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  1. Friedrich Freiherr Kress von Kressenstein (Núremberg, 24 de abril de 1870 - Múnich, 16 de octubre de 1948) fue un general alemán, miembro del grupo de oficiales alemanes que ayudaron en la dirección del Ejército otomano durante la Primera Guerra Mundial.

  2. Friedrich Siegmund Georg Freiherr Kress von Kressenstein (also German: Kreß; 24 April 1870 – 16 October 1948) was a German general from Nuremberg. He was a member of the group of German officers who assisted in the direction of the Ottoman Army during World War I.

  3. 13 de sept. de 2017 · Kreß von Kressenstein was a Bavarian-German officer who, as member of the German military mission in the Ottoman Empire, led the offensives on the Suez Canal and the defense of Gaza. In June 1918, he left for Georgia as the head of the “German delegation in the Caucasus.”

  4. Friedrich Freiherr Kress von Kressenstein ( Núremberg, 24 de abril de 1870 - Múnich, 16 de octubre de 1948) fue un general alemán, miembro del grupo de oficiales alemanes que ayudaron en la dirección del Ejército otomano durante la Primera Guerra Mundial.

  5. German general Friedrich Freiherr Kress von Kressenstein was commander of the three divisions of the Fourth Army. He further strengthened his defensive line stretching from Gaza to Beersheba after the EEF defeats at the first and second battles of Gaza in March and April 1917, and received reinforcements of two divisions.

    • 31 October 1917
    • Beersheba, Ottoman Empire
    • British victory
  6. Otto Freiherr Kreß von Kressenstein (1850–1929), bayerischer Generaloberst und Kriegsminister; Friedrich Freiherr Kreß von Kressenstein (1855–1920), bayerischer General der Infanterie; Friedrich Freiherr Kreß von Kressenstein (1870–1948), deutscher General der Artillerie; Franz Freiherr Kreß von Kressenstein (1881–1957), deutscher ...

  7. 4 de sept. de 2019 · By mid-September 1918, the force’s commander, the Bavarian General Friedrich Freiherr Kress von Kressenstein , had almost 19,000 men at his disposal . 2. This buildup of troops took place over two thousand miles from German General Headquarters in Belgium and at a time when Germany’s military situation was rapidly deteriorating.