World War II: The 250-day Siege of Sevastopol in the Crimea ends when the city falls to Axis forces.
The siege of Sevastopol also
known as the defence of Sevastopol (Russian: Оборона Севастополя,
romanized: Oborona
Sevastopolya) or the Battle of Sevastopol (German: Schlacht um
Sewastopol) was a military engagement that took place on the Eastern Front
of the Second World War. The campaign was fought by the Axis powers of Germany
and Romania against the Soviet Union for control of Sevastopol, a port in the
Crimea on the Black Sea. On 22 June 1941 the Axis invaded the Soviet Union
during Operation Barbarossa. Axis land forces reached the Crimea in the autumn
of 1941 and overran most of the area. The only objective not in Axis hands was
Sevastopol. Several attempts were made to secure the city in October and
November 1941. A major attack was planned for late November, but heavy rains
delayed it until 17 December 1941. Under the command of Erich von Manstein,
Axis forces were unable to capture Sevastopol during this first operation.
Soviet forces launched an amphibious landing on the Crimean peninsula at Kerch
in December 1941 to relieve the siege and force the Axis to divert forces to
defend their gains. The operation saved Sevastopol for the time being, but the
bridgehead in the eastern Crimea was eliminated in May 1942.
After the failure of their first assault on
Sevastopol, the Axis opted to conduct siege warfare until the middle of 1942,
at which point they attacked the encircled Soviet forces by land, sea, and air.
On 2 June ,1942, the Axis began this operation, codenamed Störfang (Sturgeon
Catch). The Soviet Red Army and Black Sea Fleet held out for weeks under
intense Axis bombardment. The German Air Force (Luftwaffe) played a vital part
in the siege, its 8th Air Corps bombing the besieged Soviet forces with
impunity, flying 23,751 sorties and dropping 20,528 tons of bombs in June
alone. The intensity of the German airstrikes was far beyond previous German
bombing offensives against cities such as Warsaw, Rotterdam or London. At the
end of the siege, there were only 11 undamaged buildings left in Sevastopol.
The Luftwaffe sank or deterred most Soviet attempts to evacuate their troops by
sea. The German 11th Army suppressed and destroyed the defenders by firing
46,750 tons of artillery ammunition on them during Störfang.
Finally, on 4 July, 1942, the
remaining Soviet forces surrendered and the Germans seized the port. The Soviet
Separate Coastal Army was annihilated, with 118,000 men killed, wounded or
captured in the final assault and 200,481 casualties in the siege as a whole
for both it and the Soviet Black Sea Fleet. Axis losses in Störfang amounted to
35,866 men, of whom 27,412 were German and 8,454 Romanian. With the Soviet
forces neutralized, the Axis refocused their attention on the major summer
campaign of that year, Case Blue and the advance to the Caucasus oilfields.

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