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Gerhard Johann David Graf von Scharnhorst
(12.11.1755 - 28.06.1813)
place of birth: Bordenau, Provinz Hannover
Königreich
Preußen: Kriegsminister;
Generalstabschef
Prussian general and
War Minister von Scharnhorst first served in the Hannoverian Army as an
artillery officer. He fought alongside the Duke of York in the Netherlands
at Hondshoote and Menin (1793). Scharnhorst was
commissioned in 1801 as a
lieutenant colonel in the Prussian Army, he taught at the Berlin War
Academy (one of his students was Clausewitz). Scharnhorst was wounded at
Auerstadt (1806) where he was serving as the Duke of Brunswick's
chief of staff, and then he was captured one month later alongside Field
Marshal von Blücher at Ratkau.
General von Scharnhorst was appointed Prussian Minister of
War and Chief of General Staff in 1808, and immediately he began to
rebuild the army with Gneisenau's help. Napoleon's edict against
foreigners serving in the Prussian Army (1810) forced him into
retirement, but he was recalled in 1812 as von Blücher's
chief of staff. He fought and was wounded at Lützen
in 1813, succumbing one month later to his wounds. Von Scharnhorst's
writings and reforms infused the Prussian Army with a sense of national
pride, and his work greatly influenced subsequent military development.
He devised the Krümpersystem under which resulted in a much
larger number of Prussian recruits to be trained as soldiers than was
permitted under the law; citizens were called to service for a short
training period to be then replaced by another group.
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General-Lieutenant
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Pour le Mérite
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00.02.1807 |
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