Sunday, April 26, 2015

The Battle of Vellinghausen


Soldiers of the Minor German States - Seven Years' War Period.

 
Bataille de Willinghausen, print, Frankfurt 1789

The Battle of Vellinghausen was fought on July 16, 1761 in Western Germany between the French armies of Soubise and Broglie and Prince Ferdinand's Allied army. You can find more by going to www.britishbattles.com or Wikipedia. Savory has a more detailed account of this battle.

Vellinghausen, had the potential to be the decisive battle of the war. Had things gone to plan, the French would have destroyed Ferdinand's Anglo-Hanoverian army so leaving Frederick's Western flank wide open.

In a nutshell, the armies of Broglie and Soubise, managed to outmanoeuvre Ferdinand and bring him to battle at a disadvantage [92,000 French against 65,000 allies]. Ferdinand took up a defensive position behind a stream in generally enclosed terrain [woods hedges etc] completely unsuitable for cavalry. The French plan called for a frontal attack by Broglie and Soubise to pin the Aliied army while detached corps performed a flank and rear attack, cutting off any possible retreat.

The battle was hard fought over two days of confusion and at close range. On the first night Ferdinand gambled everything by switching the bulk of his army to attack Broglie, leaving 23,000 men to face the 68,000 under Soubise. Broglie attacked the following morning, expecting to break through the weakened line of the day before, only to find himself outnumbered and being counter-attacked. He sent messages to Soubise for help, but Soubise failed to press home his attack despite having a local 3:1 superiority. The Flank and rear attacks encountered Allied light troops and inexplicably withdrew, apparently under the impression they were being engaged by superior forces.

Broglie's force of 32,000 suffered almost 5,000 casualties, against 300 suffered by Soubise' 60,000. The allies lost 1,400 against Broglie, and 62 against Soubise. After the Battle Broglie was understandably upset with Soubise performance and their subsequent relationship was strained, to say the least.

During the course of the battle, Sandford's British brigade and Mannsberg's Brunswick brigade attacked in what can only be described as dispersed, irregular order, "in groups and batches, rather than in lines" to quote Savory.

Gustavus Adolphus: Father of Combined Arms Warfare


Gustavus Adolphus in the battle of Breitenfeld.

By Dennis K. Redmond, Army of the US

PDF

Click PDF above

Abstract : Today's military leader when asked, who was the greatest "Captain of Military History" would probably reply with the likes of Alexander, Hannibal, Caesar, Frederick, or Napoleon. These captains, while leading their exceptional armies, provided significant innovations in operational and strategic art that are still practiced today. Although these contributions are noteworthy, their changes were evolutionary, rather than revolutionary. Truly the most prolific revolutionary but least well known "Captain of Military History" was Gustavus Adolphus, "The Father of Combined Arms Warfare." A skilled and conscientious monarch, he created the grand army of Sweden which in the early 1630s during the Thirty Years' War, saved Germany from becoming a Catholic state under the auspices of the Emperor Ferdinand of Hapsburg. Gustavus' innovations and improvements in the use of field artillery, redesigned battle formations, streamlined logistics, use of cavalry as a shock weapon and improvements to musketry highlight the importance of his contributions to today's warfighter. This strategic research paper outlines in detail those innovations in warfare that are now part of the Army's fighting doctrine.