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  1. 16 mag 2024 · Alexander von Kluck was a German general who, in World War I, commanded the 1st Army in the German offensive against Paris at the beginning of the war. Kluck saw service in the Seven Weeks’ War (1866) and in the Franco-German War (1870–71). In 1906 he became a general of infantry and in 1913 an.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. 2 giorni fa · Armee vor Paris verurteilte ihr Befehlshaber Alexander von Kluck den deutschen Schlieffen-Plan, der einen breiten Vormarsch durch Nordfrankreich vorgesehen hatte, zum Scheitern.

  3. 29 apr 2024 · to be steam-rolled by the 300,000 men of General Alexander von Kluck’s First Army.6 Being hung out to dry for political considerations was nothing new to the British Army. Despite the lackluster leadership of Sir John French, his staff saw to the efficient deployment of the BEF along the line of the Mons Canal by 23 August.

  4. 4 giorni fa · Von Rundstedt joined the General Staff of the German Army in April 1907 serving there until July 1914, when he was appointed chief of operations to the 22nd Reserve Infantry Division. This division was part of XI Corps, which in turn was part of General Alexander von Kluck's First Army.

  5. 6 giorni fa · August) südlich ab, da Befehlshaber Alexander von Kluck die französischen Truppen und das Britische Expeditionskorps verfolgte. Durch die zunehmende Frontausdehnung schwand der Überraschungseffekt der deutschen Offensive, und die zahlenmäßige Überlegenheit des rechten deutschen Flügels ging mit der Dehnung verloren, die Verbindungslinien der Deutschen wurden immer länger, jene der ...

  6. 5 giorni fa · Allied Counterattack: Under the leadership of General Joseph Joffre, the French Sixth Army launched a crucial attack against the exposed right flank of the German First Army, commanded by Alexander von Kluck.

  7. 10 ore fa · A trench song to the tune of ‘Brighton Camp’ was considerable more direct: ‘we don’t give a fuck for old Von Kluck and all his fucking army’ (p. 50)). One of the reasons why such coarseness was avoided was because these publications were not just directed at fellow soldiers, but also at an important secondary audience: the military authorities and the people back home.