The 25th Panzer Regiment and a battery of 88 mm anti-aircraft guns were called in to support, and the British withdrew. The German 37 mm anti-tank gun proved ineffective against the heavily armoured Matildas. The following day the British launched a counterattack, deploying two infantry battalions supported by heavily armoured Matilda Mk I and Matilda II tanks in the Battle of Arras. He ordered the 5th Panzer Division to move to the west and the division to the east, flanked by the SS Division Totenkopf. General Hermann Hoth received orders that the town should be bypassed and its British garrison thus isolated. By 16 May, the division had reached its assigned objective at Avesnes, where the original plan called for him to stop and await further orders, but Rommel pressed on. Rommel was active in the forward areas, directing the efforts to make a crossing, which were initially unsuccessful due to suppressive fire by the French on the other side of the river. By the third day, the 7th Panzer Division under Rommel's command, along with three panzer divisions commanded by General Heinz Guderian, had reached the River Meuse, where they found the bridges had already been destroyed. Operational history Invasion of France and Belgium Upon taking command on 10 February 1940, Rommel quickly set his unit to practicing the maneuvers they would need in the upcoming campaign. Newly promoted General Erwin Rommel, who had served on Hitler's staff during the Invasion of Poland, was able, with an intervention from Hitler, to obtain the command of the division. It consisted of 218 tanks in three battalions, with two rifle regiments, a motorcycle battalion, an engineer battalion, and an anti-tank battalion. In October 1939, the 2nd Light Division became the 7th Panzer Division, one of Germany's ten armoured divisions. General Erwin Rommel and staff observe 7th Panzer Division practicing a river crossing at the Mosel, 1940įollowing the completion of the invasion of Poland, the limited effectiveness of the light divisions caused the Oberkommando des Heeres (OKH German High Command) to order the reorganization of the four light divisions into full panzer divisions. After fighting defensively across Prussia and Northern Germany, the surviving men escaped into the forest and surrendered to the British Army northwest of Berlin in May 1945. It was twice evacuated by sea, leaving what was left of its heavy equipment behind each time. Through 19, the division was markedly understrength and continuously engaged in a series of defensive battles across the eastern front. The division fought in the unsuccessful offensive at Kursk in the summer of 1943, suffering heavy losses in men and equipment and was further degraded in the subsequent Soviet counteroffensive. It returned to Southern Russia following the defeat at Stalingrad, and helped to check a general collapse of the front in a series of defensive battles as part of Army Group Don, and participated in General Erich von Manstein's counterattack at Kharkov. In May 1942, the division was withdrawn from the Soviet Union and sent back to France to replace losses and refit. The division met with great success in France in 1940 and then again in the Soviet Union in 1941. The 7th Panzer Division is also known by its nickname, Ghost Division. It participated in the Battle of France, the invasion of the Soviet Union, the occupation of Vichy France, and on the Eastern Front until the end of the war. The 7th Panzer Division was an armored formation of the German Army in World War II.
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