Kurt Student
Kurt Student (12 May 1890 – 1 July 1978) was a German Luftwaffe general who developed the concept of airborne infantry and commanded the Fallschirmjäger paratrooper corps during World War II, orchestrating key vertical envelopment operations such as the glider-borne seizure of Fort Eben-Emael in 1940 and the invasion of Crete in 1941.[1][2] Student began his military career as an infantry officer before transferring to aviation, serving as a fighter pilot in World War I where he claimed six aerial victories.[3] Following the war, restricted by the Treaty of Versailles from conventional air forces, he contributed to clandestine glider and parachute training programs that laid the groundwork for Germany's paratrooper units.[4] Appointed commander of the airborne forces in 1938, his troops executed innovative assaults during the 1940 Western Campaign, capturing vital bridges in the Netherlands and neutralizing Belgian fortifications to facilitate rapid armored advances.[5] The Fallschirmjäger under Student's leadership captured Crete after intense fighting in May 1941, marking the first strategic airborne invasion but at the cost of over 4,000 casualties, which led to orders for reprisals against local resistance; Student was subsequently tried by a British military tribunal for war crimes including the mistreatment and killing of prisoners of war, convicted on three charges related to forced labor and executions at Maleme, and sentenced to five years' imprisonment, though released in 1948 due to deteriorating health.[6] Later in the war, he commanded defenses in the Netherlands against Allied airborne operations, earning high decorations for his role in stemming the tide at Arnhem.[2]Early Life and Education
Family Background and Childhood
Kurt Arthur Benno Student was born on 12 May 1890 in Birkholz, a village in the Prussian province of Brandenburg (now Borow, Poland).[1][7] He was the third of four sons in an upper-middle-class family, with his father working as a landowner.[8][4] As a child, Student aspired to pursue a medical career, reflecting an early interest in science and healing professions common among educated Prussian youth of the era.[1][4] However, his family's financial constraints prevented funding the extensive university education required, prompting a pivot to military service as a more accessible path for social mobility and professional training in late 19th-century Germany.[1][4] At the age of 11, Student was enrolled in the Royal Prussian Military Cadet School, an institution designed to instill discipline, loyalty to the Kaiser, and foundational officer skills in promising boys from respectable backgrounds.[7] This early immersion in military education marked the beginning of his lifelong association with the armed forces, aligning with the Prussian emphasis on martial virtues amid Bismarck's unified empire.[7]Military Training and Commissioning
Student entered the Prussian military education system at age 11 in 1901, attending the Royal Prussian Main Cadet School (Hauptkadettenschule) at Wahlstatt near Liegnitz.[7] He progressed through the cadet schools, including the Potsdam Cadet School from ages 11 to 17, undergoing rigorous discipline and basic military instruction typical of the Imperial German system designed to instill obedience, physical fitness, and tactical knowledge.[8] Upon completing his cadet training, Student joined the Imperial German Army as a Fahnenjunker (officer cadet) on March 18, 1910, initially serving with Infantry Regiment No. 56 in the Prussian 18th Division.[2] During his probationary period, Student underwent advanced officer training, including infantry tactics, drill, and leadership exercises, which culminated in his formal commissioning as a Leutnant (lieutenant) on March 18, 1911.[2] Assigned to the 1st Company of the Replacement Battalion of Infantry Regiment No. 18 "von der Mark" in Paderborn, he gained practical experience in garrison duties and unit administration before the outbreak of World War I.[2] This early ground service laid the foundation for his later aviation focus, though his initial training emphasized conventional infantry operations in line with pre-war Prussian doctrine prioritizing massed formations and rapid mobilization.[7]World War I Service
Aerial Combat Experience
Student began his aviation service in World War I with Feldflieger-Abteilung 17 on the Eastern Front in Galicia, initially as an observer before transitioning to pilot duties.[9] On 30 September 1915, he claimed an unconfirmed victory over a French Morane-Saulnier aircraft during operations in this theater.[10] In early 1916, following transfer to the Western Front, he served with Kampfstaffel 19 of Kampfgeschwader 4 and then the Army Fokkerstaffel attached to the 3rd Army, where he achieved his first three confirmed aerial victories using Fokker aircraft against French opponents.[2] His initial confirmed kill occurred on 6 July 1916, forcing a Nieuport 11 to land near Péronne.[9] This was followed by downing a Caudron on 1 August 1916 near Vaux and a Nieuport on 8 August 1916 north of St. Souplet at 10:30 a.m.[10] In October 1916, Student joined Jagdstaffel 9 as a pilot and assumed command on 16 October, leading the squadron until wounded.[9] Under his leadership, Jasta 9 focused on intercepting French reconnaissance and fighter aircraft along the Somme sector. Student's command tenure saw three additional victories, bringing his total to six confirmed kills, all against French types, primarily Nieuports.[2] These included a Nieuport on 16 March 1917; another over Hill 304 on 22 August 1917; and a final Nieuport south of Ripont on 1 November 1917 at 15:40.[10] On 2 May 1917, during intense aerial combat, he sustained wounds that hospitalized him until 11 July, after which he continued service but departed Jasta 9 in March 1918 without further victories.[9] His combat record earned recognition through the Iron Cross (second class in 1914, first in 1915) and the House Order of Hohenzollern in June 1917, reflecting his contributions to early German air superiority efforts.[2]Wounds and Recognition
During aerial combat on 2 May 1917, while commanding Jagdstaffel 9, Student sustained a gunshot wound to his left shoulder from French pilot Capitaine Pinsard, which tore a vein; despite the injury, he successfully landed his aircraft.[8][9] He was hospitalized until 11 July 1917 before resuming command duties.[10] Student's World War I service earned him recognition as a flying ace with six confirmed aerial victories over French aircraft between 1916 and 1917.[9][2] Early in the war, he received the Iron Cross, Second Class, on 26 September 1914 for infantry service prior to his transfer to aviation.[11] In June 1917, shortly after his wounding, he was awarded the House Order of Hohenzollern, Knight's Cross with Swords, for his leadership and combat achievements as a squadron commander.[11] He also qualified for the Wound Badge in Black for his single documented injury.[11]Interwar Military Career
Transition to Luftwaffe
Following the Treaty of Versailles restrictions on German aviation, Student remained in the Reichswehr during the interwar period, primarily in technical and administrative roles within the Inspectorate of Weapons and Equipment at the Reich War Ministry, where he consulted on flight technology from 1920 to 1928.[10] In 1931 and 1932, he attended special aviation courses in Würzburg, refreshing his World War I piloting expertise amid clandestine efforts to rebuild German air capabilities under the Weimar Republic's constraints.[10] With the Nazi seizure of power in January 1933 and the subsequent expansion of military aviation under Hermann Göring's Reich Aviation Ministry, Student transferred from the Heer (army) to the nascent Luftwaffe on 1 September 1933, leveraging his prior aerial combat record of six victories and technical knowledge.[10] [12] His initial assignment was as an officer for special duties at the ministry from 1 September to 30 September 1933, focusing on organizational setup during the Luftwaffe's covert formation ahead of its official public unveiling in 1935.[10] From 1 October 1933 to 31 July 1935, Student commanded the Luftwaffe's Technical Training Schools at Jüterbog, where he oversaw pilot and ground crew instruction, emphasizing rigorous standards drawn from his frontline experience to build a professional air force cadre.[10] [1] This role, appointed directly by Göring, positioned Student as a key architect in transitioning Germany's prohibited air arm into a modern force, prioritizing technical proficiency over the army's infantry focus.[13]Pioneering Airborne Doctrine
Following his transfer to the Luftwaffe in 1934, Kurt Student became a key advocate for airborne operations, influenced by interwar glider experiments and observed Soviet parachute maneuvers in the 1920s. On January 29, 1936, a formal Luftwaffe order (L.A. 262/36 gIII 1A) established the initial parachute infantry units, marking the official inception of the Fallschirmtruppe under Student's guidance.[14] The first training class commenced on May 4, 1936, at Stendal, where recruits underwent rigorous selection; only about one in four applicants completed the demanding program, fostering an elite force proficient in combat jumps.[14] Student prioritized light infantry tactics suited to dispersed drops, enabling troops to bypass fortifications and seize objectives like bridges or airfields through vertical envelopment.[7] Student's doctrine integrated paratroopers with glider-borne reinforcements, such as the DFS 230 assault glider for delivering heavier equipment and additional personnel, to create self-sufficient assault groups capable of holding ground until conventional forces linked up.[14] He developed the "oil drop" dispersal method, where paratroopers scattered upon landing to encircle and overwhelm targets from multiple directions, resolving earlier debates on airborne roles by positioning them as specialized light infantry for three-dimensional warfare rather than massed infantry substitutes.[14] This approach emphasized air superiority prerequisites and rapid execution to exploit surprise, with units trained year-round for operational readiness.[7] By mid-1938, the Fallschirmtruppe had expanded to include three components—pure paratroops, glider troops, and air-landing infantry—totaling several thousand trained personnel.[14] On July 1, 1938, Student assumed command of all airborne forces, and the 7th Flieger Division (later redesignated as the first parachute division) was formally organized around September 1, 1938, at Tempelhof with subunits at Stendal, serving as the doctrinal and training hub for subsequent expansions.[14][15] These innovations positioned German airborne forces as a pioneering tool for shock assaults, distinct from ground armies and optimized for disrupting enemy command and logistics in the opening phases of offensives.[1]World War II Command
Western Europe Campaigns (1940)
As Generalleutnant and commander of the 7th Flieger Division, Kurt Student directed the Luftwaffe's airborne forces during the opening phase of the German invasion of Western Europe on 10 May 1940. His division executed the first large-scale parachute and glider-borne assaults in military history, targeting critical infrastructure in the Netherlands and Belgium to disrupt Allied defenses and secure routes for advancing panzer groups. In the Netherlands, approximately 4,500 Fallschirmjäger were deployed to capture airfields around The Hague—Ypenburg, Ockenburg, and Valkenburg—to prevent Dutch counterattacks and potentially seize government leaders, while other units assaulted bridges over the Hollandsch Diep at Moerdijk and the Maas at Dordrecht and Rotterdam's Waalhaven airfield.[16][5][17] The operations encountered immediate and intense resistance from Dutch troops, who quickly recaptured several airfields near The Hague, inflicting heavy losses on the dispersed paratroopers through coordinated ground assaults supported by artillery and aircraft. German transport losses were significant, with numerous Junkers Ju 52s destroyed on the ground or in the air, and hundreds of Fallschirmjäger killed, wounded, or captured in the initial drops. Despite these tactical setbacks, Student's forces succeeded in holding key southern bridges, enabling the 9th Panzer Division to cross the Maas River by 12 May and outflank Dutch defenses, which contributed to the overall collapse of resistance. In Belgium, a specialized glider detachment under Student's command neutralized the formidable Fort Eben-Emael on 11 May, using shaped charges to breach concrete domes and allowing German forces to penetrate the Meuse defenses unhindered.[17][18][19] Student personally oversaw coordination in Rotterdam, where his troops had secured the Waalhaven airfield. On 14 May, amid negotiations for the city's surrender following Luftwaffe bombing, he suffered a severe head wound from a stray bullet—later attributed to friendly fire from a low-flying German aircraft—leaving him temporarily incapacitated and requiring hospitalization until early 1941. For the division's role in securing bridgeheads and neutralizing Eben-Emael, which facilitated the rapid advance through the Low Countries, Student received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 12 May 1940. These actions demonstrated the strategic potential of airborne forces despite high tactical costs, influencing subsequent German planning while exposing vulnerabilities in isolated drops against prepared defenders.[7][5][20]Operation Mercury: Battle of Crete (1941)
Kurt Student, as commanding general of XI Fliegerkorps, planned and directed Operation Mercury, the Axis airborne and amphibious invasion of Crete that began on 20 May 1941.[21] The operation involved approximately 22,000 German paratroopers, glider-borne infantry, and mountain troops transported by Luftwaffe aircraft, targeting key airfields and ports around Maleme, Chania, Retimo, and Heraklion to seize the island from Allied forces comprising British, Commonwealth, Greek, and Cretan defenders totaling around 42,000 men.[22] Student's strategy emphasized vertical envelopment, with initial waves of Fallschirmjäger dropped to capture objectives despite lacking naval support and facing forewarned defenders who had intercepted German plans via Ultra intelligence.[23] The assault commenced with glider and parachute drops on 20 May, but met fierce resistance; paratroopers at Maleme airfield secured a foothold after heavy fighting, enabling reinforcement by air-landed troops, while drops elsewhere fragmented due to anti-aircraft fire and ground opposition, resulting in disorganized units suffering up to 70% casualties in some sectors.[24] Student, operating from a forward headquarters in Greece, adjusted tactics by prioritizing Maleme as the decisive lodgment, committing reserves to exploit the breakthrough despite mounting losses from Allied counterattacks and Cretan civilian participation.[25] By 26 May, German forces had linked up across the island's north, forcing Allied evacuation; the operation concluded on 31 May with Crete under Axis control, though at the cost of roughly 6,500 German casualties, including about 3,774 dead or missing—over 17% of the airborne contingent.[22] Despite the tactical success in achieving the objective without significant naval involvement, the disproportionate casualties—far exceeding pre-invasion estimates—prompted Adolf Hitler to deem large-scale airborne operations unsustainable, effectively halting further major Fallschirmjäger assaults.[26] Student himself later reflected on Crete as the "graveyard of the parachute troops," acknowledging the operation's validation of airborne doctrine's potential while exposing vulnerabilities to prepared defenses and logistical constraints.[27] Allied losses included over 3,000 killed and 12,000 captured, with the Royal Navy suffering heavy shipping damage that compromised subsequent Mediterranean operations.[24]Subsequent Airborne and Defensive Roles (1941–1945)
Following the costly victory in Crete, where German airborne forces suffered approximately 4,000 fatalities out of 22,000 deployed, Adolf Hitler restricted large-scale paratroop operations due to the unsustainable losses, relegating Fallschirmjäger units primarily to elite infantry roles in subsequent campaigns.[21] Kurt Student, recovering from wounds sustained during the battle, retained command as General der Fallschirmtruppe and oversaw the training and deployment of parachute troops across multiple fronts, including reinforcements in Sicily and the Eastern Front, though without further major airborne assaults under his direct operational control.[2] Plans for airborne invasions of Malta, Gibraltar, and Britain were developed but ultimately canceled amid shifting strategic priorities and resource shortages.[3] In September 1943, Student directed the planning of Operation Eiche, a daring glider-borne commando raid to rescue Benito Mussolini from captivity on the Gran Sasso plateau in Italy.[28] On 12 September, elements of the 2nd Fallschirmjäger Regiment, under Major Harald Mors, executed the operation flawlessly, landing 12 gliders on the mountain summit without casualties and extracting Mussolini via Fieseler Storch aircraft, demonstrating the viability of small-scale airborne insertions despite the broader doctrinal shift.[29] Student received the Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves for his oversight, though the mission's success relied on precise intelligence and minimal resistance rather than mass drops.[7] By March 1944, Student was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the 1st Parachute Army, tasked with fortifying the Western Front against anticipated Allied invasions.[2] His forces, now functioning as conventional defenders, contributed to the Normandy defenses in June 1944, where parachute divisions absorbed heavy attrition in hedgerow fighting.[2] In September 1944, during Operation Market Garden, Student's army, positioned in the Netherlands, rapidly concentrated remnants of the 9th and 10th SS Panzer Divisions alongside parachute units to counter the airborne landings at Arnhem, inflicting severe casualties on British 1st Airborne Division and contributing to the operation's failure despite initial Allied gains.[7] Promoted to Generaloberst in November 1944, Student briefly commanded Army Group H, coordinating defenses in the Netherlands against advancing Canadian and British forces until his capture by British troops on 8 May 1945 near Bremen.[4]War Crimes Allegations and Trial
Crete Atrocities Claims
![German execution of civilians in Kondomari, Crete]float-right Following the German airborne invasion of Crete on May 20, 1941, paratroopers under Kurt Student's command encountered intense resistance from Allied forces and armed Cretan civilians, resulting in approximately 4,000 German fatalities, many attributed to local irregulars who reportedly mutilated captured or wounded soldiers.[30] In response, Student issued directives on May 31, 1941, mandating "ruthless" reprisals against villages harboring attackers, including the execution of male inhabitants and destruction of property to deter further civilian involvement.[6] One prominent claim involved the Kondomari massacre on June 2, 1941, where an ad hoc unit of the 65th Rifle Regiment executed between 23 and 60 unarmed male civilians from the village by firing squad, in retaliation for local participation in ambushes against German troops; the event was documented in photographs taken by German war correspondent Franz-Peter Weixler, later presented as evidence of reprisal killings.[31] Similarly, on June 3, 1941, Student personally ordered the razing of Kandanos village after its residents resisted advances, leading to the deaths of at least 180 civilians through executions and the village's complete demolition, with a sign erected stating "For this we razed Kandanos to the ground and you shall fear similar treatment."[32] Additional allegations encompassed the Alikianos executions around June 2-3, 1941, where over 100 male civilians from the area were shot, and broader reprisals across eastern Crete, contributing to estimates of 2,000-3,000 civilian deaths in the initial occupation phase, often justified by German reports of civilian atrocities but criticized as disproportionate collective punishment under international law.[6] These claims, drawn from eyewitness accounts, captured British intelligence reports, and German military records, formed the basis for Student's post-war indictment, though he maintained that such actions were isolated responses to irregular warfare rather than systematic policy.[6] Greek sources, while detailing extensive suffering, have been noted for potential inflation of figures amid national narratives, contrasted by German archival evidence confirming specific reprisal orders but disputing indiscriminate targeting.[33]Tribunal Proceedings and Verdict
Student was arrested by British forces in Schleswig-Holstein on April 25, 1945, while recovering from wounds sustained earlier in the war.[34] He was subsequently tried before a British Military Court in Lüneburg, Germany, from May 6 to 10, 1946, under the provisions of the Royal Warrant of 1945 regulating war crimes trials.[6] The prosecution leveled eight charges against him, alleging that as commanding general of airborne troops during Operation Mercury, he bore responsibility for the unlawful killing of 41 British prisoners of war at Maleme airfield on May 30, 1941, and additional reprisal shootings of unarmed British POWs and Greek civilians in villages such as Kondomari and Alikianos between May 31 and June 2, 1941.[6][34] The proceedings relied heavily on affidavits from eyewitnesses, including captured German officers and local Cretan survivors, detailing summary executions carried out by Fallschirmjäger units in response to partisan resistance and high paratrooper casualties during the initial landings.[34] Student, represented by counsel, maintained that while he had issued standing orders for the security of airfields and suppression of guerrilla activity—emphasizing the execution of saboteurs caught in the act—he had no knowledge of or authorization for indiscriminate reprisals against non-combatants or POWs, attributing excesses to subordinate initiative amid chaotic battlefield conditions.[6] The defense highlighted the absence of direct documentary evidence linking Student to specific unlawful orders, arguing that command responsibility required proof of personal culpability rather than mere oversight of troops.[34] The court found Student not guilty on five charges due to insufficient evidence establishing his direct involvement or foreseeability of the acts.[6] He was convicted on three charges related to the Maleme shootings and certain civilian reprisals, with the judges determining that, as overall commander, he failed to prevent foreseeable violations under his authority.[34] Subject to review, he received a sentence of five years' imprisonment commencing from the trial date.[6] However, the findings of guilt and sentence were not confirmed by the reviewing superior military authority, rendering them ineffective and resulting in Student's release without serving time; this outcome reflected procedural requirements under British military law, where unconfirmed convictions lacked enforceability.[34][6] No further trials were pursued against him for Crete-related allegations or other theaters.[34]Alternative Perspectives on Conduct
In the British military tribunal at Lüneburg from May 6–10, 1946, defense arguments emphasized that Kurt Student lacked direct knowledge of or consent to specific atrocities against prisoners of war (POWs) in Crete, attributing incidents to subordinate commanders amid the disarray of airborne assaults. Witnesses, including a New Zealand brigadier, testified that Student's Fallschirmjäger units generally exhibited disciplined conduct, contrasting with the prosecution's claims and highlighting operational constraints where temporary POW labor in combat zones was deemed unavoidable for survival. The court acquitted Student on five of eight charges, citing insufficient evidence linking him personally to acts like the alleged bombing of a hospital or use of POWs as human shields, as reconnaissance photos showed no visible Red Cross markings and the facility had ceased functioning as a hospital by May 20, 1941.[6] Alternative historical analyses contextualize reprisals against Cretan civilians as responses to documented irregular warfare, where unarmed locals, including women and adolescents, killed over 1,000 isolated paratroopers using knives, axes, and farm tools in the initial days of Operation Mercury (May 20–June 1, 1941), often mutilating bodies in acts that German forces viewed as barbaric violations of combatant status under the Hague Conventions. These perspectives argue that Student's May 31, 1941, order for swift reprisals without formalities targeted perceived francs-tireurs (civilian guerrilla fighters) rather than endorsing indiscriminate massacres, with subsequent escalations attributed to unit-level initiatives amid heavy German losses exceeding 4,000 casualties, many from civilian ambushes rather than organized Allied troops.[21][30] Student faced no prosecution for civilian reprisals, such as the June 2, 1941, Kondomari executions, despite later attributions; military histories note scant direct evidence tying him to excesses, with some Allied testimonies crediting his paratroopers' restraint in adhering to training emphasizing humane treatment, even as post-invasion guerrilla activity necessitated countermeasures to secure the island. While convicted on three POW-related charges and sentenced to five years (largely unserved due to health issues), these views portray his command as pragmatic under asymmetric threats, not inherently criminal, challenging narratives of systemic brutality by underscoring mutual atrocities and evidentiary gaps in victor-imposed tribunals.[6][35]Post-War Life and Legacy
Imprisonment and Release
Following Germany's surrender in May 1945, Student was captured by British forces in Schleswig-Holstein during April 1945.[9] He was subsequently detained and interrogated in London regarding airborne operations and alleged war crimes.[9] Student faced trial before a British Military Court at Lüneburg, Germany, from 6 to 10 May 1946, on eight charges of war crimes committed in Greece and Crete, primarily involving the authorization or toleration of reprisal killings against recaptured British prisoners of war, including officers who had escaped captivity.[6] The court found him guilty on three counts related to permitting the execution of these prisoners but acquitted him on the others, sentencing him to five years' imprisonment subject to confirmation by superior authority.[6] However, the findings of guilt and the sentence were not confirmed, rendering the conviction ineffective under British military procedure.[6] Despite the lack of confirmation, Student remained in custody for approximately three years. He was granted early release in 1948 owing to deteriorating health, after which he resided in West Germany until his death in 1978.[3][2] Greece's postwar demands for his extradition over civilian reprisals on Crete were declined by British authorities.[1]Influence on Modern Airborne Warfare
Student's innovations in airborne tactics, including the integration of paratroopers with glider-borne infantry for vertical envelopment, demonstrated the strategic value of rapid seizure of key objectives behind enemy lines, prompting Allied forces to accelerate their own airborne programs during World War II.[14] Operations under his command, such as the 1940 assault on Fort Eben-Emael using gliders for silent infiltration, showcased low-altitude drops and specialized equipment to achieve surprise, elements later incorporated into doctrines for special operations and airfield captures.[7] The heavy casualties sustained in the 1941 Crete invasion—over 4,000 German paratroopers killed or wounded out of 22,000 deployed—highlighted vulnerabilities to ground resistance and anti-aircraft fire, leading to a doctrinal shift away from divisional-scale drops in favor of smaller, reinforced battalion or regimental actions supported by air superiority and rapid ground link-up.[14] This caution influenced post-war airborne employment, evident in U.S. and NATO tactics emphasizing pathfinder units, helicopter augmentation, and combined arms integration to mitigate isolation risks, as seen in operations like the 1956 Suez Crisis and Vietnam-era airmobile assaults.[13] After his 1948 release from imprisonment, Student contributed to West German military reconstruction by directing air technology research and glider development, which circumvented Versailles Treaty restrictions and laid groundwork for the Bundeswehr's aviation capabilities, while monitoring Soviet airborne experiments to inform defensive strategies against massed drops.[13] His emphasis on elite, versatile paratrooper training persisted in modern forces, where airborne units function as rapid reaction forces for crisis intervention rather than decisive maneuvers, reflecting a synthesis of his early successes and operational lessons.[7]Ranks, Promotions, and Honors
Career Progression
Kurt Student entered the Prussian Army as a Fähnrich on 3 March 1910, with effect from 1 March 1910, and was commissioned as a Leutnant on 20 March 1911 (patent dated 24 June 1909) in the Graf von Wartenburg Regiment.[2][7] He qualified as a pilot in 1913 and volunteered for aviation service upon the outbreak of World War I in 1914, serving initially with Feldflieger-Abteilung 17 on the Eastern Front.[2][7] Student commanded Feldflieger-Abteilung 17 from 1 June 1916 and led Jagdstaffel 9 from October 1916 until May 1917, earning distinction as a fighter pilot and squadron leader.[2][7] Following Germany's defeat, Student transitioned to the Reichswehr as an infantry officer, adhering to the Treaty of Versailles' prohibition on an air force, but was appointed a captain in the Central Flying Office in 1920 to support clandestine Luftwaffe planning.[7] He observed Red Army Air Force maneuvers in the Soviet Union from 1924 to 1928, gaining insights into airborne operations, before returning to infantry duties with the Graf von Wartenburg Regiment in 1928.[7] In 1933, under Hermann Göring's direction, he oversaw Luftwaffe technical training schools.[7] His interwar promotions included Major on 1 January 1930, Oberstleutnant on 1 January 1934, and Oberst on 1 October 1935.[2] With the expansion of the Luftwaffe, Student advanced to Generalmajor on 1 April 1938 and briefly commanded the 3. Flieger-Division from 1 April to 3 July 1938, followed by oversight of Fallschirm und Luftlandetruppe from 4 July to 31 August 1938.[2] He then led the 7. Flieger-Division from 1 September 1938 to 30 September 1940 and became Inspekteur der Fallschirm und Luftlandetruppe (Inspector of Parachute and Air-Landing Troops) on 1 February 1939, formalizing his role as commandant of Fallschirmjäger forces in July 1938.[2][7]| Rank | Promotion Date |
|---|---|
| Fähnrich | 3 March 1910 |
| Leutnant | 20 March 1911 |
| Oberleutnant | 18 June 1915 |
| Hauptmann | 20 June 1918 |
| Major | 1 January 1930 |
| Oberstleutnant | 1 January 1934 |
| Oberst | 1 October 1935 |
| Generalmajor | 1 April 1938 |
| Generalleutnant | 1 January 1940 |
| General der Flieger | 29 May 1940 |
| Generaloberst | 13 July 1944 |