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Chapter 4025

Chapter 4025

After a heavy lead bullet hits, it can temporarily incapacitate the Prussian troops, but it will not kill them.

This will cause them to endure tremendous physical pain for a long period of time.

But despite this, many people in the Prussian troops still crossed the bottom of the valley, but were wounded but not killed by the heavy lead bullet muskets from the opposite side.

After they lost their combat capabilities, they could only watch helplessly as they were pushed down the Kungetron Valley by Tsarist Russian troops without any resistance.

In such a battle, the soldiers on both sides were in a state of extreme pain, and the battlefield was already full of corpses.

Not only on the frontal battlefield, but also due to the terrain of the Kungetron Valley and the disadvantages in firepower.

Finnick, trapped in the huge swamp to the north, launched two large-scale diversionary attacks, but got nothing.

But a large number of corpses were left behind.

His final result also ended in failure!

The stalemate between the two forces eventually led to a result as time passed.

Prussian troops were at a comprehensive disadvantage.

Lieutenant General Platten, who wanted to take a chance, made the decision to use all the cavalry to launch a general attack without asking Frederick II for instructions!

Under his leadership, the Prussian cavalry set out from the south of the village of Kunesdorf, trying to bypass the Great Shpitz Highlands and attack westward to defeat Tsarist Russia's rear.

He wanted to use this method to turn the tide of the war, but obviously, this plan did not succeed.

I don't know if the Prussian army has such a consistent tradition, but General Platten could hardly see anything in the darkening sky.

The same was true for the cavalry troops he led. They did not find that there were dense ponds near the south of the Big Shpitz Highlands, which was not conducive to marching at all.

Moreover, the five cavalry squadrons at the forefront of the Prussian army's array even strayed into the fire coverage area of ​​the artillery array on the Great Shpitz Highlands.

These five cavalry squadrons were almost destroyed, and before the remaining Prussian cavalry troops could regroup, General Laudon, a Tsarist general who had commanded a light cavalry unit, seized a chance.

He immediately commanded the elite cavalry that had been ready to go, the Tsarist Crown Prince's Cuirassier Regiment, the Third Cuirassier Regiment, the Kiev Cuirassier Regiment, the Kazan Cuirassier Regiment, and the Novotroitsk Cuirassier Regiment.

Ryazan Cuirassiers, Tobol Cuirassiers, Krakoviak Cuirassiers, and Lichtenstein Dragoons attack!

The total strength of these cavalry regiments reached 20,000. In less than half an hour, the Prussian cavalry, which had long been disabled, was defeated in one fell swoop!

The Prussian cavalry regiment, which was once invincible across Europe, can now only flee in panic in the pond in the Great Spitz Highlands.

Some Prussian cavalrymen had been beaten so dizzy that they even gave up their escape and plunged into the pond!

Some Prussian cavalry rushed into the infantry who were fighting fiercely.

disrupt the position of their own troops.

The Tsarist Russian cavalry troops on the other side did not stop at all, and continued to drive away the fleeing Prussian cavalry towards the Prussian infantry, allowing them to disrupt their positions.

This situation made the Prussian soldiers who had been fighting for sixteen hours and saw thousands of their comrades dead stunned by their own cavalry who fled in a hurry!

Some of the new recruits, after witnessing such a situation, began to fear the days after they were captured!


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