fbpx
Wikipedia

Battle of Dybbøl

The Battle of Dybbøl (Danish: Slaget ved Dybbøl; German: Erstürmung der Düppeler Schanzen) was the key battle of the Second Schleswig War, fought between Denmark and Prussia.[4] The battle was fought on the morning of 18 April 1864, following a siege that began on 2 April.[5] Denmark suffered a severe defeat which – with the Prussian capture of the island of Als – ultimately decided the outcome of the war,[6][7][8] forcing Danish cession of the duchies of Schleswig and Holstein.[9]

Battle of Dybbøl
Part of the Second Schleswig War

Battle of Dybbøl by Jørgen Valentin Sonne
Date7 April – 18 April 1864
Location
Result Prussian victory
Belligerents
Prussia  Denmark
Commanders and leaders
Prince Friedrich Karl Gen. Georg Gerlach
Strength
11,000 (first wave)
26,000 (in reserve)
126 guns[1]
5,000 (at the defences) 6,000 (in reserve)
66 guns
11 mortars[2]
1 ironclad warship [3]
Casualties and losses
263 killed
909 wounded
29 missing
Total:
1,201
671 killed
987 wounded
3,534 captured
Total:
5,192
Map of Dybbøl 1864. It shows the 10 redoubts which the Danes defended.

Background edit

Following the annexation of the Duchy of Schleswig in November 1863 by Danish king Christian IX (who was also the Duke of Schleswig), Prussia and Austria invaded Jutland in January 1864. The defending Danish infantry was equipped with French M1822 percussion muskets converted to Minié rifling and with Tapriffel M1864s. The Prussian army used the Dreyse needle-gun, a breech-loading rifle.[10]

Dybbøl had also been the site of a battlefield in the First Schleswig War.[11] Dybbøl fort, also called 'Dybbøl Skanser', lies on a short blunt peninsula that defends against access to the fort by land and featured an enclosed pier for the ferry across the Alssund to Sønderborg on the island of Als. It was constructed between 1861 and 1864 and consisted of seven large and three smaller redoubts.[12]

The Dybbøl position was ill-prepared as a result of too much effort expended on fortifying the Danevirke. In particular, it lacked safe shelters in the forward line. Technological developments in artillery (particularly long-range rifled guns) had made the geography of the position unsuited for a lengthy defense. The line had too little depth, and across the waters of the southern inlet (forming the southern part of the peninsula) modern guns could subject the main defensive line to raking fire along its length. This meant that not only was the position effectively saturated during the approximately two months of bombardment, but also most of the defending crew had to be withdrawn far behind the line because of attrition by the bombardment and lack of effective shelters, and when the assault finally came, the line was consequently undermanned by tired troops.

However, the Danes did have one major advantage in that they had more or less unchallenged command of the sea and were able to deploy the modern ironclad Rolf Krake to the scene to support ground forces at Dybbøl with shore bombardments from its turret-mounted eight-inch guns. For much of the siege Rolf Krake was used as a mobile heavy seaborne artillery platform and the Prussians were almost helpless to counter it, since they had no naval forces of their own capable of matching the Danish navy, a fact that sapped Prussian morale. For this reason, some Danish generals thought that the Prussians would not dare to mount a frontal attack.

Battle edit

On the morning of 18 April 1864 at Dybbøl, the Prussians moved into their positions at 02:00. At 10:00 Prussian artillery bombardment stopped and the Prussians charged; shelling from the Rolf Krake did not prove enough to halt them. Thirteen minutes after the charge, the infantry had already seized control of the first line of defense of the redoubts.

Destruction of the retreating Danish forces was avoided when the Prussian advance was halted by a counterattack by the 8th Brigade,[5] until another Prussian attack threw them back; that attack advanced about 1 km and reached Dybbøl Mill, and therefore contributed to the soldiers on the northern flank (the crew at redoubts 7–10), avoiding large losses or capture. It has subsequently been debated why the counterattack only came after half an hour of fighting. Some sources assume that due to the loud sounds that came from the battle, it was impossible to hear the signal, while others suggest that the brigade's commander Glode du Plat hesitated to give orders for the counterattack.

The 8th Brigade fought hard, but when Friedrich Karl deployed additional reserves, it retreated with heavy losses. In that counterattack the 8th Brigade had lost 1,399 of its 3,000 men,[5] but it had allowed the remnants of the 1st and 3rd Brigades to escape to the pier opposite Sønderborg. At 13:30 the last resistance collapsed at the bridgehead in front of Sønderborg. After that there was an artillery duel across the Alssund.

The Battle of Dybbøl was the first battle monitored by delegates of the Red Cross: Louis Appia (1818–98) and Charles van de Velde (1818–98).[13] Danish forces withdrew to the island of Als;[12] the Prussians used the fortifications as a staging point to attack the island in late June the next month.

Casualties edit

During the battle around 3,600 Danes and 1,200 Prussians were either killed, wounded or missing. A Danish official army casualty list at the time said 671 dead; 987 wounded, of whom 473 were captured; 3,131 unwounded captured and/or deserters; total casualties 4,789.[citation needed] The 2nd and 22nd Regiments lost the most. Also, the crew of the Danish naval ship Rolf Krake suffered one dead, 10 wounded.[14] 263 Prussians were killed during the battle. Johannes Neilsen's The Danish German War 1864 (1991) provides the following: 808 dead, 909 wounded, 2,872 captured, and 215 missing for the Danes with 1,201 casualties including 263 deaths for the Prussians.[12][5]

Aftermath edit

 
Redoubt I, the day after the battle.

While the battle of Dybbøl was a defeat for the Danes, the activities of the Rolf Krake along with other Danish naval actions during the conflict served to highlight the naval weakness of Prussia. In an attempt to remedy this, the Austro-Prussians dispatched a naval squadron to the Baltic, which was intercepted by the Danish Navy at the Battle of Helgoland.[15]

A truce followed the battle from 12 May until 26 June, with negotiations beginning in London on a new border between Denmark and the German Confederation. Denmark wanted a border on the River Eider but this was rejected as unrealistic. The war then restarted.[5]

The inflexible attitude of the Danish government in London led to their diplomatic isolation at negotiations in Vienna, resulting in a peace treaty on 30 October 1864.[16] The treaty turned the duchies of Schleswig and Holstein into an "Austro-Prussian condominium, under the joint sovereignty of the two states."[17] The German chancellor, Otto von Bismarck, had taken one of the first steps toward launching the German Empire that would dominate continental Europe until World War I.

Legacy edit

A ceremony of national commemoration is held at Dybbøl on 18 April each year. Danish soldiers appear in period uniforms. The 140th anniversary (in 2004) was a special event in Denmark. Sociologists still refer to the Battle of Dybbøl when commenting on the relationship between Danes and Germans.

The initial reaction in Denmark was difficult to accommodate psychologically. Contemporary newspapers did not blame the soldiers, but the army's return to Copenhagen received no cheering crowds or other acclamations as had occurred after the Danish victory in the First Schleswig War.[18] Because the battlefield itself was annexed into the German confederation, Danes were unable to access it.[18] Immediately following the war, German monuments started being planned.[19] Germans erected the 24-metre Düppel-Denkmal, along with a similar Alsen-Denkmal on the island of Als, to commemorate the battle on what was originally Danish redoubt 4, in the middle of the battlefield.[19] The monument at Dybbøl was dedicated 'in eternal memory to the victorious fallen in the storming on the Dybbøl redoubts 18 April 1864'.[20]

 
Historic Dybbøl Mill with bust of King Christian IX

While the monument does not explicitly stress a German importance to the battle and depicts heroism on both sides,[20] the monument 'has consistently been interpreted as a victory monument'. While the architect may have intended the monument as dedicated to the fallen rather than victory, with no direct references to victory itself, both German and Danish commentators – even at the dedication of the monument – have viewed it as representing victory and the greatness of the German nation.[21] German victory celebrations took place regularly at the monument, with the Kaiser visiting in 1890. Commemorations continued until 1914.[21] German visitation to the battlefield was common, as the place was seen as one of the focal points for unification of the many German states.[22] A large hotel was built near the site in 1885.[21]

 
Evening before the 140th anniversary of the storming of Dybbøl (18 April 1864). Danish historical reenactors on the national memorial in front of a campfire drinking coffee just before the actual performance.

Four communal graves were established for the fallen soldiers. Markers placed in 1865 carry a text in German, 'stating "here rest [number] courageous Danes/Prussians"'.[22] Officers were, over the years, further honoured with burial markers at different locations in the fortifications, with exception of Prussian Private Carl Klinke, who was made into a national hero.[23] Carl Klinke (1840-1864) who is said to have run onto the redoubt carrying explosives and igniting them by the palisades thus killing himself and blowing a hole into the Danish redoubt, was immortalized in a poem written by Theodor Fontane (1819–1898). Composer Johann Gottfried Piefke (1815-1884) dedicated the Düppeler Sturmmarsch to this battle.[24]

The Dybbøl Mill, which had been destroyed during the 1849 battle on the site, rebuilt, and then destroyed again in 1864, was again rebuilt by its owners who had strong Danish sympathies. Danish visitors to the battlefield also visited the mill. Well known Danish author Holder Drachmann visited the battlefield in 1877 and wrote on his emotions felt there in a volume entitled Derovre fra Grænsen, Strejftog over det danske Termopylæ (Als-Dybbøl) [Over There from the Border. Wanderings over the Danish Termopylæ (Als- Dybbøl)]. The book became very popular: 'articulating the emotional essence of the place, it contributed to making the Dybbøl Windmill a Danish national symbol and[] memorial site'.[25] Much of the feelings expressed in Denmark of lost Schleswig land appeared in the late 1870s onwards.[26]

The battlefield itself was returned to Denmark in consequence of internationally administered plebiscites following the Treaty of Versailles.[26] Reunification was celebrated there on 11 July 1920 as a symbol of Danish nationalism; the Danish government also requested that the Düppel-Denkmal be moved to Germany, but was ignored.[26] The battlefield was purchased following donations from across Denmark and donated to the Danish state as a national park in 1924.[27] Further Danish remembrances are conducted regularly and at major anniversaries of the battle and of Northern Schleswig's reunification.[27]

The German Düppel-Denkmal was destroyed after Germany's occupation of Denmark and the end of the Second World War on 13 May 1945, presumably by members of the resistance.[28] The perpetrators were never identified, and this monument has not been rebuilt.[29] The sister German monument on Als, the Alsen-Denkmal was destroyed in June 1945. Both monuments were buried in a gravel pit.[28]

Offers of a joint anniversary with Germany in 1966 were rejected, often explained by lingering resentment by the local population of Germany's conscription of Danes living in Schleswig during the First World War[30] Since Danish accession to the European Union in 1973 and with the passage of time, the view of the battlefield as an exclusively Danish memorial has changed: German soldiers started participating in commemorations in 1998 and marched with Danish soldiers for the first time in 2011.[30]

In popular culture edit

  • 1864 – 2014 Danish television historical drama
  • In The Riddle of the Sands (1903, Erskine Childers), Chapter V, the protagonists of the novel visit a monument to the battle near Sonderburg. Character "Davies" speculates, "It was a landing in boats, I suppose".

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Dybbøl 19. april 1864 Dansk Militærhistorie
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-02-28. Retrieved 2010-05-06.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-10-16. Retrieved 2010-08-22.
  4. ^ Sørensen, Marie Louise Stig; Adriansen, Inge (2015). "Dybbøl: The Construction and Reconstruction of a Memorial Landscape". In Sørensen, Marie Louise Stig; Viejo-Rose, Dacia (eds.). War and cultural heritage : biographies of place. New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 20. ISBN 978-1-107-05933-7. OCLC 908620045.
  5. ^ a b c d e van der Schriek, Jef; van der Schriek, Max (2011). "'Up ewig Ungedeelt!' Schleswig-Holstein 1864–1920". Journal of Conflict Archaeology. 6 (2): 154. ISSN 1574-0773. JSTOR 48601730.
  6. ^ Jürgen Müller (2006), Der Deutsche Bund 1815–1866 (in German), München: Oldenbourg, p. 46, ISBN 978-3-486-55028-3
  7. ^ . Gesellschaft für schleswig-holsteinische Geschichte. Archived from the original on 2012-12-08. Retrieved 2013-03-24.
  8. ^ "Dybbøl, Slaget på" (in Danish). Grænseforeningen. Retrieved 15 July 2015.
  9. ^ Sørensen & Adriansen 2015, pp. 21–22.
  10. ^ "Arms of the Battle of Dybbøl". myarmoury.com. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  11. ^ Sørensen & Adriansen 2015, p. 22.
  12. ^ a b c Sørensen & Adriansen 2015, p. 23.
  13. ^ "Dr. Louis Appia". The History of the Red Cross Movement. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  14. ^ "Table clipping". hheriksen.dk (in Danish).
  15. ^ Gert Laursen. . Danish Military History. Archived from the original on February 25, 2009. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  16. ^ van der Schriek & van der Schriek 2011, p. 155.
  17. ^ Schulze, Hagen (1998). Germany: A New History. trans. by Deborah Lucas Schneider. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. pp. 138–140.
  18. ^ a b Sørensen & Adriansen 2015, p. 34.
  19. ^ a b Sørensen & Adriansen 2015, p. 29.
  20. ^ a b Sørensen & Adriansen 2015, p. 30.
  21. ^ a b c Sørensen & Adriansen 2015, p. 31.
  22. ^ a b Sørensen & Adriansen 2015, p. 32.
  23. ^ Sørensen & Adriansen 2015, p. 33.
  24. ^ . fontanearchiv. Archived from the original on May 6, 2018. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  25. ^ Sørensen & Adriansen 2015, p. 35.
  26. ^ a b c Sørensen & Adriansen 2015, p. 36.
  27. ^ a b Sørensen & Adriansen 2015, p. 37.
  28. ^ a b Sørensen & Adriansen 2015, p. 39.
  29. ^ "Düppeldenkmal". schutzgebiete.de. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  30. ^ a b Sørensen & Adriansen 2015, p. 40.

Sources edit

External links edit

  • (Military History of Denmark)
  • (in English)
  • Map of Battle of Dybbøl (in English)
  • Table of Danish army losses at Battle of Dybbøl (in Danish)
  • (in Danish)
  • (in Danish)
  • AM II, 185 AMS "Düppeler Sturmmarsch" YouTube
  • Heeresmusikkorps 2 - Düppeler Schanzenmarsch 2010 YouTube

54°54′25″N 9°45′29″E / 54.90694°N 9.75806°E / 54.90694; 9.75806

battle, dybbøl, confused, with, 1848, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, schol. Not to be confused with Battle of Dybbol 1848 This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Battle of Dybbol news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message The Battle of Dybbol Danish Slaget ved Dybbol German Ersturmung der Duppeler Schanzen was the key battle of the Second Schleswig War fought between Denmark and Prussia 4 The battle was fought on the morning of 18 April 1864 following a siege that began on 2 April 5 Denmark suffered a severe defeat which with the Prussian capture of the island of Als ultimately decided the outcome of the war 6 7 8 forcing Danish cession of the duchies of Schleswig and Holstein 9 Battle of DybbolPart of the Second Schleswig WarBattle of Dybbol by Jorgen Valentin SonneDate7 April 18 April 1864LocationDybbol DenmarkResultPrussian victoryBelligerentsPrussia DenmarkCommanders and leadersPrince Friedrich KarlGen Georg GerlachStrength11 000 first wave 26 000 in reserve 126 guns 1 5 000 at the defences 6 000 in reserve 66 guns11 mortars 2 1 ironclad warship 3 Casualties and losses263 killed 909 wounded29 missingTotal 1 201671 killed987 wounded3 534 capturedTotal 5 192 Map of Dybbol 1864 It shows the 10 redoubts which the Danes defended Contents 1 Background 2 Battle 3 Casualties 4 Aftermath 5 Legacy 6 In popular culture 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksBackground editFollowing the annexation of the Duchy of Schleswig in November 1863 by Danish king Christian IX who was also the Duke of Schleswig Prussia and Austria invaded Jutland in January 1864 The defending Danish infantry was equipped with French M1822 percussion muskets converted to Minie rifling and with Tapriffel M1864s The Prussian army used the Dreyse needle gun a breech loading rifle 10 Dybbol had also been the site of a battlefield in the First Schleswig War 11 Dybbol fort also called Dybbol Skanser lies on a short blunt peninsula that defends against access to the fort by land and featured an enclosed pier for the ferry across the Alssund to Sonderborg on the island of Als It was constructed between 1861 and 1864 and consisted of seven large and three smaller redoubts 12 The Dybbol position was ill prepared as a result of too much effort expended on fortifying the Danevirke In particular it lacked safe shelters in the forward line Technological developments in artillery particularly long range rifled guns had made the geography of the position unsuited for a lengthy defense The line had too little depth and across the waters of the southern inlet forming the southern part of the peninsula modern guns could subject the main defensive line to raking fire along its length This meant that not only was the position effectively saturated during the approximately two months of bombardment but also most of the defending crew had to be withdrawn far behind the line because of attrition by the bombardment and lack of effective shelters and when the assault finally came the line was consequently undermanned by tired troops However the Danes did have one major advantage in that they had more or less unchallenged command of the sea and were able to deploy the modern ironclad Rolf Krake to the scene to support ground forces at Dybbol with shore bombardments from its turret mounted eight inch guns For much of the siege Rolf Krake was used as a mobile heavy seaborne artillery platform and the Prussians were almost helpless to counter it since they had no naval forces of their own capable of matching the Danish navy a fact that sapped Prussian morale For this reason some Danish generals thought that the Prussians would not dare to mount a frontal attack Battle editOn the morning of 18 April 1864 at Dybbol the Prussians moved into their positions at 02 00 At 10 00 Prussian artillery bombardment stopped and the Prussians charged shelling from the Rolf Krake did not prove enough to halt them Thirteen minutes after the charge the infantry had already seized control of the first line of defense of the redoubts Destruction of the retreating Danish forces was avoided when the Prussian advance was halted by a counterattack by the 8th Brigade 5 until another Prussian attack threw them back that attack advanced about 1 km and reached Dybbol Mill and therefore contributed to the soldiers on the northern flank the crew at redoubts 7 10 avoiding large losses or capture It has subsequently been debated why the counterattack only came after half an hour of fighting Some sources assume that due to the loud sounds that came from the battle it was impossible to hear the signal while others suggest that the brigade s commander Glode du Plat hesitated to give orders for the counterattack The 8th Brigade fought hard but when Friedrich Karl deployed additional reserves it retreated with heavy losses In that counterattack the 8th Brigade had lost 1 399 of its 3 000 men 5 but it had allowed the remnants of the 1st and 3rd Brigades to escape to the pier opposite Sonderborg At 13 30 the last resistance collapsed at the bridgehead in front of Sonderborg After that there was an artillery duel across the Alssund The Battle of Dybbol was the first battle monitored by delegates of the Red Cross Louis Appia 1818 98 and Charles van de Velde 1818 98 13 Danish forces withdrew to the island of Als 12 the Prussians used the fortifications as a staging point to attack the island in late June the next month Casualties editDuring the battle around 3 600 Danes and 1 200 Prussians were either killed wounded or missing A Danish official army casualty list at the time said 671 dead 987 wounded of whom 473 were captured 3 131 unwounded captured and or deserters total casualties 4 789 citation needed The 2nd and 22nd Regiments lost the most Also the crew of the Danish naval ship Rolf Krake suffered one dead 10 wounded 14 263 Prussians were killed during the battle Johannes Neilsen s The Danish German War 1864 1991 provides the following 808 dead 909 wounded 2 872 captured and 215 missing for the Danes with 1 201 casualties including 263 deaths for the Prussians 12 5 Aftermath edit nbsp Redoubt I the day after the battle While the battle of Dybbol was a defeat for the Danes the activities of the Rolf Krake along with other Danish naval actions during the conflict served to highlight the naval weakness of Prussia In an attempt to remedy this the Austro Prussians dispatched a naval squadron to the Baltic which was intercepted by the Danish Navy at the Battle of Helgoland 15 A truce followed the battle from 12 May until 26 June with negotiations beginning in London on a new border between Denmark and the German Confederation Denmark wanted a border on the River Eider but this was rejected as unrealistic The war then restarted 5 The inflexible attitude of the Danish government in London led to their diplomatic isolation at negotiations in Vienna resulting in a peace treaty on 30 October 1864 16 The treaty turned the duchies of Schleswig and Holstein into an Austro Prussian condominium under the joint sovereignty of the two states 17 The German chancellor Otto von Bismarck had taken one of the first steps toward launching the German Empire that would dominate continental Europe until World War I Legacy editSee also Second Schleswig War Aftermath A ceremony of national commemoration is held at Dybbol on 18 April each year Danish soldiers appear in period uniforms The 140th anniversary in 2004 was a special event in Denmark Sociologists still refer to the Battle of Dybbol when commenting on the relationship between Danes and Germans The initial reaction in Denmark was difficult to accommodate psychologically Contemporary newspapers did not blame the soldiers but the army s return to Copenhagen received no cheering crowds or other acclamations as had occurred after the Danish victory in the First Schleswig War 18 Because the battlefield itself was annexed into the German confederation Danes were unable to access it 18 Immediately following the war German monuments started being planned 19 Germans erected the 24 metre Duppel Denkmal along with a similar Alsen Denkmal on the island of Als to commemorate the battle on what was originally Danish redoubt 4 in the middle of the battlefield 19 The monument at Dybbol was dedicated in eternal memory to the victorious fallen in the storming on the Dybbol redoubts 18 April 1864 20 nbsp Historic Dybbol Mill with bust of King Christian IX While the monument does not explicitly stress a German importance to the battle and depicts heroism on both sides 20 the monument has consistently been interpreted as a victory monument While the architect may have intended the monument as dedicated to the fallen rather than victory with no direct references to victory itself both German and Danish commentators even at the dedication of the monument have viewed it as representing victory and the greatness of the German nation 21 German victory celebrations took place regularly at the monument with the Kaiser visiting in 1890 Commemorations continued until 1914 21 German visitation to the battlefield was common as the place was seen as one of the focal points for unification of the many German states 22 A large hotel was built near the site in 1885 21 nbsp Evening before the 140th anniversary of the storming of Dybbol 18 April 1864 Danish historical reenactors on the national memorial in front of a campfire drinking coffee just before the actual performance Four communal graves were established for the fallen soldiers Markers placed in 1865 carry a text in German stating here rest number courageous Danes Prussians 22 Officers were over the years further honoured with burial markers at different locations in the fortifications with exception of Prussian Private Carl Klinke who was made into a national hero 23 Carl Klinke 1840 1864 who is said to have run onto the redoubt carrying explosives and igniting them by the palisades thus killing himself and blowing a hole into the Danish redoubt was immortalized in a poem written by Theodor Fontane 1819 1898 Composer Johann Gottfried Piefke 1815 1884 dedicated the Duppeler Sturmmarsch to this battle 24 The Dybbol Mill which had been destroyed during the 1849 battle on the site rebuilt and then destroyed again in 1864 was again rebuilt by its owners who had strong Danish sympathies Danish visitors to the battlefield also visited the mill Well known Danish author Holder Drachmann visited the battlefield in 1877 and wrote on his emotions felt there in a volume entitled Derovre fra Graensen Strejftog over det danske Termopylae Als Dybbol Over There from the Border Wanderings over the Danish Termopylae Als Dybbol The book became very popular articulating the emotional essence of the place it contributed to making the Dybbol Windmill a Danish national symbol and memorial site 25 Much of the feelings expressed in Denmark of lost Schleswig land appeared in the late 1870s onwards 26 The battlefield itself was returned to Denmark in consequence of internationally administered plebiscites following the Treaty of Versailles 26 Reunification was celebrated there on 11 July 1920 as a symbol of Danish nationalism the Danish government also requested that the Duppel Denkmal be moved to Germany but was ignored 26 The battlefield was purchased following donations from across Denmark and donated to the Danish state as a national park in 1924 27 Further Danish remembrances are conducted regularly and at major anniversaries of the battle and of Northern Schleswig s reunification 27 The German Duppel Denkmal was destroyed after Germany s occupation of Denmark and the end of the Second World War on 13 May 1945 presumably by members of the resistance 28 The perpetrators were never identified and this monument has not been rebuilt 29 The sister German monument on Als the Alsen Denkmal was destroyed in June 1945 Both monuments were buried in a gravel pit 28 Offers of a joint anniversary with Germany in 1966 were rejected often explained by lingering resentment by the local population of Germany s conscription of Danes living in Schleswig during the First World War 30 Since Danish accession to the European Union in 1973 and with the passage of time the view of the battlefield as an exclusively Danish memorial has changed German soldiers started participating in commemorations in 1998 and marched with Danish soldiers for the first time in 2011 30 In popular culture edit1864 2014 Danish television historical drama In The Riddle of the Sands 1903 Erskine Childers Chapter V the protagonists of the novel visit a monument to the battle near Sonderburg Character Davies speculates It was a landing in boats I suppose See also editSchleswig Holstein question History of Schleswig HolsteinReferences edit Dybbol 19 april 1864 Dansk Militaerhistorie Krigen i 1864 Archived from the original on 2009 02 28 Retrieved 2010 05 06 Armored Battery Ship Rolf Krake and the War of 1864 Archived from the original on 2010 10 16 Retrieved 2010 08 22 Sorensen Marie Louise Stig Adriansen Inge 2015 Dybbol The Construction and Reconstruction of a Memorial Landscape In Sorensen Marie Louise Stig Viejo Rose Dacia eds War and cultural heritage biographies of place New York Cambridge University Press p 20 ISBN 978 1 107 05933 7 OCLC 908620045 a b c d e van der Schriek Jef van der Schriek Max 2011 Up ewig Ungedeelt Schleswig Holstein 1864 1920 Journal of Conflict Archaeology 6 2 154 ISSN 1574 0773 JSTOR 48601730 Jurgen Muller 2006 Der Deutsche Bund 1815 1866 in German Munchen Oldenbourg p 46 ISBN 978 3 486 55028 3 Schleswigsche Kriege Gesellschaft fur schleswig holsteinische Geschichte Archived from the original on 2012 12 08 Retrieved 2013 03 24 Dybbol Slaget pa in Danish Graenseforeningen Retrieved 15 July 2015 Sorensen amp Adriansen 2015 pp 21 22 Arms of the Battle of Dybbol myarmoury com Retrieved May 1 2018 Sorensen amp Adriansen 2015 p 22 a b c Sorensen amp Adriansen 2015 p 23 Dr Louis Appia The History of the Red Cross Movement Retrieved May 1 2018 Table clipping hheriksen dk in Danish Gert Laursen The Battle off Helgoland Danish Military History Archived from the original on February 25 2009 Retrieved May 1 2018 van der Schriek amp van der Schriek 2011 p 155 Schulze Hagen 1998 Germany A New History trans by Deborah Lucas Schneider Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press pp 138 140 a b Sorensen amp Adriansen 2015 p 34 a b Sorensen amp Adriansen 2015 p 29 a b Sorensen amp Adriansen 2015 p 30 a b c Sorensen amp Adriansen 2015 p 31 a b Sorensen amp Adriansen 2015 p 32 Sorensen amp Adriansen 2015 p 33 Theodor Fontane Archivs fontanearchiv Archived from the original on May 6 2018 Retrieved May 1 2018 Sorensen amp Adriansen 2015 p 35 a b c Sorensen amp Adriansen 2015 p 36 a b Sorensen amp Adriansen 2015 p 37 a b Sorensen amp Adriansen 2015 p 39 Duppeldenkmal schutzgebiete de Retrieved May 1 2018 a b Sorensen amp Adriansen 2015 p 40 Sources editTom Buk Swienty 2016 1864 The Forgotten War That Shaped Modern Europe Profile Books ISBN 978 1781252765 Nick Svendsen 2010 First Schleswig Holstein War 1848 Helion and Company ISBN 978 1906033446 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Dybbol External links editBattle of Dybbol Military History of Denmark Military History of Denmark Account of the operations of the Ironclad Rolf Krake at Dybbol in English Map of Battle of Dybbol in English Table of Danish army losses at Battle of Dybbol in Danish Krigen i 1864 in Danish Article on the war of 1864 in Danish AM II 185 AMS Duppeler Sturmmarsch YouTube Heeresmusikkorps 2 Duppeler Schanzenmarsch 2010 YouTube 54 54 25 N 9 45 29 E 54 90694 N 9 75806 E 54 90694 9 75806 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Dybbol amp oldid 1217221768, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.