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BERNHARD OF SA%E- See also: WEIMAR, DUKE (1604-1639), a celebrated general in the See also: Thirty Years' War, was the See also: eleventh son of See also: John, duke of Saxe-Weimar
.
He received an unusually
See also: good See also: education, and studied at See also: Jena, but soon went to the See also: court of the Saxon elector to engage in knightly exercises
.
At the outbreak of the Thirty Years' War he took the See also: field on the
See also: Protestant See also: side, and served under See also: Mansfeld at Wiesloch (1622), under the See also: margrave of See also: Baden at Wimpfen (1622), and with his See also: brother See also: William at Stadtlohn (1623)
.
Undismayed by these defeats, he took
See also: part in the See also: campaigns of the See also: king of
See also: Denmark; and when Christian withdrew from the struggle Bernhard went to See also: Holland and was
See also: present at the famous siege of Hertogenbosch (Bois-le-Duc) in 1629
.
When Gustavus See also: Adolphus landed in See also: Germany Bernhard quickly joined him, and for a See also: short See also: time he was colonel of the See also: Swedish See also: life See also: guards
.
After the See also: battle of See also: Breitenfeld he accompanied Gustavus in his See also: march to the Rhine and, between this event and the battle of the Alte Veste,
See also: Bern-hard commanded numerous expeditions in almost every See also: district from the Moselle to See also: Tirol
.
At the Alte Veste he displayed the greatest courage, and at Ltitzen, when Gustavus was killed, Bernhard immediately assumed the command, killed a colonel who refused to See also: lead his men to the See also: charge, and finally by his furious energy won the victory at sundown
.
At first as a sub-See also: ordinate to his brother William, who as a Swedish See also: lieutenant-general succeeded to the command, but later as an See also: independent See also: commander, Bernhard continued to push his forays over See also: southern
M
.
26Germany; and with the Swedish General See also: Horn he made in 1633 a successful invasion into See also: Bavaria, which was defended by the imperialist general Arldinger
.
In this See also: year he acquired the duchy of See also: Wurzburg, installing one of his See also: brothers as Stadthalter, and returning to the See also: wars
.
A stern Protestant, he exacted heavy contributions from the Catholic cities which he took, and his repeated victories caused him to be regarded by See also: German Protestants as the saviour of their See also: religion
.
But in 1634 Bernhard suffered the See also: great defeat of See also: Nordlingen, in which the flower of the Swedish army perished
.
In 1635 he entered the service of See also: France, which had now intervened in the war
.
He was now at the same time general-in-chief of the forces maintained by the See also: Heilbronn union of Protestant princes, and a general officer in the pay of France
.
This See also: double position was very difficult; in the following campaigns, ably and resolutely conducted as they were, Bernhard sometimes pursued a purely French policy, whilst at other times he used the French mercenaries to forward the cause of the princes
.
From a military point of view his most notable achievements were on the See also: common ground of the upper Rhine, in the See also: Breisgau
.
In his great See also: campaign of 1638 he won the battles of Rheinfelden, Wittenweiher and See also: Thann, and captured successively Rheinfelden, See also: Freiburg and See also: Breisach, the last reputed one of the strongest fortresses in See also: Europe
.
Bernhard had in the first instance received definite assurances from France that he should be given See also: Alsace and See also: Hagenau, Wurzburg having been lost in the debdde of 1634; he now hoped to make Breisach the capital of his new duchy
.
But his See also: health was now broken
.
He died on the 8/18th of See also: July 1639 at the beginning of the campaign, and the governor of Breisach was bribed to transfer the fortress to France
.
The duke was buried at Breisach, his remains being subsequently removed to Weimar
.
See J
.
A
.
C
.
Hellfeld, Geschichte Bernhards See also: des Grossen, Herzogs v
.
Saxe-Weimar (Jena, 1747); B
.
See also: Rose, Herzog Bernhard d
.
See also: Grosse von Saxe-Weimar (Weimar, 1828-1829) ; See also: Droysen, Bernhard v
.
Weimar (See also: Leipzig, 1885)
.
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