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  1. Alexandre von Kluck. Alexander Heinrich Rudolph Kluck, anobli von Kluck en 1909, né à Münster le 20 mai 1846 et mort à Berlin le 19 octobre 1934, est un militaire allemand. Il participe aux guerres austro-prussienne et franco-prussienne de 1870. Au déclenchement de la Première Guerre mondiale, il commande la 1re armée allemande et ...

  2. Alexander Von Kluck, est un militaire de carrière. Pendant la guerre franco-prussienne de 1870, lieutenant, il sera blessé par deux fois et recevra la Croix de fer. En 1914, il commande la 1ère armée allemande. Lors de la bataille de la Marne, négligeant Paris, et d’un tempérament offensif, son objectif est de poursuivre la 5e armée ...

  3. El General von Kluck, muy irritado por estas provisiones que asignaban un papel defensivo a su ejército, no estaba dispuesto a obedecer; confiado de poder lograr la victoria, nuevamente el 3 de septiembre continuó marchando la mayor parte de sus tropas hacia el sureste. Los soldados del 1.er ejército estaban agotados por el largo y agotador ...

  4. Heinrich Rudolph Alexander von Kluck was born on May 20, 1846, in Münster, Prussian Westphalia (Germany). He saw service in the Seven Weeks’ War in 1866 and in the Franco-German War of 1870–71. In 1906 Kluck became a general of infantry and in 1913 an inspector general. When World War I broke out in 1914, Kluck was appointed to command the ...

  5. Alexander Heinrich Rudolph von Kluck (20 May 1846 – 19 October 1934) was a German general during World War I. Kluck was born in Münster, Westphalia on 20 May 1846. He enlisted in the Prussian army in time to serve in the seven-week Austro-Prussian War of 1866 and the Franco-Prussian War, where he was wounded twice in the Battle of Colombey-Neuilly, and awarded the Iron Cross (second class ...

  6. In his account von Kluck argues forcefully that the decision to retreat was not his, but instead mandated by the Army's central command (i.e. Chief of Staff Helmuth von Moltke); indeed, von Kluck suggests that rather than retreat First Army should have pressed on with the attack with the possibility of winning a great victory over combined French and British forces.