- Ludwig Adolf Wilhelm von Lützow
Ludwig Adolf Wilhelm Freiherr von Lützow (
May 18 ,1782 –December 6 ,1834 ) was a Prussianlieutenant general notable for his organization and command of a "Freikorps" of volunteers during theNapoleonic Wars .Biography
Lützow was born in
Berlin .He first entered the
Prussian Army in 1795, and eleven years later as a lieutenant took part in the disastrousbattle of Auerstadt . He then achieved distinction in the siege ofKolberg , as the leader of a squadron of Schill's volunteers. In 1808, as a major he retired from the Prussian army, indignant at the humiliatingtreaty of Tilsit . He took part in the heroic venture of his old chief Schill in 1809; wounded at Dodendorf and left behind, he thereby escaped the fate of his comrades. In 1811 he was restored to the Prussian army as major, and at the outbreak of the war of liberation received permission from Scharnhorst to organize a free corps consisting of infantry, cavalry andTirol ese marksmen, for operating in the French rear and rallying the smaller governments into the ranks of the allies.This corps played a marked part in the campaign of 1813. But Lützow was unable to coerce the minor states, and the wanderings of the corps had little military influence. At Kitzen (near
Leipzig ) the whole corps, warned too late of thearmistice of Poischwitz , was caught on the French side of the line of demarcation. So called as being the only brigade containing no foreign elements in the army and, as a fighting force, annihilated. Lützow himself, wounded, cut his way out with the survivors, and immediately began reorganizing and recruiting.In the second part of the campaign the corps he served in more regular warfare under Wallmoden. Lützow and his men distinguished themselves at Gadebusch (where Körner fell) and Gohrde (where Lützow himself, for the second time, received a severe wound at the head of the cavalry). Sent next against
Denmark , and later employed at thesiege of Jühich , Lützow in 1814 fell into the hands of the French.After the peace of 1814 the corps was dissolved, the infantry becoming the 25th Regiment, the cavalry the 6th Ulans. At Ligny he led the 6th Ulans to the charge, but they were broken by the French cavalry, and he finally remained in the hands of the enemy, escaping, however, on the day of Waterloo. Made colonel in this year, his subsequent promotions were: major-general 1822, and lieutenant-general (on retirement) 1830.
One of the last acts of his life for which Lützow is remembered is his challenge (which was ignored) to Blücher, who had been ridden down in the rout of the 6th Ulans at Ligny, and had made, in his official report, comments thereon, which their colonel considered disparaging.
Several German warships including SMS "Lützow" of World War I, and the heavy cruiser "Lützow" (ex-"Deutschland") of World War II, were named after him.
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