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  1. Kingdom of Prussia and German Empire [ edit] In the Prussian Army, the Imperial German Army and later in the Wehrmacht, the rank of Generalfeldmarschall had several privileges, such as elevation to nobility, equal protocol rank with Cabinet ministers, the right of reporting directly to the monarch, and a constant escort.

  2. In the Prussian military tradition, which set the tone for the 19th century and the German Empire, field marshals could only be promoted in wartime and the royal family was excluded, both resulting in the creation of the rank of colonel general with the rank of general field marshal (German: Generaloberst mit dem Range eines ...

    Name
    Date Of Promotion
    Birth And Death
    21 June 1631
    1583–1641
    Francis Albert of Saxe-Lauenburg
    24 November 1632
    1598–1642
    19 October 1638
    1585–1645
    1 January 1666
    1605–76
  3. Generalfeldmarschall: Generaloberst mit dem Rang als Generalfeldmarschall: Generaloberst: General der Waffengattung: Generalleutnant: Generalmajor (English designation) General Field Marshal: Colonel General in the rank of Field Marshal: Colonel General: General of the branch: Lieutenant General: Major General

  4. Friedrich Heinrich Ernst Graf von Wrangel (13 April 1784 – 2 November 1877) was a Generalfeldmarschall of the Prussian Army. A Baltic German, he was nicknamed "Papa Wrangel" and was a member of the Baltic noble family of Wrangel.

  5. Generalfeldmarschall Gebhard Leb (e)recht Fürst Blücher von Wahlstadt (Wahlstatt) (1742-1819) The most successful and famous Prussian Army field commander of the period, Blücher was perhaps the most single-mindedly aggressive general employed by any belligerent.

  6. Field marshal ( German : Generalfeldmarschall ) was usually the highest military rank in various German armed forces. It had existed, under slightly different names, in several German states since 1631. [1] .