Battle of Nachod

Battle of Náchod

Cavalry clash at the Battle of Nachod by Richard Knötel
Date27 June 1866
LocationNachod, Bohemia
Result Prussian victory
Belligerents
 Prussia  Austrian Empire
Commanders and leaders
Kingdom of Prussia Von Steinmetz Austrian Empire Von Ramming[1]
Casualties and losses
1,122[1] 5,719[1]

The Battle of Nachod (or Náchod) on 27 June 1866 was the first major action of the Austro-Prussian War. The advance guard of General Karl Friedrich von Steinmetz's 5th Corps occupied some high ground near Nachod as part of a Prussian advance into Bohemia from Silesia. Elements of the Austrian 6th Corps under General Von Ramming came on the scene and attacked the Prussians but were repulsed. As more Austrians arrived, they were ordered into attacks which proved both costly and unsuccessful. Finally, the badly mauled Austrians retreated from the field. The Prussian infantry enjoyed a technical advantage in having the needle gun, a breech-loading rifle that could be fired and loaded from a prone position. Consequently, the Austrian infantry, which were only equipped with muzzle-loading rifles, suffered a disproportionate number of casualties.

Events

The Prussian Second Army, invading Bohemia, had to split up in order to negotiate the passes of the Riesen Mountains. General Karl Friedrich von Steinmetz's 5th Corps was nearly caught as it emerged from a gully by the village of Nachod, Bohemia. The King’s Grenadiers were in the advance guard, and raced forward, first to occupy some woods outside the gully’s opening, and then to take possession of the heights above Wenzelsberg.

To counter the danger of the Prussians flanking his army, during the evening June 26, Benedek finally decided to send Ramming's VI Corps to Nachod to block the passes. Benedek's orders were only received by Ramming at 1:30 AM on June 27. The first Austrian troops started up at 3:30 AM, the bulk of the corps started at 5:00 AM, without having eaten.

The Austrian Colonel Hertwegh was supposed to occupy the next village of Vysokov so as to block the road, but instead, when at 9:00 AM he got to Wenzelsberg he on his own initiative wheeled right to attack the Prussians on the ridge above; the King’s Grenadiers simply mowed his men down. It was now that the superiority of Prussian equipment made itself felt. Their new breech-loading needle guns enabled them to fire three shots to the Austrians’ muzzle-loader's one. The Prussian cavalry now rode forward along the road to stop the Austrians reaching Vysokov, and here a cavalry battle developed.

The King’s Grenadiers now came down the slope over the bodies of Herwegh’s men and occupied Wenzelsberg. At 10:45 AM a new Austrian brigade (Jonak) arrived and a fearful struggle ensued over the churchyard. The grenadiers were driven out of it but held on to most of the village for two hours while the rest of the 9th Division arrived.

A third Austrian brigade (Rosenzweig's) appeared, and this time it had unmistakable orders to take Vysokov. As the famous Viennese Hoch-und-Deutschmeister Regiment, the last fighting vestige of the old Teutonic Order, burst into the town, Colonel Louis von Blumenthal arrived at the head of the 52nd Foot on their right flank. Though the fighting continued, the result was now not in doubt.

At 1:00 PM Ramming decided to untangle by escaping forward and he committed his final brigade - Waldstätten's - to clear the woods around Kleny, pivot on Rosenzweig's left and take the town, and then turn Steinmetz's flank in order to push the Prussians back in to the pass. Using their numerically superior 42 gun artillery strength - the bulk of the Austrian guns were still struck in traffic - to pummel Waldstätten, a Prussian regiment attacked Rosenzweig in Vaclavice and a fresh regiment flanked Waldstätten's columns. At 2:00 PM, having spent all his reserve, Ramming commanded a retreat to Skalice, where he united with his artillery batteries to form an 80 gun grand battery and took up position behind a railway embankment.

Steinmetz elected not to follow up the Austrians but decided to concentrate his scattered units at the heights.

Results

Having through muddled staff orders started to late to reach the commanding heights first, the Austrian VI Corps brigades, exhausted from a six-hour march, were committed piecemeal against the Prussians commanding the heights. The Prussian firepower goaded the Austrians into courageous but costly bayonet charges; their officers lost control, and five and a half thousand men fell to the Prussians’ thousand. The news electrified Berlin. Von Steinmetz was hailed as the “Lion of Nachod,” and Bismarck found for the first time in his life that he was popular. Strategically, Ramming's loss meant the Austrians lost control of one of the passes giving entry into Bohemia. It also meant that Glabenz' Corps was left in the air at Trautenau, and ultimately meant that the Prussian army could advance towards a union with the other Prussian armies.

Map

Battle of Nachod on a relief in Berlin, by Moritz Schulz, 1872

http://usacac.army.mil/cac2/cgsc/carl/download/csipubs/cannae/maps_41_60.pdf See Map 45 Courtesy of US Combined Arms Center

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 Volley & Bayonet

References

Literature

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