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Battle of Strehla

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1760 conflict
Battle of Strehla
Part of theThird Silesian War (Seven Years' War)

Battle of Strehla (L. Therbu, G. J. Cöntgen, c. 1760)
Date20 August 1760
Location
ResultPrussian victory
Belligerents
Kingdom of PrussiaKingdom of PrussiaHabsburg monarchyAustria
Commanders and leaders
Johann Dietrich von HülsenFrederick Michael, Count Palatine of Zweibrücken
Strength
12,000[1]25,000[1]
Casualties and losses
900[1]1,800[1]
Seven Years' War:
European theatre
Bohemia and Moravia

Westphalia, Hesse and Lower Saxony

Electoral Saxony

Brandenburg

Silesia

East Prussia

Pomerania

Iberian Peninsula

Naval Operations

TheBattle of Strehla (20 August 1760) was a military engagement fought during theSeven Years' War between theKingdom of Prussia andAustria. The Austrian army attacked an outnumbered Prussian corps but was repulsed. The battle was fought near the town ofStrehla inSaxony, Germany.

Background

[edit]

In August 1760,Fredrick the Great of Prussia and his army made ready to repel further Austrian incursions into Prussian territory. When the Austrian offensive did come, it came in Prussian-occupiedSilesia. However, a second Austrian army of 25,000 men also began advancing upon Frederick's holdings in Eastern Saxony, putting the Prussians in danger of being caught in a largepincer movement.[2] To counter this threat, Frederick dispatched Lt. GeneralJohann Dietrich von Hülsen and 12,000 men to hold the west bank of the Elbe river at the town of Strehla while Frederick dealt with the Austrians in Silesia.[1][3][4] Five days before the engagement at Strehla, Frederick and his army defeated the Austrian forces in Silesia at theBattle of Liegnitz, effectively rendering the Austrian pincer plan defunct.[3][4]

Hülsen and his army arrived in Strehla, and began to fortify their position. Rather than risk fording the Elbe at Strehla, the Austrian commanderFrederick Michael, Count Palatine of Zweibrücken instead chose to cross the river at a different point and then march parallel to the Elbe until he encountered Hülsen's forces.[1][2]

Battle

[edit]

The Prussian army dug in on the high ground around Strehla's suburbs and behind a wood to the west of town. The Austrians arrived from the south, with Zweibrücken splitting his larger army in order to attack the Prussian lines from multiple directions. Despite being aware of this flanking maneuver, Hülsen resolved to fight a battle centered around a static defensive line.[1]

The battle began at 5:00 A.M. with an exchange of fire between the Austrian and Prussian artillery. Soon after, several Prussian battalions broke through the woods near Strehla, forcing a much larger body of Austrian infantry to redeploy to counter them. Meanwhile, the main lines of Prussian and Austrian infantry engaged each other on a field to the immediate south of the town. After two hours of fighting, the Prussians counterattacked and began to push the Austrians back to the south. In the meantime, the Prussian cavalry succeeded in driving back their Austrian counterparts on the Prussian far right flank. Rather than pursue the retreating Austrian cavalry, the Prussian horse reformed, charged, and overran several isolated Austrian infantry battalions. Emboldened by this success, the Prussian infantry in the woods advanced and succeeded in driving back more of the Austrian infantry.[5] With both flanks of his army being forced back, Zweibrücken ordered a withdrawal, and the fighting was concluded by 7:00 A.M.[1]

Aftermath

[edit]

The Prussian army remained in the field until 1:00 P.M., waiting for a second Austrian attack. When one did not materialize, Hülsen withdrew his army from Strehla and marched toTorgau. The Austrian army returned the next day and occupied the former Prussian position at Strehla.[1]

Hülsen was personally thanked by Frederick for his delaying action and successful repulse of the Austrians.[6]

The Austrian army lost 1,800 men killed, wounded, or captured at Strehla. The Prussian army sustained casualties of 900 men killed or wounded.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghij"1760-08-20 - Combat of Strehla - Project Seven Years War".www.kronoskaf.com. Retrieved2018-09-12.
  2. ^abDuffy Ch.,By the Force of Arms, Vol. II of "The Austrian Army in the Seven Years War", The Emperor Press, Chicago 2008.
  3. ^abFrederick II,Oeuvres de Frederic le Grand, vol. V, Berlin 1847.
  4. ^abDer Siebenjährige Krieg, hrsg Grossen Generalstab, Band 13 - Torgau, Berlin 1914.
  5. ^Dorn G., Engelmann J.,Die Kavallerie –Regimenter Friederich des Grossen 1756-1763, Friedberg 1984.
  6. ^Kurd von Schöning:Der Siebenjährige Krieg. Band 2, Berlin 1851,S. 390 und396

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