36. Lieutenant-colonel Blegen, who ordered the massacres and sack of Dinant.
37. Major Botzwitz, who ordered his troops to kill the wounded and murder prisoners of war.
38. Major Manteuffel, who ordered the destruction of Louvain and the horrible atrocities committed in it.
39. Major Sommerfeld, who ordered the destruction of Termonde (in Belgium).
40. Major Müller, who ordered the destruction of Châlons-sur-Marne.
41 and 42. Baron von Waldersee and Major Ledebur, who broke open the writing-desks and jewel-cases of the château of Beaumont.
43. Major von Bülow, who ordered the massacres and destruction of Aerschot.
44. Major Dreckmann. In a proclamation under date 6th September (Guvegnee, Belgium): “The life of hostages depends on whether the inhabitants remain peaceful under all circumstances”; and that, if the first hostages are not replaced in forty-eight hours by others, the hostage runs the risk of death, and whoever does not obey the command “Lift your arms!” is punishable with the penalty of death.
45. Commandant Chrenzer, of the 26th Austro-Hungarian regiment, operating against the Serbians, who himself massacred prisoners and peasants who were brought to him.
46. Commandant Reimond, of the 13th Austro-Hungarian corps, operating against the Serbians, who authorised the massacre of twenty-four peasants, the most part of them old folk of both sexes.