Guido Starhemberg
Guido Starhemberg | |
---|---|
Born | Graz | 11 November 1657
Died | 7 March 1737 Vienna | (aged 79)
Allegiance | Austria |
Rank | Commander-in-chief |
Battles / wars | Great Turkish War, War of the Spanish Succession |
Relations | Ernst Rüdiger von Starhemberg |
Other work | Governor of Slavonia |
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Guido Wald Rüdiger, count of Starhemberg (11 November 1657 – 7 March 1737) was an Austrian military officer (commander-in-chief) and by birth member of the House of Starhemberg.
He was a cousin of Ernst Rüdiger von Starhemberg (1638–1701), the famous commander of Vienna during the Turkish siege of 1683, and acted as his aide-de-camp during that siege. Guido followed his cousin, and later Prince Eugene of Savoy, in battles against the Turks.
In the War of the Spanish Succession, Starhemberg fought in Italy and Spain. Between 1706 and 1708 he was the commander-in-chief of the imperial army in Hungary, leading military operations against the insurgents of Francis II Rákóczi. In 1708, he was appointed Supreme Commander of the Austrians in Spain.
Together with James Stanhope he succeeded in conquering Madrid in 1710, after previously gaining victories at Almenar and Saragossa. In December, however, he was forced to leave the city by the lack of support by its inhabitants for the Habsburg pretender. After the subsequent defeats at the Battle of Brihuega and the Battle of Villaviciosa (1710), he had to pull back to Catalonia, where he was made viceroy when Archduke Charles returned to Austria.
After the Peace of Utrecht (1713), archduke Charles, now Emperor Charles VI, ordered him to abandon Catalonia. He pulled back with his troops to Genoa on English ships.
When he died in 1737, he was Governor of Slavonia.
References
- ^ Johann Christoph Allmayer-Beck: Das Heeresgeschichtliche Museum Wien. Das Museum und seine Repräsentationsräume. Kiesel Verlag, Salzburg 1981, ISBN 3-7023-0113-5, S. 33
- 1657 births
- 1742 deaths
- 17th-century Austrian people
- 18th-century Austrian people
- Viceroys of Catalonia
- Austrian army commanders in the War of the Spanish Succession
- Field marshals of Austria
- Military personnel from Graz
- Starhemberg family
- People of the Great Turkish War
- Generals of the Holy Roman Empire
- Rákóczi's War of Independence