Order of battle for the Spring Offensive
Main articles: Operation Michael and Spring Offensive
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This is the order of battle for Operation Michael, part of the German Spring Offensive fought from 21 March to 5 April 1918 as one of the main engagements of the First World War. It was fought between mixed French, British and Dominion forces and the German Empire in the Somme region in northern France.
German forces, Western Front
Army Group Crown Prince Rupprecht
- Generalfeldmarschall Rupprecht, Crown Prince of Bavaria
- Chief of Staff: General von Kuhl
- 4th Army (18 divisions)
- General der Infanterie Sixt von Armin
- Chief of Staff: General von Lossberg
- 6th Army (15 divisions)
- General der Infanterie Ferdinand von Quast
- Chief of Staff: Lieutenant-Colonel Baron von Lenz
- 17th Army (28 divisions) *
- General der Infanterie Otto von Below
- Chief of Staff: General Krafft von Dellmensingen
- 2nd Army (21 divisions)
- General der Kavallerie Georg von der Marwitz
- Chief of Staff: Colonel Erich von Tschischwitz
Army Group German Crown Prince
- General der Infanterie Wilhelm, Crown Prince of Germany
- Chief of Staff: Colonel Count von der Schulenburg
- 18th Army (27 divisions)
- General der Infanterie Oskar von Hutier
- Chief of Staff: General von Sauberzweig
- 7th Army (11 divisions)
- Generaloberst Max von Boehn
- Chief of Staff: Lieutenant-Colonel Reinhardt
- 1st Army (12 divisions)
- General der Infanterie Fritz von Below
- Chief of Staff: Lieutenant-Colonel von Klüber
- 3rd Army (11 divisions)
- Generaloberst Karl von Einem
- Chief of Staff: Lieutenant-Colonel von Klewitz
Army Group Gallwitz
- General der Artillerie Max von Gallwitz
- Chief of Staff: Lieutenant-Colonel von Pawelsz
- 5th Army (12 divisions)
- General der Artillerie Max von Gallwitz
- Chief of Staff: Lieutenant-Colonel von Pawelsz
- Armee-Abteilung C (12 divisions)
- Generalleutnant Georg Fuchs
- Chief of Staff: Colonel Baron von Ledebur
Army Group Duke Albrecht
- Generalfeldmarschall Albrecht, Duke of Württemberg
- Chief of Staff: Colonel Heye
- 19th Army (10.5 divisions)
- General der Infanterie Felix Graf von Bothmer
- Chief of Staff: Colonel Baron von Hemmer
- Armee-Abteilung A (5 infantry, 2 dismounted cavalry divisions)
- General der Infanterie Bruno von Mudra
- Chief of Staff: Lieutenant-Colonel Baron von Esebeck
- Armee-Abteilung B (9 infantry, 1 dismounted cavalry division)
- General der Infanterie Erich von Gündell
- Chief of Staff: Lieutenant-Colonel Drechsel[1]
British armies
Fifth Army
General Sir Hubert Gough
- III Corps (Lieutenant-General Sir R. H. K. Butler)
- XVIII Corps (Lieutenant-General Sir I. Maxse)
- XIX Corps (Lieutenant-General Sir H. E. Watts)
- 24th Division
- 66th (2nd East Lancashire) Division
- 50th (Northumbrian) Division (from 21 March)
- 8th Division (from 22 March)
- VII Corps (Lieutenant-General Sir W. N. Congreve VC)
- 16th (Irish) Division
- 21st Division
- 9th (Scottish) Division
- 39th Division
- 35th Division (from 23 March)
- 12th (Eastern) Division (from 25 March)[2]
- US Army
- 6th Battalion United States (railway) Engineers (2 companies)[3]
Third Army
General Hon. Sir Julian Byng
- V Corps (Lieutenant-General Sir E. A. Fanshawe)
- IV Corps (Lieutenant-General Sir G. M. Harper)
- 51st (Highland) Division
- 6th Division
- 25th Division
- 19th (Western) Division (from 21 March)
- 41st Division (from 22 March)
- 42nd (East Lancashire) Division (from 24 March)
- 62nd (2nd West Riding) Division (from 25 March)
- New Zealand Division (from 25/26 March)
- 4th Australian Division (from 25/26 March)
- VI Corps (Lieutenant-General Sir J. A. L. Haldane)
- 59th (2nd North Midland) Division
- 34th Division
- 3rd Division
- 40th Division (from 21 March)
- Guards Division (from 22 March)
- 31st Division (from 22 March)
- XVII Corps Corps (Lieutenant-General Sir Charles Fergusson, Bt.)
- Cavalry Corps (Lieutenant-General Sir C. T. MacM. Kavanagh)
French Group of Armies of Reserve
General Émile Fayolle
Third Army
General Georges Louis Humbert
- V Corps (General Maurice Pellé)
- 125th Division (from 22 March)
- 1st Dismouted Cavalry Division (from 23 March)
- 9th Division (from 23 March)
- 10th Division (from 23 March)
- 55th Division (from 24 March)
- 1st Division (from 25 March)
- 35th Division (from 25 March)
- 53rd Division (part, from 26 March)
- 77th Division (part, from 26 March)
- II Cavalry Corps (General Félix Adolphe Robillot)[lower-alpha 1]
- 22nd Division (from 24 March)
- 62nd Division (from 24 March)
First Army
General Marie-Eugène Debeney
- 56th Division (from 25 March)
- II Cavalry Corps[lower-alpha 2]
- 1st Cavalry Division (from 26 March)
- 5th Cavalry Division (from 26 March)
- 6th Cavalry Division (from 27 March)[4]
Notes
Footnotes
- ↑ Kitchen 2001, pp. 320–321.
- 1 2 Edmonds 1995, pp. 545–547.
- ↑ Edmonds 1995, p. 507.
- 1 2 3 Edmonds 1995, p. 549.
Bibliography
- Edmonds, J. E.; et al. (1995) [1935]. Military Operations France and Belgium, 1918 The German March Offensive and its Preliminaries. History of the Great War Based on Official Documents By Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence (Imperial War Museum & Battery Press ed.). London: HMSO. ISBN 0-89839-219-5.
- Kitchen, Martin (2001). The German Offensives of 1918. Stroud: Tempus. ISBN 0752417991.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to First Battle of the Somme (1918). |
- British order of battle 1914–1918
- Battles and Engagements France and Flanders 1918
- Nafziger: German Order of Battle
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