Përdoruesi:Hgav/Livadhi personal
Franz von Weyrother (Vjena, 1755 – Vjena, 16 Shkurt 1806) ishte një austriak të përgjithshme gjatë luftërave Revolucionare frëngjisht dhe luftërave napoleoni
Karrierës
RedaktoWeyrother ka lindur në Vjenë, i biri i përgjithshëm i kalorësia Adam von Weyrother. Pas studimeve në akademinë inxhinieri ushtarake, ai hyri në regjimentit të këmbësorisë Franz Moritz von Lacy # 22 si një kadet në 1775. Ai u gradua toger dy vjet më vonë. Në gusht 1778 ai u caktua adjutant i Wenze, një post që e mbajti deri në 1783.
Weyrother mori pjesë në luftën austro-turke (1787-1791) nën Fusha Browne Marshall Maksimilian, fituar promovimit të kapitenit. . Gjatë fazës së parë e Luftës së Parë Koalicionit, Weyrother shërbeu në Mainz. Promovuar në rangun e të mëdha në 1795, u plagos në Weisenau. Pasi u shërua ai u dërgua për të marrë pjesë në Ushtrinë e Rhine nën komandën e Archduke Çarls, Duka i Teschen. Në 1795 ai u emërua kalorës i Rendit Ushtarake e Maria Terezës.
Italy and Bavaria
RedaktoIn September 1796, Weyrother transferred to Northern Italy where he fought in the Battle of Bassano under Field Marshal Dagobert von Wurmser. Later he served on the staff of Feldzeugmeister József Alvinczi. In this capacity, he helped plan the campaign that ended in a narrow defeat by Bonaparte at the Battle of Arcola.[1] His plan for the Battle of Rivoli provided for three widely separated striking forces and unrealistically called for one flanking column to march across mountainous terrain in January.[2] Rivoli ended in a decisive Austrian defeat and the consequent surrender of the fortress of Mantua.
During the campaign of 1799, Weyrother served as chief of staff to Feldzeugmeister Pál Kray, where he distinguished himself at Legnago (26 March), Magnano (5 April) and Novi (15 August). He also planned an epic march by Russian Field Marshal Alexander Suvorov across the Saint Gotthard Pass. For his conduct in these actions he was promoted to colonel (Oberst), given command of the Schröder Infantry Regiment # 7, and mentioned in dispatches to Kaiser Francis II of Austria by Suvorov. In the fall of 1800, Francis II assigned him to be chief-of-staff to the 18-year old Archduke John of Austria, the new commander of the army in Bavaria. Believing Jean Moreau's French army to be in retreat, Weyrother organized an aggressive pursuit through heavily forested terrain by four non-mutually-supporting columns.[3] Instead, Moreau stood his ground, sprang an ambush, and enveloped the Austrian left flank. The resulting Battle of Hohenlinden turned out to be a catastrophe for the Austrians, effectively ending the War of the Second Coalition.
Napoleonic Wars
RedaktoWhen the War of the Third Coalition broke out, Weyrother was promoted to General-Major and at the request of General Mikhail Kutusov he was made chief of staff of the Austro-Russian army. In this capacity he was responsible for the conception of the allied plan which was defeated by Emperor Napoleon at the Battle of Austerlitz.[4] Two and a half months after the battle, Weyrother died aged 51 in Vienna.
References
Redakto- Arnold, James R. Marengo & Hohenlinden. Barnsley, South Yorkshire, UK: Pen & Sword, 2005. ISBN 1-84415-279-0
- Boycott-Brown, Martin. The Road to Rivoli. London: Cassell & Co., 2001. ISBN 0-304-35305-1
- Chandler, David. The Campaigns of Napoleon. New York: Macmillan, 1966.
Footnotes
RedaktoExternal references
RedaktoWeyrother by Digby Smith, compiled by Leopold Kudrna
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