalls lingered still, but
now the sun was rising in the east and the ground was firming up under
the tracks of the advancing panzers.
Overhead, Stuka formations led
by the legendary Hans-Ulrich Rudel were already winging their way to
soften up the Soviet positions in the vicinity of Prokhorovka: beneath
them the lead echelons of German armour were advancing across the broken,
late summer wheatfields.
Panzers from Germany's three premier
SS Panzer Divisions - the 3rd SS Totenkopf on the left, the 1st SS Leibstandarte
in the centre and the 2nd SS Das Reich to the right - were deployed
with the heavy Tigers in the van, followed by the lighter Panzer IIIs
and IVs. Wittmann and his platoon would take their place in the front
ranks of the Leibstandarte.
This German armoured thrust of
600 tanks and assault guns was met head on by some 900 T-34s and T-70s
of Rotmistrov's 5th Guards Tank Army. In this small area of only 4 miles
width, bounded by the Pssel River in the north and a railway embankment
of the Kursk-Belgorod railroad to the south, the two armoured fists
clashed and joined in battle. This quickly degenerated into a huge,
swirling melee where packets of armour and individual tanks fought for
survival in a desperate day-long slogging match. Overhead, ground attack
aircraft from both sides wove their deadly dance trying to destroy one
another and the enemy armour below.
This maelstrom of death waxed
and waned all day, only to be curtailed by the failing light. By nightfall,
the entire battlefield was littered with broken and burnt out hulks,
with thick, black, oily columns of smoke drifting upwards to merge with
the breaking thunderstorm. It is estimated that some 700 tanks on both
sides had been destroyed that day, with tragic heavy losses in veteran
tank crews.
Faced with this slogging match
and its crippling drain on resources, Hitler had little choice but to
call a halt to operations at Kursk, for with the Allied landings in
Sicily, reinforcements were needed to counter this new menace threatening
his southern front. Operation Citadel was over and the initiative on
the Eastern Front passed to the Soviets for good.
Michael Wittmann survived this
battle. In the 10 days of fighting from its launch on the 4th July to
its curtailment on the 13th July, Michael Wittmann and his crew had
destroyed 30 enemy tanks and 32 anti-tank guns. For this, and earlier
achievements, he was awarded the Knight's Cross.
Following a brief spell in Italy,
Michael Wittmann went on to fight almost another year in the fearsome
battles of the Eastern Front, achieving fame and glory, and was awarded
the Oak's Leaves to the Knight's Cross in January, 1944.
After that, he was transferred
to Belgium in anticipation of the Allied D-Day landings - but that is
another print.
650 S/N Prints, 65 Artist Proof and 30 Remarques
Overall Size: 31" x 21"
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