1864 January In January the situation remained tense but there was no fighting; Danish forces controlled the north bank of the
Eider River and German forces the south bank. All the inland waters (
Eider River,
Treene,
Schlei, and the marshes east of
Husum and around the
Rheider Au) that the Danes were relying on as defence to guard the flanks of the Danevirke, were frozen hard and could be crossed easily. Domestically, Bismarck had been under great pressure since a constitutional crisis in 1862, and he was hoping to gain public support among Prussian liberals by achieving the "liberation" of Schleswig. The decision to not settle for the occupation of the German Duchy of Holstein, but to invade Schleswig, was taken by the Prussian and Austrian governments alone. The other members of the German Confederation did not agree, and it was even discussed to declare war on the two great powers. However, due to the military superiority of the Prussians and Austrians, this did not happen. On 14 January 1864, Austria and Prussia declared that they would take action against Denmark without regard to decisions of the German Confederation. On 16 January 1864, Bismarck issued an ultimatum to Denmark demanding that the November Constitution should be abolished within 48 hours. This was politically impossible, particularly given the short deadline, and the demand was consequently rejected by the Danish government.
February At the start of the war, the Danish army consisted of about 38,000 men in four divisions. The 8th Brigade consisted of the 9th and 20th regiments (approximately 1,600 soldiers each), mainly soldiers from the middle and west and north of
Jutland. About 36,000 men defended the Dannevirke, a job which it was said would have needed 50,000 men to do properly. The 1st Regiment had been changed from a
battalion to a regiment on 1 December 1863. The Prussian army had 37 battalions, 29 squadrons and 110 guns, approximately 38,400 men. The Austrian army had 20 battalions, 10 squadrons and 48 guns, approximately 23,000 men. During the war the Prussian army was strengthened with 64 guns and 20,000 men. The supreme commander for the Prussian-Austrian army was
Field Marshal Friedrich Graf von Wrangel. The Austrian troops were led by
General Ludwig von Gablenz.
Prussian and
Austrian troops crossed into
Schleswig on 1 February 1864 against the resistance of the
Federal Assembly of the German Confederation, The hasty retreat also forced the Danes to abandon their important heavy
artillery. The railway from the south to
Flensburg was never properly used during this evacuation and the Danish army only evacuated what men and horses could carry or pull by road, leaving behind much
artillery, most importantly heavy artillery. Some hours later, the Prussians and Austrians discovered the retreat and started to pursue. This withdrawal to
Als and
Dybbøl has gone down in Danish history as one of the worst experiences that Danish soldiers have been exposed to. Some of them compared it to
Napoleon's
retreat from Moscow. It was northwards in a north gale with driven snow, and most of the soldiers had no rest for the last four days and nights. The march was burdened with artillery guns and supply carts and had to be as slow as its slowest component. Men and horses had trouble standing. Horses could not carry or pull their loads properly because of the snow and ice; riders had to dismount and lead their horses. Artillery guns and carts overturned. The column of men and horses and vehicles seemed endless. The army had to march from the Danevirke to Flensburg, which took about 14–18 hours. (
Schleswig, Schleswig-Holstein is at the east end of the Danevirke and is 20 mi from Flensburg
as the crow flies. The march was actually longer than 20 mi because soldiers had to walk from their positions to Schleswig, Schleswig-Holstein first.) They also had to fight rearguard against pursuing Prussians and Austrians. Some men in sight of Flensburg and thankful for the coming rest were ordered to stop or go back to man
checkpoints. Many men were missing at the roll call, and the army thought that many Schleswigian soldiers had deserted during the march and went home. However, most of them came in that morning or the next morning. Near
Stolk-Helligbek, about 10 kilometers north of Schleswig, pursuing Austrians reached them, and in heavy fighting near
Oversø, the 9th and 20th regiments of the 8th Brigade lost 600 men dead, injured and captured. On that day ten Danish soldiers died of
hypothermia. The Prussians crossed the frozen
Schlei at
Arnis on 6 February 1864, defeating the Danes there. In the
Battle of Sankelmark (about eight kilometers south of Flensburg) pursuing Austrians caught up with the Danish rearguard, which consisted of the 1st and 11th regiments. The Danes were commanded by Colonel
Max Müller. A hard fight, where large parts of 1st Regiment were taken prisoner, stopped the Austrians, and the retreat could continue. However, the Danes lost more than 500 men there. After a short rest and some food and drink in Flensburg, the 8th Brigade had to march to
Sønderborg, where they were taken by ship to
Fredericia. Soldiers packed the ship and could not lie down to rest. Furthermore, some had to stay outside on the deck and were nearly frozen. Other units stayed in
Dybbøl; some reportedly were so exhausted on arrival that they laid on the ground in heaps three or four deep to sleep. The loss of the
Danevirke without a fight, which in the 19th century played a big role in Danish national mythology due to its long history, caused a substantial psychological shock in Denmark and, as a result, de Meza had to resign from supreme command. Denmark never again ruled the Danevirke. The Austrians, under general
Ludwig Karl Wilhelm von Gablenz, marched north from Flensburg, while the Prussians advanced east on Sønderborg. On 18 February 1864, some Prussian
hussars, in the excitement of a cavalry skirmish, crossed the north frontier of Schleswig into Denmark proper and occupied the town of
Kolding. An invasion of Denmark itself had not been part of the original programme of the allies. Bismarck determined to use this circumstance to revise the whole situation. He urged upon Austria the necessity for a strong policy, to settle, comprehensively, the question of the duchies and the wider question of the German Confederation; Austria reluctantly consented to press the war. The Austrian army decided to stop at the north frontier of Schleswig. Some Prussians moved against
Kolding and
Vejle. On 22 February 1864, Prussian troops attacked the Danish forward line at
Dybbøl, pushing them back to the main defence line.
March • • Austrian forces capture
Vejle after fierce house-to-house combat. The Danish units involved retreat to
Horsens and later to
Vendsyssel. In
Fredericia, the Danish 8th Brigade's 20th Regiment ub involved in a bigger skirmish: the regiment's first Company are captured near
Snoghøj, on the mainland near where the (old)
Lillebælt bridge is now. The rest of Fredericia's garrison retreat to
Fyn. • • • •
April • • • • •
May Prince Friedrich Karl of Prussia becomses supreme commander of the Austro-Prussian allied army and conquers Jutland. • • •
June • • • •
July • •
August and after The preliminaries of a peace treaty were signed on 1 August 1864: the King of Denmark renounced all his rights in the duchies in favour of the Emperor of Austria and the King of Prussia. In the
Treaty of Vienna on 30 October 1864, Denmark ceded
Schleswig,
Holstein and
Lauenburg to
Prussia and
Austria. Denmark was also forced to surrender the enclaves in western Schleswig that were legally part of Denmark proper and not part of Schleswig, but was allowed to keep the island of
Ærø (which had been administered as part of Schleswig), the town of
Ribe and its surrounding land, and eight parishes from
Tyrstrup Herred south of Kolding. As a result of the peace settlement, the land area of the Danish monarchy decreased by 40% and the total population reduced from 2.6 million to 1.6 million (about 38.5%). The Danish frontier had retreated about 250 km as measured from the furthest corner of the
Duchy of Lauenburg to the new frontier on the
Kongeå river. When the Danish army returned to
Copenhagen after this war, they received no cheering or other public acclaim, unlike on their victorious return after the
First Schleswig War. ==Aftermath==