Imperial and Royal Hussar Regiment "Friedrich Leopold of Prussia" No. 2

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Hussar regiment "Friedrich Leopold of Prussia" No. 2 - uniform until 1916

The hussar regiment "Friedrich Leopold of Prussia" No. 2 was set up as the Austro-Habsburg cavalry association. The unit existed afterwards in the kk or common army within the Austro-Hungarian land forces until the end of the First World War.

When a cavalry ranking was drawn up in 1769, the association was given the name Cavalry Regiment No. 17 .

All honorary names of the regiments were deleted without replacement in 1915. From then on the regiment was only to be called "Hussar Regiment No. 2". (However, this could not be implemented in practice, on the one hand because no one adhered to it, on the other hand because the very thrifty Austro-Hungarian military administration had ordered that all remaining forms and stamps be used up first!)

Lineup

The application of the Estates of Transylvania to the emperor for the establishment of a hussar regiment was granted on April 17, 1742, and the establishment of the Transylvanian hussar regiment was ordered on the same date by the highest resolution . As was customary at the time, however, a short time later it was only named after its owner.

additions

Until 1875, the regiment was made up exclusively of the Transylvanian landscape. Then the supplementary district was expanded and extended to the neighboring districts of Hungary and the Banat . In 1889 the Sibiu district was assigned.

Peace garrisons

I. II. III.

Regimental owner

Second owner

  • 1784 Major General Michael Baron Splényi von Miháldy
  • 1840 Field Marshal Lieutenant Ferdinand Graf Zichy
  • 1809 Lieutenant Field Marshal Daniel Freiherr von Mecséry
  • Unoccupied in 1823
  • 1825 General of the cavalry Ignáz Freiherr Splényi von Miháldy
  • 1849 Lieutenant Field Marshal Ignáz Ritter von Legeditsch
  • 1866 Lieutenant Field Marshal Johann Freiherr Jósika von Branyicska

Regimental Commanders

I. II. III.
  • 1742 Colonel Anton Count Kálnoky
  • 1746 Colonel Wolfgang Makházszy
  • 1753 Colonel Joseph Baron Jósika von Branyicska
  • 1757 Colonel Joseph Adam Count Bethlen
  • 1759 Colonel Georg von Simony
  • 1771 Colonel Adam Graf Bethlen
  • 1773 Lieutenant Colonel Gregorovich (interim)
  • 1773 Colonel Johann von Ternyey
  • 1775 Colonel Johann von Baranyay
  • 1779 Colonel Anton Hildebrandt
  • 1789 Colonel Carl Otto Bátorkéz
  • 1794 Colonel Andreas Freiherr Szent-Kereszty
  • 1797 Colonel Vincenz Baron Knesevich
  • 1800 Colonel Franz Szabó
  • 1804 Colonel Ignaz Freiherr Splényi von Miháldy
  • 1809 Colonel Leopold Baron Geramb
  • 1814 Colonel Emanuel Freiherr Bretfeld zu Kronenburg
  • 1819 Colonel Ferdinand Count Serbelloni
  • 1828 Colonel Knight Michael Thaller
  • 1833 Colonel Prince Alexander of Württemberg
  • 1839 Colonel Ambrosius von Christoffy
  • 1845 Colonel Ernst Kiss von Elemér et Ittebe
  • 1849 Colonel Count Ernst Waldstein-Wartenberg
  • 1849 Colonel Victor Cseh of Szent-Kátolna
  • 1854 Colonel Ignaz von Forster
  • 1859 Colonel Ignaz von Fratricsevics
  • 1866 Colonel Heinrich Schemel Edler von Kühnritt
  • 1871 Colonel Baron Carl von Lederer
  • 1873 Colonel Baron Rudolph von Gaffron and Oberstradam
  • 1879 Colonel Baron Alexander Hügel
  • 1884 Colonel Wilhelm Saffin Edler von Corpon
  • 1889 Colonel Thomas Zalay de Hagyáros
  • 1893 Colonel Baron Paul Baumgartner von Baumgarten
  • 1898 Coloman Jámborffy
  • 1903 Colonel Heinrich Freiherr von Mylius
  • 1907 Colonel Julius Ritter Rainer von Lindenbüchl
  • 1912 Colonel Ladislaus Freiherr Ambrus de Velencze
  • 1914 Colonel Emmerich Zábrátzky de Szada

Battle calendar

Battle of Lauffeldt

War of the Austrian Succession

Seven Years War

War of the Bavarian Succession

  • 1778 missions in Bohemia, including battle with Dauba
  • 1779 patrol and backup service, parts of the regiment participated in the battles at Jonsdorf and Olbersdorf part
  • In 1784/85 the regiment was used to suppress the Wallachian revolt. A detachment of the hussars captured the leaders.
  • 1788 The hussars fought in the battles near Porcenj and Pripora as security at the Transylvanian border passes
  • In 1789, the association was used in squadrons at Kimpolung , Rimnik and Porcenj
  • 1790 Battle at Kalafat

Coalition wars

  • Relocated to the Upper Rhine in 1792/93 , the hussars fought against Napoleon's troops at Landau , in the Bienwald , Lauterburg and Saint-Jean-de-Luz
  • 1794 A detachment is to defend the fortress of Luxembourg parked
  • In 1796 the unit was relocated to Northern Italy, where it undertook patrol services in the area of ​​the Mantua fortress
  • 1799 Participation in the Battle of Cassano d'Adda , skirmishes at Trebbia , Novi and Genola , then transferred to the blockade of Cuneo
  • 1800 battles at Casteggio and Pozzolo-Valeggio
  • 1805 retreat battles in Italy
  • 1809 the IX. Assigned to the Corps, the regiment fought in Italy at Pordenone and Sacile and covered the retreat at Castelfranco di Veneto- Postioma and on the Piave . Then transferred to Hungary, parts of the regiment fought at Csanak and Raab

Wars of Liberation

Revolution of 1848/49 in the Austrian Empire

  • 1848/49 fighting against the Serbs , the regiment was used by the leaders of the uprising against the imperial troops and their allies.
Battle of Königgrätz

German war

First World War

During the First World War, the cavalry regiments were exposed to a wide variety of uses. Some of them continued to exist in the regimental association, some of them were divided into squadrons by infantry troop divisions, corps and army staffs as so-called division cavalry . (They provided services there as reconnaissance and reporting riders, as well as security detachments.) Most of the regiments, however, soon had to surrender the horses (if they still had any) and were then used by infantry. The regiments of the 4th Cavalry Troop Division were excluded from this.

Whereabouts

After the heavy loss of personnel and horses in the fighting against Russia at the beginning of the war, the regiment was disbanded in 1915. Together with the remains of other cavalry regiments, the former Hussar Regiment No. 2 formed the newly established Cavalry Rifle Regiment No. 9.

Affiliation and status in July 1914

  • XII. Corps - 1st Cavalry Troop Division - 12th Cavalry Brigade
  • Nationalities: 89% Magyars, 11% other
  • Regimental language: Hungarian
  • Uniform: light blue Attila with yellow olives (buttons) and white shako cover .

The regiment was divided and garrisoned in the following localities:

  • Staff: - Kronstadt
  • 1.Esk. - Höltövény
  • 2.Esk. - Rozsnyó
  • 3.Esk. - Botfalu-Szentpéter
  • 4.Esk. - Vidombák
  • 5.Esk. - Feketehalom
  • 6.Esk. - Kereszttényfalva
  • Replacement squad - Nagyszeben

structure

A regiment in the Austro-Hungarian Cavalry usually consisted of three to four (in exceptional cases more) divisions. (A division was used here to refer to a battalion-strength unit. The correct division was called an infantry or cavalry division.) Each division had three squadrons , each of which consisted of two companies . The number of riders in the individual sub-units fluctuated, but was usually around 80 riders per company.

With the army reform begun by Emperor Joseph II , the company structure within the cavalry was abandoned.

The individual divisions were named after their formal leaders:

  • the 1st division was the colonel division
  • the 2nd division was the lieutenant colonel (lieutenant colonel) division
  • the 3rd division was the majors division
  • the 4th division was the 2nd majors division
  • the 5th division (if any) was the 3rd majors division

In the course of the army reform, the cavalry regiments were reduced to two divisions from 1860 onwards.

Until 1798, the regiments were named after their respective owners (who did not also have to be the commanders). There was no binding regulation of the spelling. (e.g. Count Serbelloni regiment - or Serbelloni regiment.) With each change of ownership, the regiment concerned changed its name. After 1798, the numbered designation prevailed, which could possibly be linked to the name of the owner. Due to this constant renaming, the regimental histories of the Austro-Hungarian cavalry are very difficult to follow. In addition, there is the constant and apparently arbitrary, sometimes multiple reclassification of the associations. (For example: Bohemian Dragoon Regiment "Prince of Windisch-Graetz" No. 14 )

literature

  • Obstlt. Alphons Frhr. v. Wrede: History of the KuK Wehrmacht from 1618 to the end of the XIX century Vienna, 1898–1905
  • Georg Schreiber : The emperor's cavalry. Austrian cavalry in 4 centuries. With a foreword by Alois Podhajsky . Speidel, Vienna 1967.
  • BM Buchmann, Austria and the Ottoman Empire. WUV-Univ.-Verl., Vienna 1999.
  • Allmayer-Beck / Lessing: The K. (below) K. Army 1848–1914 Bertelsmann. Munich 1974.