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OSPREY· MEN-AT-ARMS SERIES

13liichers rmy
18(3-1815
Text by
PETER YOUNG
Colour plates by
MICHAEL ROFFE
MEN-AT-ARMS SERIES
EDITOR: PHILIP WARNER

~/iichers(' /frmy
1813-1815
Text by BRIGADIER PETER YOU G
DSO. Me. MA, ~-SA • .-.0111<-'., HU~"

Colour plates by MICHAEL ROFFE

OSPREY PUBLISHING Lll\·IITED


Publishcd in 1973 by
Osprcy Publishing Ltd, P.O. Box 25,
707 Oxford Road, Reading, Berkshire
\tl Copyright 1973 Osprey Publishing Limited
This book is copyrighted under the Berne
Convention. All rights reserved. Apart from any
fair dealing for thc purpose of private study,
raearch, criticism or rcvicw, as permitted under the
Copyright Act, 1956, no part of this publication
may Ix: rcproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or
transmitted in any form or by any mcans, electronic,
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Ix: addressed to the Publishers.

ISUS 0 85°,),51175

I wish to pay tribute to the uniform plates and


notes of F. and G. Bourdicf, those of Richard
KnOtcl and to the work of Illy old friend·the late
Winand Aerts. I am, in addition, much indebted
to my friend Marcus Hinton for permission to uS(:
plates drawn for his series entitled Prints Mililairt.
To my Wife, who since 1956 has typed all my
deathless prose, I can only arx)logize for inRicting
yel another burden upon her.
PETER YOUNG

Printed in Great nritain.


Monochrome by RAS Printers I.inlitcd,
Wallop, Hampshire
Colour by Colour Reproductions Ltd., Billericay.
2
'lJliicl7el:S u1TI1Z)', 18fJ-18f5

War of Liberation it is because to the English-


1tJfrorluctioll speaking reader lhe events of Napoleon's last
campaign have an inexhaustible fascination. It is
moreoversalutary forthe British student of military
In the long struggle with Revolutionary France alTairs to recall that in the majority of our great
<Iod with apoleon, Prussia's share was by no battles we have had the support of trusted allies.
mcans pre-eminent. In successive coalitions she Could Marlborough have won Blenheim without
either had no part at all or played second fiddle to Prince Eugene? Could '""ellington have won
Austria, Great Britain and Russia. But in the Waterloo without Blocher? Those who have fought
final campaigns from IBI3 to 1815 she threw against the Germans in this century have generally
caulion and pedantry to the winds and fell upon acknowledged thaI they were resolute :lnd valiant
the French wilh all the fervour and energy of a enemies. It is as well sometimes to recall that in
modern blitzkrieg. This was due to one man above times past they also showed lhemsdves to be
all, Field-Marshal Prince Blucher, 'the avenging devoted and hard-fighting allies.
thulldcrboll'. whose dynamic energy would have P.Y.
been remarkable in an officer of half his years. The
most pugnacious of generals, the mosl loyal' of
colleagues, BlUcher led or drove his raw regiments
to the fight with relentless vigour. The fumbling
uncertainty displayed b)· the Prussian High
Command in 1806 was not for him. His army of
1813-15, Ihough it contained perhaps half the
officer corps that had fought at Jena and Auer-
stadt, was nothing like the creaking machine that
Karl Wilhelm Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick had
inherited from his uncle Frederick the Greal.
The soldiers of the War of Liberation showed up
poorly on the parade ground, but they made up in
enthusiasm for any lack of the old Prussian
precision in matters of drill and lurn-out.
This book docs not concentrate on the Waterloo
campaign to the exclusion of the camp.aigns of
1813 and 1814, for it was at Dennt:witz, on the
Katzbaeh and at Leipzig that the Prussian Army
recovered the self-respect which it had lost not SO
much on the battlefields of Jena and Auerstildt
as in the shameful surrenders that followed. The
Prussian Army of 1813 was very different, not only
in appearance but in spirit, from that of 1806. But
it was the same as that of 1815: it was in fact Napoleon reed ..l... lhe Q,,"''' of Pna..la aC TU.h. Fro...
BlUcher's Army. ffrather more dctail is here given che painw.e hy Nicola•• Low•• F.....90i. Co. .e
The Treaty of Tn.it reduced Pru••la co ehe .cae.s of a
about the campaign of 1815 than about those ohhe second..:.la•• powe..

3
GIlIY}//O!Of)' 28 June Scharnhorst dies of a wound received
at Grossgorschen.
1806 12 Aug. Austria declares war.
14 Del. Dattles ofJena and Auerstadt. 23 Aug. Dattle of Grossbeeren; Bernadotte
27 Oct. Napoleon enters Berlin. defeats Oudinot.
24 Nov. BlUcher surrenders near Lubeck. 26 Aug. Baule of Ihe Kiltzbach; Blucher routs
1807 Macdonald.
8 Feb. BaltIc of Eylau, General Lestocq's 26-27 Aug. Battle of Dresden; Napoleon wins a
Corps takes parl. laClical victory.
,8"'} Battlc of Kulm; the Allies annihilate
'31May Schill's death at Stralsund. Vandamme's Corps.
5-6]uly Battle of Wagram. 6 Sepl. Baule of Dcnnewitz.
.810 16- 19 0CI . The Battle of the Nations: Leipzig;
IgJuly Death of Queen Louise of Prussia. Napoleon is heavily defeated.
r8n 30--31 Oct. Battle of Hanau; . apoleon defeats

30 Dec. The Convention ofTauroggen; Yorck 'Vrede's Bavarians.


withdraws the Prussian contingent 21 Dec. The Allies cross the Rhine.
from Ihe Grande Armie. 181 4
181 3 Jan.-Apr. The Campaign of France.
23 Feb. Frederick William III determines 10 II Apr. Abdication of Napoleon.
break with Napoleon. 18·S
13 Mar. Prussia declares waron France. I Mar. Napoleon lands ncar Cannes.
2 May Battle of LOlzen. 16June Ballies of Ligny and Quatre Bras.
20--21 May Battle of Bautzen; apoleon drives ISJune Battles of 'Vaterloo and 'Vavrc.
Wiltgenslcin from the field. 22 June Second abdication of apolcon.
21 June Balilc of Viloria (Spain). I July Combal al Versailles.

'Templin, P vldence'•• 806. The Pru..l.a.n Noble G... rd


sharpe.. their ord" on the steps or the Fft..ch Ernbali.y
la BerlIn. Wat colo.. r by F. de Myrhach

4
.
,.'.'"':ll--<"" ._
Queen LoW8a reviewing the Pru5s1an Army in 1806.
Watercolour by F. de Myrbach

Prussia, from being the foremost among the


(9rgal1izatioJl German military powers, had become one of the
least.
'Organization is a necessary eviL' The mobilization of 1813 began on 9 February
VON CLAUSEWITZ when the royal authorities in the temporary
capital at Breslau declared conscription for the
In 1806 the old Prussian Army inherited from regular army. Earlier still, on 28 January [813
Frederick the Great was shattered. The baltlcs of an Armament Commission had been set up to
.Jcna and Aucrstadt broke its body: with the supervise Ihe mobilization and expansion of the
shameful surrenders of Klislrin and other fort- army. Its members included Hardenberg, Scharn-
resses it seemed that its soul also had fled. By the horst and Hake. It was on that date that Scharn-
Treaty of Paris (18oB) the Prussian Army was horsl resumed his old POSI at the head of the War
limited to a strength of 42,000. Department.
In 1804 the King of Prussia had 9,752,731 Royal orders for mobilization were issued 011
subjects living in his domains, ofwhorn 4,860,747 [2 January, I February, and 2 and 18 March
were men. The Canton system of recruiting pc~ 1813. The first, ironically enough, was in response
milled numerous exemptions; but even S0, in to a French request foi additional troops. It gave
1805, there were 2,320,''22 men liable to military a pretext for bringing regiments up to establish-
service. By the Peace of Tilsit (9 July 1807) the ment size and for calling up artillery, pioneers and
population of Prussia was reduced to 4,938,000. reservists.
The loss of rich provinces reduced her terricory By an instruction of 7 Fcbruary it was laid down
from 5,570 to 2,877 square miles. Of her fortresses that subalterns who had served in 1806 and 1807
only Graudenz, Pillau, Kolberg, Glatz, Silbcrburg were eligible for immediate promotion, while any
and Cosel had Prussian garrisons. The rest were capable cadet, or suitable N .C.O. could be
all garrisoned by the French. In less than a year commissioned forthwith.
5
An Mein Volk, by which he set the tone of the war.
Henceforth the struggle was nOl dynastic but
national. In all these measures we may discern
the hand of Scharnhorst, who principally paved
the way for Blucher's campaigns.
The opening of hostilities on 16 March 1813
found Ihe Prussians with the following resources:
FIELD ARMY
1,776 officers; 66,963 men; 20,105 horses;
213 guns.
MEDICAL, TRAIN AND TECHNICAL TROOPS
2,643 men; 3,625 horses.
SECOND-LINE TROOPS
615 officers; 32,642 men; 650 horses; 56 guns.
GARRISON TROOPS
398 officers; 22,277 men; 1,743 horses; 148
On 3 February Hardenberg had announced train (Knechte).
the formation of Volunteer Jager units, appealing
to the propertied classes, who were cxempted from
conscription, to volunteer. This measure brought
in young men of good family, who werc officer
material. In the first months of 1813, 2,798
volunteered and by the summcr the total had
reached 7.800. This was not enough to prove that
the best of the nation were rising spontaneously
10 throw off the yoke of Napoleon, but it was
quitc enough to provide a valuable pool of
subaltern officers.
At first the Jager, who were required to equip
themselves, were given preferential treatment.
But few commanding officers believed in anything
but the strictest disciplinc, and they had thc
Volunteers whipped with the same impartiality
that they bestowed on ordinary recruits.!
The reformers worked hard to cnsure that
every able-bodied man should be liablc to con-
scription, and achieved their cnd in the teeth of a
popular press which declared Ihat the country was
not ready for such a burden, and that the free
Prussian lands wcrc bccoming a police state. But
so far as the military authorities wcrc concerned,
a man was fit if his front teeth met firmly enough
lO enable him to bilc his cartridge.
Prince Eugenc de Beauharnais withdrew his
French troops from Berlin on 4 March. By that
time the alliance with Russia had been signed
(28 February) and on 16 March King Fredcrick
William felt bold enough to declare war on the Garde-Jiiger Baualion. Greenj red facing.; gold lace.
French Empire. Next day he made his appeal, (R. KnCS1el)

6
Left: Queen Lows. of Prussl...; rillbt: Frederick wnn.rn
III of Prussl.... (Enll......,ed by T. Johnson)

The total amounted to 127,394.2 but half the 15 July 40,000 muskets and 8~ million cartridges
men were recruits without much training. There had been received. Cannon, powder, ball, wagons
was little artillery; muskets were hard to come by, and uniforms arrived in quantities. Altogether the
and there were not enough horses. Flints for Prussian Army was issued at least I 13,000 English
muskets were so scarce that the Berlin porcelain muskets in time for the autumn campaign of 1813.
factory was ordered to make trsal~ ones. They were needed, for by June 1813 the Prussian
On 21 April a Landsturm force was brought into Army numbered nearly 150,000 men. The
being. It was to be a guerrilla army, armed with Landwehr, recruiting vigorously, raised a total of
flails, rakes, pikes and axes, and was to carry out a 120,000 men by mid-July;a Lithuania, East and
scorched-earth policy upon the approach of the West Prussia to the Vistula, 20,000 men; Prussia
enemy. It was not uniformed - indeed uniform west of the Vistula, 6,620; Silesia, 49,974; New
for the Landslurm was expressly forbidden. Mark, 7,941; Electoral Mark Brandenburg,
Students of uniform will observe that whereas 20,560; Pomerania, 15,409.
most units of Bliicher's Army wore Prussian blue, In the 1815 campaign the Prussian Army was
many of their shakos and cartridge-belts had a organized into Headquarters and four army
decidedly English appearance. But arms are evcn corps. There were no divisions. Each corps had
more important than uniforms and it is not loo four infantry brigades, each about thc same sizc
much to say that without English weapons the as a French infantry division. Each corps had two
Prussian Army would have been on the same or three brigades of cavalry and between six and
footing as the Landslurm. By the end ofJune 1813 eleven batteries of artillery as well as a company
British arms were arrivinR in the Baltic ports. By of pioneers.
7
The corps varied in strength: t under Duke Ferdinand of Brunswick, taking part
I 11 III IV in a number of sieges and skirmishes. In May
Infantry 29,135 '27,00'2 '22,275 27,459 1794, aged 52, he was promoted major-general.
Cavalry 2,'75 4,47 1 1,981 3,3'2 I He was already known for his energy and his love
Gunners 1,0.')4 1,501 of excitement: 'from drilling his squadron, which
999 1,3°7
Guns 88 80 was quartered at a distance, he would proceed to a
48 88
Pioneers 63 hare hunt or a gay dinner and thai same nigln,
'°4 74 '5' perhaps, to a surprise attack on the enemy, or to
Total 32,568 33,048 25,318 32,'23e the laying of an ambush for the next morning.
h will be observed that Thielmann's Corps (III)
was much weaker than the other three.

'llieaCeatiers
FELDMARSCHALL VORWARTS
TilE AVENGING THUNDERBOLT
(Das Heilige Don1/erwe/ler)

GEBHARD U;RERt:CHT VON Bl.UCHER (1742-1819)


was a native of Rostock, brought up in Mecklen-
burg. When he was 16 he obtained a commission
in the Swedish service, but was soon taken prisoner
by the Prussian Colonel von Belling, who formed a
high opinion of him and took him into his own
regiment. His piOllS commanding officer's prayer
was: 'Thou seest, dear Heavenly Father, the sad
plight of thy servant Belling. Grant him soon a
nicc little war that he may bctter his condition
and continue to praise Thy name. Amen.' It
would be strange if his attitude did not influence
his subalterns.
BWeher is said to have been of a quarrelsome
nature and fond of drinking and gambling. He
also seems to have been somewhat heavy-
handed and when stationed in Poland is alleged
to have tortured a priest in order to extract a
confession. At a time when Frederick the Great
wished the Poles to believe him their benefactor
llus was unwise. Blucher was passed over for Slloe.ian RUloe Battalion. Gr_n, black facinc_ with roed
promotion and, resigning his commission, was pJpinS, yoellow ...oetal buttons. Fro... 180<} to 18u tboe
batt.alion wall in garrJSOft at UepLltz. The Siluian RJBe
told by the King that he mighl go to the devil. He Battalion wa. evidently an excellent unh. It had been
soon regretted his action and repeatedly applied forDled in 1808 from certaJn Ught c:ompanioe. whJcl& had
defended Glatz in 1807. In 181J Jt .aw a sreat d_1 of
to return to the servicc; but in vain. Not until figbting, notably at Kulm, wbere It took two Fnftcb
colour•• At VaucbamplI in 1814 two compaoJes undoer
Frederick died in 1786 was Bliicher, now aged 44, Capt.ain (later Adjutant-General) VOn Neurn.a.n.o fi..ed
reinstated. He was given the rank of major in his .word-bayonet. and- repulsed a ",uperJor force of tbe
cavalry of Napoleon'. Guard. In 1815 the SUe..lan RUle.
old regiment. In 1793 he was serving as a colonel served in Zieten'. (I) Corp... (R. Knlhel)

8
Having temporarily silenced the enemy he would
enjoy himself at Frankfort gambling or going to
the theatre.>~ By 1801 he was a lieutenant-general.
In 1802 Prussia was granted a slice of the
bishopric of MUnster, and Blucher was given
command of the occupying force. Baron Stein, the
famous statcsman and reformer, was president of
the organization commission, and between them
they made such a good job of their unpopular
task that the estatcs and the ecclesiastical authori·
tics asked the King of Prussia to make Blucher
thcir governor. Somewhat surprisingly they had
been impressed by the old hussar's 'knowledge of
local aA"airs, his honesty and uprightness, his
amiability and charitableness, his cleverness and
pcnctration, and his ability to keep the peace
between soldiers and civilians'. $
When in 1803 Mortier occupied Hanover,
BlUcher hastened to Berlin, only to find to his
disgust that his government's attitude was onc of
indifferencc. 'All thc misfortuncs of Germany and
of the Prussian monarchy', he was to declare later,
'are traceable to this event, at the moment so Feldmar.cball Gebhard Leberll'chc von BlUcher, Prince
insignificant.' From this time the words, 'We of Wahl.tadt. Engraving by G. Kruell

must fight France', were constantly on BlUcher's


lips.
At Auerstadt (14 October 1806), at the head of though he have a hundred elephants inside of
his squadron, he had his horsc shot under him. him'.
After extricating himself he asked the King to let In 1809 Major von Schill, one of the heroes of
him lead the Gendarmes to the charge. No sooner the defence of Colbcrg (1806) rose against the
had he been given permission than a counter- French. He was defeated and killed at Stralsund.
Qrder bade him cover the withdrawal of Hohen- Eleven of his officers were court-martialled and
lohe. This he succeeded in doing. When Hohenlohe shot. A number were sent captive to France,
surrendered at Prenzlau Bhicher fought on, branded and compelled to serve in the galleys.
cutting his way through to the Hansa city of Blucher, though in his public utterances he
LUbeck, where after a stiff fight he was compelled disavowed Schill's action, took some goo of the
to surrender, though he was soon to be exchanged survivors under his protection and in consequcnee
for General (later Marshal) Victor. was reprimanded by the King. For a second time
Scharnhorst, who had been with BlUcher in the he resigncd from the Prussian service.
retreat to LUbeck, had discerned in him the To Gneisenau he wrote:
highest military qualities. No other general, in 'God knows with what grief I quit a stale and
his opinion, was fit to head the army of resurgent an army in which I have becn ror fifty years. It
Prussia. 'You arc our leader and our hero,' wrote breaks my heart to abandon a master for whom I
Scharnhorst, 'even if you have to be carried would have given my life a thollsand times. But
before or behind us on a litter.' But, afflictcd by all the same, by God in Heavcn, I will stand no
the disasters of 1806, BlUcher fell sick in body and more slights! I will not be treated as a super·
mind. Boyen tells us that he 'actually believed annuated commander. YOllng~r men shall not be
that he was pregnant with an elephant', to which placed ahead of me! If the King docs not make
Scharnhorst's retort was that BlUcher 'must lead up his mind, if we take no steps to break our
9
At this time Blucher was in command at
Colberg, busy with the fortifications and wilh
training reserves. The French consul at Stcuin
discovered that he had 7,000 men 1110re than he
was allowed and apoleon's ambassador de-
manded his dismissal. On II November 1811 the
King wrote explaining this in as rriendly a rash ion
as he ventured to, sending him 2,000 thalers ror
his travelling expenses, and adding, 'I have it in
mind to place yOll in a position to renew your
activity so soon as there shall be an opportunity.'
At 6g BlUcher can scarcely have thought it likely
that he would be re·employed.
BlOcher withdrew to Stargard where he spent
the winter or 1811-12. While the French were
invading Russia he remained unemployed, com-
plaining that, with Prussia subjected by treaty to
France, 'All is lost and honour too .. .' But with
Scharnhorst. Froan a anedalllon by L. POlich
the ncws that the Grande Arnde had been crippled
chains - well, those who will may wear them, excitement rosc. Early in January 1813 Blucher
not I! I have sacrificed everything ror the state; wrote [Q Scharnhorst:
1 leave it as one quits the world, poor, naked, 'I am itching in every finger to grasp the
and barco But I shall go, wherever it be, with a sword. If his Majesty, our King, ir all the other
quiet conscience and accompanied by many German princes, if the nation as a whole do not
honest rolk.' now rise and sweep rrom German territory the
It is said that he actually oncred his sword to the whole rascally French brood together with
Austrian Archduke Charles, but the King assured tapol eon and all his crew, then it seems to me
BlUcher orhis COIHinucd conlldence and promoted that no German is any longer worthy or the
him gencr.d or cavalry. Gradually the old man's name. It is now the moment to do what I was
wrath subsided. Still, throughout 1809 he was already advising in 1809; namely, to call the
urging the King to throw in his lot with Austria whole nation to arms and to drive out those or
and arter Wagram he did not hesitatc to reproach the princes who refuse and who place them-
Frederick William ror not having dOlle so. selves in opposition even as we shall drive out
During the debacle or 1806 and all the misror- Bonaparte. This is not a question or Prussia
tunes that rollowed, Prussian morale, albeit a alone but or reuniting the whole German
reebte flame, had been sustained to some extent Fatherland and rebuilding the nation.'
by the grijcious, brave and charming Queen What Blucherwas bluntly expressing in hissoldierly
Louise, who was twice the marl lhat Frederick prose, was already being SLing by the pacts or the
William was. Her sad and early death deprived War or Liberation, among them Moritz Arndt:
the Prussian court or its chid ornamcnt. It pro- II path for freedom! Purify the soil!
voked a characteristic explosion rrom General The German soil, oh deanse it with thy blood!
BlUcher: At first Frederick William hoped to preserve
'I am as ir struck by lightning! The pride or peace with France on the principle or 'Live and
womanhood has departed rrom the earth. God let live', but by 23 February Scharnhorst,
in Heaven, it must be that she was too good for Hardenberg and others had made up his mind ror
us! ... How is it possible ror such a succession or him. He would venture to break with Napoleon.
misfortunes to rail un a state! In my present Three days later he wrote to Blucher:
mood I should be pleased to hear that the earth 'I have determined to place you in command of
had caught fire at all four corners!' those troops that are to be the first to take the
10
field. ] order you accordingly to mobilize here been out of his mind; he had little experience of
as speedily as possible. The importance of the handling large forces; he knew little of strategy
commission thus entrusted 10 you will convince or tactics. He could not converse with his Russian
you of the confidence I feel in your military colleagues either in Russian or French. He was
ex~rience and in your patriotism.' fond of gambling and of the bottle.
Blucher's Army of Silesia look the field early in Even if all or some of these charges contained
April, drove in the French outposts, crossed the an element of truth BlUcher's virtues outweighed
Elbe and set up his headquarters in Dresden. them. He alone had the will-power, the drive, the
From the first bartle of the campaign, LOtzen optimism, the sheer guts to carry his raw army
(2 May), his mixture of iron nerve and dash built forwards. His quickness of decision, his presence of
up rhe Blocher legend. mind under fire, more than made up for his con-
'Blucher, with the utmost im~rturbability, re- tempt for planning and cartography. With a Chief
mained, for the mOSI part at points of more or of Staff like Gneisenau to work out the details it
less danger, indefatigably smoking his pipe. When was a positive advantage to lhe Prussians that
it was smoked to the end he would hold it out BlUcher did not concern himself with the minutiae
behind him and call "Schmidt!" whereupon his of military administration.
Ol·derly would hand him one freshly filled and 'Gneisenau, being my chief of staff and very re-
the old gentleman smoked away at his case. liable, reports to me on the manceuvres that are
Once we haired for a time quile ncar a Russian
battery and a shell fell right in front of liS.
Everyone shouted: "Your Excellency, a shell!"
'''Well, leave the hellish thing alone!" said
BlOcher calmly. There he stood until it burst;
then and not till then did he change his position.'
About 4 o'clock he led a desperate attack on the
corps of Ney and Marmont and in the fighting
that followed his horse was shot under him and he
was hit in Ihe side by a bullet. As the surgeon
examined the wound BlUcher feared the worst,
but, learning that it was 110t serious, scarcely had
the patience to let himself be bandaged before
mounting and dashing back into the fray. In the
last cavalry attack, made after dark by a man of7_
who had been in the saddle since dawn, he got
within 200 yards of Napoleon's command post,
and so imposed upon the Emperor's imagination
that he let the Allies depart unmolested. LUtzen
was not much of a victory for the French, who lost
22,000 men to the 11,5°0 casualties of the Allies.
As Blucher elegantly expressed it, 'The French
may make wind as much as they please; they are
not likely to forget the 2nd of May.' •
..... ~
The Tsar, full of admiration, bestowed the ~";";'_~-!:''''''_''''''_oLil.'f!!j- ...;';,
Cross of St George upon Blucher for his services The Bnuo.deDb","I: Cwratlsler RepmeDI. The "sUneDt was
raised a'ter Tn.i, rro.... the r ...maiDS or.u. heavy cavalry
on this occasion, speaking of his 'splendid habit of repmeD'S, and (ousht In the campaJ'1lII o( .81) .....d 18t4
always being present at the point of greatest at Baul>len, n ......den, Kuhn, Lelpzi. and elsewhere. I .. (ull
d..-a a whJte coa'ee waa worn. On campaJp office... wo"
danger. . . .' But despite his bravery at LOtzen, th... blue jack...t kao_ aa the l~ib,oclc .Itd the men wo" a
Bautzen and Hanau the old gentleman had his blue litn»lca, with rtd (adn.a. With the white coat"
U.hl btue raci.roa:s were worn. The ...ddle-doths are red
critics. He was too old; he was out of date; he had with }""-lIow lri.... mi..... CR. Knl>tel)

II
to be executed and the marches that are to be ' ... Blucher, although he might readily over-
performed. Once convinced that he is right I look indiscipline among brave soldiers, came
drive my troops through hell towards the goal down very severely on weaklings and usually
and never stop until the object has been achieved punished them by his caustic humour or by
- yes, though officers of the old school may personal example. Thus it frequently happened
sulk and bellyache to the point of mutiny.' that, if he met stragglers along the line of march,
Above all Blocher had the great virtue that, he would dismount and proceed on foot, with
while he detested Napoleon, he was not impressed them walking in front of him. Or he would order
by him. 'Let him do his worst: said he after them to stick wisps of straw in their shakos and
Bautzen, 'he is really nothing but a dunderhead.' they would then be escorted by cavalrymen to
Blucher for his part was not merely a blunt their regiments, decorated as men of straw.
5abreur. Arndt, who met him in April 1813, saw 'Whenever he passed a battalion which he
concentrated in his face 'the cunning of a hussar, knew to be a brave one, he would not allow his
the play of features sometimes extending up into staff to take up the middle of the road. So as not
his eyes, and something of a marten listening for to impede those on the march, he preferred to
its prey'. ride to one side, and he greeted everyone cordi.
Wenzel Krimer (1795-1834), an Austrian who ally and made enquiries about everything. If
fought in Lutzow's Freikorps at Lutzen and there was a shortage of rations, we were certain
Bautzen tells us something of Blucher's technique to find an adequate supply all ready laid out in
of command. the open street in the next village: every man as
he passed by was allowed to help himself as he
liked.
'BlOcher's usual greeting was "Good morning,
children!" even in the evening. To this the
soldiers would respond with, "Hurrah, Father
BlOcher!"
'He had his weaknesses, certainly, but these
did little damage to his many virtues. It often
happened that, as soon as evening came or when
otherwise in bivouac, a drum had to be brought
over, and he would throw dice with the first
officers who came along. Ifhe won a few thalers,
he was as delighted as a child and would stroke
his grey moustache and grin; while if he lost
(and he often lost a great deal of money) he
would laugh at himself. But, strange to relate,
the very thing he himself did so passionately he
forbade to the soldiers: they were not allowed
to play for money or, at least, must never be
caught doing SO,'1
Captain Fritz - - , a fellow Mecklenburger,
who had been at Auerstadt, with the King's
German Legion in the Peninsula, and had the
Cross of St George and the scar of a lance wound
as souvenirs of Borodino, was well received when
he called on Blucher early in 1813.
"Vhen I called on our old hussar general, he
Trooper, Ufes:uard, 1&09- White u.uform, red (adaS_ aDd
srey ove.... lIs. From a d .... win. by I. Wolf, en.....ved by was cheerful as always and displayed that rare
F. Ju.el joviality with which he always knew how to win
12
the hearts of those around him. He was just
having a good breakfast of bread and ham and a
few bottles of Hungarian wine, to which he had
invited several Russian generals under his
command, when I was permitted to enter.
'''It is indeed a great pleasure, Captain, to see
you again. How the deuce did you acquire that
memento on your check?" He talked in this
friendly manner and shook my hand vigorously.
"Take your things off and drink a glass of wine
with us and tell us what you have been doing in
the world since I last saw you. You are said to
have got around quite a bit", he went on, giving
me a large glass of the Hungarian wine. "Drink
up!" he urged. "This is good wine, such as we
do not have the chance of tasting every day."
He introduced me to the Russian generals as the
grandson of an old comrade in arms and the son
of an officer of his regiment who had been a dear
friend of his. I had to sit down at table and tell
them about Wellington and the English, and it
was so cheerful and pleasant that the few hours
which our breakfast took slipped by very quickly
for me. The General was still the same man
whom I had known before; rank, fame and years
had not affected him in the slightest. He laughed,
joked and also swore like any good hussar officer,
and for everyone, high or low, general or cor-
poral, he had a coarse joke, an apt jest, but also,
G~Dadi~r, Fooc Guard., 1809. Blue uniform, red CacbtS',
if he thought necessary, a rebuke. This un- dark «rey breec:he•. From a d ... wlnl by I. Wolf, eUI",ved
affected joviality, which nothing put off, was of by F. JUlel
inestimable value to the Army of Silesia and
helped substantially to improve it and to 6t it knowledge, nor did he overestimate it. He talked
for great deeds.' frankly about the neglect of his upbringing, but
Despite his affability Blucher could be heavy- he also knew very well what he could achieve
handed, as the Saxons were to find when they without this education. His imperturbability
mutinied in 1815. in dangerous situations, his tenacity in misfor-
The most perceptive analysis of Blucher's tune, and his courage which grew under diffi-
character comes from General Karl von Muffling culties were based on an awareness of his physical
(1775-1851), the Hanoverian who was to play an strength, which he had often used in hand-to-
important part as liaison officer with Wellington's hand fighting during earlier campaigns. In this
Headquarters at Waterloo. way he had gradually convinced himself that
'Despite a sharp, penetrating intellect Blucher Ulere was no military predicament from which
had received no systematic education; only in one could not ultimately extricate oneself by
contact with other people, finding himself on fighting, man to man. He had no very high
good. terms with everyone, acting firmly and opinion of any officer who did not share tills
with great tact, his inexhaustible cheerfulness view.
and his modest, good-natured behaviour won 'In his opinion courage produced a military.
him friends wherever he went. He never despised reputation, and it seemed to him impossible that
/3
to add that he was made a field-marshal after
Leipzig and inJuly 1814 - despite his own opposi·
tion - Prince Blucher von Wahlstadt. 'Everything',
he wrote, 'will depend on the sort of principality
I am to receive in Silesia. Under no circumstances
will I consent to add one more to the horde of
sickly, hungry princes:
GENERAL HANS DAVID LUDWIG YOReK VON WARTEN·
BURG (1759-1830). Yord was commissioned in
the Prussian Army at the age of 13, but got himself
cashiered before he had had two yean' service. He
accused a brother officer of stealing while on
campaign. This delicate case in military law was
summarily dismissed by no less an authority than
Frederick the Great, who wrote, 'Plundering is
not stealing. Yorck can go to the devil' - a case
history that soldiers would bc unwise to take as a
precedent.
Lieutenant Yorck was now compelled to seek
his fortune abroad, and served in Ceylon with a
French regiment in the pay of the Dutch East
India Company. On Frederick's death he rejoined
the Prussian Army, rising to command a Jager
regiment, and was noted as an expert trainer.
With his customary 'awkwardness' he declined
the coveted order Pour Ie Mirite saying that he
Officer, C ...rd F...ilie.r Sattallon, 18ol}. The tulifonn J. wanted to win it on the field of battle and not on a
bl..e with red faclalJ. aDd silver lace. From a priot of the
period drawD by I. Wolf aDd IrDlJrtlVed by F. JalJd parade ground.
In 1806 Yorck, badly wounded, was taken
prisoner in Blucher's defence of Lubeck.
a brave man could lose such a reputation. He When apoleon invaded Russia a Prussian
was never troubled by the slightest apprehension contingent under Yorck served under Marshal
that a retreat or a lost battle could take away his Macdonald in his advance on Riga. He can·
own reputation. Thus the wish to command large eluded the Convention of T:'lUroggen with the
armies was quite alien to him: as a field-marshal Russians (30 December 1812), and by so doing
he put himself at the head of a squadron as made thc first move in the War of Liberation, in
readily as at the head of an army. which the people of Germany lhrew off the yoke
'He trusted the officers of his staff only when of Napoleon.
he considered them entcrprising; but once they Beyond question Yorek was a difficult customer
had earned this trust he gave it unreservedly. and, though competent and upright, a bad
He allowed them to put forward their plans for subordinate. He was known to the men as der aile
marches, positions and battles, he grasped hegrim, which, though it means 'lhe old man with
everything quickly, and if he had given them his the iron helmet', is the centuries·old nickname
approval and signed the relevant orden he would given to the wolf in German folklore. He was
accept no outside advice, and no expressions of merciless to looters, stragglen and camp·followers.
alarm made the slightest impression on him ....' Lieulenant·Colonel Ludwig von Reiche gives a
We have now arrived at the dawn of the cam- balanced picture of this remarkable officer.
paigns which made Blucher's reputation. From 'Ahhough General Yord could often be bad-
this time his history is that of his army. Suffice it tempercd and even harsh, he could also be just
14
as kind, and really charmcd peoplc in this way. opponents of Scharnhorst even before the war.
He had a high degrce of subtlcty in his mind, However, his practical understanding led him
and a tinge of slyness cxpressed itself in his almost unconsciously to grasp the nature 01" this
spiritcd facc especially when he was in a good new war [of 1813]. Although very susccptible
humour and his peculiar sarcastic smile showed to fame, he placed very littlc value on outward
itself. Yet he had a tender heart susceptible to distinctions, he was not self-seeking, and he
friendship. esteemed people irrespective of their opinions.'v
'As a subordinate, however, Yorck was very In the Watcrloo campaign the other three
disobedient and difficult to handle, which with a corps commanders were:
character like his is not to be wondered at.' I. Lieutenant-General Hans Ernst Karl Graf
That Yorck was admired and could be quite von Zieten II (1770-d1413). He had com-
charming" is exemplified hy an incident during the manded a division in the Leipzig campaign.
Frellch retreat to the Rhine after Leipzig. Colonel II. Major-General George Dlibislaw Ludwig
Coullt Henckel von Donnersmarck, the com- Pirch I. He was 52 :lIld came ffom Magde-
mander of Yorck's advance guard, with two burg.
regimcnts of cavalryd rescued 200 Austrian III. Licutenant-General Johann Adolf Freihcrr
officers and 4,000 men, taken at Dresden, who \'on Thielemann. He was 50 and had led the
wefe being marched into captivity by two Polish Saxon cavalry fighting for Napoleon at
battalions. When he reported to Yorck, the Borodino in 1812.
General took offhis cap and said to his entourage, It is well known that Wellington cared bUl little
'Gentlemen, let us give Count Henckel a cheed' how his officers dressed when on campaign, and
'These words,' wrote the Count, 'spokcn at this saw nothing objeclionable in Sir Thomas Picton's
mOment and by this man, I valued more than if I taking his division into action top hat on hcad and
had been decorated with some order.' umbrella in hand. It does 1I0t seem that Blucher's
BlOcher, who had to put up with a good deal
from 'the Wolf', said of him: 'Yorck is a waspish
fellow; he docs nothing but argue, but when he
attacks, then he gets stuck in like nobody else.'
Not too bad an epitaph for deT alte Isegrim.

GENERAL WILIIELM BULOW VON DENNEWITZ (1755-


18t6). Colonel Hermann von Boyen (1771-1848),
who was at one lime his Chief of Staff, describes
the General thus:
'Bolow had a vcry keen glance and an excel-
lent memory; a bold self·confidencc guidcd his
steps, but this made him mostly an opponent of
his superiors and a rather uncomfortable sub-
ordinatc. Without being strictly trained as a
scholar, the General had acquired a respectable
fund of knowledge in many fields. He had a
passionate love of music and had established a
reputation as a composer.... The General had
understood the events of the time in a liberal
spirit; his views on war were mainly derived
from the Seven Years War and our earlier
military institutions [i.e. the legacy of Frederick
Frederick Wilhelm BUlow von Oennewitz. From an
the Great) and therefore he had been among the engraving by T. Jobn..on

IS
staff was much more 'dressy'. His own turn-out, army since the time of Frederick the Great,
with cloak and forage cap, was practical rather whereupon I was dismissed. In fact, part of my
than showy. A great differencc had crept in since answer was a lic, because the Prussian officer
the days of 1806 when Yorck had taken the field has only our present monarch to thank for the
with his kit packed in a wagon and a light chaise. dress specially made for campaigning.'ll
He took with him two extra uniforms, ten pairs of Thc Crown Prince was, ofcourse, Jeall·Baptiste-
gloves, four pairs of trousers and waistcoats, an Jules Bernadotte, one of Napoleon's marshals,
extra hat, cloaks, an abundance of personal cloth- who was now at the head of the Swedish Army.
ing, four pairs of leather breeches, fifteen pairs of
stockings, eight nightgowns, five nightcaps, three GENERAL AUGUST GRAF NEITHARDT VON GNEISENAU
table-cloths, thirty-six napkins, a mattress, five (1760-1831). Born in Saxony, the son of a lieu-
pillows, a red silk bcd-cover, two bedpans, a set of tenant in the artillery, Gneisenau joined the
china and silver, cooking utensils, a coffee-grinder, Austrian service, then, transferring to that of
eight razors, twelve glasses, and twenty-five Anspach-Bayreuth, was sent to America in 1782
bottles of liquor. 1o 10 fight for King George III against his rebellious
On 5 October 1813 an incident took place colonists. Too late for the war, he returned to
which illustrates the new attitude towards turn-out Europe, where in 17B6 he joined the Prussian
and what is now vulgarly known as 'bull'. Boyen Army as a staff captain. In IB06 he commanded a
is once more our aul1lOrity. battalion at Saalfeld and at Jena. In IB07 he
'While they were marching through Dessau greatly distinguished himself by his tenacious
there occurred another source of annoyance for defence of the fortress of Kolberg, an exploit
the Crown Prince. Bnlow look very little trouble which won him the highest Prussian order,
over his dress, in glaring contrast to the Crown Pour Ie Meritt, and soon became legendary in
Prince, who devoted every possible care to this German history - Hitler had a film made of it
subject. We had 110 idea Ihat the Crown Prince, when the tide turned against him in the Second
who had never once bothered about the troops World War.
throughout the campaign or shown himself to Gneiscnau hated the Russians and mistrusted
them, was proposing to make an exception here. the English, but he got on splendidly widl
And so Riilow, wearing his sel'vice ovcrcoat and BlOcher who needed someone to do his staff work.
a rather dilapidated field-cap, rode at the head Friedrich von Schubert, an officer in the Austrian
of his troops on a small Polish horse. Suddenly service, tells us that Gneisenau
we heard that the Crown Prince was waiting a 'was a highly gifted and clever man of spirit
few yards away in the slrcets of Dessau in order and energy. He virtually commanded the Army
to let the corps parade past him. With the best of Silesia, yet he could not have done this in his
will in the world there was no time to altcr any- own name. For one thing, he was not yet senior
thing. llnlow drew his sword and, just as he was, enough in rank; for another, public opinion
led his troops past the Commander·in-Chiefwith demanded that BlUcher's name, celebrated in
all possible honours of war. Prussia, should be at the head. . . . Relations
'However, this was a stab through the heart between Bli.icher and his Chief of Staff were most
for the Crown Prince. He regarded it as a per- excellcnt. ... Both men were fired by hatred of
sonal slight to the respect due to him, but instead the French. But the one who could only conceive
of saying so direct he called me over and, in a of "Vorwar{s", had complete confidence in the
voice which everyone round could hear, he outstanding abilities of the other, to whom he left
mixed reproaches about this clothing offence all arrangements for the advance, and accepted
with the old recital of all Bulow's real or alleged personal responsibility for this.'
sins. As can' well be imagined, 1 found myself in In 1814 the University of Oxford conferred on
a most embarrassing situation, and when he Blncher the honorary degree of doctor. At a
reverted to the sartorial error I replied a trifle dinner given in his honour the Field-Marshal
rudely that this had been the service dress in om said: 'Now, if you have made me a doctor, then
16
incessantly to and fro within him. And if he did
occasionally - a rare occurrence for him - fall
into a half-dreamy, brooding state of exhaustion
his face likewise radiated a bubbling, spiritual
animation which seldom left his features in
repose. Consequently, the very handsome face
was difficult to take in and portray in its most
peculiar, positive significance, and anyone who
kncw Gneisenau was dissalisfied wilh any
portrait or engraving of him.'
Another intellectual, Henrik Steffens (1775-
1845), who served on his staff, found Gneisenau 'a
blend of noble pride and real humility, of confid-
cnce and modesty' _ He discerned in Gneisenau a
respect for higher intellectual training, but
thoughl he lacked the agility of mind, the ready
wit and the pungent irony which distinguished
many of the outstanding senior officers of his day.12
Gnellu,n"u. From" med"lUon by L. POIIc:b Gneiscnau was a stern and unbcnding warrior,
but not lacking in heart. On 19 October 1813 his
A.D.C., Captain Stosch, rode with him across the
Gneisenau must be made at least an apothecary.' corpses of the Silesian Landwehr un the battlefield
Ernst Moritz Arndt (1769"""1860), a Professor of of Mockern which Yorck had taken on the 16th:
History and Philology, writes: 'I watched Gncisenau's solemn face, :md as he
'Gnciscnau was a man of fifty-two when I first said to me, "Victory was bought with Gcrman
saw him during the winter of 1812, but he looked blood at gre:'l1 cost, at vcry great cost", a tear
like a thirty-year-old in bearing, walk and trickled down from his eye. It was the only lear I
gestures. His figure was imposing, his limbs like ever saw him shed. u He was made it count for his
those of a lion, and he had broad shoulders and services in Ihc Leipzig campaign.
chest. From the hips to the soles of his feet every- Gneisenau played a decisive pari in Ihe 1815
thing was strong, roundcd and, wherever it campaign and by his relentless pursuit of the
should be delicate - the feet andjoints-dclicatcly Armie du Nord on the night aftcr Waterloo showed
and supply formed. He stood and movcd like a himself as much a man of action as a staff officer.
born hero. A noble head crowned this powerfuli\- The pursuil he described as die reine Klapperjagd,
built body of above average height: the brow a mad chase, and laler declared that it was Ihe
was open, broad and serene, his dark hair grew most glorious night of his lifc. Gncisenau died of
thick, he had the most beautiful, large, blue cholcra in August 1831.
eyes, which could look and nash with equal
friendlincss or disdain, a straight nosc, full lips, MAJOR-GENERAL KARL VON CLAUSEWITZ (1780-
a round chin, and an expression of manliness and 1831). Clausewitz was born at Magdeburg on
beauty in all his features. The forehead bore a I June 1780, and entered the ()russian Army as a
long, hcaled-up scar. "This scar", he used to say Falmenjunker (cadet) when he was 12. He served
with a smile, "often makes me angry or bored, on the Rhine in 1793 and 1794 and afler the siege
when people want to know in which battle I of Mainz was commissioned.
received the wound, and 1 have to send them From 1801 10 1803 he was a student at the
away with the dusty answer: 'A foal was the hero Berlin Military School, then under Ihe direction
who scarred the lad.''' of General Scharnhorst, who was struck by his
'This fine man had a passionate and fiery ability. Clausewitz for his part took Scharnhorst
nature, and bold impulses and thoughts flowed as his model. He passed out first wilh the General
17
to the Prussiall General Ernst von Pfull (1779-
1866). He was at Borodino and was with Milora-
dovich's rearguard covering the Russian with-
drawal. In Napoleon's retreat from Moscow,
Clausewitz served with General Wiugenstein's
Corps. It fell to his lot to playa decisive part in the
negotiations with Yorck that led to the Convention
of Tauroggen.
In 1813 Clausewitz, still in the Russian service,
was liaison officer at Blocher's headquarters, and
in 1814 he was Chief of Staff to General Wal-
moden's Corps. In 1815 he re-entered the Prussian
Army and served as Chief of Staff to General
Thielemann (Ill Corps) at Ligny and Wavre.
In 1818 Clausewitz was promoted major-
general and made Director of the Berlin Military
School, an appointment which gave him time to
devote himself to his writings. In 1830 he was
transferred to the artillery at Breslau and in
December of that year, when war with France
appeared imminent, he was appointed Chief of
Staff to Gneiscnau. They were both victims of the
cholera epidemic of 1831.
This is not the place to analyse Clauscwitz's
theories on the art of war. In addition to his great
reporting on his breadth of vision, and obtaining work, On War (3 vols.), he wrote studies of The
him a posting as A.D.C. to Prince August of Ilalian Campaign, q¢-97; The Campaigns in
Prussia. Switzerland and Italy, 1799 (2 vols.), the cam-
At the battle of Auerstiidt Clausewitz led a paigns of 1812, 1813 and 1814; and The Wa/eTloo
battalion in the assault on Poppel. Campaign. Among a number of papers on the
Prince August's battalion was with Prince campaigns of Gustavus Adolphus, Turenne,
Hohenlohe's rearguard in the retreat that fol- Luxembourg, Frederick the Great and others, the
lowed, and when surrender was imminent tried most important was one on the debacle of 1806.
to fight its way out. Arter beating off several This was published by the German General Staff
French cavalry attacks it was trapped in a bog in 1888.
and taken. Prince August and Clausewitz were The German hlil~krieg of 1939 and 1940
prisoners of war until 1809. followed the classic German strategy hammered
On his return from France Clausewitz was out by Blucher, but recorded, analysed and
appointed to Scharnhorst's staff and played a pan developed by Clausewitz, and handed down by
in'his reorganization of the Prussian Army. At this the elder Moltke and by SchlieRen. Yet Clause-
period he became a friend of Gneisenau. In 1810 witz wrote not only for soldiers but for Slatesmen,
Clausewitz became a member of the Prussian and his legacy is lO be found enshrined not only
General Staff and a professor at the Military in Bismarck's policy of Blood and Iron, but in
School, as well as military instructor to the Crown Hitler's A'(ein Kampf.
Prince of Prussia, later King Frederick William IV.
In 1812, when Napoleon took a Prussian corps
to Russia, Clausewitz along with some 300 of his GRAF AUGUST LUDWIG FERDINAND VON NOSTITZ
brother officers resigned their commissions and (1777-1866). Blocher's A.D.C. was Graf August
joined the Russian service, where he was A.D.C. von Nostitz. The son of a Saxon cavalry general,
18
he had served in a dragoon regiment. As a captain wounded when, while taking an important
he was with BlOcher at Leipzig, and accompanied message to Wellington, he imprudently rode too
him to England in 1814. As a lieutenant·colonel near the French outposts; Captain von Wussow
he coolly rescued the old field-marshal when he and Captain von Scharnhorst.
was pinned under his dead horse at Ligny. At Leipzig Yorck's staff included Colonel
Nostitz, aged 75 and by then a general of cavalry, Katzcler, Major Count Brandenburg and Major
carried Blocher's baton at Wellington's funeral in von Schack. In the same battle Gneisenau's
1852. He kept a diary which has been published. A.D.C. was Captain Stosch.
Nostitz showed his presence of mind not only
at Ligny but at Leipzig, when (on 18 October) the
Allies were entering the city and Blocher was
leading up troops from a Russian corps wilh
impatient cries of'Vorw;irts, vorw;irts, Kinder!'
'A Russian general, of whose bravery BHicher The three armies engaged in the 1815 campaign
had no great opinion, protested about the were led respectively by a gunner, an infantry
personal danger to which BlOcher was exposing officer and a cavalryman. Each showed a decided
himself; but Blucher paid no attention, and penchant for his old arm. Bhichcr was the cavalry-
renewed his shouts of "Vorwarts!" inspiring his man, and, despite his years and his heavy res·
troops to advance more rapidly still. At this ponsibilities as Commander-in.Chicf, thought
moment my horse shied: it had been hit by a nothing of leading cavalry charges in person - a
bullet. The Russian general, noticing this, wcakness which nearly brought complete disaster
drew Blucher's attention to the fact as a proof of on at least one occasion.
his earlier assertion that BlOcher was within InJune 1808 the Prussian cavalry was 12,871
range of bullets. strong, including 535 officers and 1,766 N.C.O.s.
'BlOcher turned peevishly round and asked, Since the whole army only numbered 50,°47 this
"Nostitz, is your horse wounded?" was a reasonable proportion of mounted tfOOPS,
'''I'm not aware of it", was my reply. but since 4,634 of the men were on more or less
'At the gate the General remarked, "That was permanent leave, U the regiments can scarcely
clever of you, Nostitz, telling a lie about your have been in a very high state of efficiency. When
horse's wound. If you had said 'Yes', then our in 1813 the Prussian Army was expanded to some
good friend would probably have gone to '100,000, serious difficulties were encountered. Of
pieces."'lt

STAFF
The Headquarters Staff under von Grolmann
numbered only six officers. The remainder of the
Army Staff numbered forty·nine and ineluded the
officer commanding the artillery, the commandant
of Headquarters, surveyors, surgeons, an auditor,
the provost·marshal and others. In all the
Prussian Headquarters amounted to fifty·eight
officers.
A corps staff comprised about twenty officers
and a brigade staff about five.
The officers of the Army Headquarters included
Lieloltenant-Colonel Count von Nostitz, Blocher's Narrow eBcape of Blucher at Ul(ny. Trapped under biB
A.D.C. who gallantly rescued his general at dead horBe, he BeeB the 9th Cuirassiers charl(e paBt him.
Hi. A.D.C., Graf Nostilz, haB dlBmounted to defend him.
Ligny, Maj~r von Winterfeldt, who was severely From a print by Wolf and von Maner

19
these the worst was the lack of horscs. It actually
provcd impossiblc to mount all thc vctcran
cavalry troopers available. Farm and draught
horses which no self-respecting cavalry officer
would have looked at in 1806 were pressed imo
the service - but it must be conceded that the
French were in similar straits.
Despite every difficulty the Prussian cavalry
held their own pretty well during the 1813-15
period, though it would be idle to pretend that
their l>est units were as good as the ilite regiments
of Napoleon's cavalry. Nor were they anything
like as well mounted or equipped as the British
and King's German Legion cavalry of the day.
I n the Waterloo campaign Blucher's cavalry
numbcrcd I 1,948. This was not a particularly
liberal provision.
Cavalry Total
Napoleon 20,000--22,000 125,000
Wellington 14,000 c. 110,000
Blucher 11,948 123,172
Moreover Blucher's cavalry was all allotted to his
various corps. Unlike apoleon he had no true Friedrich Ge01"l Ludwit;: von Sohr. Conunanded a brlpde
reserve cavalry. The proportion of cavalry in each at Llpy and rose 10 be GenertlUeulntlnl.
corps varied very considerably.
Corps Squadrons Effutives campaign, ilnd mounted action as might be
1 3' 2,175 appropriate during a pitched oattle.
II 36 4,47 1 In two ways the Prussian cav.dry dilfcred from
III 24 l,gBt lapoleon's. It had not a large body of heavy
IV 43 .,. 3,321 cavalry equipped with the cuirass. This was
perhaps no grcat deprivation, and indeed none of
The Prussian cavalry which took part In the \\"ellington's heavy cavalry wore body armour.
1815 campaign comprised: The other diflcrence was fundamcntal. Whilc
I Napoleon kept a mass of reserve cavalry which was
Regiments Squadro1ls not affiliated to any corps d'armie, all the Prussian
Hussars 9 33 cavalry was distributed to the various corps. It
Uhlans 8 seems to the present writer that Napoleon's
DI·agoolls 5 '9 system, which permitted great strokes by a fully
Freiwillige.J iiger co-ordinated mounted arm upon tire ficld of battle,
Landwehr 12 was vastly superior. Although Ney's series of
Landwcllr attacks recoiled from Wellington's squares at
cavalry 15 Waterloo, we have only to study other Napoleonic
battles, Eylau for example, to see what the
Total 49 French reserve cavalry could do.
At regimemal and squadron level, cavalry Blucher was an inspiring leader, but his best
tactics in Blucher's Army were much the same as friend could not describe him as a clear-minded
in those of his contemporaries. Their tasks may be military thinker. It seems that he had not really
summed lip as rcconnaiss<Ulcc: and outpost duty on thought out the best organization for his cavalry.
20
Nor did he have any great cavalry commander at laid down by the Treaty of Paris of 8 September
his disposal. He lacked a Seydlitz to take a grip on 1808.
the whole mass of his mounted arm. Men like Strength of the Prussian Army including
Sohr and Henckel von Donnersmarek were first- reserves: 18°7,53,523; 1808,52,142; 18og, 45,897;
class at the regimental level, but Blocher had 1810,62,609; 1811, 74,553; 18Et, 65,000."
nobody who could co-ordinate the movements of It is true that under a programme attributed to
the cavalry as Uxbridge did for Wellington at Scharnhorst there had been an attempt to train
\Vaterloo, and as Murat had done for apoleon reserves. The success of the KriimjNr syuem has
in the great days of the Empire. become part of Prussian legend, but the assertion
The consequence of all this was that Blucher that 15°,000 reservists were available in t8t3 rests
occasionally took it into his old hussar head to lead only on the mistaken idea thai the new units
cavalry charges himself. Thus it was that at about formed that year consisted entirely of reservists.
8 p.m. on 16June 1815, when he could see by the This was not so; they were built on a nucleus of
selling sun nOlhing but ruin and a breach in his trained officers, N.C.O.s and men, to which
line filled with the bearskins of the Old Guard, recruits were added.
he galloped forward at the head of ROder's five That this was not easy is evident from the
regiments. The Prussian cavalry, mel by volleys at following figures:
point-blank range, only succeeded in strewing the Strength orthe Prussian Army inJune 1808:
ground with the bodies of men and horses. hifaTltry Artillery Cavalry Total
Milhaud's Cuirassiers and the Dragoons of the Officers
1,079 147 535 1,7 6 (
Guard supported the French squares and they N.C.O.s
3,264 503 1,7 66 5,533
pressed on towards the windmill of Brye. Musicians 659 35 '99 893
Undaunted, Blucher led his last remaining Surgeons 227 27 86 340
squadrons in a desperate charge. His horse was Troops 10,025 2,161 5,651 '7,837
hit, and galloped wildly on, until suddenly it fell Men on leave
17,396 1,653 4,634 23, 683
dead, crushing its aged master. Graf ostitz
dismounted to protect the Field-Marshal as the Total
9th Cuirassiers ebbed and flowed past them in the
32,650 4,526 12,871 50,047
,
dim light, little knowing the prize that lay within We see that the Prussian Army, some 50,000
Iheir grasp. It fell to some Prussian uhlans to haul strong in 1808, comprised only 1,761 officers and
Ihe old gentleman from under his dead horse, and 5,533 N.C.O.s.u There was a serious shortage of
to the charger of an .C.O. of the 6th Uhlans 10 experienced officers and literate .C.O.s. On the
carry him back amidst the flood of departing other hand there was a source of potential
Prussian soldiery. officers In the Volunteers (FreiwiiJige ]iiga), who
While Blucher was playing Ihe hussar, Count came forward in substantial numbers. They were,
Gneisenau was working out the next move - and however, r.'1r from being imbued with Ihe spirit
getting it right. So it may be said thai if BlOcher of the old-style Prussian martinet. One of them,
did not always behave precisely as a commander- Count Christian Stolberg (lSI EaSI Prussian
in-ehiefshould, at least he had managed to select a Regiment) wrote on 8 October: 'I am no soldier,
chief of stafr who eould carryon in his absence. but a fighter for the Fatherland; and when peace
comes I shall return home. To be a soldier for its
own sake will always be abhorrent to me,'l'
Major Karl Friedrich Friccius (1779-1856), of
1HjilllflJI the 3rd Battalion of the East Prussian Landwehr
Regiment, lells us that in order to brin~ the unil
up to strength they had tu take m;I1lY men under
When Prussia took the field against Napoleon in 1 7 or over 40.
1813 she was desperately short of trained man- 'Even fathers of families, if the lottery had
power. This was largely due to the restrictions picked them, could seldom be exempted, and
21
mixture, drawn from the most varied walks of
life and age groups. Beside a grey-haired man
you might find a boy of seventeen; beside a
worthy family-man, who had never conceived
the idea of taking up arms while in the quiet
circle of his civil profession, might be a gay
adventurer; beside an educated young man. who
had broken away from the happiest circum-
stances so as to fight for the Fatherland with high
ideas of duty and honour, stood a raw youth.
The othcr battalions of the province were
recruited from the villages and small towns,
where onc found a greatcr uniformity in age,
better physique, more contentedness and respect
for their superiors, but less experience and
docility.'11
The equipment left much to be desired. When
20,000 Austrian muskets were issued to the
Silesian Landwehr it was discovered that the
manufacturers had failed to bore touch-holes~
Many of the soldiers had linen wallets instead of
knapsacks. On 30 October 1813 Ernst Janke, a
young Prussian officer, wrote to his family: 'But
no one in Berlin will believe just how ragged our
army is. The men's clothing is rotting off their
MO_I~ offia:r, Fool Artill.. ry or tb .. e ... rd, 1801). Blue bodics. What will be the outcome of it all?'
...Uonn with n!d plpins: aro_d collar and cuff•• R~
lininc 10 jacket and .,rip" down overall•. Cold la_. Fro... Yorck, describing the state of his corps after
• corueonpo"'ry print d ... w .. by I. Wolf a ..d e...C.... ved Leipzig, tells us that of 106 guns he had in
by F. Jille.1
September only 42 remained serviceable. Despite
very often the town had to assume carc of the picking up a number of French muskets many of
wivcs and childrcn. Whcrc SO many ways re- his men were unarmed.
mained opt:n of escaping from military service, 'The troops who had taken part in the Russian
and when the promised advantages appeared so campaign in Courland were still wearing the
meagre, and above all when it had not yet been clothing issued to them in 1811. The Silesian
settled whether privileges promised to volunteer fAndwthr's patrol jackets made out of coarse
Jiig~r should also be granted lo l.mulwdtr volull- cloth had shrunk so badly as a resull of wet
leers, voluntary cnlistmCll1 ill lite J,andwdlr had bivouacs and rainy weathcr that they were too
greater merit than later 011. In spite of all this, narrow fore and aft, and too short on top and
thc Battalion had over one hundred sllch below. We were approaching a wintcr campaign
volunteers. Of tht' many boys who oflcred their and the men still had no cloth trOllsers. The
services, we only look as many as we could usc adage about ten patches for OIlC hole found
for drummers and buglers. All the rest were widespread application on the tight-fitting coats.
rejected.... 'Thcre was a great lack of shoes, although on
'As the men of the Battalion werc drawn from the march from Leipzig any new or worn foot-
a large town, they were better acquainted with wear to be found had been requisitioned. Many,
the pleasures of life and perhaps weaker in and not only Landwehr men but also Jiiger
physique. but they wcre also more experienced volunteers, marched barefoot. There was a
and skilful, and were imbucd with greater claims shortag~ of cloaks too, but here and there peoplc
to justice and honour. They were a strange had taken them off prisoners. The horses for the
22
artillery were worked very hard and many of style as their French opponents, since with raw
them became unusable. What is more, the region troops it was, gencrally speakinR, much simpler
we had marched through since leaving Halle to manccuvre battalions and regimellls in column.
was very poor in horses, so we had been able to The men were not suniciclltly well drilled to fight
requisition only a few:" in line as Frederick's had done and Wellington's
The spirit of the Landwehr sustained them even still did. The British relied primarily 011 fire-
when they had to march without shoes. But the power; on controlled volleys. The Prussians, at
shortage of food, lack of straw and firewood, and this period, believed in hand-to-hand fighting.
generally indifferent administration took its toll. BlUcher, who, as we have seen, had no very high
In the eighteen days ending t September 1813 opinion of an officer who did not think that
Yorck's Corps dwindled from 37,700 to 25,300, fighting man to man would solve practically any
thf.: losses among thf.: Landwehr far f.:Xcef.:ding those military problem, had managed to imbue his
of thf.: line regiments." army with the same spirit. An incident at Mockern
umber of Regular and Landwf.:hr infantry (16 October 1813) illustratf.:s the point. Major
rf.:giments in each corps: von Hiller of Yorck's Corps was already under
1815 firf.: 'when old BlUcher came galloping up and,
Total pointing at random, shouted to me, "There is the
I II ll/ IV
point you must hold!" I receivf.:d no further
Regular 8 8 6" 4 26
8 orders from anyone and led my battalion straight
Landwehr 4 4 6 22
away into the blue or rather into the bullets,
Total '2 12 '2 >2 48 because we were met with a dense hail of fire
from MOckf.:rn.' It was the custom in the Prussian
Army for battalion commanders to take part in a
By way of making life morf.: difficult for the bayonet attack on horseback, thus giving target
military historian every Prussian regimf.:nt had practice for enemy marksmen. This von Hiller
two numbers. This was because they had a thought folly, but he did it just the same. Hf.: was
provincial as wf.:11 as an army number. Thus the soon hit, but he remounted and led his battalion
21st was also the 4th Pomeranian Regiment, the successfully into MOckern. 'The battle swayed
5th was also the 4th East Prussian; and so on. to and fro, we were driven out and then fought
The regimf.:nu werc of thrf.:f.: battalions, each of our way in again, four or even five times.' This
four companies. The first and second battalions was the sort of fighting that took place when on
wf.:re musketeers, the third was a fusilier battalion. t8June 1815 BUlow's Corps stormed Plancenoit.
The strength of a regimf.:llt was approximately The attack was made by the 15th Regiment of
60 officers, 2,460 men and 54 musicians. Prussian infantry (16th Brigade) under Major
The infantry of the Prussian Army of 1806 von Keller, supported by some battalions of
fought in much the same style as the British Army Silesian Landwehr. They were opposed by the
of the same date - that is to say before the Penin- Guard and it was a desperate struggle with little
sular War and the tactical improvements intro- quarter given. n
duced by Sir John Moore and the Duke of If the Prussians lacked the iron discipline of
Wellington. Both fought with their battalions in Wellington's Army we must remember that the
line, and met the French tiroilJeurs with a rather majority of the rank and file wcre far less experi-
meagre proportion of light infantry. Nor is it enced. It is trlle that at Waterloo many of
strange that the two armies employ~d the same Wellington's troops saw action for the first time.
tactics since Ceneral Sir David Dundas (1735- But even in the battalions that had not been in
1820), UPOII whose Principles oj Military MIIlJf.menls, the Peninsula the majority of the mcn had had
chitfJy applicable 10 Infantry (1788) most British five years' service. In consequence they were
infantry training was still based, had borrowed his thoroughly well drilled. This is not to say that the
ideas from the Prussian Army. Prussians could not put on an impressive perfor-
Blucher's men manreuvred in much the same mance upon occasion. Take for example the
23
w· Whit. 8L· 8'"" y- V.llow 'I-Red a·G.-.
LANCE PENNONS Colo/lrJu:y B· 8lack II Bl-Ugh! blue B· Bleck O-o..nllfl C· c.rl""
UHLANS
, Squadrons

LANDWEHR CAVALRY
, Squadrons
,

-~Itz"'
-
J J
KUAMARK

~ ~ /
~
1 Rlgl.
W w
EAST
PRUSSIA
Rogu'.' ,
~
2 Reo,t.
SIL£SIA

NEUMARK
, "

3 R"!II
8AA."l[}£NBURG ~
, ~
,
I POMERANIA
.~~
5~1.

--J
~ WESTP,,,,, ' ,--A
~
6 Regt
+
.,,:,m~
ElBE

1- "...
P3: ....
tOFBREMEN
7 Reg1.
No I."ces " ... SILESIA
, J

SCHILL "S

BAegl
HELlWIG 6,hHUSSARS HUSSARS

SllESIA
, , J
'0_
~ ~I
VBLUMnE"
J4GER
GREEN AND BLACK HUSSARS OF THE SAXON
RUSSO GERMAN LEGION UHLANS

advance of Bulow's Corps at Leipzig (18 October came the commands: "Regiment - mardI!
1813), as described by Lieutenant Krctzschmer. Battalion - march!" The columns advanced
' ... A low line of hills in front orus hid the enemy uphill as if parading past the King.
from our view and also concealed our approach. •At this moment the sun broke through the
Beyond the ridge light artillery and cavalry were dark clouds as if to light our path to victory and
sparring with the French and covering our to witness our battle; bayonets glinled in the
advance. Cannon thundered on all sides and sunshine and spirits rose. The Kolbcrg Jager
indicated that our countrymen and allies must and those from the Crown Prince's Regiment
already be engaged in fierce fighting.... On our began singing the folksong Heil dir illl Sieger-
side of the ridge Bulow's corps formed up, with krantz/ with enthusiasm, and all the regimental
Krafft's brigade on the right, Borstell's in the bands joined in. As we gaily climbed the hill the
centre, and the Prince of Hesse-Homburg on our hymn sounded from a thousand throats. '23
left. BlUcher's infantry may have been inexperienced
'When everything was ready in battle order and poorly administered but they were more than
as on a parade ground, the first word ofcommand a match for the conscripts Napoleon conjured up
was heard: "Brigade - march!" Like an echo to replace the Army which had died in Russia.

24
Feldjiisu, 1809
2 Prince Bliicl>er (FeldrnanchaU)' r813
3 Ge,unl on tbe Staff, 1813

A
Officer, ..Ih SII...la.. Reilinunl, 181J-15
:z Officer, Sn...la.. Nado...l Cavalry (Hu••• r) Res!",e..I,
181J-15
J T .....npe'..r, S•• on Hu.sars, 181"

R
I Trumpeter, 6th (Neumark) D,-,soon., 1813
:t Officer, u'
(K6rnsin) DrasoonllO, 1813-IS
3 O.-...oon, sth B.-.nd"nburJ: ReplneDl, 1814

c
Trooper, 4th Squadron. 7t.b 5"'OD Rqlment J813-lS
Officer, ut Sqo.uodron. 7th Repmenf, 181)-15
::I
) Adjuu.nt of Cavalry, 181)-15

n
Drummer, a.tth (4th Brandenburr) Re,i ...."'nt, 1811-15
2 Officer of F..tlliert, 22Dd (UI Rhine) Re,tment, 1811-15
, 3 Officer of the repmentalttaff, Itt Elbe ~e,i....enl, 1814

_t_..
Officer, 3rd Sl.Iesian Re«ionerll, 18n-15
::a Trooper,::and Neuonark Rqioneut, 18'3-15
3 Tnunpeter, lSI Poonerarol.an Resloneal, 18,.

F
1 Officer. nl Pomerardan Resimenl. 1813
:z Privlue. UI We.lphaUan Reelme.>!. 1813
3 D ....mmer. 3rd Elbe ReSI...enl. 1814-15

G
CaJlnODoter, SUe_'-n 8ripde, ,813-15
2 Tnunpeter, LubOw'_ Corp-, Batte..,. No. '<t, 1815
3 Offieer, 8raadenb....., 8ripde, ,815

I-l
a most uncomfortable night. 'When day broke ...
ru1rtiflerJ! andPi011eers the general was horrified to find that my battery
was alone, without any escort, right under the
noses of the enemy's advanced piquets. During
The artillery was commanded by General von
the night the rest of the troops had all received
Holtzendorff, who was hit at Ligny. He was orders to retire; but I and my guns had been
succeeded by Lieutenant-Colonel von Rohl. completely overlooked! We would have fared
There were between thirty-eight and forty-one badly indeed had the enemy made any attempt
batteries. The foot and horse artillery baueries upon us under the cover of darkness.'
each had six guns ahd two howitzers. The siege Von Reuter was ordered to fall back and take
batteries each had eight howitzers. up a position near the windmill at Ligny. There
There were approximately one hundred and about midday, while Wellington and Blucher
sevcllly-four 6-pounders, fifty-four 12-pounders were in conference on a near-by eminence,
and ninety-two howitzers, making a total of General von Holtzendorff, the commander of the
three hundred and twenty artillery pieces in all.
Prussian artillery, rode up, and ordered NO.1 gun
According to F. &urdier there were only to fire a round. This, they were told, was the
thirty-eight batteries: signal that Blucher had decided to accept battle.
Corps Battuiu Guns Men (including Between 2 and 3 p.m. von Reuter was ordered
492 pionem) to take four of his guns and support the 14th.
I B8 1,258 Regiment (7th Brigade, II Corps) in its advance
II "
10 80 1,575 on St Amand. The other two guns and the two
III 6 4B 1,062 howitzers 'took up a position opposite Ligny, so
IV B8 1,45 8 as to be able to shell the open ground beyond the
" village, and the village itself, too, in the event of
Total 3B 30 4 5.353 our not being able to hold it'. Von Reuter went
It is perhaps prudent to rely on these figures, into action about Goo paces from St Amand,
which were based on those of the great Belgian engaging French artillery in position on the high
scholar, Winand Aerts, rather than the higher ground opposite. The enemy returned 'a well-
oncs given by Major Becke. sustained fire of shells' inflicting heavy casualties.
To serve this formidable number of pieces there The 14th Regiment, 'without ever thinking of
were only 4,861 artillerymen, and they had to be leaving an escort behind for us', pressed gal-
reinforced by infantrymen. lantly forward and seized part of the village, in-
The Prussian artillery fired 4,800 rounds al deed the captain thought they had occupied the
Waterloo. whole of it. He had been in action for some hours
and was expecting orders to follow up the move-
ment of the 14th Regiment, when he became
A PRUSSIAN BATTERY IN IBI5 aware of two strong lines of skirmishers which
Captain von Reuter commanded Battery No. 6 were apparently falling back on the battery from
which was armed with six 12-pounders and two the direction ofSt Amand. Reuter imagined they
howitzers. were Prussians and 'hastened up to the bauery
On 25 May 1815 the battery was ordered to and warned my layers not to direct their aim upon
join Zieten's Corps (I) and move to Soirlen near them, but to continue to engage the guns opposite'.
Charleroi, where it lived a quiet country life, until The skirmishers were now within 300 paces.
on IsJune the rumbling of distant guns fell on von 'I had just returned to the right flank of my
Reuter's ears as he was at breakfast, sipping his command, when our surgeon, Zinkernagel,
coffee, in the Chateau de Soirlen. By 2 p.m. the called my attention 10 the red tufts on the shakos
battery was on the march and towards evening of the sharpshooters. I at once bellowed out the
it was in position on the far side of the village of order, "With grape on the skirmishers!" At the
Fleurus and on the left of the road. There it spent same moment both their lines turned upon us,
2S
while kept up a slow fire of grape, that had the
effect of keeping the marksmen in my front glued
to the ground. But in another moment, all of a
sudden, I saw my left flank taken in rear, from the
direction of the Ligny brook, by a French staff
officer and about fifty horsemen. As these rushed
upon us the officer shouted to me in German,
"Surrender, gunners, for you are all prisoners!"
With these words he charged down with his men
on the flank gun on my left, and dealt a vicious
cut at my wheel driver, Borchardt (a good
artillery name, this), who dodged it, however, by
flinging himself over on his dead horse. The blow
was delivered with such good will that the sabre
cut deep into the saddle, and stuck there fast.
Gunner Sieberg, however, availing himself of the
chance the momentary delay afforded, snatched
up the handspike of one of the 12-pounders and
with the words, "I'll soon show him how to take
prisoners!" dealt the officer such a blow on his
bearskin that he rolled with a broken skull
from the back of his grey charger, which
galloped away into the line of skirmishers in our
front. The fifty horsemen, unable to control their
horses which bounded after their companion,
followed his lead in a moment, rode over the
prostrate marksmen, and carried the utmost
confusion into the enemy's ranks. I seized the
opportunity to limber up all my guns except the
unfortunate one on my left, and to retire on two
of our cavalry regiments, which I saw drawn up
about 600 paces to my rear. It was only when 1
had thus fallen back that the enemy's skirmishers
ventured to approach my remaining gun. I could
Prunlan dragoonll capture a RUIlIl;an colour in
combat at Ec:kau. see from a distance how bravely its detachment
From a watercolour by Richard KnUtel defended themselves and it with handspikes and
their side-arms, and some of them in the end
succeeded in regaining the battery. The moment
I got near our cavalry I rode up to them and
entreated th~m to endeavour to recapture my
gun again from the enemy, but they refused to
gave us a volley, and then flung themselves on comply with my request. I, therefore, returned
the ground. By this volley, and the bursting of a sorrowfully to my battery") which had retired
shell or two, every horse, except one wheeler, meanwhile behind the hill with the windmill on
belonging to the gun on my left flank, was either it near Ligny. We there replenished our ammuni-
killed or wounded. I ordered the horses to bc tion waggons and limber boxes, and set to rights
taken out of one of my ammunition waggons, our guns, and the battery again advanced to
which had been emptied, and thus intended to come into action on the height. We had, how-
make my gun fit to move again, while I mean- ever, hardly reached the crest of tile hill when the
26
enemy issued from the village of Ligny in over- half a horse artillery battery came up and joined
powering numbers, and compelled all our troops us. The fight then became stationary, and as the
which were there with us to fall back. The move- darkness came on, fighting gradually ceased on
ment was carried out with complete steadiness both sides. During the course of the night this
and regularity. It was now about eight o'clock rear-guard, which, meanwhile, had come under
p.m., and the growing darkness was increased by the command of Major-General von Roder,
the heavy storm clouds which began to settle continued its retreat unmolested by the enemy,
down all round us. My battery, in order to avoid crossed the Dyle on the 17th at Wavre, and there
capture, had, ofc04rse, to conform to this general we again found our baggage. During the retreat
movement. I now noticed that there was an I had the good fortune to be able to horse three
excellent artillery position about 1,500 paces guns of Meyer's battery [No.4- (Pomeranian)
behind the village of Brye, close to where the II Corps] which I found on the road unable to
Roman road intersects the road to Quatre Bras. get along, and drew them off with me. Yet
I made for this point with all haste, so that I Captain Meyer, annoyed at still having to leave
might there place my guns and cover with their three of his guns behind, was extremely rude to
fire the retreat of my comrades of the other arms. me because I could help him no further!'
A hollow road leading to Sombreffe delayed my During the withdrawal to Wavre (17 June)
progress some minutes. At length I got over this BlUcher rode up and chatted with von Reuter.
obstacle and attained my goal; but just as I was Hearing that he had lost a gun at Ligny, all the
going to give the word, "Action rear," Von Prince said was: 'There, now! Don't let that worry
Pirch's (II) infantry brigade (2nd I Corps) began you. We will very soon take it back from them
to debouch from Brye. The general saw in an again.'
instant what he took for a selfish and cowardly The battery spent an unpleasant night on
movement of retreat on my part, dashed his spurs ground soggy from a heavy downpour which
into his horse, and galloped up to me nearly extinguished every attempt to make a bivouac
beside himself with passion, and shouting out, fire. Towards morning the rain abated. The
"My God! Everything is going to the devil!" disabled guns were sent off to Maestricht to be
"Truly, sir," said I, "matters are not looking repaired.
very rosy, but the 12-pounder battery, No.6, has About midday the French (Grouchy's Corps)
simply come here to get into a position from put in an appearance and while III Corps stayed
whence it thinks it may be able to check the to hold Wavre, the rest of the Prussian Army
enemy's advance." "That, then, is very brave marched on Waterloo.
conduct on your part," answered the general, So bad was the road that it was not until
at once mollified; "cling to the position at all evening that Battery No.6 neared the battlefield.
hazards, it is of the greatest importance. I will Von Reuter was ordered to push on with all haste,
collect a few troops to form an escort to your and mounted his detachments as best he could on
guns." While this short, but animated, discussion the gun carriages. Even so he could not cover the
had been going on his brigade had come up close next half-mile at a better pace than 'walk and
to where we were. He formed it up to cover us, trot'. The other troops made way for him. They
and sent every one who was mounted to collect all were in high spirits, their bands playing. They
retreating troops in the neighbourhood for the greeted the guns with cheers and shouts of
same purpose, while, as they came up, he called 'Hurrah! Here come our gallant 12-pounders!'
out to them, "Soldiers, there, stand your guns, The moon was three days before fulJ and rose
are you not Prussians!" well before sunset on the 18th. 24 Von Reuter
'During the time that a sort of rear-guard was timed his arrival on the battlefield saying, 'at
thus formed, the battery had opened fire on the this moment the moon rose'. The skies had rained
enemy's cavalry, which was coming up rather themselves out and it was now as lovely a sort
cautiously, and had forced them to fall back summer evening as ever the Captain saw, though
again. Later on a 6-pounder field battery and with 'here and there a burning homestead'. As he
27
Left, H"ronann von Boy"n. A colonel In 181S, h" ros" to the
rank of S"n"ral. RJSht: Major von Liit20W. Froon a sketch
by Giuseppe Longhi

advanced he sensed that victory was won. He Troop, Royal Horse Artillery, at Waterloo, tells us
rOfced his charger, snorting with terror, across a that a Prussian battery encamped near him on the
hollow way filled with dead men and horses, and night of the battle, and that he prowled around,
looked ror a battery position, but the ground was 'not altogether liking their appearance'. When he
thick with dead and wounded. woke up on the Igth they had gone. He describes
'The wounded, as we came rushing on, set up 'their brass guns kept bright, and their carriages
a dreadrul crying, and holding up their hands encumbered with baggage'. It may well be that it
entreated us, some in French and some in was Battery No.6 that had spent the night next
English, not to crush their already mangled to G Troop.
bodies beneath our wheels. It was a terrible sight On 27 June near Compiegne, von Reuter's
to see those faces with the mark of death upon battery was in action for a short time against a
them, rising from the ground ar1d the arms out- small body of French troops. Zieten had given his
stretched towards us. Reluctant though I was, I gun detachments permission to carry their knap-
felt compelled to halt, and then enjoined my men sacks on the gun carriages when on the line of
to advance with great care and circumspection. march. When the skirmish »>as at its height the
And soon I saw that I could in any case have no battery commander was suddenly startled when a
share in the glory of the day, for the enemy had hoarse voice behind him roared: 'But, Captain
begun to break and fly on all sides.' Reuter, I quite miss the old smartness I was
He and Dr Zinkernagel spent the night trying accustomed to in this battery!' 'Imagine my con·
to alleviate the sufferings of the wounded. sternation', wrote the captain, 'when I turned
Captain Cavalie Mercer, who commanded G round and saw General Braun,u who had
28
formerly been my commanding officer, and on BlOcher's officers and mcn stood up to the
whom I now laid my eyes for the first time during singularly unpleasant conditions of scrvice pretty
this campaign.' He managed to convince the old well. Their stoicism in thc face of wounds and
martinet that Zieten had really given permission death was pretty creditable. Major von Hiller
for this irregularity over the knapsacks - and his leading his battalion into a hail of fire at Mockern
promotion to captain was confirmed. was hit in the hand.
Somewhere near Charleroi, Captain von Reuter 'The surgeon wanted to take me out from
found the gun lost at Ligny and with this incident, under fire in order to bandage it properly.
so pleasing to any good gunner, we will leave him. "We've no time for that", I told him. "Just
His narrative tells us more about the way BlUcher's pat~h it up for the time being." And while he was
artillery went to work than all the tables of their doing so the poor devil was hit in the head and
calibres, the returns of their ammunition expendi- fell dead on the spot. So, still unbandaged, I
ture and casualties, and even the pictures of their remounted and led my battalion successfully
uniforms. i t into Mockern. ' i t
The damage that a single shell could do to the
PIONEERS c1ose-order formations of those days is horribly
illustrated by an incident earlier the same day_
Blucher's Army was not liberally provided with Wenzel Krimer, the senior surgeon of a battalion
engineers and pioneers. In 1815 each of the four in Jagow's Brigade, was talking to a captain
corps had one company of pioneers. They varied named von Pogwisch 'when a shell came over
in strength from 63 with III Corps to 204 with from ahead of us, exploded innantly, smashed an
I Corps. officer and a sergeant in the chest and head, and
Corps Pionters broke the legs of twelve men in the column'.
I 2°4 Krimer himself had a narrow escape for a frag.
II 74 ment went between his legs. He continues:
III 63 'My company surgeons had run away. I had
IV '5' plenty to do and ought to have carried out twelve
amputations straight away, but I had to confine
Total 49 2 myself to preventing the wounded men bleeding
to death and then having them carried to the
rear. I was still hard at work when a second shell
came over, carried off the whole of the upper
uf0YriscellolZJ' part of the adjutant's body and decapitated

THE WOUNDED
The lot of wounded men and animals at the time
of the Napoleonic Wars was extremely hard. The
weapons of the period were capable of inflicting
the most hideous wounds, and the medical
services were not remarkable for their efficiency.
Men like the celebrated Frenchman, Baron
LarreY,I1 wcre few and far between. It was not
only that there were too few surgeons. There was
also a chronic shortage of am bulances, stretcher.
bearers, nurses, hospitals and even such simple
necessities as dressings. As for anaesthetics they CeD.. rsl Scba.-.hont, nlortalty _o_ded at GnHI_S'ilr-
-.;:hen. (:z May 1813), i. earried from th.. fi..ld. FrOID a
were virtually unknown. paiati... by Rlk:b..IiDt: l..n the M ........... al L1it:ll;e...

29
thigh. One of his company, who had been
wounded in the hand, helped him along, for his
foot was becoming increasingly useless.
'We had gone only a few yards like this, side by
side, when I suddenly heard a dull thud beside
me. I fell to the ground, felt myself spattered
with blood, and saw beside me a leg. Then I
heard the soldier calling, 'Friend, kill me, please!
Kill me!' One of the many cannon-balls which
were still rolling had struck him from behind and
torn off his leg just below the belly. I had to leave
him in this fearful condition, lying in the ditch
with only a few minutes to live.'JO
Another Leipzig casualty (16 October) was
Ludwig von Gerlach (1795-18n), an officer of
the 1St East Prussian Regiment, who was shot in
the thigh, fell to the ground and could not get up.
His leg felt dead and was pouring blood. Two
soldiers of the Silesian Landwehr dragged him to
the road, where he lay in the ditch until about
dusk. He was lifted on to a captured French gun,
'but could not endure for long the pain of being
jolted about, and so was SOOn carried into the
deserted village of Wahren. Here, in a farm-
house filled only with wounded men, I was
attended by a company surgeon who was very
pleased to sec me, because he had become
Lit~wkll.
and •• b ..e o(ao £a.t P ....ll.ian Vol....teer separated from his unit and hoped thai as an
National cav,dryrnao, .8l3
officer I would vouch for the fact that he had
been bandaging wounds here. He extracted the
ball by means of a cross-cut in my thigh and then
lightly dressed the wound.'
He spent the night on the floor, lying on some
straw beside a delirious hussar. Nexi day
three men. Then it rolled as far as the Silesian 'a peasant arrived with a wheelbarrow and some
rifle-battalion drawn up behind us and caused straw and carted me off to Schkeuditz, where 1
considerable casualties there.'n spent the night in the town hall on a palliasse,
Most of the wounds were severe. On the same day alongside an officer who was dying from a head
Lieutenant Woyski was wounded in the ankle. wound. On the following day, 18 October, I was
'I showed my wound to the captain and then went taken to Halle. 's,
off to find a carriage and get the wound properly The aged Feldmarschall-Vorwarts was every
dressed, although I had done this myself as best I bit as laugh as his men. He had two hors<:s shot
could on first being hit.' He limped back amidst under him at Ligny, and the second fell on top
cries of pain from the numerous wounded of both of him. Yet next day, sustained, they say, by
sides lying in a cabbage-field. 'In several places I schnapps, he was riding about and cheerfully
actually saw blood running between the cabbage encouraging officers and men. On the morning of
stalks.' 18 June the physician, Bietzke, suggested rubbing
As he went back he was hit by a ricochet in the ointment into the bruises he had sustained; all he
shoulder, and a third time on the inside of his said was that it was a matter of indifference to
30
him whether he went into Eternity 'balsamirt' or metz (lJ96-1877), nephew of the man who
'nicht balsamirt'. 'But', he added, 'if all goes well
commanded the 1st Brigade (I Corps) in 1815,
today, we shall soon all be washing and bathing in who won the Iron Cross (2nd Class) at Laon on
Paris.' 29 April 1814. when, thou'gh wounded, he re-
mained al his post. Hc had lost a brother ncar
CrossgoTSchen (2 May 1813) and anothersevercly
MUSIC
wounded in the bloody fight for MOckcrn.
At the end of the day many of the survivors of Steinmetz lived to be a Gtntroljeldmorscholl and to
Yorek's Corps, who had lost heavily in the capture command the First Army in 1870.
of MOckern, sang Nun danlctt aile Goll - not un· At Bautzen an artillery veteran had the presence
naturally. Like Frederick's soldiers after Leuthen of mind to extinguish the fuse of a French shell
they were elated by victory and grateful for which landed wilhin ten yards of Ihe spot where
survival. the Tsar was conversing with the King of Prussia.
On 18 October the Kolberg Jag« and those of The latter called OUI to him asking his name and
the Crown Prince's Regiment began singing Heil length of service. 'You shall be rewarded, my
dj, jm Siegtrlc,antd with enthusiasm as Bulow's brave fellow. Here on the spot I promote you 10 be
Corps went into action at the battle of Leipzig, an officer.' The gunner humbly thanked the King,
and the regimental bands joined in. This was but declined to accept his gracious mark of
composed by Heinrich Harries (1762-1802), a favour, saying that he would have b«n a corporal
Schleswig pastor, in 1790 and published in 1793. years ago had he not been unlettered. However,
It was sung to the same tune as God saoe the King.
The Prussians struck up this song again when
BlUcher met Wellington at La Belle Alliance in the
dusk of 18 June 1815. It was still popular in the
Prussian Army of 1870.

HO OURS A 0 AWARDS
At the end of the 1814 campaign the King of
Prussia rewarded a number of his generals.
BlUcher, promoted field·marshal after Leipzig,
was made a prince; Yorek was created Count
Yorck von Wartenberg; Kleist, Count Kleist of
Nollendorf; BUlow, Count BOlow of Dennewitz;
Taucnzien, Tauenzien of Wittenberg; and
Cneisenau was also made a count. It was a special
distinction that several of these generals were given
titles which rccorded great fcats of arms.
The highest Prussian award, instituted by
Frederick the Creat, remained the order Pour Ie
Mirite; but for the rank and file the Iron Cross was
instituted on 10 March IBI3.
French observers noted during the occupation
of Paris that of all thc Allied troops only the British
were not liberally bedizened with medals. Still
like Ludwig von Cerlach who was three times
wounded, subalterns certainly worked for their
Iron Crosses in BlUcher's Army. Another youthful The Kolbe... Inlaoury Rel..me.u, 1811. Bh.e "n.lfonn wiLh
..ed (acini. and yellow metal b"tton•• From lef110 rilht,
hero was Lieutenant Karl Friedrich von Stein· I",Dadie"j on"'....elee.. i (".lUer. (R. Kn61el)

31
(a) The Iron Cro.. ; (b) Cro.. ofthl! ~d CIa... dl.lributl!d
for the Rnt clme 10 Pomerallian -.oldle" who were heroe.
of Ihl! .<:dOD al Liit",burs in t813; (<:) Cro.. of the nt
CIa•• made of blacl< .Uk ribbon, bordered with While;
(d) Grand Cro..... <:ommolliy known •• 8tiic:her'. Star

he had the sense to add: 'Your Majesty, however, commanded a cavalry brigade (II Corps) in
will not, I hope. be displeased, if I mention that 1815, was wounded in the right arm as a major
the pay of an officer would make my family and while commanding thc Brandcnburg Hussars at
myself happy for life.' The King not only took the Leipzig (16 October 1813). He had earned his
hint, but gave him an Iron Cross into the bargain, promotion, for at the end of the battle old Yorck
whilst the Tsar bestowed upon him the coveted had said to him: 'To you alone lowe today's
Order of 5t George. victory, and I shall never forget yOll and your
Promotion was the reward of good service. gallant regiment.'
Count Henckel von Donnersmarck, a colonel in Bhicher's A.D.C., Cmf August von Nostilz, a
1813. was a major.general commanding a brigade captain in 1813. was already a lieutenant-colonel
in 1815. Colonel von Hiller, who led the 16th before Ligny, where he displayed such splendid
Brigade at Waterloo, had been wounded as a gallantry. Certainly Blucher's was an army in
major, while gallantly leading his battalion at which a bold leader fared at least as well as a
MOckern. Lieutenant-Colonel von Sohr who clever staff officer.
32
29th Regiment
PRUSSIAN ORDER OF BATTLE, 3rd Regiment (Westphalian Landwehr)
ISJUNE IBIS 1St and 2nd Companies (Silesian Rifles)
4th Brigade. Major-General Count Henckel von
It is not easy to arrive at a correct description of Donnersmarck
BlUcher's Army as it was on the eve of Waterloo. On 19th Regiment
the whole Bourdier's list seems the best. It is based on 4th Regiment (Westphalian Landwehr)
the researches of Winand Aerts, a Belgian scholar who
devoted years of his life to the study of every aspect CAVALRY
of the \Vatcrloo campaign. But Bourdier seems to give Major-General von Roder
many of the omce~ named too high a rank. In this 1St Brigade. Major-General von Treskow II
respect - but only this - MiHHing's list seems prerer- Dragoon Regiment, No. S (Brandenburg)
able, though it is not without palpable inaccuracies. Dragoon Regiment, NO.2 (1St West Prussian)
Becke does not go into as much detail as Bourdier or Uhlan Regiment, NO.3 (Brandenburg)
Muffling and seems to give Blucher rather more guns 2nd Brigade. Lieutenant-Colonel Ludwig Adolf Wil-
than he actually had. In compiling the list that helm, Freiherr von Liitzow (1782-1834)
follows I have tried to steer a course between all 1st Kurmark Landwehr
these various hazards. 2nd Kurmark Landwehr
Uhlan Regiment, No.6
STAFF
Commander-in-Chief: Hussar Regiment No. 4 (Silesian). Attached to
Field-Marshal Prince Blucher of Wahlstadt. I st I nfantry Brigade

Quartermaster-General and Chief of Staff: 1St Landwehr (Westphalian). Attached to 2nd


Lieutenant-General Count von Gneisenau (I 760- Infantry Brigade
183 1 ) ARTILLERY
Chief of the General Staff: Colonel von Lehmann
Major-General Karl Wilhelm Georg von Grolmann 12-pounder batteries, Nos. 2, 6 and 9
(1777- 1843) 6-pounder batteries, Nos. 1,3,6,8, IS and 21
Representative at Wellington's Headquarters:
Major-General Baron von Muffling
Artillery:
General von Holt7.endorff (casualty), 16 .June
• Colonel von Rohl.

I CORPS
G.D.C.:
Lieutenant-General Hans Ernst Kad Graf von
Zieten II (I 770-1 84B)
GO.S.;
Lieutenant-Colonel Ludwig von Reiche

INFANTRY
lSt Brigade. Major-General Karl Friedrich Franciscus
von Steinmetza~ (1768-1837)
12th Regiment (2nd Brandenburg)
24th Regiment
1St Regiment (Westphalian Landwehr)
3rd and 4th Companies (Silesian Rifles)
2nd Brigade. Major-General Otto Karl Lorenz von
Pirch l~
6th Regiment (1St West Prussian)
28th Regiment
2nd Regiment (Westphalian Landwehr) The ut and 2nd Silesian In(antry ReFment •. Blue uni_
(orm. with yellow collar. and cuff•. The fusilieu had
:pd Brigade. Major-General von Jagow white epauJette... traps, and the musketeers red. Grey
7th Regiment (2nd West Prussian) greatcoats, forage cap. and j.cket. are worn. (R. Knotel)

33
Howitzer battery. No. I 6th Brigade. Major·General von Krafft
Horse Artillery battery, No. 10 Infantry Regiment Kolberg. NO.9
26th Regiment
IN PANTRY 1St Regiment (Elbe Landwehr)
CAVALRY 71h Brigade. Major-General von Brause
ARTILLERY 14th Regiment
I'IONEERS 22nd Regiment
2nd Regiment (Elbe Landwehr)
Total 8th Bngade. Major·General von Bose"
21St Regiment
II CORPS 23rd Regiment
G.O.C.' 3rd Regiment (Elbe Landwehr)
Major-General Georg Dubislaw Ludwig von
Pirch I CAVALRY
C.O.S.' Major-General von Wahlen-JOrgau. wounded Ligny
Colonel Aster lSt Brigade. Colonel von ThUmen, killed Ligny
Colonel von Sc.hmiedeberg
INPANTRY Dragoon Regiment, No.6 (Neumark)
SIll Brigade. Major-General Graf von Tippels.kirch Konigin Dragoner Regiment, No.1
2nd Regiment (1St Pomeranian) Uhlan Regiment, . o. 2 (Silesian)
25th Regiment :md Brigade. LieUlenant-Colonei von Sohr
5th Regiment (Westphalian Landwehr) Huss.ar Regiment, NO.5 (Pomerania)
Huss.ar Regiment, NO.3 (Brandenburg)
The 7th and 8th Brigades each had two squadrons
of the Elbe Landwehr Cavalry attached to them.
:yd Brigade. Colonel Graf von der Schulenberg
Landwehr Regiment, NO.4 (Kurmark)
Landwehr Regiment, NO.5 (Kunnark)

ARTILLERY
Colonel von Rohl
12-pounder batteries, Nos. 4 and 8
fi.pounder batteries, Nos. 5, 6, 10, 12,34 and 37
Horse Artillery batteries, Nos. 5 and 14
INPANTRY 27,002
CAVALRY 4,471
ARTILLERY
I'IONEERS
ANDl
Total

III CORI'S
G.O.C.'
Lieutenant-General Johann Adolf Freiherr von
Thielemann
Volunteer Jiler Squadron oftbe Brandenbu... Culra••ler
C.O.S.,
R~ment. Green uniform., ,old lace. The Jiiger in the Colonel Carl von Clausewitz £1780-1831)
lilewka (rigbt) b• • • red coU.r. The otber t ....o 6pre. glh Brigade. Major-General von Borck!'
have cornflo....er.blue coll.u .nd cuff•• The centre 6pre
depici. Baron de la Moue Fouque (1711-180h .... bo ...d 30th Regiment
Hrved a. a cul.....ierofficer. bUlaflertbe RII.i.oe can>paip Leib Regiment, No.8
...d re.lgned On the ground. of lIl.bnJth (1803)' He re_
joined in 1813 and fouShl valiantly at Gros.g6....,blMl, I5.t Regiment (Kurmark Landwehr)
....bere hi. bor.e _ . kUled, brinllin. hi.... down in a lolh Brigade. Colonel von Kampfen
Freocb &quare. In November 1813. bein• •eriou.Jy ill. he
_ . I"'nled an bonou... ble dl.c......e with Ihe raDlr. of 27th Regiment
IIlllfor. (R. Ko6lel) 2nd Regiment (Kunnark Landwehr)
34
Pru••i.n Inf.ntry of the Line, 1811-15. Privatell. The badg.. it ha• • black...nd-whit.. cock..de with a bra"l1
Prull"l.n inf.ntry d ..pieted h ..r .. belong In Ih.. 2nd SU... lan button in th.. c..ntr.. and whit .. b ....id running from th..
Infantry Regin>enl. Th..y w ...r u.nlforms of Pru"sUt.n blu.., pompom to t"" cockad... Th.. fUlliH .. r's crOlls-llt....pll .nd
witb y ..llow collars and cuffs, • black sh.ko with whit..• p.ck••t .... ps .r. . .11 o( bl..ck I.... th..r. 4. Thill IIhowlI the
.nd.bl.ck Prusslan pompom, .nd grey br....ch... with b ..ck vh,w o( • mullk..t .... r in c.mpaign dr..SIl. Th.. round
black gait.. rs. Flgur..s from ldt to right .re ." follow,,: plate on th.. black ammunition pouch ill of brallll .nd ha.
1. Gr..nadi .. r,." th.. b ...." .....gl .. badg.. on his shako .nd th.....gl.. of Pru."ia IIlamped upon h. Tbi. platO! or badg..
the taU bl.ck plum.. to bis sbako sbow. The belt• •nd. wa. worn by .n Pru••I.n line t·roop. on th..ir pouchell.
.t....pll of hill equipm..nt .r" whit... 11 th.. y .r.. on th .. n ..xt A conc....ion 10 th.. rigours o( c.mpaign our figur.. is
fIgur".2. Mullk..t .... r. ThJII i" indicated by th .. (.ct that hill w ring .. pdr o( loose wbite trou ...rllsom..dm....dopted
IIhako ball no plum...nd in plac.. o( th.....gle be.u th.. byth.. Prull.l.n. On ... rvlc... (Drawing. by G .. rry Embleton,
roy.1 monog.... m o( th .. King of PrulI.i. in b ....llli. J. FUIII· d ...cribed by Marcu. HJnton) .
Ii.. r. HJ" IIb1"ko i" ..1.0 without plum....nd instead o( a

11th Brigade. Colonel von Luck u 2'ld Brigade. Colonel Grar von Lottum
3rd Regiment (Kurmark Landwehr) Dragoon Regiment, NO.7
4th Regiment (Kurmark Landwehr) Uhlan Regiment, NO.5
12th Brigade. Colonel von Stulpnagel Hussar Regiment, NO.9
31St Regiment Each in ran try brigade had attached to it two
5th Regiment (Kurmark Landwehr) squadrons or the 3rd or the 6th Kurmark Landwehr
6th Regiment (Kurmark Landwehr) Cavalry.

CAVALRY ARTILLERY
Major-General von Hobe Colonel von Mohnhaupt (MOlling)
1St Brigade. Colonel von del' Marwitz Major von Grevent? (Bourdier)
Uhlan Regiment, NO.7 6-pounder ballerie~, Nos. 7, 18, :20 and 35
Uhlan Regiment, No.8 Horse Artillery batteries, Nos. 18 and 19
35
CAVALRV
General Prince Wilhelm of Prussia
1St Brigade. Colonel Graf von Schwerin, killed 18 June
Hussar Regiment, No. 10
Hussar Regiment, o. 6 (2nd Silesian)
Hussar Regiment. No. I (West Prussian)
:md Brigode. Lieutenant-Colonel von WatzdorfT, killed
18June
Hussar Regiment, No.8
3'd Brigade. General von Sydow
Landwehr '0. I (Neumark)
Landwehr No. '2 (Neumark)
Landwehr No. I (Pomerania)
Landwehr No. '2 (Pomerania)
Landwehr No. I (Silesia)
Two squadrons from the 2nd or 3rd Silesian
Landwehr were attached 10 each brigade.

ARTILLERY U
Major von Bardelebcn
1'2-pounder batteries. Nos. 3. 5 and 13
6-pounder batteries, Nos. I, '2. II, 1'2, 13, 14 and 21
Volunteer J"ser duachnuDI of tlle ut Silesian Husllar Horse Artillery ballc:ry, No. I 1
RepJnent. Green with yellow fadn8s and silver lace. The INFANTRY
Jnouoted officer's peUlllle ill lined with red. aDd Ihe stripell
down the o~rallll of both filurell llre red. (R. Knl.heJ) CAVALRY
ARTILLERY
INFANTRV '2'2,'275 PIONEERS
CAVALRV l,gBl
ARTILLERY AND} Total
... IONEERS 1.06'2
TOTAL
Total IN PANTRY 136 Battalions 105,87 1
CAVALRY 135 Squadrons 11.948
ARTILLERY 38 Batteries }
IV COR"" 304 Guns 4. 861
G.O.C., PIONEERS 4 Companies
General Friedrich Wilhelm Count Bulow yon 49'
Dennewitz (1755-1816)
- - -
Total 1'23.1]2

13th Brigade. Lieutenant-General von Hacke


10th Regiment (1St Silesian)
2nd Regiment (Neumark Landwehr)
3rd Regiment (Neumark Landwehr)
14th Brigade. Major-General von Rysscl
I Ilh Regiment ('2nd Silesian)
1St Regiment (Pomeranian Landwehr)
'2nd Regiment (Pomeranian Landwehr)
151h Brigade. Major-General von Losthin
18th Regiment
3rd Regiment (Silesian Landwehr)
4th Regiment (Silesian Landwehr)
16111 Brigode. Colonel von Hiller
15th Regiment: D.C. Major von Keller
1St Regiment (Silesian Regiment)
'2nd Regiment (Silesian Regiment)
36
HUSSARS
71le Plates At this period Prussian hussar uniforms had much
THE STAFF of the variety that one finds in the Grande Armie. A
AI Feldjiiger notable exception is that onc docs not find the
He wears a green uniform, cut like that of a kolpak, or busby, as worn by the compagnie d'ilite in
dragoon, with yellow facings and braM buttons. French hussar regiments.
He has grey overalls trimmed with red, and black
leather accoutrements. He wears an oilskin cover HI Officer, 4th Silesian Rtgimtnt
to protect his shako. His sabre, which hM a metal In ulis regiment the dress ofonieers and men was
scabbard, is suspended from a waist-belt. The very similar, though Bourdier's uniform plates
officers wore silver instead of yellow on their show (plate 9) an N.C.O. wilhout the pelisse.
epaulettc straps, and a silver sash as was usual in Other ranks had silver instead of gold lace on
the Prussian service. ]n other respects there was their yellow collars, and their sashes were yellow
little or no difference between the uniform or and silver, alternatcly, as opposed 10 the silver of
saddlery of officers and men. Schabracques. which the officers. The sabretaehe was red with white
were rather like those of the French hussars of the trimmings and the schabraeque was trimmed with
period, were trimmed with red. red (see figurc H3). The saddlery was much the
The Fel4jiigtT were a corps whose duties were same as in the Frcnch service. A Ciulteen was
similar to those of the Royal Staff Corps in the carried on Ihe back of the saddle.
British service or the various troops of Guides in
Napoleon's Army.
B2 Offiur, Silesian National Cavalry (Hussar) Regi-
A2 Prince Blucher ment, 181j-/5
Blucher's campaign dress, like Wellington's, was This well·decorated officer, who wears the Iron
severely practical, designed for comfort rather Cross among his medals, is based on one of
than show. The picture on page 19 which shows Richard Knotel's plates (Unifomltnkundt, Band
him at Ligny with a galaxy of orders on his coat XIV. No. 27), which in turn was based on an old
is romantic rather than accurate. The Feltf- gouache painting. In theory Silesian cavalry were
morschall wears an unstiffened cap, not unlike supposed to have yellow collars and culTs, but
the caps which officers, both German and British, evidently stocks of yellow cloth werc inadequate,
wore in the trenches in 1914 and 1915. Bernadotte and from the outset the 3rd and 4th Squadrons
would not have liked it (see p. 16)! Over a simple had red facings. Again, in theory, the buttons
double·breasted jacket with scarlet facings and were supposed to be covered with red worsted.
gold lace Blocher wears a regulation greatcoat However, a sketch dated 19June 1814, belonging
with a cape, very similar to those worn by British to the Elberfeld Manuscript in the collection of
gencral officers of the pcriod. Like other Prussian Freiherr von Lipperheide, showed red collars and
officers the Prince worc a silver sash round his yellow metal bUllons. It is as well 10 be reminded
waist; his sabre, as normal with Prussjan generals, from time to time that regimcnts do not always
was of the light cavalry type with a Jilver sword· conform to the Dress Regulations, especially in
knot and a yellow metal scabbard. His saddle·cloth armies which arc raised at short nOlice!
was red, trimmed with gold.

AJ Gmeral an the Staff B3 Trumpeter, Saxon Hussars


This figure calls for no special comment except to In the Prussian service it seems that the trum-
say that Prince Blocher's coat, details of which are peters wore a uniform of the same colour as the
concealed by his greatcoat, is of the same cut. Like rest of the regiment, their normal distinction
the Ftldjiiger the general wears an oilskin shako being the special form of cpauletle which one sees
cover. for example in the dragoon (figure C3).
37
buff belt over the left shoulder was, it seems, for
the cartridge~box. The sahre was slung from the
waist-belt.
This regiment had sky-blue cloth schabracques
with a black edging. The portmanteau was grey
and the canteen was slung at the back of the
saddle on the lefl side. This was the normal
arrangement among the dragoons, the scha-
bracque and its trimmings following the colours
of the coat and its facings.

UHLANS AND STAFF


Generally speaking the uniform of Prussian uhlans
resembled that of the Polish Lancers in Napo-
leon's Army. For the most part officers and men
wore the c<.apska, a short jacket and overalls. The
litewka, though found in Liitzow's Corps, was
unusual. Instead of the czapska some regiments,
which had formerly been hussars, retained their
shakos.

Captain vOn Hdlwlg's Stnifcorps. Thi. unit w .... formed Dr Trooper, 4th Squadron, 7tlt Saxon Regiment
by ... cav...lry officer In 1813 as a .ort of reconnaJ.sance The officer's uniform was very similar, except that
corps. hs unJfonnll CaD1e from Enltland. The blUlli... rs bad
red unJfonns with blue collars, cuffs and busby-bag.; he had silver epaulettes, and silver piping on his
Ibe offic.. u had gold lace and the men white. Red .tri~s
to tbe overall. and trimn,inltli 10 Ihe .cb.. hrac:que appe... red, czapska and his belt.
and collar. and cuff. bad white pipIng. The I... nce ~nnons
were blue Over r ..d. IDfanl·ry unHOrD1fO were riOe green
with black facing... D2 Officer, lSi Squadron, 7th Regiment (Jormul.;'
The unil fOerved in Ihe Low Countries in 1813 and 1814,
and in 1815 was ... bfOorbed Into the 27,h Une Regimenl Hellwig's Hussars)
and Ihe 71h Lanceu. (R. Knl.hel) A typical lancer uniform of the period, which calls
for no special comment.
DRAGOONS
D3 Adjutant of Cavalry
Sky-blue and green appear to have been the main
This smart uniform, reminiscent of lhe Austrian
colours of the Prllssian dragoon uniforms. There
rather than the Prussian Army, is that of a staff
were two quite distinctive styles of coat or jacket,
officer of the cavalry. The young gentleman must
the [itewka (figure C/) and the kolltt (sec figures C2
have fell somewhat conspicuous under fire!
and e3).
Cr Trumpeter 6th (Neumark) Dragoons
LINE INFANTRY
This trumpeter is wearing the litewka.
The infantry of the linc worc a shako, a short
C2 Officer, 1st (Kiinigin) Dragoons
jacket - those of the officer!> had rather longer
This officer is wearing the kollet style of jacket.
tails - breeches and gaitcrs~ An occilsiollill varia-
C3 Dragoon, jtlt Brandenburg Regiment tion was while trousers. Prussian blue was the
One would expect dragoons to be armed with dominant colour, but the Silesian Ja/ler wore
carbines as well as sabres, but this is a detail green as one would expect, and grey and even
seldom shown in uniform plates. Bollrdier shows hlack arc sometimes found. Breeches were usually
(plate 12) one of the 1st Konigin Dragoons, with a grey, and boots or gaiters black. Silesian infalllry
carbine slung over his right shoulder. The white wore a black shako with a white band round the
38
tOP, bcaring thc whitc·and-blaek Prussian pom- The resemblance of the uniform to some of the
pom in frOIlt. The coat was dark Ilrllssian blue Polish Lancers of the Gra/lde Armie dt Varsovie is
and had a yellow collar and cuAS; the shoulder- remarkable. Bourdier shows a trooper of the samc
straps and the turn-backs to the coat-Iails werc regiment with an oilskin cover ovcr his r~apska
scarlet, and thc cuff-slashes (Ihc venical strips and wilh " yellow and red lance pennon. The
of cloth on Ihe cun') were the same colour as the schabracquc was blue with yellow trimmings.
coat. The buttons on the front of the coat, on Ihe F2 TroojJtr, 211d Neumark Rtgimtnt
shoulder-straps and the cuff-slashes were brass. His shako is thai of the regular dragoons.
Grey breeches were \~orn with black gaiters, 1-3 TrumjJttu, 1St Pomeranian Rtgimmt
EI Drummu, 24/h (41h Brandtnburg) Rtgimml His shako looks much the same as Ihose worn by
He wears a black oilskin cover over his shako, British light infantry orthe period.
faslened with lies al Ihe back; his grealcoat is
rolled round his body in much the same fashion as LANDWEHR INFA TRY
with most Olher Prussian troops when on campaign,
with a strip of brown leather 10 keep it tidy; he The appearance of the Landwehr was, as mighl be
carries a white knapsack 011 his hip for ralions, expected, ralher more casual tllan that of the line.
and he would also have a mess tin cncased in a The /itewka seems 10 have been a popular gar-
white canvas cover attached to the back of his ment; while both officers and mCl! worc trousers
pack by a lcather strap, His sword is carried in a instead of brecches and gaiters. Headgear varied
brown leather scabbard with a brass tip; his drum from a cap, often with an oilskin cover, such as
is suspended from a white leather bcll bearing a Blucher himself fowoured, to a shako like lhat of
brass platc with IWO sockets inlO which the thc regulars. Some of the shakos (sec figure G/)
drulllslicks arc thrusl when nOI in usc. look as if they were of British origin.
E2 0ffiCir of Fusiliers, 22nd (UI Rhine) Rtgimtnt
The officer is in full marching order. His shako, GI Officu, lSI Pomeranian Regimt1l/
covered wilh "Ill oilskin, would have a band of
gold braid round il with gilt eagles and a gilt G2 Prioa/e, lSt Weslphalian Regiment
chain. As decoration the blael.:-and-sikcr cockade
would have a gold-braided loop and bulton, G3 Drummu,3rd Efbe Regimenl
above which is a silver pompom with blael.: centre,
The shoulder-straps 10 his coat arc red trimmed THE ARTILLERY
with silver braid, and he carries a grey goatskin
pack slung from white straps. The sword-scabbard The uniforms of the Prussian anillery were by
is trimmed in gilt and the sword has a gilt hilt no means all of Prussian blue with grcy trousers.
with a silver sword-knot. The waist sash is silver Those of Li.ilzow's Corps wore a black litewka; the
with two rows of black threads running lhrough it. Russo-Gcrman Legion wore a shon g,'eell jackct
Ej Offiur of tile regimenlaf stalf, 1St Elbe Regiment with black collar and cuffs, and red piping.
This gcntleman is exercising lhe 'Divinc Right' of HI CamlOllur, Silesiall Brigade
commanders to dispense with equipment: no StlldenlS of uniform may be puzzlcd thai the
pack, no blankct roll and comfortable overalls collar and CliO's arc of a diflcrCllt colour fmlll the
instead of tight boots. epauleltc ~traps. The explanation is that the lalter
arc of lhe Silesian colours: yellow. The Branden-
burg Brigade had rcd epaulclte straps (sec figure
LAI DWEHR CAVALRY flJ).
Most of the Landwehr cavalry wore the /ittwka
and weTe armed Wilh the lance. II:! TrumjJttu, Lii/<.ow's Corps, Balltry .No. 14

FI Offi'u, 3'd Siltsian Regiment H3 0fficu, Brandenburg Bn"gade


This smart officer looks like a regular cavalryman. These IwO figures caJI for no further comment.
39
NOTES 27. Author of Mirnoires de Chirurgie mililaire, e.
campagnes . .. 4 vols., (1817).
28. Brett.James. op. cit.• p. 141.
I. William O. Shanahan, Prussian Military Riforms 29· ibid.• pp. 130-1.
q86-18J3 (New York, 1945)' 30. ibid., pp. 146-7·
2. ibid., p. 206. 3 I. ibid.• p. 148.
3- ihid., p. 219. 32. A Hessian officer.
4. The various authorities differ considerably as to 33. Given in C. de M. [Baron Karl von MUfflingl,
the strengths of the Prussian units, and even as to the History of Ihe Campaign . .. in tlu Year 1815 (London,
names of brigade commanders. I have, on the whole, 1816). MUffling gives Colonel von Langen as the
preferred F. Bourdier's statistics, which are based on commander of the 8th Brigade.
those compiled by Winand Aerts, 10 those of Major 34· Regiment No. 32 had been assigned to this
A. F. Becke, J{apolnm and Walnloo. brigade. but was as yet unformed.
5. E. F. Hrnderson. Bliklur and llu UpriJing of 35. Becke (op. &it.) gives von Braun as the com-
Prussia against Napoleon ,806-,8'5. (London/New York, mander of IV Corps artillery. but as the officer of
1911 ) p. 7· that name was a general (cf. von Reuter's narrative)
6. ibid., p. 9- he would have assumed command of the artiUery
7. Krimer became surgeon of a reserve battalion when Holtzendorff was hit. Since Colonel von Rohl
and served at Dresden, Kulm, Leipzig and in the did so. one mwt assume that von Braun was absent
Waterloo campaign. His book, En'Mtnmgen tinu allen for some reason.
Liit&wtr J4gns, 1795-1819. was published at SlUttgart
in 1913.
8. The 2nd Regiment of Hussars and the Saxon
Chevaux*Ugers.
g. Antony Brett-James. Europe against Napalmn:
The Uipdg Campaign ,813, from eyewitness ae'ormu.
(London. 1970) p. 183.
10. Shanahan, op. cit.• p. 84. fn. 64.
II. Brell-James, op. ,il., p. 1B4.
12. ibid., pp. 49-52.
13· ibid., pp. 145-6.
14. ibid.• p. ~:1I8.
15. Shanahan. op. ,it., p. 175.
16. ibid., p. '78.
17. Bren-James. op. ,it., p. 43·
lB. ibid., pp. 42-3.
19. ibid.• p. !l81.
20. ibid.• p. 44.
21. Of which one (No. 32) was 'not formed'.
22. Von Kneller again distinguished himself in the
pursuit entering Genappe when Napoleon was
passing through in his carriage. The Emperor just
had lime (Q escape on horseback, but his bagKage, a
rich booty. fell into Pl'lissian hands.
23. Breit-James. op. cit., Pl" 182-3·
24. A. F. Ikeke, Napol,oll alld Waterloo. The Em-
/Jvor'sCampaigli with fhe Armce dll Nord. 1815: a strategi-
cal alld tactical study. '2 vols. (London, 1914); revised and
re-written edition, 1 vol. (London. 1936). The Elbe Nado...1 Hu...r Re,bn"'nl. G~n wlLh srey
25. Presumably von Braun, who according to nv......lIl1. The mounleel hu••ar ha. cold I.ce and UCht blue
Becke (op. ,it.• p. 292) commanded the artillery of collar and cuff•• I.. 1813 the Pru..l.. n pn;tvince•• Ea..st
Pru••I... Pornen..l.. and Silesla. .n rai.ed N..tional
IV Corps.
26. Condensed from Captain E. S. May. R.A., wa. wa.
Cavalry Res:bnent•• The Elbe N..do....1 Hu•••r Rep.nent
Ihe la.t to be raJ.eeI. It financed larcely by Lhe old
'A Prussian Gunner's Adventures in 1815', Uniud
Seruiee Mag~j"e (October IBgI).
MacdebuI"I (181.), wa.
B......de..bu... landeel (anUlle•. It took part i .. the alCS" of
me...ed i .. the loth Hu•••.n. and
fouCht at Wavre in 1815. (R. Ka6tel)

40
Men-at-Arms Series

THE STONEWALL BRIGADE jf1lut $401'" THE CONNAUGHT RANGERS Aton S/upf>t,tl
THE BLACK WATCH CluJt-lu 0,-, 3Ont: PUl'ij'ABIS J-- UwifMd
FRENCH FOREIGN LEGION M.m.. W.:...mw GEORGE WASHINGTON'S ARMY
P,,,, T-.v
FOOT GRENADIERS OF THE IMPERIAL
GUARD Clwlu Gr-' THE BUFFS e;,'P'J Bluu-J
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P,kr r",,", PRUSSIAN ARMY OF 1870 AUml s,,,,,,,,

BRIGADIER PETER YOUNG retired from the Army in 1959 after a colour-
ful career which included wartime service in Nos. 1 and 3 Commando Brigades,
and the years 1953-6 as Commander of the 9th Regiment of the Arab Legion.
From 1959 to 1969 he was Head of the Military History Department of the
Royal Military Academy. Sandhurst. His many books and articles have made
him one of the best-known British. military historians; and his reconstruction
of Civil War battles at Marston Moor, Newbury, Cropredy Bridge and else·
where have made him known to an even wider public.

£1.25 net (in U.K. only) SBN 85045 I 17 5

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