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The Battle for the Swiepwald, 3rd July 1866: English Translation

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Battle for the Swiepwald, 3rd July 1866: English Translation

Contributors:

By (Author) Gerard Henry
Translated by Frederick Steinhardt

ISBN:

9781915070494

Series Number:

24

Publisher:

Helion & Company

Imprint:

Helion & Company

Publication Date:

15th August 2022

UK Publication Date:

15th June 2022

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

134

Dimensions:

Width 171mm, Height 248mm

Description

The insubordination of two Austria Corps Commanders at the battle of Kniggrtz played a huge part in this, the Empire's greatest defeat. Their decision to engage in an epic struggle for control of the Swiepwald forest left 12,000 men dead or wounded, and the Austrian right flank wide open to the Crown Prince of Prussia's advancing Second Army. The battle of Kniggrtz was the largest battle ever fought in western Europe until the advent of WWI and its political consequences were no less epic. The demise of Austria as a European Great Power, the loss of her historic pre-eminence among the German nations, and the final, incontestable rise of Prussia. Whether Austria could have prevailed at Kniggrtz on the 3rd of July and salvaged her Great Power status is debatable, what is not, is the part the struggle for the Swiepwald played in her ultimate defeat. The insubordination of two Austria Corps Commanders, and the decision to engage in their epic struggle for control of the Swiepwald forest, would leave 12,000 men dead or wounded within its shattered environs, and the Austrian right flank wide open to the Crown Prince of Prussia's advancing Second Army. This meticulous translation of Heidrich's brilliant monograph, takes us through the fighting, hour by hour and foot by bloody foot, in a narrative unsurpassed for detail or accuracy. AUTHOR: Colonel (Oberst) Ernst Heidrich was a serving officer in the KuK (Imperial and Royal) army when he wrote his exceptionally detailed monograph 'Der Kampf Um Den Svibwald Am 3. Juli 1866' (The battle for the Swiepwald 3rd July 1866, Sadowa Press 1902). Particulars of the Colonel's early life are sparse, but we know he was born in Horschitz (Horice) and attended the high school in Hradec Kralove (Kniggrtz), before being commissioned into the KuK Army. He seems to have served principally as an administrative officer, first as pharmacy superintendent in the fortress hospital at Josefov between 1880 - 1900, and later in the same capacity at Sarajevo (Bosnia). In the decennial Imperial census of 1900, Heidrich recorded his nationality as Czech not German (possibly to the detriment of his military career). He was living in Prague in 1918 when the empire finally collapsed and died there in 1922. 18 b/w photos & illustrations, 3 maps

Author Bio

Colonel (Oberst) Ernst Heidrich was a serving officer in the KuK (Imperial and Royal) army when he wrote his exceptionally detailed monograph 'Der Kampf Um Den Svibwald Am 3. Juli 1866' (The battle for the Swiepwald 3rd July 1866, Sadowa Press 1902). Particulars of the Colonel's early life are sparse, but we know he was born in Horschitz (Horice) and attended the high school in Hradec Kralove (Koeniggratz), before being commissioned into the KuK Army. He seems to have served principally as an administrative officer, first as pharmacy superintendent in the fortress hospital at Josefov between 1880 - 1900, and later in the same capacity at Sarajevo (Bosnia). In the decennial Imperial census of 1900, Heidrich recorded his nationality as Czech not German (possibly to the detriment of his military career). He was living in Prague in 1918 when the empire finally collapsed and died there in 1922.

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