Karl Ritter von Prager
Karl Ritter von Prager | |
---|---|
Birth name | Karl Prager |
Birth date | 23 October 1875 |
Place of birth | Warmensteinach, Kingdom of Bavaria, German Empire |
Death date | 31 January 1959 (aged 83) |
Place of death | Horn near Füssen (Allgäu), Bavaria, West Germany |
Allegiance | German Empire Weimar Republic National Socialist Germany |
Service/branch | Royal Bavarian Army Imperial German Army Reichswehr Heer |
Years of service | 1894–1931 1939–1942 |
Rank | General der Infanterie (General of the Infantry) |
Battles/wars | World War I World War II |
Awards | Iron Cross House Order of Hohenzollern Pour le Mérite |
Relations | ∞ 16 March 1922 Fried(e)l Spitzweg |
Karl Prager, with effect from 1917 Ritter[1] von Prager (1875–1959), was a German officer of the Bavarian Army, the Imperial German Army, the Reichswehr and the Wehrmacht, finally General of the Infantry in World War II. He must not be confused with Generalleutnant Karl Prager.
Career (chronology)
- 1875 Born as the son of the chief forest officer Heinrich Prager and his wife Ernestine, née Kroher.
- Abitur at the Neues Gymnasium Bamberg
- 14 July 1894 Joined the Königlich Bayerisches 11. Infanterie-Regiment „von der Tann“
- 1 March 1895 to 6 February 1896 Studies at the War School (Kriegsschule München)
- June 1899 Pioneer training course (Pionier-Übungskurs)
- May 1900 Commanded to the military shooting school (Militär-Schießschule)
- 1 October 1901 Commanded to the Bezirkskommando (Landwehr) in Regensburg
- 15 November 1901
- 1 October 1903 to 30 September 1906 Studies at the Bavarian War Academy
- 1 October 1907 Central Office of the General Staff (Zentralstelle des Generalstabs)
- 1 October 1908 to 30 September 1910 Detached to the Grand General Staff / Großer Generalstab
- 22 April 1910 Central Office of the General Staff
- 26 March 1911 to 22 January 1913 General Staff of the I. Armee-Korps as 3. Generalstabsoffizier (Ic)
- 23 January 1913 General Staff of the Gouvernement der Festung Ingolstadt (other soures state Festung Germersheim)
- He developed a new armor design here.
- 19 March 1914 Commander of the 10. Kompanie/Königlich Bayerisches 2. Infanterie Regiment „Kronprinz“ in München[2]
- 16 August 1914 General Staff of the I. Armee-Korps as intelligence officer (Nachrichtenoffizier)
- 23/25 October 1914 Transferred to the Staff of the (Generalquartiermeister) in the Großes Hauptquartier Seiner Majestät des Kaisers und Königs.
- 24/29 December 1914 First general staff officer of the newly formed Prussian 79th Reserve Division on the Eastern Front
- On 8 February 1915, he fell in combat near Gehsen during the operation in Masuria with his horse and dislocated his right arm. He was then in the Rastenburg military hospital until 2 March 1915.
- 5/6 March 1915 First general staff officer of the 52. Infanterie-Division
- 3 August 1916 General Staff of the 6th Army
- 28 August 1916 General Staff of the newly formed Heeresgruppe „Kronprinz Rupprecht“
- 1. Juni 1917 1. Generalstabsoffizier (Ia)
- Karl Ritter von Prager had distinguished himself in his function as general staff officer of the "Kronprinz Rupprecht" army group in the Battle of the Somme in 1916, in the spring battle of Arras in 1917 and in the Battle of Flanders in the summer and autumn of 1917. The Pour le Mérite was awarded following the conclusion of the Assault Battle of Cambrai.
- On 30 November 1917, the Royal Bavarian Military Max-Joseph-Order was awarded, with which the personal nobility was connected.
- 1. Juni 1917 1. Generalstabsoffizier (Ia)
- February 1919 Central Office of the General Staff
- Mid-February 1919 Bavarian military plenipotentiary at the main headquarters (Großes Hauptquartier) in Kolberg
- 16 April 1919 Vorläufige Reichswehr
- Chief of the General Staff of the Reichswehr-Gruppenkommando 4; took part in the fighting against the Bavarian Soviet Republic
- 1 October 1920 Chied of the Staff of the 7. Division of the Reichswehr
- 1 February 1921 Battalion Commander in the 19. (Bayerisches) Infanterie-Regiment in München, also on the regimental staff
- In the meantime, from 1920 until the passage of the Defense Act of 23 March 1921, which formed the legal basis for the Reichswehr, von Prager was a member of the commission that drew up this law.
- 15 June 1921 to 31 March 1922 Wworked on the regimental staff and was then transferred to the Reichswehr Ministry (RWM) in Berlin as head of the Army Training Department (T 4)
- 1 February 1925 Commander of the 19. (Bayerisches) Infanterie-Regiment
- 1 February 1927 RWM in Berlin as Inspekteur der Infanterie (In 2)
- 31 January 1931 Retired from military service (successor as Inspector of Infantry: Günther Freiherr von Hammerstein-Equord)
- After his departure, von Prager received the right to wear the general's uniform of the 19th (Bavarian) Infantry Regiment.[3]
WWII
- 26 August 1939 At disposal (zur Verfügung) of the Wehrmacht
- August 1939 to 6 November 1939 Commanding General of the XXVII. Armeekorps (27. AK)
- November 1939 to May 1942 Commanding General of the XXV. Armeekorps (25. AK) as successor to Alfred Oskar Karl Wäger and predecessor of Wilhelm Fahrmbacher
- took part in the Battle of France alongside the Höheres Kommando z. b. V. XXXIII under Georg Brandt as part of the 7th Army
- 1 May 1942 Führerreserve OKH
- 30 June 1942 Mobilization provision lifted (Mobilmachungsbestimmung aufgehoben); de facto retired
After retirement and the the heavy allied terror bombing against Munich, von Prager was bombed out in July 1944 and moved to Horn, where he died in 1959.
Promotions
- 14.7.1894 Offizieraspirant (Officer Candidate)
- 2 February 1899 rank renamed Fahnenjunker
- 27.2.1896 Sekondlieutenant (2nd Lieutenant)
- 2 February 1899 rank renamed Leutnant
- 28.10.1905 Oberleutnant (1st Lieutenant)
- 22.4.1910 Hauptmann with Patent from 7 March 1910
- 11.1.1915 Major with Patent from 30 November 1914
- 18.12.1920 Oberstleutnant with rank seniority (RDA) from 1 October 1920
- 1.7.1922 Oberst
- 1.2.1927 Generalmajor
- 1.2.1929 Generalleutnant
- 31.1.1931 Charakter als General der Infanterie with effect from 1.2.1931
- 1.9.1940 General der Infanterie z. V.[4]
Awards and decorations
- Jubiläumsmedaille für die bayerische Armee (1905) on 12 March 1905
- Order of the Crown (Preußischer Kronenorden), 4th Class on 8 September 1909
- Iron Cross (1914), 2nd and 1st Class
- Military Merit Order (Bavaria), 4th Class with Swords (BMV4⚔/BM4⚔) on 16 November 1914
- Baden Order of the Zähringer Lion (Orden vom Zähringer Löwen), Knight's Cross I. Class (BZ3a) on 2 September 1915
- This wartime award should definitely be BZ3a⚔, as the Staats-Anzeiger für das Großherzogtum Baden, 1915 issue, p. 478 proves, but the rank lists of 1926 and 1927[5] show BZ3a (without swords), which military experts believe to be a mistake.
- Crown to his Bavarian Military Merit Order, 4th Class with Swords (BMV4mKr⚔/BM4mKr⚔) on 21 December 1915
- Bremen Hanseatic Cross (Bremisches Hanseatenkreuz; BH) on 25 October 1916
- House Order of Hohenzollern, Knight's Cross with Swords on 26 March 1917 (PH3)
- Military Merit Order (Bavaria), 3rd Class with Swords (BMV3⚔) on 24 April 1917
- War Merit Cross (Brunswick), 2nd Class (BrK2) on 12 May 1917
- Military Merit Cross of Mecklenburg-Schwerin (Großherzoglich Mecklenburg-Schwerinsches Militär-Verdienstkreuz), 2nd Class (MK2) on 16 June 1917
- Lübeck Hanseatic Cross (Lübeckisches Hanseatenkreuz; LübH/LüH) on 19 July 1917
- Hamburg Hanseatic Cross (Hamburgisches Hanseatenkreuz; HH) on 10 November 1917
- Ottoman Empire Gallipoli Star (Eiserner Halbmond; TH) on 10 November 1917
- Military Order of Max Joseph, Knight's Cross (BMJ3) between 6 January and 25 February 1918 with effect from 30 November 1917[6] (Militär-Max-Joseph-Orden)
- Pour le Mérite on 23 December 1917 as Major and Erster Generalstabsoffizier (Ia) of the Heeresgruppe "Kronprinz Rupprecht"
- Saxon Albert Order (Albrechts-Orden), Knight 1st Class with Swords (SA3a⚔)
- Order of Military Merit (Bulgaria), Commander's Cross (BO3)
- Bavarian Long Service Cross (Königlich Bayerisches Dienstauszeichnungskreuz), II. Class for 24 years (BD2)
- Ehrenkreuz für Frontkämpfer
- Clasp to the Iron Cross (1939), 2nd and 1st Class
References
- ↑ Regarding personal names: Ritter (de) is a title of German nobility (Deutscher Adel), translated approximately as Knight, not a first or middle name, but connected with the surname, for example Generalfeldmarschall Robert Ritter von Greim, not Ritter Robert von Greim. There is no equivalent female form.
- ↑ Militär-Handbuch des Königsreich Bayern, 1914, p. 40
- ↑ Ritter von Prager, Karl, Lexikon der Wehrmacht
- ↑ General der Infanterie Karl Ritter von Prager
- ↑ Reichswehr Rangliste 1927
- ↑ Militär-Max-Joseph-Orden, Complete List of all WW1 Ritterkreuz MMJO recipients
Categories:
- 1876 births
- 1945 deaths
- German knights
- Military personnel of Bavaria
- German military officers
- German military personnel of World War I
- Generals of the Reichswehr
- Wehrmacht generals
- German military personnel of World War II
- Recipients of the Order of the Crown (Prussia)
- Recipients of the Iron Cross
- Recipients of the War Merit Cross (Brunswick)
- Recipients of the Military Merit Order (Bavaria)
- Recipients of the Albert Order
- Recipients of the Order of the Zähringer Lion
- Recipients of the Hanseatic Cross
- Recipients of the Gallipoli Star
- Recipients of the House Order of Hohenzollern
- Recipients of the Pour le Mérite (military class)
- Recipients of the Military Order of Max Joseph
- Recipients of the Cross of Honor
- Recipients of the clasp to the Iron Cross