The invaders continue, but on September 20,…
September 1792 CE
The invaders continue, but on September 20, they come to a stalemate against Dumouriez and François Christophe de Kellermann in which the highly professional French artillery distinguishes itself at Valmy.
Although the seven-hour artillery duel is a tactical draw, it gives a great boost to French morale.
Furthermore, the Prussians, finding that the campaign has been longer and more costly than predicted, decide that the cost and risk of continued fighting is too great, and they decide to retreat from France to preserve their army.
Kellermann comes from a Saxon family long settled in Strasbourg and ennobled.
François is the only son of two Germans living in the French department of Alsace.
His father is François de Kellermann and his mother baroness Marie von Dyrr (Dyhrn).
He had entered the French army as a volunteer, and served in the Seven Years' War and in Louis XV's Polish expedition of 1771, on returning from which he had been made a lieutenant-colonel.
He became brigadier in 1784, and in the following year marechal-de-camp.
In 1789, Kellermann had enthusiastically embraced the cause of the French Revolution, and in 1791 became general of the army in Alsace.
In April 1792 he had been made a lieutenant-general, and in August of the same year there comes to him the opportunity of his lifetime.
He has risen to the occasion, and his victory over the Prussians at the Battle of Valmy, in Goethe's words, "opened a new era in the history of the world".