Jagdkommandos - Austria-Hungary’s Special Forces in WW1 I THE GREAT WAR Special
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024
- The Jagdkommandos were Austria-Hungary’s special assault troops during WWI. From their pre-war origins, these troops had to adapt to modern war, and did so with some success. However, towards the end of the war their successes turned to failures and the Jagdkommandos faded into relative obscurity compared to their German and Italian counterparts.
» HOW CAN I SUPPORT YOUR CHANNEL?
You can support us by sharing our videos with your friends and spreading the word about our work.You can also support us financially on Patreon: / thegreatwar
You can also buy our merchandise in our online shop: shop.spreadshir...
Patreon is a platform for creators like us, that enables us to get monthly financial support from the community in exchange for cool perks.
» WHERE CAN I GET MORE INFORMATION ABOUT WORLD WAR I AND WHERE ELSE CAN I FIND YOU?
We’re offering background knowledge, news, a glimpse behind the scenes and much more on:
reddit: bit.ly/TheGreat...
Facebook: bit.ly/WW1FB
Twitter: bit.ly/WW1Series
Instagram: bit.ly/ZpMYPL
» CAN I EMBED YOUR VIDEOS ON MY WEBSITE?
Of course, you can embed our videos on your website. We are happy if you show our channel to your friends, fellow students, classmates, professors, teachers or neighbours. Or just share our videos on Facebook, Twitter, Reddit etc.
We are also happy to get your feedback, criticism or ideas in the comments. If you have interesting historical questions, just post them and we will answer in our OUT OF THE TRENCHES videos. You can find a selection of answers to the most frequently asked questions here: bit.ly/OOtrenches
» CAN I SHOW YOUR VIDEOS IN CLASS?
Of course! Tell your teachers or professors about our channel and our videos. We’re happy if we can contribute with our videos. If you are a teacher and have questions about our show, you can get in contact with us on one of our social media presences.
» WHAT ARE YOUR SOURCES?
Videos: British Pathé
Pictures: Mostly Picture Alliance
Background Map: d-maps.com/cart...
Literature (excerpt):
Gilbert, Martin. The First World War. A Complete History, Holt Paperbacks, 2004.
Hart, Peter. The Great War. A Combat History of the First World War, Oxford University Press, 2013.
Hart, Peter. The Great War. 1914-1918, Profile Books, 2013.
Stone, Norman. World War One. A Short History, Penguin, 2008.
Keegan, John. The First World War, Vintage, 2000.
Hastings, Max. Catastrophe 1914. Europe Goes To War, Knopf, 2013.
Hirschfeld, Gerhard. Enzyklopädie Erster Weltkrieg, Schöningh Paderborn, 2004
Michalka, Wolfgang. Der Erste Weltkrieg. Wirkung, Wahrnehmung, Analyse, Seehamer Verlag GmbH, 2000
Leonhard, Jörn. Die Büchse der Pandora: Geschichte des Ersten Weltkrieges, C.H. Beck, 2014
If you want to buy some of the books we use or recommend during our show, check out our Amazon Store: bit.ly/AmazonTGW
NOTE: This store uses affiliate links which grant us a commission if you buy a product there.
» WHAT IS “THE GREAT WAR” PROJECT?
THE GREAT WAR covers the events exactly 100 years ago: The story of World War I in realtime. Featuring: The unique archive material of British Pathé. Indy Neidell takes you on a journey into the past to show you what really happened and how it all could spiral into more than four years of dire war. Subscribe to our channel and don’t miss our new episodes every Thursday.
» WHO IS REPLYING TO MY COMMENTS? AND WHO IS BEHIND THIS PROJECT?
Most of the comments are written by our social media manager Florian. He is posting links, facts and backstage material on our social media channels. But from time to time, Indy reads and answers comments with his personal account, too.
The Team responsible for THE GREAT WAR is even bigger:
- CREDITS -
Presented by : Indiana Neidell
Written by: Indiana Neidell
Director: Toni Steller & Florian Wittig
Director of Photography: Toni Steller
Sound: Markus Linke
Mixing, Mastering & Sound Design: www.above-zero.com
Editing: Toni Steller
Motion Design: Philipp Appelt
Research by: Indiana Neidell
Fact checking: Markus Linke
The Great War Theme composed by Karim Theilgaard: bit.ly/karimyt
A Mediakraft Networks Original Channel
Based on a concept by Spartacus Olsson
Author: Indiana Neidell
Visual Concept: Astrid Deinhard-Olsson & David van Stephold
Executive Producer: Spartacus Olsson
Producer: Toni Steller & Florian Wittig
Social Media Manager: Florian Wittig
Contains licenced Material by British Pathé
All rights reserved - © Mediakraft Networks GmbH, 2017
The Austro-Hungarian empire is one of the most interesting to me. They had very unique and ingenious weaponry but their military was a jumbled mess. I love these specials, especially about special groups of soldiers or tactics or equipment used by them and, like I said, AH is one of the more interesting to me. I'd love to collect some AH military surplus.
For me the key and interesting thing is how the political infighting between intransigent Budapest and Vienna led to the weakening of the Habsburg army. Despite having a larger population than France, AH mobilised less men than the French in 1914. Budapest and its notions of increased autonomy had a lot to answer for the debacle of 1914-18.
TwentythreePER Their helmets are awesome.
I have some but won't sell 😁
minotauruskt I've only got a repro for airsoft. It's nice though.
Well, the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy was a really colorful place in connection with national and religious minorities. It might have been the cause of mess as these politics were not really well-managed, unfortunately.
My great-grandfather fought as a lance corporal in an infantry unit, in Italy. He had a medal of bravery which was kind of like the iron cross in the German Army.
Borojevic,brilliant Croatian commander,my great- grandfather fought under his command as a Jagdcommando,lot of Croatians did.Thank you for this wonderful insight Mr Indy,cheers!
My great-grandfather was one too thats actually really cool
Borojevic seems like one of the better generals of the war.
We agree.
but he didn't have much recognition.
And if the Germans at that time used gases on the North-Western Front, then the Austrians also used a terrible novelty - explosive bullets "dum-dum", inflicting huge lacerations, almost certainly fatal or crippling a person. Russian soldiers considered this method of war dishonest and fought with it in their own way - they did not take prisoners from whom they found clips with dum-dum bullets in their pouches, and killed them in their place. Austria-Hungary was outraged and declared that for each such killed, two Russian prisoners would be shot. To which Grand Duke Nikolai Nikolayevich reacted and made an unequivocal statement in reply - they say, if Vienna only dares to take such a step, then for every Russian killed in Austrian captivity, Russia will hang four prisoners of Austria-Hungary. And he eloquently explained: "We have enough prisoners for this." And the use of explosive bullets was largely eliminated - the soldiers of Austria-Hungary were simply afraid to carry them with them and threw them away at the first opportunity.
@@АвтономныйСтранникdum dum rounds aren’t “explosive” ammunition it’s just a bullet with the metal jacket removed from the tip and upper part of the bullet so that the soft lead is exposed and expands and mushrooms on impact creating a larger wound channel and putting more force and energy from the round into the target instead of going straight through someone like a fully metal jacketed bullet would it’s the same thing as a modern jacketed soft point used in hunting and self defense
@@bcb5696 Such a bullet shattered into pieces, inflicting serious wounds. Or a cripple from multiple damage to internal organs, or death from blood loss. By the way, for the same reason, the soldiers of the warring countries got rid of knives with teeth like a saw. In addition, flamethrowers and shotgun users, whose weapons inflicted very severe wounds, had little chance of surviving captivity. Many farmers in France had shotguns against hares that ruined grapes, were taken "hostage" by the Germans and executed just for possession of such weapons. And snipers were considered scoundrels.
A funny episode took place in the Russian imperial army. When the Germans were using rifles with a telescopic sight with might and main, one Siberian well-aimed shooter-hunter was punished for purposefully shooting enemy officers. "Not noble!" Although he had an ordinary rifle without optics.
The Austrian Jagdkommando still exists today.. the Jagdkommando is like the special forces in the Austrian military
Oh should have watched till the end before commenting
Always admired the Austro-Hungarians during the Great Wars. Will you look into the Gebirgsjäger soon?
IMO they always get a rough deal and are regularly mocked. Certainly they were slipshod, inefficient and often a mess but the durability of the ordinary Habsburg soldier despite so many disadvantages and set-backs is truly admirable.
Well, we made a general episode about mountain warfare, not sure we will go into Gebirgsjäger separately.
Yes I too find something very attractive about the A-H army in WW1! (In fact all their elite units are a blast-the Bosnian units,the Tiroler Kaiserjaeger,& Landdeschuetzen,&c.,& it's nice to compare & contrast the German .Austro-Hungarian,& Italian "specialist" assault units. They say the Brits didn't have them but we did have the Canadians,Australians,& New Zealanders so......
Soldiers were doing what they could but in the end, it all fell to A-H's inability to modernize their thinking. Like problems with command, generals stuck in the past but still being generals because of their high noble status, fail to address increasing tensions between different nations, lack of some resources, and huge differences between regions' industrialization levels.
But you are right, the soldier often fought very bravely and well, my great-grandfather fought on an Italian front and was injured there I think. And I think the level of disloyalty among A-H troops is often needlessly overestimated in people's minds, I think in most cases they fought bravely, and only after capture did some of them consider fighting for their nation as exile freedom fighters.
Amy was not the real problem. The problem was inefficient government and bureaucracy which led to the army ineffectives.
I find the Italian Front very interesting and have learned a lot about it from this channel. Indy really is a gifted narrator.
Oky i dont get it why some people dislike these videos... indi is a nice guy, the videos are well made and interesting
If you dont like the topic you dont have to watch them!
flo low I agree. This has to be about the worst set of comments I have ever seen.
Indy is bae.
Name anything under the sun and you will find people who don't like it, if for no other reason than to be a contrarian.
Heck, there are people who actually don't like pineapple on pizza. In fact, they despise it and say crazy things like "pineapple doesn't belong on pizza"
Austria Hungary is so interesting they are like a feudal kingdom fighting with Napoleonic tactics in the modern world, so contradictory and so awesome
Yes, the one anomaly in a war between nation states.
imho this wasnt awesome. they had dumb leaders and dumb commanders with reactionary thinking. the individual soldier does a great job.
being stupid isnt awesome in any way.
These are the reasons why it was the weakest army in europe, or shall I say: in the world
@@et4069 not really
@@hanz2904 please watch some documentaris about Austria-Hungary in WW1 and then come back and change your mind, thx
Austria-Hungary had Jagdkommandos. Indy has Commentkommandos
"Willpower and courage is enough to overcome macineguns and artillery"
Doesn't matter how brave your men are though, corpses don't march.
Right, the bullets and artillery rounds are stupid, they have no clue how brave the soldiers are.
YES!!! I've been waiting for a good video on the Jagdkommando forever! Cheers guys, thanks for the good work.
I allways love the episodes that Indy ends with "This is modern war" It just five me such a Thrill
Another Great War Special guys. I'm just amazed how armies changed their tactics and training as the war progresses. I also see it as younger officers move up the chain of command the old guard way of fighting and training slowly moving aside. These soldiers are becoming our modern day Green Berets and NAVY Seals. Training in mountain , snow, hand to hand warfare. Now we just underwater units.
Love the new scenery, really enhances the storytelling and lets us know what kind of Environment these troops were meant to fight in.
This might be a bit much.... but you guys should totally recreate a trench and walk us through it.
Love the show, thanks for the meaningful content. @TheGreatWar
5:47 car whit cloaking device!! :O
It was a time travelers car .. They where heading back to their own time through an invisible portal..
As long as it don become corrupted by chaos ! ;O
aparently you dont need a fluxcapasetor and travel at 141 KMH anymore! ;O
Yes Magnus science advances all the time :D
then its magic or timetravel!
♫Radetzky March♫ intensifies ;-)
Great episode. I knew very little about this subject.
Radetzky...
Remember italian RISORGIMENTO...
Important question: Was there a Hötzenkommando division of special forces expert in Hötzendorfing?
If anyone else can't get enough of Indy, check out his other channel, TimeGhost, where he is currently covering the Cuban missile crisis in real time!
Man I love this channel I hope it never stops
You weren´t by chance in austria filming this video, because of the beautiful mountains in the background?
AMAZING information! Thanks Andy!
A salute from Brazil!
For 'Out of the trenches'. Will you do a WW2 walkthrough like you are currently doing with WW1? That would be absolutely fantastic! :D
www.reddit.com/r/TheGreatWarChannel/comments/4ksvy2/will_you_guys_ever_do_a_ww2_channel_our_official/
Some of the best Austro-hungarian fighters were from Styrian region of Slovenia. Coming the end of ww1, they even invaded Austria (insurgency)
Did you do a piece on Svetozar Boroević? He is one of my favorites of the war.
h lynn keith yes they have a special on him
Great episode!
You claimed that Russia invented these units but in reality they are much, much older. In the Napoleonic era these units were already common and were called Chasseurs or Jäger back then. Long time before that such units were known as skirmishers.
I have a question for an out of the trenches: What were German plans for France, Belgium, Great Britain? Also what did the Treaty of Brest-Livostk (I am very sure I spelled that wrong) look like in detail, what new countries were created, and what lands were annexed? Sometimes I hear that Germany annexes Lithuania, other times I hear that it's independent, sometimes I hear that Germany gets a new client state in the Ukraine, other times it's a buffer for Austria-Hungary. Thank you so much!!! I love your channel and I thank you and your team for creating it!
all in due time (late next year)
Great! Thank you for answering the question so quickly!
Seeing how much boroevic achieved, I am seriously wondering why he is so forgotten.
Watch our Borojevic episode. It talks a bit about that.
Hi Indy and crew.
I have been following your channel for a while now. Actually, after I bought Battlefield 1, I wanted to learn more about the "great" war. I am from Norway, in my understanding we were helping the Allies during the war. Can you please inlight me from the chair of Wisdom on what we did? I can't find much information. I know that we had a few weapons on trial.
(I just wonder, is the chair of wisdom as comfy as it looks?)
Mats Gustavsen.
Please do a video on Admiral Miklos Horthy!
But what about the Ottoman Stormtroopers (Yıldırım Army group) and Flamethrowers I know you talked about them shortly on the ottoman uniforms episode
cemo1999 Actually, that'll be interesting since many of us don't think the Ottomans have Stormtroop or Flamethrowers.
Very interesting
Ottoman Stormtroopers was called Hücum Müfrezeleri (Storm Platoons), Yıldırım Army Group was a Strategic unit hence "army".
You can see their uniform in this picture from Palestine front, and yes it is same with the Jagdkommando. Steel helmet, hand grenade bag under arm etc. all same.
www.google.com.tr/search?q=ottoman+stormtroopers&rlz=1C1GCEA_enTR754TR754&tbm=isch&source=iu&ictx=1&fir=L-JqkjJUfaQLgM%253A%252CoGhojme4KO2GsM%252C_&usg=__AYWP5V26Joq6npg0WuHTokwV9_I%3D&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjdwdmzuNPXAhUBUlAKHXLyDC4Q9QEINzAB#imgrc=L-JqkjJUfaQLgM:
I wish indy could share the story of corporal seyit (not many know how heroic he is sadly)
Flamethrowers...around 2 or so and they hated them because they were so hot
Did the allies have their own version of storm-troops? If so could you make a video on them?
Canadians.
Are you going to make a video about the Assyrians in the first world war?
Great show btw
We might.
Hey, Indie
Could you guys do a special or out of the trenches on the British West Indies Regiment(BWIR). My family in Guyana recently told me they had 2 Long Lees and a water canteen with the BWIR symbol. I know very minimal about BWIR and would like to know more.
Kept up the great work!
excellent episode!!! had only encountered 1 or 2 line references about them in the past.
The Jagdkommando still exists today
Can you please make a video about the fieldrailways in the first ww. I somwhere heard that those railways helped by the german, french and british warfare. Those railways are tiny so i heard the where used on frontlines. Is that true? Maby in germany it called "Heeresfeldbahn" or something like this. Thank you very much :D
And sorry for my bad english...
2:03 Great idea
Rommel was one of this leaders against the Italians as Leutnant Rommel, he gaint for one of theese comando raids the "Pour les Merits" and later he wrote a standard work book "Infanterie greift an" which still is standard in many ways today
Are you going to do specials on other nations elite soldiers. I would like to see one for Britain, France or any other nations who you have not covered. Great show 👍
If we find pictures and sources, yes
Ok thanks 😊
55,000 views within 24 hours! Congratulations to the Great War team.
hey guys, thanks for the great show. i was wondering what your favorite works of fiction about ww1 are. cheers, b
>the 10th battle for the same goddamned river
The problem is that Storm-troop formations drain the best men from the line units. Nice Job!
Great video! I have a question, if it can be answered. Do you know what was the combat role of sappers on the eastern front of WW1? I am asking because my great grandfather was a sapper in the Polish legions and during the Polish Soviet war. I know he blew up bridges, but I was wondering about other duties. Were sappers obstacle clearing troops or assault troops, that would be the first to make contact with the enemy? Unfortunately, the only information I can find on ww1 sappers is about the western front, but you guys know a lot about the eastern front for a positive change.
As you know, the role of a sapper in the eastern front might be very different than those in the western front, considering that the eastern front was extremely mobile and fast paced and not as based on trench warefare.
Was Arnold the Terminator one of them?
Excellent series 👍
I suppose the Jagdkommandos weren't overseen by Hötzendorf too?
No they didn't let me😢
Yes! "THIS is modern war" makes a return!!!
4:30 That is the cutest little trench mortar.
Thank you.
Then the winged hussars arrived!!!!
Marcus Alonzo/VD studios what
By the time jagdkommandos were in use the AustriaHungry probally disnt have any on hand
*Ottoman troops have launched an offensive on Vienna
Coming down the mountainside!!!
So were the jagdkommandos ever an officially formed unit and if so when were they officially formed?
Hi, excellent work as always guys!. I saw this (www.classicfm.com/artists/steven-isserlis/trench-cello-first-world-war/) and caught my attention for you guys. Do you have plans to talk about music in the trenches (or probably out of them as well)? since I think it is a big part of the everyday life that we take for granted and it was probably a luxury around those days.
Keep the excellent work!
Will you do videos on ww2 when the centenarie occurs
I just watched your episode that talked about the calm sects of the western front. Did this become far more widespread during the Christmas Truce in 1914 I think it happened?
Could you do a video about Australian stealth raiders on the western front?
Big Lez *Wadiyatalkinabeet ya fucken druggo?*
I'm here.
The Reptilian Wizard Lizard met to
The Reptilian Wizard Lizard gimme the zucc
Meh, so what.
Is Indy left handed??? I notice he always motions with his left hand.
More Outtakes please! •.•
Anyone else think this may be the next squad available in the Tannenberg game?
Central Powers: *invent Special Forces and flamethrowers* Welcome to the Modern day. Bet you can’t beat that.
Entente: Oh, let us try! *few years later, invent tanks*
Central: ... time out?
The Austrians actually invented tanks ten years earlier. And then proceeded to dismiss them os overly expensive and unnecesseary.
Wait, did you expect something else? You must be new here.
I may have missed it but has there been a special on British/Commonwealth special forces? Were their any that performed a similar function of Jagkommandos or Sturmtruppen? if there isn't a special yet on British/Commonwealth special forces will there be one?
Aside from Canadians being used as shock troops all I can think of is the Royal Marines or perhaps one of the Indian regiments
There haven't been so far and we haven't found any sources about it. Thing is that everyone claims that the Canadians were used like Shock Troops but I also would like to have an analysis about that.
I think the claim that the Canadians were used as shock troops stems partly from the Game Verdun where they are portrayed as such. Afaik the Commonwealth Armies just put together Trench Raider groups on a need to basis instead of specially training units as such, though i might be wrong.
The claim of Canadians being shock troops is definitely in more than just the game Verdun. I originally heard that claim from my parents and grandparents so that claim has been around at least as long as the 1950s. I'll see if I can find some more reliable sources.
Can you make a special on the Russian commandos you mentioned on the beginning?
Wish you did a special on the priginal Russian commandos.
Did they used jagdkommando knives?
Do you have notes of all your video's or how do you know everything what you say to us
Don't forget that the indigenous militaries also used these tactics as a matter of course. This is when European and some Asian militaries stopped with their rigid thinking and learned to become more flexible.
Talk about the special forces of Austria & Hungary from Bosnia
Can we get a „what happened 80 years ago“ for WWII since the end of WWI will come soon?
Actually Austria used Jäger Units since the 18th century. Just Google the Doppelstutzen 1768.
Can you do a video on the Harlem hellfighters
Lizerd King they probably will next year once the US get involved properly
could you talk about the connacht rangers mutiny
Send in the Strudeltroopers!
😂
with such an elite force, austria-hungary will win the war! :D
Well no, but no
Wat happens to the empty shell we’re the used again? Or sold. In ww2 in Nijmegen were a lot bom left behind and shells and al lot people sold it when the war was over
Might be a dumb question, but I've often seen storm troops and other similar units such as the jadgkommandos wearing cloth sacks of some kind round their torsos and i was wondering what are they for?
(See 1:10 and 1:29 for reference)
They were for carrying handgranades
The WAR TO END ALL WAR! Yeah right.
한글 자막 대 환영...!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 이쪽 영상에서 한글 자막 계속 부탁함......
오 안녕하세요!
Did they see much service on the Eastern front?
Could you make an episode about Serbian king Peter I?
I thought that was the 3 bladed dagger
yea its named after this special force however besides its name it has nothing to do with the Jagdkommando
Dlouho žít císař. Dlouho žít Říši.
Why does the background look greenscreened
(as a German speaker)
Jagd is probably Austrian German for jäger which means Hunter so it (probably) means hunter-commandos and that may sound odd, but in the simplest terms possible us German speakers just hear stuff different, for example, when we hear "you must try a slice of cake" all we hear is "EAT IT!" Or when someone says "I'm not book smart I'm street smart" all we hear is "I am not real smart just fake smart" just a cultural difference I want to point out
Ist das so?
Austrian here - dont think so, Jagdkommando makes absolute sense in german and simply means hunting commando, like indy said
We Austrian dont have some weird pronunciation for the Word Jäger we say it just like you germans
Le Predator oh ok, sorry, just making an assumption, never been to Österreich, nur Deutschland, Frankreich, und Amerika
Did the US military have any special units like the stormtroopers or arditi?
can you do a special about serbian spec forses called chetniks or komite
Italy had the Arditi, AH Jagdkommando, Germany the Stosstrupp
Britain? They had the Anzacs and Canadians
Can you make video about (Thailand) Siamese during WW1 please~
Yes, we want to.
Numquam retro, Numquam perimus!
Bulletproof commando
Talk about vânătorii de munte is romanian special force since in 1916
our special force is still called jagdkommando
I feel bad for Flo that after all these years his title in the videos is still "Social Media Guy" can't it be like "Producer" or something?
Are you going to make
Who did what in WW1 about King Aleksandar Karadžordzevic
Who is that?
The Great War he is the king as he typed he was king of yugoslavia just type it .
Hunter commando. Cool
Best general od austria hungary in ww1 was Croatian Feldmarshal Borojević
4:30 what kind of weapon is that?
It's a 37mm Infanteriegeschütz M.15
Austria-Hungary special forces...did they have to be bailed out by the German army too?
Can anybody tell me the name or the source of the painting at 1:43 ?