Louis William, Margrave of Baden-Baden
Louis William | |
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Margrave of Baden-Baden | |
Born | Hôtel de Soissons, Paris, France | 8 April 1655
Died | 4 January 1707 Schloss Rastatt, Rastatt, Baden, Holy Roman Empire | (aged 51)
Burial | Stiftskirche, Baden-Baden |
Spouse | Sibylle of Saxe-Lauenburg |
Issue Detail | Louis George, Margrave of Baden-Baden Auguste, Duchess of Orléans Augustus George, Margrave of Baden-Baden |
House | House of Zähringen |
Father | Ferdinand Maximilian of Baden-Baden |
Mother | Louise of Savoy |
Religion | Roman Catholic |
Military career | |
Conflicts |
Louis William, Margrave of Baden-Baden (German: Ludwig Wilhelm von Baden-Baden; 8 April 1655 – 4 January 1707) was the ruling Margrave of Baden-Baden in Germany and chief commander of the Imperial army. He was also known as Türkenlouis ("Turkish Louis") for his numerous victories against Ottoman forces. After his death in 1707, his wife, Sibylle of Saxe-Lauenburg, acted as regent of Baden-Baden during the minority of his eldest son, who succeeded him as Margrave of Baden-Baden.
Family
[edit]Born in Paris, Louis was a son of Hereditary Prince Ferdinand Maximilian of Baden-Baden and his French wife, Louise of Savoy. His godfather was Louis XIV of France. His father was the elder son of Wilhelm, Margrave of Baden-Baden, whom he pre-deceased, leaving Louis to succeed as reigning Margrave of Baden-Baden and head of the Catholic branch of the House of Zähringen.
His mother's brother was the Count of Soissons, father of the renowned general Prince Eugene of Savoy, whose military career would start in the shadow of Louis, Eugene being Louis's junior; the cousins would serve together the Holy Roman Emperor against the French in several campaigns. His parents being estranged, he was kidnapped as a child from his mother's home in Paris and re-patriated to Germany, where he was raised by his paternal step-grandmother.
Military career
[edit]Louis William served first under Raimondo Montecuccoli against Turenne, and then under the duke of Lorraine. At the siege of Vienna by the Turks, in 1683, he threw his forces into the city, and by a brilliant sally effected a junction with Jan III Sobieski and the Duke of Lorraine, who had come to its relief. In 1689 he defeated the Turks at Niš.[1]
Louis came to be called the Türkenlouis or shield of the empire. The Turks called him the red king, because his red uniform jacket made him very visible on the battlefield. He was known as a defender of Europe against the Turks, as was Eugene of Savoy.[citation needed] As a military commander in the service of the Holy Roman Empire, in 1689 he was made chief commander of the Imperial army in Hungary, where he scored a resounding victory against the Ottomans at Slankamen in 1691. Louis saw Osijek as a location of exceptional strategic importance in the war against the Ottomans.[2] He urged the repair of the city walls, and proposed construction of a new fort called Tvrđa, according to Vauban's principles of military engineering.[2][3] Shortly afterward he was sent to head the army of the Rhine in the War of the Grand Alliance.[citation needed]
In 1701, he built the Lines of Stollhofen, a line of defensive earthworks designed to protect northern Baden from French attack. He later led the imperial army in the War of the Spanish Succession where he successfully concluded the Siege of Landau in September 1702, but soon had to withdraw across the Rhine and was defeated by the French under the Duke of Villars at Friedlingen. In 1704 however, he participated in the successful German campaign of Marlborough and Eugene of Savoy. He distinguished himself in the Battle of Schellenberg and besieged and conquered Ingolstadt and Landau, thus drawing Bavarian troops away from the decisive Battle of Blenheim.[citation needed]
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At the Battle of Schellenberg in July 1704, Ludwig Wilhelm had suffered a wound that did not fully heal. He continued to command on the Upper Rhine without treating the injury and died as a result of this wound on January 4, 1707 at the age of 51 in his unfinished Schloss Rastatt. In his painting "The Last Hours of Louis William" the German-Greek painter Aris Kalaizis immortalized the end of the life of the commander. His wife took up a regency for their son, Louis George. The latter took over the government from his mother in October 1727.[citation needed]
Marriage and children
[edit]The Emperor gave him a young heiress to wed, Sibylle of Saxe-Lauenburg. They had the following children:[citation needed]
- Leopold William of Baden-Baden (1694 – 1695) Hereditary Prince of Baden-Baden, died in infancy;
- Charlotte of Baden-Baden (1696 – 1700) died in infancy;
- Charles Joseph of Baden-Baden (1697 – 1703) Hereditary Prince of Baden-Baden, died young;
- Wilhelmine of Baden-Baden (1700 in Schlackenwerth – 1702 in Schlackenwerth), died in infancy;
- Luise of Baden-Baden (1701 in Nürnberg – 1707), died young;
- Louis George Simpert of Baden-Baden, (7 June 1702 – 22 October 1761) Margrave of Baden-Baden, married Maria Anna of Schwarzenberg, had children; married again to Maria Anna of Bavaria, no children;
- Wilhelm Georg Simpert of Baden-Baden (1703 – 1709), died young;
- Auguste of Baden-Baden, (10 November 1704 in Aschaffenburg – 8 August 1726 in Paris) married Louis d'Orléans, Duke of Orléans and had children.
- Augustus George Simpert of Baden-Baden, (14 January 1706 – 21 October 1771) Margrave of Baden-Baden, married Marie Victoire d'Arenberg, no male children.
Seventeen years after the margrave's death, the only one of his daughters to survive childhood, Princess Auguste, married Louis d'Orléans, son of the infamous French Regent and, at the time of the wedding, first in the line of succession to the throne of France.[citation needed]
His descendant through this marriage became King Louis Philippe of the French in 1830.[4]
After the death of Louis, his widow built Schloss Favorite castle as a summer residence in memory of her husband. He was buried at the Stiftskirche in Baden-Baden.[5]
Ancestry
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References
[edit]- ^ Ripley, George; Dana, Charles A., eds. (1879). The American Cyclopædia. .
- ^ a b Mažuran, Ive (14 January 2010). "Tvrđa: ishodište Osijeka". Vijenac (in Croatian). 414. Zagreb: Matica hrvatska. ISSN 1330-2787. Retrieved 18 September 2010.
- ^ Krajnik, Damir; Obad Šćitaroci, Mladen (December 2008). "Preobrazba bastionskih utvrđenja grada Osijeka" [Conversion of bastion fortifications in Osijek] (PDF). Prostor (in Croatian). 16 (2). University of Zagreb, Faculty of Architecture: 168–179. ISSN 1330-0652.
- ^ Montjouvent, Philippe de (1998). Le comte de Paris et sa Descendance (in French). Charenton: Éditions du Chaney. p. 471. ISBN 2-913211-00-3.
- ^ "Burial of the Margraves of Baden-Baden". royaltyguide.nl. Archived from the original on 2010-05-30. Retrieved 2010-07-02.
External links
[edit]- Francis Lieber; E. Wigglesworth; Thomas Gamaliel Bradford; Henry Vethake, eds. (1851). "Baden-Baden (Louis William I) margrave of". Encyclopædia Americana. pp. 519–520.
- The American Cyclopædia. 1879. .
- New International Encyclopedia. 1905. .
- 1655 births
- 1707 deaths
- House of Zähringen
- Nobility from Paris
- Roman Catholic monarchs
- Candidates for the Polish elective throne
- Hereditary princes of Baden-Baden
- Margraves of Baden-Baden
- German army commanders in the War of the Spanish Succession
- German military personnel of the Nine Years' War
- Knights of the Golden Fleece
- People of the Great Turkish War
- Field marshals of the Holy Roman Empire
- Soldiers of the Imperial Circles
- Burials at Stiftskirche, Baden-Baden
- Military personnel of the Franco-Dutch War