Archive of roughly 500 leaves A4 sized including dozens of folded battle scenario maps. In 6 folders plus loose pages. Dates range from 1909–1913. The documents belonged to Oberleutnant Anton Glas who was part of the infantry regiment Freiherr v. Czibulka Nr. 91
The k.u.k. War College was the highest military facility to educate, instruct, train, and develop general staff officers of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. It was located in Vienna, and active from 1852 to 1918.
This is a collection of battle scenarios for officer instruction at the War College in the years leading up to World War I, and thus provide an insight into how Austro-Hungarian officers were trained just prior to the Great War. Of interest to us was the substantial coverage given to Japanese battle formations as training for Austro-Hungarian officers.
The scenarios generally provide a history of the battle followed by a timeline of the advances and retreats and are supplemented by maps showing troop positions.
The detailed topics include:
Occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1878; rebellion in Herzegovina 1882; battle of Kumano in October 1912; march of the Serbian division through Albania in 1912; troops led by Hauptmann von Vivenot in 1866; History of the Austrian Cavalry including the march to Berlin in 1757; Infantry battle of Bruville in 1870; the fight for Le Bourget in 1870; the battle at Lovca in 1877; Infantry battle of St. Privat in 1870; cavalry battles of the Russian-Japanese war; battle of Gustozza in 1866; cavalry brigade Pulz and Bujanovics in 1866; battle of New-Rogritz, Rudersdorf in 1866; battles of Jicin in 1866; fundamentals of structuring a military; introduction to batallion stuctures; examples of preparing for defense overnight during battle engagement; Japanese battle formations of 1904; attacks of the 5th Japanese infantry brig. by Mukden in 1905; the battle of Tjurentschön (falling to the Japanese); Boer war (South Africa) 1899; battle at Modde River (South Africa) 1899.
Price: $2250
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Title | Archive of roughly 500 leaves A4 sized including dozens of folded battle scenario maps. In 6 folders plus loose pages. Dates range from 1909–1913. The documents belonged to Oberleutnant Anton Glas who was part of the infantry regiment Freiherr v. Czibulka Nr. 91 |
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