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FREIHERR VON KRAPPITZ COUNT VON CHRISTIAN See also: born on the rlth of See also: June 1752, at Peucke near Ols
.
He belonged to the Silesian (See also: Protestant) branch of the See also: ancient See also: family of Haugwitz, of which the Catholic branch is established in Moravia
.
He studied See also: law, spent some See also: time in See also: Italy, returned to See also: settle on his estates in See also: Silesia, and in 1991 was elected by the Silesian estates general director of the province
.
At the urgent instance of See also: King
See also: Frederick See also: William II. he entered the Prussian service, became ambassador at Vienna in 1792 and at the end of the same
See also: year a member of the See also: cabinet at Berlin
.
Haugwitz, who had attended the See also: young emperor See also: Francis II. at his See also: coronation and been See also: present at the conferences held at See also: Mainz to consider the attitude of the See also: German See also: powers towards the Revolution, was opposed to the exaggerated attitude of the French emigres and to any interference in the See also: internal affairs of See also: France
.
After the war broke out, however, the defiant temper of the Committee of Public Safety made an honourable See also: peace impossible, while the strained relations between See also: Austria and Prussia on the question of territorial " compensations " crippled the power of the See also: Allies to carry the war to a successful conclusion
.
It was in these circumstances that Haugwitz entered on the negotiations that resulted in the subsidy treaty between See also: Great Britain and Prussia, and Great Britain and See also: Holland, signed at the Hague on the 19th of
See also: April 1794
.
Haugwitz, however, was not the See also: man to See also: direct a strong and aggressive policy; the failure of Prussia to make any effective use of the See also: money supplied broke the See also: patience of Pitt, and in See also: October the denunciation by Great Britain of the Hague treaty broke the last tie that bound Prussia to the Coalition
.
The See also: separate treaty with France, signed at See also: Basel on the 5th of April 1795, was mainly due to the influence of Haugwitz
.
His See also: object was now to save the provinces on the See also: left See also: bank of the Rhine from being lost to the See also: Empire
.
No guarantee of their maintenance had been inserted in the Basel treaty ; but Haugwitz and the king hoped to preserve them by establishing the armed See also: neutrality of See also: North See also: Germany and securing its recognition by the French Republic
.
This policy was rendered futile by the victories of See also: Napoleon See also: Bonaparte and the virtual See also: conquest of See also: South Germany by the French
.
Haugwitz, who had continued to enjoy the confidence of the new king, Frederick William III., recognized this fact, and urged his master to join the new Coalition'in 1798 . But the king clung blindly to the illusion of neutrality, and Haugwitz allowed himself to be made the instrument of a policy of which he increasingly disapproved . It was not till 1803, when the king refused his urgent advice to demand the evacuation ofSee also: Hanover by the French, that he tendered his resignation
.
In See also: August 1804 he was definitely replaced by Hardenberg, and retired to his estates
.
In his retirement Haugwitz was still consulted, and he used all his influence against Hardenberg's policy of a rapprochement with France
.
His representations had little See also: weight, however, until Napoleon's high-handed See also: action in violating Prussian territory by marching troops through See also: Ansbach, roused the anger of the king
.
Haugwitz was now once more appointed See also: foreign See also: minister, as Hardenberg's colleague, and it was he who was charged to carry to Napoleon the Prussian See also: ultimatum which was the outcome of the visit of the See also: tsar See also: Alexander I. to Berlin in
See also: November
.
But in this crisis his courage failed him; his nature was one that ever let " I dare not wait upon I will "; he delayed his journey pending some turn in events and to give time for-the mobilization of the duke of See also: Brunswick's army; he was frightened by reports of separate negotiations between Austria and Napoleon, not realizing that a bold declaration by Prussia would nip them in the bud
.
Napoleon, when at last they met, read him like a See also: book and humoured his See also: diplomatic weakness until the whole issue was decided at See also: Austerlitz
.
On the 15th of See also: December, instead of delivering an ultimatum, Haugwitz signed at Schonbrunn the treaty which gave Hanover to Prussia in return for Ansbach, See also: Cleves and Neuchatel
.
The humiliation of Prussia and her minister was, however,
not yet See also: complete
.
In See also: February 1806 Haugwitz went to See also: Paris to ratify the treaty of Schonbrunn and to attempt to secure some modifications in favour of Prussia
.
He was received with a See also: storm of abuse by Napoleon, who insisted on tearing up the treaty and See also: drawing up a fresh one, which doubled the amount of territory to be ceded by Prussia and forced her to a breach with Great Britain by binding her to close the Hanoverian ports to See also: British commerce
.
The treaty, signed on the 1sth of February, left Prussia wholly isolated in See also: Europe
.
What followed belongs to the See also: history of Europe rather than to the biography of Haugwitz
.
He remained, indeed, at the See also: head of the Prussian See also: ministry of foreign affairs, but the course of Prussian policy it was beyond his power to control
.
The Prussian ultimatum to Napoleon was forced upon him by overwhelming circumstances, and with the See also: battle of See also: Jena, on the 14th of October, his See also: political career came to an end
.
He accompanied the See also: flight of the king into See also: East Prussia, there took leave of him and retired to his Silesian estates
.
In 1311 he was appointed Curator of the university of See also: Breslau; in 1820, owing to failing See also: health, he went to live in Italy, where he remained till his See also: death at Venice in 1831
.
Haugwitz was a man of great intellectual gifts, of dignified presence and a charming address which endeared him to his sovereigns and his colleagues; but as a statesman he failed, not through want of perspicacity, but through lack of will power and a fatal habit of procrastination
.
During his retirement in Italy he wrote See also: memoirs in See also: justification of his policy, a fragment of which dealing with the See also: episode of the treaty of Schonbrunn was published at Jena in 1837
.
See J. von Minutoli, Der Graf von Haugwitz and See also: Job von Witzleben (Berlin, 1844) ; L. von See also: Ranke, Hardenberg is. d
.
Gesch. See also: des preuss
.
Shales (See also: Leipzig, 1879-1881), note on Haugwitz's memoirs in vol. ii.; Denkninrdigkeiten des Staatskanzlers Frirsten von Hardenberg, ed
.
Ranke (5 vols., Leipzig, 1877); A . See also: Sorel, L'Europe et la Revol
.
See also: Franc., passim
.
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