*** Welcome to piglix ***

Armeeoberkommando


The Armeeoberkommando or AOK was the name of the German and Austro-Hungarian army commands, especially during the First and Second World Wars.

The army of the German Empire had so-called Army Inspectorates (Armee-Inspektionen) as command authorities above their army corps (latterly numbered from I to VIII), which were renamed in the First World War to Armeeoberkommandos.

In Austria-Hungary an Armeeoberkommando (AOK) - there was only one - was established in summer 1914 at the outbreak of the war and was the command centre for all land and naval forces within the double monarchy. It was led by the following commanders-in-chief (Armeeoberkommandanten): Archduke Frederick; from 2 December 1916 by Emperor Charles I himself; on 3 November 1918 by Arthur Arz and from 4–11 November 1918 by Hermann Kövess. Its chiefs of general staff were: to 1 March 1917, Field Marshal Conrad; from 2 November 1918, Arthur Arz. The AOK was stationed in Teschen in Austrian Silesia until 1916, and then in Baden bei Wien.

In the Second World War an AOK (usually commanded by colonel general, Generaloberst, or above) led several army corps and had its own army troops, e.g. heavy artillery, sappers and other specialist troops that were subordinated to it depending on availability and task. The AOK was the command level between the army group and the army corps. Demands and allocation of logistic supplies usually went straight to the senior quartermaster (Oberquartiermeister) of the AOK; the army group command was only involved in situations of crisis. The area of responsibility of an AOK was split into the operational area, which was further subdivided at corps and divisional level, and the army rear area, which was run by "Commander Rear Area" (Kommandanten rückwärtiges Gebiet or Korück).


...
Wikipedia

...