History of War

Tiger vs T-34

Germany’s Operation Citadel aimed to squeeze off the salient around Kursk, but standing before their formidable armoured divisions stood a Soviet defence bristling with its own powerful tanks. The two had met briefly, earlier in the year, during the fighting around Rostov-on-Don and Kharkov, but Kursk was the first occasion in which they fought in significant numbers. In July 1943 Army Group Centre (AGC), faced Central Front, and Army Group South (AGS) prepared to do battle with Voronezh Front and then Steppe Front for the Kursk salient.

Tigers were organised into heavy panzer battalions of three or four companies. Four Tigers formed a zug (platoon) and three or four zugs formed a kompanie (company). Tanks in a zug often moved and worked in pairs.

By the summer of 1943 the various models of T-34/76 were very familiar to the Wehrmacht. The German evaluation of the T-34 during the winter of 1941-42 in effect advised, ‘copy it’. The result was the Panther.

“WHEN THE GERMANS FIRST ENCOUNTERED THE T-34 THEY WERE HORRIFIED AS THEY HAD VIRTUALLY NO ANTI-TANK GUN CAPABLE OF DESTROYING IT”

The Tiger was less known and understood by the Red Army, but an intact Tiger had been captured near Leningrad in January 1943 and thoroughly analysed at the testing ground at Kubinka. Among the conclusions reached was that the T-34 would have to be up-gunned from the 76mm weapon that was its main armament. The result, the T-34/85, was not available in time for Kursk, so the Red Army would be reliant on the T-34/76.

The Soviet armoured fist

When the Germansmany of the main problems that earlier experience had highlighted.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from History of War

History of War4 min read
How Would It Be Different?
Gambling on the weather Eisenhower makes one of the boldest decisions of the war, postponing the invasion by a day in the hope that the weather will improve on 6 June. He trusts his meteorologists, but he knows the risks if they have got it wrong. 5
History of War6 min read
Underground wren
Marie Scott was just 13 at the outbreak of the Second World War, and four years later she decided it was time to play her part on the home front. However, dreading the prospect of toiling in the fields with the Women’s Land Army, she utilised her swi
History of War10 min read
The Other Operation Overlord D-day’s Ghost Army
Historian Taylor Downing’s latest book, The Army That Never Was: D-Day and the Great Deception, covers the audacious schemes of Operation Fortitude, the misdirection and misinformation mission to confuse German defences during preparations for D-Day,

Related Books & Audiobooks