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STUDENT, KURT


Student, Kurt


(May 12, 1890–July 1, 1978)
German General


S


tudent was a pio-
neer of airborne
warfare whose para-
troopers and glider forces
were the envy of the
world. However, the
costly victory at Crete in
1941 underscored their
limitations, and his men
were grounded for the
rest of the war. Three
years later Student was
called upon to help
thwart the biggest air-
borne offensive in history.
Kurt Student was born
on May 12, 1890, in Birk-
honz, Germany, the scion
of a minor aristocratic
family. After graduating
from the Lichterfeld
Cadet School in 1908, he
was commissioned a sec-
ond lieutenant in the York
Jager (sharpshooter)bat-
talion, and two years
later he was selected to


pass through the elite
Kriegsakademie(war col-
lege) at Danzig. By this
time aviation technology
had developed to the
point where military ap-
plications were feasible,
and Student volunteered
for pilot training in 1913.
When World War I com-
menced the following
year, he flew along the
Eastern Front as a fighter
pilot. In 1915, Student
transferred to the West-
ern Front commanding a
fighter squadron with the
rank of captain. But by
war’s end, the Treaty of
Versailles forbade Ger-
manyfrom possessing mi-
litary aircraft, so Student
transferred back to the
infantry.
The interwar period
proved an innovative
time for Student. Ger-

Kurt Student
Imperial War Museum
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