Romanenko was born on 25 February 1897 at his peasant family's khutor in Poltava Governorate's Romensky Uyezd (now the village of Khustyanka in Buryn Raion). He fought in the Imperial Russian Army during World War I,[1] volunteering for the 14th Orenburg Cossack Regiment in 1914 and becoming a sergeant (uryadnik in the Cossack rank system) and then senior sergeant. Romanenko fought on the Southwestern Front as commander of a half-company, and was awarded four Crosses of St. George for his actions.[2] In 1917, he graduated from the 5th Kiev Praporshchik School, and was promoted to praporshchik, becoming a junior officer in the 155th Reserve Infantry Regiment.[3]
After the end of the civil war, in May 1921, Romanenko became commander of the 14th Cavalry Division's 83rd Cavalry Regiment, part of the North Caucasus Military District. In 1925 he graduated from commander's refresher courses (KUKS) at the LeningradHigher Cavalry School, becoming commander of the 10th Maikop Cavalry Division's 59th Cavalry Regiment in October 1926. Romanenko transferred to command the 10th Verkhneuralsk Red Cossack Cavalry Regiment of the 2nd Red Cossack Cavalry Division. In 1930, he graduated from Officer Improvement Courses (KUVNAS) at the Frunze Military Academy, and graduated from the academy itself in May 1933. He then became an assistant chief of the 3rd Department in the Directorate for Motorization and Mechanization, and in May 1935 became the 13th Mechanized Brigade's chief of staff in the Moscow Military District. In April 1937, Romanenko took command of the Leningrad Military District's 11th Mechanized Brigade. He was sent to Spain as an adviser to the Spanish Republican Army during the Spanish Civil War, and was awarded the Order of Lenin for his actions there. Upon his return to the Soviet Union in February 1938, Romanenko took command of the 7th Mechanized Corps in the Leningrad Military District, which was later converted into the 10th Tank Corps, leading it during the Winter War in the fighting around Kiviniemi and the repulse of a Finnish counterattack northeast of Boboshino. In May 1940 he took command of the 34th Rifle Corps in the North Caucasus Military District, but was appointed commander of the new 1st Mechanized Corps in June. Romanenko became commander of the 17th Army of the Transbaikal Military District in January 1941.[3][1][2]
World War II
After spending the first months after Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union, in the Far East, Romanenko was sent west to command the newly formed 3rd Tank Army in May 1942. In late August, the army became part of the Western Front and fought in the unsuccessful Kozelsk Offensive against the 2nd Panzer Army. After the offensive ended in September, he became deputy commander of the Bryansk Front. Romanenko was transferred to command the reformed 5th Tank Army in November, leading it in Operation Uranus, the Soviet counteroffensive in the Battle of Stalingrad during late November. In January 1943, he took command of the 2nd Tank Army, fighting in Central Front's unsuccessful offensive on Oryol and Bryansk during February. Romanenko then became commander of the 48th Army in the same month, leading it during the Battle of Kursk, Operation Kutuzov, and the Chernigov-Pripyat Offensive in the summer and early fall of 1943. From November 1943, the army fought in the Gomel-Rechitsa Offensive, during which it captured Gomel. During Operation Bagration, the Soviet offensive that recaptured Belarus and eastern Poland, which began in late June 1944, the army fought in the Bobruysk Offensive, seizing Zhlobin, Bobruisk, and Slonim.[2] In July, Romanenko was promoted to Colonel General,[3] but was replaced in command in December 1944 due to declining health.[1]
Postwar
From July 1945, Romanenko commanded the East Siberian Military District.[2] In February 1947 he became a student at the Higher Academic Courses of the Higher Military Academy, but in December transferred to the 2nd Main Courses of the academy, graduating in 1948. Romanenko was a deputy of the Second Convocation of the Supreme Soviet before his death on 10 March 1949[1][2] as a result of a serious illness. He was buried in Novodevichy Cemetery.[3]
"Романенко Прокофий Логвинович"[Romanenko Prokofy Logvinovich]. mil.ru (in Russian). Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation. Retrieved 16 June 2017.
Glantz, David M.; House, Jonathan M. (2009). To the Gates of Stalingrad: Soviet–German combat operations, April–August 1942. Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas. ISBN9780700616305.
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