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WORTH

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 836 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WORTH , a See also:

village of See also:Alsace, on the Sauer, 6 m. N. of See also:Hagenau, which gives its name to the See also:battle of the 6th of See also:August 1870, fought between the Germans under the See also:crown See also:prince of See also:Prussia and the See also:French under See also:Marshal See also:MacMahon. The battle is also called Reichshoffen and Froschweiler. The events which led up to the engagement, and the See also:general situation on the 6th are dealt with under FRANCA-See also:GERMAN See also:WAR. During the 5th of August the French concentrated in a selected position See also:running nearly N. and S. along the Sauer See also:Bach on the See also:left front of the German III. See also:army which was moving S. to seek them. The position is marked from right to left by Morsbronn, the See also:Niederwald, the heights W. of Worth and the See also:woods N.E. of Froschweiler. E. of the Sauer the German III. army was moving S. towards Hagenau, when their See also:cavalry found the French position about See also:noon. Thereafter the German vedettes held the French under See also:close observation, while the latter moved about within their lines and as far as the village of Worth as if in See also:peace quarters, and this notwithstanding the defeat of a portion of the army at See also:Weissenburg on the previous See also:day. The remnant of the force which had been engaged, with many of its wounded still in the ranks, marched in about noon with so soldierly a bearing that, so far from their depressing the morale of the See also:rest, their See also:appearance actually raised it. About 5 p.M. some horses were watered at the Sauer, as in peace, without escort, though hostile scouts were in sight. A sudden swoop of the enemy's hussars drove the party back to See also:camp. The alarm was sounded, tents were struck and the troops See also:fell in all along the See also:line and remained under arms until the confusion died down, when orders were sent to fall out, but not to See also:pitch the tents.

The army therefore bivouacked, and but for this incident the battle of the next day would probably not have been fought. A sudden and violent See also:

storm See also:broke over the bivouacs, and when it was over, the men, wet and restless, began to move about, See also:light fires, &c. Many of them broke out of camp and went into Worth, which was unoccupied, though Prussians were only 300. yds. from the sentries. These fired, and the officer commanding the Prussian outposts, See also:hearing the confused murmur of voices, ordered up a See also:battery, and as soon as there was light enough dropped a few shells into Worth. The stragglers rushed back, the French lines were again alarmed, and several batteries on their See also:side took up the See also:challenge. The Prussian guns, as strict orders had been given to avoid all engagement that day, soon withdrew and were about to return to camp, when renewed See also:artillery See also:fire was heard from the S. and presently also from the N. In the latter direction, the II. Bavarian See also:corps had bivouacked along the Mattstall-Langensulzbach road with orders to continue the See also:march if artillery were heard to the S. This See also:order was contrary to the spirit of the III. army orders, and moreover the V. Prussian corps to the S. was in See also:ignorance of its having been given. The outpost battery near See also:Werth was heard, and the Bavarians at once moved forward. Soon the leading troops were on the See also:crest of the See also:ridge between the Sauer and the Sulzbach, and the divisional See also:commander, anxious to prove his See also:loyalty to his new See also:allies—his enemies in 1866—ordered his troops to attack, giving the See also:spire of Froschweiler, which was visible over the woods, asthe point of direction.

The French, however, were quite ready and a furious fusillade broke out, which was multiplied by the echoes of the See also:

forest-clad hills out of all proportion to the See also:numbers engaged. The Prussian See also:officers of the V. corps near Dieffenbach, knowing nothing of the orders the Bavarians had received, were amazed; but at length when about 10.30 a.m. their comrades were seen retiring, in some cases in See also:great disorder, the corps commander, General von Kirchbach, decided that an effort must at once be made to relieve the Bavarians. His See also:chief of See also:staff had already ordered up the divisional and corps artillery (84 guns in all), and he himself communicated his intention of attacking to the XI. corps (General von Bose) on his left and asked for all available assistance. A See also:report was also despatched to the crown prince at Sulz, 5 M. away. Meanwhile the XI. corps had become involved in an engagement. The left of the V. corps' outposts had over See also:night occupied Gunstett and the See also:bank of the Sauer, and the French shortly after daylight on the 6th sent down an unarmed party to fetch See also:water. As this appeared through the mist, the Prussians naturally fired upon it, and the French General Lartigue (to whose See also:division the party belonged), puzzled to See also:account for the firing, brought up some batteries in readiness to repel an attack. These fired a few rounds only, but remained in position as a precaution. Hearing the firing, the XI. corps' advanced guard, which had marched up behind in accordance with the general See also:movement of the corps in changing front to the See also:west, and had halted on reaching the Kreuzhecke See also:Wood, promptly came up to Spachbach and Gunstett. In this movement across See also:country to Spachbach some bodies appear to have exposed themselves, for French artillery at Elsasshausen suddenly opened fire, and the shrapnel bursting high, sent showers of bullets on to the See also:house See also:roofs of Spachbach, in which village a See also:battalion had just halted. As the falling tiles made the position undesirable, the See also:major in command ordered the march to be resumed, and as he gave the order, his See also:horse ran away with him towards the Sauer. The leading See also:company, seeing the battalion commander gallop, moved off at the See also:double, and the others of course followed.

Coming within sight of the enemy, they See also:

drew a heavy See also:shell fire, and, still under the impression that they were intended to attack, deployed into line of columns and doubled down to the See also:river, which they crossed. One or two companies in the neighbourhood had already begun to do so, and the stream being too wide for the mounted officers to jump, presently eight or ten companies were across the river and out of See also:superior See also:control. By this See also:time the French outposts (some 1500 rifles), lining the edge of the Niederwald, were firing heavily. The line of See also:smoke was naturally accepted by all as the See also:objective, and the German companies with a See also:wild See also:rush reached the edge of the wood. The same thing had happened at Gunstett. A most obstinate struggle ensued and both sides brought up reinforcements. The Prussians, with all their See also:attention concentrated on the wood in their front, and having as yet no superior commanders, soon exhibited signs of confusion, and thereupon General Lartigue ordered a See also:counter attack towards the heights of Gunstett, when all the Prussians between the Niederwald and the Sauer gave way. The French followed with a rush, and, fording the Sauer opposite Gunstett, for a moment placed the See also:long line of German guns upon the heights in considerable danger. At this crisis a fresh battalion of the XI. corps arrived by the road from Surburg to Gunstett, and attacked the French on one flank whilst the guns swept the other. The momentum of the See also:charge died cut, and the French drifted backwards after an effort which compelled the admiration of both sides. In the centre the fight had been going badly for the V. corps. As soon as the 84 guns between Dieffenbach and Spachbach opened fire the French disappeared from sight.

There was no longer a See also:

target, and, perhaps to compel his adversary to show himself, von Kirchbach ordered four battalions to See also:cross the river. These battalions, however, were widely separated, and coming under fire as soon as they appeared, they attacked in two See also:groups, one from Worth towards Froschweiler, the other from near Spachbach towards the See also:Calvary See also:spur, E. of Elsasshausen. Both were overpowered by See also:infantry fire. A fraction of the S. party maintained itself all day in the See also:elbow of the Hagenau chaussee, which formed a starting-point for subsequent attacks. But the rest were driven back in great confusion. Once more the dashing counter-attack of the French was thrown into confusion by the Prussian shell fire, and as the French fell the attack against the Niederwald with such of his forces as had arrived, and had ordered General von Schkopp's See also:brigade, which was then approaching, to join the troops See also:collecting to the See also:east of Gunstett. Schkopp, however, seeing that his See also:present line of advance led him See also:direct on to the French right about Morsbronn and kept him clear of the confusion to be seen around Gunstett, back the Prussian infantry, now reinforced, followed them up (about r p.m.). The commander-in-chief of the German III. army (the crown prince See also:Frederick) now appeared on the See also:field and ordered Kirchbach to stand fast until the pressure of the XI. corps and See also:Wurttemberg division could take effect against the French right wing. The See also:majority of these troops had not yet reached the field. Von Bose, however, seeing the See also:retreat of the troops of the V. corps, had independently determined to renew Emuyw.tke.:o disregarded the order and continued to advance on Morsbronn. This deliberate See also:acceptance of responsibility really decided the battle, for his brigade quietly deployed as a unit' and compelled the French right wing to fall back. To See also:cover the French retreat See also:Michel's brigade of cavalry was ordered to charge.

The order was somewhat vague, and in his position under cover near See also:

Eberbach, General Michel had no know-ledge of the actual situation. Thus it came about that, without reconnoitring or manoeuvring for position, the French cavalry rode straight at the first objective which offered itself, and struck the victorious Prussians as they were See also:crossing the hills between the Albrechtshauserhof and Morsbronn. Hence the charge was costly and only partly successful. However, the Prussians were ridden over here and there, and their attention was sufficiently absorbed while the French infantry rallied for a fresh counter-stroke. This was made about 1.20 P.M. with the utmost gallantry, and the Prussians were driven off the hillsides between the Albrechtshauserhof and Morsbronn which they had already won. But the counter-attack soon came under the fire of the great artillery See also:mass above Gunstett, and, von Bose having at length concentrated the See also:main See also:body of the XI. corps in the meadows between the Niederwald and the Sauer, the French had to with-draw. Their withdrawal involved the retreat of the troops who had fought all day in See also:defence of the Niederwald. By 3 P.M. the Prussians were masters of the Niederwald and the ground S. of it on which the French right wing had originally stood, but they were in indescribable confusion after the prolonged fighting in the dense undergrowth. Before order could be restored came another fierce counter-stroke. As the Prussians emerged from the N. edge of the wood, the French reserves suddenly came out from behind the Elsasshausen heights, and striking due S. drove the Prussians back. It was a See also:grave crisis, but at this moment von Schkopp, who throughout all this had kept two of his battalions intact, came See also:round the N.W. corner of the Wald, and these fresh battalions again brought the French to a standstill. Meanwhile von Kirchbach, seeing the progress of the XI. corps, had ordered the whole of his command forward to See also:assault the French centre, and away to the right the two Bavarian corps moved against the French left, which still maintained its See also:original position in the woods N.E. of Froschweiler.

MacMahon, however, was not beaten yet. Ordering Bonne-mains' cavalry division to charge, by squadrons to gain time, he brought up his reserve artillery, and sent it forward to See also:

case-shot range to cover a final counter-stroke by his last intact battalions. But from his position near Froschweiler he could not see into the hollow between Elsasshausen and the Niederwald. The order was too See also:late, and the artillery unlimbered just as the counter attack on the Niederwald alluded to above gave way before von Schkopp's reserve. The guns were submerged in a See also:flood of fugitives and pursuers. Elsasshausen passed into the hands of the Germans. To See also:rescue the guns the nearest French infantry attacked in a See also:succession of groups, charging See also:home the See also:bayonet with the utmost determination. Before each attack the Prussians immediately in front gave way, but those on the flanks swung inwards and under this converging fire each French See also:attempt died out, the Prussians following up their retreat. In this manner, step by step, in confusion which almost defies See also:analysis, the Prussians conquered the whole of the ground to the S. of the Froschweiler-Worth road, but the French still held on in the village of Froschweiler itself and in the woods to the N. of the road, where throughout the day they had held the two Bavarian corps in check with little difficulty. To break down this last stronghold, the guns of the V. and XI. corps, which had now come forward to the captured ridge of Elsasshausen, took the village as their target; and the great See also:crowd of infantry, now flushed with victory but in the direst confusion, encouraged by the example of two horse artillery batteries which galloped boldly forward to case-shot range, delivered one final rush which swept all resistance before it. The battle was won and cavalry only were needed to reap its consequences, but the Prussian cavalry division had been left behind without orders and did not reach the battlefield till late at night. The divisional cavalry squadrons did their best, but each pursued on its own account, and the results in prisoners and guns fell far See also:short of what the opportunity offered.

Under cover of darkness the French escaped, and on the following day the cavalry division was quite unable to discover the direction of the retreat. MacMahon received no support from the neighbouring French troops (see FRANCO-GERMAN WAR). The battle was won by over-powering See also:

weight of numbers. The Prussian general staff were able to direct upon the field no fewer than 75,000 infantry, 600o cavalry, and 300 guns, of which 71,000 rifles, 4250 sabres and 234 guns came into See also:action, against 32,000 rifles, 4850 sabres and 101 guns on the French side. The superiority of the French See also:chassepot to the See also:needle guns may reasonably be set against the superior number of rifles on the German side, for though the Germans were generally, thanks to their numbers, able to bring a converging fire upon the French, the latter made nearly double the number of hits for about the same weight of See also:ammunition fired, but the French had nothing to oppose to the superior German artillery, and in almost every instance it was the terrible shell fire which broke up the French counter attack. All of these attacks were in the highest degree See also:honourable to the French army, and many came nearer to imperilling the ultimate success of the Germans than is generally supposed. One other point deserves See also:special attention. As soon as the fighting became general, all order in the skirmisher lines disappeared on both sides, and invariably, except where the Prussian artillery fire intervened, it was the appearance of closed bodies of troops in See also:rear of the fighting line which determined the retreat of their opponents. Even in the confused fighting in the Niederwald, the See also:mere See also:sound of the Prussian drums or the French bugles induced the adversary to give way even though drums and bugles frequently appealed to non-existent troops. The losses of the Germans were 9270 killed and wounded and 1370 missing, or 13%; those of the French were about 8000 killed and wounded, and perhaps 12,000 missing, and prisoners, representing a See also:total loss of about 41 %. Some French regiments retained a semblance of discipline after suffering enormous losses. The 2nd Turcos lost 93 %, 13th hussars 87 %, and thirteen regiments in all lost over 5o% of their strength.

See the French and German See also:

official histories of the war; H. Bonnal, Froschwiller (1899); H. Kunz, Schlacht von Worth (1891) and Kriegsgesch. Beispiele, Nos. 13-18; R. Tournes, De Gunstett au Niederwald and Le Calvaire ; and Commandant See also:Grange, " See also:Les Realit6s du champ de bataille," Revue d'infanterie (1908–1910). (F. N.

End of Article: WORTH

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