But later, after he knew who the founder of this Cossack army was, he felt even more absurd about his fate.
The strongest Cossack cavalry team in Tsarist Russia was actually one of the few legacies left by their German Marshal Minih.
At this time, night has fallen, and the gods in the sky seem to be fighting in a melee, emitting rolling thunder and illuminating everything on the battlefield.
After the battle ended, the Tsarist Russian troops began to search for injured soldiers on the battlefield, kill them, and get their belongings. This was a plunder from hell.
Of the 50,000 soldiers gathered by the Prussian army, only 3,000 fled under the command of Frederick II.
They had thrown away all their supplies, and hunger, thirst and exhaustion were like sticky monsters wrapped around them, telling them with the simplest touch that they were still alive.
But it would be better to die.
The living soldiers have to endure the hunger in their bellies and listen to the wails of their compatriots around them. They evaluate themselves like this: they are ghosts in hell, and everything around them has long become numb.
However, all this is not the most desperate. For the Tsarist Russian troops, they won the victory and were temporarily relieved from the war.
But for the Prussian soldiers, their war was not even halfway done.
Even in this state, Frederick II, who wanted to quickly leave the battlefield and reorganize the army, still adhered to Prussia's most stringent military regulations and used active and strict military discipline to restrain this army that had lost its fighting spirit.
And to make a comeback again.
He also requested that Major General Fleming strictly inspect the defeated troops and that no one, except senior officers and wounded personnel, be allowed to reorganize on the spot.
This situation made the soldiers who were already suffering even more pain.
After Frederick II was out of danger, he immediately handed over the command of the remaining troops to Lieutenant General Augustus and ordered him to swear an oath of allegiance to his successor, William II!
After everything was done, he rushed back to the West Bank front and continued to gather troops to join the army.
This war is far from over, and he needs these remaining troops to defend his country.
...
In this war, the Prussian troops dispatched a total of 53 infantry battalions, 95 cavalry squadrons, 140 heavy artillery pieces, 100 light artillery pieces, and a total of 50,900 people including artillery and engineers.
, the loss after the war was 19,100 men and 170 artillery pieces!
The Tsarist Russian troops dispatched 86 infantry battalions, 71 cavalry squadrons, 248 artillery pieces, a total of 59,500 people, and lost 15,500 people after the war!
The Prussian army could be said to have suffered a disastrous defeat, but the cost of victory paid by the Tsarist Russian army was also extremely high. After this battle, the entire Kungetron Valley was stained with blood, and the fields were covered with the corpses of soldiers.
After this battle, for a long period of time, the Prussian troops and the Russian-Austrian forces were unable to continue fighting.
The Russian and Austrian allied forces temporarily gave up their plan to attack Berlin. They needed to revise and did not further expand their results.
During this period of time, Frederick II relied on soldiers and civilians from various places to supplement the defeated troops and regroup the scattered troops.
His troops actually quickly reached 35,000 troops again.
This should have been a happy thing, but for Frederick II, he was still pessimistic because the lifespan of their troops had been extended from days to weeks.
Everyone knows that this is obviously impossible.
This war is far from over.
And they must regroup their forces and continue to attack towards their respective goals.