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Battle of Saalfeld

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1806 Battle during the War of the Fourth Coalition

Battle of Saalfeld
Part of theWar of the Fourth Coalition

The death ofLouis Ferdinand of Prussia, byPeter Edward Stroehling
Date10 October 1806[1]
Location
Saalfeld, Germany
50°39′00″N11°22′01″E / 50.6500°N 11.3669°E /50.6500; 11.3669
ResultFrench victory[1]
Belligerents
FranceFrench EmpireKingdom of PrussiaPrussia
Electorate of SaxonySaxony
Commanders and leaders
FranceJean Lannes
FranceClaude Victor-Perrin
FranceLouis Gabriel Suchet
FrancePierre Augereau
Kingdom of PrussiaPrince Louis Ferdinand 
Strength
12,000[1]–12,800 men[2][3]
12 guns[2]
8,300[2]–9,000[1]
44 guns[2]
Casualties and losses
172[3]–200[2][1] killed or wounded900 killed or wounded[3]
1,800 captured[3]
33 guns (15 Prussian, 18 Saxon)[2]
Map
Map
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170km
106miles
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 current battle
 Napoleon not in command
 Napoleon in command

TheBattle of Saalfeld took place on 10 October 1806, at which aFrench force of 12,800 men commanded by MarshalJean Lannes defeated aPrussian-Saxon force of 8,300 men underPrince Louis Ferdinand. The battle took place inThuringia in what was theErnestine duchy ofSaxe-Coburg-Saalfeld. The battle was the second clash in thePrussian Campaign of theWar of the Fourth Coalition.

Background

[edit]
Main article:War of the Fourth Coalition § Prussian_campaign

French Movements

[edit]
Jean Lannes

Napoleon had arranged theGrande Armée into three columns to cross theThuringian Forest to attack the Prussian-Saxon army.[4] The westernmost column was headed byV Corps commanded byJean Lannes, withPierre Augereau'sVII Corps following behind. They had orders to march fromCoburg viaGräfenthal due atSaalfeld on 11 October. V Corps set out on 8 October, and by the end of 9 October was atGräfenthal withlight cavalry on the road to Saalfeld.[5] At 5 am on 10 October, Lannes withLouis-Gabriel Suchet's division andAnne-François-Charles Trelliard brigade of light cavalry of V corps began advancing down the road toSaalfeld, aware that a Prussian-Saxon force was in front of them.

Prussian-Saxon movements

[edit]
Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia

Prince Louis Ferdinand commanded the Advanced Guard ofFrederick Louis, Prince of Hohenlohe-Ingelfingen's army and on 9 October the Prince his headquarters atRudolstadt, with detachments at Saalfeld,Schwarza [de], andBad Blankenburg. The Prince had received a message from Hohenlohe that the Prussian-Saxon army would be advancing across the RiverSaale to supportBogislav Friedrich Emanuel von Tauentzien's force after theBattle of Schleiz,[6] and thatDuke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel's main army would be advancing to Rudolstadt. In the evening of 9 OctoberOberst Leopold Ludwig Maximilian Nordeck zu Rabenau (who commanded a detachment at Saalfeld) reported to Prince Louis that a French column of between 16,000 and 20,000 men had left Coburg heading for Saalfeld and that a post of 30 hussars stationed at Gräfenthal and theJäger Company "Valentini" stationed atHoheneiche [de] had both retreated toArnsgereuth after clashing with the French.[7] Knowing that the main body of the army under Hohenlohe was due to advance across the River Saale on 10 October, Prince Louis therefore decided that his forces needed to stop the French column from either crossing the Saale at Saalfeld and interfering with Hohenlohe’s movements or from moving up the western side of the Saale to Rudolstadt, which they would reach before Brunswick’s army.[8] During 9 October afusilier company commanded byAugust von Gneisenau was sent to Arnsgereuth to support the troops there, and having confirmed that the French were advancing on Saalfeld and in strength, the Prussian troops withdrew from Arnsgereuth toLerchenhügel [de], just outside Saalfeld, with advance posts inGarnsdorf [de].[9]

At 7 am Prince Louis began concentrating his troops at Saalfeld, and by 9 am he had arranged his forces for battle. The troops were arranged in a line stretching from in front of Saalfeld to behindCrösten [de] andBeulwitz [de] facing the woods the covered the hills above Saalfeld and the Saale valley. The Prince left Generalmajor Karl Gerhard von Pelet's detachment at Blankenburg.[10]

Order of battle

[edit]
Main article:Battle of Saalfeld order of battle

Battle

[edit]
Battle of Saalfeld

At around 9.45 AM, the advance guard of V Corps, consisting of the corps'Bataillon d'élite (formed of the elitecompanies of battalions left at depots), the 17thLégère Regiment, and two cannons, made its way towards Saalfeld and occupied the heights overlooking the town. The French light cavalry brigade and the advanced guard began to engage the Prussian-Saxon army. TheBataillon d'élite supported by French skirmishers pushed out the Prussian troops from Garnsdorf and occupied it.[11] As the French troops advanced and the Prussian-Saxon army prepared to fight them, Marshal Lannes noticed that the right flank of the Prussian-Saxon army was completely uncovered, and while the cavalry and French advanced guard engaged the Prussians around Garnsdorf and Saalfeld, he ordered rest of Suchet's division to march northwards through the woods to outflank the Prussian and Saxon line. To cover these moves, the 17th Légère Regiment formed askirmish line that extended from Saalfeld to Beulwitz.[12]

Prince Louis was aware that he was engaged with a larger force, and then at 11 am, SaxonSouslieutnant Heinrich August von Egidy brought a verbal order from Prince Hohenlohe to remain at Rudolstadt and that the offensive across the Saale had been abandoned. Prince Louis decided to try and disengage with the French and retreat to Rudolstadt. He ordered second battalion of the "Müffling" Regiment to Schwarza to hold the bridges, and sent troops under the Saxon GeneralmajorFriedrich Joseph von Bevilaqua [de] to extend the right of his line to the hills either side ofAue am Berg [de] (known as the Oberhayn and Sandberg).[13] He also ordered the "Prince Xaver" and "Kurfürst" regiments to take the offensive by attacking the plain between Siechentbal and the Kesselthal streams.[14] The skirmishers of the 17th Légère Regiment supported with the 34thLigne Regiment (which had moved out of the woods into Beulwitz) repelled the Saxon regiments, who then fell back in disorder.[15] Prince Louis rallied these troops, and fearing that he would lose communication with General Bevilaqua and his troops, he ordered another attack, and by midday the "Kurfürst" regiment had captured Crösten. Thinking that his centre was secure, Prince Louis gave further orders for a withdrawal. The French had entered Saalfeld and were pushing the Prussian troops back toWöhlsdorf [de], where Prince Louis headed to rally these troops.[16]

Maps of the Battle of Saalfeld
9AM
10.30AM
11.30AM
1PM

At just before 1 pm, Marshal Lannes gave the signal for the offensive.[17] The 34th, 40th, and 64th Ligne headed towards the Saxon troops around Aue am Berg, whilst the French cavalry, with the 88th Ligne behind them, moved forward between Crösten and Saalfeld. Prince Louis decided this was a moment to engage the French cavalry with the Prussian and Saxon cavalry, attacking an exposed flank of the 21stChasseurs à Cheval. However, the second line of French cavalry then enveloped the Prince's outnumbered cavalry line. Order in the Prussian and Saxon cavalry began to break down, and they fled joining the troops retreating from Saalfeld. In the confused mass around Wöhlsdorf, many were cut down by the Frenchhussars and some drowned trying to escape across the Saale. Prince Louis tried to cut his way out towards Schwarza, during which he was attacked by Quartermaster Guindet of the 10th Hussars. Although wounded, Prince Louis refused to surrender and was killed.[18]

Meanwhile, on the Prussian-Saxon right, General Bevilaqua tried to reinforce the Sandberg with the "Prinz Clemens" regiment, but then seeing the rout at Wöhlsdorf, Bevilaqua ordered a retreat to Scwharza. As the first battalion of the "Prince Clemens" Regiment moved down the slope it was attacked repeatedly by the 21st Chasseurs à Cheval, and the Saxons broke under the onslaught. the 21st Chasseurs à Cheval then assaulted and successively broke the second battalion "Prinz Clemens" Regiment and first battalion "Müffling" Regiment. As these troops dispersed, General Bevilaqua was captured.[19]

There was a final conflict at Schwarza and Pelet's force engaged the French around Unter-Wirbach. Pelet's force was largely intact but had to retreat to Stadt-Ilm, which it reached at 10 pm. The French cavalry pursued the remains of the Prussian and Saxon units to Rudolstadt, but the French infantry halted at Schwarza. Some of the Prussian and Saxon troops that had escaped onto the east side of the Saale withdrew towards Rudolstadt.[20]

Aftermath

[edit]

Prince Louis' force had been completely dispersed as a fighting force.[21] Only Pelet's detachment was intact, and they were forced to take a long route to rejoin Hohenlohe.

Despite this battle and the battle of Schleiz, Napoleon was still not fully aware of location of the Prussian army. After four days of further marches, the French engaged the Prussians and Saxons at the twin battles ofJena andAuerstedt on the plateau west of the riverSaale.

A memorial stone commemorates the site of the battle and Prince Louis Ferdinand's death. The plaque reads"Here Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia fell fighting for his grateful Fatherland on 10 October 1806".

See also

[edit]

Colours of "Müffling", "Kurfürst", and "Prince Clemens" regiments.

Maps of the Battle

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^abcdeBodart 1908, p. 371.
  2. ^abcdefSmith 1998, p. 223.
  3. ^abcdClodfelter 2017, p. 85.
  4. ^Chandler 1993, pp. 40–41.
  5. ^Petre 1907, p. 86.
  6. ^Bressonnet 1909, pp. 7–8.
  7. ^Bressonnet 1909, pp. 10, 16.
  8. ^Petre 1907, pp. 100–101.
  9. ^Bressonnet 1909, pp. 16–17.
  10. ^Petre 1907, pp. 92–93, 98.
  11. ^Bressonnet 1909, pp. 22–24.
  12. ^Bressonnet 1909, p. 26.
  13. ^Bressonnet 1909, pp. 28–29.
  14. ^Bressonnet 1909, p. 30.
  15. ^Bressonnet 1909, p. 32.
  16. ^Bressonnet 1909, pp. 33–35.
  17. ^Bressonnet 1909, p. 38.
  18. ^Bressonnet 1909, pp. 40–42.
  19. ^Bressonnet 1909, pp. 43–44.
  20. ^Bressonnet 1909, pp. 45–48.
  21. ^Bressonnet 1909, p. 48.
  22. ^Petre 1907, p. 102.
  23. ^Tardieu 1820.

References

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
  • Bichler, Karl-Horst (1998).Napoleons Krieg gegen Preussen und Sachsen 1806 : (Saalfeld, Jena und Auerstedt) (in German). Reinbek: Einhorn-Presse-Verlag.ISBN 9783887567835.
  • Höpfner, Friedrich Eduard Alexander von (1855).Krieg von 1806 und 1807 : ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der preussischen Armee nach den Quellen des Kriegs-Archivs (in German). Vol. 1. Berlin: Simon Schropp & Comp. pp. 265–284.hdl:2027/hvd.hw2kvy.OCLC 10489667.
  • Hourtoulle, François Guy (2005).Jena - Auerstaedt : the triumph of the eagle. Paris: Histoire & Collections.ISBN 9782915239768.

Media

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External links

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Preceded by
Battle of Schleiz
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Battle of Saalfeld
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