24th Division (2nd Royal Saxon)
The 24th Division (2nd Royal Saxon) was a large unit of the Saxon Army .
structure
The division was initially part of the XII. (I. Royal Saxon) Army Corps , later the XIX. (II. Royal Saxon) Army Corps .
1867
-
3rd Infantry Brigade No. 47 in Zwickau
- 5th Infantry Regiment "Prince Friedrich August" No. 104 in Zwickau and Schneeberg
- 6th Infantry Regiment No. 105 in Plauen and Oelsnitz
-
4th Infantry Brigade No. 48 in Chemnitz
- 7th Infantry Regiment "Prinz Georg" No. 106 in Chemnitz and Marienberg
- 8th Infantry Regiment No. 107 in Döbeln, Leisnig and Mittweida
- Schützen (Fusilier) Regiment No. 108 in Leipzig and Wurzen
- 1st Jäger Battalion "Crown Prince" No. 12 in Freiberg
- 2nd Jäger Battalion No. 13 in Meissen
1890
-
3rd Infantry Brigade No. 47 in Leipzig
- 10th Infantry Regiment No. 134 in Leipzig
- 11th Infantry Regiment No. 139 in Döbeln
-
4th Infantry Brigade No. 48 in Leipzig
- 7th Infantry Regiment No. 106 “Prince Georg” in Leipzig
- 8th Infantry Regiment No. 107 “Prince Johann Georg” in Leipzig
- 3rd Jäger Battalion No. 15 in Wurzen
-
2nd Cavalry Brigade No. 24 in Leipzig
- 1st Hussar Regiment No. 18 in Leipzig
- 2nd Hussar Regiment No. 19 in Grimma
Peace structure 1914
-
3rd Infantry Brigade No. 47 in Döbeln
- 11th Infantry Regiment No. 139 in Döbeln
- 14th Infantry Regiment No. 179 in Leisnig , Leipzig and Wurzen
- 4th Infantry Brigade No. 48 in Leipzig
-
2nd Cavalry Brigade No. 24 in Leipzig
- 2nd Hussar Regiment No. 19 in Grimma
- 2nd Uhlan Regiment No. 18 in Leipzig
-
2nd Field Artillery Brigade No. 24 in Leipzig
- 7th Field Artillery Regiment No. 77 in Leipzig
- 8th Field Artillery Regiment No. 78 in Wurzen
Organization of war during mobilization in 1914
-
47th Infantry Brigade (3rd Royal Saxon)
- 11th Royal Saxon Infantry Regiment No. 139
- 14th Royal Saxon Infantry Regiment No. 179
- 2nd Royal Saxon Hunter Battalion No. 13
-
48th Infantry Brigade (4th Royal Saxon)
- Infantry Regiment "King Georg" (7th Royal Saxon) No. 106
- Infantry Regiment "Prince Johann Georg" (8th Royal Saxon) No. 107
- 2nd Royal Saxon Uhlan Regiment No. 18
-
24th Field Artillery Brigade (2nd Royal Saxon)
- 7th Royal Saxon Field Artillery Regiment No. 77
- 8th Royal Saxon Field Artillery Regiment No. 78
- 2nd (Royal Saxon) Pioneer Battalion No. 22
Division of War of March 20, 1918
-
89th Infantry Brigade (8th Royal Saxon)
- 9th Royal Saxon Infantry Regiment No. 133
- 11th Royal Saxon Infantry Regiment No. 139
- 14th Royal Saxon Infantry Regiment No. 179
- 1st squadron / 2nd squadron Royal Saxon Hussar Regiment No. 19
- Artillery Commander No. 24
- 7th Royal Saxon Field Artillery Regiment No. 77
- Foot Artillery Battalion No. 96
- 2nd (Royal Saxon) Pioneer Battalion No. 22
- Division News Commander No. 24
history
The division was established on April 1, 1867 when the Saxon Army was restructured and Saxony joined the North German Confederation . The command was initially in Dresden and from 1869 until demobilization and dissolution in 1919 in Leipzig .
First World War
During the First World War , the division was only active on the Western Front . There, parts of the large association were involved in the Dinant massacre on August 23, 1914 .
Battle calendar
1914
- 23rd to 24th August - Battle of Dinant
- August 24th to 27th - 3rd Army intervenes in the battle of 2nd Army near Namur in the direction of Mettet - Philippeville and subsequent pursuit in south-west and south as far as the Sormonne
- August 27-30 - Battle of the Meuse and pursuit up to the Aisne
- August 31 to September 5 - Fighting on the Aisne and pursuit over the Marne
- Battle of the Marne September 6-11 -
- September 12th to October 4th - Trench warfare in Champagne
- October 11-12 - capture of Lille
- October 13th to December 13th - Trench warfare in Flanders and Artois
- October 15-28 - Battle of Lille
- October 30th to November 24th - Battle of Ypres
- December 14th to 24th - Battle of French Flanders
- from December 25th - trench warfare in Flanders and Artois
1915
- to May 8th - trench warfare in Flanders and Artois
- Loretto Battle May 9th to July 23rd -
- July 24th to September 24th - Trench warfare in Flanders and Artois
- September 25th to October 13th - autumn battle at La Bassée and Arras
- from October 14th - trench warfare in Flanders and Artois
1916
- to June 23rd - trench warfare in Flanders and Artois
- June 24th to July 7th - 6th Army reconnaissance and demonstration battles
- July 7th to August 4th - Trench warfare in Flanders and Artois
- Battle of the Somme August 5th to 31st -
- September 4th to October 5th - Trench warfare in Flanders and Artois
- October 6th to November 8th - Battle of the Somme
- from November 8th - trench warfare in the Wytschaete-Bogen
1917
- to May 26th - trench warfare in the Wytschaete-Bogen
- May 27th to June 28th - Battle of Flanders
- June 29th to August 7th - Trench warfare in Flanders and Artois
- August 8th to October 28th - Battle of Flanders
- October 28th to December 3rd - trench warfare in Flanders and Artois
- from December 4th - fighting in the Siegfried position
1918
- until January 31st - fighting in the Siegfried position
- February 1 to March 20 - Trench warfare in Artois and deployment to the Great Battle of France
- March 21 to April 6 - Great battle in France
- Arras and Albert April 7th to July 22nd - Fights between
- July 23rd to August 7th - fighting on the Avre and Matz
- Somme and Avre August 8-20 - Defensive battle between
- August 21 to September 4 - Defensive battle between Oise and Aisne
- September 5th to 8th - fighting in front of the Siegfried Front
- Hermann position September 9 to October 28 - Fights in front of and in the
- October 29th to November 11th - Trench warfare in Lorraine
- November 12th to 18th - evacuation of the occupied territory and march home
Commanders
Rank | Surname | date |
---|---|---|
Lieutenant General | Bernhard von Schimpff | April 1, 1867 to May 31, 1869 |
Major general | Gustav Erwin Nehrhoff from Holderberg | June 1, 1869 to December 21, 1873 |
Major general | Alban of Montbè | December 22, 1873 to March 10, 1885 |
Lieutenant General | Adolf Leopold von Tschirschky and Bögendorff | March 11, 1885 to January 31, 1889 |
Lieutenant General | Bernhard von Holleben called von Normann | February 1, 1889 to January 23, 1892 |
Lieutenant General | Julius von Tschirschnitz | January 24, 1892 to February 9, 1893 |
Lieutenant General | Thank God von Hodenberg | February 10, 1893 to April 1, 1897 |
Lieutenant General | Heinrich Leo von Treitschke | April 2, 1897 to March 24, 1899 |
Lieutenant General | Alexander Vitzthum von Eckstädt | March 25, 1899 to March 22, 1901 |
Lieutenant General | Adolf von Rabenhorst | March 23, 1901 to June 18, 1904 |
Lieutenant General / General of the Infantry | Karl Ludwig d'Elsa | June 19, 1904 to July 10, 1910 |
Lieutenant General | Adolf Muller | July 11, 1910 to July 21, 1911 |
Lieutenant General | Hans Krug from Nidda | July 22nd to September 22nd, 1911 (substitute) |
Lieutenant General / General of the Cavalry | Hans Krug from Nidda | September 23, 1911 to May 4, 1916 |
Major General / Lieutenant General | Rudolph Hammer | May 5, 1916 to January 26, 1919 |
literature
- Hall of Fame of our Old Army. Published on the basis of official material from the Reichsarchiv , Militär-Verlag, Berlin 1927, pp. 68, 123–124.
- Histories of Two Hundred and Fifty-One Divisions of the German Army Which Participated in the War (1914-1918). United States War Office as War Department Document No. 905, Office of the Adjutant, 1920, pp. 343-346.
- The Saxon Army, its command, judicial and administrative authorities 1831–1921. In: Overview of the holdings of the military archive of the GDR. (Ed. NVA, Military Archives of the GDR). Printed as a manuscript. Potsdam 1974.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Ranking list of the Saxon Army 1890.
- ↑ Dermot Bradley (ed.), Günter Wegner: Occupation of the German Army 1815-1939. Volume 1: The higher command posts 1815–1939. Biblio Verlag, Osnabrück 1990, ISBN 3-7648-1780-1 , p. 121.