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For more information on Joseph Count Radetzky, visit Britannica.com.
| Military History Companion: FM Count Josef Radetzky von Radetz |
Radetzky von Radetz, FM Count Josef (1766-1858), perhaps the greatest soldier ever produced by Austria. He came to prominence in the Habsburg army during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars and in the aftermath of the failed Wagram campaign of 1809, he became COS to Count Karl Schwarzenberg when he replaced Archduke Charles as head of the army. In this capacity Radetzky directed the operations of the Austrian army at the battle of Leipzig in 1813 and throughout the subsequent campaign in Germany and western France the following year. Entrusted with the command of the Habsburg Italian army, he suppressed nationalist revolts on several occasions through the 1820s and 1830s. Made a field marshal in 1836, he maintained his army in the highest state of readiness, and conducted the first large-scale peacetime manoeuvres in the the history of the Habsburg army to keep the skills of officers and men honed. This preparation bore fruit during the uprisings of 1848, when empire-wide insurrection threatened to topple the dynasty. Radetzky not only put down the Italian insurrection quickly, he also twice defeated the army of Sardinia-Piedmont, which had invaded Habsburg territory in the hope of unifying Italy under its banner. Radetzky retired from active duty in 1857 at the age of 91, forced out by imperial favourite Count Karl von Grünne, who replaced Radetzky with the much less capable Count Franz von Gyulai, loser of the Italian campaign of 1859. Commemorating his great victories in 1848-9, Austrian composer Johann Strauss ‘the Elder’ wrote the ‘Radetzky March’, probably the single piece of music most identified with old, imperial Austria and its army, and which is played each year as the finale to the Vienna Philharmonic's New Year's Concert.
— Scott W. Lackey
| German Literature Companion: Joseph Radetzky |
Radetzky, Joseph, with full title Feldmarschall Joseph Graf Radetzky von Radetz (Trzebnitz, Bohemia, 1766-1858, Milan), was commissioned in the Austrian army in 1787, served as an instructor in Wels, and was Chief of Staff to Fürst K. P. Schwarzenberg at the battle of Leipzig in 1813 (see Völkerschlacht). He served in various Austrian garrisons, including Ofen, and was general commanding the Austrian forces in Lombardy and Venetia from 1831 onwards. He was a capable administrator and trainer of troops. After revolution broke out in 1848 at Milan and elsewhere, Radetzky put down the insurrection in two pitched battles, at Custozza in 1848 and Novara in 1849 (see Revolutionen 1848-9). J. Strauß (sen., 1804-49) composed a march in his honour (‘Radetzkymarsch’) and Grillparzer a patriotic poem (‘Feldmarschall Radetzky’); the victory march is used by J. Roth as the title for his novel Radetzkymarsch.
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Joseph Radetzky, Graf Radetzky de Radetz |
| Wikipedia: Joseph Radetzky von Radetz |
| Joseph Radetzky von Radetz | |
|---|---|
| November 2, 1766 – January 5, 1858 (aged 91) | |
Josef Graf Radetzky von Radetz |
|
| Place of birth | Třebnice (Trebnitz), Bohemia |
| Allegiance | Habsburg Empire |
| Years of service | 1785 – 1858 |
| Rank | Field Marshal |
Johann Josef Wenzel Graf Radetzky von Radetz (English: Count John Joseph Wenceslaus Radetzky of Radetz, Czech: Jan Josef Václav hrabě Radecký z Radče) (November 2, 1766 – January 5, 1858) was a
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Radetzky was born into a noble family at Třebnice (Trebnitz) in Bohemia (modern-day Czech Republic). Orphaned at an early age, he was educated by his grandfather, and after the count's death, at the Theresa Academy at Vienna. The academy was dissolved during his first year's residence in 1785, and Radetzky became a cadet in the Austrian Army. The following year he became an officer, and in 1787 was promoted to first lieutenant in a cuirassier regiment. He served as a galloper on Count von Lacy's staff in the Turkish War, and in the Austrian Netherlands from 1792 to 1795.
In 1798 he married Countess Francisca von Strassoldo Grafenberg, from Tržič. They would have five sons and three daughters.
In 1795 Radetzky fought on the Rhine. Next year he served with Johann Beaulieu against Napoleon in Italy, but disliked the indecisive "cordon" system of warfare which Count von Lacy had instituted and other Austrian generals imitated. His personal courage was conspicuous. At the Battle of Fleurus (1794) he led a party of cavalry through the French lines to discover the fate of Charleroi, and at Valeggio sul Mincio in 1796, with a few hussars, he rescued Beaulieu from the enemy. Promoted to major, he took part in Dagobert Wurmser's Siege of Mantua campaign, which ended in the fall of that fortress. As lieutenant-colonel and colonel he displayed bravery and skill in the battles of Trebbia and Novi (1799). At the Battle of Marengo, as colonel on the staff of Melas, he was hit by five bullets, after endeavouring on the previous evening to bring about modifications in the plan suggested by the "scientific" Franz Zach. In 1801 Radetzky was created a Knight of the Military Order of Maria Theresa.
In 1805, on the march to Ulm, he received news of his promotion to major-general and his assignment to a command in Italy under the Archduke Charles of Austria. He thus took part in the successful campaign of Caldiero. Peace provided a short leisure, which he used in studying and teaching the art of war. In 1809 he led a brigade in V Corps during the Battle of Eckmuhl.[1] Promoted lieutenant field marshal, he commanded a division in IV Corps at the Battle of Wagram.[2] In 1810 he was created a Commander of the Order of Maria Theresa and awarded the colonelcy of the 5th Radetzky Hussars. From 1809 to 1812, as chief of the general staff, he was active in reorganising the army and its tactical system, but unable to carry out the reforms he desired owing to the opposition of the Treasury, he resigned the position. In 1813 he was Schwarzenberg's chief of staff and had considerable influence on the councils of the Allied sovereigns and generals. Langenau, the quartermaster-general of the Grand Army, found him an indispensable assistant, and he had a considerable share in planning the Leipzig campaign. As a tactician he won praise in the battles of Brienne and Arcis sur Aube. He entered Paris with the allied sovereigns in March 1814, and returned with them to the Congress of Vienna, where he appears to have acted as an intermediary between Metternich and Tsar Alexander I of Russia, when the two were not on speaking terms.
During the succeeding years of peace he disappeared from public view. He resumed his functions as chief of staff, but his ardent ideas for reforming the army came to nothing in the face of the general war-weariness and desire to "let well alone." His zeal added to the number of his enemies, and in 1829, after he had been for twenty years a lieutenant field marshal, it was proposed to place him on the retired list. The emperor, unwilling to go so far as this, promoted him general of cavalry and shelved him by making him governor of a fortress. But very soon afterwards the Restoration settlement of Europe was shaken by fresh upheavals, and Radetzky was brought into the field of war again. He took part under Frimont in the campaign against the Papal States insurgents, and succeeded that general in the chief command of the Austrian army in Italy in 1834.
In 1836 he became a field marshal. He was now seventy, but still displayed the activity of youth in training and disciplining the army he commanded. But here too he was in advance of his time, and the government not only disregarded his suggestions and warnings but also refused the money that would have enabled the finest army it possessed to take the field at a moment's notice. Thus the events of 1848 in Italy, which gave the old field marshal his place in history among the great commanders, found him, in the beginning, not indeed unprepared but seriously handicapped in the struggle with Charles Albert's army and the insurgents in Milan and elsewhere. By falling back to the Quadrilateral and there, checking one opponent after another, he was able to spin out time until reinforcements arrived, and thenceforward up to the final triumph at the Battle of Novara on March 23, 1849, he and his army carried all before them. He also commanded the Austrian troops who reconquered Venice after the year-long siege of the rebellious city in May 1848-August 1849. He became a Knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece in 1848.
His well-disciplined sense of duty to the superior officer had become more intense in the long years of peace, and after keeping his army loyal in the midst of the confusion of 1848, he made no attempt to play the part of Wallenstein or even to assume Wellington's role of family adviser to the nation. While as a patriot he dreamed a little of a united Germany, he remained to the end simply the commander of one of the emperor's armies.
After his triumph in Italy, he was made Viceroy of Lombardy-Venetia - the first and last not of royal Habsburg blood. In spite of his success against Italian patriots, he is not remembered unkindly even in Italy: he was regarded as a fair ruler (for an enemy) and a gentleman who paid his debts. There is also a memorable anecdote of his meeting the man responsible for one of the most significant checks in the 1848 campaign, General Cesare Launier, shaking his hand, and congratulating him on getting "a bunch of kids" (much of Launier's command was made up of volunteer university students) to fight so hard that Radetzky and his men seriously thought they were facing crack professional Sardinian troops. Politically, he worked to reconcile especially the lower classes to the Habsburg monarchy; he could see the Industrial Revolution coming and hoped to use the conflict of classes to isolate the patriotic party, made up mostly of the upper and middle classes, from the rising working class. He was ruthless in punishing rebellious soldiers - Hungarian troopers who had passed to the rebels' side in 1848 were not even shot, but hanged - and violent rebels, but very mild with unarmed opponents: patriot leaders of European renown, such as Verdi, Manzoni and Rosmini, were allowed to live in peace in the kingdom, while Italy's other reactionary governments drove all their liberals into exile. Already in 1849, at the end of the siege of Venice, he had allowed the local patriot leaders to quietly slip away, and avoided public martyrdoms. This was probably the best policy that Austria could possibly adopt in the circumstances, but it was doomed anyway; the events of 1848-49 had dug too deep a chasm between the Italians and the Austrian government, and - as events in 1859 showed - it was only the power of Austrian arms that kept Austria and her client states in Italy. It was part of Radetzky's good fortune that he died one year before his whole work dissolved like ice in an erupting volcano.
He died in harness, though in poor health. Josef Wenzel Graf Radetzky of Radetz died on January 5, 1858 after an accident in Milan. On January 19, 1858, he was buried in Heldenberg in Lower Austria. The Emperor wished that he be buried in the Capuchin crypt (the Imperial Crypt in Vienna). Radetzky bequeathed his earthly remains, and the right to bury him, to Joseph Gottfried Pargfrieder, whom decades earlier had settled his debts. In Heldenberg is an open-air pantheon with warrior statues, the Gedenkstätte Heldenberg (literally translated as the Hero Mountain Memorial.) Radetzky lies buried under a monumental obelisk.
In military history Radetzky's fame rests on one great achievement, but in the history of the Austrian army he is the frank and kindly "Vater Radetzky" whom the soldiers idolized. In the year following his death, another and greater Italian war broke out, and his beloved army disintegrated and was defeated in every encounter.
Regarding personal names: Graf is a title, translated as Count, not a first or middle name. The female form is Gräfin.
These are Radetzky's letters to his daughter Friederike Radetzky von Radetz, Gräfin Wenckheim, published to celebrate the unveiling of the Radetzky monument in Vienna.
(There has been no full-length biography of Radetzky in English).
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