Fegelein's path into the military began in the interwar period when he enlisted in the Reiter-Regiment 17 of the Reichswehr in 1925 at the age of eighteen. By 1933 he transferred to the SS with the number 66 680 and the NSDAP membership number 1 200 158, quickly advancing through ranks due to his riding skills. He led the Reiter-SS equestrian group, organized events for the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games and became head of the Haupt-Reitschule München in 1937. These early roles blended sportsmanship with paramilitary training, earning him various civilian and party awards including the German Olympic Honor Badge First Class and the German Riding Badge in Gold. When war broke out in 1939 Fegelein commanded the SS-Totenkopf-Reiterstandarte during the Polish campaign, where his unit operated from Warsaw and engaged in security duties that foreshadowed the more ruthless operations to come. In 1940 he saw action in Belgium and France with the SS-Verfügungstruppe before being reassigned to the East in 1941, first with reconnaissance elements attached to the 87th Infantry Division near Białystok and then taking charge of SS-Kavallerie-Regiment 1.
The brutal realities of the Eastern Front transformed Fegelein into a seasoned combat leader during Operation Barbarossa. In 1941 his brigade played a central role in the large-scale sweeps through the Pripyat Marshes, where mounted SS troopers conducted mass executions of suspected partisans and civilians under direct orders aimed at securing the rear areas for advancing German armies. These actions involved riding through swampy terrain, setting ambushes and coordinating with infantry to encircle villages, often resulting in thousands of deaths in what later historians described as early genocidal warfare tactics. By late 1941 Fegelein had risen to command the full SS-Kavallerie-Brigade, which was thrown into the defensive meat grinder northwest of Rzhev as part of the 9th Army in Army Group Center. The winter of 1941-1942 brought blizzards, temperatures plunging to minus forty degrees and Soviet assaults that turned the landscape into a frozen wasteland of snowdrifts and icy trenches, where horses and men alike struggled to move yet Fegelein maintained mobility through skillful use of mounted patrols and rapid counterattacks.
Fegelein's leadership at Rzhev directly secured his first major decoration when, in January and February 1942, wave after wave of Red Army infantry and cavalry hammered the German lines north of Malo Nikolskoye, Polovino, Saizewo, Dmitrowo and Sokolowo. On 5 February 1942 he personally directed a lightning assault that encircled elements of the Soviet 381st Rifle Division at Chertolino, with his troopers charging through deep snow in close-quarters fighting to overrun positions, seize a critical road junction and capture the railway station supplying the enemy spearhead. Nine days later, on 14 February, his regiments stormed the village of Yershovo under artillery barrages, sealing the pocket and annihilating trapped Soviet units in hand-to-hand combat amid burning buildings and drifting smoke. Through relentless personal bravery, iron discipline and clever exploitation of cavalry speed even in arctic conditions, Fegelein prevented any decisive breakthrough, stabilized the entire sector for the 9th Army and inflicted devastating losses on the attackers, actions that earned him the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 2 March 1942 as SS-Standartenführer der Reserve.
By December 1942 Fegelein was rushed south to command an ad-hoc Kampfgruppe in the great bend of the Don River during the Soviet winter offensive following Stalingrad. In one of the most audacious operations of his career, on 20 December he led a tiny reconnaissance force consisting of himself, an Oberscharführer and just two Sturmgeschütze assault guns deep behind enemy lines through snow-covered steppe shrouded in darkness and fog. The group surprised an entire Soviet corps headquarters, bursting into the command post in a short, sharp firefight that captured the commanding general, his chief of staff, several senior officers and the full staff intact along with operational maps, orders and two additional assault guns. This spectacular coup decapitated Soviet command in the sector, plunged the enemy offensive into immediate chaos and bought vital time for German defenses to hold, even though Fegelein himself was wounded by a sniper the same day. The strategic impact and sheer boldness of the raid resulted in the award of the Oak Leaves to his Knight's Cross on 22 December 1942.
As commander of the newly formed 8th SS Cavalry Division Florian Geyer throughout 1943, Fegelein orchestrated a series of grueling anti-partisan sweeps and defensive battles that culminated in his final decoration. In May through July his horsemen cleared dense forests and marshes southwest of Gomel during Operations Weichsel, Zeithen and Seydlitz, riding at dawn to encircle partisan bands, burning hideouts and securing supply routes with ruthless efficiency amid ambushes and hand-to-hand clashes. Transferred to the blazing Kharkov sector in August, the division repelled furious Soviet tank and infantry assaults near Bespalovka and Bolshaya Gomolsha on 26 August in savage close combat. On 8 September Fegelein personally directed a fierce counterattack that recaptured the dominating Hill 199.0 at Verkhniy Bishkin under heavy artillery fire, his men storming the slopes through smoke and explosions to restore the line. Even after sustaining a serious wound to his left arm on 13 September while fighting for Hill 208.5, he refused evacuation until the position was secured. These repeated defensive victories and captures of enemy personnel and equipment were cited when the Swords to his Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves were awarded on 30 July 1944.
After his wounding in September 1943 Fegelein was reassigned to a staff role as Himmler's liaison officer at Hitler's headquarters, where he became a fixture in the shrinking inner circle of the Führerbunker by early 1944. His marriage to Gretl Braun on 3 June 1944 in Salzburg and the birth of their daughter Eva Barbara on 5 May 1945 tied him inextricably to the Braun family and Hitler's personal life. Yet as the Soviet offensive closed on Berlin in April 1945 Fegelein attempted to flee the capital, leading to his arrest on 28 April, immediate demotion and a summary court-martial ordered by Hitler himself. Executed by SS firing squad in the Reich Chancellery garden that same evening, his death symbolized the collapsing discipline of the regime in its final days. Fegelein left behind a legacy of combat skill intertwined with the atrocities of the Eastern Front campaigns, remembered both for battlefield audacity and for his proximity to the Nazi leadership's downfall.
Source:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
https://www.tracesofwar.com/
https://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/
https://rk.balsi.de/index.php?action=list&cat=300
https://www.geni.com/
https://forum.axishistory.com/
https://www.wehrmacht-awards.com/forums/
https://www.bundesarchiv.de/en/
https://web.archive.org/web/20091027052912fw_/http://geocities.com/orion47.geo/index2.html
https://www.unithistories.com/units_index/index.php?file=/officers/personsx.html
Padfield, Peter: Himmler: Reichsführer S.S. (1991)
Various archival documents from Bundesarchiv and unit histories on Waffen-SS cavalry formations.






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