Prince Henry of Prussia (1726–1802)
Prince of Prussia and the younger brother of Frederick the Great
Years: 1726 - 1802
Frederick Henry Louis (German: Friedrich Heinrich Ludwig) (January 18, 1726 – August 3, 1802), commonly known as Henry (Heinrich), is a Prince of Prussia and the younger brother of Frederick the Great.
He also serves as a general and statesman, leading Prussian armies in the Silesian Wars and the Seven Years' War, having never lost a battle in the latter
In 1786, he is suggested as a candidate for a monarch for the United States.
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None of Prussia's enemies seem willing to take the decisive steps to pursue Frederick into Prussia's heartland.
The Austrian Feldmarshalleutnant Leopold Josef Graf Daun could have ended the war in October at Hochkirch, but he had failed to follow up on his victory with a determined pursuit of Frederick's retreating army.
This has allowed Frederick time to recruit a new army over the winter.
Prussia has reached a strategic defensive position in the war by 1759.
Russian and Austrian troops surround Prussia, although not quite at the borders of Brandenburg.
Frederick, upon leaving winter quarters in April 1759, had assembled his army in Lower Silesia; this had forced the main Habsburg army to remain in its winter staging position in Bohemia.
The Russians, however, had shifted their forces into western Poland and marched westward toward the Oder river, a move that had threatened the Prussian heartland, Brandenburg, and potentially Berlin itself.
Frederick had countered by sending an army corps commanded by Friedrich August von Finck to contain the Russians; he had sent a second column commanded by Christoph II von Dohna to support Finck.
The Austrian and Russian goal is twofold.
The Austrians have advanced to the northern Bohemian frontier river Queis (Kwisa), the frontier between Lusatia and Silesia, and occupied fifteen kilometers (nine point three miles) of the frontier between Austria and Prussia in Silesia.
From there, Leopold Joseph von Daun can cross into either Lusatia or Silesia, as needed.
The Allies hold a council of war on July 8, and Saltykov presses for a crossing into Silesia.
Daun is still reluctant to do so, but he does send Ernst Gideon von Laudon with the auxiliary corps.
Part of Daun's reluctance is based on what Frederick and his brother, Henry, might do.
Frederick leaves his encampment near Landeshut on 4 July and marches north west toward Lowenberg, twenty kilometers (twelve miles) east of Daun's position on July 10.
At the same time, his brother marches with the main army from Saxony to Sagan, in Silesia.
This effectively separates Daun from Saltykov.
Knowing, though, that Loudon's corps is not sufficient to fully support the Russian ally, he sends also Count András Hadik's seventeen thousand-man observation corps from northern Bohemia.
This corps has been shadowing Henry's army and Hadik breaks off his contact with Henry's force on July 22, crossing into Lusatia at Zwickau.
By August 9, he had forty-nine thousand to fifty thousand troops, enhanced by Finck's defeated corps, and Prince Henry of Prussia's corps moving from the Lausitz region.
Saltykov and the Austrian troops are stretched along the ridge that runs from the outskirts of Frankfurt to just north of the village of Kunersdorf.
Anticipating that Frederick will rely on his cavalry, the Russians effectively negate any successful cavalry charge by using fallen trees to break up the ground on the approaches.
Saltykov's scouts had informed him by August 10 him that Frederick was at the far western edge of Frankfurt.
Accordingly Saltykov takes everything he could from the city by way of sustenance, all oxen, sheep, chickens, produce, wine, beer, in a flurry of ransacking.
Frederick crosses the Oder in the night and the next morning, and moves southward toward Kunersdorf; the Prussians establish a staging area near Göritz (also spelled Gohritz on the old maps), about nine and a half kilometers (six miles) north-northeast of Kunersdorf late on August 11 with about fifty thousand men; of these, two thousand are deemed unfit for service and stay behind to guard the baggage.
Frederick conducts a perfunctory reconnaissance of his enemy's position, accompanied by a forest ranger and an officer who had previously been stationed in Frankfurt.
He also consults a peasant who, though garrulous, is uninformed about military needs: the peasant tells the King that a natural obstacle between the Red Grange (a large farmstead between Kunersdorf and Frankfurt's outer city) and Kunersdorf is impassable; what the peasant does not know is that the Russians have been there long enough to construct a causeway linking these two sections.
Looking to the east through his telescope, Frederick sees some wooded hills, called the Reppen Forest, and he believes he can use them to screen an advance, much like he had done at Leuthen.
He does not send scouts to reconnoiter the land or question locals about the ground in the forest.
Furthermore, through his glass he can see that the Russians are facing west and north, and their fortifications are stronger on the west.
He decides that all the Allies are facing northwest and that the forest is readily passable.
After his perfunctory reconnaissance, Frederick returns to his camp to develop his battle plan.
He plans to direct a diversionary force, commanded by Finck, to the Hühner Fliess, to demonstrate in front of what he believes to be the main Russian line.
He will march with his main army to the southeast of the Allied position, circling around Kunersdorf, screened by the Reppen Forest.
This way, he thinks, he will surprise his enemy, forcing the Allied army to reverse fronts, which is a complicated maneuver for even the best trained troops.
Frederick can then employ his much feared oblique battle order, feinting with his left flank as he does so.
Ideally, this will allow him to roll up the Allied line from the Mühlberg.
By 5:00 pm, neither side can make any gains; the Prussians hold tenaciously to the captured artillery works, too tired to even retreat: they have pushed the Russians from the Mühlberge, the village, and the Kuhgrund, but no further.
The Allies are in a similar state, except they have more cavalry in reserve and some fresh Austrian infantry.
This part of Laudon's forces, late arrivals to the scene and largely unused, come into action at about 7:00 pm.
To the exhausted Prussians holding the Kuhgrund, the swarm of fresh Austrian reserves is the final stroke.
Although such isolated groups as Hans Sigismund von Lestwitz's regiment put up a bold front, these groups lose heavily and their stubborn defense cannot stop the chaos of the Prussian retreat.
Soldiers throw their weapons and gear aside and run for their lives.
The battle is lost for Frederick—it had actually been lost for the Prussians for a couple of hours—but he had not accepted this fact.
Frederick rides among his melting army, snatches a regimental flag, trying to rally his men: Children, my children, come to me. Avec moi, Avec moi!
They do not hear him, or if they do, they chose not to obey.
Saltykov, watching the chaos and seeking the coup de grâce, throws his own Cossacks and Kalmyks (cavalry) into the fray.
The Chuggavieski Cossacks surround Frederick on a small hill, where he stands with the remnants of his body-guard—the Leib Cuirassiers—determined to either hold the line or to die trying.
With a hundred-strong hussar squadron, Rittmeister (cavalry captain) Joachim Bernhard von Prittwitz-Graffron cuts his way through the Cossacks and drags the King to safety.
Much of his squadron dies in the effort.
As the hussars escorts Frederick from the battlefield, he passes the bodies of his men, lying on their faces with their backs slashed open by Laudon's cavalry.
A dry thunderstorm creates a surreal effect.
That evening back in Reitwein, Frederick sits in a peasant hut and writes a despairing letter to his old tutor, Count Karl-Wilhelm Finck von Finckenstein:
This morning at 11 o'clock I have attacked the enemy. ... All my troops have worked wonders, but at a cost of innumerable losses. Our men got into confusion. I assembled them three times. In the end I was in danger of getting captured and had to retreat. My coat is perforated by bullets, two horses of mine have been shot dead. My misfortune is that I am still living ... Our defeat is very considerable: To me remains 3,000 men from an army of 48,000 men. At the moment in which I report all this, everyone is on the run; I am no more master of my troops. Thinking of the safety of anybody in Berlin is a good activity ... It is a cruel failure that I will not survive. The consequences of the battle will be worse than the battle itself. I do not have any more resources, and—frankly confessed—I believe that everything is lost. I will not survive the doom of my fatherland. Farewell forever!
Frederick also decides to turn over command of the army to Finck.
He tells this unlucky general he is sick.
He names his brother as generalissimo and insists his generals swear allegiance to his nephew, the fourteen-year-old Frederick William.
Christopher Duffy places Russian losses at thirteen thousand four hundred and seventy-seven; in addition, the Russians had lost about four thousand at the Battle of Kay a week earlier.
Sources differ on Prussian losses.
Duffy maintains six thousand killed and thirteen thousand wounded, a casualty rate of more than thirty-seven percent.
Gaston Bodart represents losses at thirty-nine percent, and that two thirds (twelve thousand) of the nineteen thousand casualties were deaths.
Following the battle, the victorious Cossack troops plunder corpses and slit the throats of the wounded; this no doubt contributes to the death rate.
The Prussians have lost their entire horse artillery, an amalgam of cavalry and artillery in which the crews ride horses into battle, dragging their cannons behind them, one of Frederick's notable inventions.
The Prussians have also lost sixty percent of their cavalry, killed or wounded, animals and men.
The Prussians have lost one hundred and seventy-two of their own cannons plus the one hundred and five that they had captured from the Russians in the late morning on the Mühlberge.
They have also lost twenty-seven flags and two standards.
Staff losses are significant.
Frederick has lost eight regimental colonels.
Of his senior command, Seydlitz is wounded and had to relinquish command to Platen, nowhere near his equal in energy and nerve; Wedel is wounded so badly that he will never fight again; Georg Ludwig von Puttkamer, commander of the Puttkamer Hussars, lies among the dead.
Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben, later the inspector general and major general of the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War, had been wounded at the battle.
Ewald Christian von Kleist, the famous poet of the Prussian army, had been badly injured in the latter moments of the assault on the Walkeberge.
By the time he was injured, Major Kleist was the highest ranking officer in his regiment.
Generalleutnant August Friedrich von Itzenplitz will die of his wounds on September 5, Prince Charles Anton August von Holstein-Beck on September 12, and Finck's brigade commander, Generalmajor George Ernst von Klitzing, on October 28 in Stettin.
Prussia is at its last gasp and Frederick despairs of preserving much of his remaining kingdom for his heir.
They had outfought Frederick's army in a test of nerve, courage and military skills.
Elizabeth of Russia promotes Saltykov to Generalfeldmarschall and awards a special medal to everyone involved.
She also sends a sword of honor to Laudon.
The price of this rout, though, is high: twenty-six percent Austrian and Russian losses would not usually qualify as a victory.
The storming of field works typically resulted in a disproportionate number of killed over wounded.
The conclusion of the battle in hand-to-hand struggle also increased casualties on both sides.
Finally, subsequent cavalry charges and the stampeding flight of men and horses had caused many more injuries.
Regardless of the losses, though, Saltykov and Laudon had remained on the field with intact armies, and with extant communications between one another.
The Prussian defeat remains without consequences when the victors do not capitalize on the opportunity to march against Berlin, but retire to Saxony instead
If Saltykov had sought the coup de grâce in the last hour of the battle, he did not follow through with it.
Within days, Frederick's army has reconstituted itself.
Approximately twenty-six thousand men—most of the survivors—had been scattered over the territory between Kunersdorf and Berlin.
Four days after the battle, though, most of the men turn up at the headquarters on the Oder River or in Berlin, and Frederick's army recovers to a strength of thirty-two thousand men and fifty artillery pieces
Britain threatens to withdraw its subsidies if Prussia does not consider offering concessions to secure peace.
As the Prussian armies have dwindled to just sixty thousand men and with Berlin itself about to come under siege, Frederick's survival is severely threatened, but at the death of the Russian Empress Elizabeth on January 5, 1762, her Prussophile successor, Peter III, at once ends the Russian occupation of East Prussia and Pomerania and mediates Frederick's truce with Sweden.
He also places a corps of his own troops under Frederick's command.
Frederick is now able to muster a larger army, of one hundred and twenty thousand men, and concentrate it against Austria.
He drives them from much of Saxony, while his brother Henry wins a victory in Silesia in the Battle of Freiberg (October 29, 1762).
At the same time, his Brunswick allies capture the key town of Göttingen and compound this by taking Cassel.
