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KARL GOTTLIEB See also: QUINTUS ICILIUS, was See also: born at See also: Magdeburg in 1724, of a See also: family of French refugees
.
He was educated for the See also: Church, and at
See also: Leiden actually preached a See also: sermon as a See also: candidate for the pastorate
.
But he abandoned See also: theology for more secular studies, especially that of See also: ancient See also: history, in which his learning attracted the See also: notice of the See also: prince of Orange, who promised him a vacant professorship at See also: Utrecht
.
On his arrival, however, he found that another See also: scholar had been elected by the See also: local authorities, and he thereupon sought and obtained a commission in the Dutch army
.
He made the See also: campaigns of 1747—48 in the Low Countries
.
In the See also: peace which followed, his combined military and classical training turned his thoughts in the direction of ancient military history
.
His notes on this subject See also: grew into a See also: treatise, and in 1754 he went over to See also: England in See also: order to consult various See also: libraries
.
In 1757 his Memoires militaires sur See also: les Grecs et les Romaine appeared at the Hague, and when Carlyle wrote his See also: Frederick the See also: Great it had reached its fifth edition
.
Coming back, with See also: English introductions, to the Continent, he sought service with See also: Ferdinand of
See also: Brunswick, who sent him on to Frederick the Great, whom he joined in See also: January 1758 at See also: Breslau
.
The See also: king was very favourably impressed with
See also: Guichard and his See also: works, and he remained for nearly 18 months in the royal suite
.
His Prussian official name of Quintus Icilius was the outcome of a friendly dispute with the king (see Nikolai, Anekdoten, vi
.
129-145; Carlyle, Frederick the Great, viii
.
113-114) . Frederick in discussing the See also: battle of Pharsalia spoke of a See also: centurion Quintus See also: Caecilius as Q
.
Icilius
.
Guichard ventured to correct him, whereupon the king said, " You shall be Quintus Icilius," and as Major Quintus Icilius he was forthwith gazetted to the command of a See also: free See also: battalion
.
This corps he commanded throughout the later stages of the SevenYears' War, his battalion, as See also: time went on, becoming a regiment of three battalions, and Quintus himself recruited seven more battalions of the same kind of troops
.
His command was almost always with the king's own army in these campaigns, but for a See also: short time it fought in the western theatre under Prince See also: Henry
.
When not on the
See also: march he was always at the royal headquarters, and it was he who brought about the famous interview between the king and Gellert (see Carlyle, Frederick the Great, ix. log; Gellert, Briefwechsel mit Demoiselle
See also: Lucius, ed
.
See also: Ebert, See also: Leipzig, 1823, pp
.
629-631) on the subject of See also: national See also: German literature
.
On 22nd January 176r Quintus was ordered to See also: sack the castleof See also: Hubertusburg (a task which Major-General Saldern had point-See also: blank refused to undertake, from motives of See also: conscience), and carried out his task, it is said, to his own very considerable profit
.
The place cannot have been seriously injured, as it was soon afterwards the meeting-place of the diplomatists whose See also: work ended in the peace of Hubertusburg, but the king never ceased to banter Quintus on his supposed depredations
.
The very See also: day of Frederick's triumphant return from the war saw the disbanding of most of the free battalions, including that of Quintus, but the major to the end of his See also: life remained with the king
.
He was made See also: lieutenant-colonel in 1765, and in 1773, in recognition of his work Memoires critiques et historiques sur plusieurs points d'antiquites militaires, dealing mainly with Caesar's campaigns in See also: Spain (Berlin, 1773),was promoted colonel
.
He died at See also: Potsdam, 1775
.
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