|
LEUTHEN , a See also: village of Prussian See also: Silesia, to m
.
W. of See also: Breslau, memorable as the scene of See also: Frederick the See also: Great's victory over the
Austrians on See also: December 5, 1757• The high road from Breslau to Luben crosses the marshy See also: Schweidnitz See also: Water at Lissa,
and immediately enters the See also: rolling country about Neumarkt
.
Leuthen itself stands some 4000 paces See also: south of the road, and a similar distance south again lies Sagschiitz, while Nypern, on the See also: northern edge of the See also: hill country, is 5000 paces from the road
.
On Frederick's approach the Austrians took up a
See also: line of See also: battle resting on the two last-named villages
.
Their whole position was strongly garrisoned and protected by obstacles, and their artillery was numerous though of See also: light calibre
.
A strong outpost of Saxon cavalry was in See also: Borne to the westward
.
Frederick had the previous See also: day surprised the See also: Austrian bakeries at Neumarkt, and his Prussians, 33,000 to the enemy's 82,000, moved towards Borne and Leuthen early on the 5th
.
The Saxon outpost was rushed at in the See also: morning mist, and, covered by their advanced guard on the heights beyond, the Prussians wheeled to their right
.
See also: Prince See also: Charles of
See also: Lorraine, the Austrian commanderin-chief, on Leuthen See also: Church tower, could make nothing of Frederick's movements, and the
See also: commander of his right wing (Lucchesi) sent him message after message from Nypem and Gocklerwitz asking for help, which was eventually despatched
.
But the real See also: blow was to fall on the See also: left under See also: Nadasdy
.
While the Austrian commander was thus wasting See also: time, the Prussians were marching against Nadasdy in two columns, which preserved their distances with an exactitude which has excited the wonder of See also: modern generations of soldiers; at the due place they wheeled into line of battle obliquely to the Austrian front, and in one great See also: echelon,—the cavalry of the right wing foremost, and that of the left " refused,"—Frederick advanced on Sagschiitz
.
Nadasdy, surprised, put a bold face on the See also: matter and made a See also: good defence, but he was speedily routed, and, as the Prussians advanced, See also: battalion after battalion was rolled up towards Leuthen until the Austrians faced almost due south
.
The fighting in Leuthen itself was furious; the Austrians stood, in places, Too deep, but the disciplined valour of the Prussians carried the village . For a moment the victory was endangered when Lucchesi came down upon the Prussian left wing from the See also: north, but Driesen's cavalry, till then refused, charged him in flank and scattered his troopers in See also: wild rout
.
This stroke ended the battle
.
The retreat on Breslau became a rout almost comparable to that of See also: Waterloo, and Prince Charles rallied, in Bohemia, barely 37,000 out of his 82,000
.
Ten thousand Austrians were left on the See also: field, 21,000 taken prisoners (besides 17,000 in Breslau a little later), with 51
See also: colours and 116 cannon
.
The Prussian loss in all was under 5500
.
It was not until 1854 that a memorial of this astonishing victory was erected on the battlefield
.
See Carlyle, Frederick, bk. xviii. cap. x.; V
.
011ech, See also: Friedrich der See also: Grosse von See also: Kolin bis Leuthen (Berlin, 1858) ; Kutzen, Schlacht bei Leuthen (Breslau, 1851); and bibliography under SEVEN YEARS'
W Alt
.
|
|
|
[back] LEUK (Fr. Loeche Ville) |
[next] EMANUEL LEUTZE (1816–1868) |
There are no comments yet for this article.
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.