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Hermann von Kuhl

Hermann Josef von Kuhl (2 November 1856 – 4 November 1958) was a Prussian military officer, member of the German General Staff, and a Generalleutnant during World War I. One of the most competent commanders in the German Army, he retired in 1919 to write a number of critically acclaimed essays on the war. Hermann von Kuhl is one of only three recipients to be distinguished with both the "military class" and "peace class" of the Pour le Mérite, Prussia's and Germany's highest honor.[1][2]

Pre-war period edit

Hermann Kuhl was born in Koblenz, Rheinpreußen (Rhenish Prussia), the son of a professor of philosophy at the Jülich Progymnasium.[3] He studied philosophy, classical philology, German studies and comparative linguistics at the Universities of Leipzig, Tübingen, Marburg and Berlin. In 1878 he received his D.Phil. from Tübingen magna cum laude with the dissertation De Saliorum Carminibus. During his studies, he was a member of the University of Leipzig's singing group St. Pauli.

On 1 October 1878 he joined the 5th Westphalian Infantry Regiment No. 53 – Köln as a cadet. He was promoted to Leutnant in 1879 and Oberleutnant in 1889 when he competed in the entrance examination for the Prussian Military Academy where he studied from 1889 to 1892. Winning appointment to the General Staff he was seconded to the Staff for six months before becoming a company commander in Grenadier Regiment Nr. 3 in Königsberg East Prussia.

Finally in 1897 he returned to the Prussian Military Academy in Berlin as an instructor and concurrently served as a member of the Third Department of the General Staff, which monitored France, Britain, and the Low Countries. The intelligence from this department was essential for the development of Feldmarschall Alfred Graf von Schlieffen's Plan. Kuhl's career flourished because he met the high standards of the demanding Schlieffen, who predicted that he would become a "great captain of the future".[4] In 1899 he was promoted to Major and married. He learned much participating in Schleiffen's staff rides and war games. After Schlieffen's retirement Kuhl became head of the Third Department and was promoted to lieutenant colonel and then colonel. His first major publication, on Bonaparte's Campaign of 1796, appeared in 1902.[5]

Further promotion depended on further command experience, so the new Chief of the General Staff Helmuth von Moltke persuaded the Kaiser's War Cabinet to appoint him to command the 25th Infantry Brigade Münster. A day later, on 4 June 1912 Kuhl was promoted to Generalmajor. A year later during the 25th anniversary celebration of the reign of Kaiser Wilhelm II he was knighted and thereby became von Kuhl. On 1 January 1914 he returned to the General Staff as an Oberquartiermeister.

World War I edit

At the outbreak of World War I on 2 August 1914, von Kuhl became Chief of Staff in General Alexander von Kluck's First Army which was the crucial right flank of the swinging door in the Schlieffen Plan. Kluck regarded him as

a notable man, of most energetic character and wide views. Mentally and physically he was imperturbable, and, in addition to an extremely cultivated mind, he possessed a personal bravery on the battlefield which from time to time evoked a caution from the Army Commander.[6]

By adroit staff planning they squeezed their 320,000 men through a 10 km (6.2 mi) strip of land between Liege and the Dutch border. Pivoting down into France they swept back the British Expeditionary Force. Shortly thereafter they had reached the Marne River and were transferring men to their right flank to fend off a French thrust from Paris. With the tip of the Eiffel Tower on the horizon, they were sure that "complete victory beckoned"[7] Nonetheless they were ordered to retreat because of concern about the gap between their right flank and the German Second Army — abandoning the Schlieffen Plan.[8] Kuhl always maintained that the retreat was a disastrous, unnecessary failure of nerve.[7] He was promoted to Generalleutnant on 18 April 1915. On 22 September in that same year, he became chief of staff in General Max von Fabeck's Twelfth Army, which was shifted to the Eastern Front. Next starting on 24 November 1915 he served in the same capacity in the Sixth Army on the Western Front, which was commanded by General Crown Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria. Rupprecht's prewar career was in the Bavarian Army. For exemplary service during the Battle of the Somme Kuhl received the Pour le Mérite on 28 August 1916.

At the end of August 1916 Rupprecht was given command of Army Group Crown Prince Rupprecht (German: Heeresgruppe "Kronprinz Rupprecht) with Kuhl as chief of staff. Rupprecht was one of four senior members of German royal families who were appointed army group commanders; he was regarded as difficult: according to Chief of the General Staff Erich von Falkenhayn: "One minute he is extraordinarily optimistic, the next terribly down.",[9] which made Kuhl especially important. The Army Group was responsible for the Ypres Salient; their major challenge was to funnel in the reserves to counter the British attacks. Kuhl received the Kingdom of Bavaria's highest purely military honor, the Military Order of Max Joseph, on 13 December 1916. By then Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg and General Erich Ludendorff had taken command. In 1917 the Germans again fought bitter defensive battles in the west, while in the east they drove the Russians out of the war.

Hence at the beginning of 1918 they outnumbered their opponents in the west and they were determined to attack for victory. Kuhl's proposal for an attack on the vital British railroads in Flanders was accepted, but while waiting for the ground to dry there, in March 1918 they smashed through the southern British front near Cambrai, using troops from the two armies on the southern flank of Army Group Rupprecht. Their success was so overwhelming that they extended the attack, but failed to separate the French and British armies and depleted resources intended for Flanders. When they did attack there they smashed through the British and Portuguese lines, but were stopped short of their strategic goal. To drain allied reserves from Flanders, the Germans shifted direction to hit the French in the south, once again shredding through their opponents lines, but failing to smash their will to resist. The Germans were about to attack again in Flanders so Kuhl, Rupprecht and their artillery commanders were meeting with Ludendorff to finalize the plans for the opening barrage when they learned by telephone that a joint French and American assault had shredded the German flank in the south. As Rupprecht wrote in his diary "no doubt we have passed the high point of this year's achievements". They all realized that they lacked the resources for continuing their attacks, so they went on the defensive.[10]

After their defeat at the Battle of Amiens on 11 August 1918, Rupprecht and his staff recognized that Germany's position had become hopeless. Their headquarters had moved to Tournai (24 April 1918), now they retreated to Mons (2 September 1918) and finally to Brussels (17 October 1918), reflecting the long withdrawal from the Western Front and the final collapse of the German Army. Rupprecht resigned his post on 11 November 1918. For the march back to Germany, the Army Group was designated "A" (German: Heeresgruppe A) and Kuhl was made General der Infanterie to oversee its orderly demobilization. Following this final military assignment, he retired.

Post-war period edit

In retirement, von Kuhl published books and numerous essays, articles and reviews about leadership problems on the Western Front during the war. He discussed the Schlieffen Plan in 1920, in an article written for general readers entitled Why did the Marne Campaign Fail? This sparked a debate concerning German strategy that continued throughout the 1920s and early 1930s, and again in the 1950s.[11] Perhaps his most popular book in its day was The German General Staff in the Preparation and Conduct of the World War (1920), republished several times. He also wrote an essay The World War in the Judgment of our Enemies (1922). He was a member of the commission to oversee the publication of the official German history of the war.[12] A string of notable works[13][14][15] was capped in 1929 when he published Weltkrieg 1914–1918, two extensive volumes covering the entire war, which firmly established his reputation as a historian.[16]

In the 1920s von Kuhl was appointed to the Historical Commission of the Reich Archives and gave evidence to the Weimar Republic's Parliamentary inquiries on the reasons for the military collapse of 1918.[17] In his testimony, von Kuhl concluded

The German offensive of spring 1918 had to battle with severe challenges... The mobility of the army was limited. Front-line units were gradually exhausted, while the enemy's combat power grew substantially through the arrival of the Americans and through the new means of combat – the tank.[18]

This stands in contrast to General Erich Ludendorff who spent his post-war years promoting a stab-in-the-back legend that blamed the German defeat without an honorable peace on Marxists and Republicans at home.[19] Military historian Hans Meier-Welcker summed up von Kuhl this way

For a deep historical understanding of the world war, even if not free of temporal apology, he performed a significant contribution.[20]

For his postwar work, von Kuhl was awarded the Pour le Mérite für Wissenschaften und Künste (English: Order of Merit in the Sciences and Arts) in 1924, Germany's highest civilian decoration.[21] Hermann von Kuhl spent his last few years living with his nephew in Frankfurt am Main. He died there on 4 November 1958 at the age of 102.

In an obituary, German historian Gerhard Ritter called him "the last of the officers of the old imperial army who had already held a senior command in 1914".[22]

Awards edit

Dates of ranks edit

Works by von Kuhl edit

  • Der deutsche Generalstab in Vorbereitung und Durchführung des Weltkrieges. Mittler, Berlin 1920 (online).
  • Der Marnefeldzug 1914. Mittler, Berlin 1921 (online).
  • Ursachen des Zusammenbruchs: Entstehung, Durchführung und Zusammenbruch der Offensive von 1918. Hobbing, Berlin 1923.
  • "Unity of Command Among the Central Powers" in: Foreign Affairs September, 1923 (online) at foreignaffairs.com
  • Der Weltkrieg 1914–1918. Dem deutschen Volke dargestellt. 2 Bände. Tradition W. Kolk, Berlin 1929.
  • with General [Walter Friedrich Adolf] von Bergmann, Movements and Supply of the German First Army During August and September, 1914 (Fort Leavenworth: Command and General Staff School Press, 1929). (Online).

References edit

  1. ^ a b William E. Hamelman: The History of the Prussian Pour le Mérite Order, Volume III (1888–1918) Matthäus Publishers, 1986
  2. ^ History of the Pour le Mérite at pourlemerite.org, Retrieved 28 April 2012.
  3. ^ Foley, Robert T. (2008). "Hermann von Kuhl". In Zabecki, Maj. Gen. David T. (ed.). Chief of Staff. Annapolis MD: Naval Institute Press. pp. 147–161.
  4. ^ Foley, 2008, p. 152.
  5. ^ von Kuhl, Hermann (1902). Bonapartes erster Feldzug 1796, der Ausgangspunkt moderner Kriegführung. Berlin.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  6. ^ Kluck, Alexander von (1920). The march on Paris and the battle of the Marne,1914. London: E. Arnold. p. 6.
  7. ^ a b Foley, 2008, p. 155.
  8. ^ Hermann, von Kuhl (1921). Der Marnefeldzug 1914. Berlin: E. S. Mittler.
  9. ^ Foley, 2008, p. 156.
  10. ^ Kronprinz Rupprecht von Bayern (1919). Mein Kriegstagbuch. Vol. 2. Munich: Deutscher National Verlag U. G. München. p. 422.
  11. ^ Zuber, Terence (2004). German war planning, 1891-1914 : Sources and Interpretations. Woodbridge: Boydell Press. p. 2. ISBN 1-84383-108-2.
  12. ^ Foley, 2008, p. 159.
  13. ^ Kuhl, Hermann von (1921). Französisch-englische Kritik des Weltkrieges. Berlin: Militär-Wochenblatt. Jahrg. 105. Beiheft 4.
  14. ^ Kuhl, Hermann von (1922). Die Kriegslage im Herbst 1918. Warum konnten wir weiterkämpfen? ... Eine Entgegnung auf die Schrift von Adolf Köster; Konnten wir im Herbst 1918 weiterkämpfen?. Berlin: E. S. Mittler.
  15. ^ Kuhl, Hermann von (1920). Der deutsche Generalstab in Vorbereitung und Durchführung des Weltkrieges. Berlin: E. S. Mittler.
  16. ^ a b Hermann von Kuhl at the Pour le Mérite für Wissenschaft und Künste Official website (in German), Retrieved 28 April 2012.
  17. ^ Lutz, Ralph Haswell (1934). The Causes of the German Collapse in 1918. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
  18. ^ Ekins, ed. (2010). 1918 – Year of Victory: The End of the Great War and the Shaping of History. Auckland: Moonrising.
  19. ^ Watson, Alexander (2008). "6". Enduring the Great War: Combat, Morale and Collapse in the German and British Armies, 1914–1918. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  20. ^ Meier-Welcker, Hans. Kuhl. Neue Deutsche Biographie.
  21. ^ G. Ritter Orden Pour le mérite f. Wiss. u. Künste, Speeches & Memorial Words Vol. III, 1958/59, pp. 85–97.
  22. ^ Ritter, Gerhard (1958). Gedenkworte für Hermann von Kuhl (PDF) (in German). Orden Pour le Mérite für Wissenschaft und Künste. p. 85.
  23. ^ Oakleaves awards 30 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine at pourlemerite.org, Retrieved 28 April 2012
  24. ^ Wolfgang Schütz: Koblenzer Köpfe. Personen der Stadtgeschichte – Namensgeber für Straßen und Plätze. 2. Auflage. Verlag für Anzeigenblätter, Mülheim-Kärlich 2005. (in German)

Literature edit

  • Hans Meier-Welcker: "General der Infanterie v. Kuhl 96 Jahre alt". In: Wehrwissenschaftlche Rundschau. Band 2, 1952, Heft 11, p. 550.

External links edit

Military offices
Preceded by
?
Commander, 25. Infantry Brigade Münster
3 June 1913 – 2 August 1914
Succeeded by
?
Preceded by
Formed from VIII Army Inspectorate
(VIII. Armee-Inspektion)
Chief of Staff, 1st Army
2 August 1914 – 21 September 1914
Succeeded by
?
Preceded by
?
Chief of Staff, 12th Army
22 September 1915 – 23 November 1915
Succeeded by
?
Preceded by
?
Chief of Staff, 6th Army
24 November 1915 – 27 August 1916
Succeeded by
?
Preceded by
?
Chief of Staff
Army Group Kronprinz Rupprecht

24 November 1915 – 11 November 1918
Succeeded by
Dissolved
Preceded by
Formed from Army Group
Kronprinz Rupprecht
General der Infanterie
Army Group A

12 November 1918 – 11 January 1919
Succeeded by
Dissolved

hermann, kuhl, hermann, josef, kuhl, november, 1856, november, 1958, prussian, military, officer, member, german, general, staff, generalleutnant, during, world, most, competent, commanders, german, army, retired, 1919, write, number, critically, acclaimed, es. Hermann Josef von Kuhl 2 November 1856 4 November 1958 was a Prussian military officer member of the German General Staff and a Generalleutnant during World War I One of the most competent commanders in the German Army he retired in 1919 to write a number of critically acclaimed essays on the war Hermann von Kuhl is one of only three recipients to be distinguished with both the military class and peace class of the Pour le Merite Prussia s and Germany s highest honor 1 2 Hermann von KuhlKuhl in 1914Born2 November 1856Koblenz Kingdom of PrussiaDied4 November 1958 1958 11 04 aged 102 Frankfurt am Main GermanyAllegiance Prussia German Empire Weimar RepublicService wbr branchPrussian ArmyYears of service1878 1919RankGeneral der InfanterieCommands heldChief of Staff 1st Army 12th Army 6th Army Army Group Kronprinz Rupprecht Army Group ABattles warsWorld War I Battle of the Marne 1914 Battle of the Somme 1916 Battle of Passchendaele 1917 Battle of Messines Battle of Pilckem Ridge Battle of the Menin Road Ridge Battle of BroodseindeAwardsPour le Merite with Oakleaves 1916 Military Order of Max Joseph 1916 Order of the Red Eagle 1918 Pour le Merite f Wiss u Kunste 1924 Other workAuthor Military historian Contents 1 Pre war period 2 World War I 3 Post war period 4 Awards 5 Dates of ranks 6 Works by von Kuhl 7 References 8 Literature 9 External linksPre war period editHermann Kuhl was born in Koblenz Rheinpreussen Rhenish Prussia the son of a professor of philosophy at the Julich Progymnasium 3 He studied philosophy classical philology German studies and comparative linguistics at the Universities of Leipzig Tubingen Marburg and Berlin In 1878 he received his D Phil from Tubingen magna cum laude with the dissertation De Saliorum Carminibus During his studies he was a member of the University of Leipzig s singing group St Pauli On 1 October 1878 he joined the 5th Westphalian Infantry Regiment No 53 Koln as a cadet He was promoted to Leutnant in 1879 and Oberleutnant in 1889 when he competed in the entrance examination for the Prussian Military Academy where he studied from 1889 to 1892 Winning appointment to the General Staff he was seconded to the Staff for six months before becoming a company commander in Grenadier Regiment Nr 3 in Konigsberg East Prussia Finally in 1897 he returned to the Prussian Military Academy in Berlin as an instructor and concurrently served as a member of the Third Department of the General Staff which monitored France Britain and the Low Countries The intelligence from this department was essential for the development of Feldmarschall Alfred Graf von Schlieffen s Plan Kuhl s career flourished because he met the high standards of the demanding Schlieffen who predicted that he would become a great captain of the future 4 In 1899 he was promoted to Major and married He learned much participating in Schleiffen s staff rides and war games After Schlieffen s retirement Kuhl became head of the Third Department and was promoted to lieutenant colonel and then colonel His first major publication on Bonaparte s Campaign of 1796 appeared in 1902 5 Further promotion depended on further command experience so the new Chief of the General Staff Helmuth von Moltke persuaded the Kaiser s War Cabinet to appoint him to command the 25th Infantry Brigade Munster A day later on 4 June 1912 Kuhl was promoted to Generalmajor A year later during the 25th anniversary celebration of the reign of Kaiser Wilhelm II he was knighted and thereby became von Kuhl On 1 January 1914 he returned to the General Staff as an Oberquartiermeister World War I editAt the outbreak of World War I on 2 August 1914 von Kuhl became Chief of Staff in General Alexander von Kluck s First Army which was the crucial right flank of the swinging door in the Schlieffen Plan Kluck regarded him asa notable man of most energetic character and wide views Mentally and physically he was imperturbable and in addition to an extremely cultivated mind he possessed a personal bravery on the battlefield which from time to time evoked a caution from the Army Commander 6 By adroit staff planning they squeezed their 320 000 men through a 10 km 6 2 mi strip of land between Liege and the Dutch border Pivoting down into France they swept back the British Expeditionary Force Shortly thereafter they had reached the Marne River and were transferring men to their right flank to fend off a French thrust from Paris With the tip of the Eiffel Tower on the horizon they were sure that complete victory beckoned 7 Nonetheless they were ordered to retreat because of concern about the gap between their right flank and the German Second Army abandoning the Schlieffen Plan 8 Kuhl always maintained that the retreat was a disastrous unnecessary failure of nerve 7 He was promoted to Generalleutnant on 18 April 1915 On 22 September in that same year he became chief of staff in General Max von Fabeck s Twelfth Army which was shifted to the Eastern Front Next starting on 24 November 1915 he served in the same capacity in the Sixth Army on the Western Front which was commanded by General Crown Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria Rupprecht s prewar career was in the Bavarian Army For exemplary service during the Battle of the Somme Kuhl received the Pour le Merite on 28 August 1916 At the end of August 1916 Rupprecht was given command of Army Group Crown Prince Rupprecht German Heeresgruppe Kronprinz Rupprecht with Kuhl as chief of staff Rupprecht was one of four senior members of German royal families who were appointed army group commanders he was regarded as difficult according to Chief of the General Staff Erich von Falkenhayn One minute he is extraordinarily optimistic the next terribly down 9 which made Kuhl especially important The Army Group was responsible for the Ypres Salient their major challenge was to funnel in the reserves to counter the British attacks Kuhl received the Kingdom of Bavaria s highest purely military honor the Military Order of Max Joseph on 13 December 1916 By then Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg and General Erich Ludendorff had taken command In 1917 the Germans again fought bitter defensive battles in the west while in the east they drove the Russians out of the war Hence at the beginning of 1918 they outnumbered their opponents in the west and they were determined to attack for victory Kuhl s proposal for an attack on the vital British railroads in Flanders was accepted but while waiting for the ground to dry there in March 1918 they smashed through the southern British front near Cambrai using troops from the two armies on the southern flank of Army Group Rupprecht Their success was so overwhelming that they extended the attack but failed to separate the French and British armies and depleted resources intended for Flanders When they did attack there they smashed through the British and Portuguese lines but were stopped short of their strategic goal To drain allied reserves from Flanders the Germans shifted direction to hit the French in the south once again shredding through their opponents lines but failing to smash their will to resist The Germans were about to attack again in Flanders so Kuhl Rupprecht and their artillery commanders were meeting with Ludendorff to finalize the plans for the opening barrage when they learned by telephone that a joint French and American assault had shredded the German flank in the south As Rupprecht wrote in his diary no doubt we have passed the high point of this year s achievements They all realized that they lacked the resources for continuing their attacks so they went on the defensive 10 After their defeat at the Battle of Amiens on 11 August 1918 Rupprecht and his staff recognized that Germany s position had become hopeless Their headquarters had moved to Tournai 24 April 1918 now they retreated to Mons 2 September 1918 and finally to Brussels 17 October 1918 reflecting the long withdrawal from the Western Front and the final collapse of the German Army Rupprecht resigned his post on 11 November 1918 For the march back to Germany the Army Group was designated A German Heeresgruppe A and Kuhl was made General der Infanterie to oversee its orderly demobilization Following this final military assignment he retired Post war period editIn retirement von Kuhl published books and numerous essays articles and reviews about leadership problems on the Western Front during the war He discussed the Schlieffen Plan in 1920 in an article written for general readers entitled Why did the Marne Campaign Fail This sparked a debate concerning German strategy that continued throughout the 1920s and early 1930s and again in the 1950s 11 Perhaps his most popular book in its day was The German General Staff in the Preparation and Conduct of the World War 1920 republished several times He also wrote an essay The World War in the Judgment of our Enemies 1922 He was a member of the commission to oversee the publication of the official German history of the war 12 A string of notable works 13 14 15 was capped in 1929 when he published Weltkrieg 1914 1918 two extensive volumes covering the entire war which firmly established his reputation as a historian 16 In the 1920s von Kuhl was appointed to the Historical Commission of the Reich Archives and gave evidence to the Weimar Republic s Parliamentary inquiries on the reasons for the military collapse of 1918 17 In his testimony von Kuhl concludedThe German offensive of spring 1918 had to battle with severe challenges The mobility of the army was limited Front line units were gradually exhausted while the enemy s combat power grew substantially through the arrival of the Americans and through the new means of combat the tank 18 This stands in contrast to General Erich Ludendorff who spent his post war years promoting a stab in the back legend that blamed the German defeat without an honorable peace on Marxists and Republicans at home 19 Military historian Hans Meier Welcker summed up von Kuhl this wayFor a deep historical understanding of the world war even if not free of temporal apology he performed a significant contribution 20 For his postwar work von Kuhl was awarded the Pour le Merite fur Wissenschaften und Kunste English Order of Merit in the Sciences and Arts in 1924 Germany s highest civilian decoration 21 Hermann von Kuhl spent his last few years living with his nephew in Frankfurt am Main He died there on 4 November 1958 at the age of 102 In an obituary German historian Gerhard Ritter called him the last of the officers of the old imperial army who had already held a senior command in 1914 22 Awards editPour le Merite 28 August 1916 1 one of the few recipients of both the military class and the civil class Oak leaves to the Pour le Merite 20 December 1916 23 Commander of the Military Order of Max Joseph Bavaria 13 December 1916 Order of the Red Eagle Knight 2nd Class with Oak Leaves and Swords 12 January 1918 Order of the Crown 1st class with Swords Prussia 22 March 1918 Pour le Merite for Sciences and Arts for his historical studies 5 December 1924 16 Naming of a street in Koblenz Von Kuhl Strasse 24 Dates of ranks editFahnrich 1 October 1878 Leutnant 12 January 1879 Oberleutnant 16 February 1889 Hauptmann 14 September 1892 Major 13 September 1899 Oberstleutnant 10 April 1906 Oberst 24 March 1909 Generalmajor 4 June 1912 Generalleutnant 18 April 1915 General der Infanterie 18 November 1918Works by von Kuhl editDer deutsche Generalstab in Vorbereitung und Durchfuhrung des Weltkrieges Mittler Berlin 1920 online Der Marnefeldzug 1914 Mittler Berlin 1921 online Ursachen des Zusammenbruchs Entstehung Durchfuhrung und Zusammenbruch der Offensive von 1918 Hobbing Berlin 1923 Unity of Command Among the Central Powers in Foreign Affairs September 1923 online at foreignaffairs com Der Weltkrieg 1914 1918 Dem deutschen Volke dargestellt 2 Bande Tradition W Kolk Berlin 1929 with General Walter Friedrich Adolf von Bergmann Movements and Supply of the German First Army During August and September 1914 Fort Leavenworth Command and General Staff School Press 1929 Online References edit a b William E Hamelman The History of the Prussian Pour le Merite Order Volume III 1888 1918 Matthaus Publishers 1986 History of the Pour le Merite at pourlemerite org Retrieved 28 April 2012 Foley Robert T 2008 Hermann von Kuhl In Zabecki Maj Gen David T ed Chief of Staff Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press pp 147 161 Foley 2008 p 152 von Kuhl Hermann 1902 Bonapartes erster Feldzug 1796 der Ausgangspunkt moderner Kriegfuhrung Berlin a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Kluck Alexander von 1920 The march on Paris and the battle of the Marne 1914 London E Arnold p 6 a b Foley 2008 p 155 Hermann von Kuhl 1921 Der Marnefeldzug 1914 Berlin E S Mittler Foley 2008 p 156 Kronprinz Rupprecht von Bayern 1919 Mein Kriegstagbuch Vol 2 Munich Deutscher National Verlag U G Munchen p 422 Zuber Terence 2004 German war planning 1891 1914 Sources and Interpretations Woodbridge Boydell Press p 2 ISBN 1 84383 108 2 Foley 2008 p 159 Kuhl Hermann von 1921 Franzosisch englische Kritik des Weltkrieges Berlin Militar Wochenblatt Jahrg 105 Beiheft 4 Kuhl Hermann von 1922 Die Kriegslage im Herbst 1918 Warum konnten wir weiterkampfen Eine Entgegnung auf die Schrift von Adolf Koster Konnten wir im Herbst 1918 weiterkampfen Berlin E S Mittler Kuhl Hermann von 1920 Der deutsche Generalstab in Vorbereitung und Durchfuhrung des Weltkrieges Berlin E S Mittler a b Hermann von Kuhl at the Pour le Merite fur Wissenschaft und Kunste Official website in German Retrieved 28 April 2012 Lutz Ralph Haswell 1934 The Causes of the German Collapse in 1918 Stanford Stanford University Press Ekins ed 2010 1918 Year of Victory The End of the Great War and the Shaping of History Auckland Moonrising Watson Alexander 2008 6 Enduring the Great War Combat Morale and Collapse in the German and British Armies 1914 1918 Cambridge Cambridge University Press Meier Welcker Hans Kuhl Neue Deutsche Biographie G Ritter Orden Pour le merite f Wiss u Kunste Speeches amp Memorial Words Vol III 1958 59 pp 85 97 Ritter Gerhard 1958 Gedenkworte fur Hermann von Kuhl PDF in German Orden Pour le Merite fur Wissenschaft und Kunste p 85 Oakleaves awards Archived 30 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine at pourlemerite org Retrieved 28 April 2012 Wolfgang Schutz Koblenzer Kopfe Personen der Stadtgeschichte Namensgeber fur Strassen und Platze 2 Auflage Verlag fur Anzeigenblatter Mulheim Karlich 2005 in German Literature editHans Meier Welcker General der Infanterie v Kuhl 96 Jahre alt In Wehrwissenschaftlche Rundschau Band 2 1952 Heft 11 p 550 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hermann von Kuhl Literature by and about Hermann von Kuhl in the Catalog of the German National Library Newspaper clippings about Hermann von Kuhl in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Military offices Preceded by Commander 25 Infantry Brigade Munster3 June 1913 2 August 1914 Succeeded by Preceded byFormed from VIII Army Inspectorate VIII Armee Inspektion Chief of Staff 1st Army2 August 1914 21 September 1914 Succeeded by Preceded by Chief of Staff 12th Army22 September 1915 23 November 1915 Succeeded by Preceded by Chief of Staff 6th Army24 November 1915 27 August 1916 Succeeded by Preceded by Chief of StaffArmy Group Kronprinz Rupprecht24 November 1915 11 November 1918 Succeeded byDissolved Preceded byFormed from Army GroupKronprinz Rupprecht General der InfanterieArmy Group A12 November 1918 11 January 1919 Succeeded byDissolved Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hermann von Kuhl amp oldid 1219953924, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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