Battle of Prenzlau | |||||||
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Part of theWar of the Fourth Coalition | |||||||
Capitulation of Prenzlau bySimeon Fort (1793–1861). | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
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Commanders and leaders | |||||||
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Strength | |||||||
12,000, 12 guns | 10,000[1]–12,000, 64 guns | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
Slight | 3,500 killed or captured in battle 10,000 surrendered[1] 64 guns |
In theBattle of Prenzlau orCapitulation of Prenzlau on 28 October 1806 two divisions ofFrench cavalry and some infantry led byMarshalJoachim Murat intercepted a retreatingPrussian corps led byFrederick Louis, Prince of Hohenlohe-Ingelfingen. In this action from theWar of the Fourth Coalition, Hohenlohe surrendered his entire force to Murat after some fighting and a parley.Prenzlau is located about 90 kilometers north ofBerlin inBrandenburg.
After their catastrophic defeat at theBattle of Jena-Auerstedt on 14 October, the Prussian armies fled north to theElbe River with EmperorNapoleon I of France's victorious army in hot pursuit. The Prussians crossed the Elbe nearMagdeburg and marched northeast, trying to reach safety behind theOder River. Part of Napoleon's army thrust east to seize Berlin, while the rest followed the retreating Prussians. From Berlin, Murat moved north with his cavalry, trying to head off Hohenlohe.
After several clashes on 26 and 27 October, Murat arrived at Prenzlau on the heels of Hohenlohe's corps. Fighting occurred in which several Prussian units were captured or cut to pieces. Murat then bluffed the demoralized Hohenlohe into surrendering his entire corps by claiming that the Prussians were surrounded by overwhelming forces. In fact, apart from a brigade of infantry, only Murat's cavalry were in the vicinity. In the days afterward, the French cowed several more Prussian forces and fortresses into surrendering. Finding its way to the northeast blocked, a second corps of retreating Prussians underGebhard Leberecht von Blücher veered northwest towardLübeck.
On 8 October 1806, Napoleon's 180,000-strong army invaded theElectorate of Saxony through theFranconian Forest. His troops were massed in abatallion carré (battalion square) made up of three columns of two army corps each, plus theImperial Guard, the Cavalry Reserve, and aBavarian contingent.[2]
Opposing the French army were three semi-independent Prussian-Saxon armies, the first led byFeldmarschallCharles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick, the second underGeneral of InfantryFrederick Louis, Prince of Hohenlohe-Ingelfingen, and the third co-commanded by General of InfantryErnst von Rüchel andLieutenant General Blücher.[3] Brunswick held a position atErfurt in the center. Hohenlohe took station nearRudolstadt in the east, with General-MajorBogislav Friedrich Emanuel von Tauentzien atHof. Rüchel was atGotha, and Blücher heldEisenach at the western end of the line with GeneralKarl August, Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach's division nearMeiningen and General Christian Ludwig von Winning atVacha.Eugene Frederick Henry, Duke of Württemberg's Reserve lay far to the north atMagdeburg.[4]
MarshalJean-Baptiste Bernadotte's I Corps and Murat's cavalry defeated Tauentzien's division at theBattle of Schleiz.[5] The next day, MarshalJean Lannes' V Corps mauled the 8,300-man division ofPrince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia at theBattle of Saalfeld, where the young prince was slain.[6] On 12 October, Napoleon wheeled hisbatallion carré to the left to engage his enemies in combat. In the face of this menace, Brunswick elected to march the main army north fromWeimar toMerseburg, while Hohenlohe defended his flank nearJena.[7] Rüchel was at Weimar, waiting for Saxe-Weimar to return with his division.[8] The doubleBattle of Jena-Auerstedt occurred on 14 October as Napoleon's 96,000 troops attacked Hohenlohe and Rüchel's 53,000 atJena,[9] while Brunswick's 49,800 troops encountered the 26,000-man III Corps of MarshalLouis Davout atAuerstedt.[10] The Prussian armies were beaten and driven from both battlefields. Brunswick's army lost 13,000 casualties and 115 artillery pieces, while the casualties of Hohenlohe and Rüchel may have reached 25,000.[11]
InCapitulation of Erfurt on 16 October, over 10,000 Prussians laid down their arms in the first of a series of shameful surrenders. The 12,000-man corps of Saxe-Weimar and Winning missed Jena-Auerstedt and remained intact, heading north throughBad Langensalza.[12] Shot through both eyes at Auerstadt, Brunswick died on 10 November atAltona near Hamburg.[13] Dangerously wounded at Jena, Rüchel escaped toPoland and later recovered.[14] Filling the command void were Hohenlohe, General of InfantryFriedrich Adolf, Count von Kalckreuth, and Blücher, who each led sizable bodies of Prussians fromNordhausen through theHarz Mountains toHalberstadt andQuedlinburg. These columns were energetically pursued by MarshalNicolas Soult's IV Corps withGeneral of DivisionLouis Michel Antoine Sahuc'sdragoons attached.[15] On 17 October, Bernadotte inflicted heavy losses on Eugene of Württemberg's Reserve at theBattle of Halle.[16]
By 20 October, Hohenlohe and the survivors of the Reserve reached Magdeburg. Kalckreuth crossed the Elbe atTangermünde before handing over his command in order to take up a new post in Poland.[17] Blücher was east ofBrunswick marching for the Elbe with Saxe-Weimar a day's march behind him atSalzgitter[18] On the 20th, Soult and Murat arrived before Magdeburg. Murat sent hischief of staffAugustin Daniel Belliard to demand its surrender, which was refused by Hohenlohe. However, the Prussians foolishly allowed Belliard into the city without a blindfold. He reported back to Murat that Hohenlohe's main body was still in the city and that great confusion prevailed.[17] Davout seizedWittenberg on the 20th, with the local people assisting his troops in putting out a fire and preventing a powder magazine from being blown up. Consequently, 140,000 pounds of gunpowder and a valuable Elbe River crossing fell into French hands. Lannes seized a second bridgehead atDessau.[19]
Leaving MarshalMichel Ney's VI Corps to begin theSiege of Magdeburg, Napoleon ordered his right wing to head forBerlin. The French emperor found time to pay a reverent visit to the tomb ofFrederick the Great atPotsdam. In spite of his respect for the Prussian king, Napoleon stole Frederick's sword and other trophies.[20] The French right wing consisted of Davout's corps, Lannes' corps, MarshalPierre Augereau's VII Corps, and Murat's 1stCuirassier Division under General of DivisionEtienne Marie Antoine Champion de Nansouty, 2nd Cuirassier Division led by General of DivisionJean-Joseph Ange d'Hautpoul, and 3rd Dragoon Division under General of DivisionMarc Antoine de Beaumont. General of DivisionEmmanuel Grouchy's 2nd Dragoon Division trailed behind. Bernadotte, Soult, and Sahuc's 4th Dragoon Division formed the left wing.Louis Klein's 1st Dragoon Division was split between assisting Ney and patrolling the line of communications. Smith supplied the cavalry division numbers.[21]
Under orders from KingFrederick William III of Prussia to march for the Oder, Hohenlohe's corps set out from Magdeburg on the morning of 21 October. He reinforced the garrison with 9,000 men, but in the confusion other units and 39 field guns stayed in the fortress so that 25,000 troops were left behind. That evening, Hohenlohe reachedBurg bei Magdeburg where he gathered up Kalckreuth's column.[22] His main body arrived atGenthin on the evening of the 22nd andRathenow at nightfall on the 23rd. In order to feed his troops better, he split his command up into several columns.[23]
On the 24th, Blücher crossed the Elbe atSandau,[18] while Saxe-Weimar crossed there after deceiving Soult into believing he was heading for Magdeburg. During the operation,OberstLudwig Yorck von Wartenburg fought a successfulrear guard action atAltenzaun on the 26th. Once the column was safely on the east bank of the Elbe, Saxe-Weimar was relieved by Winning in command.[24] Hohenlohe reachedNeustadt an der Dosse on the 24th. He sent out General-Major Christian Ludwig Schimmelpfennig towardFehrbellin, between Neustadt andOranienburg, and site of a1675 battle. Schimmelpfennig's task was to cover his right flank and keep the French from interfering with the main body's march toSzczecin (Stettin) on the Oder. Hohenlohe gave Blücher command of his rear guard.[25]
The dilapidated fortress ofSpandau[26] fell on 25 October to General of DivisionLouis Gabriel Suchet's division of Lannes' corps. The commandantMajor Benekendorf was discussing terms with the French when they rushed the gate and broke into the fortress. Altogether, 71 cannon and 920 soldiers, including the 3rd battalion of theKönig Infantry Regiment #18, three companies of soldiers unfit for field duty, and 65 gunners surrendered, the garrison being released on parole. In 1808, Benekendorf was hauled before acourt-martial and condemned to be shot, but the king commuted his sentence to life in prison.[27]
On 25 October, Davout's corps marched through Berlin in triumph.[28] That evening, Hohenlohe's main body was betweenNeuruppin andLindow, Blücher's rear guard division at Neustadt, Oberst von Hagen's infantry and General-Major von Schwerin's[a] cavalry atWittstock, and General-Major Rudolph Ernst Christoph von Bila's brigade atKyritz, just north of Neustadt. Napoleon sent Murat and Lannes marching north from Berlin to intercept Hohenlohe.General of BrigadeAntoine Lasalle's light cavalry and Grouchy's dragoons were already at Oranienburg with General of BrigadeÉdouard Jean Baptiste Milhaud's light cavalry nearby.[29]
Lasalle overtook Schimmelpfennig's 1,300 troops atZehdenick around noon on 26 October. At first, the Prussians held back the French, but the dragoon divisions of Grouchy and Beaumont soon arrived. TheKönigin Dragoons # 5, four squadrons strong, charged and drove back Lasalle's hussars, but Grouchy's dragoons intervened and nearly wiped out the regiment. The Prussians lost one color and 14 officers and 250 men killed, wounded, or captured. Pursued by the French until evening, Schimmelpfennig's crippled force fled to Stettin.[27][30] Hearing of this setback, Hohenlohe changed his line of march fromGransee farther north throughLychen. On the morning of the 27th he waited at Lychen for Blücher and Bila. Since neither turned up, his column set out forBoitzenburg.[31]
As Hohenlohe neared Boitzenburg on the 27th, he met Graf von Arnim who notified him that he had collected supplies for the hungry soldiers at his manor, theSchloss Boitzenburg. Unfortunately, when the Prussians arrived around 2:00 PM they found that Milhaud's cavalrymen got there first and were pillaging the estate. It took Hohenlohe's advanced guard three hours to drive Milhaud's brigade out of the town. In the meantime, Murat heard the sound of the battle and hurried north with Grouchy's dragoons. South of Boitzenburg at Wichmannsdorf, Hohenlohe's right flank guard blundered into Grouchy's column. Three regiments of French dragoons drove the PrussianGensdarmes Cuirassier Regiment # 10 against a marsh and forced its surrender. But without infantry, Murat was unable to halt Hohenlohe's column from hurrying past toward Prenzlau.[32]
After the clash at Boitzenburg, Hohenlohe knew that the French were on the Berlin highway, which went northeast from Zehdenick to Prenzlau. So instead of continuing on the Lychen-Boitzenburg-Prenzlau road, which intersected with the Berlin highway, he veered northeast to Schönermark-Nordwestuckermark. At 4:00 AM on 28 October and the column reached Schönermark, only eight kilometers from Prenzlau. Hohenlohe held acouncil of war at which the officers argued whether to march east to Prenzlau or to go north toPasewalk. A cavalry vedette reported that Prenzlau was clear of the French at 6:00 AM, so the march continued, though three hours were wasted before getting underway. It was very difficult to get the column moving again and angry protests were heard from the starving soldiers. Schwerin led the column with a cuirassier regiment and a battery of horse artillery. The bulk of the infantry trailed behind Schwerin's vanguard and OberstPrince Augustus of Prussia led the rear guard, which consisted of a cavalry regiment and an infantry battalion. Two dragoon regiments protected the right flank.[33]
Two roads approached the west side of Prenzlau, the Berlin highway to the southwest and the road through Schönermark to the northwest. The two roads entered the city at gates about 500 meters apart. The roads were raised above the surrounding marshland and passed through suburbs about one kilometer in length. The several kilometer long Unteruckersee (Lower Ucker Lake) lies on the south side of the city. TheUecker River flows north from the lake on the west side of Prenzlau.[34]
Marshal Murat had two divisions and two brigades of cavalry, plus 12 guns in three horse artillery batteries. Lasalle's brigade included the 5th and 7thHussar Regiments, and Milhaud's brigade comprised the 1st Hussar and 13thChasseurs à Cheval Regiments. Grouchy's 2nd Dragoon Division had the 3rd, 4th, 10th, 11th, 13th, and 22nd Dragoon Regiments, 24 squadrons. Beaumont's 3rd Dragoon Division was made up of the 5th, 8th, 12th, 16th, 19th, and 21st Dragoon Regiments, 24 squadrons. The total French strength was 12,000 men. Smith puts all the light cavalry in Lasalle's division on page 227, but on page 228 he separates them into brigades under Lasalle and Milhaud.[35] Another authority wrote that Milhaud's brigade consisted of the 13th Chasseurs and a dragoon regiment,[36] and that 3,000 of Lannes' picked infantry were at hand.[34]
Hohenlohe's command included theRabiel,Schack,Dohna,Osten,Borcke,Losthin, andHahnGrenadier battalions, and the 1st battalionArnim Infantry Regiment # 13, 1st battalionGarde Infantry Regiment # 15,König Infantry Regiment # 18,Brunswick Infantry Regiment # 21,Möllendorf Infantry Regiment # 25,Grawert Infantry Regiment # 47, Cuirassier Regiment # 3,Leib Cuirassier Regiment # 5,Prittwitz Dragoon Regiment # 2,Krafft Dragoon Regiment # 11,Wobeser Dragoon Regiment # 14. The field artillery included one horse and two 12-pounder foot batteries. Altogether, the Prussians had about 10,000 soldiers, 64 guns, and 1,800 horses for the cavalry and artillery.[37]
As Hohenlohe marched along the Schönermark road, his troops kept bumping into French patrols in the morning mist. As the column passed through the marshes, the dragoon flankers returned to the main road and pushed their way into the line of march. This spread the column out over a greater distance. Lasalle tried to block the Prussian approach march in the suburb, but Schwerin's cuirassiers brushed the French hussars out of the way. Hohenlohe directed his troops to move through the city and draw rations from a wagon train parked on the other side of Prenzlau. To cover his march, Hohenlohe posted General-Major von Tschammer[b] with two grenadier battalions across the Berlin highway with their battalion guns trained on the road. Smaller detachments guarded the lake shore, the town gate, and a paper-mill.[38]
At this time, French Captain Hugues appeared out of the mist with a flag of truce and was taken to Hohenlohe. Hugues spun "a wonderful tissue of lies", claiming that Murat had 30,000 troops at hand and that Lannes with 60,000 more lurked on the road to Stettin. He insisted that the Prussian general surrender, which Hohenlohe refused to do. However, he sent hischief of staff OberstChristian Karl August Ludwig von Massenbach back with Hugues, apparently to see what he could find out.[39]
Murat then launched his attack, Lasalle's hussars leading the way, followed by Grouchy's dragoons, while Beaumont brought up the rear. The French horse artillery rapidly silenced Tschammer's cannons. In order to harass the rear of Hohenlohe's column, the French marshal detached one of Beaumont's brigades and placed it under the command of hisaide-de-camp ColonelLouis Chrétien Carrière Beaumont. Murat sent it circling to the left through the hamlet of Göllmitz on the Boitzenburg road. Murat then ordered General of BrigadeAndré Joseph Boussart's brigade from Grouchy's division to attack the Prussian column of march. After fording a small stream west of the town, Boussart's dragoons smashed into Hohenlohe's marching column from the south. The cavalrymen overran a substantial part Hohenlohe's troops and captured Tschammer. The Prussians were forced into Prenzlau, leaving eight guns and many prisoners in French hands. Cut off, the rear guard was set upon from two directions by both Beaumont's division and Beaumont's brigade and driven northward. After trapping his command against the Uecker, the two Beaumonts compelled Prince Augustus to surrender.[40] Marching to the sound of the guns, Milhaud's brigade observed the prince's capture before continuing north to Pasewalk.[36]
Grouchy's dragoons broke down the town gate and trotted through Prenzlau and out the other side to view Hohenlohe's 10,000 troops drawn up on the road to Pasewalk. Murat sent Belliard to demand Hohenlohe's surrender, which the Prussian declined again. By this time some of Lannes' infantry were on the field. Together with Grouchy and Lasalle (but not Beaumont), there were only 4,000 to 5,000 French confronting the Prussians. At this time, Massenbach was allowed to return to the Prussian lines. Completely deceived by the French, Massenbach reported to Hohenlohe that their enemies were now between them and Stettin. Murat asked for a head-to-head parley with Hohenlohe which was granted. The marshal lied to Hohenlohe on his "word of honor" that he was surrounded by 100,000 French in the corps of Lannes, Soult, and Bernadotte.[41]
When a munitions wagon blew up in the distance, a quick-witted French officer explained that it was Soult's signal gun announcing that he was now blocking the Prussians' retreat route. Hohenlohe requested terms. These were harsh, with the officers and the Royal Guards being released on parole and the rank and file being made prisoners. After consulting with his officers, the Prussian prince surrendered his entire corps.[42]
HistorianDigby Smith stated that 10,000 Prussian troops, 1,800 cavalry horses, and 64 guns fell into French hands, while Murat's cavalry suffered few casualties.[37]Francis Loraine Petre noted that the Prussians' total losses were nearly 12,000, with Hohenlohe surrendering 10,000, Boussart's brigade killing or capturing 1,000, and Beaumont's division accounting for the 1,000-man rear guard. Between Prenzlau and the fighting at Boitzenburg and Zehdenick, the Prussians lost nearly 13,500 men. Beaumont was given responsibility for escorting the prisoners. Evidently some escaped, because Beaumont reported his captives numbered 9,534, not counting the approximately 400 paroled officers.[43]
Hohenlohe's capitulation proved to be a bad precedent to a subsequent string of abject Prussian surrenders in the next few days.[43] In theCapitulation of Pasewalk on 29 October, 4,000 Prussians surrendered to a force smaller than their own. Soon afterward, in theCapitulation of Stettin, Lasalle's light cavalry brigade bluffed the fortress commandant into surrendering his 5,000-man garrison.[44] Since Auerstedt, Blücher had carefully preserved an artillery convoy. But on 30 October, Major von Höpfner surrendered with 600 soldiers and 25 guns to some of Lannes' units atBoldekow, 14 kilometers south ofAnklam. On 1 November, the fortress ofKüstrin capitulated to General of BrigadeNicolas Hyacinthe Gautier's brigade of Davout's corps. A French dragoon brigade caught up with the 1,100 infantry and 1,073 cavalry of Bila at Anklam. Smith asserted that the brigade was from Sahuc's 4th Division but Petre stated on page 264 that Sahuc was atRathenow on 1 November.[45] Bila had been joined by his older brother Karl Anton Ernst von Bila with a battalion from Hanover. On 31 October, General of DivisionNicolas Léonard Beker forced them to withdraw to the north side of thePeene River and convinced them to capitulate the next day.[46]
After Prenzlau, Blücher's escape path to the northeast was blocked. AtNeustrelitz he swung his columns to the northwest and raced towardLübeck. By this time, Winning's division joined him to raise his total strength to 22,000 men.[44] TheBattle of Lübeck occurred on 6 November.[47]
Petre believed that Hohenlohe's surrender was unnecessary and his chief of staff Massenbach was partly responsible. He thought that the Prussians could have fought their way into Stettin, and probably would have if a strong-willed general like Blücher had been in command. The brigades of Hagen and Bila were not far away at the time and these forces might have helped prevent Murat from encircling Hohenlohe.[48] Petre listed several criticisms of Hohenlohe. First, he marched too slowly from Burg and took too many detours to the north at the incompetent Massenbach's advice. It might have been possible for him to reach Prenzlau a day earlier, in which case he would have escaped Murat. Second, he kept too much cavalry and Hagen's infantry brigade on his left flank, where there were no enemies. Only Schimmelpfennig's weak brigade of 1,300 men was in the critical sector on the right flank. Third, his best troops marched in the rear guard with Blücher, while the major threat was on the right flank.[49]
The following websites are excellent sources for the full names of French and Prussian generals.
Preceded by Siege of Magdeburg (1806) | Napoleonic Wars Battle of Prenzlau | Succeeded by Capitulation of Pasewalk |