Timeline of the 1939 invasion of Poland

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The invasion of Poland was a joint offensive on the Republic of Poland by Nazi Germany, the Slovak Republic, the Free City of Danzig, and the Soviet Union, which marked the beginning of World War II. The invasion began on 1 September 1939, when German, Slovak, and Danzig forces entered Poland. The Soviets invaded Poland on 17 September. The campaign ended on 6 October with Germany and the Soviet Union dividing and annexing the whole of Poland under the terms of the German–Soviet Frontier Treaty. The aim of the invasions was to disestablish Poland as a sovereign country, with its citizens destined for extermination.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The following is a timeline of the invasion, which includes events preluding to the offensives, battles and attacks during the invasion, before ending with the last Polish armed forces surrendering on 6 October, which then begins the Polish resistance movement against the German Military Administration in Poland and the Soviet Union occupational administration.

Prelude

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Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov signs the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact. Behind him stand German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop and Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin.
Molotov and Ribbentrop sign the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, in the presence of Joseph Stalin, the dictator of the Soviet Union

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  • 25 August:
  • 26 August:
    • Hitlers postpones the invasion of Poland after being "considerably shaken" (according to General Franz Halder) by the reaffirmation of the Anglo-Polish alliance.<ref name="Zaloga"/>
    • Approximately 70 German Abwehr agents, commanded by Lieutenant Template:Ill, attacked and failed to capture a key rail station and tunnel in the Jablunkov Pass in Poland. The attack, which became known as the Jabłonków incident, was part of Case White. Herzner was unaware Hitler had postponed the invasion at the last moment. The Jabłonków incident has been named the first commando operation of World War II.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
  • 28 August: German saboteur Anton Guzy planted and detonated two time bombs hidden in suitcases at the Tarnów train station in Poland, killing 20 people and injuring 35 others.<ref name="Zaloga"/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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Polish destroyers evacuate to the United Kingdom during the Peking Plan

September

1 September

The German battleship Schleswig-Holstein firing her guns during the battle of Westerplatte; taken by a Nazi collaborator photographer with the Associated Press
Danzig Police demolish a Polish border crossing
The town of Wieluń after German bombing
German armored car Sd.Kfz.221 during the battle of Tuchola Forest

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2 September

3 September

  • During the withdrawal of Polish troops from Bydgoszcz, local Germans opened fire on Polish soldiers and civilians, forcing them into a defensive battle in which several hundred people were killed on both sides. The event was referred to as the Bloody Sunday by the propaganda of Nazi Germany, with number of German victims upped to 58,000 by German propagandists.<ref name=":52">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp
  • Bombing of Skierniewice by the Luftwaffe begins.<ref name=wp>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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4 September

5 September

German battleship Schleswig-Holstein firing at Westerplatte, 5 September 1939

6 September

  • Wyszków Operational Group begins its counterattack (as ordered on 5 September) towards Pułtusk against I Corps; 1st Legions Infantry Division and 61st Infantry Division clash.<ref name="Forczyk 2019 Poland2" />Template:Rp
  • Corps Wodrig forces the Germans' way across the Narew river; the corps subsequently wastes time with preparations to attack Różan (already evacuated by Polish defenders during the night of 5/6 September).<ref name="Forczyk 2019 Poland2" />Template:Rp
  • XXII Corps severs the line between Warsaw and Częstochowa.<ref name=":62">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp
  • Krakow is captured by German forces.<ref name=":22">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp
  • The Polish air force attempts a general offensive and musters 164 sorties with 13 victories and nine planes lost. In the evening, orders are given to move all remaining Polish fighters to Lublin, where 88 fighters are subsequently formed into the newly improvised Pursuit Brigade.<ref name="Forczyk 2019 Poland2" />Template:Rp
  • The Polish government and its accredited ambassadors evacuate Warsaw and relocate to Lublin.<ref name=":62" />Template:Rp
  • Poles evacuate the arms factory in Starachowice to Kowel; Germans attack the Wanacja suburb of Starachowice, and then murder over 20 civilians.Template:Sfn
  • German troops perpetrated a massacre of Polish POWs, including 19 officers, in Moryca and Longinówka, and massacres of 56 Polish civilians in Będzin and Uniejów.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn They also burned the villages Komorów and Krasna, killing 28 inhabitants.
  • During the night of 6/7 September, the Wyszków Operational Group's progress is significantly hampered by logistical chaos when the 33rd and 41st Infantry Divisions become hopelessly entangled with each other, causing mass confusion among the troops.<ref name="Forczyk 2019 Poland2" />Template:Rp

7 September

8 September

Polish POWs and German soldiers shortly before the Ciepielów massacre

9 September

Public execution of Polish civilians in Bydgoszcz on 9 September 1939
  • 4th Panzer Division repeats its attack against Warsaw; Panzer Regiment 35 suffers heavy casualties, leading to the eventual recall of 4th Panzer Division from the Warsaw sector.<ref name=":02" />Template:Rp
  • The German 8th Army captures Łódź, and subsequently advances against a concentration of Polish forces southwest of Warsaw that was giving XVI Corps of 10th Army significant trouble.<ref name="Rohde 1991 Blitzkrieg2"/>Template:Rp
  • German troops perpetrated massacres of around 80 Polish civilians in Kłecko, Mielno, Orło and Pniewo, and massacres of over 260 Jews in Będzin, Sławków and Wyszków.Template:Sfn
  • During the night of 9/10 September, the Poznan Army attempts a breakout attempt towards the south of Łódź and strikes the flank of the German 8th Army (primarily the 30th Infantry Division),<ref name="Giziowski 1997 Blaskowitz2" />Template:Rp achieving operational surprise against the Germans.<ref name=":72">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp
  • The German 5th Panzer Division attacked Polish forces at Pacanów and Stopnica.Template:Sfn

10 September

11 September

12 September

13 September

  • The German Group Kaupisch enters Gdynia (Polish remnant resistance in the city continues until 19 September).<ref name="Rohde 1991 Blitzkrieg2" />Template:Rp
  • Luftwaffe formations are concentrated against the area northeast of Łódź, where Polish marching columns make for appealing targets.<ref name="Rohde 1991 Blitzkrieg2" />Template:Rp
  • German troops carried out massacres in Cecylówka, Kokoszkowy, Łowicz and Mień, killing over 80 Poles, including boy scouts, and at least 12 Jews.Template:Sfn<ref name=wm>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
  • The majority of Poland's gold reserve stored by the Polish government in Śniatyn on the border with Romania.<ref name=jw/>

14 September

German forces in Gdynia, 14 September

15 September

  • XVIII Corps captures the fortress at Przemyśl.<ref name="Rohde 1991 Blitzkrieg2" />Template:Rp
  • German police and army arrested 7,000 Poles in Gdynia.Template:Sfn
  • German troops carried out massacres in Sulejówek and Długa Szlachecka, killing over 90 Poles.Template:Sfn

16 September

Polish Anti-aircraft Bofors 40 mm in the Battle of Lwów
  • 4th Panzer Division attempts to cross the Bzura river to attack the Poznan Army in its German-encircled position, but is beaten back; Panzer Regiment 36 and SS Leibstandarte are temporarily trapped by Polish forces.<ref name=":02" />Template:Rp
  • German attackers are repulsed at Lwów.<ref name="Rohde 1991 Blitzkrieg2" />Template:Rp
  • German troops perpetrated massacres in Bocheń, Guźnia and Retki, killing 49 Polish civilians.Template:Sfn
  • Order No. 005 of the Soviet Minsk Military District is read out to Soviet troops, promising them the "liberation of Ukrainian and Belarussian workers from Polish landowners and capitalists".<ref name=":12" />Template:Rp

17 September

18 September

  • The main clashes of the Battle of the Bzura cease; OKH reports 120,000+ Polish prisoners from a total of 19 divisions and three cavalry brigades.<ref name="Rohde 1991 Blitzkrieg2" />Template:Rp
  • Following Soviet pressure against the Estonian government, Orzel leaves Tallinn and begins its breakout towards the United Kingdom, which it would reach (without maps) on 14 October.<ref name="Rohwer 1968 Seekrieg" />Template:Rp
  • Germans perpetrated a massacre of some 300 Poles, including POWs and refugees, in Śladów.Template:Sfn

19 September

Soviet troops enter Wilno, 19 September
  • German forces complete the encirclement of Warsaw, ending what the Germans would subsequently dub the "Eighteen Days Campaign".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp
  • Krakow Army attempts a breakout towards the Romanian frontier through Tomaszow Lubelski.<ref name=":72" />Template:Rp
  • Pomorze Army and Poznan Army are forced to surrender.<ref name=":22" />Template:Rp
  • Wilno taken by the Soviets after the Battle of Wilno.Template:Sfn

20 September

  • Army Group South is ordered to abort its attacks and to withdraw west of the Vistula-San line to make space for the advancing Soviets. The German siege of Lwów is aborted and left to the Soviets. A German attack against the city by XVIII Army Corps planned for 21 September is cancelled.<ref name=":422" />Template:Rp
  • Clashes between Polish and Soviet forces at Grodno ("Battle of Grodno").<ref name=":12" />Template:Rp
  • German troops carried out massacres of 42 Polish POWs in Majdan Wielki and 8 Poles in Białystok.Template:Sfn<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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21 September

  • Polish garrison of Lviv unexpectedly attempts surrender to the withdrawing Germans;<ref name=":422" />Template:Rp occupation of Lviv is left to the Soviets, who take the city after an artillery bombardment.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp
  • Reinhard Heydrich issues a directive to begin the concentration of Poland's Jews in the major cities to prepare the formation of ghettos and to ease subsequent deportations to concentration camps.<ref name=":82" />Template:Rp

22 September

23 September

  • Soviets carried out a massacre of 25 Polish POWs in Husynne.<ref name=onz/>

24 September

  • Johannes Blaskowitz (of German 8th Army) orders the final assault against Warsaw.<ref name="Forczyk 2019 Poland2" />Template:Rp
  • Appointed German Kreisleiter called Polish municipal officials in Bydgoszcz to a supposed formal meeting in the city hall, from where they were taken to a forest near Bydgoszcz and exterminated.Template:Sfn He also ordered the execution of their family members to "avoid creating martyrs".Template:Sfn

27 September

28 September

  • Soviet-Polish battle at Szack; 52nd Rifle Division and 411th Tank Battalion forced in temporary retreats by Polish defenders.<ref name=":12" />Template:Rp
  • Germany and the Soviet Union sign a Border and Friendship Treaty and adjust the frontiers of occupied Poland. The Soviet Union publicly blames the Western Allies for the continuation of the war.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp
  • Germans carried out the second mass execution, this time of 16 patients of the Kocborowo psychiatric hospital, at the Forest of Szpęgawsk.Template:Sfn
  • Soviets carried out a massacre of 18 Polish POWs from the Riverine Flotilla of the Polish Navy in Mokrany.<ref name=onz/>

29 September

  • The Polish garrison of Modlin fortress surrenders at 08:00; the roughly 35,000 defenders (including 4,000 wounded) are released as agreed in the surrender agreement, though most officers are subsequently recaptured in the following weeks and detained in POW camps.<ref name=":62" />Template:Rp
  • Wounded General Władysław Anders taken prisoner by the Soviets.Template:Sfn

30 September

October

1 October

German troops enter Warsaw, 1 October 1939
  • Around 02:00 at night, a Polish vanguard of the Border Protection Corps meets a column of Soviet tanks near Wytyczno and destroys four of them. As the BPC crosses the Bug river south of Włodawa to catch up with Independent Operational Group Polesie forces, a Soviet counterattack ("Battle of Wytyczno") commences in the early morning. General Wilhelm Orlik-Rückemann decides to break up his force into small units and send them into various directions. Several massacres are subsequently committed by the Soviet pursuers against Polish groups of soldiers.<ref name=":62" />Template:Rp
  • After a final assault against Hel by the German Infantry Regiment 374 towards Hel, the Polish commander asks for an armistice around 14:00.<ref name=":92" />Template:Rp
  • At 14:30, the German mineseeker M85 is sunk by the Polish submarine Zbik with 23 lives lost, sole Polish submarine victory of the campaign.<ref name=":92" />Template:Rp
  • Ger. 10th Army is alerted to return to Germany to prepare operations against France.
  • Germans carried out a massacre of 64 Polish men, including ten boys under the age of 18, in Szczuczki.Template:Sfn
  • Polish Consul in Kyiv Jerzy Matusiński was summoned for supposed talks at the Representation Office of the People's Commissariat for Foreign Affairs, and then arrested by the Soviets, with his fate unknown to this day.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

2 October

  • Command of the Defenders of Poland (Komenda Obrońców Polski) Polish resistance organization founded in Warsaw.Template:Sfn

3 October

  • Gerd von Rundstedt becomes military commander in German-occupied Poland.<ref name=":422" />Template:Rp

4 October

Polish soldiers during the Battle of Kock

5 October

6 October

  • The final Polish resistance (around two divisions in strength, under General Kleeberg around Kock) surrender, ending the campaign.<ref name="Rohde 1991 Blitzkrieg2" />Template:Rp

See also

References

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Bibliography