Franz Petrasch
Franz, Freiherr von Petrasch (1746 – 17 January 1820) was an Austrian general officer serving in the Austrian Empire during the French Revolutionary Wars. He was the third generation of a bourgeois family in which two brothers, seeking adventure, joined the Habsburg military and rose through the ranks. The family was elevated to the Moravia nobility in the early eighteenth century, and to the Hungarian nobility in 1722.
Franz Petrasch served throughout the Habsburg's wars with France, in particular the Rhine Campaign of 1796 and the Swiss campaigns of 1799.
Family von Petrasch
The Petrasch family was established in Moravia, near Brno, a wealth family of bourgeois origins. Two brothers, Ernst Anton and Maximilian, emerged in the late seventeenth century. They joined the military and in 1695 fought under Count Friedrich Veterani in the seven cavalry regiments of 6,500 men and 800 infantry at Lugos against Sultan Mustafa II. Ernst Anton later served in the War of the Spanish SuccessionHe had a son, Ernst Gottlieb.[1] Maximilian was badly injured at Lugos; this wound never healed and in later life made it difficult, or impossible, for him to mount a horse. Eventually he retired to his estate near Breslau, where he died at the age of 56 after several weeks of suffering. He had married Maria Anna, Countess of Becker, and had a son, Joseph von Petrasch, the famous Enlightenment scholar and founder of The Society of Anonymous Scholars in the Austrian Lands, of which he was president until 1758. Joseph and Anne von Hettersdorf married eventually they had three daughters.[2][3]
Ernst Gottlieb, son of Ernst Anton, had been born in Teschen, Austrian Silesia, in 1708. Like his cousin Joseph, he also enjoyed a good education. The educated and informed baron soon gained the favor of the Empress Maria Theresa. Petrasch organized the illuminations and fireworks on the occasion of the second marriage of the Archduke with Josepha of Bavaria in the Schwarzenberg Garden. As an imperial favorite, he was given the castle Holitsch, and made master of Prerau. The Empress extended his father's barony to an Hungarian barony 30 January 1767. Earnst Gottlieb married Elizabeth von Fritz (or Friss), a favorite maid of the Empress Maria Theresa, and they had a son, Franz, born in 1746 at the family estate in Prerau, and a daughter, who married the son of Claude-Hyacinthe-Henri Foucher, Baron de Bretton (d. 24 March 1779).[4] Ernst Gottlieb died in Vienna on 30 June 1792.[5][6][7]
Military career
Little is evident of Franz Petrasch's early life other than that he was the son of Ernst Anton, a favored courtier, and was born on his father's estates in Prerau, Moravia. He joined the Habsburg military as a twenty-year-old cadet (in 1766). From 1785 to 1788 he was lieutenant colonel commanding a grenadier battalion, before being made colonel then and commander of Infantry Regiment No. 37 "Baron de Vins" at the beginning of 1792.
By 1794 he had been elevated to major general commanding an infantry brigade in the Austrian Netherlands (present-day Belgium). He served in Beaulieu & Werneck’s columns at the second action at Charleroi 16 June.
Service on the Rhine
In 1796 he was promoted lieutenant field marshal and was dispatched to command a brigade in Germany under the Archduke Charles. In September he commanded a 5,564 man mobile corps detached between the Neckar and the Rhine, securing the territories between the Austrian garrisons of Mannheim and Philippsburg). There, he operated behind French forces under Moreau. On 18 September he raided Kehl, cutting off Moreau, but his troops failed to burn the bridge and was driven out again.[8] Petrasch then occupied Stuttgart. His advance posts were driven back by Desaix at Villingen on 9 October, then suffered a defeat at the Battle of Ettenheim. Petrasch then re-joined Charles and Latour to defeat Moreau at the Battle of Emmendingen, where he assumed command of Wartensleben's column after the old general was wounded.[9]
In 1799 Petrasch commanded a division under Archduke Charles and fought at Stockach (25 March), on the right wing, near Liptingen. He was then under lieutenant field marshal Friedrich Freiherr von Hotze in the clashes of Frauenfeld (25 May) and Winterthur (27 May). In the First Battle of Zürich (4 June), he was on the left wing, at Wallisellen. When Hotze was wounded in the assault on Mount Zürich, he handed over command to Petrasch.[10]
In August 1799, when Charles took most of the army north into Swabia, Petrasch remained in Switzerland, as second-in-command of Hotze's Austrian corps (11 battalions, 10 squadrons, total of 10,000 men), cooperating with the Russians under lieutenant general Alexander Korsakov. When Hotze was killed while on a reconnaissance ride on 25 September, prior to the Second Battle of Zürich, Petrasch took over command and withdrew to Feldkirch, losing 5,000 men, 25 guns and 4 colors.[11] In 1800, he commanded the garrison at the Ulm fortress.
1799 Campaign
At the beginning of hostilities Petrasch commanded a Division of Wallis’ 1st Corps under Charles on the Danube, and served at the Battle of Stockach 25 March. During the invasion of Switzerland in May he was detached to link with the Vorarlberg Corps of Hotze, his command becoming the reserve. He commanded the 4th Column in Hotze’s left wing at the First Battle of Zurich (Zurich Berg) 4 June, and temporarily replaced Hotze when that officer was wounded. During the Second Battle of Zurich after the death of Hotze on the Linth 25 September he replaced him as commander of the Vorarlberg Corps, then, learning of the defeat of Korsakov's Russians, retreated precipitously beyond the Rhine, effectively abandoning the Corps of Alexander Suvorov to suffer the full attentions of the French.[12] Transferred to command the garrison of Ulm on the Danube in December, he was left behind at Ulm with 10,000 men when Kray retreated after the Battle of Höchstadt 19 June."
Promotions
- October 1793 major general[13]
- 4 March 1796, provisionally, lieutenant field marshal, 12 Feb 1796.[13]
Petrasch died 17 January 1820 in Vienna.
References
- ↑ (in German) D'Elvert, Christian, Petrasch, die Freiherren von, in: Biographisches Lexikon des Kaisertums Österreich 22 (1887), p. 103.
- ↑ (in German) Lichard, Daniel,Petrasch, Maximilian Freiherr von in: Biographisches Lexikon des Kaisertums Österreich, vol, 22, p. 105.
- ↑ (in German) Schlossar, Anton, "Petrasch, Josef Freiherr von", in: Biographisches Lexikon des Kaisertums Österreich 25 (1887), pp. 516–517.
- ↑ Brentano, Kaiserlich, p. 15.
- ↑ (in German) Vehse, Eduard, "Petrasch, Earnst Anton", in: General German Biography 25 (1887), p. 101.
- ↑ (in German) Annalen der k.k. Österreichischen Armee ... welcher mehrere interessante Gegenstände enthält: Die Cavallerie, Artillerie, und verschiedene andere Branchen, Cath. Gräffer u. Comp, 1812, p. 581.
- ↑ (in German) Gregor Wolný, Conrad Schenkl, Die Markgrafschaft Mähren: topographisch, statistisch und ..., Volume 1, In Commission der L. W. Seidel'schen.
- ↑ (in German) Hans Eggert Willibald von der Lühe, Militär-Conversations-Lexikon:Kehl (Uberfall 1796) & (Belagerung des Bruckenkopfes von 1796–1797), Volume 4. C. Brüggemann, 1834.
- ↑ J. Rickard, Battle of Emmendingen, History of war.org. 17 February 2009. Accessed 18 November 2014.
- ↑ Digby Smith, Napoleonic Wars Data Book, London, Greenhill, 1998, pp. 156–157.
- ↑ Smith, pp. 168–169.
- ↑ see Longworth p.285 "All assumed that Suvorov’s army could not survive, none tried to make any diversion for him. They did not stop to wonder why Molitor and Gazan… had moved most of their troops away from them. If they had paused to consider, they might have realized that the French had turned to meet Suvorov. It was a grotesque display of timidity and disloyalty”
- 1 2 Antonio Schmidt-Brentano, Kaiserlich und K.K. Generale 1618-1815), Österreichesches Staatsarchiv, A Schmidt-Brentano, 20006, p. 79.
Further reading
- Longworth, Philip. (1965), The Art of Victory. The Life and Achievements of Field Marshal Suvorov (1729-1800) (first ed.), London
- Phipps, Ramsay Weston. (1926), The Armies of the First French Republic and the Rise of the Marshals of Napoleon I (in V volumes), V (first ed.), London