26th Artillery Brigade (Ukraine)
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117th Guards Rifle Division 32nd Guards Mechanized Division (?-4 Jun 1957) 26th Artillery Brigade |
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150px | |
Active | 1942-present |
Country | Ukraine (from 1992) |
Branch | Ukrainian Army |
Type | Artillery |
Size | Brigade |
Part of | Operation Command North |
Garrison/HQ | Berdichev |
Engagements | War in the Donbass |
Commanders | |
Current commander |
Colonel Andrey Malinovsky |
The 26th Artillery Brigade is an artillery formation of the Ukrainian Ground Forces, based at Berdychiv. It traces its history to the 117th Guards Rifle Division of the Second World War.[1]
After the war, and several redesignations, the 117th Guards Rifle Division became the 117th Guards Tank Training Division. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the 117th Guards Tank Training Division was succeeded by the 62nd Mechanized Brigade, which, in turn, was created 26th Artillery Brigade (based on the Directive of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine from 18.06.2004 № 312/1/014).
Cold War
In 1945, the 117th Guards Rifle Division became the 32nd Guards Mechanized Division. It moved to Berdichev and later became part of the 8th Mechanized Army.[2]
On 4 June 1957, the division was converted into the 41st Guards Tank Division and the army became the 8th Tank Army. The 76th Separate Tank Training Battalion was disbanded in 1960. On 19 February 1962, the 685th Separate Missile Battalion and 437th Separate Equipment Maintenance and Recovery Battalion were activated. On 11 January 1965, the division was renamed the 117th Guards Tank Division, restoring its World War II number. In 1968, the 129th Separate Guards Sapper Battalion became an engineer-sapper unit. On 1 November of that year, the division became a training tank division and was directly subordinated to the Carpathian Military District. On 1 September 1987, it became the 119th Guards District Training Center.[3]
References
- ↑ Feskov et al 2013, 205.
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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- Michael Holm, 117th Guards Tank Division, 2015.