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COUNT HANS DAVID LUDWIG YORCK VON WAR...

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 924 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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COUNT HANS DAVID LUDWIG YORCK VON WARTENBURG (1739–1830)  , Prussian general field-marshal, was of
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English ancestry . He entered the Prussian army in 1772, but after seven years' service was cashiered for disobedience . Entering the Dutch service three years later he took
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part in the operations of 1783–84 in the East Indies' as captain . Returning to Prussia in 1785 he was, on the
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death of Frederick the
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Great, reinstated in his old service, and in 1794 took part in the operations in Poland, distinguishing himself especially at Szekoczyn . Five years afterwards Yorck began to make a name for himself as
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commander of a
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light
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infantry regiment, being one of the first to give prominence to the training of skirmishers . In 1805 he was appointed to the command of an infantry brigade, and in the disastrous
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Jena
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campaign he played a conspicuous and successful part as a rearguard commander, especially at Altenzaun . He was taken prisoner, severely wounded, in the last stand of Blucher's corps at
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Lubeck . In the reorganization of the Prussian army which followed the peace of
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Tilsit, Yorck was one of the leading figures . At first major-general commanding the West Prussian brigade, afterwards inspector-general of light infantry, he was finally appointed second in command to General Grawert, the leader of the auxiliary corps which Prussia was compelled to send to the
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Russian War of 1812 . The two generals did not agree, Grawert being an omen partisan of the French
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alliance, and Yorck an ardent patriot; but before long Grawert retired, and Yorck assumed the command . Opposed in his advance on Riga by the Russian General Steingell, he displayed great skill in a series of combats which ended in the retirement of the enemy to Riga . Throughout the campaign he had been the
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object of many overtures from the enemy's generals, and though he had hitherto rejected them, it was soon borne in upon him that the
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Grand Army was doomed .

Marshal

Macdonald, his immediate French
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superior, retreated before the corps of Diebitsch, and Yorck found himself isolated . As a soldier his duty was to break through, but as a Prussian patriot his position was more difficult . He had to judge whether the moment was favourable for the war of liberation; and, whatever might be the
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enthusiasm of his junior staff-
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officers, Yorck had no illusions as to the safety of his own head . On December 3oth the general made up his mind . The Convention of Tauroggen " neutralized " the Prussian corps . The
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news was received with the wildest enthusiasm, but the Prussian Court dared not yet throw off the mask, and an order was despatched suspending Yorck from his command pending a court-martial . Diebitsch refused to let the
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bearer pass through his lines, and the general was finally absolved when the treaty of Kalisch definitely ranged Prussia on the side of the Allies . Yorck's act was nothing less than the turning-point of Prussian
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history . His veterans formed the nucleus of the forces of East Prussia, and Yorck himself in public took the final step by declaring war as the commander of those forces . On March 17th, 1813, he made his entry into Berlin in the midst of the wildest exuberance of patriotic joy . On the same day the king declared war . During 1813–14 Yorck led his veterans with conspicuous success .

He covered Blucher's

retreat after Bautzen and took a decisive part in the battles on the Katzlach . In the advance on
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Leipzig his corps won the
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action of Wartenburg (
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October 4) and took part in the crowning victory of October 18th . In the campaign in France Yorck drew off the shattered remnants of Sacken's corps at Montmirail, and decided the day at
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Laon . The storm of Paris was his last fight . In the campaign of 1815 none of the older men were employed in Blucher's army, in order that Gneisenau (the ablest of the Prussian generals) might be
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free to assume command in case of the old prince's death . Yorck was appointed to a reserve corps in Prussia, and, feeling that his services were no longer required, he retired from the army . His master would not accept his resignation for a considerable time, and in 1821 made him general field-marshal . He had been made Count Yorck von Wartenburg in 1814 . The remainder of his
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life was spent on his estate of Klein-01s, the gift of the king . He died there on the 4th of October 1830 . A statue (by Rauch) was erected to him in Berlin in 855• See Seydlitz, Tagebuch
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des Preussischen Armee Korps 1812 (Berlin, 1823); Droysen, Leben des G . F .

M . Grafen Yorck von Wartenburg (Berlin, 1851) .

End of Article: COUNT HANS DAVID LUDWIG YORCK VON WARTENBURG (1739–1830)
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