Quebec and 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler: Difference between pages

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{{Infobox Military Unit
{{two other uses|the province|the city|Quebec City}}
|unit_name= 1st SS Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
{{coord|53|45|N|71|59|W|display=title}}
|image= [[Image:1. SS-Panzer-Division Leibstandarte-SS Adolf Hitler.svg|125px]]
{{Infobox Province or territory of Canada
|caption= 1st SS Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
| Name = Quebec <!--usual form in English; See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Naming_conventions_(use_English) -->
|dates= [[9 November]] [[1923]] - [[8 May]] [[1945]]
| AlternateName = Québec<!-- French form-->
|country= [[Nazi Germany]]
| Flag = Flag of Quebec.svg
|allegiance=[[Adolf Hitler]]
| EntityAdjective = Provincial
|branch= [[SS]]
| CoatOfArms = Coat of arms of Québec.svg
|type=
| Map = Québec, Canada.svg
|role=
| Label_map = no
|size=Division
| Motto = ''[[Je me souviens]]''<br/><small>({{lang-fr|I remember}})</small>
|current_commander=
| OfficialLang = [[French language|French]]<ref name=language>[http://www.oqlf.gouv.qc.ca/charte/charte/clflgoff.html Titre I – Le statut de la langue française – Chapitre I – La langue officielle du Québec<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
|garrison=
| Flower = [[Iris versicolor|Blue Flag Iris]]<ref name="Qsymbols">{{cite web|url=http://www.gouv.qc.ca/portail/quebec/pgs/commun/portrait?id=portrait.drapeau&lang=en|publisher=Services Québec|accessdate=2008-03-09|title=National Flag and Emblems}}</ref>
|ceremonial_chief=
| Tree = [[Betula alleghaniensis|Yellow Birch]]<ref name="Qsymbols"/>
|colonel_of_the_regiment=
| Bird = [[Snowy Owl]]<ref name="Qsymbols"/>
|nickname=
| Capital = [[Quebec City]]
|patron=
| LargestCity = [[Montreal]]
|motto=
| LargestMetro = [[Greater Montreal Area]]
|colors=
| Language = [[French language|French]]
|identification_symbol=
| Gentilic = Quebecer, Quebecker, ''French:'' Québécois
|march=
| Premier = [[Jean Charest]]
|mascot=
| PremierParty = [[Quebec Liberal Party|PLQ]]
|battles=[[Saar (League of Nations)|Saar/Rhineland Occupation 1935]]<br>[[Anschluss|Austrian Occupation 1938]]<br>[[German occupation of Czechoslovakia|Czechoslovak Occupation 1939]]<br>[[Fall Weiß (1939)|Poland 1939]]<br>[[Battle of France|Western Campaign 1940]]<br>[[Battle of Greece|Balkan Campaign 1941]]<br>[[Operation Barbarossa|Eastern Front 1941-1942]]<br>[[Third Battle of Kharkov|Eastern Front 1943]]<br>[[Italian Campaign (World War II)|Western Front 1943]]<br>[[Battle of Kursk|Eastern Front 1943]]<br>[[Invasion of Normandy|Western Front 1944]]<br>[[Operation Lüttich]]<br>[[Falaise pocket]]<br>[[Battle of the Bulge|Ardennes Offensive]]<br>Eastern Front 1945
| Viceroy = [[Pierre Duchesne]]
|Commanders= [[Julius Schreck]] - January [[1923]] - [[9 November]] [[1923]] <br> [[Josef Dietrich|Josef 'Sepp' Dietrich]] - [[17 Marcp]] 1933 - [[1August]] 1944 <br> [[Paul Hausser]] - [[1 August]] [[1944]] - [[28 August]] [[1944]]
| ViceroyType = Lieutenant-Governor
|notable_commanders= [[Josef Dietrich]]
| PostalAbbreviation = QC<ref>[http://www.canadapost.ca/personal/tools/pg/manual/PGaddress-e.asp#1382088 Addressing Guidelines] from [[Canada Post]]</ref>
|anniversaries=
| PostalCodePrefix = [[List of G Postal Codes of Canada|G]], [[List of H Postal Codes of Canada|H]], [[List of J Postal Codes of Canada|J]]
|decorations=
| AreaRank = 2nd
|battle_honours=
| TotalArea_km2 = 1542056
| LandArea_km2 = 1365128
| WaterArea_km2 = 176928
| PercentWater = 11.5
| PopulationRank = 2nd
| Population = 7,744,530 (est.)<ref>{{cite web | author= Statistics Canada|publisher= |title= Canada's population estimates 2008-06-25 |accessdate=2008-06-25 |url=http://www.statcan.ca/Daily/English/080625/d080625b.htm}}</ref>
| PopulationYear = 2008
| DensityRank = 5th
| Density_km2 = 5.63
| GDP_year = 2006
| GDP_total = C$285.158&nbsp;billion<ref>[http://www40.statcan.ca/l01/cst01/econ15.htm Gross domestic product, expenditure-based, by province and territory]</ref>
| GDP_rank = 2nd
| GDP_per_capita = C$37,278
| GDP_per_capita_rank = 10th
| AdmittanceOrder = 1st
| AdmittanceDate = [[July 1]], [[1867]]
| Nationalday = June 24
| TimeZone = [[UTC]]−5, −4
| HouseSeats = 75
| SenateSeats = 24
| ISOCode = CA-QC
| Website = www.gouv.qc.ca
| Patron Saint = St. John The Baptist
}}
}}
{{portalpar|Quebec|Flag of Quebec.svg}}


The '''Leibstandarte SS ''Adolf Hitler''''' ('''SS-LAH''') founded in September 1933 was [[Adolf Hitler]]'s personal [[Bodyguard]] [[Regiment]]. In 1939 the SS-LAH became a separate unit of the [[Waffen-SS]] aside the '''[[SS-Totenkopfverbände|SS-TV]]''' and the '''[[SS-Verfügungstruppe|SS-VT]]'''.<ref>Waffen-SS at [[Encyclopædia Britannica]] </ref>
<!--READ BEFORE CHANGING THE LEAD: the opening paragraph is the result of much discussion and consensus. Please address any changes to the talk page before making them.-->
'''Quebec''' ({{PronEng|kwɨˈbɛk}} or {{IPA|/kəˈbɛk/}}), in [[French language|French]], '''''Québec''''' ({{IPAudio|FR-Québec.ogg|/kebɛk/}})<ref name="EFname">According to the [[Government of Canada|Canadian government]], '''Québec''' (with the [[acute accent]]) is the official name in [[Canadian French|French]] and '''Quebec''' (without the accent) is the province's official name in [[Canadian English|English]]; the name is [http://geonames.nrcan.gc.ca/info/pan_can_e.php one of 81 locales of pan-Canadian significance with official forms in both languages]. In this system, the official name of the capital is Québec in both official languages. The Quebec government renders both names as ''Québec'' in both languages.</ref> is a [[Provinces and territories of Canada|province]] in the [[Central Canada|central]] part of [[Canada]].<ref name="QLocation">Quebec is located in the Eastern half of Canada, but is historically and politically considered to be part of Central Canada</ref> It is the only Canadian province with a predominantly [[francophone|French-speaking]] population and the only one whose sole [[official language]] is [[French language|French]] at the provincial level. Other elements of French tradition, such as the [[Civil law (legal system)|civil law]] legal system, also remain strong in Quebec.


The SS-LAH independently participated in combats during the [[Invasion of Poland (1939)]]. Elements of the SS-LAH later joined the [[SS-Verfügungstruppe|SS-VT]] prior to [[Operation Barbarossa]] in 1941.
[[Quebec Nationalism|Nationalism]] plays a large role in the politics of the province, with all three major provincial political parties seeking greater autonomy and recognition of the Quebec people as a nation.<ref>{{cite web|title=Votes and Proceedings Thursday, 30 October 2003 – No. 19|publisher=National Assembly of Quebec|url=http://www.assnat.qc.ca/eng/37legislature1/Pv/PA20031030.HTM#P8|date=2003-10-30}}</ref> [[Quebec sovereignty movement|Sovereigntist]] governments held referendums on independence in [[1980 Quebec Referendum|1980]] and [[1995 Quebec referendum|1995]], and the [[Canadian House of Commons]] passed a [[Québécois nation motion|symbolic motion]] recognizing the "[[Québécois]] as a nation within Canada".<ref>{{cite web | url =http://www2.parl.gc.ca/HousePublications/Publication.aspx?Language=E&Mode=1&Parl=39&Ses=1&DocId=2528725#SOB-1788846 | work=Hansard of 39th Parliament, 1st Session; No. 087 | title = Routine Proceedings: The Québécois | publisher = Parliament of Canada | date = 2006-11-22 | accessdate = 2008-04-30 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url = http://www2.parl.gc.ca/HousePublications/Publication.aspx?Pub=hansard&Language=E&Mode=1&Parl=39&Ses=1&DocId=2544166&File=0#SOB-1799205 | work = Hansard of 39th Parliament, 1st Session; No. 087 | title = Government Orders: The Québécois | publisher = Parliament of Canada | date = 2006-11-27 | accessdate = 2008-04-30}}</ref>


==Early history (1923–1933)==
Quebec is [[Canada]]'s largest province by area and its second-largest [[Canada#Administrative divisions|administrative division]]; only the territory of [[Nunavut]] is larger. It is bordered to the west by the province of [[Ontario]], [[James Bay]] and [[Hudson Bay]], to the north by [[Hudson Strait]] and [[Ungava Bay]], to the east by the [[Gulf of Saint Lawrence]] and the provinces of [[Newfoundland and Labrador]] and [[New Brunswick]]. It is bordered on the south by the [[U.S. state]]s of [[Maine]], [[New Hampshire]], [[Vermont]], and [[New York]]. It also shares maritime borders with Nunavut, [[Prince Edward Island]] and [[Nova Scotia]].
In the earliest days of the NSDAP, it was realised by the leaders that bodyguard units composed of trustworthy and loyal men would be a wise development. [[Ernst Röhm]] formed a guard formation from the 19.Granatwerfer-Kompanie, and from this formation the [[Sturmabteilung]] (SA) soon evolved. Adolf Hitler, realising the potential threat that the SA had presented, in early 1923 ordered the formation of a bodyguard for himself. The tiny unit, originally formed by only eight men (and commanded by [[Julius Schreck]] and [[Joseph Berchtold]]), was designated the '''Stabswache''' (Staff Guard). The guards of the ''Stabswache'' were issued uniforms that showed their difference from the SA (despite the fact that at this stage the ''Stabswache'' still was under overall SA control). Schreck resurrected the use of the ''[[Totenkopf]]'' (skull) as insignia, which had been a symbol used by various élite forces throughout the [[Prussia]]n kingdom and the later [[German Empire]].
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Soon after its formation, the unit was renamed '''Stoßtrupp (Shock Troop) ''Adolf Hitler'''''. On November 9, 1923, the ''Stoßtrupp'', along with the SA and several other NSDAP paramilitary units, took part in the abortive [[Beer Hall Putsch]] in Munich. In the aftermath of the putsch, Hitler was imprisoned and the NSDAP and all associated formations, including the ''Stoßtrupp'', were officially disbanded.
Quebec is the second most populated province, after Ontario. Most inhabitants live in urban areas near the [[Saint Lawrence River]] between [[Montreal]], the largest city, and [[Quebec City]], the capital. [[English-speaking Quebecer|English-speaking communities]] and English-language institutions are concentrated in Montreal but are also significantly present in the [[Outaouais region|Outaouais]], the [[Eastern Townships]], and [[Gaspé Peninsula|Gaspé]] regions. The central and northern portion of the province is sparsely populated and inhabited primarily by [[Aboriginal peoples in Canada|Aboriginal peoples]].


Shortly after Hitler's release in 1924, he ordered a new bodyguard unit formed, again called the ''Stabswache'', but this time it did not fall under SA control. In 1925, the ''Stabswache'' was renamed as the ''[[Schutzstaffel]]'', abbreviated ''SS''. By March 1933, the SS had grown from a tiny personal bodyguard unit to a formation of over 50,000 men. The decision was made to form a new bodyguard unit, picking the most capable and trustworthy SS men to form its cadre.
While the province's substantial [[natural resources]] have long been the mainstay of its economy, sectors of the [[knowledge economy]] such as [[aerospace]], information and communication technologies, [[biotechnology]] and the [[pharmaceutical industry]] also play leading roles.<ref>{{cite web|last=Poitras|first=François |title=Regional Economies Special Report Micro-Economic Policy Analysis|publisher=Industry Canada |url=http://www.ic.gc.ca/epic/site/eas-aes.nsf/vwapj/srreo200401e.PDF/$FILE/srreo200401e.PDF|format=PDF|date=2004-01|accessdate=2008-05-15}}</ref>


On 17 March 1933, the '''SS-Stabswache ''Berlin''''' was formed, under the command of [[Josef Dietrich|Josef 'Sepp' Dietrich]], Hitler's personal bodyguard. Dietrich hand-picked 120 men to form the ''SS-Stabswache''. The unit was based at the [[Andrews Barracks]] in [[Berlin]]. Later in 1933, the formation was redesignated '''SS-Sonderkommando ''Zossen''''' and a second unit of 120 men, designated '''SS-Sonderkommando ''Jüterbog''''' was raised. The two Sonderkommandos provided guards for the NSDAP hierarchy, functioned as training cadres for the SS, and for a short time acted as auxiliary police units.
==Etymology and boundary changes==
[[Image:Samuel de champlain.jpg|left|thumb|150px|[[Samuel de Champlain]], Father of [[New France]]]]
The name "Quebec", which comes from the [[Algonquin language|Algonquin]] word '''kepék''' meaning "(it) narrows", originally referred to the area around Quebec City where the Saint Lawrence River narrows to a cliff-lined gap. Early variations in the spelling of the name included ''Québecq'' (Levasseur, 1601) and ''Kébec'' (Lescarbot 1609).<ref>Afable, Patricia O. and Madison S. Beeler (1996). "Place Names". In "Languages", ed. Ives Goddard. Vol. 17 of ''Handbook of North American Indians'', ed. William C. Sturtevant. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution, pg. 191</ref> French explorer [[Samuel de Champlain]] chose the name ''Québec'' in 1608 for the colonial outpost he would use as the administrative seat for the French colony of [[New France]].<ref>{{cite web | url = http://history.cbc.ca/history/?MIval=EpContent.html&series_id=1&episode_id=2&chapter_id=4&page_id=4&lang=E | title = Canada: A People's History – The birth of Quebec | publisher = Canadian Broadcast Corporation|year=2001 | accessdate = 2006-08-26}}</ref>


In September 1933, the two Sonderkommandos were merged into the '''SS-Sonderkommando ''Berlin'''''. In November 1933, on the 10th anniversary of the Beer Hall Putsch, the ''Sonderkommando'' took part in the rally and memorial service at the [[Feldherrnhalle]], erected in the place where many NSDAP members had fallen during the putsch. All members of the ''Sonderkommando'' then swore personal allegiance to Hitler himself. To conclude this ceremony, the ''Sonderkommando'' received a new title, '''Leibstandarte ''Adolf Hitler'''''.
The [[Province of Quebec (1763-1791)|Province of Quebec]] was founded in the [[Royal Proclamation of 1763]] after the [[Treaty of Paris (1763)|Treaty of Paris]] formally transferred the [[French colonial empires|French colony]] of [[Canada (New France)|Canada]]<ref>"his Most Christian Majesty cedes and guaranties to his said Britannick Majesty, in full right, Canada, with all its dependencies, as well as the island of Cape Breton, and all the other islands and coasts in the gulph and river of St. Lawrence, and in general, every thing that depends on the said countries, lands, islands, and coasts, with the sovereignty, property, possession, and all rights acquired by treaty, or otherwise, which the Most Christian King and the Crown of France have had till now over the said countries, lands, islands, places, coasts, and their inhabitants" – [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Paris_%281763%29 ''Treaty of Paris''], 1763</ref> to [[Kingdom of Great Britain|Britain]] after the [[Seven Years' War]]. The proclamation restricted the province to an area along the banks of the Saint Lawrence River. The [[Quebec Act]] of 1774 restored the [[Great Lakes]] and the [[Ohio River]] Valley regions to the province. The [[Treaty of Versailles, 1783]] ceded territories south of the Great Lakes to the [[United States]]. After the [[Constitutional Act of 1791]], the territory was divided between [[Lower Canada]] (present day Quebec) and [[Upper Canada]] (present day Ontario), with each being granted an elected [[Legislative Assembly]]. In 1840, these become [[Canada East]] and [[Canada West]] after the British Parliament unified Upper and Lower Canada into the [[Province of Canada]]. This territory was redivided into the Provinces of Quebec and Ontario at [[Canadian Confederation|Confederation]] in 1867. Each became one of the first four provinces.


==Trial by fire—Leibstandarte expands==
In 1870, Canada purchased [[Rupert's Land]] from the [[Hudson's Bay Company]]. Over the next few decades the [[Parliament of Canada]] transferred portions of this territory to Quebec that more than tripled the size of the province.<ref>[[Parliament of Canada|Library of the Parliament of Canada]], [http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/library/PRBpubs/bp412-e.htm#B].</ref> In 1898, the Canadian Parliament passed the first [[Quebec Boundary Extension Act, 1898|Quebec Boundary Extension Act]] that expanded the provincial boundaries northward to include the lands of the [[Cree]]. This was followed by the addition of the [[District of Ungava]] through the [[Quebec Boundaries Extension Act, 1912|Quebec Boundaries Extension Act of 1912]] that added the northernmost lands of the aboriginal [[Inuit]] to create the modern Province of Quebec. In 1927, the border between Quebec and [[Newfoundland and Labrador]] was established by the British [[Judicial Committee of the Privy Council]]. Quebec [[Labrador#The Labrador boundary dispute|officially disputes this boundary]].
<!-- Unsourced image removed: [[Image:LSSAH Parade 1936.jpg|thumb|250px|right|''Leibstandarte'' grenadiers on parade, Berlin, 1936. {{deletable image-caption|1=Saturday, 5 January 2008}}]] -->


In early 1934, [[Heinrich Himmler]], the ''[[Reichsführer-SS]]'', ordered the ''Leibstandarte'' to be renamed '''Leibstandarte SS ''Adolf Hitler''''' (''LSSAH''). In late June, the ''LSSAH'' was called into action for the first time. Ernst Röhm, the [[Stabschef (SA)|''Stabschef-SA'']], began to push for greater power for his already powerful [[Sturmabteilung|SA]]. Hitler decided that the SA had to be put in its place, and ordered Himmler and [[Hermann Göring]] to prepare their elite units, Himmler's ''Leibstandarte'' and Göring's [[Landespolizeigruppe General Goering|Landespolizeigruppe ''General Göring'']], for immediate action. The ''LSSAH'' formed two companies under the control of [[Jürgen Wagner]] and [[Otto Reich (SS)|Otto Reich]], and these formations were moved to [[Munich]] on 30 June.
== Geography ==
{{main|Geography of Quebec}}
[[Image:Map of Quebec (English).png|right|200px|thumb|Map of Quebec.]]
[[Image:Quebec SPOT 1035.jpg|left|200px|thumb|Quebec city seen from Spot Satellite]]
The province occupies a vast territory (nearly three times the size of [[France]] or [[Texas]]), most of which is very sparsely populated. Quebec's highest point is [[Mount Caubvik|Mont D'Iberville]], located on the border with [[Newfoundland and Labrador]] in the northeastern part of the province.


Hitler ordered all SA leaders to attend a meeting at the Hanselbauer Hotel in [[Bad Wiessee]], near Munich. On 30 June, Hitler joined Sepp Dietrich and a unit from the ''Leibstandarte'' and travelled to Bad Wiessee to personally command Röhm's arrest and subsequent execution. In what the Nazis called the [[Röhm Putsch]] to give their action an appearance of legitimacy, but otherwise came to be known as the [[Night of the Long Knives]], the execution companies of the ''LSSAH'', together with Göring's Landespolizeigruppe, performed [[Death Squad]] actions, carrying out many executions without trials over the next few days. By 13 July 1934, at least 177 people had been executed.
The Saint Lawrence River is one of the world's largest sustaining large inland [[Atlantic Ocean|Atlantic]] ports at Montreal (the province's largest city), [[Trois-Rivières]], and Quebec City (the capital). Its access to the Atlantic Ocean and the interior of North America made it the base of early [[French colonization of the Americas|French exploration and settlement]] in the 17th and 18th centuries. Since 1959, the [[Saint Lawrence Seaway]] has provided a navigable link between the Atlantic Ocean and Great Lakes. Northeast of Quebec City, the river broadens into the world's largest [[estuary]], the feeding site of numerous species of whales, fishes and sea birds.<ref>{{cite web |title=Saguenay-St. Lawrence National Park |url=http://www.greatcanadianparks.com/quebec/saguenp/index.htm}}</ref> The river empties into the [[Gulf of Saint Lawrence]]. This marine environment sustains fisheries and smaller ports in the [[Bas-Saint-Laurent|Lower Saint Lawrence]] (''Bas-Saint-Laurent''), [[Côte-Nord|Lower North Shore]] (''Côte-Nord''), and [[Gaspé Peninsula|Gaspé]] (Gaspésie) regions of the province.


The actions of the ''LSSAH'' and Göring's unit had succeeded in effectively decapitating the SA and removing the threat to Hitler's leadership. Following the 'success' of the Night of the Long Knives, in recognition of their actions, both the ''LSSAH'' and the Landespolizeigruppe ''General Göring'' were expanded to regimental size and motorised. In addition, the SS was finally removed from overall SA control.
[[Image:Monteregian Hills from space.jpg|left|200px|thumb|Satellite view of three [[Monteregian Hills]] in [[Saint Lawrence Lowlands]].]]
The most populated [[physiographic]] region is the [[Saint Lawrence Lowlands|Saint Lawrence Lowland]]. It extends northeastward from the southwestern portion of the province along the shores of the Saint Lawrence River to the Quebec City region, and includes [[Anticosti Island]], the Mingnan Archipelago<ref>{{cite web| title = Mingan Archipelago National Park Reserve of Canada | publisher = Parks Canada | url = http://www.pc.gc.ca/pn-np/qc/mingan/index_e.asp | date = 2008-05-02 | accessdate = 2008-05-15}}</ref> and other small islands in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence.<ref name=NAC>{{cite web | title = Borderlands / St. Lawrence Lowlands | work = The Atlas of Canada | publisher = Natural Resources Canada | date = 2006-10-25 | url = http://atlas.nrcan.gc.ca/site/english/maps/environment/land/st_lawrence_lowlands.html | format = html | accessdate = 2008-04-28}}</ref> Its landscape is low-lying and flat, except for isolated [[igneous]] outcrops near Montreal called the [[Monteregian Hills]]. Geologically, the lowlands formed as a [[rift valley]] about 100 million years ago and are prone to infrequent but significant earthquakes.<ref name=Elson>{{cite web | last = Elson | first = J.A. | title = St Lawrence Lowland | work = Canadian Encyclopedia | publisher = Historica Foundation | url = http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0007093 | format = html | accessdate = 2008-04-28}}</ref> The most recent layers of [[sedimentary rock]] were formed as the seabed of the ancient [[Champlain Sea]] at the end of the last ice age about 14,000 years ago.<ref>{{cite web | last = Lasalle | first = Pierre | coauthors = Robert J. Rogerson | title = Champlain Sea | work = Canadian Encyclopedia | publisher = Historica Foundation | url = http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0001507 | format = html | accessdate = 2008-04-28}}</ref> The combination of rich and easily arable soils and Quebec's warmest climate make the valley Quebec's most prolific agricultural area. [[Mixedwood Plains|Mixed forests]] provide most of Canada's [[maple syrup]] crop every spring. The rural part of the landscape is divided into narrow rectangular tracts of land that extend from the river and date back to [[Seigneurial system of New France|settlement patterns in 17th century New France]].


As the SS began to swell with new recruits, the ''LSSAH'' remained the pinnacle of Hitler's [[Aryan]] ideal. Strict recruitment regulations meant that only those deemed sufficiently Aryan, as well as being physically fit and fervent National Socialists, would be admitted.
[[Image:LG2.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Robert-Bourassa Dam, part of [[James Bay Project]] on [[Canadian Shield]].]]
More than 90% of Quebec's territory lies within the [[Canadian Shield]], a rough, rocky terrain sculpted and scraped clean of soil by successive [[ice ages]]. It is rich in the forestry, mineral and hydro-electric resources that are a mainstay of the Quebec economy. [[Primary industries]] sustain small cities in regions of [[Abitibi-Témiscamingue]], [[Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean]], and [[Côte-Nord]]. In the [[Labrador Peninsula]] portion of the Shield, the far northern region of [[Nunavik]] includes the [[Ungava Peninsula]] and consists of [[Arctic]] [[tundra]] inhabited mostly by the [[Inuit]]. Further south lie [[subarctic]] [[taiga]] and [[boreal forest]], where [[spruce]], [[fir]], and [[poplar]] trees provide raw materials for Quebec's [[Pulp and paper industry in Canada|pulp and paper]] and [[lumber]] industries. Although inhabited principally by the [[Grand Council of the Crees|Cree]], [[Naskapi]], and [[Innu]] [[First Nations]], thousands of temporary workers reside at [[Radisson, Quebec|Radisson]] to service the massive [[James Bay Hydroelectric Project]] on the [[La Grande River|La Grande]] and [[Eastmain River|Eastmain]] rivers. The southern portion of the shield extends to the [[Laurentian mountains|Laurentians]], a mountain range just north of Montreal and Quebec City that attracts local and international tourists to ski hills and lakeside resorts.


The ''LSSAH'' provided the honour guard at several of the [[Nuremberg Rallies]] and in 1935 took part in the reoccupation of the [[Saarland]]. The ''Leibstandarte'' was also in the vanguard of the March into [[Austria]] as part of the ''[[Anschluss]]''.In 1938 the ''LSSAH'' then took part in the occupation of the [[Sudetenland#Sudetenland becomes part of the Third Reich|Sudetenland]]. <ref>Reynolds p.4</ref>
The [[mixed forests]] of the [[Appalachian Mountains]] flank the eastern portion of the province, extending from [[New England]] into the [[Eastern Townships]], northeastward through the [[Beauce, Quebec|Beauce]] region, and on to the [[Gaspé Peninsula]], where they disappear into the [[Gulf of St. Lawrence]]. This region sustains a mix of forestry, industry, and tourism based on its natural resources and landscape.
In 1939 the ''LSSAH'' now a full infantry regiment with three infantry battalions, an artillery battalion and anti-tank, reconnaissance and engineer subunits,<ref> Reynolds p.4</ref>, it was involved in the annexation of [[Bohemia]] and [[Moravia]]. Soon after this action, the ''LSSAH'' had several motorised components attached, including an [[Armored car (military)|armoured car]] platoon and a motorcycle unit, and was redesignated '''Infanterie-Regiment ''Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler'' (mot.).'''


When Hitler ordered the formation of an SS division in mid 1939, the ''Leibstandarte'' was designated to form its own unit, unlike the other [[Standarte]]n of the [[SS-Verfügungstruppe]] (SS-VT) ([[SS Standarte Deutschland|SS-Standarte ''Deutschland'']], [[SS Standarte Germania|SS-Standarte ''Germania'']], and [[SS Standarte Der Führer|SS-Standarte ''Der Führer'']]). The Polish crisis of October 1939 put these plans on hold, and the ''LSSAH'' was ordered to join [[German XIII Army Corps|XIII. Armeekorps]], a part of [[Army Group South]] which was preparing for the attack on [[Poland]].
===Climate===
Quebec has three main climate regions. Southern and western Quebec, including most of the major population centres, have a [[humid continental climate]] ([[Köppen climate classification]] ''Dfb'') with warm, humid summers and long, cold winters. The main climatic influences are from western and northern Canada which move eastward and from the southern and central United States that move northward. Because of the influence of both storm systems from the core of [[North America]] and the [[Atlantic Ocean]], precipitation is abundant throughout the year, with most areas receiving more than 100&nbsp;centimetres(40 in) of precipitation, including over 300&nbsp;centimetres (120 in) of snow in many areas. During the summer, severe weather patterns (such as [[tornado]]es and [[severe thunderstorm]]s) occasionally occur.


==Early war campaigns==
Most of central Quebec has a [[subarctic climate]] (Köppen ''Dfc''). Winters are long and among the coldest in eastern Canada, while summers are warm but very short because of the higher latitude and the greater influence of Arctic air masses. Precipitation is also somewhat less than farther south, except at some of the higher elevations.
<!-- Commented out because image was deleted: [[Image:LSAH.jpg|thumb|left|250px|The ''Leibstandarte'' on the march before the war.]] -->
During the initial stages of the [[Invasion of Poland (1939)|Invasion of Poland]], the ''LSSAH'' was attached to the [[German 17th Infantry Division|17.Infanterie-Division]] and tasked with providing flank protection for the southern pincer. The regiment was involved in several ferocious battles against [[Polish cavalry]] brigades attempting to hit the flanks of the German advance. At [[Pabianice]], a town near [[Łódź]], the ''LSSAH'' fought off elements of the [[Polish 28th Infantry Division]] and the [[Wołyńska Cavalry Brigade]] in ferocious close combat.


After the success at Pabianice, the ''LSSAH'' was shifted to the area near [[Warsaw]] and attached to the [[German 4th Panzer Division|4.Panzer-Division]] under ''Generaloberst'' [[Georg-Hans Reinhardt]], where it saw action preventing encircled Polish units from escaping, and repelling several desperate attempts by other Polish troops to break through. The ''LSSAH'' had proved itself an effective fighting unit during the campaign, though several Heer Generals had reservations about the high casualties which the ''LSSAH'' and the [[SS Verfügungstruppen|''SS-VT'']] units had sustained in combat.
The northern regions of Quebec have an [[arctic climate]] (Köppen ''ET''), with very cold winters and short, much cooler summers. The primary influences in this region are the Arctic Ocean currents (such as the [[Labrador Current]]) and continental air masses from the [[High Arctic]].or ((LOW)) according to the climate


In early 1940 the ''LSSAH'' was expanded into a full independant motorised infantry regiment and a [[Sturmgeschutz]] (Assault Gun) battery was added to their establishment <ref.Reynolds p.6</ref>
==History==
The regiment was shifted to the Dutch border for the launch of [[Fall Gelb]], and was to form the vanguard of the ground advance into the [[Netherlands]], tasked with capturing a vital bridge over the [[IJssel]] and linking up with the [[Fallschirmjäger]] of Generaloberst [[Kurt Student|Kurt Student's]] airborne forces, the [[German 7th Air Division|7.Flieger-Division]] and the [[German 22nd Air Landing Infantry Division|22.Luftlande-Infanterie-Division]].
{{main|History of Quebec}}
===First Nations===
At the time of first European contact and later colonization, [[Algonquian language|Algonquian]], [[Iroquoian language|Iroquoian]] and [[Inuit]] groups were the peoples that inhabited what is now Quebec. Their lifestyles and cultures reflected the land on which they lived. Seven Algonquian groups lived [[nomad]]ic lives based on hunting, gathering, and fishing in the rugged terrain of the Canadian Shield: (James Bay Cree, [[Innu]], [[Algonquin]]s) and Appalachian Mountains ([[Mi'kmaq]], [[Western Abenaki|Abenaki]]). [[St. Lawrence Iroquoians]] lived more settled lives, planting squash and maize in the fertile soils of St. Lawrence Valley. The Inuit continue to fish and hunt whale and seal in the harsh Arctic climate along the coasts of Hudson and Ungava Bay. These people traded fur and food and sometimes warred with each other.


The Invasion of France and the [[Netherlands]] was launched on 10 May 1940. On that day, the ''LSSAH'' crossed the dutch border <ref>Reynolds p.6</ref> covered over 75 km, securing a crossing over the IJssel near [[Zutphen]] after discovering that their target bridge had been destroyed. Over the next four days' fighting, the ''LSSAH'' covered over 215km, and earned itself dubious fame by accidentally shooting at and seriously wounding [[Kurt Student|Generaloberst Student]] near [[Amsterdam]]. After the surrender of the Netherlands on 14 May, the regiment was used to form part of the reserve for [[Army Group B]].
===Early European exploration===
[[Basque people|Basque]] whalers and fishermen traded furs with Saguenay natives throughout the [[16th century]].<ref>[http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0000550 Basques], The Canadian Encyclopedia</ref>


After the British armoured [[Battle of Arras (1940)|counterattack at Arras]], the ''LSSAH'', along with the [[SS Division Das Reich|SS-Verfügungs-Division]] was moved to the front lines to hold the perimeter around [[Dunkirk]] and reduce the size of the pocket containing the encircled British Expeditionary Force and French forces. Near [[Wormhoudt]], the ''LSSAH'' ignored Hitler's orders for the advance to halt and continued the attack, suppressing the British artillery positions on the Wattenberg Heights. During this battle the regiment suffered heavy casualties.
The first French [[List of explorers|explorer]] to reach Quebec was [[Jacques Cartier]], who planted a cross in 1534 at either [[Gaspé]] or at [[Old Fort Bay]] on the [[Lower North Shore]]. He sailed into the St. Lawrence River in 1535 and established an ill-fated colony near present-day Quebec City at the site of [[Stadacona]], an Iroquoian village.


After the attack, elements of ''LSSAH's'' II.Battalion, under the command of SS-Hauptsturmführer [[Wilhelm Mohnke]], were mistakenly informed that their divisional commander Sepp Dietrich had been killed in the fighting. In what is known as the [[Wormhoudt massacre]], about 80 British [[prisoner of war|POW]]s of 2nd Battalion of the [[The Royal Warwickshire Fusiliers|Royal Warwickshire Regiment]] were murdered in retaliation for the supposed death of Dietrich. Although it is unarguable that the massacre occurred, Mohnke's level of involvement is impossible to know, and as such he was never brought to trial to face the allegations. <ref>Reynolds p.6</ref>
'''Bold text'''===New France===
{{main|New France}}
[[Samuel de Champlain]] was part of a 1603 expedition from France that travelled into the St. Lawrence River. In 1608, he returned as head of an exploration party and founded Quebec City with the intention of making the area part of the [[French colonial empire]]. Champlain's ''Habitation de Quebec'', built as a permanent fur trading outpost, was where he would forge a trading, and ultimately a [[military]] alliance, with the [[Algonquin]] and [[Huron]] nations. Natives traded their furs for many French goods such as metal objects, guns, alcohol, and clothing.


==Brigade status—Balkans==
[[Helen Desportes|Hélène Desportes]], born July 7, 1620, to the [[French people|French]] [[habitants]] (settlers) Pierre Desportes and his wife Françoise Langlois, was the first child of [[European ethnic groups|European descent]] born in Quebec.
{{main|Battle of Vevi (1941)}}
After the conclusion of the Western campaign, the ''LSSAH'' was expanded to [[brigade]] size. Despite this, it retained the designation regiment. A [[Flak]] [[battalion]] and a [[assault gun|StuG]] [[Artillery battery|Batterie]] were among the formations added to the ''LSSAH''. During the later months of 1940, the regiment trained in amphibious assaults in preparation for [[Operation Seelöwe]]. After the failure of the [[Battle of Britain]] and the cancellation of the operation, the ''LSSAH'' was shifted to [[Bulgaria]] in preparation for [[Operation Marita]], part of the planned invasion of [[Greece]] and [[Yugoslavia]].


The Operation was launched on April 6 1941. The ''LSSAH'' was to follow the route of the [[German 9th Panzer Division|9.Panzer-Division]], part of ''General der Panzertruppen'' [[Georg Stumme]]'s [[German XL Panzer Corps|XL.Panzer-Korps]]. The regiment crossed the border near [[Prilep]] and was soon deep in Greek territory.
From Quebec, [[coureurs des bois]], [[coureur des bois#Voyageurs|voyageurs]] and Catholic missionaries used river [[canoe]]s to explore the interior of the North American continent, establishing fur trading forts on the [[Great Lakes]] ([[Étienne Brûlé]] 1615), [[Hudson Bay]] ([[Pierre-Esprit Radisson|Radisson]] and [[Médard des Groseilliers|Groseilliers]] 1659–60), [[Ohio River]] and [[Mississippi River]] ([[Robert Cavelier de La Salle|La Salle]] 1682), as well as the [[Prairie River]] and [[Missouri River]] ([[Pierre Gaultier de Varennes et de la Vérendrye|de la Verendrye]] 1734–1738).


The ''LSSAH'' captured [[Vevi]] on April 10. ''Sturmbannführer'' [[Kurt Meyer (Panzermeyer)|Kurt Meyer]]'s reinforced [[Aufklärungsabteilung|Aufklärungs-Abt]] ''LSSAH'' was tasked with clearing resistance from the Kleisoura Pass, south-west of Vevi and driving through to the [[Kastoria]] area to cut off retreating Greek and [[Commonwealth of Nations|British Commonwealth]] forces. Resistance from the Greek 20th Division was fierce. According to some accounts, the SS were inspired to capture the Kleisoura Pass only after Meyer threw a grenade at the feet of some of his soldiers
After 1627, King [[Louis XIII of France]] introduced the [[Seigneurial system of New France|seigneurial system]] and forbade settlement in [[New France]] by anyone other than [[Roman Catholic]]s. [[Sulpician]] and [[Jesuit]] clerics founded missions in [[Trois-Rivières, Quebec|Trois-Rivières]] (Laviolette) and Montréal or Ville-Marie ([[Paul Chomedey de Maisonneuve]] and [[Jeanne Mance]]) to convert [[New France]]'s [[Huron]] and [[Algonkian]] allies to [[Catholicism]]. The seigneurial system of governing New France also encouraged immigration from the motherland.


''Sturmbannführer'' [[Fritz Witt]]'s ''I.Battalion'' was tasked with [[Battle of Vevi (World War II)|clearing the Klidi Pass]], just south of Vevi and strongly defended by [[Australia]]n, British and [[New Zealand]] troops. Witt's Battalion was reinforced and renamed ''Kampfgruppe Witt''. An Australian officer wrote of the Germans' "insolence" in driving "...trucks down the main road &mdash; to within {{convert|3000|yd}} of our infantry", and there unloading the SS troops. <ref>{{cite web|title=great risk|url=http://www.ww2australia.gov.au/greatrisk/greatrisk04.htm}}access date 101108</ref>
New France became a Royal Province in 1663 under King [[Louis XIV of France]] with a [[Sovereign Council of New France|Sovereign Council]] that included [[intendant of New France|intendant]] [[Jean Talon]]. This ushered in a golden era of [[French colonization of the Americas|settlement and colonization]] in New France, including the arrival of les "[[Filles du Roi]]". The population grew from about 3,000 to 60,000 people between 1666 and 1760.<ref>[http://www.statcan.ca/english/freepub/98-187-XIE/pop.htm Estimated population of Canada, 1605 to present]</ref> Colonists built farms on the banks of St. Lawrence River and called themselves "[[Canadiens]]" or "[[Habitants]]". The colony's total population was limited, however, by a winter climate significantly harsher than that found in France; by the spread of diseases; and by the refusal of the French crown to allow [[Huguenots]], or French Protestants, to settle there. The population of New France lagged far behind that of the [[Thirteen Colonies]] to the south, leaving it vulnerable to attack.
The Germans were forced off the road and faced fierce resistance for more than two days. On the morning of April 12, the Germans launched a frontal assault, and by late afternoon the pass was cleared.
With the fall of the two passes, the main line of resistance of the [[Greek First Army]] was broken, and the campaign became a battle to prevent the escape of the enemy. On April 20, following a pitched battle in the {{convert|5000|ft|m|sing=on}}-high [[Metsovon]] Pass in the [[Pindus Mountains]], the commander of the Greek First Army surrendered the entire [[Hellenic Army]] to Dietrich. British Commonwealth troops were now the only Allied forces remaining in Greece, and they were falling back across the [[Corinth Canal]] to the [[Peloponnesos]]. By April 26, the ''LSSAH'' had reached the [[Gulf of Patras]], and in an effort to cut off the retreating British Commonwealth forces, Dietrich ordered that his regiment cross the Gulf and secure the town of [[Patras]] in the Peloponnesos. Since no transport vessels were available, the ''LSSAH'' commandeered fishing boats and successfully completed the crossing, despite being forced to leave much of their heavy equipment behind. By April 30, the last British Commonwealth troops had either been captured or escaped. The ''LSSAH'' occupied a position of honour in the victory parade through [[Athens]].


Following Operation Marita, the ''LSSAH'' was ordered north, to join the forces of [[Army Group South]] massing for the launch of [[Operation Barbarossa]].
===Conquest of New France===
In 1753 France began building a series of forts in the British [[Ohio Country]]. They refused to leave after being notified by the British Governor, and in 1754 [[George Washington]] launched an attack on the French [[Fort Duquesne]] (now [[Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania|Pittsburgh]]) in the Ohio Valley in an attempt to enforce the British claim to the territory. This frontier battle set the stage for the [[French and Indian War]] in North America. By 1756, France and Britain were battling the [[Seven Years' War]] worldwide. In 1758, the [[Kingdom of Great Britain|British]] mounted an attack on New France by sea and took the French fort at [[Louisbourg]].


==Barbarossa==
On [[September 13]] [[1759]], General [[James Wolfe]] defeated General [[Louis-Joseph de Montcalm]] on the [[Plains of Abraham]] outside Quebec City. France ceded its North American possessions to Great Britain through the [[Treaty of Paris (1763)]]. By the [[British Royal Proclamation of 1763]], Canada (part of New France) was renamed the [[Province of Quebec (1763-1791)|Province of Quebec]].
Following the ''LSSAH's'' outstanding performance during ''Marita'', Himmler ordered that it should be upgraded to divisional status.<ref>Reynolds p.8</ref> As such, the Regiment, already the size of a reinforced brigade, was redesignated '''SS-Division (mot.) ''Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler'''''. Despite this, there was no time to refit the division to full divisional status before the launch of [[Operation Barbarossa]], the invasion of the [[Soviet Union]], and so the new 'Division' remained the size of a reinforced brigade.


The ''LSSAH'' was attached to the [[German LIV Army Corps|LIV.Armee-Korps]] and held in reserve during the opening stages of the attack. In August, it was transferred to [[German III Panzer Corps|III.Panzer-Korps]], part of ''Generalfeldmarschall'' [[Ewald von Kleist]]'s [[Panzer Group 1|Panzergruppe 1]]. During this time, the ''LSSAH'' was involved in the [[Battle of Uman]] and the subsequent capture of [[Kiev]]. During this time, the division was involved in heavy fighting, with Meyer's [[Abteilung]] particularly distinguishing itself.
In 1774, fearful that the French-speaking population of Quebec (as the colony was called) would side with the rebels of the Thirteen Colonies to the south, the British Parliament passed the [[Quebec Act]] giving recognition to French law, Catholic religion and French language in the colony; before that Catholics had been excluded from public office and recruitment of priests and brothers forbidden, effectively shutting down Quebec's schools and colleges. The first British policy of assimilation (1763–1774) was deemed a failure. Both the petitions and demands of the Canadiens' élites, and Governor [[Guy Carleton, 1st Baron Dorchester|Guy Carleton]], played an important role in convincing London to drop the assimilation scheme, but the looming American revolt was certainly a factor. Through the Quebec Act, the Quebec people obtained their first Charter of Rights, which paved the way to later official recognition of the French language and [[French culture]]. The act allowed ''Canadiens'' to maintain French [[Civil law (legal system)|civil law]] and sanctioned freedom of religion, allowing the [[Roman Catholic Church]] to remain. It also restored the Ohio Valley to Quebec, reserving the territory for the fur trade.


In early September, the division was transferred back to LIV.Armee-Korps, preparing to launch an offensive to clear the [[Crimea|Crimean peninsula]]. The operation was launched on 17 September 1941. The ''LSSAH'' was involved in heavy fighting for the town of [[Perekop]], before advancing across the [[Perekop Isthmus]] to assault the Soviet defensive positions near the [[Tartar Ditch]].
The act, designed to placate one North American colony, had the opposite effect among its neighbors to the south. The Quebec Act was among the [[Intolerable Acts]] that infuriated American colonists, who launched the [[American Revolution]]. A [[Invasion of Canada (1775)|1775 invasion]] by the American [[Continental Army]] met with early success but was later repelled at the [[Battle of Quebec (1775)|battle at Quebec City]].


In November, the ''LSSAH'' was transferred back to Panzergruppe 1 and took part in the heavy fighting for the city of [[Rostov on Don|Rostov-on-Don]], which was captured in late November. During Operation Barbarossa, the division had penetrated 960 kilometers into Soviet territory.
===Revolutionary War===
When the American army came to Quebec they found many sympathetic supporters. According to Baby, Tachereau and Williams, as many as 747 people in Quebec took up active service with the Americans, most notably [[Clément Gosselin]] of the [[2nd Canadian Regiment]].


Heavy Soviet counterattacks during the winter meant that Army Group South had to fall back from Rostov-on-Don to defensive lines on the river [[Mius]]. The ''LSSAH'' spent the winter fighting ferocious defensive battles in temperatures of down to -40°C, with minimal winter clothing and only 150 grams of rations per man per day. Despite this, the division held. After the spring [[rasputitsa]] had cleared, the exhausted division joined in [[Fall Blau]], partaking in the fighting to retake Rostov-on-Don, which was recaptured in late July, 1942. Severely understrength and completely exhausted, the ''LSSAH'' was pulled out of the line. The division was ordered to the [[Normandy]] region of occupied [[France]] to join the newly formed [[II SS Panzer Corps|SS-Panzer-Korps]] and to be reformed as a [[panzergrenadier]] division.
The [[2nd Canadian Regiment]] fought at the [[Battle of Brandywine]] in 1777. The [[1st Canadian Regiment]] under [[James Livingston]] served at the [[Battle of Saratoga]] in 1777.


==Kharkov==
At the end of the war, 50,000 [[Loyalist (American Revolution)|Loyalists]] came to Canada and settled amongst a population of 90,000 French people.
The ''LSSAH'' spent the remainder of 1942 refitting as a panzergrenadier division. Thanks to the efforts of the Reichsführer-SS, along with SS-Obergruppenführer [[Paul Hausser]], the SS-Panzerkorps commander, the four SS panzergrenadier divisions (''LSSAH'', [[SS Division Wiking|''Wiking'']], ''Das Reich'' and ''[[Totenkopf]]'' were to be formed with a full regiment of tanks rather than only an [[Abteilung]]. This meant that the SS Panzergrenadier divisions were full-strength Panzer divisions in all but name. Also, the division received nine [[Tiger 1]] tanks, and these were formed into 13.(schwere)Kompanie/SS-Panzer-Regiment 1.


The collapse of the front around Stalingrad and the encirclement of the [[German Sixth Army|6.Armee]] meant that the entire eastern front was close to collapse. ''Generalfeldmarschall'' [[Erich von Manstein]], commander of [[Army Group Don]], requested reinforcements to halt the Soviet attack near [[Kharkov]]. The SS-Panzerkorps was ordered east to join Manstein's forces.
The [[American Revolutionary War]] was ultimately successful in winning independence for the Thirteen Colonies. In the [[Treaty of Paris (1783)]], the British ceded their territory south of the Great Lakes to the newly formed United States of America.


Arriving at the front in late January 1943, the ''LSSAH'' was thrown into the line defending Kharkov itself as a part of Hausser's SS-Panzer-Korps. Facing them were the hundreds of [[T-34]]s of [[Mobile Group Popov]], a Soviet armoured Army sized formation which formed the spearhead of the Soviet advance. On 8-9 February, 1943, the ''LSSAH's'' SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment 1 under SS-Sturmbannführer [[Fritz Witt]], fighting alongside SS-Sturmbannführer [[Max Wünsche]]'s I./SS-Panzer-Regiment 1, fought a bitter delaying action near the town of [[Merefa]], halting a major Soviet attack. The division fought in many desperate defensive battles over the next few weeks, gradually being pushed back into the city of Kharkov itself.
===''Patriotes''' Rebellion in Lower and Upper Canada===
{{main|Lower Canada Rebellion}}
Like their counterparts in [[Upper Canada]], in 1837 English and French speaking residents of Lower Canada, led by [[Louis-Joseph Papineau]] and [[Robert Nelson]], formed an armed resistance group to seek an end to British colonial rule. They made a Declaration of Rights with equality for all citizens without discrimination and a Declaration of Independence in 1838. Their actions resulted in rebellions in both Lower and Upper Canada. An unprepared [[British Army]] had to raise a local [[militia]] force, and the rebel forces were soon defeated after having scored a victory in [[Saint-Denis, Quebec]], east of Montreal. The British army also burned the Church of St-Eustache, killing the rebels who were hiding within it. The bullet and cannonball marks on the walls of the church are still visible to this day.


<!-- Unsourced image removed: [[Image:LSSAH Charkow3.jpg|thumb|right|250px|SS-Panzergrenadiers of Kampfgruppe ''Witt'' in the Kharkov outskirts, March 1943. {{deletable image-caption|1=Saturday, 5 January 2008}}]] -->
=== Act of Union ===
After the rebellions, [[John Lambton, 1st Earl of Durham|Lord Durham]] was asked to undertake a study and prepare a [[Report on the Affairs of British North America (1839)|report]] on the matter and to offer a solution for the British Parliament to assess.


Despite inflicting heavy losses on the Soviets, and rebuffing all enemy attacks, the Soviets succeeded in outflanking the corps. On 15 February, Hausser ignored Hitler's orders to hold the city at all costs and ordered the SS-Panzer-Korps to abandon the city and withdraw towards [[Krasnograd]]. Over the next week, the SS-Panzer-Korps annihilated Mobile Group Popov in a series of brilliant and hard fought battles. The ''LSSAH'' was a major participant in these battles, destroying several Soviet divisions and inflicting heavy losses.
The final report recommended that the two provinces of Upper and Lower Canada be united, and that the French speaking population of Lower Canada be assimilated into British culture. Following Durham's [[Report on the Affairs of British North America (1839)|Report]], the British government merged the two colonial provinces into one [[Province of Canada]] in 1840 with the [[Act of Union 1840|Act of Union]].


Hausser now ordered that Kharkov should be recaptured. The ''LSSAH'', ''Das Reich'' and ''Totenkopf'' were to form the spearhead of the attack. The attack got underway on 2 March. The ''LSSAH'' was formed into three [[Kampfgruppe]]n which would attack towards and capture Kharkov. Over the next weeks, the ''LSSAH'' would take part in the ferocious battles to take the city. Kampfgruppe ''Meyer'', under Panzermeyer's command, penetrated to Red Square before being cut off. Kampfgruppe ''Witt'' saw heavy fighting against a Soviet blocking force near [[Dergatschi]] before it also broke through into the city. Both Kampfgruppen were repeatedly cut off during the confused fighting, and it was not until Kampfgruppe ''Peiper'', under [[Joachim Peiper]], broke through that the defenders were finally overwhelmed. By 21 March, the battle was over and Kharkov was back in German hands, with Peiper's Kampfgruppe having penetrated as far as [[Belgorod]].
However, the political union proved contentious. Reformers in both Canada West (formerly Upper Canada) and Canada East (formerly Lower Canada) worked to repeal limitations on the use of the French language in the Legislature. The two colonies remained distinct in administration, election, and law.


In honour of the 4,500 casualties suffered by the Leibstandarte in the fighting, Kharkov's Red Square was renamed ''Platz der Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler''. The division was pulled back for much needed rest and refit.
In 1848, Baldwin and LaFontaine, allies and leaders of the Reformist party, were asked by [[James Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin|Lord Elgin]] to form an administration together under the new policy of [[responsible government]]. The French language subsequently regained legal status in the Legislature.


==Kursk==
=== Canadian Confederation ===
The spring [[rasputitsa]] halted offensive operations, giving the ''Leibstandarte'' time to rest and refit. By early June 1943, the division had been fully refitted. Its armour strength was 12 [[Tiger I]]s, 72 [[Panzer IV]]s, 16 [[Panzer III]] and [[Panzer II]]s, and 31 [[StuG III|StuG]]s. In late June 1943, the formation of [[I SS Panzer Corps|I.SS-Panzerkorps]] meant that Hausser's SS-Panzerkorps was renamed [[II SS Panzer Corps|II.SS-Panzerkorps]].
In the 1860s, the delegates from the colonies of [[British North America]] (Canada, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, and Newfoundland) met in a series of conferences to discuss self-governing status for a new confederation.


The II.SS-Panzerkorps was moved north to Belgorod in preparation for the upcoming Summer offensive, [[Operation Citadel]]. The ''LSSAH'', along with the ''Totenkopf'' and ''Das Reich'', was to form the spearhead of ''Generaloberst'' [[Hermann Hoth|Hoth]]'s [[German Fourth Panzer Army|4.Panzer-Armee]], tasked with breaching the southern flank of the [[Kursk]] [[salient]].
The first [[Charlottetown Conference]] took place in [[Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island]] followed by the [[Quebec Conference, 1864|Quebec Conference]] in Quebec City which led to a delegation going to [[London]], [[England]], to put forth a proposal for a national union.


''Generalfeldmarschall'' [[Walter Model]]'s [[German Ninth Army|9.Armee]] was to breach the northern flank, and the two forces were to meet near the city of Kursk, thereby encircling a large Soviet force.
As a result of those deliberations, in 1867 the [[Parliament of the United Kingdom]] passed the [[British North America Act]], providing for the Confederation of most of these provinces.


The II.SS-Panzerkorps reached its assembly areas on 28 June and began preparing for the assault. The attack was set for 5 July, and on 4 July the II.SS-Panzerkorps, as well as the [[XLVIII Panzer Corps|XLVIII.Panzerkorps]] on its left and the [[III Panzer Corps|III.Panzerkorps]] on the right, began minor attacks to secure observation posts. Fighting lasted throughout the day, with the ''LSSAH'' Pionier-Bataillon seeing heavy action clearing out the entrenched Soviets.
The former [[Province of Canada]] was divided into its two previous parts as the provinces of [[Ontario]] (Upper Canada) and Quebec (Lower Canada).
* [[New Brunswick]] and [[Nova Scotia]] joined Ontario and Quebec in the new [[Canada|Dominion of Canada]].
* [[Prince Edward Island]] joined in 1873 and the [[Dominion of Newfoundland]] entered the Confederation in 1949.


The Soviet run [[Lucy Spy Ring]] had infiltrated the German [[OKW]] and informed [[STAVKA]] of the impending operation. Captured German troops provided details of the objectives and locations of the major assaults. Before dawn on July 5, 1943, the Soviet artillery launched a massive bombardment against the German assembly areas. Despite this, the attack got underway after only a brief delay, and under perhaps the largest air battle in history, as the German aircraft defended against a Soviet [[Soviet Air Forces|VVS]]'s attempt to annihilate the [[Luftwaffe]] on the ground.
===Quiet Revolution===
{{main|Quiet Revolution}}
The [[conservatism|conservative]] government of [[Maurice Duplessis]] and his [[Union Nationale (Canada)|Union Nationale]] dominated Quebec politics from 1944 to 1960 with the support of the [[Roman Catholic]] church. [[Pierre Elliot Trudeau]] and other liberals formed an intellectual opposition to Duplessis's regime, setting the groundwork for the [[Quiet Revolution]] under [[Jean Lesage]]'s [[Parti libéral du Québec|Liberals]]. The Quiet Revolution was a period of dramatic social and political change that saw the decline of Anglo supremacy in the Quebec economy, the decline of the Roman Catholic Church's influence, the [[nationalization]] of [[hydro-electric]] companies under [[Hydro-Québec]] and the emergence of a [[Quebec sovereignty movement|pro-sovereignty movement]] under former Liberal minister [[René Lévesque]].


The ''LSSAH'' panzers, advancing in [[Panzerkeil]]s, soon ran into the Soviet [[Pakfront]]s. The elaborate system of Soviet defences slowed the attack, but unlike in Model's sector, the 4.Panzer-Armee, spearheaded by the SS-Panzerkorps and the ''LSSAH'', was not halted, and eventually broke through.
Beginning in 1963, a [[terrorism|terrorist]] group that became known as the [[Front de libération du Québec]] (FLQ) launched a decade of bombings, robberies and attacks<ref name=FLQ>[http://thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0003082 Front de libération du Québec] from the [[Canadian Encyclopedia]]</ref> directed primarily at English institutions, resulting in at least five deaths. In 1970, their activities culminated in events referred to as the [[October Crisis]] [http://www.mcgill.ca/maritimelaw/history/crisis/] when [[James Cross]], the British trade commissioner to Canada, was kidnapped along with [[Pierre Laporte]], a provincial minister and Vice-Premier, who was murdered a few days later. In their published Manifesto, the terrorists stated: "In the coming year [[Robert Bourassa|Bourassa]] will have to face reality; 100,000 revolutionary workers, armed and organized."


By 9 July, the SS-Panzerkorps had advanced {{convert|30|mi|km}} north, and were nearing the small town of [[Prokhorovka]]. The ''Leibstandarte'' again took the lead, by now its armour strength reduced to just 77 armoured vehicles. SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment 2, supported by several panzers, advanced straight up the road to Prokhorovka against heavy resistance. By midday, the grenadiers had cleared the Komsomolets State Farm and the began the attack on Hill 241.6, which they secured shortly after nightfall on 10 July.
At the request of Premier Robert Bourassa, Prime Minister [[Pierre Trudeau]] invoked the [[War Measures Act]]. In addition, the Quebec [[Ombudsman]] [http://www.protecteurducitoyen.qc.ca/en/index.asp] Louis Marceau was instructed to hear complaints of detainees and the Quebec government agreed to pay damages to any person unjustly arrested (only in Quebec). On [[February 3]], [[1971]], [[John Turner]], the [[Minister of Justice (Canada)|Minister of Justice of Canada]], reported that 497 persons had been arrested throughout Canada under the War Measures Act,<ref>Susan Munroe, [http://canadaonline.about.com/cs/octobercrisis/a/octobercrisistl.htm October Crisis Timeline], Canada Online. Retrieved 21 January 2008.</ref> of whom 435 had been released. The other 62 were charged, of which 32 were crimes of such seriousness that a [[Quebec Superior Court]] judge refused them bail. The crisis ended a few weeks after the death of Pierre Laporte at the hands of his captors. The fallout of the crisis marked the zenith and twilight of the FLQ which lost membership and public support.


<!-- Unsourced image removed: [[Image:LSSAH - Kursk POW.jpg|thumb|right|240px|Tankers from SS-Panzer-Regiment ''LSSAH'' treat wounded Soviet POWs during a lull in the fighting near Prokhorovka. {{deletable image-caption|1=Monday, 7 January 2008}}]] -->
In 1977, the newly elected [[Parti Québécois]] government of [[René Lévesque]] introduced the [[Charter of the French Language]]. Often known as [[Bill 101]], it defined French as the only official language of Quebec in areas of provincial jurisdiction.


On 11 July, the advance resumed. With the division capturing Oktiabr'skii State Farm and Hill 252.2 in heavy fighting against Soviet [[Paratroop]]s of the [[Soviet 9th Guards Airborne Division|9th Guards Airborne Division]]. On 12 July, the Soviets threw the [[Soviet 5th Guards Tank Army|5th Guards Tank Army]] into a counterattack near Prokhorovka. Two tank [[corps]] faced the ''Leibstandarte'' hitting the advancing Germans around Oktiabr'skii State Farm and Hill 252.2. In the ensuing fighting, the outnumbered Germans inflicted heavy casualties on the Soviets, knocking out many tanks. In the process, the ''Leibstandarte'' also suffered relatively light casualties, however the Soviet counterattack had stalled the German advance, and the division was forced to fall back to Oktiabr'skii. Fighting continued on the 13th, but the focus of the Soviet attack had shifted to the ''Totenkopf'', to the left of the ''Leibstandarte''.
===Parti Québécois and constitutional crisis===
Lévesque and his party had run in the 1970 and 1973 Quebec elections under a platform of separating Quebec from the rest of Canada. The party failed to win control of Quebec's National Assembly both times — though its share of the vote increased from 23% to 30% — and Lévesque was defeated both times in the [[Electoral district (Canada)|riding]] he contested. In the 1976 election, he softened his message by promising a referendum (plebiscite) on [[sovereignty-association]] rather than outright separation, by which Quebec would have independence in most government functions but share some other ones, such as a common currency, with Canada. On [[November 15]], [[1976]], Lévesque and the Parti Québécois won control of the provincial government for the first time. The question of [[sovereignty-association]] was placed before the voters in the [[1980 Quebec referendum]]. During the campaign, [[Pierre Trudeau]] promised that a vote for the "no" side was a vote for reforming Canada. Trudeau advocated the [[patriation]] of Canada's Constitution from the [[United Kingdom]]. The existing constitutional document, the [[British North America Act]], could only be amended by the [[United Kingdom Parliament]] upon a request by the Canadian parliament.


With the Battle of Prokhorovka still in the balance, a massive Soviet counteroffensive near [[Orel]], caused Hitler to order the cancellation of Citadel. The SS-Panzerkorps was pulled back. ''LSSAH'' was ordered out of the line. It was to be sent to Italy to help stabilise the situation caused by the deposal of [[Mussolini]] by the [[Pietro Badoglio|Badoglio]] Government and the Allied Landings in [[Sicily]] on 10 July. The division left its armour and equipment, which was given to ''Das Reich'' and ''Totenkopf'', and entrained for the trip to Italy.
Sixty percent of the Quebec electorate voted against the proposition. Polls showed that the overwhelming majority of English and immigrant Quebecers voted against, and that French Quebecers were almost equally divided, with older voters less in favour and younger voters more in favour. After his loss in the referendum, Lévesque went back to Ottawa to start negotiating a new constitution with Trudeau, his minister of Justice [[Jean Chrétien]] and the nine other provincial premiers. Lévesque insisted Quebec be able to veto any future constitutional amendments. The negotiations quickly reached a stand-still.


==Italy==
Then on the night of [[November 4]], [[1981]] (widely known in Quebec as ''La nuit des longs couteaux'' and in the rest of Canada as the [[Patriation#The Kitchen Accord|"Kitchen Accord"]]) Federal Justice Minister Jean Chrétien<!--not PM Trudeau, as erroneously reported here before. PM Trudeau had simply pointed out to the provinces that had held out with Lévesque that he had been individually negotiating with Lévesque, against the terms of the agreement between all the hold-out provinces--> met with all of the provincial premiers except [[René Lévesque]] to sign the document that would eventually become the new Canadian constitution. The next morning, they presented the "fait accompli" to Lévesque. Lévesque refused to sign the document and returned to Quebec. In 1982, Trudeau had the new constitution approved by the British Parliament, with Quebec's signature still missing (a situation that persists to this day). The Supreme Court of Canada confirmed Trudeau's assertion that every province's approval is not required to amend the constitution.
The division travelled back from the front, stopping at [[Innsbruck]] in [[Austria]], where it disembarked. The division was re-equipped with vehicles and continued the journey by road, travelling across the Alps and into Northern Italy. The division arrived on the [[Po River|Po River Plain]] on 8 August 1943.


The ''Leibstandarte'' was given the task of guarding several vital road and rail junctions in the area of [[Trento]]-[[Verona]]. After several weeks operating in this area, the division was moved to the [[Parma]]-[[Reggio]] area. During this period, the Leibstandarte was involved in several skirmishes with [[Partisan (military)|partisan]]s. With the Italian collapse of 8 September 1943, the division was ordered to begin disarming nearby Italian units. This went smoothly, with the exception of a brief skirmish with Italian troops stationed in [[Parma]] on 9 September. By 19 September, all Italian forces in the Po River Plain had been disarmed, but OKW was concerned by reports that elements of the [[Italian Fourteenth Army]] were regrouping in [[Piedmont]], near the French border. Sturmbannführer [[Joachim Peiper|Peiper's]] mechanised III./SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment 2 was sent to disarm these units. Upon arriving in the Province of Cuneo, Peiper was met by an Italian officer who warned that his forces would attack unless Peiper's unit vacated the province immediately. Peiper refused, which goaded the Italians into attacking. The veterans of Peiper's battalion defeated the Italians in a fierce battle, and then proceeded to disarm the remaining Italian forces in the area.
In subsequent years, two attempts were made to gain Quebec's approval of the constitution. The first was the [[Meech Lake Accord]] of 1987, which was finally abandoned in 1990 when the province of [[Manitoba]] did not pass it within the established deadline. ([[Newfoundland and Labrador|Newfoundland]] premier [[Clyde Wells]] had expressed his opposition to the accord, but, with the failure in Manitoba, the vote for or against Meech never took place in his province.) This led to the formation of the sovereignist [[Bloc Québécois]] party in Ottawa under the leadership of [[Lucien Bouchard]], who had resigned from the federal cabinet. The second attempt, the [[Charlottetown Accord]] of 1992, was rejected by 56.7% of all Canadians and 57% of Quebecers. This result caused a split in the [[Parti libéral du Québec|Quebec Liberal Party]] that led to the formation of the new [[Action Démocratique]] (Democratic Action) party led by [[Mario Dumont]] and [[Jean Allaire]].


Following the disintegration and capitulation of Italy, the activities of partisan groups increased all across the area. The Leibstandarte was sent to the [[Istria]] Peninsula and was engaged in several major anti-partisan operations. During its period in Italy, the Leibstandarte was reformed as a full panzer division, and redesignated '''1.SS-Panzer-Division ''Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler'''''. In early November, the deteriorating situation in the east meant that the division was ordered back to the Russian Front, arriving in the [[Zhitomir]] area in mid November.
On [[October 30]], [[1995]], with the [[Parti Québécois]] back in power since 1994, a [[1995 Quebec referendum|second referendum]] on sovereignty took place. This time, it was rejected by a slim majority (50.6% NO to 49.4% YES); a clear majority of French-speaking Quebecers voted in favour of sovereignty.


==Eastern Front==
The referendum was enshrouded in controversy. Federalists complained that an unusually high number of ballots had been rejected in pro-federalist areas, notably in the largely Jewish and Greek riding of [[Chomedey (electoral district)|Chomedey]] (11.7 % or 5,500 of its ballots were spoiled, compared to 750 or 1.7% in the general election of 1994) although Quebec's chief electoral officer found no evidence of outright fraud. The federal government was accused of not respecting provincial laws with regard to spending during referendums (leading to a corruption scandal that would become public a decade later, greatly damaging the Liberal Party's standing), and of having accelerated the naturalization of immigrants in Quebec before the referendum in order that they could vote, as naturalized citizens were believed more likely to vote no. (43,850 immigrants were naturalized in 1995, whereas the average number between 1988 and 1998 was 21,733.)
The division was posted to [[XLVIII Panzer Corps|XLVIII.Panzer-Korps]], a part of [[German Fourth Panzer Army|4.Panzer-Armee]], which was struggling to hold the line near Zhitomir. The division was broken up into several [[Kampfgruppe]]n and thrown into action. On 18 November, Kampfgruppe Frey halted the advance of the Fifth Guards Tank Army near the town of Kotscherovo. Over the next two months, the division's Kampfgruppen saw very heavy fighting in the Shitomir area, performing fire-brigade actions and enabling XLVIII.Panzer-Korps to hold the line.


In January 1944, one of the Leibstandarte's [[101st SS Heavy Panzer Detachment|s.SS-Panzer-Abt 101]] Tiger commanders, [[Michael Wittman]], was awarded the Oakleaves to the [[Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross]] for his actions in halting the attack of an entire Soviet armoured brigade. The division was transferred to the [[Cherkassy]] area at the end of January, where it was assigned to [[German III Panzer Corps|III.Panzer-Korps]], a part of [[German First Panzer Army|1.Panzer-Armee]].
The same night of the referendum, an angry [[Jacques Parizeau]], then premier and leader of the "Yes" side, declared that the loss was because of "[[money and a part of the ethnic vote]]". Parizeau resigned over public outrage and as per his commitment to do so in case of a loss. [[Lucien Bouchard]] became Quebec's new premier in his place.


When the 56,000 men of [[Gruppe Stemmermann]] were trapped in the [[Korsun Pocket]] in February 1944, the Leibstandarte, along with the remainder of III.Panzer-Korps and [[German XLVII Panzer Corps|XLVII.Panzer-Korps]] were ordered to attempt to break the Soviet cordon and rescue the trapped forces. Hitler intervened, and ordered the relief attempt be transformed into an impossible attempt to counter-encircle two Soviet fronts. The Leibstandarte, along army panzer units including Oberstleutnant Dr. [[Franz Bäke]]'s [[German 503rd Heavy Panzer Detachment|503rd schwere Panzer Abteilung]] spearheaded the attack. Despite initial gains, the attack soon stalled due to a combination of the resistance of four Soviet tank corps and the thick mud of the [[rasputitsa]]. The exhausted Germans managed to reach the Gniloy Tikich river, where a small bridgehead was established. The survivors of the encirclement fought their way through to the bridgehead and by late February the battle was over.
Federalists accused the sovereignist side of asking a vague, overly complicated question on the ballot. Its English text read as follows:
<blockquote>
''Do you agree that Québec should become sovereign after having made a formal offer to Canada for a new economic and political partnership within the scope of the bill respecting the future of Québec and of the agreement signed on June 12, 1995?''
</blockquote>
After winning the next election in 1998, Bouchard retired from politics in 2001. [[Bernard Landry]] was then appointed leader of the [[Parti Québécois]] and premier of Quebec. In 2003, Landry lost the election to the [[Parti Libéral du Québec|Quebec Liberal Party]] and [[Jean Charest]]. Landry stepped down as PQ leader in 2005, and in a crowded race for the party leadership, [[André Boisclair]] was elected to succeed him. He also resigned after the renewal of the Quebec Liberal Party's government in the [[2007 Quebec election|2007 general election]] and the Parti Québécois becoming the second opposition party, behind the Action Démocratique. The PQ has promised to hold another referendum should it return to government.


The majority of the Leibstandarte was withdrawn to Belgium for rest and refit, however a Kampfgruppe was left behind. On 22 March, the entire 1.Panzer-Armee was encircled in the [[Kamenets-Podolsky Pocket]]. The Leibstandarte Kampfgruppe took part in the desperate fighting to escape the encirclement, forming a part of the spearhead which linked up with the [[II SS Panzer Corps|II.SS-Panzer-Korps]] near [[Buczacz]] on 6 April, 1944. The shattered remnant of the Kampfgruppe was ordered to Belgium where it was to rest, refit and rejoin the remainder of the division.
===Quebec as a nation===
Given the province's heritage and the preponderance of French (unique among the Canadian provinces), there is an ongoing debate in Canada regarding the status of Quebec and its people (wholly or partially). Prior attempts to amend the Canadian constitution to acknowledge Quebec as a '[[distinct society]]' – referring to the province's uniqueness within Canada regarding law, language, and culture – have been unsuccessful; however, the federal government under [[Prime Minister of Canada|Prime Minister]] Jean Chrétien would later endorse recognition of Quebec as a "unique society"[http://www.exec.gov.nl.ca/currentevents/unity/unityr1.htm]. On [[October 30]], [[2003]], the National Assembly of Quebec voted unanimously to affirm "that the Quebecers form a [[nation]]".<ref>{{PDFlink|[http://www.saic.gouv.qc.ca/publications/resolutions/20031030.pdf ''Résolution de l'Assemblée Nationale du Québec'', October 30, 2003]|95.4&nbsp;KB}}</ref>
On [[November 27]] [[2006]], the [[Canadian House of Commons|House of Commons]] passed a motion moved by Prime Minister [[Stephen Harper]] declaring that "this House recognize[s] that the [[Québécois]] form a nation within a united Canada."<ref>[http://www2.parl.gc.ca/HousePublications/Publication.aspx?Pub=hansard&Language=E&Mode=1&Parl=39&Ses=1&DocId=2544166&File=0#SOB-1798651 Hansard; 39th Parliament, 1st Session; No. 087; November 27, 2006]</ref><ref>[http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20061128.wnation28/BNStory/National/home Galloway, Gloria; Curry, Bill; Dobrota, Alex; ''Globe and Mail'': 'Nation' motion passes, but costs Harper; November 28, 2006]</ref><ref>[http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20061127.wchong1127/BNStory/National Bonoguore, Tenille; Sallot, Jeff; ''Globe and Mail'': Harper's Quebec motion passes easily; November 27, 2006]</ref> However, there is considerable debate and uncertainty over what this means.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/parliament39/motion-quebecnation.html| title = Debate: The motions on the Québécois nation | publisher = Canadian Broadcasting Corporation |date=2006-11-24 | accessdate = 2007-08-26}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2006/12/19/harper-motion.html?ref=rss | title = Who's a Québécois? Harper isn't sure | publisher = Canadian Broadcasting Corporation |date=2006-12-19 | accessdate = 2006-12-21}}</ref>


==Demographics==
==Normandy==
The LAH's most crucial role in Normandy would be the part it played against [[Operation Goodwood]]. Launched 18 July, three British armoured divisions, with infantry support on their flanks, were to swing through the gap between [[Caen]] and the eastern heights. There they would have to get across the hills at Bourguébus and break through towards open ground. The operation was preceded by a three hour bombing assault by 2,500 aircraft.
{{main|Demographics of Quebec|French Canadian}}
At 1.52, Quebec's [[fertility rate]] is slightly below the Canada-wide rate of 1.54<ref>http://cansim2.statcan.ca/cgi-win/CNSMCGI.PGM</ref> and well below the replacement fertility rate of 2.1. This contrasts with fertility rates before [[1960]], which were among the highest of any industrialized society. Although Quebec is home to only 23.9% of the population of Canada, the number of international adoptions in Quebec is the highest of all provinces of Canada. In 2001, 42% of international adoptions in Canada were carried out in Quebec.
===Population of Quebec since 1851===
{| class="wikitable sortable"
!Year
!Population
!Five-year<br/>% change
!Ten-year <br/>% change
!Rank among<br/>provinces
|-
|1851 ||892,061 ||n/a ||n/a ||2
|-
|1861 ||1,111,566 ||n/a ||24.6 ||2
|-
|1871 ||1,191,516 ||n/a ||7.2 ||2
|-
|1881 ||1,359,027 ||n/a ||14.1 ||2
|-
|1891 ||1,488,535 ||n/a ||9.5 ||2
|-
|1901 ||1,648,898 ||n/a ||10.8 ||2
|-
|1911 ||2,005,776 ||n/a ||21.6 ||2
|-
|1921 ||2,360,665 ||n/a ||17.8 ||2
|-
|1931 ||2,874,255 ||n/a ||21.8 ||2
|-
|1941 ||3,331,882 ||n/a ||15.9 ||2
|-
|1951 ||4,055,681 ||n/a ||21.8 ||2
|-
|1956 ||4,628,378 ||14.1 ||n/a ||2
|-
|1961 ||5,259,211 ||13.6 ||29.7 ||2
|-
|1966 ||5,780,845 ||9.9 ||24.9 ||2
|-
|1971 ||6,027,765 ||4.3 ||14.6 ||2
|-
|1976 ||6,234,445 ||3.4 ||7.8 ||2
|-
|1981 ||6,438,403 ||3.3 ||6.8 ||2
|-
|1986 ||6,532,460 ||1.5 ||4.8 ||2
|-
|1991 ||6,895,963 ||5.6 ||7.1 ||2
|-
|1996 ||7,138,795 ||3.5 ||9.3 ||2
|-
|2001 ||7,237,479 ||1.4 ||5.0 ||2
|-
|2006 ||7,546,131 ||4.3 ||5.7 ||2
|}
<small>''Source: [[Statistics Canada]]''</small> [http://www40.statcan.ca/l01/cst01/demo62f.htm][http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census06/data/popdwell/Table.cfm?T=101]


Immediately afterwards the British tanks came rumbling on and seized all their primary objectives. 2nd SS Panzer regiment 1, located by the woods near Garcelles, received orders to attack the British at Soliers. SS-Obersturmführer Malkomes drove in the direction of Bourguébus with his 13 Panthers and discovered 60 enemy tanks South South East of the town. He attacked them, destroying 20, and capturing Soliers. Around 12:00 hours the [[Panther tank|Panther]] Battalion, 1/1st SS Panzer regiment, was engaged in combat with the [[British 29th Armoured Brigade]] of the [[British 11th Armoured Division]]. The body of the Leibstandarte was rushed to the front from [[Falaise]], where it was being held in reserve. Counterattacked immediatley at 17:00, together with the [[21st Panzer Division]], they halted the British offensive on the left front. The British withdrew to Caen, leaving behind 126 destroyed tanks.
===Ethnic origin===
{| class="wikitable sortable" align="left"
|- bgcolor="#CCCCCC"
!Ethnic origin
!Population
!Percent
|-
|[[Canadian]]
|4,474,115
|60.2%
|-
|[[French people|French]]
|2,151,655
|28.9%
|-
|[[Irish Canadian|Irish]]
|406,085
|5.5%
|-
|[[Italian Canadian|Italian]]
|299,655
|4.0%
|-
|[[English Canadian|English]]
|245,155
|3.3%
|-
|[[First Nations|North American Indian]]
|219,815
|3.0%
|-
|[[Scottish Canadian|Scottish]]
|202,515
|2.7%
|-
|[[Québécois]]
|140,075
|1.9%
|-
|[[German Canadian|German]]
|131,795
|1.8%
|-
|[[Chinese Canadian|Chinese]]
|91,900
|1.2%
|-
|[[Haitian Canadians|Haitian]]
|91,435
|1.2%
|-
|[[Spanish Canadian|Spanish]]
|72,090
|1.0%
|-
|[[Jewish Canadian|Jewish]]
|71,380
|1.0%
|-
|[[Greek Canadian|Greek]]
|65,985
|0.9%
|-
|[[Polish Canadian|Polish]]
|62,800
|0.8%
|-
|[[Lebanese Canadian|Lebanese]]
|60,950
|0.8%
|-
|[[Portuguese Canadian|Portuguese]]
|57,445
|0.8%
|-
|[[Belgian people|Belgian]]
|43,275
|0.6%
|-
|[[Indo-Canadian|East Indian]]
|41,600
|0.6%
|-
|[[Romanian Canadian|Romanian]]
|40,320
|0.5%
|-
|[[Russian Canadian|Russian]]
|40,155
|0.5%
|-
|}
<br clear=left>
<small>''Percentages are calculated as a proportion of the total number of respondents (7,435,905) and may total more than 100% due to dual responses. <br />Only groups with more than 0.5% of respondents are shown.''</small><ref>[http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census06/data/highlights/ethnic/pages/Page.cfm?Lang=E&Geo=PR&Code=24&Data=Count&Table=2&StartRec=1&Sort=3&Display=All&CSDFilter=5000 Ethnic origins, 2006 counts, for Canada, provinces and territories - 20% sample data]</ref>


At first, 19 July seemed to bring an end to Operation Goodwood, as only some individual tank assaults were carried out. But by 13:00 the British charged again, having brought up reinforcements to continue the attack. They quickly overran the forward German units and pressed on hard, a wave of tanks spearheading the attack. But when the leading Sherman/Fireflies and Cromwells approached Bourguébus Ridge at 16:00 hours, they came under fire and were blown up; the Panthers of the Leibstandarte had taken up positions on the hill itself. Around 15:00 hours the first of the [[12th SS Panzer Division]] arrived, which relieved the right flank. The British failed to break out of their bridgehead there, but Caen was now fully in their hands and the bridgehead had been expanded for 9 km, suffering the loss of 493 tanks, and 4,011 casualties.
===Aboriginal status===
The 2006 census counted a total aboriginal population of 108,425 (1.5%) including 65,085 [[First Nations|North American Indians]] (0.9%), 27,985 [[Métis]] (0.4%), and 10,950 [[Inuit]] (0.15%). It should be noted however, that there is a significant undercount, as many of the biggest Indian bands regularly refuse to participate in Canadian censuses for political reasons regarding the question of aboriginal sovereignty. In particular, the largest [[Mohawk]] [[Iroquois]] reserves ([[Kahnawake]], [[Akwesasne]] and [[Kanesatake]]) were not counted.


[[Image:HausserMark.jpg|left|thumb|SS-Obergruppenführer Paul Hausser]]
<small>''Percentages are calculated as a proportion of the total number of respondents (7,435,905)''</small><ref>[http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census06/data/profiles/aboriginal/Details/Page.cfm?Lang=E&Geo1=PR&Code1=24&Geo2=PR&Code2=01&Data=Count&SearchText=Quebec&SearchType=Begins&SearchPR=01&B1=All&GeoLevel=&GeoCode=24 Aboriginal Population Profile (2006 Census)]</ref>
Despite this costly victory, the Allied forces remained vastly superior in numbers. Five days later the Americans saw the chance to break out of their beachhead. The weakened German defense could not keep up with the savage battle of attrition as little or no reinforcements had arrived, supplies were shot up, and movement by day was made impossible. They stormed into the open, one column headed towards Avranches, and another column making an encircling movement towards [[St. Lô]]. Hitler however forbade any retreat and, instead, ordered an assault to be made. Leibstandarte, together with 4 other SS-Panzer Divisions and 3 Wehrmacht Panzer Divisions went on the attack on 7 August after moving to the assembly areas on 5 and 6 August. The 1st SS Panzer regiment along with two Panzer Grenadier Battalionss, one Pionier Compamy and the [[Flak]] Battalion, were used. The weather wasn't suited for flying that morning, which only disadvantaged the Allies. That is why the attack went smoothly at first, despite the fact that the Allies knew the attack was coming. [[2nd SS Division Das Reich]] managed to recapture Mortain, and an armoured Kampfgruppe under Jochen Peiper managed to go as far as Bourlopin, but was stopped by massive swarms of Allied aircraft. Another attempt was mounted the next day, but failed.


A report from SS-Obersturmführer Preuss, 10.Kp./SS-Panzergrenadierregiment 2 describes the impossible situation:
===Visible minorities===
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|- bgcolor="#CCCCCC"
!Visible minority
!Population
!Percentage
|-
|Total visible minority population
|654,355
|8.8%
|-
|Black
|188,070
|2.5%
|-
|Arab
|109,020
|1.5%
|-
|Latin American
|89,505
|1.2%
|-
|Chinese
|79,830
|1.1%
|-
|South Asian
|72,845
|1.0%
|-
|Southeast Asian
|50,455
|0.7%
|-
|}
<small>''Percentages are calculated as a proportion of the total number of respondents (7,435,905). <br />Only groups with more than 0.5% of respondents are shown''</small><ref>[http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census06/data/highlights/ethnic/pages/Page.cfm?Lang=E&Geo=PR&Code=01&Table=1&Data=Count&StartRec=1&Sort=11&Display=Page&CSDFilter=5000 Visible minority groups, 2006 counts, for Canada, provinces and territories - 20% sample data]</ref>


<blockquote>It is true that one fighter bomber we shot down landed on a Panzer and destroyed it. Most other Panzer and Schützenpanzer, however, fell victim to this intensive air bombardment, which lasted hours. Those Grenadiere still able to fight had spread themselves out to the left and right through the terrain's many hedges. They were happy to see that the bombers swarming like bees over our heads were finding more rewarding targets than individual men. I agreed with them. I heard that Peiper had suffered a heart attack. Diefenthal (the commander of the III./2) lost his hearing when a bomb fell right next to him. Kuhlmann was unable to get the attack moving forward again. My brave messenger, Sturmmann Horst Reinicken, was killed as he tried to reach the command post of the Heer Panzerabteilung to which we were subordinated. He was trying to bring the Panzerabteilung the news that its commander and Adjutant lay dead not far from our hedge.</blockquote>
===Religion===
Quebec is unique among the provinces in its overwhelmingly [[Roman Catholic]] population. This is a legacy of colonial times when only Roman Catholics were permitted to settle in [[New France]].


This marked the end of the campaign in Normandy; Leibstandarte got encircled by the Americans and Canadians supported by the [[1st Polish Armoured Division]] in what would be called the [[Falaise pocket]], but by then the unit was reduced to several small Kampfgruppen. Hausser, commander of 7. Armee was told by von Kluge (commander in chief West, as successor to von Rundstedt) to withdraw the [[2nd SS Panzer Corps]], his motors and his administrative personnel from the pocket. The Führer had still not given orders to withdraw at this point, so it all depended on the will of the units themselves to get out. Leibstandarte withdrew from the pocket with Unterführers and Führers each taking the lead of a small Kampfgruppe and smashing through the ring, on 22 August, after which no combat ready tanks or artillery pieces were reported. The whole campaign caused some 5,000 casualties to the LSSAH.
The 2001 census showed the population to be 83.4% [[Catholic|Catholic Christian]] (including 83.2% [[Roman Catholic]]); 4.7% [[Protestant|Protestant Christian]] (including 1.2% [[Anglican]], 0.7% [[United Church of Canada|United Church]]; and 0.5% [[Baptist]]); 1.4% [[Eastern Orthodox|Orthodox Christian]] (including 0.7% [[Greek Orthodox]]); and 0.8% [[Christian|Other Christian]]; as well as 1.5% [[Muslim]]; 1.3% [[Jewish]]; 0.6% [[Buddhist]]; 0.3% [[Hindu]]; and 0.1% [[Sikh]]. An additional 5.8% of the population said they had no religious affiliation (including 5.6% who stated that they had no religion at all).<br />
<small>''Percentages are calculated as a proportion of the total number of respondents (7,125,580)''</small><ref>[http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census01/products/highlight/Religion/Page.cfm?Lang=E&Geo=PR&View=1a&Code=24&Table=1&StartRec=1&Sort=2&B1=24&B2=All Selected Religions, for Canada, Provinces and Territories]</ref>


==Lineage of the unit==
===Language===
[[Image:Paradejack.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Deposition of the captured 1st SS Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler standard (minus its flag cloth) by Soviet soldiers near the [[Kremlin Wall]] during the [[Moscow Victory Parade|Victory Parade]], [[June 24]], [[1945]].]]
{{main|Language demographics of Quebec}}
*''Stabswache'' (SA controlled)
The [[official language]] of Quebec is [[French language|French]]. Quebec is the only Canadian province whose population is mainly [[francophone]], constituting 79% (5,877,660) of the population according to the 2006 Census.<ref name=autogenerated1>{{cite web |url=http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census06/data/highlights/language/Table401.cfm |title=Population by mother tongue and age groups, percentage distribution (2006), for Canada, provinces and territories, and census metropolitan areas and census agglomerations – 20% sample data |accessdate=2008-02-18 |work=Statistics Canada }}</ref> 95% of the people speak French as either their first, second or even third language.
*''Stoßtrupp Adolf Hitler'' (SA controlled)
*''Stabswache'' (not under SA control)
*''SS-Stabswache Berlin''
*''SS-Sonderkommando Zossen''
*''SS-Sonderkommando Jüterbog''
*''SS-Sonderkommando Berlin''
*''Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler''
*''Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler''
*''Infanterie-Regiment (mot.) Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler''
*''SS-Division (mot.) Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler''
*''SS-Panzergrenadier-Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler''
*''1.SS Division Leibstandarte Schutzstaffel Adolf Hitler''


==Commanders==
[[English language|English]] is not designated an official language by Quebec law<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charter_of_the_French_Language</ref>. However, both English and French are required by the ''[[Constitution Act, 1867]]'' for the enactment of laws and regulations and any person may use English or French in the National Assembly and the courts of Quebec. The books and records of the National Assembly must also be kept in both languages.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.canlii.org/en/ca/scc/doc/1979/1979canlii21/1979canlii21.html |title=Att. Gen. of Quebec v. Blaikie et al., 1979 CanLII 21 (S.C.C.) |accessdate=2007-11-24 |work=Canadian Legal Information Institute }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.canlii.org/eliisa/highlight.do?language=en&searchTitle=Federal&path=/en/ca/scc/doc/1981/1981canlii14/1981canlii14.html
* SS-Oberstgruppenführer [[Josef Dietrich]], 15 August 1938 – 7 April 1943
|title=A.G. (Quebec) v. Blaikie et al., [1981] 1 S.C.R. 312
* SS-Brigadeführer [[Theodor Wisch]], 7 April 1943 – 20 August 1944
}}</ref>
* SS-Brigadeführer [[Wilhelm Mohnke]], 20 August 1944 – 6 February 1945
* SS-Brigadeführer [[Otto Kumm]], 6 February 1945 – 8 May 1945


==Orders of battle==
According to the 2006 Canadian census, 575,560 (7.7% of population) in Quebec declare English as their [[mother tongue]], 744,430 (10.0%) use mostly English as their [[home language]], and 918,955 (12.9% according to the 2001 Census) comprise the Official Language Minority, having English as their [[Bilingualism in Canada#Official Languages Regulations|First Official language spoken]].<ref name="gmcdi_a"> {{cite web
===Infantry Regiment (mot) ''Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler''—April 1941—Operation Marita===
| title = Population by mother tongue and age groups, percentage distribution (2006), for Canada, provinces and territories – 20% sample data
* Regimental Headquarters Staff (SS-Gruppenführer [[Josef Dietrich]])
| publisher = Statistics Canada
* I. Infantry Battalion (mot): (SS-Sturmbannführer [[Fritz Witt]])
| location = Ottawa
* II. Infantry Battalion (mot): (SS-Sturmbannführer [[Theodor Wisch]])
| year = 2007
* III. Infantry Battalion (mot): (SS-Sturmbannführer Weidenhaupt)
| month = December
* IV. Infantry Battalion (mot): (SS-Sturmbannführer Jahnke)
| url = http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census06/data/highlights/language/Table401.cfm
* V. Infantry Battalion (mot): (SS-Sturmbannführer Van Bibber)
| accessdate = 2007-12-04
* Heavy Infantry Battalion (mot): (SS-Sturmbannführer Steineck)
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web
* Anti-aircraft Battalion ''Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler'': (SS-Hauptsturmführer [[Bernhard Krause]])
| title = Population by language spoken most often at home and age groups, percentage distribution (2006), for Canada, provinces and territories, and census metropolitan areas and census agglomerations – 20% sample data
* Assault gun ([[Sturmgeschütz]]) Battalion ''Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler'': (SS-Sturmbannführer [[Georg Schönberger]])
| publisher = Statistics Canada
* SS Engineer Battalion ''Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler'' (mot): (SS-Sturmbannführer Christian Hansen
| location = Ottawa
* SS Reconnaissance Battalion 1 ''Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler'': (SS-Sturmbannführer [[Kurt Meyer (Panzermeyer)|Kurt Meyer]])
| year = 2007
| month = December
| url = http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census06/data/highlights/language/Table402.cfm
| accessdate = 2007-12-04
}}</ref><ref> {{cite web
| last = Greater Montreal Community Development Initiative (GMCDI)
| title = Demographics and the Long-term Development of the English-speaking Communities of the Greater Montreal Region
| publisher = The Quebec Community Groups Network
| location = Montreal
| year = 2007
| month = April
| url = http://www.qcgn.ca/files/QCGN/a20070409_demographics.pdf
| accessdate = 2007-04-18
|format=PDF}}</ref> The [[English-speaking Quebecers|English-speaking community]] or [[Anglophones]] are entitled to services in English in the areas of justice, health, and education (by strict exception)<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charter_of_the_French_Language</ref>; services in English are offered in municipalities in which more than half the residents have English as their mother tongue.


[[Allophone (Quebec)|Allophones]], whose mother tongue is neither French nor English, make up 11.9% (886,280) of the population.<ref name=autogenerated1 />


===1st SS Panzer Division ''Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler'' - Normandy 1944 ===
There is a considerable number of people that consider themselves to be [[bilingual]] (having a knowledge of French and English). In Quebec, about 40.6% (3,017,860) of the population are bilingual, and for the Island of Montreal, this proportion grows to 60% (1,020,760) of the island's population. Quebec has the highest proportion of bilinguals among the other Canadian provinces. The proportion in the [[rest of Canada]] is only about 10.2% (2,430,990) of the population having a knowledge of both of the country's official languages. Overall, 17.4% (5,448,850) of Canadians report as bilingual.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census06/data/profiles/community/Details/Page.cfm?Lang=E&Geo1=PR&Code1=24&Geo2=PR&Code2=01&Data=Count&SearchText=Quebec&SearchType=Begins&SearchPR=01&B1=Language&Custom= |title=Language |accessdate=2007-12-04 |work=Statistics Canada }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census06/data/profiles/community/Details/Page.cfm?Lang=E&Geo1=CD&Code1=2466&Geo2=PR&Code2=24&Data=Count&SearchText=Montreal&SearchType=Begins&SearchPR=01&B1=Language&Custom= |title=Language |accessdate=2008-02-18 |work=Statistics Canada }}</ref>


*1st SS Panzer Regiment (Peiper)
Languages other than French on commercial signs are only permitted if French is given marked prominence, but recent arguments have led to many conflicts to this rule.
*1st SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment (Frey)
*2nd SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment (Sandig)
*1st SS Panzer Reconnaissance Battalion (Knittel)
*1st SS Assault gun Battalion (Heimann)
*1st SS Artillery Regiment (Steineck)
*1st SS Werfer Regiment (Besch)
*1st SS Anti Aircraft Battalion (Ullerich)
*1st SS Panzer Pioneer Battalion (Steiner)
*1st SS Panzer Signal Battalion (Metz)
*1st SS Medical Battalion (Liebrich)
*1st SS Admin Battalion (Tauber)
*1st SS Repair Battalion (Gilles)
*1st SS Supply Battalion (Stamp)


''Note a SS Panzer Regiment had two Panzer Battalions and a SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment had three Pz-Gren Battalions'' <ref> Reynolds, pp 288 - 291</ref>
====Mother tongues====
Of the 7,546,131 population counted by the 2006 census, 7,435,905 people completed the section about language. Of these 7,339,495 gave singular responses to the question regarding [[mother tongue]]. The languages most commonly reported were the following:


==References==
{| class="wikitable sortable"
<References/>
|- bgcolor="#CCCCCC"
*''The Leibstandarte - Volumes I - IV/2'' by Ralf Tiemann and Rudolf Lehmann.
!Language
*''Steel Inferno: I SS Panzer Corps in Normandy'' by Michael Reynolds (New York: Sarpedon, 1997, ISBN 1-885119-44-5; Staplehurst, Kent : Spellmount, 1997, ISBN 1-873376-90-1).
!Number of <br />native speakers
*''The 1st SS Armored Division: A Documentation in Words and Pictures'' Herbert Walther (West Chester, Pa.: Schiffer Pub., 1989, ISBN 0-88740-165-1).
!Percentage of <br />singular responses
*''Hitler's Guard: The Story of the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler, 1933–1945'' by James J. Weingartner (Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press, 1974, ISBN 0-8093-0682-4).
|-
*''SS-Leibstandarte: The History of the First SS Division, 1934–45'' by Rupert Butler (Staplehurst, Kent: Spellmount, 2001, ISBN 1-86227-117-8).
|[[Quebec French|French]]
|5,877,060
|80.1%
|-
|[[English language|English]]
|575,555
|7.8%
|-
|[[Italian language|Italian]]
|124,820
|1.7%
|-
|[[Spanish language|Spanish]]
|108,790
|1.5%
|-
|[[Arabic language|Arabic]]
|108,105
|1.5%
|-
|[[Chinese language|Chinese]]
|63,415
|0.9%
|-
|[[Creole]]
|44,145
|0.6%
|-
|[[Greek language|Greek]]
|41,845
|0.6%
|-
|[[Portuguese language|Portuguese]]
|34,710
|0.5%
|-
|[[Romanian language|Romanian]]
|27,180
|0.4%
|-
|[[Vietnamese language|Vietnamese]]
|25,370
|0.3%
|-
|[[Russian language|Russian]]
|19,275
|0.3%
|-
|[[German language|German]]
|17,855
|0.2%
|-
|[[Polish language|Polish]]
|17,305
|0.2%
|-
|[[Armenian language|Armenian]]
|15,520
|0.2%
|-
|[[Persian language|Persian]]
|14,655
|0.2%
|-
|[[Cree]]
|13,340
|0.2%
|-
|[[Panjabi]] (Punjabi)
|11,905
|0.2%
|-
|[[Tagalog]] (Filipino)
|11,785
|0.2%
|-
|[[Tamil language|Tamil]]
|11,570
|0.1%
|-
|[[Urdu]]
|9,685
|0.1%
|-
|[[Bengali]]
|9,660
|0.1%
|-
|[[Inuktitut]]
|9,615
|0.1%
|-
|[[Montagnais-Naskapi]]
|9,335
|0.1%
|-
|[[Khmer]] (Cambodian)
|8,250
|0.1%
|-
|[[Yiddish]]
|8,225
|0.1%
|-
|[[Hungarian language|Hungarian]] (Magyar)
|7,750
|0.1%
|-
|[[Gujarati language|Gujarati]]
|6,050
|0.1%
|-
|[[Turkish language|Turkish]]
|5,865
|0.1%
|-
|[[Ukrainian]]
|5,395
|0.1%
|-
|[[Atikamekw]]
|5,245
|0.1%
|-
|[[Bulgarian language|Bulgarian]]
|5,215
|0.1%
|-
|[[Lao]]
|4,785
|0.1%
|-
|[[Berber]]
|4,560
|0.1%
|-
|[[Hebrew]]
|4,110
|0.1%
|-
|[[Korean language|Korean]]
|3,970
|0.1%
|-
|[[Dutch language|Dutch]]
|3,620
|~
|-
|}
Numerous other languages were also counted, but only languages with more than 3,000 native speakers are shown. <br />(Figures shown are for the number of single language responses and the percentage of total single-language responses)<ref>{{cite paper|url=http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census06/data/topics/RetrieveProductTable.cfm?ALEVEL=3&APATH=3&CATNO=&DETAIL=0&DIM=&DS=99&FL=0&FREE=0&GAL=0&GC=99&GK=NA&GRP=1&IPS=&METH=0&ORDER=1&PID=89186&PTYPE=88971&RL=0&S=1&ShowAll=No&StartRow=1&SUB=701&Temporal=2006&Theme=70&VID=0&VNAMEE=&VNAMEF=&GID=837953 | title=Detailed Mother Tongue (148), Single and Multiple Language Responses (3) and Sex (3) for the Population of Canada, Provinces, Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2006 Census – 20% Sample Data |year=2007}}</ref>

==Economy==
{{main|Economy of Quebec}}
[[Image:Montreal Twilight Panorama 2006.jpg|thumb|center|590px|[[Montreal]], North America's Francophone metropolis]]

The St. Lawrence River Valley is a fertile agricultural region, producing [[dairy]] products, [[fruit]], [[vegetable]]s, [[foie gras]], [[maple syrup]] (Quebec is the world's largest producer), and [[livestock]].

North of the St. Lawrence River Valley, the territory of Quebec has significant resources in its coniferous forests, lakes, and rivers—pulp and [[paper]], [[lumber]], and [[hydroelectricity]] are still some of the province's most important industries.

There is a significant concentration of high-tech industries around Montreal, including aerospace companies such as aircraft manufacturer [[Bombardier]], the jet engine company [[Pratt & Whitney]], the flight simulator builder [[CAE (company)|CAE]] and defence contractor [[Lockheed Martin|Lockheed Martin, Canada]]. In the video game industry, large video game companies such as [[Electronic Arts]] and [[Ubisoft]] have studios in Montreal.<ref>[http://theconsolewars.blogspot.com/2005/11/montreal-and-revolution.html The Console Wars: Montreal and the Revolution | Xbox 360, Playstation 3 PS3, Revolution]</ref>

[[Image:Château Frontenac01.jpg|thumb|right|The [[Château Frontenac]] is iconic to the province of Quebec.]]

== Government ==
{{main|Politics of Quebec|Monarchy in Quebec}}

The [[List of Lieutenant Governors of Quebec|Lieutenant Governor]] represents [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Queen Elizabeth II]] as [[head of state]]. The head of government is the [[List of Quebec premiers|Premier]] (called ''premier ministre'' in French) who leads the largest party in the [[unicameral]] [[National Assembly of Quebec|National Assembly]] or ''Assemblée Nationale'', from which the Council of Ministers is appointed.

Until 1968, the Quebec [[legislature]] was [[bicameral]], consisting of the [[Legislative Council of Quebec|Legislative Council ]] and the [[Legislative Assembly of Quebec|Legislative Assembly]]. In that year the Legislative Council was abolished, and the Legislative Assembly was renamed the National Assembly. Quebec was the last province to abolish its legislative council.

The government of Quebec awards an order of merit called the [[National Order of Quebec]]. It is inspired in part by the [[France|French]] [[Légion d'honneur|Legion of Honour]]. It is conferred upon men and women born or living in Quebec (but non-Quebecers can be inducted as well) for outstanding achievements.

=== Administrative subdivisions ===
{{Main|Administrative subdivisions of Quebec}}

Quebec has subdivisions at the regional, supralocal and local levels. Excluding administrative units reserved for Aboriginal lands, the primary types of subdivision are:

At the regional level:
*17 [[Regions of Quebec|administrative regions]].
At the supralocal level:
*86 [[Regional county municipality|regional county municipalities]] or RCMs (''municipalités régionales de comté'', ''MRC'');
*2 [[Metropolitan community|metropolitan communities]] (''communautés métropolitaines'').
At the local level:
*1,117 [[Local government in Quebec|local municipalities]] of various [[types of municipalities in Quebec|types]];
*11 [[Urban agglomerations of Quebec|agglomerations]] (''agglomérations'') grouping 42 of these local municipalities;
*within 8 local municipalities, 45 [[List of boroughs in Quebec|boroughs]] (''arrondissements'').//

==Population centres==
The data are from the 2006 census of Canada.<ref name="2006POPS"> {{cite web| url=http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census06/data/popdwell/Table.cfm?T=202&PR=24&S=0&O=A&RPP=50 |title=Population and dwelling counts, for Canada, provinces and territories, census metropolitan areas and census agglomerations, 2006 and 2001 censuses – 100% data | work=[[Statistics Canada]], 2006 Census of Population | accessdate=2007-10-10}}</ref>

=== Census metropolitan areas by population ===
{| class="wikitable"
!Census<br>metropolitan<br>area
!2007 pop. est.
!2001 pop.¹
![[Regions of Quebec|Region]]²
!Image
|-
|[[Greater Montreal]]
|3,695,790
|3,451,027
|[[Montréal (region)|Montréal]]
|[[Image:Mont.jpg|180px]]
|-
|[[Quebec City]] <br>(provincial capital)
|728,924
|686,569
|[[Capitale-Nationale]]
|[[Image:Quebec city view 2005-02-14.JPG|center|180px|]]
|-
|[[Gatineau, Quebec|Gatineau]]³
|287,728
|261,704
|[[Outaouais region|Outaouais]]
|[[Image:Gatineau-qc.jpg|center|180px|]]
|-
|[[Sherbrooke, Quebec|Sherbrooke]]
|186,952
|175,950
|[[Estrie]]
|[[Image:Sherbrooke.jpg|center|180px|]]
|-
|[[Saguenay, Quebec|Saguenay]]
|151,803
|154,938
|[[Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean]]
|[[Image:Chicoutimipano.jpg|center|180px|]]
|-
|[[Trois-Rivières, Quebec|Trois-Rivières]]
|143,846
|137,507
|[[Mauricie]]
|[[Image:Trois-Rivières Des Forges.JPG|center|180px|]]
|}

¹These figures are adjusted to reflect boundary changes for the 2006 census.

²Where a metropolitan area straddles more than one administrative region, the region of the central municipality is given.

³These figures pertain to the part of the Ottawa-Gatineau census metropolitan area that is in Quebec. The total figures for the CMA, including the part in Ontario, are 1,168,788 (2007) ,
1,130,761 (2006), 1,067,800 (2001).

=== Major municipalities ===
The municipalities of the Montreal, Quebec, and Ottawa-Gatineau metropolitan areas exceeding 50,000 in population in 2006 are given below with their [[Regions of Quebec|administrative regions]] in parentheses.

[[Greater Montreal|Montreal CMA]]:
*[[Montreal]] ([[Montréal (region)|Montréal]]), 1,620,693;
*[[Laval, Quebec|Laval]] ([[Laval, Quebec|Laval]]), 368,709;
*[[Longueuil, Quebec|Longueuil]] ([[Montérégie]]), 229,330;
*[[Terrebonne, Quebec|Terrebonne]] ([[Lanaudière]]), 94,703;
*[[Repentigny, Quebec|Repentigny]] ([[Lanaudière]]) 76,237;
*[[Brossard, Quebec|Brossard]] ([[Montérégie]]), 71,154;
*[[Saint-Jérôme, Quebec|Saint-Jérôme]] ([[Laurentides (region)|Laurentides]]), 63,729.

The population of the Island of Montreal was 1,854,442.

Quebec CMA:
*[[Quebec City]] ([[Capitale-Nationale]]), 491,142;
*[[Lévis, Quebec|Lévis]] ([[Chaudière-Appalaches]]), 130,006.

Ottawa-Gatineau CMA:
*[[Gatineau, Quebec|Gatineau]] ([[Outaouais region|Outaouais]]), 242,124.

The population of [[Ottawa, Ontario]] is 812,129.

===Other census agglomerations===

{| class="wikitable"
!Census<br>agglomeration
!2006
!2001¹
![[Regions of Quebec|Region]]²
|-
|[[Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec|Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu]]
|87,492
|79,600
|[[Montérégie]]
|-
|[[Drummondville, Quebec|Drummondville]]
|78,108
|72,778
|[[Centre-du-Québec]]
|-
|[[Granby, Quebec|Granby]]
|68,352
|63,069
|[[Montérégie]]
|-
|[[Shawinigan, Quebec|Shawinigan]]
|56,434
|56,412
|[[Mauricie]]
|-
|[[Saint-Hyacinthe, Quebec|Saint-Hyacinthe]]
|55,823
|54,275
|[[Montérégie]]
|-
|[[Victoriaville, Quebec|Victoriaville]]
|48,893
|46,908
|[[Centre-du-Québec]]
|-
|[[Sorel-Tracy, Quebec|Sorel-Tracy]]
|48,295
|47,802
|[[Montérégie]]
|-
|[[Rimouski, Quebec|Rimouski]]
|46,807
|46,012
|[[Bas-Saint-Laurent]]
|-
|[[Joliette, Quebec|Joliette]]
|43,595
|39,720
|[[Lanaudière]]
|-
|[[Rouyn-Noranda, Quebec|Rouyn-Noranda]]
|39,924
|39,621
|[[Abitibi-Témiscamingue]]
|-
|[[Salaberry-de-Valleyfield, Quebec|Salaberry-de-Valleyfield]]
|39,672
|39,028
|[[Montérégie]]
|-
|[[Alma, Quebec|Alma]]
|32,603
|32,930
|[[Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean]]
|-
|[[Val-d'Or, Quebec|Val-d'Or]]
|32,288
|32,433
|[[Abitibi-Témiscamingue]]
|-
|[[Saint-Georges, Quebec|Saint-Georges]]
|31,364
|29,759
|[[Chaudière-Appalaches]]
|-
|[[Baie-Comeau, Quebec|Baie-Comeau]]
|29,808
|30,401
|[[Côte-Nord]]
|-
|[[Sept-Îles, Quebec|Sept-Îles]]
|27,827
|27,623
|[[Côte-Nord]]
|-
|[[Thetford Mines, Quebec|Thetford Mines]]
|26,107
|26,721
|[[Chaudière-Appalaches]]
|-
|[[Rivière-du-Loup, Quebec|Rivière-du-Loup]]
|24,570
|23,229
|[[Bas-Saint-Laurent]]
|-
|[[Amos, Quebec|Amos]]
|17,918
|18,302
|[[Abitibi-Témiscamingue]]
|-
|[[Matane, Quebec|Matane]]
|16,438
|16,597
|[[Bas-Saint-Laurent]]
|-
|[[La Tuque, Quebec|La Tuque]]
|15,293
|15,725
|[[Mauricie]]
|-
|[[Dolbeau-Mistassini, Quebec|Dolbeau-Mistassini]]
|14,546
|14,879
|[[Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean]]
|-
|[[Cowansville, Quebec|Cowansville]]
|12,666
|12,558
|[[Montérégie]]
|-
|[[Lachute, Quebec|Lachute]]
|11,832
|11,628
|[[Laurentides (region)|Laurentides]]
|}

¹These figures are adjusted to reflect boundary changes for the 2006 census.

²Where a census agglomeration straddles more than one administrative region, the region of the central municipality is given.

The municipalities of Quebec which are not part of a CMA or CA but which had populations exceeding 10,000 in 2006, with administrative regions in parentheses, are: [[Gaspé, Quebec|Gaspé]] ([[Gaspésie–Îles-de-la-Madeleine]]), 14,819; [[Saint-Lin-Laurentides, Quebec|Saint-Lin-Laurentides]] ([[Lanaudière]]), 14,159; [[Mont-Laurier, Quebec|Mont-Laurier]] ([[Laurentides (region)|Laurentides]]), 13,405; [[Les Îles-de-la-Madeleine, Quebec|Les Îles-de-la-Madeleine]] ([[Gaspésie-Îles-de-la-Madeleine]]), 12,560; [[Sainte-Marie, Quebec|Sainte-Marie]] ([[Chaudière-Appalaches]]), 11,584; [[Montmagny, Quebec|Montmagny]] ([[Chaudière-Appalaches]]), 11,353; [[Sainte-Adèle, Quebec|Sainte-Adèle]] ([[Laurentides (region)|Laurentides]]), 10,634; [[Roberval, Quebec|Roberval]] ([[Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean]]), 10,544; [[Saint-Félicien, Quebec|Saint-Félicien]] ([[Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean]]), 10,477; [[Sainte-Sophie, Quebec|Sainte-Sophie]] ([[Laurentides (region)|Laurentides]]), 10,355; [[Prévost, Quebec|Prévost]] ([[Laurentides (region)|Laurentides]]), 10,132; [[Rawdon, Quebec|Rawdon]] ([[Lanaudière]]), 10,058.

==Sports teams==

*[[National Hockey League]]
**[[Montreal Canadiens]]

*[[Canadian Football League]]
**[[Montreal Alouettes]]

*[[Can-Am League]]
**[[Quebec Capitales]]

*[[National Women's Hockey League]]
**[[Montreal Axion]] (currently on hiatus)
**[[Quebec Avalanche]] (currently on hiatus)

*[[United Soccer Leagues]]
**[[Montreal Impact]]

===Former sports teams===
*[[National Hockey League]]
**[[Quebec Nordiques]] (moved to [[Denver, Colorado]] and are now the [[Colorado Avalanche]])
**[[Quebec Bulldogs]] (moved to [[Hamilton, Ontario]] and became the [[Hamilton Tigers]] for the rest of the team's existence)
**[[Montreal Maroons]] (defunct)
**[[Montreal Wanderers]] (defunct)

*[[Major League Baseball]]
**[[Montreal Expos]] (moved to [[Washington, D.C.]] and are now the [[Washington Nationals]])

*[[American Hockey League]]
**[[Quebec Citadelles]] (merged with the [[Hamilton Bulldogs]])
**[[Quebec Aces]] (moved to [[Richmond, Virginia]] and became the [[Richmond Robins]] for the rest of the team's existence)

*[[World League of American Football]]
**[[Montreal Machine]] (defunct)

*[[Canadian-American League]]
**Quebec Braves/Alouettes/Athletics (defunct)
**Trois-Rivières Royals (defunct)

*[[International Hockey League (1945-2001)|International Hockey League]]
**[[Quebec Rafales]] (defunct)

== Symbols ==
[[Image:Quebecois flag.jpg|thumbnail|100px|left|The '''Fleurdelisé''' leads a ship to harbour near Quebec City.]]
=== Coat of arms ===
In 1939, the [[government of Quebec]] unilaterally ratified its [[Coat of arms of Quebec|coat of arms]] to reflect [[History of Quebec|Quebec's political history]]: French rule (gold lily on blue background), British rule (lion on red background) and Canadian rule (maple leaves) and with Quebec's motto below "Je me souviens".<ref>http://www.drapeau.gouv.qc.ca/ Justice Québec – Drapeauet et symboles nationaux {{fr}}</ref>

=== Motto ===
{{main|Je me souviens}}
[[Image:QC 1995 SAMPLE.jpg|150px|150px|thumb|right|[[Vehicle registration plates of Quebec|Current Quebec licence plate]]]]
[[Je me souviens|''Je me souviens'' ("I remember")]] was first carved under the coat of arms of Quebec's [[Parliament Building (Quebec)|Parliament Building]] façade in 1883. It is an official part of the coat of arms and has been the official license plate motto since 1978, replacing "''[[La belle province]]''" (the beautiful province). The expression ''La belle province'' is still used mostly in tourism as a nickname for the province.

=== Flag ===
{{main|Flag of Quebec}}
The fleur-de-lis, the ancient symbol of the [[French monarchy]], first arrived on the shores of the [[Gaspésie]] in 1534 with [[Jacques Cartier]] on his first voyage. In 1900, Quebec finally sought to have its own uniquely designed flag. By 1903, the parent of today's flag had taken shape, known as the "''[[Fleurdelisé]]''". The flag in its present form with its 4 white "[[fleur-de-lis]]" lilies on a blue background with a white cross replaced the [[Union Jack]] on Quebec's [[Parliament Building (Quebec)|Parliament Building]] on [[January 21]] [[1948]].

=== Other official symbols ===
*The floral emblem of Quebec is the ''[[Iris versicolor]]''.<ref name="Qsymbols"/>
[[Image:Harfang sur neige.jpg|thumbnail|150px|right|The ''harfang des neiges'' ([[snowy owl]]), official bird of Quebec.]]
*Since 1987 the avian emblem of Quebec has been the [[Snowy Owl|snowy owl]].<ref name="Qsymbols"/>
*An official tree, the [[yellow birch]] (''bouleau jaune'', ''merisier''), symbolises the importance Quebecers give to the forests. The tree is known for the variety of its uses and commercial value, as well as its autumn colours.<ref name="Qsymbols"/>

In 1998 the [[Montreal Insectarium]] sponsored a poll to choose an official insect. The [[Limenitis arthemis|White Admiral]] butterfly (''Limenitis arthemis'') [http://www2.ville.montreal.qc.ca/insectarium/toile/info_insectes/fiches/fic_fiche08_amiral.htm] won with 32&nbsp;% of the 230&nbsp;660 votes against the Spotted [[Coccinellidae|lady beetle]] (''Coleomegilla maculata lengi''), the [[Ebony Jewelwing]] [[damselfly]] (''Calopteryx maculata''), a species of [[bumble bee]] (''Bombus impatiens'') and the six-spotted [[tiger beetle]] (''Cicindela sexguttata sexguttata'').

=== Fête nationale ===
{{main|Fête nationale du Québec}}
In 1977, Premier [[René Lévesque]] declared [[June 24]] to be Quebec's National Holiday. Historically [[June 24]] was a holiday honouring one of Quebec's patron saints, [[St. John the Baptist]], which is why it is commonly known as ''La Saint-Jean-Baptiste'' (often shortened to ''La St-Jean''). On this day, the song "[[Gens du pays]]" by [[Gilles Vigneault]] is often heard and commonly regarded as Quebec's unofficial anthem.


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Panzer division]], [[Division (military)]], [[Military unit]], [[List of German divisions in WWII]]
* [[Lists of Quebec-related topics]]
*[[Culture of Quebec]]
* [[Waffen-SS]], [[SS]]
* [[Joachim Peiper]]

==Notes==
{{reflist|2}}

==References==
*Armony, Victor (2007). Le Québec expliqué aux immigrants. Montréal, VLB Éditeur, 208 pages, ISBN 9782890059856.
*Lacoursière, Jacques, Jean Provencher et Denis Vaugeois (2000). Canada-Québec 1534–2000. Sillery, Septentrion. 591 pages, (ISBN 2-89448-156-X)
*Jacques Lacoursière, Histoire du Québec, Des origines à nos jours, Édition Nouveau Monde, 2005, ISBN 2-84736-113-8
*Linteau, Paul-André (1989). Histoire du Québec contemporain – Volume 1; De la Confédération à la crise (1867–1929), Histoire, coll. «Boréal Compact» n° 14, 758 pages, (ISBN 2-89052-297-8)
*Linteau, Paul-André (1989). Histoire du Québec contemporain – Volume 2; Le Québec depuis 1930, Histoire, coll. «Boréal Compact» n° 15, 834 pages, (ISBN 2-89052-298-5)
*Québec. Institut de la statistique du Québec (2007). Le Québec chiffres en main, édition 2007[pdf]. 56 pages, (ISBN 2-550-49444-7)
*Venne, Michel (dir.) (2006). L'annuaire du Québec 2007. Montréal, Fides. 455 pages, (ISBN 2-7621-2746-7)


== External links ==
==External links==
* http://www.lssah.eu
* {{en icon}} [http://www.discoverthequebec.ca/ Discover the Quebec in pictures, photos]
*[http://www.feldgrau.com/1ss.html 1.SS-Panzer-Division Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler] at Feldgrau.com.
* {{en icon}} [http://www.gouv.qc.ca/portail/quebec/pgs?lang=en Government of Quebec]
*[http://www.axishistory.com/index.php?id=1982 1. SS-Panzer-Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler] at Axis History Factbook.
* {{en icon}} [http://www.bonjourquebec.com/ Bonjour Québec], Quebec government official tourist site
* {{en icon}} [http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/bill101/ Bill 101]
*[http://www.geocities.com/wolfram55/ Leibstandarte SS]
*[http://www.humanitas-international.org/archive/ss-leibstandarte-ah/ Leibstandarte "Adolf Hitler" - Waffen SS], miscellaneous photos and Information.
* {{en icon}} [http://archives.cbc.ca/IDD-1-73-651/politics_economy/quebec_elections/ CBC Digital Archives – Quebec Elections: 1960–1998]
*[http://www.lssah.com/ 1.SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte] the premier LAH reenacting unit.
* {{fr icon}} [http://www.agora.qc.ca/ Agora], online encyclopaedia from Quebec
* {{en icon}} [http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0006591 An article on the province of Quebec from ''The Canadian Encyclopedia'']
* {{en icon}} {{wikitravel}}


{{SS Divisions}}
;History
{{SS organizations}}
* {{en icon}} [http://www2.marianopolis.edu/quebechistory/ Quebec History], online encyclopaedia made by Marianapolis College
{{German Armoured Divisions of World War II}}
* {{en icon}} [http://www.mccord-museum.qc.ca/en/collections/theme/2 The 1837–1838 Rebellion in Lower Canada], Images from the McCord Museum's collections
* {{fr icon}} [http://www4.bnquebec.ca/cargeo/accueil.htm Bibliothèque nationales du Québec Map Collection], 5,000 digitized maps
<br/>{{Quebec topics}}
{{Quebec|regions=yes|cities=yes}}
{{Provinces and territories of Canada}}


[[Category:Quebec| ]]
[[Category:Adolf Hitler]]
[[Category:Provinces and territories of Canada]]
[[Category:German panzer divisions|SS01]]
[[Category:Algonquian toponyms]]
[[Category:German units in Normandy|SS01]]
[[Category:Proposed countries]]
[[Category:Waffen-SS divisions|0*01]]
[[Category:Military units and formations established in 1933]]


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Revision as of 08:19, 13 October 2008

1st SS Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
1st SS Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
Active9 November 1923 - 8 May 1945
CountryNazi Germany
AllegianceAdolf Hitler
BranchSS
SizeDivision
EngagementsSaar/Rhineland Occupation 1935
Austrian Occupation 1938
Czechoslovak Occupation 1939
Poland 1939
Western Campaign 1940
Balkan Campaign 1941
Eastern Front 1941-1942
Eastern Front 1943
Western Front 1943
Eastern Front 1943
Western Front 1944
Operation Lüttich
Falaise pocket
Ardennes Offensive
Eastern Front 1945
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Josef Dietrich

The Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler (SS-LAH) founded in September 1933 was Adolf Hitler's personal Bodyguard Regiment. In 1939 the SS-LAH became a separate unit of the Waffen-SS aside the SS-TV and the SS-VT.[1]

The SS-LAH independently participated in combats during the Invasion of Poland (1939). Elements of the SS-LAH later joined the SS-VT prior to Operation Barbarossa in 1941.

Early history (1923–1933)

In the earliest days of the NSDAP, it was realised by the leaders that bodyguard units composed of trustworthy and loyal men would be a wise development. Ernst Röhm formed a guard formation from the 19.Granatwerfer-Kompanie, and from this formation the Sturmabteilung (SA) soon evolved. Adolf Hitler, realising the potential threat that the SA had presented, in early 1923 ordered the formation of a bodyguard for himself. The tiny unit, originally formed by only eight men (and commanded by Julius Schreck and Joseph Berchtold), was designated the Stabswache (Staff Guard). The guards of the Stabswache were issued uniforms that showed their difference from the SA (despite the fact that at this stage the Stabswache still was under overall SA control). Schreck resurrected the use of the Totenkopf (skull) as insignia, which had been a symbol used by various élite forces throughout the Prussian kingdom and the later German Empire.

Soon after its formation, the unit was renamed Stoßtrupp (Shock Troop) Adolf Hitler. On November 9, 1923, the Stoßtrupp, along with the SA and several other NSDAP paramilitary units, took part in the abortive Beer Hall Putsch in Munich. In the aftermath of the putsch, Hitler was imprisoned and the NSDAP and all associated formations, including the Stoßtrupp, were officially disbanded.

Shortly after Hitler's release in 1924, he ordered a new bodyguard unit formed, again called the Stabswache, but this time it did not fall under SA control. In 1925, the Stabswache was renamed as the Schutzstaffel, abbreviated SS. By March 1933, the SS had grown from a tiny personal bodyguard unit to a formation of over 50,000 men. The decision was made to form a new bodyguard unit, picking the most capable and trustworthy SS men to form its cadre.

On 17 March 1933, the SS-Stabswache Berlin was formed, under the command of Josef 'Sepp' Dietrich, Hitler's personal bodyguard. Dietrich hand-picked 120 men to form the SS-Stabswache. The unit was based at the Andrews Barracks in Berlin. Later in 1933, the formation was redesignated SS-Sonderkommando Zossen and a second unit of 120 men, designated SS-Sonderkommando Jüterbog was raised. The two Sonderkommandos provided guards for the NSDAP hierarchy, functioned as training cadres for the SS, and for a short time acted as auxiliary police units.

In September 1933, the two Sonderkommandos were merged into the SS-Sonderkommando Berlin. In November 1933, on the 10th anniversary of the Beer Hall Putsch, the Sonderkommando took part in the rally and memorial service at the Feldherrnhalle, erected in the place where many NSDAP members had fallen during the putsch. All members of the Sonderkommando then swore personal allegiance to Hitler himself. To conclude this ceremony, the Sonderkommando received a new title, Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler.

Trial by fire—Leibstandarte expands

In early 1934, Heinrich Himmler, the Reichsführer-SS, ordered the Leibstandarte to be renamed Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler (LSSAH). In late June, the LSSAH was called into action for the first time. Ernst Röhm, the Stabschef-SA, began to push for greater power for his already powerful SA. Hitler decided that the SA had to be put in its place, and ordered Himmler and Hermann Göring to prepare their elite units, Himmler's Leibstandarte and Göring's Landespolizeigruppe General Göring, for immediate action. The LSSAH formed two companies under the control of Jürgen Wagner and Otto Reich, and these formations were moved to Munich on 30 June.

Hitler ordered all SA leaders to attend a meeting at the Hanselbauer Hotel in Bad Wiessee, near Munich. On 30 June, Hitler joined Sepp Dietrich and a unit from the Leibstandarte and travelled to Bad Wiessee to personally command Röhm's arrest and subsequent execution. In what the Nazis called the Röhm Putsch to give their action an appearance of legitimacy, but otherwise came to be known as the Night of the Long Knives, the execution companies of the LSSAH, together with Göring's Landespolizeigruppe, performed Death Squad actions, carrying out many executions without trials over the next few days. By 13 July 1934, at least 177 people had been executed.

The actions of the LSSAH and Göring's unit had succeeded in effectively decapitating the SA and removing the threat to Hitler's leadership. Following the 'success' of the Night of the Long Knives, in recognition of their actions, both the LSSAH and the Landespolizeigruppe General Göring were expanded to regimental size and motorised. In addition, the SS was finally removed from overall SA control.

As the SS began to swell with new recruits, the LSSAH remained the pinnacle of Hitler's Aryan ideal. Strict recruitment regulations meant that only those deemed sufficiently Aryan, as well as being physically fit and fervent National Socialists, would be admitted.

The LSSAH provided the honour guard at several of the Nuremberg Rallies and in 1935 took part in the reoccupation of the Saarland. The Leibstandarte was also in the vanguard of the March into Austria as part of the Anschluss.In 1938 the LSSAH then took part in the occupation of the Sudetenland. [2] In 1939 the LSSAH now a full infantry regiment with three infantry battalions, an artillery battalion and anti-tank, reconnaissance and engineer subunits,[3], it was involved in the annexation of Bohemia and Moravia. Soon after this action, the LSSAH had several motorised components attached, including an armoured car platoon and a motorcycle unit, and was redesignated Infanterie-Regiment Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler (mot.).

When Hitler ordered the formation of an SS division in mid 1939, the Leibstandarte was designated to form its own unit, unlike the other Standarten of the SS-Verfügungstruppe (SS-VT) (SS-Standarte Deutschland, SS-Standarte Germania, and SS-Standarte Der Führer). The Polish crisis of October 1939 put these plans on hold, and the LSSAH was ordered to join XIII. Armeekorps, a part of Army Group South which was preparing for the attack on Poland.

Early war campaigns

During the initial stages of the Invasion of Poland, the LSSAH was attached to the 17.Infanterie-Division and tasked with providing flank protection for the southern pincer. The regiment was involved in several ferocious battles against Polish cavalry brigades attempting to hit the flanks of the German advance. At Pabianice, a town near Łódź, the LSSAH fought off elements of the Polish 28th Infantry Division and the Wołyńska Cavalry Brigade in ferocious close combat.

After the success at Pabianice, the LSSAH was shifted to the area near Warsaw and attached to the 4.Panzer-Division under Generaloberst Georg-Hans Reinhardt, where it saw action preventing encircled Polish units from escaping, and repelling several desperate attempts by other Polish troops to break through. The LSSAH had proved itself an effective fighting unit during the campaign, though several Heer Generals had reservations about the high casualties which the LSSAH and the SS-VT units had sustained in combat.

In early 1940 the LSSAH was expanded into a full independant motorised infantry regiment and a Sturmgeschutz (Assault Gun) battery was added to their establishment <ref.Reynolds p.6</ref> The regiment was shifted to the Dutch border for the launch of Fall Gelb, and was to form the vanguard of the ground advance into the Netherlands, tasked with capturing a vital bridge over the IJssel and linking up with the Fallschirmjäger of Generaloberst Kurt Student's airborne forces, the 7.Flieger-Division and the 22.Luftlande-Infanterie-Division.

The Invasion of France and the Netherlands was launched on 10 May 1940. On that day, the LSSAH crossed the dutch border [4] covered over 75 km, securing a crossing over the IJssel near Zutphen after discovering that their target bridge had been destroyed. Over the next four days' fighting, the LSSAH covered over 215km, and earned itself dubious fame by accidentally shooting at and seriously wounding Generaloberst Student near Amsterdam. After the surrender of the Netherlands on 14 May, the regiment was used to form part of the reserve for Army Group B.

After the British armoured counterattack at Arras, the LSSAH, along with the SS-Verfügungs-Division was moved to the front lines to hold the perimeter around Dunkirk and reduce the size of the pocket containing the encircled British Expeditionary Force and French forces. Near Wormhoudt, the LSSAH ignored Hitler's orders for the advance to halt and continued the attack, suppressing the British artillery positions on the Wattenberg Heights. During this battle the regiment suffered heavy casualties.

After the attack, elements of LSSAH's II.Battalion, under the command of SS-Hauptsturmführer Wilhelm Mohnke, were mistakenly informed that their divisional commander Sepp Dietrich had been killed in the fighting. In what is known as the Wormhoudt massacre, about 80 British POWs of 2nd Battalion of the Royal Warwickshire Regiment were murdered in retaliation for the supposed death of Dietrich. Although it is unarguable that the massacre occurred, Mohnke's level of involvement is impossible to know, and as such he was never brought to trial to face the allegations. [5]

Brigade status—Balkans

After the conclusion of the Western campaign, the LSSAH was expanded to brigade size. Despite this, it retained the designation regiment. A Flak battalion and a StuG Batterie were among the formations added to the LSSAH. During the later months of 1940, the regiment trained in amphibious assaults in preparation for Operation Seelöwe. After the failure of the Battle of Britain and the cancellation of the operation, the LSSAH was shifted to Bulgaria in preparation for Operation Marita, part of the planned invasion of Greece and Yugoslavia.

The Operation was launched on April 6 1941. The LSSAH was to follow the route of the 9.Panzer-Division, part of General der Panzertruppen Georg Stumme's XL.Panzer-Korps. The regiment crossed the border near Prilep and was soon deep in Greek territory.

The LSSAH captured Vevi on April 10. Sturmbannführer Kurt Meyer's reinforced Aufklärungs-Abt LSSAH was tasked with clearing resistance from the Kleisoura Pass, south-west of Vevi and driving through to the Kastoria area to cut off retreating Greek and British Commonwealth forces. Resistance from the Greek 20th Division was fierce. According to some accounts, the SS were inspired to capture the Kleisoura Pass only after Meyer threw a grenade at the feet of some of his soldiers

Sturmbannführer Fritz Witt's I.Battalion was tasked with clearing the Klidi Pass, just south of Vevi and strongly defended by Australian, British and New Zealand troops. Witt's Battalion was reinforced and renamed Kampfgruppe Witt. An Australian officer wrote of the Germans' "insolence" in driving "...trucks down the main road — to within 3,000 yards (2,700 m) of our infantry", and there unloading the SS troops. [6] The Germans were forced off the road and faced fierce resistance for more than two days. On the morning of April 12, the Germans launched a frontal assault, and by late afternoon the pass was cleared. With the fall of the two passes, the main line of resistance of the Greek First Army was broken, and the campaign became a battle to prevent the escape of the enemy. On April 20, following a pitched battle in the 5,000-foot (1,500 m)-high Metsovon Pass in the Pindus Mountains, the commander of the Greek First Army surrendered the entire Hellenic Army to Dietrich. British Commonwealth troops were now the only Allied forces remaining in Greece, and they were falling back across the Corinth Canal to the Peloponnesos. By April 26, the LSSAH had reached the Gulf of Patras, and in an effort to cut off the retreating British Commonwealth forces, Dietrich ordered that his regiment cross the Gulf and secure the town of Patras in the Peloponnesos. Since no transport vessels were available, the LSSAH commandeered fishing boats and successfully completed the crossing, despite being forced to leave much of their heavy equipment behind. By April 30, the last British Commonwealth troops had either been captured or escaped. The LSSAH occupied a position of honour in the victory parade through Athens.

Following Operation Marita, the LSSAH was ordered north, to join the forces of Army Group South massing for the launch of Operation Barbarossa.

Barbarossa

Following the LSSAH's outstanding performance during Marita, Himmler ordered that it should be upgraded to divisional status.[7] As such, the Regiment, already the size of a reinforced brigade, was redesignated SS-Division (mot.) Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler. Despite this, there was no time to refit the division to full divisional status before the launch of Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of the Soviet Union, and so the new 'Division' remained the size of a reinforced brigade.

The LSSAH was attached to the LIV.Armee-Korps and held in reserve during the opening stages of the attack. In August, it was transferred to III.Panzer-Korps, part of Generalfeldmarschall Ewald von Kleist's Panzergruppe 1. During this time, the LSSAH was involved in the Battle of Uman and the subsequent capture of Kiev. During this time, the division was involved in heavy fighting, with Meyer's Abteilung particularly distinguishing itself.

In early September, the division was transferred back to LIV.Armee-Korps, preparing to launch an offensive to clear the Crimean peninsula. The operation was launched on 17 September 1941. The LSSAH was involved in heavy fighting for the town of Perekop, before advancing across the Perekop Isthmus to assault the Soviet defensive positions near the Tartar Ditch.

In November, the LSSAH was transferred back to Panzergruppe 1 and took part in the heavy fighting for the city of Rostov-on-Don, which was captured in late November. During Operation Barbarossa, the division had penetrated 960 kilometers into Soviet territory.

Heavy Soviet counterattacks during the winter meant that Army Group South had to fall back from Rostov-on-Don to defensive lines on the river Mius. The LSSAH spent the winter fighting ferocious defensive battles in temperatures of down to -40°C, with minimal winter clothing and only 150 grams of rations per man per day. Despite this, the division held. After the spring rasputitsa had cleared, the exhausted division joined in Fall Blau, partaking in the fighting to retake Rostov-on-Don, which was recaptured in late July, 1942. Severely understrength and completely exhausted, the LSSAH was pulled out of the line. The division was ordered to the Normandy region of occupied France to join the newly formed SS-Panzer-Korps and to be reformed as a panzergrenadier division.

Kharkov

The LSSAH spent the remainder of 1942 refitting as a panzergrenadier division. Thanks to the efforts of the Reichsführer-SS, along with SS-Obergruppenführer Paul Hausser, the SS-Panzerkorps commander, the four SS panzergrenadier divisions (LSSAH, Wiking, Das Reich and Totenkopf were to be formed with a full regiment of tanks rather than only an Abteilung. This meant that the SS Panzergrenadier divisions were full-strength Panzer divisions in all but name. Also, the division received nine Tiger 1 tanks, and these were formed into 13.(schwere)Kompanie/SS-Panzer-Regiment 1.

The collapse of the front around Stalingrad and the encirclement of the 6.Armee meant that the entire eastern front was close to collapse. Generalfeldmarschall Erich von Manstein, commander of Army Group Don, requested reinforcements to halt the Soviet attack near Kharkov. The SS-Panzerkorps was ordered east to join Manstein's forces.

Arriving at the front in late January 1943, the LSSAH was thrown into the line defending Kharkov itself as a part of Hausser's SS-Panzer-Korps. Facing them were the hundreds of T-34s of Mobile Group Popov, a Soviet armoured Army sized formation which formed the spearhead of the Soviet advance. On 8-9 February, 1943, the LSSAH's SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment 1 under SS-Sturmbannführer Fritz Witt, fighting alongside SS-Sturmbannführer Max Wünsche's I./SS-Panzer-Regiment 1, fought a bitter delaying action near the town of Merefa, halting a major Soviet attack. The division fought in many desperate defensive battles over the next few weeks, gradually being pushed back into the city of Kharkov itself.


Despite inflicting heavy losses on the Soviets, and rebuffing all enemy attacks, the Soviets succeeded in outflanking the corps. On 15 February, Hausser ignored Hitler's orders to hold the city at all costs and ordered the SS-Panzer-Korps to abandon the city and withdraw towards Krasnograd. Over the next week, the SS-Panzer-Korps annihilated Mobile Group Popov in a series of brilliant and hard fought battles. The LSSAH was a major participant in these battles, destroying several Soviet divisions and inflicting heavy losses.

Hausser now ordered that Kharkov should be recaptured. The LSSAH, Das Reich and Totenkopf were to form the spearhead of the attack. The attack got underway on 2 March. The LSSAH was formed into three Kampfgruppen which would attack towards and capture Kharkov. Over the next weeks, the LSSAH would take part in the ferocious battles to take the city. Kampfgruppe Meyer, under Panzermeyer's command, penetrated to Red Square before being cut off. Kampfgruppe Witt saw heavy fighting against a Soviet blocking force near Dergatschi before it also broke through into the city. Both Kampfgruppen were repeatedly cut off during the confused fighting, and it was not until Kampfgruppe Peiper, under Joachim Peiper, broke through that the defenders were finally overwhelmed. By 21 March, the battle was over and Kharkov was back in German hands, with Peiper's Kampfgruppe having penetrated as far as Belgorod.

In honour of the 4,500 casualties suffered by the Leibstandarte in the fighting, Kharkov's Red Square was renamed Platz der Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler. The division was pulled back for much needed rest and refit.

Kursk

The spring rasputitsa halted offensive operations, giving the Leibstandarte time to rest and refit. By early June 1943, the division had been fully refitted. Its armour strength was 12 Tiger Is, 72 Panzer IVs, 16 Panzer III and Panzer IIs, and 31 StuGs. In late June 1943, the formation of I.SS-Panzerkorps meant that Hausser's SS-Panzerkorps was renamed II.SS-Panzerkorps.

The II.SS-Panzerkorps was moved north to Belgorod in preparation for the upcoming Summer offensive, Operation Citadel. The LSSAH, along with the Totenkopf and Das Reich, was to form the spearhead of Generaloberst Hoth's 4.Panzer-Armee, tasked with breaching the southern flank of the Kursk salient.

Generalfeldmarschall Walter Model's 9.Armee was to breach the northern flank, and the two forces were to meet near the city of Kursk, thereby encircling a large Soviet force.

The II.SS-Panzerkorps reached its assembly areas on 28 June and began preparing for the assault. The attack was set for 5 July, and on 4 July the II.SS-Panzerkorps, as well as the XLVIII.Panzerkorps on its left and the III.Panzerkorps on the right, began minor attacks to secure observation posts. Fighting lasted throughout the day, with the LSSAH Pionier-Bataillon seeing heavy action clearing out the entrenched Soviets.

The Soviet run Lucy Spy Ring had infiltrated the German OKW and informed STAVKA of the impending operation. Captured German troops provided details of the objectives and locations of the major assaults. Before dawn on July 5, 1943, the Soviet artillery launched a massive bombardment against the German assembly areas. Despite this, the attack got underway after only a brief delay, and under perhaps the largest air battle in history, as the German aircraft defended against a Soviet VVS's attempt to annihilate the Luftwaffe on the ground.

The LSSAH panzers, advancing in Panzerkeils, soon ran into the Soviet Pakfronts. The elaborate system of Soviet defences slowed the attack, but unlike in Model's sector, the 4.Panzer-Armee, spearheaded by the SS-Panzerkorps and the LSSAH, was not halted, and eventually broke through.

By 9 July, the SS-Panzerkorps had advanced 30 miles (48 km) north, and were nearing the small town of Prokhorovka. The Leibstandarte again took the lead, by now its armour strength reduced to just 77 armoured vehicles. SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment 2, supported by several panzers, advanced straight up the road to Prokhorovka against heavy resistance. By midday, the grenadiers had cleared the Komsomolets State Farm and the began the attack on Hill 241.6, which they secured shortly after nightfall on 10 July.


On 11 July, the advance resumed. With the division capturing Oktiabr'skii State Farm and Hill 252.2 in heavy fighting against Soviet Paratroops of the 9th Guards Airborne Division. On 12 July, the Soviets threw the 5th Guards Tank Army into a counterattack near Prokhorovka. Two tank corps faced the Leibstandarte hitting the advancing Germans around Oktiabr'skii State Farm and Hill 252.2. In the ensuing fighting, the outnumbered Germans inflicted heavy casualties on the Soviets, knocking out many tanks. In the process, the Leibstandarte also suffered relatively light casualties, however the Soviet counterattack had stalled the German advance, and the division was forced to fall back to Oktiabr'skii. Fighting continued on the 13th, but the focus of the Soviet attack had shifted to the Totenkopf, to the left of the Leibstandarte.

With the Battle of Prokhorovka still in the balance, a massive Soviet counteroffensive near Orel, caused Hitler to order the cancellation of Citadel. The SS-Panzerkorps was pulled back. LSSAH was ordered out of the line. It was to be sent to Italy to help stabilise the situation caused by the deposal of Mussolini by the Badoglio Government and the Allied Landings in Sicily on 10 July. The division left its armour and equipment, which was given to Das Reich and Totenkopf, and entrained for the trip to Italy.

Italy

The division travelled back from the front, stopping at Innsbruck in Austria, where it disembarked. The division was re-equipped with vehicles and continued the journey by road, travelling across the Alps and into Northern Italy. The division arrived on the Po River Plain on 8 August 1943.

The Leibstandarte was given the task of guarding several vital road and rail junctions in the area of Trento-Verona. After several weeks operating in this area, the division was moved to the Parma-Reggio area. During this period, the Leibstandarte was involved in several skirmishes with partisans. With the Italian collapse of 8 September 1943, the division was ordered to begin disarming nearby Italian units. This went smoothly, with the exception of a brief skirmish with Italian troops stationed in Parma on 9 September. By 19 September, all Italian forces in the Po River Plain had been disarmed, but OKW was concerned by reports that elements of the Italian Fourteenth Army were regrouping in Piedmont, near the French border. Sturmbannführer Peiper's mechanised III./SS-Panzergrenadier-Regiment 2 was sent to disarm these units. Upon arriving in the Province of Cuneo, Peiper was met by an Italian officer who warned that his forces would attack unless Peiper's unit vacated the province immediately. Peiper refused, which goaded the Italians into attacking. The veterans of Peiper's battalion defeated the Italians in a fierce battle, and then proceeded to disarm the remaining Italian forces in the area.

Following the disintegration and capitulation of Italy, the activities of partisan groups increased all across the area. The Leibstandarte was sent to the Istria Peninsula and was engaged in several major anti-partisan operations. During its period in Italy, the Leibstandarte was reformed as a full panzer division, and redesignated 1.SS-Panzer-Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler. In early November, the deteriorating situation in the east meant that the division was ordered back to the Russian Front, arriving in the Zhitomir area in mid November.

Eastern Front

The division was posted to XLVIII.Panzer-Korps, a part of 4.Panzer-Armee, which was struggling to hold the line near Zhitomir. The division was broken up into several Kampfgruppen and thrown into action. On 18 November, Kampfgruppe Frey halted the advance of the Fifth Guards Tank Army near the town of Kotscherovo. Over the next two months, the division's Kampfgruppen saw very heavy fighting in the Shitomir area, performing fire-brigade actions and enabling XLVIII.Panzer-Korps to hold the line.

In January 1944, one of the Leibstandarte's s.SS-Panzer-Abt 101 Tiger commanders, Michael Wittman, was awarded the Oakleaves to the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross for his actions in halting the attack of an entire Soviet armoured brigade. The division was transferred to the Cherkassy area at the end of January, where it was assigned to III.Panzer-Korps, a part of 1.Panzer-Armee.

When the 56,000 men of Gruppe Stemmermann were trapped in the Korsun Pocket in February 1944, the Leibstandarte, along with the remainder of III.Panzer-Korps and XLVII.Panzer-Korps were ordered to attempt to break the Soviet cordon and rescue the trapped forces. Hitler intervened, and ordered the relief attempt be transformed into an impossible attempt to counter-encircle two Soviet fronts. The Leibstandarte, along army panzer units including Oberstleutnant Dr. Franz Bäke's 503rd schwere Panzer Abteilung spearheaded the attack. Despite initial gains, the attack soon stalled due to a combination of the resistance of four Soviet tank corps and the thick mud of the rasputitsa. The exhausted Germans managed to reach the Gniloy Tikich river, where a small bridgehead was established. The survivors of the encirclement fought their way through to the bridgehead and by late February the battle was over.

The majority of the Leibstandarte was withdrawn to Belgium for rest and refit, however a Kampfgruppe was left behind. On 22 March, the entire 1.Panzer-Armee was encircled in the Kamenets-Podolsky Pocket. The Leibstandarte Kampfgruppe took part in the desperate fighting to escape the encirclement, forming a part of the spearhead which linked up with the II.SS-Panzer-Korps near Buczacz on 6 April, 1944. The shattered remnant of the Kampfgruppe was ordered to Belgium where it was to rest, refit and rejoin the remainder of the division.

Normandy

The LAH's most crucial role in Normandy would be the part it played against Operation Goodwood. Launched 18 July, three British armoured divisions, with infantry support on their flanks, were to swing through the gap between Caen and the eastern heights. There they would have to get across the hills at Bourguébus and break through towards open ground. The operation was preceded by a three hour bombing assault by 2,500 aircraft.

Immediately afterwards the British tanks came rumbling on and seized all their primary objectives. 2nd SS Panzer regiment 1, located by the woods near Garcelles, received orders to attack the British at Soliers. SS-Obersturmführer Malkomes drove in the direction of Bourguébus with his 13 Panthers and discovered 60 enemy tanks South South East of the town. He attacked them, destroying 20, and capturing Soliers. Around 12:00 hours the Panther Battalion, 1/1st SS Panzer regiment, was engaged in combat with the British 29th Armoured Brigade of the British 11th Armoured Division. The body of the Leibstandarte was rushed to the front from Falaise, where it was being held in reserve. Counterattacked immediatley at 17:00, together with the 21st Panzer Division, they halted the British offensive on the left front. The British withdrew to Caen, leaving behind 126 destroyed tanks.

At first, 19 July seemed to bring an end to Operation Goodwood, as only some individual tank assaults were carried out. But by 13:00 the British charged again, having brought up reinforcements to continue the attack. They quickly overran the forward German units and pressed on hard, a wave of tanks spearheading the attack. But when the leading Sherman/Fireflies and Cromwells approached Bourguébus Ridge at 16:00 hours, they came under fire and were blown up; the Panthers of the Leibstandarte had taken up positions on the hill itself. Around 15:00 hours the first of the 12th SS Panzer Division arrived, which relieved the right flank. The British failed to break out of their bridgehead there, but Caen was now fully in their hands and the bridgehead had been expanded for 9 km, suffering the loss of 493 tanks, and 4,011 casualties.

File:HausserMark.jpg
SS-Obergruppenführer Paul Hausser

Despite this costly victory, the Allied forces remained vastly superior in numbers. Five days later the Americans saw the chance to break out of their beachhead. The weakened German defense could not keep up with the savage battle of attrition as little or no reinforcements had arrived, supplies were shot up, and movement by day was made impossible. They stormed into the open, one column headed towards Avranches, and another column making an encircling movement towards St. Lô. Hitler however forbade any retreat and, instead, ordered an assault to be made. Leibstandarte, together with 4 other SS-Panzer Divisions and 3 Wehrmacht Panzer Divisions went on the attack on 7 August after moving to the assembly areas on 5 and 6 August. The 1st SS Panzer regiment along with two Panzer Grenadier Battalionss, one Pionier Compamy and the Flak Battalion, were used. The weather wasn't suited for flying that morning, which only disadvantaged the Allies. That is why the attack went smoothly at first, despite the fact that the Allies knew the attack was coming. 2nd SS Division Das Reich managed to recapture Mortain, and an armoured Kampfgruppe under Jochen Peiper managed to go as far as Bourlopin, but was stopped by massive swarms of Allied aircraft. Another attempt was mounted the next day, but failed.

A report from SS-Obersturmführer Preuss, 10.Kp./SS-Panzergrenadierregiment 2 describes the impossible situation:

It is true that one fighter bomber we shot down landed on a Panzer and destroyed it. Most other Panzer and Schützenpanzer, however, fell victim to this intensive air bombardment, which lasted hours. Those Grenadiere still able to fight had spread themselves out to the left and right through the terrain's many hedges. They were happy to see that the bombers swarming like bees over our heads were finding more rewarding targets than individual men. I agreed with them. I heard that Peiper had suffered a heart attack. Diefenthal (the commander of the III./2) lost his hearing when a bomb fell right next to him. Kuhlmann was unable to get the attack moving forward again. My brave messenger, Sturmmann Horst Reinicken, was killed as he tried to reach the command post of the Heer Panzerabteilung to which we were subordinated. He was trying to bring the Panzerabteilung the news that its commander and Adjutant lay dead not far from our hedge.

This marked the end of the campaign in Normandy; Leibstandarte got encircled by the Americans and Canadians supported by the 1st Polish Armoured Division in what would be called the Falaise pocket, but by then the unit was reduced to several small Kampfgruppen. Hausser, commander of 7. Armee was told by von Kluge (commander in chief West, as successor to von Rundstedt) to withdraw the 2nd SS Panzer Corps, his motors and his administrative personnel from the pocket. The Führer had still not given orders to withdraw at this point, so it all depended on the will of the units themselves to get out. Leibstandarte withdrew from the pocket with Unterführers and Führers each taking the lead of a small Kampfgruppe and smashing through the ring, on 22 August, after which no combat ready tanks or artillery pieces were reported. The whole campaign caused some 5,000 casualties to the LSSAH.

Lineage of the unit

File:Paradejack.jpg
Deposition of the captured 1st SS Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler standard (minus its flag cloth) by Soviet soldiers near the Kremlin Wall during the Victory Parade, June 24, 1945.
  • Stabswache (SA controlled)
  • Stoßtrupp Adolf Hitler (SA controlled)
  • Stabswache (not under SA control)
  • SS-Stabswache Berlin
  • SS-Sonderkommando Zossen
  • SS-Sonderkommando Jüterbog
  • SS-Sonderkommando Berlin
  • Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler
  • Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
  • Infanterie-Regiment (mot.) Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
  • SS-Division (mot.) Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
  • SS-Panzergrenadier-Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
  • 1.SS Division Leibstandarte Schutzstaffel Adolf Hitler

Commanders

  • SS-Oberstgruppenführer Josef Dietrich, 15 August 1938 – 7 April 1943
  • SS-Brigadeführer Theodor Wisch, 7 April 1943 – 20 August 1944
  • SS-Brigadeführer Wilhelm Mohnke, 20 August 1944 – 6 February 1945
  • SS-Brigadeführer Otto Kumm, 6 February 1945 – 8 May 1945

Orders of battle

Infantry Regiment (mot) Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler—April 1941—Operation Marita

  • Regimental Headquarters Staff (SS-Gruppenführer Josef Dietrich)
  • I. Infantry Battalion (mot): (SS-Sturmbannführer Fritz Witt)
  • II. Infantry Battalion (mot): (SS-Sturmbannführer Theodor Wisch)
  • III. Infantry Battalion (mot): (SS-Sturmbannführer Weidenhaupt)
  • IV. Infantry Battalion (mot): (SS-Sturmbannführer Jahnke)
  • V. Infantry Battalion (mot): (SS-Sturmbannführer Van Bibber)
  • Heavy Infantry Battalion (mot): (SS-Sturmbannführer Steineck)
  • Anti-aircraft Battalion Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler: (SS-Hauptsturmführer Bernhard Krause)
  • Assault gun (Sturmgeschütz) Battalion Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler: (SS-Sturmbannführer Georg Schönberger)
  • SS Engineer Battalion Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler (mot): (SS-Sturmbannführer Christian Hansen
  • SS Reconnaissance Battalion 1 Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler: (SS-Sturmbannführer Kurt Meyer)


1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler - Normandy 1944

  • 1st SS Panzer Regiment (Peiper)
  • 1st SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment (Frey)
  • 2nd SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment (Sandig)
  • 1st SS Panzer Reconnaissance Battalion (Knittel)
  • 1st SS Assault gun Battalion (Heimann)
  • 1st SS Artillery Regiment (Steineck)
  • 1st SS Werfer Regiment (Besch)
  • 1st SS Anti Aircraft Battalion (Ullerich)
  • 1st SS Panzer Pioneer Battalion (Steiner)
  • 1st SS Panzer Signal Battalion (Metz)
  • 1st SS Medical Battalion (Liebrich)
  • 1st SS Admin Battalion (Tauber)
  • 1st SS Repair Battalion (Gilles)
  • 1st SS Supply Battalion (Stamp)

Note a SS Panzer Regiment had two Panzer Battalions and a SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment had three Pz-Gren Battalions [8]

References

  1. ^ Waffen-SS at Encyclopædia Britannica
  2. ^ Reynolds p.4
  3. ^ Reynolds p.4
  4. ^ Reynolds p.6
  5. ^ Reynolds p.6
  6. ^ "great risk".access date 101108
  7. ^ Reynolds p.8
  8. ^ Reynolds, pp 288 - 291
  • The Leibstandarte - Volumes I - IV/2 by Ralf Tiemann and Rudolf Lehmann.
  • Steel Inferno: I SS Panzer Corps in Normandy by Michael Reynolds (New York: Sarpedon, 1997, ISBN 1-885119-44-5; Staplehurst, Kent : Spellmount, 1997, ISBN 1-873376-90-1).
  • The 1st SS Armored Division: A Documentation in Words and Pictures Herbert Walther (West Chester, Pa.: Schiffer Pub., 1989, ISBN 0-88740-165-1).
  • Hitler's Guard: The Story of the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler, 1933–1945 by James J. Weingartner (Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press, 1974, ISBN 0-8093-0682-4).
  • SS-Leibstandarte: The History of the First SS Division, 1934–45 by Rupert Butler (Staplehurst, Kent: Spellmount, 2001, ISBN 1-86227-117-8).

See also

External links