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Gottfried Heinrich Graf zu Pappenheim

 
Military History Companion: Graf Gottfried Heinrich von Pappenheim

Pappenheim, Graf Gottfried Heinrich von (1594-1632). A Catholic convert, Pappenheim was perhaps the most famous mercenary cavalry leader of the Thirty Years War. He had learnt his trade with the Poles, and from them he borrowed their favoured tactic of the charge with cold steel as opposed to the convoluted cavalry caracole tactics then in favour in western Europe.

Pappenheim was a truculent subordinate whose appetite for plunder made him difficult to control. However, in 1623 he gained his own cuirassier regiment, whose black armour and dashing commander soon gained them a fearsome reputation. He went on to play a leading part in the sack of Magdeburg.

At Breitenfeld, Pappenheim came up against the Swedish horse for the first time and found them tough and disciplined opponents, while skirmishing infantry deployed in support of the cavalry shot his troopers out of the saddle. He covered the retreat with skill and in 1632 he became an imperial general under Wallenstein.

At Lützen, Pappenheim found himself detached from the main army, and urgently summoned to Wallenstein's assistance. Riding pell-mell into the thick of the action, his men began to force the Swedes back, but Pappenheim was hit by a cannon ball at the height of the fighting and carried off to the rear. His cuirassiers retired, much dispirited by his death, and consoled only by the fact that Gustavus Adolphus had also been killed at virtually the same moment.

— Toby McLeod

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German Literature Companion: Gottfried Heinrich Pappenheim
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Pappenheim, Gottfried Heinrich, Graf zu (Pappenheim/Altmühl, 1594-1632, Leipzig), of an ancient noble family formerly occupying the hereditary marshalcy (Reichserbmarschallamt), was a Roman Catholic convert who served King Sigismund of Poland before he became, under the Catholic League (see Katholische Liga), a participant in the Thirty Years War (see Dreissigjähriger Krieg and Weissen Berge, Schlacht am). In the service of the Emperor Ferdinand II he commanded a regiment of cuirassiers (Pappenheimer Kürassiere), fighting in Lombardy and supporting Tilly in the siege of Magdeburg (1631). Impatient with the slow pace of this ageing general, he provoked the battle of Breitenfeld which gave the Swedish King Gustavus Adolphus his first decisive victory over the imperial army. At the battle of Lützen he arrived in time to avert the worst consequences of Wallenstein's defeat, before being mortally wounded.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Gottfried Heinrich Graf zu Pappenheim
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Pappenheim, Gottfried Heinrich, Graf zu (gôt'frēt hīn'rĭkh gräf tsū pä'pənhīm), 1594-1632, German military leader, imperial field marshal in the Thirty Years War. A convert to Roman Catholicism, he became a counselor in the service of the Holy Roman emperor, but soon abandoned this position for a military career. In the early stages of the Thirty Years War he fought with Duke Maximilian I of Bavaria and the Catholic League, and he distinguished himself against the Protestant Union under Frederick the Winter King at the battle of White Mt. (1620). He entered the imperial service in 1623. On May 20, 1631, he led the assault against the Protestant city of Magdeburg, which was sacked and virtually destroyed by his troops. Pappenheim was defeated (September) with Baron von Tilly by the Swedish king, Gustavus Adolphus (Gustavus II), at Breitenfeld, but his cavalry was later effective in raids on small bands of Swedish troops. Fighting under the imperial commander Albrecht von Wallenstein, he was mortally wounded at Lutzen.
Wikipedia: Gottfried Heinrich Graf zu Pappenheim
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Gottfried Heinrich Graf zu Pappenheim
May 29, 1594November 17, 1632
Gottfried Heinrich von Pappenheim.jpg
Gottfried Heinrich Graf zu Pappenheim
Place of birth Pappenheim on the Altmühl, Bavaria
Place of death Leipzig, Saxony
Allegiance  Holy Roman Empire
Years of service - November 16, 1632
Battles/wars Thirty Years' War
Letter of Wallenstein, asking for help
Cuirassiers of Gottfried Heinrich Graf zu Pappenheim
Hanging of Upper Austria insurgent peasants suppressed by Pappenheim.
The Bauernhügel monument in Pinsdorf, Upper Austria, commemorates the peasant insurgents suppressed by Papenheim. It appears on the village's coat of arms

Gottfried Heinrich Graf zu Pappenheim (May 29, 1594November 17, 1632) was field marshal of the Holy Roman Emperor in the Thirty Years' War.

Contents

Biography

Pappenheim was born at the little town of Pappenheim on the Altmühl, in Bavaria, the seat of a free lordship of the empire, from which the ancient family to which he belonged derived its name.

He was educated at Altdorf and at Tübingen, and subsequently travelled in southern and central Europe, mastering the various languages, and seeking knightly adventures. His stay in these countries led him eventually to adopt the Roman Catholic faith (1614), to which he devoted the rest of his life. At the outbreak of the great war he abandoned the legal and diplomatic career on which he had embarked, and in his zeal for the faith took service in Poland and afterwards under the Catholic League.

He soon became a lieutenant-colonel, and displayed brilliant courage at the battle of the White Mountain near Prague (November 8, 1620), where he was left for dead on the field. In the following year he fought against Mansfeld in western Germany, and in 1622 became colonel of a regiment of cuirassiers. In 1623, as an ardent friend of Spain, the ally of his sovereign and the champion of his faith, he raised troops for the Italian war and served with the Spaniards in Lombardy and the Grisons. It was his long and heroic defence of the post of Riva on the Lake of Garda which first brought him conspicuously to the front.

In 1626 Maximilian I of Bavaria, the head of the League, recalled him to Germany and entrusted him with the suppression of a dangerous peasant rebellion which had broken out in Upper Austria [1]. Pappenheim swiftly carried out his task, encountering a most desperate resistance, but always successful; and in a few weeks he had crushed the rebellion with ruthless severity (actions of Efferdingen, Gmünden, Vöcklabruck and Wolfsegg, 15-30 November 1626).

After this he served with Tilly against Christian IV of Denmark, and besieged and took Wolfenbüttel. His hope of obtaining the sovereignty and possessions of the evicted prince of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel was, after a long intrigue, definitely disappointed.

In 1628 he was made a count of the empire. The siege and storm of Magdeburg followed, and Pappenheim, like Tilly, has been accused of the most savage cruelty in this transaction. But it is known that, disappointed of Wolfenbüttel, Pappenheim desired the profitable sovereignty of Magdeburg, and it can hardly be maintained that he deliberately destroyed a prospective source of wealth.

From the military point of view Pappenheim's conduct was excellent; his measures were skillful, and his personal valour, as always, conspicuous. So much could not be said of his tactics at the battle of Breitenfeld, the loss of which was not a little due to the impetuous cavalry general, who was never so happy as when leading a great charge of horse. The retreat of the imperialists from the lost field he covered, however, with care and skill, and subsequently he won great glory by his operations on the lower Rhine and the Weser in rear of the victorious army of Gustavus Adolphus. Much-needed reinforcements for the king of Sweden were constantly detained by Pappenheim's small and newly-raised force in the north-west.

His operations were far-ranging and his restless activity dominated the country from Stade to Kassel, and from Hildesheim to Maastricht. Being now a field marshal in the imperial service, he was recalled to join Wallenstein, and assisted the generalissimo in Saxony against the Swedes; but, was again despatched towards Cologne and the lower Rhine. In his absence a great battle became imminent, and Pappenheim was hurriedly recalled. He appeared with his horsemen in the midst of the battle of Lützen (November 16, 1632). His furious attack was for the moment successful. As Rupert at Marston Moor sought Cromwell as his worthiest opponent, so now Pappenheim sought Gustavus. At about the same time as the king was killed, Pappenheim received a mortal wound in another part of the field. He died later the same day or early the next morning en route to Leipzig, where his body was embalmed at the Pleissenburg fortress.

Legacy

His name forms the key part of the Czech, Flemish, Dutch, Scandinavian, and German colloquialism; "I know my fellow Pappenheims" ("ich kenne meine Pappenheimer"). It is used to imply tongue-in-cheek that someone has, is or will be acting in a way that is completely expected. The sentence originally held a positive connotation and referred to the determination of Pappenheim's horsemen. Friedrich Schiller used the modified sentence "Daran erkenn' ich meine Pappenheimer" in his "Wallenstein" trilogy.

The form of rapier called the pappenheimer, is named after him according to "Webster's Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language: Deluxe Edition."

Notes

Regarding personal names: Graf is a title, translated as Count, not a first or middle name. The female form is Gräfin.

References


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Military History Companion. The Oxford Companion to Military History. Copyright © 2001, 2004 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
German Literature Companion. The Oxford Companion to German Literature. Copyright © 1976, 1986, 1997, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Gottfried Heinrich Graf zu Pappenheim" Read more