Carl Gustaf Armfeldt
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General Friherre Carl Gustaf Armfeldt | |
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November 9, 1666 - October 24, 1736 | |
Place of birth | Swedish Ingria |
Place of death | Pernå, Finland |
Allegiance | Swedish Armed Forces |
Rank | General |
Commands held | Finnish Army |
Battles/wars | Battle of Storkyro |
Friherre Carl Gustaf Armfeldt (born in Ingria November 9, 1666, died October 24, 1736 in Finland), was a Swedish officer who took part in the Great Northern War.
He was born in Ingria to lieutenant colonel Gustaf Armfelt and Anna Elisabet Brakel. Like other members of his family Armfelt devoted himself to war and at seventeen years' age joined Nylands kavalleri as a cadet. In 1685 he left this position and left for France where he joined prince Ferdinand of Fürstenburg's regiment as a mere footsoldier. He campaigned in France for twelve years and returned to Sweden as a captain. Due to his military experience he was employed in the Finnish army as a generaladjutant in 1701 and stayed with this army for most of the Great Northern War. He was named commander of the Finnish army in 1713.
During the long war he distinguished himself in several occasions, especially during the defense of Helsingfors in 1713, but met an overwhelming Russian force and was defeated at the battle of Storkyro in 1714.
In 1717 Armfeldt was promoted to lieutenant general and commanded the Swedish force which on the orders of Charles XII of Sweden was sent into Norway to take Trondheim. Poorly equipped, Armfelt pulled out after the king fell at Fredrikshald. On New Year's Eve 1718 he arrived at Norwegian Tydal, with 80 kilometers to the closest Swedish village in Jämtland. When the troops had marched 10 kilometers from Tydalen, a severe blizzard struck from the northwest. The bitter cold killed the pathfinder on the very first day, and the army scatted blindly in the mountains (Sylan mountain range). On the following nights hundreds more perished. Of the over 5,000 men who left Tydalen, only 870 were found alive on arrival at Duved, mostly hardened Finnish veterans.
In 1719 Armfelt was named governor of Viborg county but never took office, as the county was under Russian control and was ceded to Russia after the treaty of Nystad. He was named general of infantry in 1735, and according to the Pernå parish records (cited by Hornborg, 1952, died at Liljendal in Finland October 24, 1736, and was interred at Isnäs on 3 December 1736.
He was married in 1700 to Lovisa Aminoff.
[edit] Source
- Svenskt biografiskt handlexikon, 1906; *"Karolinen Armfelt och kampen om Finland under Stora nordiska kriget", Eirik Hornborg 1952