The 'German Second Army' (German: ''2. Armee Oberkommando'') was a
World War I and
World War II field army.
First World War
The German Second Army during
World War I, fought on the
Western Front and took part in the
Schlieffen Plan offensive against
France and
Belgium in August
1914. Commanded by General
Karl von Bülow, the Second Army's job was to support the
German First Army's right sweep of the left flank of the
French Army and encircling
Paris, bringing a rapid conclusion to the war. The Second Army sieged, and took the Belgian fortresses around
Namur, and fought Gen.
Charles Lanrezac's French Fifth Army at the
Battle of Charleroi on August 23-24, 1914 and again at
St. Quentin on August 29-30, 1914.
Commanders
★ General
Karl von Bülow (
1914–March
1915)
★ General
Georg von der Marwitz (
December 1916-
September 1918)
Second World War
The Second Army was activated on
October 20,
1939 with General
Maximilian Reichsfreiherr von Weichs in command. First seeing service in France, the army was involved in the invasion of the Balkans, before offensive operations in the
Ukraine as part of
Operation Barbarossa.
In 1945 the army was pivotal in the defence of East and West Prussia before
finally surrendering on
9 May 1945.
[1]
Commanders
★ General
Maximilian Reichsfreiherr von Weichs (
October 20 1939 -
July 13 1942)
★ General
Hans von Salmuth (
July 14 1942 -
February 3 1943)
★ General
Walter Weiss (
February 4 1943 -
March 9 1945)
★ General
Dietrich von Saucken (
March 10 1945 -
May 9,
1945)
Footnotes
1. Beevor, Antony. ''Berlin: The Downfall 1945'', Penguin Books, 2002, ISBN 0-670-88695-5, pp.26,49,50,88,90,115-116,119,402