11 SS Nordland
11 SS Nordland
11 SS Nordland
SS-Freiwilligen-Panzergrenadier-Division
Nordland
The 11. SS-Freiwilligen-Panzergrenadier-Division Nordland was formed in 1943 to combine all the Scandinavian
and Dutch volunteer formations, but the Dutch did in the end not end up in Nordland, instead it contained a
majority of volksdeutsche (ethnic Germans) and a minority of Scandinavians.
It was sent to Croatia in September 1943 for training where it was also used to fight partisans. It was sent to the
Oranienbaum front near Leningrad in November and December 1943 and suffered heavy losses during the Soviet
offensive in January 1944, fighting on the Luga River and at Narva before retreating to the Tannenberg Line July
1944 where it remained until September 1944 when it retreated into Latvia seeing action in the Kurland battles.
It was transferred to Pomerania in February 1945 where it fought until 19 March when it was evacuated and sent
to the Oder front. Much of the surviving parts of Nordland were caught up in the battle for Berlin and only a few
suvivors managed to break out of the city.
The surviving elemets of the divisions surrendered to the western Allies at the Elbe river.
Pukovnik Stjepan Peričić, the commander of the Croatian I Mountain Brigade reported in a letter that an SS unit
had killed 100 people in Popovaca on 16 September 1943 following an attack by partisans, the killed included
civilians as well as partisans. This incident occurred in the area controlled by units of the Nordland division. (2)
Lineage
Commanders
Quartermaster
Area of operations
Manpower strength
Honor titles
The name “Nordland” translates as “Northern Land” and was chosen as this formation consisted mainly of
“Germanic” SS volunteers. This division inherited its name from the regiment of the same name, which was
transferred in from the “Wiking” division. The “Nordland” division was originally intended to receive the name
“Waräger” (= Vikings, see also 5th division “Wiking”) but that name was rejected by Hitler himself, who wanted
the division to keep using the already-existing regiment’s name.
Stab
SS-Grenadier-Regiment 1 Danmark
SS-Grenadier-Regiment 2 Norge
SS-Kradschützen-Regiment
SS-Panzer-Regiment
SS-Artillerie-Regiment
SS-Panzerjäger-Abteilung
SS-Sturmgeschütz-Abteilung
SS-Pionier-Bataillon
SS-Nachrichten-Abteilung
SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment 23 Norge
SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment 24 Danmark
SS-Panzer-Abteilung 11 Hermann von Salza
SS-Panzer-Artillerie Regiment 11
SS-Panzer-Aufklärungs Abteilung 11 (1)
SS-Sturmgeschütz-Abteilung 11
SS-Panzerjäger-Abteilung 11
SS-Nachrichtung-Abteilung 11
SS-Pionier-Bataillon 11
SS-Nachrichtung-Abteilung Truppen 11
SS-Nachschub-Truppen 11
SS-Instandsetzungs-Abteilung 11
SS-Wirtschafts-Abteilung 11
SS-Kriegsberichter-Zug 11
SS-Feldgendarmerie-Trupp 11
SS-Feldersatz-Bataillon 11
SS-Bewährungs-Kompanie 11
SS-Sanitäts-Abteilung 11
SS-Werfer-Battalion 521
SS-Jäger-Regiment 11
Notable members
Kurt Gildisch (Commander of the SS-Begleitkommando des Führers, Hitlers bodyguard unit, 1933-1934, served
in Nordland after he was expelled from the SS and NSDAP for his drinking. Sentenced to 15 years in prison post-
war for the murder of Catholic politician Erich Klausener during the Night of long knives)
Niels Kryssing (Son of SS-Brigadeführer Christian Peder Kryssing, a Dane who was the highest ranking non-
German in the Waffen-SS)
Hans-Gösta Pehrsson (Swedish volunteer and commander of the so called Schwedenzug, the highest ranking
Swedish volunteer in the Waffen-SS)
Erik Wallin (Swedish volunteer on whose experiences the book Ragnarök, Twilight of the Gods, is based)
Concentration Camps 12
(includes officers serving in the Einsatzgruppen or Concentration Camps either prior to or after service in this
unit)
Insignia
The tactical marking of the division was a "Sonnenrad", a sun wheel swastika, inside a circle.
A sonnenrad swastika (sunwheel) was to be used instead of the SS runes on the rollar tabs but the SS runes were
often used.
SS-Untersturmführer Johan-Petter Balstad, note the special collar tabs and cuff-title
(Courtesy of Bjørn Jervås)
A well known photo of a destroyed SdKfz 250 belonging to Nordland in Berlin 1945, it is belived to be the
command vehicle of SS-Hauptsturmführer Hans-Gösta Pehrsson, commander of the so called
Schwedenzug, the "Sweden Platoon", and the dead driver SS-Unterscharführer Ragnar Johansson.
(Courtesy of Julian)
(Courtesy of Hjalmar)
In fiction
The 2000 crime novel "The Redbreast" (original Norwegian title "Redstrupe") by Jo Nesbø includes a backstory
dealing with Norwegian volunteers in the "Norge" regiment.
Footnotes
1. The 4. Zug of the 3. Kompanie is often referred to as the Schwedenzug, the "Sweden Platoon". A total of 26
Swedes and 18 Estonia-Swedes served in that platoon with an additional five Swedish war correspondents being
attached to it. It was commanded by the Swede Hans-Gösta Pehrsson.
2. Document D-578, from the Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression volumes, Supplement A: Closing Address,
Closing Arguments, Closing Statements; Documents Introduced in Evidence By British and American
Prosecutors, US Government Printing Office, District of Columbia:1947, pp. 889-91.
3. Joachim Ziegler was relieved of command and placed under house arrest on 25 April for "defeatism" when it
became clear that he was avoiding to sacrifise his division in a futile defence of Berlin.
Sources used
Christopher Ailsby - Hitler's Renegades: Foreign nationals in the service of the Third Reich
John R. Angolia - Cloth insignia of the SS
Roger James Bender & Hugh Page Taylor - Uniforms, Organization and History of the Waffen-SS, vol 3
Philip H Buss - Divisional signs of the Waffen-SS (Military Advisor, vol 19, number 4)
Georges M. Croisier - Waffen-SS (PDF)
Lars Ericson - Svenska frivilliga: Militära uppdrag i utlandet under 1800- och 1900-talen
Terry Goldsworthy - Valhalla's Warriors: A history of the Waffen-SS on the Eastern Front 1941-1945
Lars Gyllenhaal & Lennart Westberg - Svenskar i krig 1914-1945
Steve Kane - Waffen-SS Forces in the Balkans: A checklist (in World War II Journal, Vol 7)
Dr. K-G Klietmann - Die Waffen-SS: eine Dokumentation
Kurt Mehner - Die Waffen-SS und Polizei 1939-1945
Herbert Poller - Pansarspaning med Waffen SS på Östfronten: SS-Panzer-Aufklärungs-Abteilung 11 Nordland
och svenska SS-Plutonen I Baltikum, Pommern Och Berlin 1943-45
Marc J. Rikmenspoel - Waffen-SS Encyclopedia
George H. Stein - The Waffen-SS: Hitler's Elite Guard at War 1939-1945
James C. Steuard - Tactical Markings of the Waffen-SS, Part 4 (in AFV-G2 Vol 4 No 6)
Frank Thayer - SS Foreign volunteer collar insignia and their reporductions (in The Military Advisor, Vol 4 No 2)
Wilhelm Tieke with Lennart Westberg & Martin Månsson - Division Nordland i strid: Svenskar, norrmän och
danskar i Waffen-SS från Baltikum till Berlin 1943-1945
Wilhelm Tieke - Tragedy of the Faithful: A history of III. (germanisches) SS-Panzer-Korps
Gordon Williamson & Thomas McGuirl - German military cuffbands 1784-present
Gordon Williamson - The Waffen-SS: 11. to 23. Divisions
Mark C. Yerger - Waffen-SS Commanders: The Army, corps and divisional leaders of a legend (2 vol)