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Royal Prussian Army of the Napoleonic Wars

The Royal Prussian Army was the principal armed force of the Kingdom of Prussia during its participation in the Napoleonic Wars.

A standard of the Prussian Army used before 1807

Frederick the Great's successor, his nephew Frederick William II (1786–97), relaxed conditions in Prussia and had little interest in war. He delegated responsibility to the aged Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick, and the army began to degrade in quality. Led by veterans of the Silesian Wars, the Prussian Army was ill-equipped to deal with Revolutionary France. The officers retained the same training, tactics, and weaponry used by Frederick the Great some forty years earlier.[1] In comparison, the revolutionary army of France, especially under Napoleon Bonaparte, was developing new methods of organization, supply, mobility, and command.[2]

Prussia withdrew from the First Coalition in the Peace of Basel (1795), ceding the Rhenish territories to France. Upon Frederick William II's death in 1797, the state was bankrupt and the army outdated.

War of the Fourth Coalition 1806–1807 edit

He was succeeded by his son, Frederick William III (1797–1840), who involved Prussia in the disastrous Fourth Coalition. The Prussian Army was decisively defeated in the battles of Saalfeld, Jena, and Auerstedt in 1806. The Prussians' famed discipline collapsed and led to widescale surrendering among infantry, cavalry, and garrisons. While some Prussian commanders acquitted themselves well, such as L'Estocq at Eylau, Gneisenau at Kolberg, and Blücher at Lübeck, they were not enough to reverse Jena-Auerstedt. Prussia submitted to major territorial losses, a standing army of only 42,000 men, and an alliance with France in the Treaty of Tilsit (1807).

Reform edit

 
Meeting of the reformers in Königsberg in 1807, by Carl Röchling

The defeat of the disorganized army shocked the Prussian establishment, which had largely felt invincible after the Frederician victories. While Stein and Hardenberg began modernizing the Prussian state, Scharnhorst began to reform the military. He led a Military Reorganization Committee, which included Gneisenau, Grolman, Boyen, and the civilians Stein and Könen.[3] Clausewitz assisted with the reorganization as well. Dismayed by the populace's indifferent reaction to the 1806 defeats, the reformers wanted to cultivate patriotism within the country.[4] Stein's reforms abolished serfdom in 1807 and initiated local city government in 1808.[5]

 
Gerhard von Scharnhorst

The generals of the army were completely overhauled — of the 143 Prussian generals in 1806, only Blücher and Tauentzien remained by the Sixth Coalition;[6] many were allowed to redeem their reputations in the war of 1813.[7] The officer corps was reopened to the middle class in 1808, while advancement into the higher ranks became based on education.[3][8] King Frederick William III created the War Ministry in 1809, and Scharnhorst founded an officer's training school, the later Prussian War Academy, in Berlin in 1810.

Scharnhorst advocated adopting the levée en masse, the military conscription used by France. He created the Krümpersystem, by which companies replaced 3–5 men monthly, allowing up to 60 extra men to be trained annually per company.[6] This system granted the army a larger reserve of 30,000–150,000 extra troops[3] The Krümpersystem was also the beginning of short-term compulsory service in Prussia, as opposed to the long-term conscription previously used.[9] Because the occupying French prohibited the Prussians from forming divisions, the Prussian Army was divided into six brigades, each consisting of seven to eight infantry battalions and twelve squadrons of cavalry. The combined brigades were supplemented with three brigades of artillery.[10]

Corporal punishment was by and large abolished, while soldiers were trained in the field and in tirailleur tactics. Scharnhorst promoted the integration of the infantry, cavalry, and artillery through combined arms, as opposed to their previous independent states. Equipment and tactics were updated in respect to the Napoleonic campaigns. The field manual issued by Yorck in 1812 emphasized combined arms and faster marching speeds.[11] In 1813, Scharnhorst succeeded in attaching a chief of staff trained at the academy to each field commander.

Some reforms were opposed by Frederician traditionalists, such as Yorck, who felt that middle class officers would erode the privileges of the aristocratic officer corps and promote the ideas of the French Revolution.[12] The army reform movement was cut short by Scharnhorst's death in 1813, and the shift to a more democratic and middle class military began to lose momentum in the face of the reactionary government.

 
The Iron Cross, introduced by King Frederick William III in 1813
 
Prussian hussars at the Battle of Leipzig, 1813

The reformers and much of the public called for Frederick William III to ally with the Austrian Empire in its 1809 campaign against France. When the cautious king refused to support a new Prussian war, however, Schill led his hussar regiment against the occupying French, expecting to provoke a national uprising. The king considered Schill a mutineer, and the major's rebellion was crushed at Stralsund by French allies.[13]

French invasion of Russia edit

The Franco-Prussian treaty of 1812 forced Prussia to provide 20,000 troops to Napoleon's Grande Armée, first under the leadership of Grawert and then under Yorck. The French occupation of Prussia was reaffirmed, and 300 demoralized Prussian officers resigned in protest.[14]

During Napoleon's retreat from Russia in 1812, Yorck independently signed the Convention of Tauroggen with Russia, breaking the Franco-Prussian alliance. Stein arrived in East Prussia and led the raising of Landwehr (militia) to defend the province. With Prussia's joining of the Sixth Coalition out of his hands, Frederick William III quickly began to mobilize the army, and the East Prussian Landwehr was duplicated in the rest of the country. In comparison to 1806, the Prussian populace, especially the middle class, was supportive of the war, and thousands of volunteers joined the army. Prussian troops under the leadership of Blücher and Gneisenau proved vital at the Battles of Leipzig (1813) and Waterloo (1815). Later staff officers were impressed with the simultaneous operations of separate groups of the Prussian Army.

The Iron Cross was introduced as a military decoration by King Frederick William III in 1813. After the publication of his On War, Clausewitz became a widely studied philosopher of war.[15]

Wars of Liberation edit

The Prussian, and later German General Staff, which developed out of meetings of the Great Elector with his senior officers[13] and the informal meeting of the Napoleonic Era reformers, was formally created in 1814. In the same year Boyen and Grolman drafted a law for universal conscription, by which men would successively serve in the standing army, the Landwehr, and the local Landsturm until the age of 39.[16] Troops of the 136,000-strong standing army served for three years and were in the reserves for two, while militiamen of the 163,000-strong Landwehr served a few weeks annually for seven years.[17]} Boyen and Blücher strongly supported the 'civilian army' of the Landwehr, which was to unite military and civilian society, as an equal to the standing army.[18]

The Convention of Tauroggen became the starting-point of Prussia's regeneration. As the news of the destruction of the Grande Armée spread, and the appearance of countless stragglers convinced the Prussian people of the reality of the disaster, the spirit generated by years of French domination burst out. For the moment the king and his ministers were placed in a position of the greatest anxiety, for they knew the resources of France and the boundless versatility of their arch-enemy far too well to imagine that the end of their sufferings was yet in sight. To disavow the acts and desires of the army and of the secret societies for defence with which all north Germany was honeycombed would be to imperil the very existence of the monarchy, whilst an attack on the wreck of the Grand Army meant the certainty of a terrible retribution from the new armies now rapidly forming on the Rhine.[19]

But the Russians and the soldiers were resolved to continue the campaign, and working in collusion they put pressure on the not unwilling representatives of the civil power to facilitate the supply and equipment of such troops as were still in the field; they could not refuse food and shelter to their starving countrymen or their loyal allies, and thus by degrees the French garrisons scattered about the country either found themselves surrounded or were compelled to retire to avoid that fate. Thus it happened that the viceroy of Italy felt himself compelled to depart from the positive injunctions of Napoleon to hold on at all costs to his advanced position at Posen, where about 14,000 men had gradually rallied around him, and to withdraw step by step to Magdeburg, where he met reinforcements and commanded the whole course of the lower Elbe.[20]

Hundred Days edit

Prussian Army (Army of the Lower Rhine) edit

This army was composed entirely of Prussians from the provinces of the Kingdom of Prussia, old and recently acquired alike. Field Marshal Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher commanded this army with General August Neidhardt von Gneisenau as his chief of staff and second in command.[21]

Blücher's Prussian army of 116,000 men, with headquarters at Namur, was distributed as follows:

German Corps (North German Federal Army) edit

This army was part of the Prussian Army above, but was to act independently much further south. It was composed of contingents from the following nations of the German Confederation: Electorate of Hessen, Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, Grand Duchy of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, Duchy of Oldenburg (state), Duchy of Saxe-Gotha, Duchy of Anhalt-Bernburg, Duchy of Anhalt-Dessau, Duchy of Anhalt-Kothen, Principality of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt, Principality of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen, Principality of Waldeck (state), Principality of Lippe and the Principality of Schaumburg-Lippe.[24]

Fearing that Napoleon was going to strike him first, Blücher ordered this army to march north to join the rest of his own army.[25] The Prussian General Friedrich Graf Kleist von Nollendorf initially commanded this army before he fell ill on 18 June and was replaced by the Hessen-Kassel General Von Engelhardt.[25][26] Its composition in June was:[27]

  • Hessen-Kassel Division (Three Hessian Brigades)- General Engelhardt
  • Thuringian Brigade – Colonel Egloffstein
  • Mecklenburg Brigade – General Prince of Mecklenburg-Schwerin

Total 25,000[28]

Prussian Reserve Army edit

Besides the four Army Corps that fought in the Waterloo Campaign listed above that Blücher took with him into the Kingdom of the Netherlands, Prussia also had a reserve army stationed at home in order to defend its borders.

This consisted of:[29]

Organisation of the Royal Prussian Army edit

Staff system edit

The Prussian General Quartermaster Staff (General-Quartiermeister-Stab) was initially established by Frederick William III in 1803. It was divided into three departments each corresponding with parts of the state. The Eastern brigade covering the territory east of the Vistula, the Western Brigade covering the territory west of the Elbe and the Southern Brigade covering the south of the kingdom. It was headed by a General Quartermaster (General-Quartiermeister) while a Lieutenant (General-Quartiermeister-Lieutenant) headed each brigade. This lasted until 1807 when the three brigades were merged. During peacetime they were to develop operational plans for defensive and offensive actions in any potential campaign. They were also to produce detailed maps. From 1808 they studied recent campaigns and considered potential future scenarios. In 1810 Frederick William decreed that staff officers serve with different branches so as to gain practical knowledge of soldiering. On mobilisation staff officers would then be distributed among the personal staff of generals in various commands.[30]

Otto Von Bismarck generals edit

Army General Headquarters edit

Ranks of the Prussian Army edit

This chart shows the line Infantry, cavalry, and light Infantry ranking system for the Royal Prussian Army of 1808 onward. General der Infanterie & its equivalent, General der Cavallerie, were unused, however still official, from 1808 until December 1813. Do note that these ranks are in the contemporary German used by the Prussians, not modern German.

Prussian Line Infantry Rank Cavalry Equivalent Light Infantry Equivalent
General-Feldmarschall N/A N/A
General der Infanterie General der Cavallerie N/A
General-Lieutenant N/A N/A
General-Major N/A N/A
Oberst Oberst N/A
Oberst-Lieutenant Oberstlieutenant N/A
Major Major Major
Capitän Rittmeister Hauptmann
Premier-Lieutenant Premier-Lieutenant Premier-Lieutenant
Seconde-Lieutenant Seconde-Lieutenant Seconde-Lieutenant
Fähnrich Fähnrich Fähnrich
Feldwebel Wachtmeister Feldwebel
Sergeant Unterwachtmeister Sergeant
Unterofficer Unterofficier Unterofficier
Gefreiter Gefreiter Oberjäger/Oberschütze
Soldat (i.e. Musketier, Grenadier, etc.) Reiter Jäger/Schütze

The König could also serve as a military commander.

Organization of Army edit

Royal Guard edit

As of 1813, the Royal Prussian Army's Royal Guard consisted of the following regiments:

Regiment Name In Contemporary German Regimental Role
1st Guard Regiment on Foot 1. Garde-Regiment zu Fuß Guard infantry, 2 guard grenadier battalions and 1 fusilier battalion.
2nd Guard Regiment on Foot 2. Garde-Regiment zu Fuß Guard infantry, 3 guard grenadier battalions
Guard Hunter Battalion Garde-Jäger-Bataillon Guard riflemen, 1 battalion of riflemen
Regiment of Guard Foot Artillery Garde-Fuß-Artillerie-Regiment Guard foot artillery, 2 batteries
Battery of Guard Horse Artillery Garde-Reitende-Artillerie-Batterie Guard horse artillery, 1 battery
Horse Guards Regiment der Gardes du Corps Guard heavy cavalry, 4 squadrons

The following regiments were raised after Napoleon's exile in 1815, with the exception of the 2 grenadier regiments which were created in 1814 as a result of merging the provincial grenadier battalions:

Regiment Name In Contemporary German Regimental Role
Guard Riflemen Battalion Garde-Schützen-Bataillon Guard riflemen, 1 battalion of riflemen
Guard Uhlan Regiment Garde-Ulanen-Regiment Guard lancer cavalry, 2 squadrons
Guard Hussar Regiment Garde-Husaren-Regiment Guard hussars, 2 squadrons
Guard Dragoon Regiment Garde-Dragoner-Regiment Guard dragoons, 2 squadrons
1st 'Emperor Alexander' Grenadier Regiment 1. Grenadier-Regiment 'Kaiser Alexander' Guard grenadiers, 3 battalions
2nd 'Emperor Franz' Grenadier Regiment 2. Grenadier-Regiment 'Kaiser Franz' Guard grenadiers, 3 battalions

Uniforms edit

Royal Prussian Army uniforms consisted of a variety of colors. The Regimental colors determined the colors of one's facing color (collar, cuffs, lapels before 1809) and button color.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Citino 2005, p. 110.
  2. ^ Citino 2005, pp. 108–109.
  3. ^ a b c Citino 2005, p. 128.
  4. ^ Craig 1964, p. 40.
  5. ^ Craig 1964, p. 41.
  6. ^ a b Koch 1978, p. 183.
  7. ^ Craig 1964, p. 42.
  8. ^ Koch 1978, p. 181.
  9. ^ Citino 2005, p. 130 cites Walter 2003.
  10. ^ Craig 1964, p. 46.
  11. ^ Citino 2005, p. 130.
  12. ^ Koch 1978, p. 186.
  13. ^ a b Koch 1978, pp. 190–191.
  14. ^ Craig 1964, p. 58.
  15. ^ Citino 2005, p. 143.
  16. ^ Craig 1964, p. 69.
  17. ^ Koch 1978, p. 216.
  18. ^ Craig 1964, p. 70.
  19. ^ Maude 1911, pp. 228–229.
  20. ^ Maude 1911, p. 229.
  21. ^ Bowden 1983, Chapter 2.
  22. ^ Hofschroer 2005, p. 49.
  23. ^ "Pirch I", the use of Roman numerals being used in Prussian service to distinguish officers of the same name, in this case from his brother, seven years his junior, Otto Karl Lorenz "Pirch II"
  24. ^ Plotho 1818, p. 54.
  25. ^ a b Hofschroer 1999.
  26. ^ Pierer 1857, p. 605, 2nd column.
  27. ^ Plotho 1818, p. 56.
  28. ^ Chandler 1981, p. 30.
  29. ^ Plotho 1818, pp. 36–55.
  30. ^ Schmidt 2011, pp. 98–99.

References edit

  • Bowden, Scott (1983). Armies at Waterloo: A Detailed Analysis of the Armies That Fought History's Greatest Battle. Empire Games Press. ISBN 0-913037-02-8.
  • Citino, Robert M. (2005). The German Way of War: From the Thirty Years' War to the Third Reich. University Press of Kansas. p. 428. ISBN 0-7006-1410-9.
  • Craig, Gordon A. (1964). The Politics of the Prussian Army: 1640 – 1945. London: Oxford University Press. pp. 538. ISBN 0-19-500257-1.
  • Koch, H.W. (1978). A History of Prussia. New York: Barnes & Noble Books. p. 326. ISBN 0-88029-158-3.
  • Hofschroer, Peter (2005). Waterloo 1815: Quatre Bras: Quatre Bras. Pen and Sword. ISBN 9781473801240.
  • Hofschroer, Peter (1999). 1815: The Waterloo Campaign: The German victory, from Waterloo to the fall of Napoleon. Vol. 2. Greenhill Books. ISBN 1-85367-368-4.
  • Pierer, H.A. (1857). "Russisch-Deutscher Krieg gegen Frankreich 1812-1815". Pierer's Universal-Lexikon (in German). Vol. 14. p. 605, 2nd column.
  • Plotho, Carl von (1818). Der Krieg des verbündeten Europa gegen Frankreich im Jahre 1815. Berlin: Karl Freidrich Umelang.
  • Maude, Frederic Natusch (1911). "Napoleonic Campaigns" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 19 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 216–236.
  • Schmidt, Oliver (2011). Armies of the Napoleonic Wars. Pen and Sword. pp. 98–99, 110–111.
  • Smith, Digby (2015). Uniforms of the Napoleonic Wars. London: Lorenz Books. p. 211.

Further reading edit

  • Blackbourn, David (2003). History of Germany, 1780–1918: The Long Nineteenth Century. Blackwell Publishing. p. 544. ISBN 0-631-23196-X.
  • Chandler, David (1981) [1980]. Waterloo: The Hundred Days, Osprey Publishing.
  • Clark, Christopher (2006). Iron Kingdom: The Rise and Downfall of Prussia 1600–1947. Cambridge: Belknap Press of Harvard. pp. 776. ISBN 0-674-02385-4.
  • Fulbrook, Mary (1983). Piety and Politics: Religion and the Rise of Absolutism in England, Wurttemberg and Prussia. Cambridge University Press. pp. 223. ISBN 0-521-27633-0.
  • MacDonogh, Giles (2001). Frederick the Great: A Life in Deed and Letters. New York: St. Martin's Griffin. p. 436. ISBN 0-312-27266-9.
  • Reiners, Ludwig (1960). Frederick the Great, a Biography. Translated by Lawrence P. R. Wilson. New York: G. P. Putnam & Sons.
  • Ritter, Gerhard (1974). Frederick the Great: A Historical Profile. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 207. ISBN 0-520-02775-2.
  • Summerfield, Stephen (2009). Prussian Infantry 1808-1840: Volume 1 Line and Guard 1808-1814. Partizan Press. ISBN 978-1-85818-583-5.
  • Summerfield, Stephen (2009). Prussian Infantry 1808-1840: Volume 2 Jager, Reserve, Freikorps and New Regiments. Partizan Press. ISBN 978-1-85818-584-2.
  • Walter, Dierk (2003). Preussische Heeresreformen 1807–1870: Militärische Innovation und der Mythos der "Roonschen Reform". Paderborn: Schöningh. OCLC 249071210. — dissertation of the University of Bern (2001)

royal, prussian, army, napoleonic, wars, royal, prussian, army, principal, armed, force, kingdom, prussia, during, participation, napoleonic, wars, standard, prussian, army, used, before, 1807frederick, great, successor, nephew, frederick, william, 1786, relax. The Royal Prussian Army was the principal armed force of the Kingdom of Prussia during its participation in the Napoleonic Wars A standard of the Prussian Army used before 1807Frederick the Great s successor his nephew Frederick William II 1786 97 relaxed conditions in Prussia and had little interest in war He delegated responsibility to the aged Charles William Ferdinand Duke of Brunswick and the army began to degrade in quality Led by veterans of the Silesian Wars the Prussian Army was ill equipped to deal with Revolutionary France The officers retained the same training tactics and weaponry used by Frederick the Great some forty years earlier 1 In comparison the revolutionary army of France especially under Napoleon Bonaparte was developing new methods of organization supply mobility and command 2 Prussia withdrew from the First Coalition in the Peace of Basel 1795 ceding the Rhenish territories to France Upon Frederick William II s death in 1797 the state was bankrupt and the army outdated Contents 1 War of the Fourth Coalition 1806 1807 2 Reform 3 French invasion of Russia 4 Wars of Liberation 5 Hundred Days 5 1 Prussian Army Army of the Lower Rhine 5 2 German Corps North German Federal Army 5 3 Prussian Reserve Army 6 Organisation of the Royal Prussian Army 6 1 Staff system 6 2 Otto Von Bismarck generals 6 3 Army General Headquarters 6 4 Ranks of the Prussian Army 6 5 Organization of Army 6 5 1 Royal Guard 7 Uniforms 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further readingWar of the Fourth Coalition 1806 1807 editHe was succeeded by his son Frederick William III 1797 1840 who involved Prussia in the disastrous Fourth Coalition The Prussian Army was decisively defeated in the battles of Saalfeld Jena and Auerstedt in 1806 The Prussians famed discipline collapsed and led to widescale surrendering among infantry cavalry and garrisons While some Prussian commanders acquitted themselves well such as L Estocq at Eylau Gneisenau at Kolberg and Blucher at Lubeck they were not enough to reverse Jena Auerstedt Prussia submitted to major territorial losses a standing army of only 42 000 men and an alliance with France in the Treaty of Tilsit 1807 Reform edit nbsp Meeting of the reformers in Konigsberg in 1807 by Carl RochlingThe defeat of the disorganized army shocked the Prussian establishment which had largely felt invincible after the Frederician victories While Stein and Hardenberg began modernizing the Prussian state Scharnhorst began to reform the military He led a Military Reorganization Committee which included Gneisenau Grolman Boyen and the civilians Stein and Konen 3 Clausewitz assisted with the reorganization as well Dismayed by the populace s indifferent reaction to the 1806 defeats the reformers wanted to cultivate patriotism within the country 4 Stein s reforms abolished serfdom in 1807 and initiated local city government in 1808 5 nbsp Gerhard von ScharnhorstThe generals of the army were completely overhauled of the 143 Prussian generals in 1806 only Blucher and Tauentzien remained by the Sixth Coalition 6 many were allowed to redeem their reputations in the war of 1813 7 The officer corps was reopened to the middle class in 1808 while advancement into the higher ranks became based on education 3 8 King Frederick William III created the War Ministry in 1809 and Scharnhorst founded an officer s training school the later Prussian War Academy in Berlin in 1810 Scharnhorst advocated adopting the levee en masse the military conscription used by France He created the Krumpersystem by which companies replaced 3 5 men monthly allowing up to 60 extra men to be trained annually per company 6 This system granted the army a larger reserve of 30 000 150 000 extra troops 3 The Krumpersystem was also the beginning of short term compulsory service in Prussia as opposed to the long term conscription previously used 9 Because the occupying French prohibited the Prussians from forming divisions the Prussian Army was divided into six brigades each consisting of seven to eight infantry battalions and twelve squadrons of cavalry The combined brigades were supplemented with three brigades of artillery 10 Corporal punishment was by and large abolished while soldiers were trained in the field and in tirailleur tactics Scharnhorst promoted the integration of the infantry cavalry and artillery through combined arms as opposed to their previous independent states Equipment and tactics were updated in respect to the Napoleonic campaigns The field manual issued by Yorck in 1812 emphasized combined arms and faster marching speeds 11 In 1813 Scharnhorst succeeded in attaching a chief of staff trained at the academy to each field commander Some reforms were opposed by Frederician traditionalists such as Yorck who felt that middle class officers would erode the privileges of the aristocratic officer corps and promote the ideas of the French Revolution 12 The army reform movement was cut short by Scharnhorst s death in 1813 and the shift to a more democratic and middle class military began to lose momentum in the face of the reactionary government nbsp The Iron Cross introduced by King Frederick William III in 1813 nbsp Prussian hussars at the Battle of Leipzig 1813The reformers and much of the public called for Frederick William III to ally with the Austrian Empire in its 1809 campaign against France When the cautious king refused to support a new Prussian war however Schill led his hussar regiment against the occupying French expecting to provoke a national uprising The king considered Schill a mutineer and the major s rebellion was crushed at Stralsund by French allies 13 French invasion of Russia editThe Franco Prussian treaty of 1812 forced Prussia to provide 20 000 troops to Napoleon s Grande Armee first under the leadership of Grawert and then under Yorck The French occupation of Prussia was reaffirmed and 300 demoralized Prussian officers resigned in protest 14 During Napoleon s retreat from Russia in 1812 Yorck independently signed the Convention of Tauroggen with Russia breaking the Franco Prussian alliance Stein arrived in East Prussia and led the raising of Landwehr militia to defend the province With Prussia s joining of the Sixth Coalition out of his hands Frederick William III quickly began to mobilize the army and the East Prussian Landwehr was duplicated in the rest of the country In comparison to 1806 the Prussian populace especially the middle class was supportive of the war and thousands of volunteers joined the army Prussian troops under the leadership of Blucher and Gneisenau proved vital at the Battles of Leipzig 1813 and Waterloo 1815 Later staff officers were impressed with the simultaneous operations of separate groups of the Prussian Army The Iron Cross was introduced as a military decoration by King Frederick William III in 1813 After the publication of his On War Clausewitz became a widely studied philosopher of war 15 Wars of Liberation editThe Prussian and later German General Staff which developed out of meetings of the Great Elector with his senior officers 13 and the informal meeting of the Napoleonic Era reformers was formally created in 1814 In the same year Boyen and Grolman drafted a law for universal conscription by which men would successively serve in the standing army the Landwehr and the local Landsturm until the age of 39 16 Troops of the 136 000 strong standing army served for three years and were in the reserves for two while militiamen of the 163 000 strong Landwehr served a few weeks annually for seven years 17 Boyen and Blucher strongly supported the civilian army of the Landwehr which was to unite military and civilian society as an equal to the standing army 18 The Convention of Tauroggen became the starting point of Prussia s regeneration As the news of the destruction of the Grande Armee spread and the appearance of countless stragglers convinced the Prussian people of the reality of the disaster the spirit generated by years of French domination burst out For the moment the king and his ministers were placed in a position of the greatest anxiety for they knew the resources of France and the boundless versatility of their arch enemy far too well to imagine that the end of their sufferings was yet in sight To disavow the acts and desires of the army and of the secret societies for defence with which all north Germany was honeycombed would be to imperil the very existence of the monarchy whilst an attack on the wreck of the Grand Army meant the certainty of a terrible retribution from the new armies now rapidly forming on the Rhine 19 But the Russians and the soldiers were resolved to continue the campaign and working in collusion they put pressure on the not unwilling representatives of the civil power to facilitate the supply and equipment of such troops as were still in the field they could not refuse food and shelter to their starving countrymen or their loyal allies and thus by degrees the French garrisons scattered about the country either found themselves surrounded or were compelled to retire to avoid that fate Thus it happened that the viceroy of Italy felt himself compelled to depart from the positive injunctions of Napoleon to hold on at all costs to his advanced position at Posen where about 14 000 men had gradually rallied around him and to withdraw step by step to Magdeburg where he met reinforcements and commanded the whole course of the lower Elbe 20 Hundred Days editMain article Military mobilisation during the Hundred Days Prussian Army Army of the Lower Rhine See also Order of Battle of the Waterloo Campaign Prussian Army Army of the Lower Rhine edit This army was composed entirely of Prussians from the provinces of the Kingdom of Prussia old and recently acquired alike Field Marshal Gebhard Leberecht von Blucher commanded this army with General August Neidhardt von Gneisenau as his chief of staff and second in command 21 Blucher s Prussian army of 116 000 men with headquarters at Namur was distributed as follows I Corps Graf von Zieten 30 800 cantoned along the Sambre headquarters Charleroi and covering the area Fontaine l Eveque Fleurus Moustier II Corps Pirch I 22 23 31 000 headquarters at Namur lay in the area Namur Hannut Huy III Corps Thielemann 23 900 in the bend of the river Meuse headquarters Ciney and disposed in the area Dinant Huy Ciney IV Corps Bulow 30 300 with headquarters at Liege and cantoned around it German Corps North German Federal Army edit This army was part of the Prussian Army above but was to act independently much further south It was composed of contingents from the following nations of the German Confederation Electorate of Hessen Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg Schwerin Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg Strelitz Grand Duchy of Saxe Weimar Eisenach Duchy of Oldenburg state Duchy of Saxe Gotha Duchy of Anhalt Bernburg Duchy of Anhalt Dessau Duchy of Anhalt Kothen Principality of Schwarzburg Rudolstadt Principality of Schwarzburg Sondershausen Principality of Waldeck state Principality of Lippe and the Principality of Schaumburg Lippe 24 Fearing that Napoleon was going to strike him first Blucher ordered this army to march north to join the rest of his own army 25 The Prussian General Friedrich Graf Kleist von Nollendorf initially commanded this army before he fell ill on 18 June and was replaced by the Hessen Kassel General Von Engelhardt 25 26 Its composition in June was 27 Hessen Kassel Division Three Hessian Brigades General Engelhardt Thuringian Brigade Colonel Egloffstein Mecklenburg Brigade General Prince of Mecklenburg SchwerinTotal 25 000 28 Prussian Reserve Army edit Besides the four Army Corps that fought in the Waterloo Campaign listed above that Blucher took with him into the Kingdom of the Netherlands Prussia also had a reserve army stationed at home in order to defend its borders This consisted of 29 V Army Corps Commanded by General Ludwig Yorck von Wartenburg VI Army Corps Commanded by General Bogislav Friedrich Emanuel von Tauentzien Royal Guard VIII Corps Commanded by General Charles II Grand Duke of Mecklenburg StrelitzOrganisation of the Royal Prussian Army editStaff system edit The Prussian General Quartermaster Staff General Quartiermeister Stab was initially established by Frederick William III in 1803 It was divided into three departments each corresponding with parts of the state The Eastern brigade covering the territory east of the Vistula the Western Brigade covering the territory west of the Elbe and the Southern Brigade covering the south of the kingdom It was headed by a General Quartermaster General Quartiermeister while a Lieutenant General Quartiermeister Lieutenant headed each brigade This lasted until 1807 when the three brigades were merged During peacetime they were to develop operational plans for defensive and offensive actions in any potential campaign They were also to produce detailed maps From 1808 they studied recent campaigns and considered potential future scenarios In 1810 Frederick William decreed that staff officers serve with different branches so as to gain practical knowledge of soldiering On mobilisation staff officers would then be distributed among the personal staff of generals in various commands 30 Otto Von Bismarck generals edit Army General Headquarters edit Ranks of the Prussian Army edit This chart shows the line Infantry cavalry and light Infantry ranking system for the Royal Prussian Army of 1808 onward General der Infanterie amp its equivalent General der Cavallerie were unused however still official from 1808 until December 1813 Do note that these ranks are in the contemporary German used by the Prussians not modern German Prussian Line Infantry Rank Cavalry Equivalent Light Infantry EquivalentGeneral Feldmarschall N A N AGeneral der Infanterie General der Cavallerie N AGeneral Lieutenant N A N AGeneral Major N A N AOberst Oberst N AOberst Lieutenant Oberstlieutenant N AMajor Major MajorCapitan Rittmeister HauptmannPremier Lieutenant Premier Lieutenant Premier LieutenantSeconde Lieutenant Seconde Lieutenant Seconde LieutenantFahnrich Fahnrich FahnrichFeldwebel Wachtmeister FeldwebelSergeant Unterwachtmeister SergeantUnterofficer Unterofficier UnterofficierGefreiter Gefreiter Oberjager OberschutzeSoldat i e Musketier Grenadier etc Reiter Jager Schutze dd dd dd dd dd dd The Konig could also serve as a military commander Organization of Army edit Royal Guard edit As of 1813 the Royal Prussian Army s Royal Guard consisted of the following regiments Regiment Name In Contemporary German Regimental Role1st Guard Regiment on Foot 1 Garde Regiment zu Fuss Guard infantry 2 guard grenadier battalions and 1 fusilier battalion 2nd Guard Regiment on Foot 2 Garde Regiment zu Fuss Guard infantry 3 guard grenadier battalionsGuard Hunter Battalion Garde Jager Bataillon Guard riflemen 1 battalion of riflemenRegiment of Guard Foot Artillery Garde Fuss Artillerie Regiment Guard foot artillery 2 batteriesBattery of Guard Horse Artillery Garde Reitende Artillerie Batterie Guard horse artillery 1 batteryHorse Guards Regiment der Gardes du Corps Guard heavy cavalry 4 squadronsThe following regiments were raised after Napoleon s exile in 1815 with the exception of the 2 grenadier regiments which were created in 1814 as a result of merging the provincial grenadier battalions Regiment Name In Contemporary German Regimental RoleGuard Riflemen Battalion Garde Schutzen Bataillon Guard riflemen 1 battalion of riflemenGuard Uhlan Regiment Garde Ulanen Regiment Guard lancer cavalry 2 squadronsGuard Hussar Regiment Garde Husaren Regiment Guard hussars 2 squadronsGuard Dragoon Regiment Garde Dragoner Regiment Guard dragoons 2 squadrons1st Emperor Alexander Grenadier Regiment 1 Grenadier Regiment Kaiser Alexander Guard grenadiers 3 battalions2nd Emperor Franz Grenadier Regiment 2 Grenadier Regiment Kaiser Franz Guard grenadiers 3 battalionsUniforms editRoyal Prussian Army uniforms consisted of a variety of colors The Regimental colors determined the colors of one s facing color collar cuffs lapels before 1809 and button color See also editMilitary history of Germany Prussian Army Napoleonic eraNotes edit Citino 2005 p 110 Citino 2005 pp 108 109 a b c Citino 2005 p 128 Craig 1964 p 40 Craig 1964 p 41 a b Koch 1978 p 183 Craig 1964 p 42 Koch 1978 p 181 Citino 2005 p 130 cites Walter 2003 Craig 1964 p 46 Citino 2005 p 130 Koch 1978 p 186 a b Koch 1978 pp 190 191 Craig 1964 p 58 Citino 2005 p 143 Craig 1964 p 69 Koch 1978 p 216 Craig 1964 p 70 Maude 1911 pp 228 229 Maude 1911 p 229 Bowden 1983 Chapter 2 Hofschroer 2005 p 49 Pirch I the use of Roman numerals being used in Prussian service to distinguish officers of the same name in this case from his brother seven years his junior Otto Karl Lorenz Pirch II Plotho 1818 p 54 a b Hofschroer 1999 Pierer 1857 p 605 2nd column Plotho 1818 p 56 Chandler 1981 p 30 Plotho 1818 pp 36 55 Schmidt 2011 pp 98 99 References editBowden Scott 1983 Armies at Waterloo A Detailed Analysis of the Armies That Fought History s Greatest Battle Empire Games Press ISBN 0 913037 02 8 Citino Robert M 2005 The German Way of War From the Thirty Years War to the Third Reich University Press of Kansas p 428 ISBN 0 7006 1410 9 Craig Gordon A 1964 The Politics of the Prussian Army 1640 1945 London Oxford University Press pp 538 ISBN 0 19 500257 1 Koch H W 1978 A History of Prussia New York Barnes amp Noble Books p 326 ISBN 0 88029 158 3 Hofschroer Peter 2005 Waterloo 1815 Quatre Bras Quatre Bras Pen and Sword ISBN 9781473801240 Hofschroer Peter 1999 1815 The Waterloo Campaign The German victory from Waterloo to the fall of Napoleon Vol 2 Greenhill Books ISBN 1 85367 368 4 Pierer H A 1857 Russisch Deutscher Krieg gegen Frankreich 1812 1815 Pierer s Universal Lexikon in German Vol 14 p 605 2nd column Plotho Carl von 1818 Der Krieg des verbundeten Europa gegen Frankreich im Jahre 1815 Berlin Karl Freidrich Umelang Maude Frederic Natusch 1911 Napoleonic Campaigns In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 19 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 216 236 Schmidt Oliver 2011 Armies of the Napoleonic Wars Pen and Sword pp 98 99 110 111 Smith Digby 2015 Uniforms of the Napoleonic Wars London Lorenz Books p 211 Further reading editBlackbourn David 2003 History of Germany 1780 1918 The Long Nineteenth Century Blackwell Publishing p 544 ISBN 0 631 23196 X Chandler David 1981 1980 Waterloo The Hundred Days Osprey Publishing Clark Christopher 2006 Iron Kingdom The Rise and Downfall of Prussia 1600 1947 Cambridge Belknap Press of Harvard pp 776 ISBN 0 674 02385 4 Fulbrook Mary 1983 Piety and Politics Religion and the Rise of Absolutism in England Wurttemberg and Prussia Cambridge University Press pp 223 ISBN 0 521 27633 0 MacDonogh Giles 2001 Frederick the Great A Life in Deed and Letters New York St Martin s Griffin p 436 ISBN 0 312 27266 9 Reiners Ludwig 1960 Frederick the Great a Biography Translated by Lawrence P R Wilson New York G P Putnam amp Sons Ritter Gerhard 1974 Frederick the Great A Historical Profile Berkeley University of California Press pp 207 ISBN 0 520 02775 2 Summerfield Stephen 2009 Prussian Infantry 1808 1840 Volume 1 Line and Guard 1808 1814 Partizan Press ISBN 978 1 85818 583 5 Summerfield Stephen 2009 Prussian Infantry 1808 1840 Volume 2 Jager Reserve Freikorps and New Regiments Partizan Press ISBN 978 1 85818 584 2 Walter Dierk 2003 Preussische Heeresreformen 1807 1870 Militarische Innovation und der Mythos der Roonschen Reform Paderborn Schoningh OCLC 249071210 dissertation of the University of Bern 2001 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Royal Prussian Army of the Napoleonic Wars amp oldid 1187409591, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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