1st Lithuanian Dragoon Regiment | |
---|---|
Lithuanian Dragoon Regiment in 1813 | |
Active | 1717-1919 |
Country | Kingdom of Prussia |
Type | Dragoons |
1st Lithuanian Dragoon Regiment (Lithuanian language: 1-as lietuvių dragūnų pulkas
- German language
- Dragoner-Regiment „Prinz Albrecht von Preußen“ (Litthauisches) Nr. 1) was a dragoon regiment of the Royal Prussian Army that had a Prussian Lithuanian-majority.[1] The regiment was formed in 1717 and disbanded in 1919. This regiment was one of the eldest in the whole Prussian army.
The regiment was recruited almost exclusively from volunteers from its immediate homeland, i.e. Lithuania Minor, and was well reputed in the army at all times for having the best horses and riders.[2] In the memoirs of the inhabitants of Lithuania Minor it is written that they were proud of serving in this regiment.[3]
18th century[]
On 19 April 1717, King Frederick William I of Prussia ordered major general Heinrich Jordan von Wuthenau to form a regiment from 780 Saxon cavalrymen and dragoons, which Augustus II the Strong gifted the Prussian King. Already in May, von Wuthenau divided the regiment into eight companies.[2] The uniform consisted of a white coat with light blue embroidering, because of which the regiment was called the "Porcelain regiment". In December, the regiment was ordered to march to Insterburg (Lithuanian: Įsrūtis ), Tilsit (Lithuanian: Tilžė ), Ragnit (Lithuanian: Ragainė ), Goldap (Lithuanian: Geldapė ), Stallupönen (Lithuanian: Stalupėnai ) and Pillkallen (Lithuanian: Pilkalnis ). In 1718, the whole regiment was assembled in its entirety to a single place for military exercise in Insterburg and by the August of that year, the regiment already had ten companies. In 1725, it was established that every company would have 110 dragoons, and each company was renamed to squadrons.
When general von Wuthenau died in 1727, the regiment was divided in two regiments, which were that of von Cosel and von Dockum. The regiment von Cosel maintained the same uniform and was assigned all of the same garrisons except Tilsit. The dragoon regiment von Dockum remained in Tilsit with its five squadrons and received white coats with red embroidering. After a year, the regiment received silver timpani. The dragoon regiment von Dockum was later called the 7th Dragoon regiment.
In the period between 1734 and 1746, the regiment was often relocated to various places such as Berlin, Magdeburg, Potsdam or Tilsit. Finally, in 1746, Tilsit was established as the regiment's permanent garrison.
First Silesian War (1740-1742)[]
During the First Silesian War, the regiment fought in the Battle of Chotusitz with the Imperial and Royal von Birkenfeld Cuirassier regiment. The dragoon regiment's Leibstandarte was lost when the enemies grenadiers seized it from the seriously wounded junker von Roop. The regiment lost four officers and 152 soldiers, with six officers and 71 soldiers being wounded. In addition, three officers and 280 soldiers were taken prisoners of war.
Second Silesian War (1744–1745)[]
During the Second Silesian War, adjutant lieutenant von Blankenburg lost the timpani and flag in the skirmish near Niederzehren. However, in the battle of Kesselsdorf, the dragoon regiment attacked the Saxon Karabiniers-garde and mounted grenadiers. The Lithuanian dragoon regiment defeated the Saxon Foot Guard and also the Saxon infantry regiment Niesemeuschel. The victorious regiment took away the flags of both of these regiments. In addition, the regiment seized the flag and silver timpani of the Saxon Karabiniers-garde.
19th century[]
Napoleonic wars[]
After the Treaties of Tilsit and the cabinet's order of 14 September 1808, regiments were no longer named after their commanders. During the Prussian Army's reorganization, the regiment was initially called the East Prussian Dragoon Regiment (Ostpreußisches Dragoner-Regiment), and after the cabinet's order of 14 September 1808, the regiment was called the 3rd Dragoon Regiment. The Lithuanian Dragoon Regiment was at first established in Tilžė and Įsrūtis.
Two of the regiment's squadrons were made part of the 1st Mobile Dragoon Regiment, which was part of Yorck's Auxiliary Prussian Corps. This Corps fought on Napoleon's side in the French invasion of Russia in 1812. Later, the regiment fought in Germany and France in 1813 and 1814. In the Battle of Leipzig, the regiment captured a French Imperial Eagle.[4]
After the Napoleonic wars[]
Circa 1815–1816, the regiment's soldiers were dispersed into other parts of the Prussian Kingdom, i.e. Berlin, Demmin or Tilžė. In between 1860 and 1866, the regiment was garrisoned in different parts of East Prussia, e.g. Įsrūtis or Ragainė. Finally, from 1879, the regiment was located only in Tilžė.
20th century[]
World War I[]
Even until the end of the First World War, the signs outside the soldiers' barracks were in Lithuanian and German languages.[5]
Commanders[]
The regimental commanders were the following:[6]
№ | Commander | Took office | Left office | Time in office | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | (1667–1737) | Oberst Anton Ludolph von Krosigk19 April 1717 | 31 March 1721 | 3 years, 346 days | |
2 | Oberst Franz Christoph von Friesenhausen | 31 March 1721 | 15 June 1727 | 6 years, 76 days | |
3 | Oberstleutnant Wilhelm von Rappe | 15 June 1727 | 3 May 1737 | 9 years, 322 days | |
4 | Friedrich von Stosch (1689–1752) | Oberst 3 May 1737 | 1 November 1744 | <7 years, 5 months | |
5 | Friedrich Ludwig I. Truchseß von Waldburg (1711–1777) | Oberstleutnant 1 November 1744 | 19 January 1746 | <1 year, 2 months | |
6 | Joachim Wilhelm von Ahlimb (1701–1763) | Oberstleutnant 19 January 1746 | 17 April 1754 | <8 years, 2 months | |
7 | Johann Heinrich Friedrich von Spaen (1705–1762) | Major 17 April 1754 | 18 February 1759 | <4 years, 10 months | |
8 | Major Carl Sigismund von Pogrell | 1759 | ? (c.1760) | <10 months | |
9 | Major Heinrich Ernst von Loßberg | ? (c.1760) | until September 1760 | <8 months | |
10 | Oberst Joachim Anton von Massow | 23 September 1760[7] | 29 November 1762 | <2 years | |
11 | Major Karl von Eberstein | 29 November 1762[8] | 27 October 1778 | <15 years, 10 months | |
12 | Sylvius von Frankenberg und Proschlitz (1732–1795) | Major, then Oberstleutnant, later Oberst and then Generalmajor 6 November 1778 | 26 September 1790 | <11 years, 10 months | |
13 | Joseph Albrecht Christoph von Bieberstein-Pilchowsky (1730–1815) | Oberst 26 September 1790 | 27 November 1793 | <3 years, 2 months | |
14 | Major, then Oberstleutnant, then Oberst Franz von Quoos | 27 November 1793[9] | 25 September 1798 | <4 years, 9 months | |
15 | Joseph Theodor Sigismund von Baczko (1751–1840) | Oberstleutnant, then Oberst 25 September 1798 | 18 November 1806 | <8 years, 1 month | |
16 | Helmuth Dietrich von Maltzahn (1761–1826) | Oberst 18 November 1806 | 1 February 1813 | <6 years, 2 months | |
17 | Gottlieb Wilhelm Christian von Platen (1765–1819) | Oberst 1 February 1813 | 30 June 1813 | <4 months | |
18 | Theodor von Below (1765–1839) | Oberstleutnant then Oberst 30 June 1813 | 5 January 1816 | <2 years, 6 months | |
19 | Rudolph Hiller von Gaertringen (1771–1831) | Oberst 5 January 1816 | 15 November 1827 | <11 years, 10 months | |
20 | Wilhelm von Tietzen und Hennig (1787–1869) | Oberstleutnant 30 March 1828 | 30 March 1836 | <8 years | |
21 | Karl von Broesigke (1790–1852) | Major 30 March 1836 | 29 March 1839 | <2 years | |
22 | Heinrich Gregorovius | 30 March 1839 | 23 March 1841 | <1 year | |
23 | Hans Adolf Erdmann von Auerswald (1792–1848) | 23 March 1841 | <6 years | ||
24 | Major Karl von Dunker | 27 March 1847 | 8 March 1848 | < | |
25 | Otto von Trotta genannt Treyden | Major then Oberstleutnant, then Oberst9 March 1848 | 7 August 1854 | <6 years, 4 months | |
26 | Major then Oberstleutnant Eduard Kehler | 5 October 1854 | 13 March 1857 | <3 years, 2 months | |
27 | Richard von Kalckreuth (1808–1879) | Major then Oberstleutnant then Oberst 14 May 1857 | 15 September 1862 | <5 years, 4 months | |
28 | Otto von Bernhardi (1818–1897) | Major then Oberstleutnant then Oberst 16 September 1862 | 21 March 1868 | <5 years, 6 months | |
29 | Oberstleutnant then Oberst Ferdinand von Massow (1830–1878) | 22 March 1868 | 1 December 1871 | <3 years, 8 months | |
30 | Oberstleutnant then Oberst August von Egloffstein | 17 December 1871 | 15 October 1873 | <1 year, 9 months | |
31 | Oberstleutnant then Oberst Otto von Holtzendorff | 16 October 1873 | 4 August 1875 | <1 year, 9 months | |
32 | Major then Oberstleutnant then Oberst Richard Manché | 5 August 1875 | 4 July 1883 | <7 years, 10 months | |
33 | Oberstleutnant then Oberst Albert von Kemnitz | 5 July 1883 | 16 January 1888 | <4 years, 6 months | |
34 | Oberstleutnant then Oberst Hans von Meyer | 17 January 1888 | 27 July 1892 | <4 years, 6 months | |
35 | Oberstleutnant then Oberst Gustav Kühls | 28 July 1892 | 13 May 1894 | <5 years, 4 months | |
36 | Hans von Gersdorff (General) (1847–1929) | Major then Oberstleutnant then Oberst 14 May 1894 | 17 August 1898 | <5 years, 4 months | |
37 | Oberstleutnant then Oberst Kuno von Ruppert | 18 August 1898 | 21 April 1901 | <2 years, 8 months | |
38 | Julius von Platen (1853–1922) | Oberstleutnant then Oberst 22 April 1901 | 9 September 1908 | <7 years, 4 months | |
39 | Oberstleutnant then Oberst Wedig von Glasenapp | 10 September 1908 | 3 April 1913 | <4 years, 6 months | |
40 | Oberstleutnant Georg von Eicke und Pollwitz | 4 April 1913 | 11 December 1913 | <8 months | |
41 | Oberstleutnant then Oberst Karl von Kanitz | 12 December 1913 | 21 March 1918 | <4 years, 3 months | |
42 | Oberstleutnant Hermann Osterroht | 22 March 1918 | June 1919 | <1 year, 2 months |
Legacy[]
A statue commemorating the regiment's fallen soldiers was built after World War I.[5]
See also[]
References[]
- ↑ Matulevičius 2020.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Goetzke 2003.
- ↑ Rėklaitis 1968.
- ↑ Haber, R. von (1877) (in de). Die Cavallerie des Deutschen Reiches: Derselben Entstehung, Entwickelung und Geschichte nebst Rang-, Quartier-, Anciennitäts-Liste und Uniformirung. Helwing'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung (Th. Mierzinsky). pp. 101-103. https://www.google.com/books/edition/Die_Cavallerie_des_Deutschen_Reiches/1oIRAAAAYAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Jakužaitis 1952.
- ↑ Günter Wegmann (Hrsg.), Günter Wegner: Formationsgeschichte und Stellenbesetzung der deutschen Streitkräfte 1815–1990. Teil 1: Stellenbesetzung der deutschen Heere 1815–1939. Band 3: Die Stellenbesetzung der aktiven Regimenter, Bataillone und Abteilungen von der Stiftung bzw. Aufstellung bis zum 26. August 1939. Biblio Verlag, Osnabrück 1993, ISBN 3-7648-2413-1, S. 44–46.
- ↑ Sammlung ungedruckter Nachrichten. Band 3, S. 19.
- ↑ Louis Ferdinand Eberstein: Geschichte der Freiherren von Eberstein. Band 1, S. 1185.
- ↑ Gothaisches genealogisches Taschenbuch der adeligen Häuser. Gotha 1904, S. 689.
Sources[]
- Rėklaitis, P. (November 1968). "Mažosios Lietuvos Dragūnų Pulkas" (in Lithuanian). pp. 307–311. http://partizanai.org/karys-1968m-9-10/5846-mazosios-lietuvos-dragunu-pulkas.
- Jakužaitis, Hermanas, ed (1952). "Prūsų Lietuvių Pulkai ir Batalionai" (in Lithuanian). pp. 7, 14. https://www.epaveldas.lt/preview?id=C1B0003218530-1952-Nr.1-2.
- Matulevičius, Algirdas (2020). "dragūnai" (in lt). Mažosios Lietuvos enciklopedija. https://www.mle.lt/straipsniai/dragunai.
- Goetzke, Harry (2003). "Das Dragoner-Regiment Prinz Albrecht von Preußen (Litthauisches) Nr. 1 in Tilsit" (in de). http://www.tilsit-ragnit.de/tilsit/ti_dragonerregiment.html.
- "Die neuen preußischen Regimenter 1808 - 1918 ; Dragoner" (in de). http://www.preussenweb.de/kavregt2.htm.
The original article can be found at 1st Lithuanian Dragoon Regiment and the edit history here.