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Maurice de Saxe

Maurice, Count of Saxony (German: Hermann Moritz von Sachsen, French: Maurice de Saxe; 28 October 1696 – 20 November 1750) was a notable soldier, officer and a famed military commander of the 18th century. The illegitimate son of Augustus II the Strong, King of Poland and Elector of Saxony, he initially served in the Army of the Holy Roman Empire, then the Imperial Army, before finally entering French service. De Saxe became a Marshal and even Marshal General of France. He is best known for his deeds in the War of the Austrian Succession and especially for his decisive victory at the Battle of Fontenoy.

Maurice de Saxe
Count of Saxony
Marshal General of France
Maurice de Saxe wearing the Polish Order of the White Eagle, 1748
Born(1696 -10-28)28 October 1696
Goslar, Holy Roman Empire
Died20 November 1750(1750-11-20) (aged 54)
Château de Chambord, Kingdom of France
Burial
SpouseJohanna Viktoria von Loeben
IssueAugust Adolf von Sachsen
Marie-Aurore de Saxe
Names
Hermann Maurice de Saxe
FatherAugustus II of Poland
MotherMaria Aurora of Königsmarck
Signature
Military career
Service/branch Army of the Holy Roman Empire
French Royal Army
Battles/wars
Tree-like list

Childhood edit

Maurice was born at Goslar, an illegitimate son of Augustus II the Strong, King of Poland and Elector of Saxony, and the Countess Maria Aurora of Königsmarck. He was the first of eight extramarital children whom August acknowledged, although as many as 354 are claimed by sources, including Wilhelmine of Bayreuth, to have existed.[1]

In 1698, the Countess sent him to his father in Warsaw. August had been elected King of Poland in the previous year, but the unsettled condition of the country obliged Maurice to spend the greater part of his youth outside its borders. This separation from his father made him independent and had an important effect on his future career.[1]

Military career edit

 
Maurice de Saxe as a Marshal of France by Jean-Étienne Liotard
 
The Battle of Fontenoy, 11 May 1745, showing Maurice de Saxe presenting the captured British and Dutch prisoners and colours to Louis XV and the dauphin
 
Battle of Lawfeld, 2 July 1747: Louis XV pointing out the village of Lawfeld to Maurice

At the age of twelve, Maurice served in the Imperial Army under Prince Eugene of Savoy, at the sieges of Tournai and Mons and at the Battle of Malplaquet during the war of the Spanish Succession. A proposal at the end of the campaign to send him to a Jesuit college in Brussels was dropped due to the protests of his mother.

Upon his return to the camp of the Allies at the beginning of 1710, Maurice displayed a courage so impetuous that Prince Eugene admonished him to not confuse rashness with valour.[1]

He next served under Peter the Great against the Swedes in the Great Northern War. In 1711, August formally recognized him and Maurice was granted the rank of Count (Graf). He then accompanied his father to Pomerania, and in 1712 he took part in the Battle of Gadebusch. At the age of 17 in 1713 he commanded his own regiment of the Royal Saxon Army.[1]

As an adult, Maurice bore a strong resemblance to his father, both physically and in character. His grasp was so powerful that he could bend a horseshoe with his hand, and even at the end of his life, his energy and endurance were scarcely affected by the illnesses his many excesses had caused.[1]

On 12 March 1714, a marriage was arranged between him and one of the richest of his father's subjects, Countess Johanna Viktoria Tugendreich von Loeben, but he dissipated her fortune so rapidly that he was soon heavily in debt. The next year (21 January 1715), Johanna gave birth to a son, called August Adolf after his grandfather; the child only lived a few hours. Since Maurice had also given her more serious grounds of complaint against him, he consented to an annulment of the marriage on 21 March 1721.[1]

After serving the German Emperor Charles VI in a campaign against the Ottoman Empire in 1717, he went to Paris to study mathematics, and in 1720 obtained a commission as field marshal. In 1725, he entered negotiations for election as Duke of Courland, at the insistence of the Duchess Anna Ivanovna, who offered him her hand. He was chosen Duke in 1726, but declined marriage with the duchess. He soon found it impossible to resist her opposition to his claims, but with the assistance of £30,000 lent him by the French actress Adrienne Lecouvreur, he raised a force by which he maintained his authority till 1727, when he withdrew and took up residence in Paris.[1] Lecouvreur was to die mysteriously shortly afterwards: there is controversy as to whether or not she was poisoned by her rival, Maria Karolina Sobieska, Duchess of Bouillon.

At the outbreak of the War of the Polish Succession, Maurice served under Marshal the Duke of Berwick, and for a brilliant exploit at the Siege of Philippsburg he was named lieutenant-general. In the War of the Austrian Succession he took command of an army division sent to invade Austria in 1741, and on 19 November 1741, surprised Prague during the night, and seized it before the garrison was aware of the presence of an enemy, a coup de main which made him famous throughout Europe; he thus repeated the exploit of 1648 of his maternal great-grandfather, Hans Christoff von Königsmarck. After capturing the fortress of Eger (Cheb) on 19 April 1742, he received a leave of absence, and went to Russia to push his claims for the Duchy of Courland, but returned to his command after getting nowhere.[1]

Maurice's exploits were the sole redeeming feature in an unsuccessful campaign, and on 26 March 1743, his merits were rewarded by promotion to Marshal of France. He had been given only 50–60,000 men to defend against an enemy army twice as large.[2] From this time on, he became one of the great generals of the age. In 1744, he was chosen to command the 10,000 men of the French invasion of Britain on behalf of James Francis Edward Stuart, which assembled at Dunkirk but did not proceed more than a few miles out of harbour before being wrecked by disastrous storms.[3] After its termination, he received an independent command in the Netherlands, and by skilful manoeuvering succeeded in continually harassing the superior forces of the enemy without risking a decisive battle.[1]

 
Engraving of Maurice de Saxe

In the following year, Maurice with 65,000 men besieged Tournai and inflicted a severe defeat on the army of the Duke of Cumberland at the Battle of Fontenoy, an encounter determined entirely by his constancy and cool leadership.[4] During the battle, he was unable to sit on horseback due to edema, and was carried about in a wicker chariot.[1]

In recognition of his brilliant achievement, Louis XV conferred on him the Château de Chambord for life, and in April 1746, he was naturalised as a French subject. Until the end of the war, he continued to command in the Netherlands, always with success.[5] Besides Fontenoy he added Rocoux (1746) and Lawfeldt or Val (1747) to the list of French victories. He led the French force which captured Brussels and it was under his orders that Marshal Löwendahl captured Bergen op Zoom. He himself won the last success of the war in capturing Maastricht in 1748.

Saxe invented a handheld light-artillery piece that he called an amusette, which fired a half-pound ball a distance of 4,000 paces at a rate of 100 shots an hour.[6]

In 1747 the title once held by Turenne and Villars, "Marshal General of the King's camps and armies", was revived for Maurice. But on 20 November 1750 he died at the Château de Chambord "of a putrid fever".[1]

During the last years of his life, Maurice had an affair with a French lady, Marie Rinteau, who at that time was only eighteen years old. In 1748 she gave birth to a daughter, the last of Maurice's several illegitimate children. She was called Maria Aurora (in French: Marie Aurore) after her grandmother. She bore the surname de la Rivière until 1766 when the Parlement of Paris formally recognized her parentage and she could assume the surname of von Sachsen or de Saxe. Marie Aurore married firstly in 1766 with Antoine, Count of Horne (1735–1767), an alleged illegitimate son of Louis XV of France. By her second marriage with Louis Claude Dupin de Francueil (in 1777), she was the grandmother of Amandine Lucile Aurore Dupin, who later became famous as the writer George Sand. Maria Aurore died on 25 December 1821 when her granddaughter George Sand was seventeen. Sand included details of her grandmother's parentage in her memoires. [1]

Writings edit

Saxe's work on the art of war, Mes Rêveries (My Reveries), was published after his death in 1757.[7] Described by Carlyle as "a strange military farrago, dictated, as I should think, under opium", it was praised by Frederick the Great and described by Lord Montgomery, more than two centuries later, as "a remarkable work on the art of war".

A common theme of the 18th century Age of Enlightenment was to emphasise the scientific method and the idea every activity could be expressed in terms of a universal system.[8] In one sense, Mes Rêveries followed this by subjecting "military affairs to reasoned criticism and intellectual treatment, and the ensuing military doctrines were perceived as forming a definitive system".[9] Written following Prussian expansion during the War of the Austrian Succession, Saxe rejected their rigid discipline; arguing the French character was fundamentally different and their tactics should reflect that, he advocated the use of a deep order or ordre profond, rather than relying on firearms.[10]

However, Mes Rêveries also challenged French military orthodoxy in arguing for a greater focus on mobile warfare, rather than fortifications; this was partly a legacy of Vauban (1633–1707), who had revolutionised this field but adherence to his principles meant French engineers became ultra-conservative. As early as 1701, John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough argued winning one battle was more beneficial than taking 12 fortresses; Saxe followed this line but his argument was given increased weight by French losses in the 1756–1763 Seven Years' War.[11]

Saxe's Lettres et mémoires choisis (Selected Letters and Memoirs) appeared in 1794. His letters to his sister Anna Karolina Orzelska, the Duchess of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Beck, preserved at Strasbourg, were destroyed by the bombardment of that place in 1870.[1] Thirty copies had, however, been printed from the original.[1]

Legacy edit

 
Funerary monument of Maurice de Saxe in Saint Thomas Church, Strasbourg

After Maurice de Saxe's death in Chambord, a funerary ceremony was held for him in Paris, but as a Protestant, he could not be buried there. His remains were transported to Strasbourg and temporarily kept at the Temple Neuf. At Louis XV's request, a permanent mausoleum was created by Jean-Baptiste Pigalle in the apse of St Thomas' Church, Strasbourg, of which it now marks the focal point. The elaborate monument, under which de Saxe's remains were interred on 20 August 1777, shows Death holding a sandglass and calling him to the grave while a crying France tries to retain him, and Hercules weeps on the tomb's side. To the left are France's enemies personnified by three distraught animals: the German eagle, the Dutch lion, and the British lion, and their broken flags, while to the right are France's triumphant standards. In the middle stands the heroic marshal holding his baton, unfazed by his fate. Gérard de Nerval believed his majestic pose might have inspired the Commendatore's statue in Don Giovanni, based on the fact that Mozart had performed in the church in 1778 shortly after the monument's inauguration.[12]

Maurice de Saxe has been the focus of several biographical works. Many previous errors in former biographies were corrected and additional information supplied in Karl von Weber's Moritz Graf von Sachsen, Marschall von Frankreich, nach archivalischen Quellen [Moritz Count of Saxony, Marshal of France, according to archival sources] (Leipzig: Tauchnitz, 1863), in Saint-René Taillandier's Maurice de Saxe, étude historique d'après les documents des archives de Dresde [Maurice of Saxe, historical study according to the documents in the archives of Dresden] (1865) and in Karl Friedrich Vitzthum von Eckstädt [de] Maurice de Saxe (Leipzig, 1861).[1]

A biography in English is Jon Manchip White's Marshal of France: The Life and Times of Maurice, Comte de Saxe (1696–1750) (Rand McNally & Company, Chicago, 1962). See also the military histories of the period, especially Carlyle's Frederick the Great.[1]

He is honoured in the Walhalla Memorial.

Ancestry edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Chisholm 1911.
  2. ^ White, p. 138
  3. ^ White, p. 132
  4. ^ White, p. 147
  5. ^ White, p. 181
  6. ^ Hart, B.H.L., Great Captains Unveiled, pp.54-55 (Books for Libraries Press, 1967).
  7. ^ de Saxe, Field Marshal Herman Maurice (1757). . London. Archived from the original on February 5, 2008. Retrieved May 11, 2012.
  8. ^ Gay, Peter (1996). The Enlightenment: An Interpretation. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-00870-8.
  9. ^ Manabrata Guha (2011). Reimagining War in the 21st Century: From Clausewitz to Network-Centric Warfare. Taylor & Francis. p. 24. ISBN 978-0-415-56166-2. Retrieved 6 December 2012.
  10. ^ Smith, Bryan L. (Spring 2012), From Myth-Conceived to Myth-Understood: France's Revolutionary Ordre Profond Revisited
  11. ^ Picon, Antoine (2001). Delon, Michel (ed.). Encyclopedia of the Enlightenment. Routledge. p. 540. ISBN 978-1-57958-246-3.
  12. ^ Hans Storck (26 July 2014). "Le tombeau du Maréchal de Saxe". Le Rouge & le Noir.

External links edit

  • Child of Chequer'd Fortune: The Life, Loves and Battles of Maurice de Saxe, Maréchal de France by Marjorie Bowen at Project Gutenberg Australia

maurice, saxe, maurice, count, saxony, german, hermann, moritz, sachsen, french, october, 1696, november, 1750, notable, soldier, officer, famed, military, commander, 18th, century, illegitimate, augustus, strong, king, poland, elector, saxony, initially, serv. Maurice Count of Saxony German Hermann Moritz von Sachsen French Maurice de Saxe 28 October 1696 20 November 1750 was a notable soldier officer and a famed military commander of the 18th century The illegitimate son of Augustus II the Strong King of Poland and Elector of Saxony he initially served in the Army of the Holy Roman Empire then the Imperial Army before finally entering French service De Saxe became a Marshal and even Marshal General of France He is best known for his deeds in the War of the Austrian Succession and especially for his decisive victory at the Battle of Fontenoy Maurice de SaxeCount of SaxonyMarshal General of FranceMaurice de Saxe wearing the Polish Order of the White Eagle 1748Born 1696 10 28 28 October 1696Goslar Holy Roman EmpireDied20 November 1750 1750 11 20 aged 54 Chateau de Chambord Kingdom of FranceBurialSaint Thomas Church StrasbourgSpouseJohanna Viktoria von LoebenIssueAugust Adolf von SachsenMarie Aurore de SaxeNamesHermann Maurice de SaxeFatherAugustus II of PolandMotherMaria Aurora of KonigsmarckSignatureMilitary careerService wbr branchArmy of the Holy Roman Empire French Royal ArmyBattles warsTree like listAustro Turkish War 1716 1718 Siege of Belgrade 1717 War of the Austrian Succession Battle of Prague 1741 Siege of Tournai 1745 Battle of Fontenoy Siege of Brussels Battle of Rocoux Battle of Lauffeld Siege of Maastricht 1748 Contents 1 Childhood 2 Military career 3 Writings 4 Legacy 5 Ancestry 6 References 7 External linksChildhood editMaurice was born at Goslar an illegitimate son of Augustus II the Strong King of Poland and Elector of Saxony and the Countess Maria Aurora of Konigsmarck He was the first of eight extramarital children whom August acknowledged although as many as 354 are claimed by sources including Wilhelmine of Bayreuth to have existed 1 In 1698 the Countess sent him to his father in Warsaw August had been elected King of Poland in the previous year but the unsettled condition of the country obliged Maurice to spend the greater part of his youth outside its borders This separation from his father made him independent and had an important effect on his future career 1 Military career edit nbsp Maurice de Saxe as a Marshal of France by Jean Etienne Liotard nbsp The Battle of Fontenoy 11 May 1745 showing Maurice de Saxe presenting the captured British and Dutch prisoners and colours to Louis XV and the dauphin nbsp Battle of Lawfeld 2 July 1747 Louis XV pointing out the village of Lawfeld to Maurice At the age of twelve Maurice served in the Imperial Army under Prince Eugene of Savoy at the sieges of Tournai and Mons and at the Battle of Malplaquet during the war of the Spanish Succession A proposal at the end of the campaign to send him to a Jesuit college in Brussels was dropped due to the protests of his mother Upon his return to the camp of the Allies at the beginning of 1710 Maurice displayed a courage so impetuous that Prince Eugene admonished him to not confuse rashness with valour 1 He next served under Peter the Great against the Swedes in the Great Northern War In 1711 August formally recognized him and Maurice was granted the rank of Count Graf He then accompanied his father to Pomerania and in 1712 he took part in the Battle of Gadebusch At the age of 17 in 1713 he commanded his own regiment of the Royal Saxon Army 1 As an adult Maurice bore a strong resemblance to his father both physically and in character His grasp was so powerful that he could bend a horseshoe with his hand and even at the end of his life his energy and endurance were scarcely affected by the illnesses his many excesses had caused 1 On 12 March 1714 a marriage was arranged between him and one of the richest of his father s subjects Countess Johanna Viktoria Tugendreich von Loeben but he dissipated her fortune so rapidly that he was soon heavily in debt The next year 21 January 1715 Johanna gave birth to a son called August Adolf after his grandfather the child only lived a few hours Since Maurice had also given her more serious grounds of complaint against him he consented to an annulment of the marriage on 21 March 1721 1 After serving the German Emperor Charles VI in a campaign against the Ottoman Empire in 1717 he went to Paris to study mathematics and in 1720 obtained a commission as field marshal In 1725 he entered negotiations for election as Duke of Courland at the insistence of the Duchess Anna Ivanovna who offered him her hand He was chosen Duke in 1726 but declined marriage with the duchess He soon found it impossible to resist her opposition to his claims but with the assistance of 30 000 lent him by the French actress Adrienne Lecouvreur he raised a force by which he maintained his authority till 1727 when he withdrew and took up residence in Paris 1 Lecouvreur was to die mysteriously shortly afterwards there is controversy as to whether or not she was poisoned by her rival Maria Karolina Sobieska Duchess of Bouillon At the outbreak of the War of the Polish Succession Maurice served under Marshal the Duke of Berwick and for a brilliant exploit at the Siege of Philippsburg he was named lieutenant general In the War of the Austrian Succession he took command of an army division sent to invade Austria in 1741 and on 19 November 1741 surprised Prague during the night and seized it before the garrison was aware of the presence of an enemy a coup de main which made him famous throughout Europe he thus repeated the exploit of 1648 of his maternal great grandfather Hans Christoff von Konigsmarck After capturing the fortress of Eger Cheb on 19 April 1742 he received a leave of absence and went to Russia to push his claims for the Duchy of Courland but returned to his command after getting nowhere 1 Maurice s exploits were the sole redeeming feature in an unsuccessful campaign and on 26 March 1743 his merits were rewarded by promotion to Marshal of France He had been given only 50 60 000 men to defend against an enemy army twice as large 2 From this time on he became one of the great generals of the age In 1744 he was chosen to command the 10 000 men of the French invasion of Britain on behalf of James Francis Edward Stuart which assembled at Dunkirk but did not proceed more than a few miles out of harbour before being wrecked by disastrous storms 3 After its termination he received an independent command in the Netherlands and by skilful manoeuvering succeeded in continually harassing the superior forces of the enemy without risking a decisive battle 1 nbsp Engraving of Maurice de Saxe In the following year Maurice with 65 000 men besieged Tournai and inflicted a severe defeat on the army of the Duke of Cumberland at the Battle of Fontenoy an encounter determined entirely by his constancy and cool leadership 4 During the battle he was unable to sit on horseback due to edema and was carried about in a wicker chariot 1 In recognition of his brilliant achievement Louis XV conferred on him the Chateau de Chambord for life and in April 1746 he was naturalised as a French subject Until the end of the war he continued to command in the Netherlands always with success 5 Besides Fontenoy he added Rocoux 1746 and Lawfeldt or Val 1747 to the list of French victories He led the French force which captured Brussels and it was under his orders that Marshal Lowendahl captured Bergen op Zoom He himself won the last success of the war in capturing Maastricht in 1748 Saxe invented a handheld light artillery piece that he called an amusette which fired a half pound ball a distance of 4 000 paces at a rate of 100 shots an hour 6 In 1747 the title once held by Turenne and Villars Marshal General of the King s camps and armies was revived for Maurice But on 20 November 1750 he died at the Chateau de Chambord of a putrid fever 1 During the last years of his life Maurice had an affair with a French lady Marie Rinteau who at that time was only eighteen years old In 1748 she gave birth to a daughter the last of Maurice s several illegitimate children She was called Maria Aurora in French Marie Aurore after her grandmother She bore the surname de la Riviere until 1766 when the Parlement of Paris formally recognized her parentage and she could assume the surname of von Sachsen or de Saxe Marie Aurore married firstly in 1766 with Antoine Count of Horne 1735 1767 an alleged illegitimate son of Louis XV of France By her second marriage with Louis Claude Dupin de Francueil in 1777 she was the grandmother of Amandine Lucile Aurore Dupin who later became famous as the writer George Sand Maria Aurore died on 25 December 1821 when her granddaughter George Sand was seventeen Sand included details of her grandmother s parentage in her memoires 1 Writings editSaxe s work on the art of war Mes Reveries My Reveries was published after his death in 1757 7 Described by Carlyle as a strange military farrago dictated as I should think under opium it was praised by Frederick the Great and described by Lord Montgomery more than two centuries later as a remarkable work on the art of war A common theme of the 18th century Age of Enlightenment was to emphasise the scientific method and the idea every activity could be expressed in terms of a universal system 8 In one sense Mes Reveries followed this by subjecting military affairs to reasoned criticism and intellectual treatment and the ensuing military doctrines were perceived as forming a definitive system 9 Written following Prussian expansion during the War of the Austrian Succession Saxe rejected their rigid discipline arguing the French character was fundamentally different and their tactics should reflect that he advocated the use of a deep order or ordre profond rather than relying on firearms 10 However Mes Reveries also challenged French military orthodoxy in arguing for a greater focus on mobile warfare rather than fortifications this was partly a legacy of Vauban 1633 1707 who had revolutionised this field but adherence to his principles meant French engineers became ultra conservative As early as 1701 John Churchill 1st Duke of Marlborough argued winning one battle was more beneficial than taking 12 fortresses Saxe followed this line but his argument was given increased weight by French losses in the 1756 1763 Seven Years War 11 Saxe s Lettres et memoires choisis Selected Letters and Memoirs appeared in 1794 His letters to his sister Anna Karolina Orzelska the Duchess of Schleswig Holstein Sonderburg Beck preserved at Strasbourg were destroyed by the bombardment of that place in 1870 1 Thirty copies had however been printed from the original 1 Legacy edit nbsp Funerary monument of Maurice de Saxe in Saint Thomas Church Strasbourg After Maurice de Saxe s death in Chambord a funerary ceremony was held for him in Paris but as a Protestant he could not be buried there His remains were transported to Strasbourg and temporarily kept at the Temple Neuf At Louis XV s request a permanent mausoleum was created by Jean Baptiste Pigalle in the apse of St Thomas Church Strasbourg of which it now marks the focal point The elaborate monument under which de Saxe s remains were interred on 20 August 1777 shows Death holding a sandglass and calling him to the grave while a crying France tries to retain him and Hercules weeps on the tomb s side To the left are France s enemies personnified by three distraught animals the German eagle the Dutch lion and the British lion and their broken flags while to the right are France s triumphant standards In the middle stands the heroic marshal holding his baton unfazed by his fate Gerard de Nerval believed his majestic pose might have inspired the Commendatore s statue in Don Giovanni based on the fact that Mozart had performed in the church in 1778 shortly after the monument s inauguration 12 Maurice de Saxe has been the focus of several biographical works Many previous errors in former biographies were corrected and additional information supplied in Karl von Weber s Moritz Graf von Sachsen Marschall von Frankreich nach archivalischen Quellen Moritz Count of Saxony Marshal of France according to archival sources Leipzig Tauchnitz 1863 in Saint Rene Taillandier s Maurice de Saxe etude historique d apres les documents des archives de Dresde Maurice of Saxe historical study according to the documents in the archives of Dresden 1865 and in Karl Friedrich Vitzthum von Eckstadt de Maurice de Saxe Leipzig 1861 1 A biography in English is Jon Manchip White s Marshal of France The Life and Times of Maurice Comte de Saxe 1696 1750 Rand McNally amp Company Chicago 1962 See also the military histories of the period especially Carlyle s Frederick the Great 1 He is honoured in the Walhalla Memorial Ancestry editAncestors of Maurice de Saxe8 John George II Elector of Saxony4 John George III Elector of Saxony8 Magdalene Sibylle of Brandenburg Bayreuth2 Augustus II the Strong10 Frederick III of Denmark5 Princess Anna Sophie of Denmark11 Sophie Amalie of Brunswick Luneburg1 Maurice de Saxe12 Count Hans Christoff von Konigsmarck6 Count Kurt Christoph von Konigsmarck13 Barbara Maria Agata von Leesten3 Countess Maria Aurora von Konigsmarck14 Herman Wrangel7 Maria Kristina Wrangel15 Countess Amalie Magdalena of Nassau SiegenReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Chisholm 1911 White p 138 White p 132 White p 147 White p 181 Hart B H L Great Captains Unveiled pp 54 55 Books for Libraries Press 1967 de Saxe Field Marshal Herman Maurice 1757 Reveries on the Art of War London Archived from the original on February 5 2008 Retrieved May 11 2012 Gay Peter 1996 The Enlightenment An Interpretation W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 00870 8 Manabrata Guha 2011 Reimagining War in the 21st Century From Clausewitz to Network Centric Warfare Taylor amp Francis p 24 ISBN 978 0 415 56166 2 Retrieved 6 December 2012 Smith Bryan L Spring 2012 From Myth Conceived to Myth Understood France s Revolutionary Ordre Profond Revisited Picon Antoine 2001 Delon Michel ed Encyclopedia of the Enlightenment Routledge p 540 ISBN 978 1 57958 246 3 Hans Storck 26 July 2014 Le tombeau du Marechal de Saxe Le Rouge amp le Noir nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Saxe Maurice Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press White Jon Manchip 1962 Marshal of France the life and times of Maurice comte de Saxe 1696 1750 Rand McNally ISBN 978 1 258 13994 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Maurice de Saxe Child of Chequer d Fortune The Life Loves and Battles of Maurice de Saxe Marechal de France by Marjorie Bowen at Project Gutenberg Australia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maurice de Saxe amp oldid 1205433672, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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