Battle of Gumbinnen

Battle of Gunbinnen
Part of Russian invasion of East Prussia during World War I

Eastern Front, 17–23 August 1914.
Date20 August 1914
LocationGumbinnen, East Prussia (now Gusev, Russia)
54°36′N 22°12′E / 54.600°N 22.200°E / 54.600; 22.200Coordinates: 54°36′N 22°12′E / 54.600°N 22.200°E / 54.600; 22.200
Result Tactical Russian victory
German retreat
Belligerents
 German Empire  Russian Empire
Commanders and leaders
German Empire Maximilian von Prittwitz Russian Empire Paul von Rennenkampf
Units involved
German Empire VIII Army Russian Empire I Army
Strength
148,800 men 192,000 men
Casualties and losses
14,607:[1]
1,250 killed
6,414 wounded
6,943 prisoners
18,839 KIA, MIA, WIA[2]

The Battle of Gumbinnen, initiated by forces of the German Empire on 20 August 1914, was a German offensive on the Eastern Front during the First World War. Because of the hastiness of the German attack, the Russian Army emerged victorious.

Background

At the outbreak of the war, Maximilian von Prittwitz's orders were very strict and clear: his German Eighth Army was to remain in its positions in East Prussia, without attempting any offensive action, as all German efforts were to be concentrated on the Western Front against France, according to the Schlieffen Plan. In addition, should the Russians increase their pressure, he was authorized to fall back as far as the Vistula River, abandoning eastern Prussia.

The Eighth Army comprised four corps: I Corps (Hermann von François), XVII Corps (August von Mackensen), I Reserve Corps (Otto von Below), and XX Corps (Friedrich von Scholtz), plus 1st Cavalry Division, facing the Russian First Army (Paul von Rennenkampf) and Second Army (Alexander Samsonov). The Russians enjoyed considerable numerical superiority, but were hampered by significant deficiencies in their services of supply and field communications.[3]

François was convinced that German training and equipment made up for their lack of numbers, and was pressing for offensive action. On the 17th he launched, on his own initiative and against orders, an attack against the Russian First Army at the Battle of Stallupönen. By the time he withdrew to Gumbinnen after this battle, his corps had inflicted 5,000 casualties and managed to capture about 3,000 Russian prisoners.

German attack and retreat

Map of the battle and German retreat.

With this success, François persuaded Prittwitz to launch an offensive against the Russian First Army while the Second Army was still far to the south. François argued that his troops, many of whom were native East Prussians, would be demoralized by retreating and leaving their homeland to the Russians, and that the Russians were not as strong as they appeared to be. A radio message that did not use codes supported this assessment.[4]

Prittwitz was convinced, and decided to engage Rennenkampf at the earliest possibility, pitting 150,000 Germans against 200,000 Russians. This decision went against the orders of Helmuth von Moltke, the German Chief of Staff, which specifically ruled out any offensive on the Eastern Front until France was defeated in the West.

On 19 August Russian cavalry came into contact with a German infantry regiment outside Gumbinnen. Instead of withdrawing, the Russians dismounted and brought up their artillery to continue the fight, driving the Germans back. However, they suffered 400 casualties and after expending most of their ammunition were forced to retreat themselves. This was the signal François had been awaiting, and he convinced Prittwitz to launch a counterattack the next day. With Prittwitz's approval, François started moving I Corps forward that night, reinforced by the 1st Cavalry Division.

At 04:00 on 20 August, I Corps attacked the Russian 28th Division, which put up a spirited artillery defense. However, the Russians were always lacking in supplies, and they soon expended their artillery ammunition. This left them at the mercy of the German artillery, and they were forced to retreat 8 km in the early afternoon.[5] The lines were stabilized when the Russian 29th Division arrived, and the battle turned into a stalemate.

To the south, Mackensen's XVII Corps and Below's I Reserve Corps were still moving up and were not ready for combat. Hearing of von François's actions further north, von Mackensen attacked Rennenkampf's III Corps at 08:00, but von Below was not able to join in until noon. The Russians in this area were well aware of German intentions due to von François's attack, and had spent the time preparing for the assault by moving up their heavy artillery. At first the German advance went well, but faltered once they came under Russian artillery fire, and the Russians were able to turn their flanks and force them to retreat in disorder to the Insterburg-Angerburg lines, leaving 6,000 prisoners in Russian hands.[5]

"The uncharacteristic sight of defeated German soldiers streaming mob-like to the rear really unnerved Prittwitz",[6] who feared that his army could be trapped between Rennenkampf and Samsonov, although the former did not seem eager to pursue the retreating German troops. Prittwitz panicked and, with a decision out of proportion to the severity of the situation, ordered a general retreat to the Vistula, leaving East Prussia to the Russians.

Helmuth von Moltke's reaction

Prittwitz's panic affected Moltke, who feared that Berlin itself could now be threatened by the advancing Russians. The Chief of Staff reacted by removing Prittwitz and his deputy, Waldersee, replacing them with Paul von Hindenburg and Erich Ludendorff.[7][8] He also transferred three corps and a cavalry division from the Western Front, which has been generally considered to have been an incorrect decision, as it weakened (some scholarssay fatally) the German "marching wing" that was intended to rapidly move across Belgium to outflank and destroy the French army.

One seemingly minor outcome of the battle would have lasting effects. After the battle, a note was found on a dead Russian officer that outlined the greater part of the Russian plans for the campaign. As Hindenburg recalled:

"It told us that Rennenkampf's Army was to pass the Masurian Lakes on the north and advance against the Insterburg-Angerburg line. It was to attack the German forces presumed to be behind the Angerapp while the Narew Army [Samsonov's] was to cross the Lotzen-Ortelsburg line to take the Germans in flank."[6]

Armed with this intelligence, Hindenburg and Ludendorff halted the German retreat and decided to take the initiative. This would result in the Battle of Tannenberg, one of Germany's greatest victories.

References

  1. Tannenberg 1914,(2005) p. 29.
  2. Tannenberg 1914, Warszawa, 2005; p. 32
  3. Tuchman, Barbara (1994). The Guns of August. p. 266.
  4. Neiberg, Michael S.; Jordan, David (2008). The Eastern Front, 1914-1920: from Tannenberg to the Russo-Polish War. Amber. pp. 36–37. ISBN 9781906626112.
  5. 1 2 The Battle of Gumbinnen, 1914
  6. 1 2 The Battles of Stalluponen and Gumbinnen
  7. Showalter, "Even Generals Wet Their Pants: The First Three Weeks in East Prussia, August 1914"
  8. Neiberg, Michael S.; Jordan, David (2008). The Eastern Front, 1914-1920: from Tannenberg to the Russo-Polish War. Amber. p. 37. ISBN 9781906626112.

Further reading

  • Buttar, Prit (2014). Collision of Empires: the War on the Eastern Front in 1914. Osprey. ISBN 9781782006480.
  • Neiberg, Michael S.; Jordan, David (2008). The Eastern Front, 1914-1920: From Tannenberg to the Russo-Polish War. Amber. ISBN 9781906626112.
  • Showalter, Dennis E. (2004). Tannenberg Clash of Empires, 1914. Brassey's. ISBN 9781597974943. OCLC 755574118.
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