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  1. Alexander Heinrich Rudolph von Kluck (Münster, Westfalia; 20 de mayo de 1846 - Berlín, Alemania; 19 de octubre de 1934) fue un general alemán durante la Primera Guerra Mundial. Biografía. Nació en Münster, Westfalia, y peleó tanto en la guerra austro-prusiana de 1866 como en la guerra franco-prusiana.

    • Südwestkirchhof Stahnsdorf
  2. Alexander Heinrich Rudolph von Kluck (20 May 1846 – 19 October 1934) was a German general during World War I . Early life. Kluck was born in Münster, Westphalia on 20 May 1846. He was the son of architect Karl von Kluck and his wife Elisabeth, née Tiedemann. [1] . He was a pupil at a school called Paulinum in his hometown of Münster. [2]

  3. Alexander Heinrich Rudolph Kluck, ab 1909 von Kluck, (* 20. Mai 1846 in Münster; † 19. Oktober 1934 in Berlin) war ein preußischer Generaloberst und Armeeoberbefehlshaber im Ersten Weltkrieg. Er kommandierte zu Beginn des Ersten Weltkriegs die 1. Armee, die 1914 den gescheiterten Angriff auf Paris unternahm.

  4. 19 de mar. de 2024 · Alexander von Kluck was a German general who, in World War I, commanded the 1st Army in the German offensive against Paris at the beginning of the war. Kluck saw service in the Seven Weeks’ War (1866) and in the Franco-German War (1870–71). In 1906 he became a general of infantry and in 1913 an.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Alexander Heinrich Rudolph von Kluck (Münster, Westfalia; 20 de mayo de 1846 - Berlín, Alemania; 19 de octubre de 1934) fue un general alemán durante la Primera Guerra Mundial. Quick facts: Alexander von Kluck, Información personal, Na...

  6. Three of them on the German right flank would be most involved in the Battle of the Marne. At the beginning of the war, the First Army numbered 320,000 men commanded by Alexander von Kluck; the Second Army had 260,000 men commanded by Karl von Bülow; and the Third Army commanded by Max von Hausen had 180,000 men.

  7. General Alexander von Kluck the 1st Army commander, ordered the II Corps to move back to the north bank of the Marne, which began a redeployment of all four 1st Army corps to the north bank by 8 September.