Battle of Longeau

Last updated
Battle of Longeau
Part of Franco-Prussian War
Stele des Mobiles.jpg
Stele of the Mobiles
DateDecember 16, 1870 [1] [2]
Location
Result German victory [4] [5]
Belligerents
Flag of France (1794-1958).svg  French Republic

Flag of Germany (1867-1919).svg  North German Confederation

Commanders and leaders
Flag of France (1794-1815, 1830-1958).svg General Arbellot [6]
Flag of France (1794-1815, 1830-1958).svg Stanislaus Koch  [5]
War Ensign of Prussia (1816).svg August von Werder [7]
War Ensign of Prussia (1816).svg Colmar Freiherr von der Goltz [8]
Strength
2,000 – 6,000 troops and 4 cannons [9] [5] 6,500 troops and 15 cannons [5] [9]
Casualties and losses
200 wounded, 50 captured, 2 artillery pieces and 2 ammunition wagons captured [10] 20 casualties (4 killed and 15 wounded, 1 officer)

The Battle of Longeau, [11] was a battle of the Franco-Prussian War [9] on December 16, 1870 [4] in Longeau-Percey, near Dijon, France. [3] The fighting lasted about three hours, [12] and ended in a French retreat. Victory went to the Prussian Infantry Brigade under Colmar Freiherr von der Goltz and the German XIV Corps infantry under the command of Lieutenant General August von Werder, [9] over French troops commanded by General Pierre Arbellot de Vacqueur, semt from Langres to Longeau. [4] [13] The French suffered significant losses of both manpower and equipment. [12]

Contents

Background

The goal of the Armée de l'Est (Army of the East) under division general Charles-Denis Bourbaki was to reach the Colonel Denfort-Rochereau in the besieged Belfort, and take the German forces from behind. To counter this maneuver, the German 2nd and 7th armies moved south from Metz and Paris. From Verseilles-le-Haut, General de Moltke asked the XIV Army Corps, posted around Dijon, to put an end to raids on supply units and destroy the railways that linked Besançon and Belfort to the rest of France.

Battle

On December 14, Infantry General von Werder, commanding the XIV Corps, sent the Prussian brigade of von der Goltz to Langres, via Is-sur-Tille and Selongey. It consisted of the 30th regiment of the 4th Rhine infantry and the 34th regiment of the Pomeranian Fusiliers, approximately 6000 men, reinforced with a 700-horse cavalry regiment and an artillery division with three batteries of six cannons each.

A garrison of 200 French soldiers from the 50th line regiment, had been stationed at Longeau since November 1. On the morning of December 16, General Arbellot, in command at Langres, was warned of the arrival of the Prussians and brought in reinforcements—1,500 men from the line and the mobiles. The mobiles of the 2nd battalion of the 56th provisional infantry regiment were commanded by Stanislas de Régel under the overall command of captain Koch.

At eleven o'clock, the Prussian brigade launched its first shells. On the French side, in the confusion, two cannons headed for Verseilles-le-Haut and two others hid above the cemetery. Some troops accompanied the guns; other soldiers took position next to Longeau-Percey. The remainder were stationed in the center of Longeau.

The main road had been made impassable by abatis and cuts, so the Prussians marched around it, one column through Verseilles-le-Bas, and another Cohons, against the wings of the position, and dislodged the mobiles, from whom they took a cannon. The French mobiles fell back to higher ground northeast of the village and tried to hold on with the two pieces they had left. But after a short time, they had to retreat again, abandoning a second cannon, which was captured while still firing. Pursued by Prussian shells, they tried in vain to make a stand a third time near the village of Bourg and finally returned to Langres, having lost 150 men, including the commanders Koch [14] and Régel, 80 prisoners, two pieces of artillery and two caissons. [15]

Aftermath

Having lost only twenty men, of which four were killed and 15 were wounded, including one officer, General von der Goltz stopped in Bourg for the night. The next day, he bypassed Langres to the west and established himself north of the city, between the Marne and Suize  [ fr ] rivers, a position from which he covered the supply lines of the 2nd Army. By order of Werder, he extended his troops further east, from Neuilly-l'Évêque to Laferté-sur-Amance. On December 18, he sent word to Langres but General Arbellot refused to capitulate. To bombard the city, von der Goltz pulled all the advance troops back to the ramparts and proceeded to build batteries.

On December 26, having learned that the army of General Charles-Denis Bourbaki was moving towards Chalon-sur-Saône, Werder evacuated Dijon and assembled the 16th army around Vesoul. All detachments were recalled. The von der Goltz brigade immediately fell back to Vesoul.

Monuments

Stele of the Mobiles. Stele des Mobiles.jpg
Stèle of the Mobiles.

Three commemorative monuments were built after the war to commemorate the battle. The Guide to the Monuments of the War of 1870-1871 states:

“Régel's family intends to honor the memory of the commander by building, as was done at the time, a cross on the place where he died. And as he died at the head of his mobiles, the dedication associates the memory of Stanislas de Régel and, by name, that of the mobiles killed in the same fight. ‘In memory of Stanislas de Régel, commander of the Haute-Marne mobiles, fatally struck in action at Longeau on December 16, 1870. And that of his brave soldiers killed in the same battle: Grapotte Nicolas, Charles Anselme, Mugnier Marcellin Louis, Durand Hippolyte, Nicolas Charles, Villemot Nicolas’.

Regardless of Régel's family and unable or unwilling to consult them, veterans of the mobile guards of Haute-Marne intended to honor their dead with a monument. Theirs does not bear any religious sign, perhaps the reason for the Calvary built. by the family. "To the commander of Régel and the mobile guards killed in action at Longeau on 16 December 1870, the officers of the Mobile National Guard of Hte-Marne".

The third monument is in the cemetery of Longeau with two plaques. One reads: "In memory of the fighters who fell at the battle of Longeau on 12/16/1870. Cadet S. De Regel, Ignace Quenemann, Jean Wichert, Pierre Etienne, Nicolas Grapotte, Cadet M. Charles Koch, Louis M. Mognier, Joseph Gony, Sébastien Jacob, Hyppolyte Durand", on the other: "Unseren Tapferen Kameraden" (Our Brave Comrades).

Cross Calvaire Koch.jpg
Cross

See also

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References

  1. The American Annual Cyclopaedia and Register of Important Events of the Year..., Volume 10, Page 367
  2. Colmar Goltz (Freiherr von der), The nation in arms, Page 343
  3. 1 2 Georges-Ernest-Jean-Marie Boulanger, L'invasion allemande, Volume 3, Page 2234
  4. 1 2 3 Wilhelm Rüstow, The war for the Rhine frontier, 1870: Its political and military history, Volume 1, Page 188
  5. 1 2 3 4 Joseph Mills Hanson, The Marne: historic and picturesque, Page 41
  6. Eugène Désiré Édouard Sergent, L'armée de l'Est: relation anecdotique de la campagne de 1870-71, d'après de nombreux témoignages oculailes et de nouveaux documents, Volume 2, Volume 137
  7. Johannes Baumgarten, Handbuch der französischen Sprache und Litteratur für Polytechniker: eine Sammlung gediegener und interessanter Abhandlungen und aufsätze aus der neuesten polytechnischen Litteratur Frankreichs nebst militärischen studien und Schilderungen von französischen darstellern des letzten Krieges. Mit Anmerkungen und Sacherklärungen..., Page 382
  8. "Men who have made the new German empire. A series of brief biographic sketches"
  9. 1 2 3 4 August Niemann, The French campaign, 1870-1871: Military description, Page 377
  10. "The Franco-German War of 1870—71" (Helmuth Von Moltke)
  11. Dominique Auzias, Pascaline Ferlin, Jean-Paul Labourdette, Guide des lieux de mémoire: champs de bataille, cimetières militaires, musées, mémoriaux (Guide to Historical Sites: Battlefields, Military Cemeteries, Museums, Memorials), Page 102
  12. 1 2 Edmund Ollier, Cassell's history of the war between France and Germany, 1870-1871, Page 69
  13. Eugène Désiré Édouard Sergent, L'armée de l'Est: relation anecdotique de la campagne de 1870-71, d'après de nombreux témoignages oculaires et de nouveaux documents (The Army of the East: Anecdotal Account of the 1870-71 Campaign, According to Numerous Eyewitness Testimonies and New Documents), Volume 2, Page 137
  14. Captain Koch wasn't shot by a Prussian bullet, but a French one.
  15. The loss figures, both Prussian and French, vary according to the sources.

Bibliography