Middle Army Division

The Middle Army Division (Swedish: Mellersta arméfördelningen, 14. förd), was a division of the Swedish Army which operated in various forms from 1941 to 1997. Its staff was located in Linköping Garrison in Linköping.[2]

Middle Army Division
Mellersta arméfördelningen
Active1941–1997
CountrySweden
AllegianceSwedish Armed Forces
BranchSwedish Army
TypeInfantry
SizeArmy Division
Part ofMiddle Military Area[note 1]
Garrison/HQLinköping
March"Svensk lösen" (Modéer)[note 2]
Insignia
Standard m/1995
Standard m/1950

History

The Middle Army Division was raised on 1 August 1941 as the XIV Division (XIV. fördelningen), a doubling division of the IV Division. The army division was directly subordinate to the military commander of the IV Military Area, while the Svea Life Guards was responsible for raising and mobilization of the army division staff. In 1966, the mobilization responsibility for the army division was transferred to the Life Grenadier Regiment in Linköping. On 1 October 1966, the designation was changed from being given in Roman numerals to Arabic numerals, that is, the division was termed the 14th Division (14. fördelningen). On 1 July 1984, the mobilization responsibility for the army division was transferred to Södermanland Regiment (P 10/Fo 43) in Strängnäs.[2]

On 1 July 1991, the Bergslagen Military Area and the Eastern Military Area merged and formed the Middle Military Area. The army division, together with the Eastern Army Division, thus came to be subordinate to the military commander of the Middle Military Area. Through the Defence Act of 1992, the Riksdag decided that the Swedish Armed Forces' war organization should reflect the peace organization. As of 1 July 1994, the army division staff, together with the Eastern Army Division, came to be organized as cadre-organized units within the Middle Military Area.[3][2] With this reorganization, the division was relocated to Linköping Garrison.

Prior to the Defence Act of 1996, the Swedish government proposed to the Riksdag that the war organization to be reduced. Where, among other things, the three military areas would be covered by each division staff. Of the six division staffs, three with division units and 13 army brigades would be maintained. Within the Middle Military Area, the government proposed that the Middle Army Division should be disbanded. On 13 December 1996, the Riksdag adopted the government's bill, which meant that the Middle Army Division was disbanded on 31 December 1997.[4]

Barracks and training areas

Although the division was mobilized by other units, it was in peace time grouped together with the military area staff. When the division staff was raised, it came to be co-located with the Eastern Military Area Staff at Stureplan in Stockholm. In 1949, the two staffs were moved to the barracks of the Life Regiment of Horse (Livregementets till häst, K 1) at Lidingövägen 28 in Stockholm. On 14 June 1963, both staff were transferred to a new property complex in Strängnäs Garrison.[5][6] When the staff became independent on 1 July 1994, the staff was placed to the barracks area in Linköping Garrison.

Heraldry and traditions

Coat of arms

The coat of arms of the Middle Army Division used from 1994 to 1997. Blazon: "Azure, the provincial badge of Östergötland, a griffin with dragon wing and tail or, armed and langued gules. The shield surmounted two batons, charged with open crowns azure in saltire or".[7]

Medals

In 1995, the Mellersta arméfördelningens förtjänstmedalj ("Middle Army Division Medal of Merit") in silver (MellfördSM) of the 8th size was established. In 1997, this medal was renamed Mellersta fördelningens (14.förd) minnesmedalj ("Middle Division (14.förd) Commemorative Medal") in silver (MellfördSMM). The medal ribbon is blue with red edges followed by a yellow stripe.[8]

Commanding officers

  • 1941–1994: ?
  • 1994–1996: Colonel 1st Class Hans Berndtson[9]
  • 1996–1997: Lieutenant Colonel Anders Ihrén (acting)[10]

Names, designations and locations

Name Translation From To
XIV. arméfördelningen XIV Army Division 1941-08-01 1966-09-30
14. arméfördelningen 14th Army Division 1966-10-01 1994-06-30
Mellersta arméfördelningen Middle Army Division 1994-07-01 1997-12-31
Designation From To
XIV. förd 1941-08-01 1966-09-30
14. förd 1966-10-01 1997-12-31
Location From To
Stockholm Garrison 1941-08-01 1966-09-30
Linköping Garrison 1966-10-01 1984-06-30
Strängnäs Garrison 1984-07-01 1994-06-30
Linköping Garrison 1994-07-01 1997-12-31
gollark: - ethics (ignoring)- dataset obtaining (easy, crawl reddit and use memeCLOUD™)- temporarily attaining the high-powered GPUs I will likely need for some stages (solved)- slow internet connection on the primary osmarks.net server (may limit meme throughput; can be solved via either compression on a more internet-facing chair, or just sampling fewer)- how to actually do it (investigating)
gollark: I mean, there aren't that many concerns.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Yes, that.
gollark: Some may question the ethics of using significant amounts of electricity to filter slightly humorous images. I am not doing this at present.

See also

Footnotes

  1. The army division staff was subordinated to the Svea Life Guards (1946–1966), the Life Grenadier Regiment (1966–1984) and the Södermanland Regiment (1984-1994).
  2. The march was established on 13 June 1996 by TFG 960005. It was taken over in 2000 by the 1st Mechanized Division (1. mekaniserade divisionen).[1]

References

Notes

  1. Sandberg 2007, p. 55
  2. Braunstein 2003, p. 313
  3. Bildt, Carl; Björck, Anders (13 February 1992). "Regeringens proposition 1991/92:102: Totalförsvarets utveckling till och med budgetåret 1996/97 samt anslag för budgetåret 1992/93" (in Swedish). Stockholm: Riksdag. Retrieved 14 January 2018.
  4. Persson, Göran; Peterson, Thage G. (12 September 1996). "Proposition 1996/97:4: Totalförsvar i förnyelse - etapp 2" (in Swedish). Stockholm: Riksdag. Retrieved 2 January 2017.
  5. Jansson, Christian (2013-09-27). "Högre regional ledning" (PDF) (in Swedish). Försvarets Historiska Telesamlingar. p. 124. Retrieved 14 January 2018.
  6. Holmberg 1993, p. 87
  7. Braunstein 2006, p. 20
  8. Braunstein 2007, pp. 99–100
  9. Kjellander 2003, p. 34
  10. "Mellersta arméfördelningen (14. fördelningen)" (in Swedish). National Archives of Sweden. Retrieved 11 December 2019.

Print

  • Braunstein, Christian (2003). Sveriges arméförband under 1900-talet. Skrift / Statens försvarshistoriska museer, 1101-7023 ; 5 (in Swedish). Stockholm: Statens försvarshistoriska museer. ISBN 91-971584-4-5. SELIBR 8902928.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Braunstein, Christian (2006). Heraldiska vapen inom det svenska försvaret [Heraldry of the Swedish Armed Forces] (PDF). Skrift / Statens försvarshistoriska museer, 1101-7023 ; 9 (in Swedish). Stockholm: Statens försvarshistoriska museer. ISBN 91-971584-9-6. SELIBR 10099224.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Braunstein, Christian (2007). Utmärkelsetecken på militära uniformer [Decorations on Swedish military uniforms] (PDF). Skrift / Statens försvarshistoriska museer, 1101-7023 ; 12 (in Swedish). Stockholm: Statens försvarshistoriska museer. ISBN 978-91-976220-2-8. SELIBR 10423295.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Holmberg, Björn (1993). Arméns regementen, skolor och staber: [en uppslagsbok] : en sammanställning (in Swedish). Arvidsjaur: Svenskt militärhistoriskt bibliotek (SMB). ISBN 91-972209-0-6. SELIBR 7796532.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Kjellander, Rune (2003). Sveriges regementschefer 1700-2000: chefsbiografier och förbandsöversikter (in Swedish). Stockholm: Probus. ISBN 91-87184-74-5. SELIBR 8981272.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Sandberg, Bo (2007). Försvarets marscher och signaler förr och nu: marscher antagna av svenska militära förband, skolor och staber samt igenkännings-, tjänstgörings- och exercissignaler (in Swedish) (New ed.). Stockholm: Militärmusiksamfundet med Svenskt marscharkiv. ISBN 978-91-631-8699-8. SELIBR 10413065.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.