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Kurt Knispel

Kurt Knispel

German World War II tank gunner

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Interest in “Kurt Knispel” spiked on Wikipedia on 2026-02-25.

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2026-01-27Peak: 3302026-02-25
30-day total: 6,101

Key Takeaways

  • Kurt Knispel (20 September 1921 – 28 April 1945) was a German tank commander during World War II.
  • He died two hours later in a German field hospital.
  • On 12 November 2014, the German War Graves Commission reburied his remains at the Central Brno military cemetery in Brno.
  • Post war popular literature and enthusiast literature often portray Knispel as a leading German “tank ace,” sometimes crediting him with as many as 168 destroyed enemy tanks, on the basis of clean Wehrmacht mythology.
  • Alfred Rubbel, serving in the unit explained that the exact number of Knispel’s tank kills could not be confirmed because the battalion did not use to count destroyed tanks or ascribe them to an individual gunner or tank commander.

Kurt Knispel (20 September 1921 – 28 April 1945) was a German tank commander during World War II. Knispel was severely wounded on 28 April 1945 by shrapnel to his head when his Tiger II was hit in battle by Soviet tanks. He died two hours later in a German field hospital.

On 10 April 2013, Czech authorities said that Knispel's remains were found with 15 other German soldiers behind a church wall in Vrbovec, identified by his dog tags. On 12 November 2014, the German War Graves Commission reburied his remains at the Central Brno military cemetery in Brno. He was buried with 41 other German soldiers who died in Moravia and Silesia.

Post war popular literature and enthusiast literature often portray Knispel as a leading German “tank ace,” sometimes crediting him with as many as 168 destroyed enemy tanks, on the basis of clean Wehrmacht mythology. Modern studies of the “Panzer ace” phenomenon treat such tallies, including those attributed to figures like Michael Wittmann and Otto Carius with considerable caution, noting that individual kill claims from German sources are difficult to verify and were often inflated in post‑war narratives. Alfred Rubbel, serving in the unit explained that the exact number of Knispel’s tank kills could not be confirmed because the battalion did not use to count destroyed tanks or ascribe them to an individual gunner or tank commander.

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