词条 | Japanese Fourteenth Area Army | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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|unit_name= Japanese Fourteenth Area Army |image=Masaharu Homma ashore at Lingayen Gulf.jpg |image_size=300px |caption= General Homma comes ashore at Lingayen Gulf |dates= November 6, 1942 – August 15, 1945 |country= {{flag|Empire of Japan}} |allegiance= |branch={{army|Empire of Japan}} |type= Infantry |role= Field Army |garrison=Manila |nickname= 尚武 (shōbu = "militarism", also a synonym for "victory") |battles=Battle of the Philippines (1941–42) Philippines campaign (1944–45) }}{{command structure |name= Japanese Fourteenth Army |date= Dec 1941 – Apr 1942 |parent=Southern Expeditionary Army |subordinate=
}}{{command structure |name= Japanese Fourteenth Area Army |date= August 15, 1945 |parent=Southern Expeditionary Army |subordinate=
}} The {{nihongo| Japanese Fourteenth Army|第14軍 |Dai-jyūyon gun}} was an army of the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II. On July 28, 1944 it was reinforced and upgraded to a field army called the {{nihongo| Japanese Fourteenth Area Army|第14方面軍|Dai-jyūyon hōmen gun}}, to counter the imminent Allied invasion of the Philippines by combined American and Filipino troops. HistoryThe Japanese 14th Army was formed on November 6, 1941, under the Southern Expeditionary Army Group for the specific task of invading and occupying the Philippines. It initially consisted of the IJA 16th Division, 48th Division, 56th Division, and 65th Independent Mixed Infantry Brigade. In January 1942, the 48th Division was detached and reassigned to the Japanese Sixteenth Army for the invasion of the Netherlands East Indies,[1] and was replaced with Fourth Division. As the army was still fighting in the Philippines, its commanding officer, Lieutenant General Masaharu Homma, requested more reinforcements. The 10th Independent Garrison was sent to the Philippines as was the 21st Division Infantry Group, and the First Field Artillery Headquarters to command the field artillery units. The Fourth and Seventh Tank Regiments were part of the 14th Army as well as First, Eighth and 16th Field Artillery Regiments and the 9th Independent Field Artillery Battalion. This army was responsible for the Bataan Death March after the surrender of US and Filipino forces in Bataan, and the 65th Independent Brigade was also accused of the Mariveles Massacre.[2] The 14th Army came under the direct control of Imperial General Headquarters in June, 1942; however, the Southern Expeditionary Army Group from its headquarters in Saigon continued to issue orders, at times in conflict with those received from Tokyo, and its commanding officer was plagued by insubordination by junior officers who used the situation to issue orders without his approval or to countermand orders with which they did not agree.[3] In August 1942, Homma was replaced by Lieutenant General Shizuichi Tanaka.[4] In July, 1942, the IJA Fourth Division came under control of the 14th Army, as did the IJA 30th Division, which was assigned to the defense of Mindanao. As the war situation continued to deteriorate for Japan, and Allied forces prepared to invade the Philippines, and the 14th Army restructured its independent infantry brigades and reserves to form the new IJA 100th Division, IJA 102nd Division, IJA 103rd Division, and IJA 105th Divisions.{{Citation needed|date=June 2013}} In March, 1944, the 14th Army officially reverted to the control of the Southern Expeditionary Army Group. On July 28, 1944, the Japanese 14th Army officially became the Japanese 14th Area Army. Two more divisions (the IJA 8th Division and IJA 10th Division) arrived in August 1944 as reinforcements, and also in August, the Japanese 35th Army also came under its control. On October 10, 1944, General Tomoyuki Yamashita assumed the command of the 14th Area Army to defend the Philippines. In the various battles of the Philippines campaign (1944–45) against combined American and Philippine Commonwealth armed forces in Leyte, Mindanao and parts of Luzon, the Japanese 14th Area Army suffered over 350,000 casualties, including virtually all of the 18,000 men of the 16th Infantry Division in the Battle of Leyte.{{Citation needed|date=June 2013}} Troops of the 14th Area Army were responsible for the Palawan Massacre of December 14, 1944. List of commandersCommanding officer
Chief of staff
Structure
ReferencesBooks
| last = Breuer | first = William B. | authorlink = | coauthors = | year = 1986 | title = Retaking The Philippines: America's Return to Corregidor & Bataan, 1944–1945 | publisher = St Martin's Press | location = | id = ASIN B000IN7D3Q }}
| last = Madej | first = Victor | coauthors = | year = 1981 | title = Japanese Armed Forces Order of Battle, 1937–1945 | publisher = Game Publishing Company | location = | id = ASIN: B000L4CYWW }}
| last = Marston | first = Daniel | coauthors = | year = 2005 | title = The Pacific War Companion: From Pearl Harbor to Hiroshima | publisher = Osprey Publishing | location = | isbn = 1-84176-882-0 }}
| last = Nalty | first = Bernard | coauthors = | year = 1999 | title = War in the Pacific: Pearl Harbor to Tokyo Bay : The Story of the Bitter Struggle in the Pacific Theater of World War II | publisher = University of Oklahoma Press | location = | isbn = 0-8061-3199-3 }}
| last = Rottman | first = Gordon | coauthors = | year = 2005 | title = Japanese Army in World War II: "The South Pacific and New Guinea, 1942–43" (Battle Orders) | publisher = Osprey Publishing | location = | isbn = 1-84176-789-1 }}
| last = Weist | first = Andrew A | coauthors = | year = 2005 | title = The Pacific War: Campaigns of World War II (The Campaigns of World War II) | publisher = Motorbooks International | location = | isbn = 0-7603-1146-3 }} External links
| last = Wendel | first = Marcus | url = http://www.axishistory.com/index.php?id=6748 | title = Axis History Factbook | work = Japanese Fourteenth Area Army }} Notes1. ^Madej,Japanese Armed Forces Order of Battle, 1937–1945 2. ^{{Cite news|url=http://opinion.inquirer.net/4403/mariveles-massacre|title=Mariveles Massacre|last=Farolan|first=Ramon|access-date=2018-05-09|language=en}} 3. ^Toland, The Rising Sun 4. ^[https://books.google.be/books?id=CiqCAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA318&lpg=PA318&dq=Shizuichi+Tanaka+1942&source=bl&ots=bdxHhhT5lF&sig=KiXZfUtuhLkXmmN5zDfuOobnOk0&hl=nl&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjP2OP70cPRAhXjB8AKHQG7D_0Q6AEIYzAP#v=onepage&q=Shizuichi%20Tanaka%201942&f=false Who's Who in Twentieth Century Warfare by Spencer Tucker] 3 : Field armies of Japan|Military units and formations established in 1942|Military units and formations disestablished in 1945 |
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