25 December 1900 Pechenegi, Volchansky Uyezd, Kharkov Governorate, Russian Empire
Died
27 June 1966(1966-06-27) (aged 65) Leningrad, Soviet Union
Allegiance
Soviet Union
Service/branch
Red Army (Soviet Army from 1946)
Years of service
1919–1956
Rank
Major general
Commands held
353rd Rifle Division
34th Guards Rifle Division
40th Guards Rifle Division
62nd Guards Rifle Division
95th Guards Rifle Division
Battles/wars
Russian Civil War
World War II
Awards
Hero of the Soviet Union
Grigory Filippovich Panchenko (Russian: Григорий Филиппович Панченко; 25 December 1900 – 27 June 1966) was a Soviet Army major general and a Hero of the Soviet Union who held divisional commands during World War II.
A veteran of the Russian Civil War, Panchenko rose through command and staff positions in the interwar Red Army and was decorated for his leadership of a regiment in the Winter War. He commanded the 353rd Rifle Division during late 1941 and early 1942 and served as deputy commander of the 2nd Mechanized Corps until his wounding in August 1943. He commanded the 40th Guards Rifle Division in the Soviet advance through southern Ukraine and into Romania during 1944, and was made a Hero of the Soviet Union for his leadership of a crossing of the Danube while deputy commander of the 31st Guards Rifle Corps. In the final weeks of the war Panchenko commanded the 62nd Guards Rifle Division. Postwar, he commanded the 95th Guards Rifle Division before failing health forced his transfer to military commissar posts.
Grigory Filippovich Panchenko (Russian: Григорий Филиппович Панченко; 25 December 1900 – 27 June 1966) was a Soviet Army major general and a Hero of the...
journalist and TV presenter GrigoryPanchenko (1900–1966), Soviet general and Hero of the Soviet Union Kirill Panchenko (born 1989), Russian footballer...
surveyed the barren territory at night, is largely fictional. Aleksandr Panchenko, an established specialist on 19th-century Russia, used original correspondence...
aviation GrigoryPanchenko - Soviet Army major general and a Hero of the Soviet Union who held divisional commands during World War II Grigory Kulik –...
269th Army Pontoon-Bridge Brigade. The division commander, Mjr. Gen. GrigoryPanchenko, prepared detailed plans, and on the 13th a forward detachment of...
the next day by Maj. Gen. GrigoryPanchenko; Moshlyak went on to the Voroshilov Academy for further education while Panchenko would remain in command until...
1946 when he was replaced by Hero of the Soviet Union Maj. Gen. GrigoryPanchenko. This officer was moved to the post of Military Commissar of Stalingrad...
Kirill Nababkin Ruslan Nigmatullin Andrei Novosadov Ivan Oblyakov Kirill Panchenko Ilya Pomazun Denis Popov Vladislav Radimov Sergei Semak Igor Semshov Dmitri...
(born 1950) Lembit Oll (1966–1999) Sam Palatnik (born 1950) Alexander Panchenko (1953–2009) Vasily Panov (1908–1976) Vasily Papin (born 1988) Nikolay...
Security of the Soviet Union under the direction of Pavel Sudoplatov and Grigory Mairanovsky, at the hands of the personal orders of Stalin, Khrushchev...
November 1943; promoted to major general 15 September) Major General GrigoryPanchenko (9 November–4 December 1943) Colonel Kuzma Parfyonov (5 December 1943...
Nekrasov (brother) Viktor Onopko, Sergei Onopko (brother) Viktor Panchenko, Kirill Panchenko (son) Pavel Pogrebnyak, Kirill Pogrebnyak (brother) Danil Prutsev...
Voronin (1951–1992), Russian weightlifter and Olympic champion Alexander Panchenko (1953–2009), Russian chess Grandmaster Pavel Zhagun (born 1954), Russian...
season Manager Gennadi Kostylev Boris Kopeikin Stadium Dynamo Stadium Grigory Fedotov Stadium Luzhniki Stadium Light-Athletic Football Complex CSKA Top...
Moscow CSKA Moscow Dynamo Moscow Dynamo Stavropol Krasnaya Presnya Stadium Grigory Fedotov Stadium Central Dynamo Stadium Dynamo Stadium Capacity: Capacity:...
Broiler”. The owners of GC "Prodo" Andrey Gorodilov, Efim Malkin and Irina Panchenko are considered associates of Roman Abramovich. Men, according to the investigation...
pieces, 2017 positions. Theory and Practice of Chess Endings, by Alexander Panchenko. Two small volumes (318 positions/160 pages and 356 positions/176 pages)...