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  2. Lützow Free Corps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lützow_Free_Corps

    The unit was officially founded in February 1813 as Königlich Preußisches Freikorps von Lützow (Royal Prussian Free Corps von Lützow). Lützow, who had been an officer under the ill-fated Ferdinand von Schill, obtained permission from the Prussian Chief-of-Staff Gerhard von Scharnhorst to organize a free corps consisting of infantry, cavalry, and Tyrolean Jäger (literally, “hunters ...

  3. Ludwig Adolf Wilhelm von Lützow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ludwig_Adolf_Wilhelm_von...

    In 1811, Lützow was recommissioned into the Prussian army as major, and at the outbreak of the German War of Liberation received permission from Scharnhorst to organize a free corps consisting of infantry, cavalry and Tirolese riflemen, for attacking flanks or in guerilla fighting in the French rear and rallying the smaller governments into the ranks of the allies. [2]

  4. Weimar paramilitary groups - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weimar_paramilitary_groups

    Not a true paramilitary in structure, it was suppressed with considerable loss of life by government troops and Freikorps units in what was known as the Ruhr uprising (13 March – 12 April 1920). [23] Schwarze Scharen (Black Band) were resistance groups of anarchist and anarcho-syndicalist youth affiliated with the Free Workers' Union of ...

  5. Freikorps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freikorps

    Free Corps Denmark, a Danish volunteer collaborationist group in the Waffen-SS that was founded by the National Socialist Workers' Party of Denmark, and participated in the invasion of the Soviet Union. British Free Corps, a Waffen-SS unit made up of former British Commonwealth prisoners of war. Freikorps Sauerland

  6. List of Freikorps members - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Freikorps_members

    Freikorps (English: Free Corps) were German volunteer military or paramilitary units. The term was originally applied to voluntary armies formed in German lands from the middle of the 18th century onwards.

  7. File:Flag of the Iron Division Freikorps.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Flag_of_the_Iron...

    The following 17 pages use this file: Battle of Cēsis (1919) Battle of Radviliškis; Battle of Riga (1919) Central Powers intervention in the Russian Civil War; Eiserne Division; Estonian War of Independence; Freikorps in the Baltic; Latvian War of Independence; List of flags of Latvia; Palm Sunday Putsch; Skull and crossbones (military) Talk ...

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  9. Freikorps in the Baltic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freikorps_in_the_Baltic

    The Freikorps had saved Latvia from capture by the Red Army in the spring of 1919. However, the Freikorps' goal of creating a German-dominated state in Courland and Livonia failed. Many of the German Freikorps members who served in the Baltic left Latvia with the belief that they had been " stabbed in the back " by the Weimar Republic , under ...