EN
The paper seeks to introduce the German-Danish War of 1864 from a somewhat different perspective: through a prism of the organization of the healthcare. This article describes and compares the organization of military healthcare and voluntary healthcare during the German-Danish war of 1864. It also brings a description of the first application of the International Red Cross in war practice. The text is divided into several parts, which combine descriptive, explanatory and narrative approaches. The presentation is based on foreign sources. In the spirit of so-called new military history, it concentrates on the socio-cultural context of the war. In the conclusion, I explain whether the German-Danish War of 1864 represented an imaginary baptism by fire for the International Red Cross, or whether it was just another European war in the 19th century.