Battle of Saalfeld order of battle

The Battle of Saalfeld took place on the 10 October 1806. A French force of 12,800 men commanded by Marshal Jean Lannes defeated a Prussian-Saxon force of 8,300 men under Prince Louis Ferdinand.

French V Corps

Commander-in-chief: Marshal Jean Lannes

Chief of staff: Général de Division Claude Victor-Perrin

1st Division

Général de Division Louis-Gabriel Suchet

1st Brigade

Général de Brigade Michel Marie Claparède

  • 1st and 2nd battalions, 17th Légère Regiment (2,047 officers and men)
  • Bataillon d’élite (751), formed of carabiniers and voltigeurs of the 3rd battalions of the 17th and 21st Légère, and the grenadiers and voltigeurs of 4th battalion 34th Ligne, 3rd battalions of 40th, 64th, and 88th Ligne.

2nd Brigade

Général de Brigade Honoré Charles Reille

3rd Brigade

Général de Brigade Dominique Honoré Antoine Vedel

Divisional Artillery

  • 15th company, 5th Foot Artillery Regiment (108)
  • 3rd company, 3rd Horse Artillery Regiment (68)

(2x12lb, 6x8lb, 2x4lb cannons, 2x6" howitzers)

Cavalry Brigade

Général de Brigade Anne-François-Charles Trelliard

Strengths as at 1 October 1806.[1][2][3]

Prussian-Saxon Advanced Guard Division

Generalleutenant Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia

General staff: Stabskapitän Georg Wilhelm von Valentini

Detachment at Blankenburg

Generalmajor Karl Gerhard von Pelet

  • Fusilier Battalion No. 14 "von Pelet"
  • Jäger Company "Masars"
  • 3 squadrons, Saxon Hussar Regiment
  • ½ Horse Artillery Battery No. 2 "Gause" (4 guns)

Troops at Saalfeld

Prussian Troops

  • Jäger Company "Valentini"
  • Fusilier Battalion No. 13 "Rabenau"
  • Fusilier Battalion No. 15 "Rühle"
  • 5 squadrons, Hussar Regiment No. 6 "Schimmelpfennig von der Oye"
  • ½ Horse Artillery Battery No. 2 "Gause" (4 guns)
  • 2 battalions, Infantry Regiment No. 49 "Müffling"
  • 6lb Foot Artillery Battery "Reimann" (12 guns)

Saxon Troops
Generalmajor Friedrich Traugott von Trützschler

Generalmajor Friedrich Joseph von Bevilaqua

  • 5 squadrons, Saxon Hussar Regiment
  • 1st and 2nd battalions, Infantry Regiment No. 1 "Kurfürst"
  • 1st and 2nd battalions, Infantry Regiment No. 4 "Prinz Clemens"
  • 1st and 2nd battalions, Infantry Regiment No. 9 "Prince Xaver"
  • 4lb Foot Artillery Battery "Hoyer" (8 guns)

16 additional guns attached to the infantry regiments

Detachment at Pößneck

Generalmajor Christian Ludwig Schimmelpfennig von der Oye

  • 5 squadrons, Hussar Regiment No. 6 "Schimmelpfennig von der Oye"

Total strength 9 October 1806: 7,500 infantry, 2,700 cavalry, 44 guns[4]

gollark: Anyone know a formula for (digits of) Tau?
gollark: ???
gollark: I prefer GC'd languages, partly because there are more nice functional ones with cool syntax which have GCs and partly because the borrow checker annoys me lots.
gollark: It's more compile-time smart pointers than actual smart pointers, I think.
gollark: Except if they hit a bad situation they'll need to cause an interruption *anyway* or the program will just fail silently.

References

  1. Smith, Digby (1998), The Greenhill Napoleonic Wars Data Book, London: Greenhill Books/Lionel Leventhal, p. 223, ISBN 9781853672767
  2. Chandler, David G. (1993), Jena 1806 : Napoleon destroys Prussia, Osprey Campaign Series, 20, London: Osprey, pp. 40–41, ISBN 9781855322851
  3. Foucart, Paul (1890). Campagne de Prusse (1806), d'après les archives de la guerre, par P. Foucart, ... Prenzlow-Lubeck (in French). Paris: Berger-Levrault. OCLC 461415300.
  4. von Lettow-Vorbeck, Oscar (1891). Der Krieg von 1806 und 1807 (in German). Berlin: E.S. Mittler und Sohn. p. 226. OCLC 9959799., Bressonnet, Pascal (1909). Études tactiques sur la campagne de 1806 (in French). Paris: Chapelot. p. 9. OCLC 610334571.
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