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Adam Albert von Neipperg

Adam Albert, Count von Neipperg (8 April 1775 – 22 February 1829) was an Austrian general and statesman. He was the son of a diplomat famous for inventing a letter-copying machine, and the grandson of Count Wilhelm Reinhard von Neipperg. His second wife, Empress Marie-Louise, was the widow of Napoleon and a daughter of Francis II, the last Holy Roman Emperor and founding Emperor of the Austrian Empire.

Adam Albert von Neipperg
Adam Albert, Count von Neipperg
Born8 April 1775 (1775-04-08)
Vienna, Archduchy of Austria
Died22 February 1829 (1829-02-23) (aged 53)
Parma, Duchy of Parma
Allegiance Austrian Empire
Service/branchCavalry
Years of service 1791–1829
Rank Feldmarschall-Leutnant and 2nd Colonel-Proprietor of the 3rd Hussar Regiment
Battles/warsBattle of Jemappes
Battle of Neerwinden
Siege of Valenciennes
Siege of Mainz
Battle of Verderio
Relief of Mantua
Battle of Marengo
Battle of Pozzolo
Battle of Leipzig
Battle of Ronco
Battle of Scapezzano
Battle of Tolentino (support)
Awards Tyrolean Silver Medal of Honor (1798)

Order of Maria Theresa (1801)
Order of the Légion d'Honneur (1810)
Order of the Sword (1812)
Order of St. George (1813)
Order of St. Anna (1813)
Order of St. Maurice and St. Lazarus (1814)
Order of St. Ferdinand and of Merit (1815)
Sacred Military Constantinian Order of St. George (1816)

Order of Leopold (1825)
Other work Prime Minister and Ehren-Kavalier to Duchess Maria Luigia 1821–1829

Early life edit

Adam Neipperg was born in Vienna as a son of Count Leopold von Neipperg (1728–1792) and his third wife, Countess Maria Wilhelmine von Hatzfeldt-Wildenburg (1750–1784). In 1766, the County of Neipperg, centred on Schwaigern, had become an Imperial State of the Holy Roman Empire, but was mediatised to the Kingdom of Württemberg in 1806.

Neipperg was educated at the Karlsschule military academy in Stuttgart. At the age of sixteen, Neipperg attempted to enlist in the French army at Strasbourg but, in 1791, he joined the ranks of the Austrians.

Career edit

He participated in the Battle of Jemappes, Battle of Neerwinden, and Siege of Valenciennes. On 14 September 1794, at the village of Doel, on returning from one of many missions to deliver secret instructions to forts in the Dutch Republic, he became trapped behind enemy lines and received such serious bayonet wounds that he was left for dead; he lost his right eye in this skirmish. The following day, while burying the dead, the French found him still breathing and hospitalised him. Speaking French rather too well for a common soldier, he was assumed to be a traitor and sentenced to be shot once his health had returned. However, his convalescence was lengthy due to the seriousness of his injuries. By the time he recovered, the command having changed, he became part of a prisoner exchange. In a different account, he lost his eye not to a saber wound sustained in battle, but as a result of his maltreatment while being held prisoner by the French.[1] He was unable to return to active duty for over a year. Neipperg rejoined the Austrian army and took part in the Battle of Mainz in 1795, and led Austrian troops in Italy, culminating at the disastrous Battle of Marengo in 1800 that drove the Austrians out of Italy. Following Marengo, Major Neipperg went to Paris in July 1800 as secretary to Feldmarschallleutnant Graf St. Julien, who was conducting peace negotiations with the French. When these failed in the autumn, he was appointed to 5th Ott Hussars on 1 December, distinguishing himself at the Battle of Pozzolo on 25 December. As the Oberstleutnant (Lt-colonel) of the same regiment, he fought in NE Italy again in the 1805 campaign, notably in the rearguard action on the Tagliamento. In 1806 he was appointed Oberst (colonel) of the regiment and directed the Neutrality and Frontier Cordon force, which observed the 1806-7 war.[2]

Diplomatic career edit

In 1809, after the Austrian campaign, he was appointed ambassador to Sweden and encouraged Bernadotte to enter in the coalition which was formed in 1813. In reward for this service, he was decorated by the Swedish king. Neipperg rejoined the Austrian army and fought at Leipzig where he distinguished himself sufficiently to be appointed as lieutenant field marshal.[citation needed]

In 1814, Klemens von Metternich sent him to negotiate with the King of Naples, Joachim Murat, who signed a secret peace treaty with Austria in order to keep his throne. Metternich's other intrigue was to try to distance Prince Eugene (stepson of Napoleon and son-in-law of King Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria) from the French. When Napoleon returned from exile, Murat once again allied with his brother-in-law the Emperor, triggering the Neapolitan War.[citation needed]

Later military career edit

Neipperg commanded a corps in the Austrian army (called the Army of Naples) under Field Marshal Frederick Bianchi. Murat dispatched General Carrascosa with a division of Neapolitan troops to prevent Neipperg's corps linking up with Bianchi and the Austrian main body. Neipperg defeated Carrascosa at Scapezzano on 1 May 1815. The main Neapolitan force under Murat's command attacked Bianchi's smaller force, which was in a strong defensive position, at Tolentino on 2 May 1815. The attack was renewed on 3 May and the Neapolitan force was gaining an advantage over the Austrians, when Murat received news of Carrascosa's defeat. With the threat of Neipperg's large force approaching his flank, Murat had to order the Neapolitan army to withdraw, turning Tolentino from a potential Napoleonic victory into a defeat.[citation needed]

In 1815, Neipperg participated in the short occupation of France. In July 1815, as the Austrian army crossed the Rhone, he took command of the troops in the French departments of Gard, Ardèche and Hérault. He was under the supervision of Bianchi, commanding the Austrian army in the south of France. He lived in Nîmes and left the city with the rest of the troops on 14 September 1815.[citation needed]

Personal life edit

 
Neipperg family coat of arms

In 1806, Neipperg married Therese Josephine Walpurgis, Countess von Pola (1778–1815). Before her death on 23 April 1815, they had four sons:

  1. Count Alfred von Neipperg (1807–1865), who married Countess Giuseppina di Grisoni in 1835. After her death, he married Princess Marie Frederike Charlotte von Württemberg, daughter of King William I of Württemberg and Grand Duchess Catherine Pavlovna of Russia (a daughter of Tsar Paul I of Russia), in 1840.
  2. Count Ferdinand von Neipperg (1809–1843), who died unmarried.
  3. Count Gustav von Neipperg (1811–1850), who died unmarried.
  4. Count Erwin von Neipperg (1813–1897), who married Countess Henriette von Waldstein-Wartenberg in 1845. After her death, he married Princess Maria Rosa von Lobkowicz, in 1852.

He was succeeded in the headship of the House of Neipperg by his eldest son Alfred who died childless and his brother Erwin followed him. The male heirs of this senior line of counts still live at Schwaigern in Germany. The present head of the house, Karl-Eugen, Count von Neipperg (born 1951), is the husband of Archduchess Andrea von Habsburg.

Second marriage edit

In August 1814, he was instructed to escort Napoleon's wife, the Empress Marie-Louise, to Aix-les-Bains to take the waters. However, the true purpose of his mission was to prevent the Empress from joining Napoleon in exile in Elba. Neipperg, who had understood this perfectly, was rumored to have told his mistress in Milan: "Inside of six months I shall be her lover, and soon her husband".[3] The quote is most likely apocryphal, and at any rate, he did not need that long, as the Empress soon became his lover and talk of Elba never arose again.[4]

Four months after the death of Napoleon I in 1821, he married Marie-Louise in a morganatic marriage. She had become sovereign Duchess of Parma, Piacenza and Guastalla, styled Maria-Luigia di Parma, in the final act of the Congress of Vienna on 9 June 1815. From this union, four children were born, the first two before the marriage, whilst Marie-Louise was still legally married to Napoleon:

  1. Countess Albertine di Montenuovo (Italian translation of Neipperg) (1817–1867), who married Luigi Sanvitale, Count di Fontanellato, in 1833.
  2. William Albert, Count, then 1st Prince von Montenuovo (1819–1895), who married Countess Juliana Batthyány von Németújvár, in 1850.[5]
  3. Countess Mathilde di Montenuovo (b. 1822), who died young.[citation needed]

Neipperg died in Parma on 22 February 1829 of a heart condition. His descendants with the Duchess Maria-Luigia, the Princes von Montenuovo, intermarried with the Austro-Hungarian nobility and served as courtiers and diplomats at the Imperial Hofburg in Vienna, dying out in the male line in 1951.

Ancestry edit

References edit

  1. ^ Wurzbach, Constantin (1869), Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich, Universitätsbibliothek Graz, Vol. 20, pp. 146-152.
  2. ^ Jaromir Hirtenfeld: Der Militär-Maria-Theresien-Orden und seine Mitglieder (1857) Vol 2 pp.1124-5
  3. ^ Geer, Walter (1925), Napoleon and Marie-Louise; the fall of the empire, New York, Brentano's, p.315.
  4. ^ von Wertheimer, Edouard (1902), The Duke of Reichstadt (Napoleon the Second), London, Ballantyne & Co., p.120.
  5. ^ "Ritter-Orden", Hof- und Staatshandbuch der Österreichisch-Ungarischen Monarchie, 1918, pp. 62, 64, 69, retrieved 2 November 2019

Sources edit

  • Translated from: fr:Adam Albert de Neipperg
Political offices
Preceded by
Filippo Magawly Cerati
Prime Minister of Duchy of Parma
1823–1829
Succeeded by
Joseph von Werklein

adam, albert, neipperg, adam, albert, count, neipperg, april, 1775, february, 1829, austrian, general, statesman, diplomat, famous, inventing, letter, copying, machine, grandson, count, wilhelm, reinhard, neipperg, second, wife, empress, marie, louise, widow, . Adam Albert Count von Neipperg 8 April 1775 22 February 1829 was an Austrian general and statesman He was the son of a diplomat famous for inventing a letter copying machine and the grandson of Count Wilhelm Reinhard von Neipperg His second wife Empress Marie Louise was the widow of Napoleon and a daughter of Francis II the last Holy Roman Emperor and founding Emperor of the Austrian Empire Adam Albert von NeippergAdam Albert Count von NeippergBorn8 April 1775 1775 04 08 Vienna Archduchy of AustriaDied22 February 1829 1829 02 23 aged 53 Parma Duchy of ParmaAllegianceAustrian EmpireService wbr branchCavalryYears of service1791 1829RankFeldmarschall Leutnant and 2nd Colonel Proprietor of the 3rd Hussar RegimentBattles warsBattle of JemappesBattle of NeerwindenSiege of ValenciennesSiege of MainzBattle of VerderioRelief of MantuaBattle of MarengoBattle of PozzoloBattle of LeipzigBattle of RoncoBattle of ScapezzanoBattle of Tolentino support AwardsTyrolean Silver Medal of Honor 1798 Order of Maria Theresa 1801 Order of the Legion d Honneur 1810 Order of the Sword 1812 Order of St George 1813 Order of St Anna 1813 Order of St Maurice and St Lazarus 1814 Order of St Ferdinand and of Merit 1815 Sacred Military Constantinian Order of St George 1816 Order of Leopold 1825 Other workPrime Minister and Ehren Kavalier to Duchess Maria Luigia 1821 1829 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Diplomatic career 2 2 Later military career 3 Personal life 3 1 Second marriage 4 Ancestry 5 References 6 SourcesEarly life editAdam Neipperg was born in Vienna as a son of Count Leopold von Neipperg 1728 1792 and his third wife Countess Maria Wilhelmine von Hatzfeldt Wildenburg 1750 1784 In 1766 the County of Neipperg centred on Schwaigern had become an Imperial State of the Holy Roman Empire but was mediatised to the Kingdom of Wurttemberg in 1806 Neipperg was educated at the Karlsschule military academy in Stuttgart At the age of sixteen Neipperg attempted to enlist in the French army at Strasbourg but in 1791 he joined the ranks of the Austrians Career editHe participated in the Battle of Jemappes Battle of Neerwinden and Siege of Valenciennes On 14 September 1794 at the village of Doel on returning from one of many missions to deliver secret instructions to forts in the Dutch Republic he became trapped behind enemy lines and received such serious bayonet wounds that he was left for dead he lost his right eye in this skirmish The following day while burying the dead the French found him still breathing and hospitalised him Speaking French rather too well for a common soldier he was assumed to be a traitor and sentenced to be shot once his health had returned However his convalescence was lengthy due to the seriousness of his injuries By the time he recovered the command having changed he became part of a prisoner exchange In a different account he lost his eye not to a saber wound sustained in battle but as a result of his maltreatment while being held prisoner by the French 1 He was unable to return to active duty for over a year Neipperg rejoined the Austrian army and took part in the Battle of Mainz in 1795 and led Austrian troops in Italy culminating at the disastrous Battle of Marengo in 1800 that drove the Austrians out of Italy Following Marengo Major Neipperg went to Paris in July 1800 as secretary to Feldmarschallleutnant Graf St Julien who was conducting peace negotiations with the French When these failed in the autumn he was appointed to 5th Ott Hussars on 1 December distinguishing himself at the Battle of Pozzolo on 25 December As the Oberstleutnant Lt colonel of the same regiment he fought in NE Italy again in the 1805 campaign notably in the rearguard action on the Tagliamento In 1806 he was appointed Oberst colonel of the regiment and directed the Neutrality and Frontier Cordon force which observed the 1806 7 war 2 Diplomatic career edit In 1809 after the Austrian campaign he was appointed ambassador to Sweden and encouraged Bernadotte to enter in the coalition which was formed in 1813 In reward for this service he was decorated by the Swedish king Neipperg rejoined the Austrian army and fought at Leipzig where he distinguished himself sufficiently to be appointed as lieutenant field marshal citation needed In 1814 Klemens von Metternich sent him to negotiate with the King of Naples Joachim Murat who signed a secret peace treaty with Austria in order to keep his throne Metternich s other intrigue was to try to distance Prince Eugene stepson of Napoleon and son in law of King Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria from the French When Napoleon returned from exile Murat once again allied with his brother in law the Emperor triggering the Neapolitan War citation needed Later military career edit Neipperg commanded a corps in the Austrian army called the Army of Naples under Field Marshal Frederick Bianchi Murat dispatched General Carrascosa with a division of Neapolitan troops to prevent Neipperg s corps linking up with Bianchi and the Austrian main body Neipperg defeated Carrascosa at Scapezzano on 1 May 1815 The main Neapolitan force under Murat s command attacked Bianchi s smaller force which was in a strong defensive position at Tolentino on 2 May 1815 The attack was renewed on 3 May and the Neapolitan force was gaining an advantage over the Austrians when Murat received news of Carrascosa s defeat With the threat of Neipperg s large force approaching his flank Murat had to order the Neapolitan army to withdraw turning Tolentino from a potential Napoleonic victory into a defeat citation needed In 1815 Neipperg participated in the short occupation of France In July 1815 as the Austrian army crossed the Rhone he took command of the troops in the French departments of Gard Ardeche and Herault He was under the supervision of Bianchi commanding the Austrian army in the south of France He lived in Nimes and left the city with the rest of the troops on 14 September 1815 citation needed Personal life edit nbsp Neipperg family coat of arms In 1806 Neipperg married Therese Josephine Walpurgis Countess von Pola 1778 1815 Before her death on 23 April 1815 they had four sons Count Alfred von Neipperg 1807 1865 who married Countess Giuseppina di Grisoni in 1835 After her death he married Princess Marie Frederike Charlotte von Wurttemberg daughter of King William I of Wurttemberg and Grand Duchess Catherine Pavlovna of Russia a daughter of Tsar Paul I of Russia in 1840 Count Ferdinand von Neipperg 1809 1843 who died unmarried Count Gustav von Neipperg 1811 1850 who died unmarried Count Erwin von Neipperg 1813 1897 who married Countess Henriette von Waldstein Wartenberg in 1845 After her death he married Princess Maria Rosa von Lobkowicz in 1852 He was succeeded in the headship of the House of Neipperg by his eldest son Alfred who died childless and his brother Erwin followed him The male heirs of this senior line of counts still live at Schwaigern in Germany The present head of the house Karl Eugen Count von Neipperg born 1951 is the husband of Archduchess Andrea von Habsburg Second marriage edit In August 1814 he was instructed to escort Napoleon s wife the Empress Marie Louise to Aix les Bains to take the waters However the true purpose of his mission was to prevent the Empress from joining Napoleon in exile in Elba Neipperg who had understood this perfectly was rumored to have told his mistress in Milan Inside of six months I shall be her lover and soon her husband 3 The quote is most likely apocryphal and at any rate he did not need that long as the Empress soon became his lover and talk of Elba never arose again 4 Four months after the death of Napoleon I in 1821 he married Marie Louise in a morganatic marriage She had become sovereign Duchess of Parma Piacenza and Guastalla styled Maria Luigia di Parma in the final act of the Congress of Vienna on 9 June 1815 From this union four children were born the first two before the marriage whilst Marie Louise was still legally married to Napoleon Countess Albertine di Montenuovo Italian translation of Neipperg 1817 1867 who married Luigi Sanvitale Count di Fontanellato in 1833 William Albert Count then 1st Prince von Montenuovo 1819 1895 who married Countess Juliana Batthyany von Nemetujvar in 1850 5 Countess Mathilde di Montenuovo b 1822 who died young citation needed Neipperg died in Parma on 22 February 1829 of a heart condition His descendants with the Duchess Maria Luigia the Princes von Montenuovo intermarried with the Austro Hungarian nobility and served as courtiers and diplomats at the Imperial Hofburg in Vienna dying out in the male line in 1951 Ancestry editAncestors of Adam Albert von Neipperg16 Eberhard Wilhelm Baron of Neipperg8 Eberhard Friedrich Baron of Neipperg17 Margaretha Elisabeth von Sternenfels4 Wilhelm Reinhard Count of Neipperg18 Reinhard von Hornberg9 Margareta Lucretia von Hornberg19 Anna Agnes von Buseck2 Leopold Joseph Count of Neipperg20 Count Franz Christoph von Khevenhuller Frankenburg10 Count Franz Ferdinand von Khevenhuller Frankenburg21 Countess Faustina Barbara von Montecuccoli5 Countess Maria Franziska Theresia von Khevenhuller Frankenburg22 Baron Mathias Franz von Lubetich Chapelot11 Baroness Maria Theresia von Lubetich Chapelot23 Countess Theresia Isabella von Lodron1 Adam Albert Count of Neipperg24 Baron Melchior Friedrich von Hatzfeld12 Baron Wilhelm Franz von Hatzfeld25 Baroness Maria Barbara von Furstenberg6 Count Karl Ferdinand von Hatzfeldt Wildenburg26 Baron Philipp Christoph von Loe13 Baroness Sophie Therese von Loe27 Baroness Anna Maria Theresia von Winckelhausen3 Countess Marie Wilhelmine von Hatzfeldt Wildenburg28 Adolf Karl von Bettendorff14 Baron Lothar Karl von Bettendorff29 Baroness Maria Catharina Kammerer von Worms Dalberg7 Baroness Marie Sophie von Bettendorff30 Count Johann Philipp von Stadion Warthausen15 Countess Marie Sophie von Stadion31 Countess Maria Anna von Schonborn BuchheimReferences edit Wurzbach Constantin 1869 Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich Universitatsbibliothek Graz Vol 20 pp 146 152 Jaromir Hirtenfeld Der Militar Maria Theresien Orden und seine Mitglieder 1857 Vol 2 pp 1124 5 Geer Walter 1925 Napoleon and Marie Louise the fall of the empire New York Brentano s p 315 von Wertheimer Edouard 1902 The Duke of Reichstadt Napoleon the Second London Ballantyne amp Co p 120 Ritter Orden Hof und Staatshandbuch der Osterreichisch Ungarischen Monarchie 1918 pp 62 64 69 retrieved 2 November 2019Sources editTranslated from fr Adam Albert de Neipperg nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Adam Albert von Neipperg Political offices Preceded byFilippo Magawly Cerati Prime Minister of Duchy of Parma1823 1829 Succeeded byJoseph von Werklein Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Adam Albert von Neipperg amp oldid 1215243814, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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