Prussian Army at Mobilization, 23 March 1815

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Prussian Army at Mobilization, 23 March 1815 Prussian Army at Mobilization 23 March l8l5 lst Army Corps: Generallieutenant von Zeithen (on the Rhine) (35,620 men) lst Brigade: Generalmajor von Steinmetz Brandenburg Infantry Regiment l2th Reserve Infantry Regiment lst Westphalian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 2nd Brigade: Generalmajor von Pirch II lst West Prussian Infantry Regiment lst Berg Infantry Regiment 2nd Westphalian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 3rd Brigade: Generalmajor Jangow 2nd West Prussian Infantry Regiment 2nd Berg Infantry Regiment 4th Westphalian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 4th Brigade: Generalmajor Graf Henckel lst Reserve Infantry Regiment 7th Reserve Infantry Regiment 4th Westphalian Landwehr Regiment Other: Silesian Schützen Battalion (later divided between lst & 3rd Brigades) Cavalry Reserve: Generalmajor von Ro"der lst West Prussian Dragoon Regiment Brandenburg Dragoon Regiment lst Silesian Hussar Regiment Brandenburg Uhlan Regiment lst Kurmark Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 2nd Kurmark Landwehr Cavalry Regiment Westphalian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment von Lutzow Cavalry Regiment Artillery: l2 Batteries. 2nd Army Corps: Generallieutenant Borstell (on the Rhine) (35,220 men) 5th Brigade: Generalmajor Pirch I von Lutzow Infantry Regiment lst Pommeranian Infantry Regiment 5th Westphalian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 6th Brigade: Generalmajor von Krafft Colberg Infantry Regiment Elbe Infantry Regiment lst Elbe Landwehr Infantry Regiment 7th Brigade: Generalmajor von Brause 2nd Reserve Infantry Regiment l0th Reserve Infantry Regiment 2nd Elbe Landwehr Infantry Regiment 8th Brigade: vacant 9th Reserve Infantry Regiment llth Reserve Infantry Regiment 3rd Elbe Landwehr Infantry Regiment 1 Cavalry Reserve: Generalmajor Ju"rgass Ko"nigin Dragoon Regiment Neuma"rk Dragoon Regiment Brandenburg Hussar Regiment Pommeranian Hussar Regiment Silesian Uhlan Regiment Berg Hussar Regiment Elbe Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 3rd Kurmark Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 4th Kurmark Landwehr Cavalry Regiment Artillery: l2 Batteries 3rd Army Corps: Generallieutenant von Thielmann (34,820 men) 9th Brigade: Generalmajor von Borcke Leib Infantry Regiment lst Russo-German Legion Infantry Regiment lst Kurmark Landwehr Infantry Regiment l0th Brigade: Oberst Kraufeneck 8th Reserve Infantry Regiment 27th Infantry Regiment 2nd Kurmark Landwehr Infantry Regiment llth Brigade: vacant New Saxon Infantry Regiment 3rd Kurmark Landwehr Infantry Regiment 4th Kurmark Landwehr Infantry Regiment l2th Brigade: Generalmajor von Hobe 2nd Russo-German Legion Infantry Regiment 5th Kurmark Landwehr Infantry Regiment 6th Kurmark Landwehr Infantry Regiment Cavalry Reserve: Generalmajor von Dobschu"tz 5th Uhlan Regiment 9th Hussar Regiment 7th Dragoon Regiment Saxon Hussar Regiment 3rd Russo-German Legion Regiment von Helwig Squadron 5th Kurmark Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 6th Kurmark Landwehr Cavalry Regiment Artillery: l2 Batteries 4th Army Corps: (on the Rhine) (36,420 men) l3th Brigade: lst Silesian Infantry Regiment 2nd Neuma"rk Landwehr Infantry Regiment Neuma"rk Landwehr Infantry Regiment l4th Brigade: 2nd Silesian Infantry Regiment lst Pommeranian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 2nd Pommeranian Landwehr Infantry Regiment l5th Brigade: 6th Reserve Infantry Regiment 3rd Silesian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 4th Silesian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 2 l6th Brigade: 3rd Reserve Infantry Regiment lst Silesian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 2nd Silesian Landwehr Infantry Regiment Cavalry Reserve: 2nd Silesian Hussar Regiment West Prussian Uhlan Regiment Elbe National Cavalry Regiment 8th Dragoon Regiment 8th Hussar Regiment lst Pommeranian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 2nd Pommeranian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment lst Silesian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 2nd Silesian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 3rd Silesian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment Artillery: l2 Batteries 5th Army Corps: (on the Elbe)(37,220) l7th Brigade: 3rd East Prussian Infantry Regiment lst East Prussian Landwehr Infantry Regiment lst West Prussian Landwehr Infantry Regiment l8th Brigade: 4th East Prussian Infantry Regiment 2nd West Prussian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 5th Silesian Landwehr Infantry Regiment l9th Brigade: 4th Reserve Infantry Regiment 6th Silesian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 7th Silesian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 20th Brigade: 5th Reserve Infantry Regiment 7th Kurmark Landwehr Infantry Regiment 3rd Pommeranian Landwehr Infantry Regiment Cavalry Reserve: 2nd West Prussian Dragoon Regiment Lithuanian Dragoon Regiment 2nd Leib Hussar Regiment 7th Hussar Regiment lst West Prussian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 2nd West Prussian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 3rd West Prussian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 3rd Pommeranian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 7th Kurmark Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 4th Silesian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 5th Silesian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 6th Army Corps: (on the Elbe) 2lst Brigade: lst East Prussian Infantry Regiment 8th Silesian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 9th Silesian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 22nd Brigade: 2nd East Prussian Infantry Regiment l0th Silesian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 3 llth Silesian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 23rd Brigade: l2th Silesian Landwehr Infantry Regiment l3th Silesian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 2nd East Prussian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 24th Brigade: 3rd East Prussian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 4th East Prussian Landwehr Infantry Regiment 5th East Prussian Landwehr Infantry Regiment Cavalry Reserve: Silesian Cuirassier Regiment East Prussian Cuirassier Regiment Brandenburg Cuirassier Regiment 4th Cuirassier Regiment 4th Uhlan Regiment 6th Silesian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 7th Silesian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 8th Silesian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment lst East Prussian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 2nd East Prussian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 3rd East Prussian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment 4th East Prussian Landwehr Cavalry Regiment Artillery: l2 Batteries 7th Army or Reserve Corps Grenadier Brigade: Garde Schu"tzen Battalion Kaiser Franz Grenadier Regiment Kaiser Alexander Grenadier Regiment Guard Brigade: Guard Jager Battalion lst Garde zu Fuss Infantry Regiment 2nd Garde zu Fuss Infantry Regiment Cavalry Brigade: Guard Uhlan Regiment Guard Dragoon Regiment Guard Hussr Regiment Garde du Corps Regiment Prussian General Staff, Das Preussische Heer in den Jahren l8l4 und l8l5 4 .
Recommended publications
  • The Night Operation on the Passchendaele Ridge, 2Nd December 1917
    Centre for First World War Studies A Moonlight Massacre: The Night Operation on the Passchendaele Ridge, 2nd December 1917 by Michael Stephen LoCicero Thesis submitted to The University of Birmingham for the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY School of History and Cultures College of Arts & Law June 2011 University of Birmingham Research Archive e-theses repository This unpublished thesis/dissertation is copyright of the author and/or third parties. The intellectual property rights of the author or third parties in respect of this work are as defined by The Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988 or as modified by any successor legislation. Any use made of information contained in this thesis/dissertation must be in accordance with that legislation and must be properly acknowledged. Further distribution or reproduction in any format is prohibited without the permission of the copyright holder. Abstract The Third Battle of Ypres was officially terminated by Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig with the opening of the Battle of Cambrai on 20 November 1917. Nevertheless, a comparatively unknown set-piece attack – the only large-scale night operation carried out on the Flanders front during the campaign – was launched twelve days later on 2 December. This thesis, a necessary corrective to published campaign narratives of what has become popularly known as „Passchendaele‟, examines the course of events from the mid-November decision to sanction further offensive activity in the vicinity of Passchendaele village to the barren operational outcome that forced British GHQ to halt the attack within ten hours of Zero. A litany of unfortunate decisions and circumstances contributed to the profitless result.
    [Show full text]
  • War Weariness' in the Canadian Corps During the Hundred Days Campaign of the First World War
    University of Calgary PRISM: University of Calgary's Digital Repository Graduate Studies The Vault: Electronic Theses and Dissertations 2013-09-13 Unwilling to Continue, Ordered to Advance: An Examination of the Contributing Factors Toward, and Manifestations of, 'War Weariness' in the Canadian Corps during the Hundred Days Campaign of the First World War Chase, Jordan A.S. Chase, J. A. (2013). Unwilling to Continue, Ordered to Advance: An Examination of the Contributing Factors Toward, and Manifestations of, 'War Weariness' in the Canadian Corps during the Hundred Days Campaign of the First World War (Unpublished master's thesis). University of Calgary, Calgary, AB. doi:10.11575/PRISM/28595 http://hdl.handle.net/11023/951 master thesis University of Calgary graduate students retain copyright ownership and moral rights for their thesis. You may use this material in any way that is permitted by the Copyright Act or through licensing that has been assigned to the document. For uses that are not allowable under copyright legislation or licensing, you are required to seek permission. Downloaded from PRISM: https://prism.ucalgary.ca UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY Unwilling to Continue, Ordered to Advance: An Examination of the Contributing Factors Toward, and Manifestations of, ‘War Weariness’ in the Canadian Corps during the Hundred Days Campaign of the First World War by Jordan A.S. Chase A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENT FOR DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY CALGARY, ALBERTA SEPTEMBER, 2013 © Jordan A.S. Chase 2013 Abstract This thesis examines the contributing factors and manifestations of ‘war weariness’ in the Canadian Corps during the final months of the Great War.
    [Show full text]
  • Stanislaviv in the Face of the Polish-Soviet War 1939 Polish Garrison – Soviet Garrison
    Open Military Studies 2020; 1: 70–78 Research Article Maciej Franz* Stanislaviv in the face of the Polish-Soviet War 1939 Polish Garrison – Soviet Garrison https://10.1515/openms-2020-0107 Received Oct 07, 2020; accepted Dec 11, 2020 Abstract: In 1921-1939 Stanyslaviv was one the bigger polish garrisons. The approach of the war the reason for leaving the town by polish troops. In September of 1939 the garrison in Stanyslaviv was rather small, consisting of small logistic units. Until now the historians have been interested in the face of this particular garrison in those few September days of 1939th. This is an attempt to showcase the most important events that happened while the polish troops were stationed in town and were still trying to provide peace and safety it and its people. Keywords: Polish troops, polish campaign, 1939, Second World War The Polish campaign of 1939, as the first episode of World War II, was not the same in all parts of Poland. For the inhabitants of Stanislaviv and a significant part of the Stanislaviv Voivodeship, it did not turn out to be a war against the Third Reich, but Soviet aggression – it is another episode on the long list of Polish- Russian armed conflicts in history. For people who lived in the western, southern and northern provinces of the Second Polish Republic, the war immediately took on a normal appearance. Air raids by enemy planes began, as a result – bombing, and a few days later the front was changed. The symbols of those days were mass groups of soldiers moving through these territories, both Polish soldiers who had to defend their homeland and those Germans who sought to conquer the Polish state.
    [Show full text]
  • Danish and Norwegian Cavalry and Artillery 1803-1814
    revious to this article Danish infantry of the line and light infantry 1803-1814 have been dealt with in three issues of Chakoten – Magazine for the Danish Military PHistorical Society, 2016-2017. The present article serves the Danish and same general dual purpose: to convey precise information on organization, uniforms, armament and equipment and to wel- come the Alan Perry achievement in designing and providing the metal figures and thus further extending the range of the Norwegian Danish-Norwegian units of the army. The Perry figures are increasing in numbers among painters and wargamers – in Denmark also applying stats for, General de Brigade, Black Powder and Sharp Practice 2. Thus the ini- Cavalry and tiative to drafting and presenting this article has been taken by Mr. Ole Thureholm, who has leaned on available knowledge on organization, uniforms, armament and equipment from Mr. Jørgen Larsen and Mr. Hans Chr. Wolter. Artillery Organization of the Cavalry 1802-1814 Between 1791 and 1802 the Danish cavalry became exposed to extensive modernization and reorganization. 1803-1814 The Danish cavalry consisted of The Royal Horse Guard, Part 1 the four heavy cavalry regiments (Rytter regimenter), the three light dragoon regiments (Lette dragonregimenter), The Alan Perry has enlarged his series of Dragoon Regiment, The Hussar Regiment, and the Bosniac metal figures of Danish and Norwegian Squadron (from1808 the Uhlan Squadron). The Horse Guard mustered 2 squadrons each with 4 officers, 5 NCOs, 2 trumpe- troops from the Napoleonic era ters and 60 men. The regiments of the heavy cavalry, the light dragoons and the Dragoon Regiment, had 4 squadrons, each with 5 officers, 12 NCOs, 2 trumpeters and 144 men.
    [Show full text]
  • THE BATTLE of FRANCE (July 19 to August 29, 1944)
    THE BATTLE OF FRANCE (July 19 to August 29, 1944) N our last issue's review of the invasion battle 31. This breakthrough decided the entire cam­ we pointed out two remarkable facts. viz.• paign. Another wave of US troop. advanoe!l I (1) that only one major landing operation had east from Granville to Villedieu to CO-<lperate been carried out during the first six weeks, and with formatioJlB furt,her t.o the northeast ill (2) that the number of troops pumped into the protecting the left Bank of the main thruli,. comparatively narrow bridgehead was out of Several German attacks against this flank in the proportion to the area then at the disposal of the area of Tessy. VilJedieu. and Mortain. which u Allied Command. Although this seemed to indicate one time narrowed the American corridor of that General Eisenhower intended to concentrate Avranches to twenty kilometers. had to be aban. all hi' available forces for a push from this one doned, as the sout.hward advance of the Britilh bridgehead. the German High Command could not 2nd Army from the region of Caumont threatened be sure of that and had therefore to maintain con· the rear of the German divisioJlB. The fate of the siderable forces all along the far·Bung coasts of campaign in FTance was sealed: what was at stake Europe. a factor which limited the forces opposing now was no longer tbe fat.e of French territory the Normandy invaders and gave the Allies a vast but that of the German armiCl in France.
    [Show full text]
  • The German Army, Vimy Ridge and the Elastic Defence in Depth in 1917
    Journal of Military and Strategic VOLUME 18, ISSUE 2 Studies “Lessons learned” in WWI: The German Army, Vimy Ridge and the Elastic Defence in Depth in 1917 Christian Stachelbeck The Battle of Arras in the spring of 1917 marked the beginning of the major allied offensives on the western front. The attack by the British 1st Army (Horne) and 3rd Army (Allenby) was intended to divert attention from the French main offensive under General Robert Nivelle at the Chemin des Dames (Nivelle Offensive). 1 The French commander-in-chief wanted to force the decisive breakthrough in the west. Between 9 and 12 April, the British had succeeded in penetrating the front across a width of 18 kilometres and advancing around six kilometres, while the Canadian corps (Byng), deployed for the first time in closed formation, seized the ridge near Vimy, which had been fiercely contested since late 1914.2 The success was paid for with the bloody loss of 1 On the German side, the battles at Arras between 2 April and 20 May 1917 were officially referred to as Schlacht bei Arras (Battle of Arras). In Canada, the term Battle of Vimy Ridge is commonly used for the initial phase of the battle. The seizure of Vimy ridge was a central objective of the offensive and was intended to secure the protection of the northern flank of the 3rd Army. 2 For detailed information on this, see: Jack Sheldon, The German Army on Vimy Ridge 1914-1917 (Barnsley: Pen&Sword Military, 2008), p. 8. Sheldon's book, however, is basically a largely indiscriminate succession of extensive quotes from regimental histories, diaries and force files from the Bavarian War Archive (Kriegsarchiv) in Munich.
    [Show full text]
  • Military Tribunal, Indictments
    MILITARY TRIBUNALS Case No. 12 THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA -against- WILHELM' VON LEEB, HUGO SPERRLE, GEORG KARL FRIEDRICH-WILHELM VON KUECHLER, JOHANNES BLASKOWITZ, HERMANN HOTH, HANS REINHARDT. HANS VON SALMUTH, KARL HOL­ LIDT, .OTTO SCHNmWIND,. KARL VON ROQUES, HERMANN REINECKE., WALTERWARLIMONT, OTTO WOEHLER;. and RUDOLF LEHMANN. Defendants OFFICE OF MILITARY GOVERNMENT FOR GERMANY (US) NORNBERG 1947 • PURL: https://www.legal-tools.org/doc/c6a171/ TABLE OF CONTENTS - Page INTRODUCTORY 1 COUNT ONE-CRIMES AGAINST PEACE 6 A Austria 'and Czechoslovakia 7 B. Poland, France and The United Kingdom 9 C. Denmark and Norway 10 D. Belgium, The Netherland.; and Luxembourg 11 E. Yugoslavia and Greece 14 F. The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics 17 G. The United states of America 20 . , COUNT TWO-WAR CRIMES AND CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY: CRIMES AGAINST ENEMY BELLIGERENTS AND PRISONERS OF WAR 21 A: The "Commissar" Order , 22 B. The "Commando" Order . 23 C, Prohibited Labor of Prisoners of Wal 24 D. Murder and III Treatment of Prisoners of War 25 . COUNT THREE-WAR CRIMES AND CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY: CRIMES AGAINST CIVILIANS 27 A Deportation and Enslavement of Civilians . 29 B. Plunder of Public and Private Property, Wanton Destruc­ tion, and Devastation not Justified by Military Necessity. 31 C. Murder, III Treatment and Persecution 'of Civilian Popu- lations . 32 COUNT FOUR-COMMON PLAN OR CONSPIRACY 39 APPENDIX A-STATEMENT OF MILITARY POSITIONS HELD BY THE DEFENDANTS AND CO-PARTICIPANTS 40 2 PURL: https://www.legal-tools.org/doc/c6a171/ INDICTMENT
    [Show full text]
  • The United States Atomic Army, 1956-1960 Dissertation
    INTIMIDATING THE WORLD: THE UNITED STATES ATOMIC ARMY, 1956-1960 DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Paul C. Jussel, B.A., M.M.A.S., M.S.S. * * * * * The Ohio State University 2004 Dissertation Committee Approved by Professor Allan R. Millett, Advisor Professor John R. Guilmartin __________________ Professor William R. Childs Advisor Department of History ABSTRACT The atomic bomb created a new military dynamic for the world in 1945. The bomb, if used properly, could replace the artillery fires and air-delivered bombs used to defeat the concentrated force of an enemy. The weapon provided the U.S. with an unparalleled advantage over the rest of the world, until the Soviet Union developed its own bomb by 1949 and symmetry in warfare returned. Soon, theories of warfare changed to reflect the belief that the best way to avoid the effects of the bomb was through dispersion of forces. Eventually, the American Army reorganized its divisions from the traditional three-unit organization to a new five-unit organization, dubbed pentomic by its Chief of Staff, General Maxwell D. Taylor. While atomic weapons certainly had an effect on Taylor’s reasoning to adopt the pentomic organization, the idea was not new in 1956; the Army hierarchy had been wrestling with restructuring since the end of World War II. Though the Korean War derailed the Army’s plans for the early fifties, it returned to the forefront under the Eisenhower Administration. The driving force behind reorganization in 1952 was not ii only the reoriented and reduced defense budget, but also the Army’s inroads to the atomic club, formerly the domain of only the Air Force and the Navy.
    [Show full text]
  • Russian Divisional Organization, 1914-1918
    Russian Divisional Organization 1914-1918 Imperial Guard 1st Guard Infantry Division Preobragenski Guard Infantry Regiment Semenov Guard Infantry Regiment Ismailov Guard Infantry Regiment Guard Jager Regiment 2nd Guard Infantry Division Moscow Guard Infantry Regiment Guard Grenadier Infantry Regiment Pavlov Guard Infantry Regiment Finland Guard Infantry Regiment 3rd Guards (Warsaw) Infantry Division Lithuania Guard Infantry Regiment Kexholm Guard Infantry Regiment St. Petersburg Guard Infantry Regiment Guard Rifle Division 1st Guard Rifle Regiment "Strelkovyi Evo Velichestva" 2nd Guard Rifle Regiment "Tsarskoe Selo" 3rd Guard Rifle Regiment "Strelkovyi Ego Velichestva" 4th Guard Rifle Regiment "Strelkovyi Imperatorskoi Familii" 3rd Finland Rifle Battalion 1st Guard Cavalry Division Chevalier Guard Regiment Horse Guard Regiment Tsar (Emperor) Guard Regiment Tsarina (Empress) Guard Regiment 2nd Guard Cavalry Division Horse Grenadier Guard Regiment Tsarina Guard Uhlan Regiment Guard Dragoon Regiment Tsar Guard Hussar Regiment 3rd Guard Cavalry Division Tsar Guard Uhlan Regiment Grodno Guard Hussar Regiment Tsar Guard Cossack Regiment Combined Guard Cossack Regiment Kuban Warsaw Division Cossack's (2 sqns) Kuban Guard Cossack Regiment (2 sqns) Terek Guard Cossack Regiment (2 sqns) Tsararevich's Ataman Cossack Guard Regiment Ural Guards Sotnia Guard Artillery 1st Guard Artillery Brigade (1-6th Btrys) 2nd Guard Artillery Brigade (1-6th Btrys) 3rd Guard Artillery Brigade (1-6th Btrys) Guard Horse Artillery Brigade (1-6th Btrys) Other Guard Guard
    [Show full text]
  • 10/10/2007 Veterans History Project Content Page 1 Last Name First
    Veterans History Project content 10/10/2007 Last name First name Branch Yrs service Battalion-Regiment Highest rank Conflict Injured POW Honors Notes Ainsworth Thomas Army (Air 1941-1945 332nd Service 1st World War N N African OCS; Africa, Italy; Corps) Group, 12th Air Lieutenant II Campaign w/4 photocopies of Anderson Mary K. Navy 1943-1946 WAVES Lieutenant World War N N American photographs and Junior Grade II Theater and manuscripts Anderson John D. Army (Air 1944-1945 443 AAF BU 1st World War N N Theater Interview by Corps) Lieutenant II Ribbons-5 Kathleen Anteau Robert L. Navy 1943-1946 USS Drexler DD Fire World War N N American 741 Controlman II Area, Antoszews Rita S. Army 1945-1946 361st Station Ist Lieutenant World War Y N Victory Medal, suffered from ki Nurse Hospital II A-P Theater perforated Apel Edward G. Army 1941-1946 Special Engineers Corporal 5th World War N N Interview on mini Grade II cassette Balough Elmer J. Air Force 1947-1950 5th Air Force Sergeant Korea N N Japanese Occupation Bartell Frank J. Navy 1942-1953 Lieutenant World War N N Theater photographs, Junior Grade II (Korea? Ribbons, manuscripts Baron Eugene A. Army (Air 1942-1945 8th AF 351 Bomb Tech. World War N N Air Medal w/3 manuscripts, Force) Group Sergeant II clusters, photographs Basilius Vernon J. Navy 1952-1954 USS Hunt DD674 Petty Officer Korea N N 2nd Class Basler Francis Army 1942-1946 11th Armored Div. T4 Tech World War NNService 3rd Army Sergeant II Ribbons, Battle Batchelor Edward W.
    [Show full text]
  • German 5Th Army Before Verdun March-September 1916
    German 5th Army Before Verdun March-September 1916 5th Army: Crown Prince Wilhelm On Left Bank of the Maas Western Attack Group: General der Artillery von Gallwitz VI Reserve Corps: General der Infanterie z.D.von Goszler 11th Bavarian Division: Generalleutnant von Kneussel 21st Bavarian Brigade: Generalmajlr Ritter von Schoch (replaced on 4/18 by GM z.D.Raab) 3rd Bavarian Regiment 22nd Bavarian Regiment 13th Reserve Bavarian Reserve Regiment 21st Bavarian Field Artillery Regiment 19th Bavarian Pioneer Company 21st Bavarian Pioneer Company 4th Co/6th Pioneer Battalion 11th Bavarian Trench Mortar Company 11th Bavarian Pontoon Engineers 11th Bavarian Telephone Detachment 192nd Division: Generalmajor Kotsch 192nd Infantry Regiment 193rd Infantry Regiment 25th Bavarian Infantry Regiment (2 bns) 1st Landwehr Squadron, 12th Corps District 192nd Field Artillery Battalion 192nd Pioneer Company 404th Trench Mortar Company (may be detached) 11th Reserve Division: Generalleutnant von Hertzberg 23rd Brigade: Oberst Daubert (until 4/3, then Oberst Jetter 10th Reserve Regiment 2 Machine Gun Companies 22nd Regiment 2 Machine Gun Companies 156th Regiment 2 Machine Gun Companies 11th Reserve Field Artillery Regiment 95th Anti-Aircraft Platoon 4th Field Company, 29th Pioneer Battalion 283rd Pioneer Company 211th Trench Mortar Company 6th Reserve Medical Company 12th Reserve Division: Generalleutnant von Kehler (until 4/20, then Generalleutnant von Kahlden 22nd Reserve Brigade: Generalleutnant z. D. von Leyser 23rd Reserve Regiment 1 Machine Gun Company
    [Show full text]
  • The Grand Duke Constantine's Regiment of Cuirassiers of The
    Johann Georg Paul Fischer (Hanover 1786 - London 1875) The Grand Duke Constantine’s Regiment of Cuirassiers of the Imperial Russian Army in 1806 signed and dated ‘Johann Paul Fischer fit 1815’ (lower left); dated 1815 (on the reverse); the mount inscribed with title and dated 1806 watercolour over pencil on paper, with pen and ink 20.5 x 29 cm (8 x 11½ in) This work by Johann Georg Paul Fischer is one of a series of twelve watercolours depicting soldiers of the various armies involved in the Napoleonic Wars, a series of conflicts which took place between 1803 and 1815, when Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821) was defeated at the Battle of Waterloo. The series is a variation of a similar set executed slightly earlier, held in the Royal Collection, and which was probably purchased by, or presented to, the Prince Regent. In this work, Fischer depicts various elements of the Russian army. On the left hand side, the Imperial Guard stride forward in unison, each figure looking gruff and determined. They are all tall, broad and strong and as a collective mass they appear very imposing. Even the drummer, who marches in front, looks battle-hardened and commanding. On the right-hand side, a cuirassier sits atop his magnificent steed and there appear to be further cavalry soldiers behind him. There is a swell of purposeful movement in the work, which creates an impressive image of military power. The Russian cuirassiers were part of the heavy cavalry and were elite troops as their ranks were filled up with the best soldiers selected from dragoon, uhlan, jager and hussar regiments.
    [Show full text]