The following is a list of forces involved in the Battle of Amiens of World War I fought from August 8 to August 11, 1918.
Allied forces at Amiens were under the supreme command of General Ferdinand Foch.
General Sir Henry Rawlinson
British III Corps – Lieutenant General Sir Richard Butler
10th Tank Battalion – 36 Mark V tanks
Australian Corps – Lieutenant General Sir John Monash
5th Tank Brigade – 2nd, 8th, 13th Bn Tank Corps with 108 Mark V tank; 15th Bn Tank Corps with 36 Mark V* Tank; 17th (Armoured Car) Bn (Austin Armoured Cars.[1]
Canadian Corps – Lieutenant General Sir Arthur Currie
4th Tank Brigade – 108 Mark V tank, 36 Mark V* Tank
British Cavalry Corps – Lieutenant General Sir Charles Kavanagh
3rd Tank Brigade – 72 Whippet tank of 3 Bn and 6 Bn Tank Corps
Reserve
9th Tank Battalion – 36 Mark V tanks
Royal Air Force air support
(Major General John Salmond)
V Brigade
15th (Corps) Wing – 110 aircraft
22nd (Army) Wing – 222 aircraft
IX Brigade
9th Wing – 2 fighter sqns, 2 bomber sqns, 1 reconnaissance sqn. (99 aircraft)
51st Wing – 3 fighter sqns, 2 bomber sqns. (101 aircraft)
54th Wing – 2 night-fighter sqns, 4 night-bomber sqns (76 aircraft)
III Brigade (available in support)
13th (Army) Wing – 136 aircraft
I Brigade (available in support) – 19 aircraft
X Brigade (available in support) – 19 aircraft
General Marie-Eugène Debeney
XXXI Corps – General Paul-Louis Toulorge
42nd Division
66th Division
153rd Division
126th Division
IX Corps – General Noël Garnier-Duplessix
3rd Division
15th Colonial Division
X Corps – General Charles Vandenburg
166th Division
XXXV Corps – General Charles Jacquot
46th Division
133rd Division
169th Division
II Cavalry Corps – General Felix Robillot
2nd Cavalry Division
4th Cavalry Division
6th Cavalry Division
The French Third Army played a peripheral role in the battle and was commanded by Georges Humbert
XV Corps – General Jacques de Riols de Fonclare
67th Division
74th Division
123rd Division
XXXIV Corps – General Alphonse Nudant
6th Division
121st Division
129th Division
165th Division
Total: 1,104 aircraft
The German Second and Eighteenth armies were part of Army Group Rupprecht, commanded by Crown Prince Rupprecht
General Georg von der Marwitz
54th Corps – Generalleutnant Alfred von Larisch
233rd Division
26th Reserve Division – (From Seventeenth Army, 9 August)
XI Corps – Generalleutnant Viktor Kühne
107th Division – (From Second Army reserve, 8 August)
21st Division – (From Second Army reserve, 9 August)
5th Bavarian Division – (From Seventeenth Army, 8 August)
38th Division – (From Sixth Army, 9 August)
51st Corps – Generalleutnant Eberhard von Hofacker
14th Bavarian Division
225th Division
Jagdgruppe 2
Jagdgruppe Greim
Bombengeschwader 7
Fliegerabteilung (Lichtbildgerät) 40
Fliegerabteilung 17,33
Fliegerabteilung (Artillerie) 217,224,207,219,232,241,269
Schlachtstaffel 17
General Oskar von Hutier
III Corps – Generalleutnant Walther von Lüttwitz
79th Reserve Division – (From Seventh Army, 9 August)
IX Corps – Generalleutnant Horst Ritter und Edler von Oetinger
I Bavarian Corps – Generalleutnant Nikolaus Ritter von Endres (Corps was formed during the battle on 10 August)
Alpenkorps – (from Fourth Army, 10 August)
121st Division – (from Ninth Army, 10 August)(The remaining corps of Eighteenth Army played only a peripheral role in the battle.)
I Reserve Corps – Generalleutnant Kurt von Morgen
206th Division
119th Division – (Sent to 51st Corps, Second Army, 8 August)
XXVI Reserve Corps – Generalleutnant Oskar von Watter
204th Division – (Sent to I Bavarian Corps, 10 August)
XVIII Reserve Corps – Generalleutnant Ludwig Sieger
221st Division – (Sent to III Corps, 9 August)
Luftstreitkräfte (air support)
Jagdstaffel 24, 42, 44, 78
Bombengeschwader 4
Fliegerabteilung (Lichtbildgerät) 23
Fliegerabteilung (Artillerie) 2, 245, 14,212,238,203
Schlachtstaffel 36