- Erich Marcks
Infobox Military Person
name=Erich Marcks
lived=June 6 ,1891 –June 12 ,1944
placeofbirth=Berlin-Schöneberg
placeofdeath=Hébécrevon près de Marigny,Saint-Lô
caption=
nickname=
allegiance=flagicon|German EmpireGerman Empire (to 1918)
flagicon|GermanyWeimar Republic (to 1933)
flagicon|Nazi GermanyNazi Germany
branch=Heer
serviceyears=1910-1944
rank=General der Artillerie
commands=
unit= German LXXXIV Army Corps
battles=World War I World War II
awards=Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves
laterwork=Erich Marcks (
June 6 ,1891 –June 12 ,1944 ) was a Germangeneral ofartillery inWorld War II .Biography
Born in Berlin-Schöneberg, Marcks was the son of the German historian Erich Marcks. He began advanced studies in philosophy in
Freiburg in 1909. He broke off his studies after only three semesters and became a career officer of theGerman Army in October 1910. In the early 1930s, he was assigned as the chief of public affairs for the armed forces minister. From 1932 until 1933 he served as the public affairs officer for chancellorsFranz von Papen andKurt von Schleicher .During the 1940 Campaign in France, while serving as chief of staff of the 18th Army, Marcks altered German plans to prevent bombardment of the city of
Bruges and bombardment of bridges inParis , believing that the historical significance of these sites required their preservation, even in time of war. [ [http://www.1939-45.org/bios/marcks.htm Marcks biography in French] ] In 1940, Marcks worked on the initial invasion plans of theSoviet Union . Taking part inOperation Barbarossa , Marcks was seriously wounded in theUkraine onJune 26 ,1941 as the commander of the 101st Light Infantry Division. This wounding resulted in the amputation of one of Marcks' legs. Two of Marcks' three sons were lost during theRusso-German War .Subsequently, despite his disability, Marcks commanded the 337th Infantry Division in
Paris , the LXVI Army Corps atClermont-Ferrand , and the LXXXVII Army Corps in northernBrittany prior to his final assignment.In 1944, Marcks commanded the German LXXXIV Army Corps against the Allies'
Normandy Invasion . He was one of the fewWehrmacht generals who believed an invasion in Normandy was a serious possibility. The D-Day invasion took place on Marcks' 53rd birthday. His suspicions of the true intention of the allies to land at Normandy, and birthday, are dramatized in the film "The Longest Day ". While on a daily round of troop unit inspections, Marcks was mortally wounded onJune 12 ,1944 by an Allied fighter-bomber attack near Hébécrevon près de Marigny, several kilometers northwest ofSaint-Lô .Marcks was a holder of the Knight's Cross with Oakleaves.
Auszeichnungen
*
Iron Cross (1914) 2nd und 1st Class
*Cross of Honor
* "Wehrmacht-Dienstauszeichnung IV. bis II. Klasse"
* Clasp to the Iron Cross 2nd and 1st Class
* Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves
** Knight's Cross (26 June 1941 )
** Oak Leaves (24 June 1944 ) (posthumous)
* Mentioned in theWehrmachtsbericht on13 June 1944 In popular culture
*In the 1962 film "The Longest Day", Erich Marcks was portrayed by the German actor
Richard Münch .Footnotes and References
Article Sources
* Das Deutsche Heer 1939-1945, Wolf Keilig, Part 211, Page 211. Bad Nauheim: Podzun Verlag, 1957.
* [http://www.1939-45.org/bios/marcks.htm Biography of Marcks (in French)]Notes
*
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