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Battle of Möckern

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1813 battle of the War of the Sixth Coalition

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Battle of Möckern
Part of theGerman campaign of 1813

The great Platen and his trumpeter at Möckern (5 April 1813)
Richard Knötel
Date5 April 1813[1]
Location52°08′N11°57′E / 52.14°N 11.95°E /52.14; 11.95
ResultPrusso-Russian victory[1]
Belligerents
First French EmpireFrench EmpireKingdom of PrussiaPrussia
Russian EmpireRussian Empire
Commanders and leaders
First French EmpireEugène de BeauharnaisRussian EmpirePeter Wittgenstein[a]
Strength

37,000[3] to 50,000[1]

  • up to 46,000 infantrymen[1]
  • up to 4,000 cavalrymen[1]

20,000[3] to 24,000[1]

  • up to 19,000 infantrymen[1]
  • up to 5,000 cavalrymen[1]
Casualties and losses

900[4] to 2,200[1][5]

  • up to 1,200 dead and wounded[1]
  • up to 1,000 captured[1][6]
500[5] to 600[1][4][6] dead and wounded
Battle of Möckern is located in Europe
Battle of Möckern
Location within Europe
Map
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180km
112miles
19
19 Siege of Hamburg from 24 December 1813 to 12 May 1814
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14
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8 Battle of the Katzbach on 26 August 1813
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6
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4
4 Battle of Bautzen (1813) from 20 to 21 May 1813
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3
3 Battle of Lützen (1813) on 2 May 1813
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2
1
1 Siege of Danzig (1813) from 16 January to 29 November 1813
1 Siege of Danzig (1813) from 16 January to 29 November 1813
  current battle
  Napoleon in command
  Napoleon not in command
General Bülow
General Wittgenstein

TheBattle of Möckern (also known as theBattle of Dannigkow)[1] was a series of heavy clashes between alliedPrusso-Russian troops underRussian commanderPeter Wittgenstein andNapoleonic French forces underEugène de Beauharnais south ofMöckern. It occurred on 5 April 1813. It ended in a French defeat and formed the successful prelude to the "Liberation War" againstNapoleon (the German name for theGerman theatre of theWar of the Sixth Coalition).

Context

[edit]

In winter 1812, Napoleon had suffered a heavy defeat before Moscow upon which Prussia began to consider giving up its enforced alliance with the French. It signed theConvention of Tauroggen with Russia on 30 December 1812, stipulating neutrality between them, and then on 27 March 1813 both powers declared war on France.

Course

[edit]

Meanwhile, in March 1813, the Allied armies decided to attack French forces inMagdeburg so that they could then cross theRiver Elbe and advance westwards. Troops were also sent off under the command of the Prussian generalsFriedrich Wilhelm von Bülow,Karl Ludwig von Borstell, Friedrich von Hünerbein andLudwig Yorck as well as the Russian commandersPeter Wittgenstein andFriedrich Wilhelm von Berg. After the French received information of the advance, about 30,000 men left Magdeburg under viceroyEugène on 2 April 1813 and crossed the Elbe, setting up his headquarters inKönigsborn. Wittgenstein, who was in overall command of the Allied operations, planned to use feints further to the east to draw in the French and then cut them off after they returned to Magdeburg.

In expectation of an attack, the French formed their troops along theriver Ehle between Möckern andGommern. The allies arranged a total of about 10,000 men in three detachments marching in from the northeast, east and southeast. Smaller clashes were already happening on the 3rd and 4 April, with the French committing few troops to the fighting. Messages also began to arrive stating that the French wished to withdraw to Magdeburg and so Wittgenstein gave the command to attack on 5 April.

First general Hünerbein with two Yorkschen Corps marching in from the south came upon the French near Dannigkow, leading to stubborn resistance and house-to-house fighting.

In spite of numerical inferiority, after four hours Hünerbein succeeded in forcing the 2,000 French soldiers out of their positions.

The second major clash happened at the Ehle river crossing in Vehlitz. Prusso-Russian troops under Borstel and Berg here attacked the French, who had posted themselves in several lines at the Ehle as far as behind Vehlitz. Due to the deep gradient, few of the Allied guns could come to bear and so the battle descended into man-to-man fighting. This was impeded wide swampy area that lay between the two forces, meaning the soldiers had to wade across in places with the water up to breast height. After violent clashes, in which the French also used cavalry squadrons, here too the Allies succeeded in forcing the French from their positions.

Result

[edit]

In view of these unexpected defeats, the French viceroy concluded on the night of 5 April to withdraw once more to Magdeburg. On its withdrawal the French forces destroyed all the bridges of the Klusdammes, denying the most important access routes to Magdeburg to the Allies. Although the French forces in Germany were not finally defeated by this action, for the Prussians and Russians the clash was nevertheless a first important success on the way to the final victory over Napoleon.

Gallery

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  • Memorial in Dannigkow
    Memorial in Dannigkow
  • Memorial in Vehlitz
    Memorial in Vehlitz

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^He led the Prussians and the Russians.[1][2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghijklmnBodart 1908, p. 447.
  2. ^Bogdanovich 1863, p. 98.
  3. ^abKarl Ludwig Wilhelm Ernst von Prittwitz:Beiträge zur Geschichte des Jahres 1813, Vol. 1,Potsdam 1843, pp. 337–338.
  4. ^abJean-Baptiste-Adolphe Charras:Geschichte des Krieges von 1813 in Deutschland,Leipzig 1867, p. 400.
  5. ^abRudolf Friederich:Die Befreiungskriege 1813–1815, Vol. 1,Berlin 1911, p. 205.
  6. ^abBogdanovich 1863, p. 103.

Sources

[edit]

External links

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