Friedrich Bertram Sixt von Armin (27 November 1851 – 30 September 1936) was a Prussian and Germangeneral who participated in the Franco-Prussian War and was a senior commander in the First World War. In the latter he participated in many battles on the Western Front, including the Battles of Passchendaele and the Lys. He was the recipient of many decorations for his leadership, including the Order Pour le Mérite with Oakleaves, Prussia's highest military honor.
Family
Friedrich Bertram Sixt von Armin was born on 27 November 1851 in Wetzlar, an exclave of the Rhine Province, Kingdom of Prussia, as the son of Heinrich Joseph Jacob Sixt von Armin (†1872), a career officer, and Amöne, née Hiepe (†1901).[1] He was married on 11 June 1882 to Klara Pauline Auguste Henriette Karoline von Voigts-Rhetz (1 October 1859 - 28 November 1937), the daughter of General der ArtillerieJulius von Voigts-Rhetz [de] (1822-1904)[2][3] The couple had two daughters and three sons. One son, Friedrich-Wilhelm (1889-1914), was killed in action in France as a Leutnant in Garde-Grenadier-Regiment Nr. 4. Another, Hans-Heinrich, was also career officer, reaching the rank of Generalleutnant (lieutenant general); he was taken a prisoner of war in 1942 and died in the Soviet Union in 1952.
Military career
Sixt von Armin entered service as an Avantageur on 16 July 1870 in 4. Garde-Grenadier-Regiment „Königin“ (later renamed Königin Augusta Garde-Grenadier-Regiment Nr. 4).[4] He was wounded by rifle rounds in both legs in the fighting near Saint-Privat-la-Montagne on 18 August 1870 while serving with the regiment's 11th Company.[5] He was commissioned a Secondelieutenant on 9 March 1872 with a Patent of 12 January 1871.[6] He served as regimental adjutant from 18 April 1876 to 21 March 1881 and was promoted to Premierlieutenant on 17 February 1880.[7]
From 1 April 1881 to 15 April 1884, Sixt von Armin served as adjutant of the 3rd Guards Infantry Brigade.[8] This was followed by a one-year assignment to the Great General Staff on 1 May 1884, which was then extended for a second year.[9] On 17 April 1886, he was promoted to Hauptmann and transferred to the auxiliary establishment (Nebenetat) of the Great General Staff.[10] On 7 February 1888, he was transferred to the Great General Staff and on 26 May 1888 to the general staff of the 22nd Division.[11] On 12 January 1889 he was assigned to the Ministry of War in Berlin.[12] He was transferred to Grenadier-Regiment König Friedrich Wilhelm IV. (1. Pommersches) Nr. 2 as a company commander on 15 July 1890.[13]
On 22 March 1891, Sixt von Armin was promoted to Major, transferred back to the General Staff of the Army, and assigned to the general staff of the VII Army Corps.[14] On 15 July 1893, he was transferred to the Great General Staff[15] and on 18 August 1896, he was named a battalion commander in Magdeburgisches Füsilier-Regiment Nr. 36.[16] On 22 March 1897, he was promoted to Oberstlieutenant and on 20 July 1897 he became Chief of the General Staff of the XIII (Württemberg) Army Corps in Stuttgart.[17]
On 27 January 1900, Sixt von Armin was promoted to Oberst[18] From 18 October 1900 to 14 November 1901, he commanded Infanterie-Regiment Graf Bülow von Dennewitz (6. Westfälisches) Nr. 55.[19] He was then named Chief of the General Staff of the Guards Corps.[20]
On 18 April 1903, Sixt von Armin was promoted to Generalmajor.[21] He returned to the Ministry of War on 2 June 1903 and on 18 August was named director of the General War Department (Allgemeines Kriegsdepartment).[22] In this capacity he also served as deputy plenepotentiary to the Bundesrat of the German Empire, chairman of the Reichs-Rayon-Kommission,[23] and member of the Imperial Disciplinary Court (Reichsdisziplinarhof).[24]
Sixt von Armin led the IV Army Corps into Brussels on 20 August 1914, and then engaged with the enemy in the Battle of Mons on 23 and 24 August 1914.[28] On 26 August, the corps engaged the British at Le Cateau.[29]
His corps then participated in the First Battle of the Marne.[30] At the end of September 1914, as part of the Race to the Sea, the corps was transferred to the 6th Army in the Artois region, where it remained in trench warfare until mid-1916.[31] Among the major battles were the Battle of Arras in early October 1914 and in the fighting by La Bassée and Arras, including at the Loretto Heights (Lorettoschlacht), followed by the Battle of Loos in the autumn of 1915, and the Battle of the Somme from 12 to 25 July 1916 and from mid-September to early October 1916.[32] He was awarded the Order Pour le Mérite on 10 August 1916 for his leadership in the Battle of the Somme.[33]
From 10 to 25 April 1918, during the Battle of the Lys (Fourth Battle of Ypres), the army captured Messines, Wytschaete and the Ypres bend and stormed the Kemmel.[38] However, the German offensive then lost momentum, and the Germans went back on the defensive. The 4th Army was forced to give more ground in the Fifth Battle of Ypres, including losing control of the Flanders coast and the key submarine bases there.[39] After the Allies defeated his forces on the Lys on 25 October, Sixt von Armin was forced to pull the 4th Army back to the Antwerp–Maas defensive position, where it remained until the Armistice.[40]
On 29 November 1918, Sixt von Armin took command of Army Group Crown Prince Rupprecht from its namesake, Field Marshal Crown Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria, and led the formation, redesignated Army Group A, in the withdrawal from Allied territory back to Paderborn, where Sixt von Armin's command was demobilized.[41][42] He retired from the army on 2 January 1919.[43]
Later life
After the war, Sixt von Armin lived in Magdeburg, Province of Saxony, where he was a popular speaker and made frequent appearances at public events. When he died in 1936, he was buried with full military honors.
A Kaserne (barracks) (1928) and Sixt-von-Armin-Weg (1933), both in Magdeburg, were named after him, although both were subsequently renamed.
A Bundeswehr barracks in Wetzlar was renamed the Sixt-von-Armin-Kaserne [de] in 1964. It was closed in 1993 and converted to commercial and residential properties.
Notes
^Offizier-Stammliste des Königin Elisabeth Garde-Grenadier-Regiments Nr. 3, E.S. Mittler & Sohn, Berlin 1910, p. 153
^Gothaisches Genealogisches Taschenbuch der Adeligen Häuser, Justus Perthes, 1942, p. 550
^Awards of the Red Eagle with the Royal Crown continued to be worn when one received a higher class of the order
^ abcdefghijKriegsministerium (Hrsg.): Rangliste der Königlich Preußischen Armee und des XIII. (Königlich Württembergischen) Armeekorps für 1914, E.S. Mittler & Sohn, Berlin, 1914
^Militär-Wochenblatt, 1911 No. 10, 22 January 1911, p. 197
^ abcdefghijklmnoKriegsrangliste der Heeresgruppe Kronprinz Rupprecht, Bavarian State Archives, Department IV, War Archive, Kriegsranglisten und -stammrollen, 1914-1918, Munich.
^Richard Lundström and Daniel Krause: Verleihungen des Fürstlichen Hausordens von Hohenzollern mit Schwertern und der Goldene Ehrenmedaille mit Schwertern 1914-1947, Phaleristischer Verlag Michael Autengruber, Konstanz am Bodensee, 2008, ISBN 3-937064-12-5, p. 9
^Militär-Wochenblatt, 1912 No. 156, 7 December 1912, p. 3594
^Verordnungsblatt des Königlich Bayerischen Kriegsministeriums, 1908 No. 17330, 10 September 1908, p. 152
^Verordnungsblatt des Königlich Bayerischen Kriegsministeriums, 1914 No. 47845, 13 November 1914, p. 409
^Erhard Roth: Verleihungen von militärischen Orden und Ehrenzeichen des Königreichs Bayern im Ersten Weltkrieg 1914-1918, Phaleristischer Verlag Michael Autengruber, Offenbach am Main, 1997, ISBN 3-932543-19-X, p. 1
^ abDer Königlich Sächsische Militär-St. Heinrichs-Orden 1736-1918: Ein Ehrenblatt der Sächsischen Armee, Druck und Verlag der Wilhelm und Bertha v. Baensch Stiftung, Dresden 1937, pp. 84, 123
^Militär-Wochenblatt, 1912 No. 156, 7 December 1912, p. 3594
^Militär-Wochenblatt, 1912 No. 10, 21 January 1912, p. 219
^Richard Lundström and Daniel Krause: Verleihungen von militärischen Orden und Ehrenzeichen der Ernestinischen Herzogtümer Sachsen-Altenburg, Sachsen-Coburg und Gotha und Sachsen-Meiningen im Ersten Weltkrieg, 1914-1918, Phaleristischer Verlag Michael Autengruber, Konstanz am Bodensee 2008, ISBN 3-937064-09-5
^Militär-Wochenblatt 1903 No. 94, 29 August 1903, p. 2258
Braumüller, Maximilian von: Geschichte des Königin Augusta Garde-Grenadier-Regiments Nr. 4, E.S. Mittler & Sohn, Berlin 1901
Mansberg, Ernst-Adolf von: Offizier-Stammliste des Königlich Preußischen Infanterie-Regiments Graf Bülow von Dennewitz (6. Westfälischen) Nr. 55 vormals 6. Westfälischen Infanterie-Regiments Nr. 55, 1. Nachtrag, E.S. Mittler & Sohn, Berlin 1910
Möller-Witten, Hanns: Geschichte der Ritter des "Ordens pour le mérite" im Weltkrieg, Band II: M-Z, Verlag Bernard & Graefe, Berlin 1935
Puttkamer, Feodor von: Offizier-Stammliste des Grenadier-Regiments König Friedrich Wilhelm IV. (1. Pommerschen) Nr. 2, Band II, von 1906 bis 1919 Stettin 1931