Talk:Fritz von Loßberg
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[edit]sent of Roland v.Lossberg on 04 December, 2004 around 12:21:31
Answer up: General of the infantry Fritz von Lossberg von J.Wilkening on 30 November, 2004 around 21:29:31:
- No. General Fritz v.Lossberg was another line. The father of general Fritz v.Lossberg was called however Victor v.Lossberg. His brother Karl v.Lossberg (please 1870) had a son also named Karl (please 1914). His son was Viktor v.Lossberg (geb. 1904, last Colonels...). The brother of Victor was called Karl Egon (1901-2001) and was my grandfather. Correct it is however that Ulrich Grauert was the son-in-law of general Fritz v.Lossberg. Fritz v. Lossberg had a son (Bernhard) and several daughters.
With kind regards Roland v.Lossberg
- General of the infantry Fritz von Lossberg (1868-1942,
- Knight of the Pour le merite with oak leaves
- last commander realm military's group command I/Berlin (1925-27):
- Did he have children? Was he possibly the father of Viktor von Lossberg? He was born 1904 in Posen, was in the 2.WK last Colonel i.G., carriers of the knight cross and still for some years in the German Federal Armed Forces actively. : General Fritz von Lossberg was allegedly the father-in-law of Ulrich Grauert, 1940 colonel general of the Air Force, pleases 1941. Can that confirm someone?
--ROGER DAVIES TALK 10:18, 7 June 2007 (UTC)
More
[edit]Friedrich Karl von Loßberg was born on the 30th of April 1868 at Bad Homburg and died on the 14th of May 1942 at Lübeck. He entered the 2. Garde-Regiment zu Fuß on the 3rd of January 1886 as a Fahnenjunker and was commissioned as a Sekondelieutenant on the 17th of September 1887.
He attended the War Academy from 1 October 1894 until 21 July 1897 and was attached to the General Staff on the 1st of April 1898 being definitively assigned on the 29th of March 1900. From 18 August 1900 to 17 February 1903 he was on the staff of the XIV Army Corps and was then a company commander in Infantry Regiment 114 until his assignment as the operations officer of the 19th Division on 22nd of April 1905. He served as an instructor at the War Academy from 1st Oct 1907 to 1st October 1910 when he became operations officer of the XIV Army Corps. On the 1st of October1912 he was appointed as the commander of the 2nd Battalion Infantry Regiment 94 and exactly a year later as the Chief of Staff of the XIII Army Corps.
From 23 Jan 1915 he was the deputy Chief of the Operations Section of the General Staff of the Field Army and then held the following Army Chief of Staff posts:
26 Sep 1915: 3rd Army 02 Jul 1916: 2nd Army 19 Jul 1916: 1st Army 11 Apr 1917: 6th Army 12 Jun 1917 4th Army
On the 6th of August 1918 he became COS of Army Group Boehm and his final wartime appointment was as COS of Army Group Herzog Albrecht von Württemberg. Following the war he was COS of Grenschutz Süd, Commander of Reichwehr-Brigade 26 and took up the appointment of Commander of the 6th Division on the 1st of August 1920. His final appointment was as Commander of Group Command 1 from 1st Jan 1925 until his retirement on the 31 Jan 1927.
Promotions:
Premierlieutenant: 16 Jun 1894 Hauptmann: 29 Mar 1900 Major: 27 Jan 1907 Oberstleutnant: 16 Jan 1913 Oberst: 24 Jul 1915 Generalmajor: 03 Aug 1917 Generalleutnant: 18 Dec 1920 (seniority of 1 Oct 1920) General der Infanterie: 01 Oct 1926
PLM: 21 Sep 1916 OPLM: 24 Apr 1917
--ROGER DAVIES TALK 22:31, 7 June 2007 (UTC)
Lossberg was against elastic defence
[edit]It was Ludendorff in 1917 who insisted on front-line troops retreating from the outpost zone after the disaster of Broodseinde.Keith-264 (talk) 01:03, 24 December 2011 (UTC)
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[edit]Tidied layout, swapped online for printed sources. Note that the long quote from Wynne was unattributed and so long that plagiarism might be inferred. Keith-264 (talk) 20:02, 16 January 2017 (UTC)
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