Walther
Karl Friedrich Freiherr von Lüttwitz
(02.02.1859 - 20.09.1942)
place of birth: Bodland, Oberschlesien (Bogacica, Poland)
Königreich
Preußen: OberKdo
Marken, KG, General der Infanterie
Imperial German officer and Silesian baron
Walther Freiherr von Lüttwitz
first came to military prominence in 1912 as Senior Quartermaster of
the Great General Staff. The outbreak of the Great War found
him serving as chief of staff for Fourth Army commander Duke Albrecht.
His first cousin Arthur Freiherr von Lüttwitz
was also a highly-decorated general officer who served during the Great
War.
General von Lüttwitz
is considered responsible for the infamous razing of
the Belgian town of Louvain occurring at the start
of the War. Due to disagreements with new Chief of General Staff von
Falkenhayn, Lüttwitz was
transferred in September 1914 to take command of 33rd Division engaged
in the Argonne. Falkenhayn then sent him to Galicia
in the summer of 1915 to head up 2nd Guards Division. There, his troops
participated in the break through at Krasnostov as
they cntinued pushing the Russian enemy back to the River Bug. He was then brought back to the Western Front to take the
reigns of X. Army Corps, directing his new troops during the the
September 1915 Battle of Champagne. The corps was
transported to the Eastern Front in the summer of 1916 to support
Austrian forces engaged along the River Stochid,
Ukraine.
In late August 1916, Generalleutnant von Lüttwitz
was brought to OHL
headquarters in Pless, Silesia, where Falkenhayn handed him orders for
a transfer back to the western theater. Following the failure at Verdun
in August 1916, Lüttwitz was
to replace Crown Prince Wilhelm's discredited assistant Konstantin
Schmidt von Knobelsdorf as Fifth Army Chief of Staff. When Lüttwitz arrived at Fifth Army
headquarters, the Kaiser himself was waiting there to award him with
the coveted Pour le Merite honor.
In November of 1916, the Kaiser handed over
command of III. Army Corps to Freiherr von Lüttwitz,
an assignment which he maintained until War's end. Initially fighting
in support of First Army, his corps troops successfully fought in the 1917
Spring Offensive along the River
Aisne. In support of the newly-formed Eighteenth Army, Lüttwitz' divisions were also engaged
at St-Quentin/La Fere during the 1918
Spring Offensive. It was for his exemplary leadership during
this conflict that the general received the oak leaves for his Blue
Max ribbon. While the summer of 1918 initially saw his troops
fighting it out in the trenches, the enemy went on the offensive in
August, and III. Corps began an orderly defensive retreat in the region
near the Rivers Somme and Avre.
Lüttwitz was promoted to
General der Infanterie in mid-August as his corps assets were
transferred to fight in support Seventh Army until the Armistice.
After the War, General von Lüttwitz
brought his corps back home for demobilization and was subsequently
asked to lead the forces set up to defend Berlin. He was then charged
with quelling revolutionary unrest in that city as head of Oberkommando
in den Marken, commander of military forces in the
Mark-Brandenburg region. During the Spartacus Revolt
of 1919, troops under his command were responsible for the deaths of
radical communist leaders Rosa Luxembourg and Karl Liebknecht. He was
also one of the failed leaders of the 1920 Kapp Putsch.
The general had one son serving in a Jäger
Bataillon who was killed in action in 1916, and another son, Smilo, who
also fought in the Great War and was a highly
decorated officer during the Second World War. He was also the
father-in-law of Wehrmacht general Kurt von Hammerstein-Equord. Walther
von Lüttwitz passed away on 20
September 1942 in Breslau.
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General
der Infanterie |
18.08.1918 |
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Pour
le Mérite |
24.08.1916
(Eichenlaub: 24.03.1918) |
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