Online Encyclopedia

FRANCIS EDWARD JAMES KEITH (1696-1758)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 716 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

FRANCIS
See also:
EDWARD JAMES KEITH (1696-1758)
  , Scottish soldier and Prussian field marshal, was the second son of William, 9th
See also:
earl marishal of Scotland, and was born on the 11th of
See also:
June 1696 at the castle of Inverugie near
See also:
Peterhead . Through his careful
See also:
education under Robert Keith, bishop of Fife, and subsequently at
See also:
Edinburgh University in preparation for the legal profession, he acquired that taste for literature which afterwards secured him the esteem of the most distinguished savants of
See also:
Europe; but at an early period his preference for a soldier's career was decided . The
See also:
rebellion of 1715, in which he displayed qualities that gave some augury of his future eminence, compelled him to seek safety on the Continent . After spending two years in Paris, chiefly at the university, he in 17r9 took
See also:
part in the
See also:
ill-starred expedition of the Pretender to the Highlands of Scotland . He then passed some time at Paris and
See also:
Madrid in obscurity and poverty, but eventually obtained a colonelcy in the
See also:
Spanish army, and, it is said, took part in the siege of
See also:
Gibraltar (1726-27) . Finding his Protestantism a barrier to promotion, he obtained from the king of Spain a recommendation to Peter II. of Russia, from whom he received (1728) the command of a regiment of the guards . He displayed in numerous
See also:
campaigns the
See also:
calm, intelligent and watchful valour which was his chief characteristic, obtaining the rank of general of
See also:
infantry and the reputation of being one of the ablest
See also:
officers in the
See also:
Russian service as well as a capable and liberal
See also:
civil
See also:
administrator . Judging, however, that his rewards were not commensurate with his merits, he in 1747 offered his services to Frederick II. of Prussia, who at once gave him the rank of field marshal, in 1749 made him governor of Berlin, and soon came to cherish towards him, as towards his
See also:
brother, the loth earl marishal, a strong
See also:
personal regard . In 1756 the Seven Years' War broke out . Keith was employed in high command from the first, and added to his Russian reputation on every occasion by
See also:
resolution and promptitude of
See also:
action, not less than by care and skill . In 1756 he commanded the troops covering the investment of
See also:
Pirna, and distinguished himself at Lobositz . In 1757 he commandedat the siege of Prague; later in this same
See also:
campaign he defended
See also:
Leipzig against a greatly
See also:
superior force, was
See also:
present at
See also:
Rossbach, and, while the king was fighting the campaign of
See also:
Leuthen,
See also:
con-ducted a foray into Bohemia .

In 1758 he took a prominent part in the unsuccessful Moravian campaign, after which he withdrew from the army to recruit his broken

See also:
health . He returned in time for the autumn campaign in the Lausitz, and was killed on the 14th of
See also:
October 1758 at the
See also:
battle of Hochkirch . His
See also:
body was honourably buried on the field by Marshal Dann and General Lacy, the son of his old
See also:
commander in Russia, and was shortly afterwards transferred by Frederick to the garrison church of Berlin . Many memorials were erected to him by the king, Prince Henry, and others . Keith died unmarried, but had several children by his
See also:
mistress, Eva Mertens, a
See also:
Swedish prisoner captured by him in the war of 1741-43 . In 1889 the 1st Silesian infantry regiment No . 22 of the German army received his name . See K . A . Varnhagen von Ense, Biographische Denkmale, part 7 (1844) ; Fragment of a Memoir of Field-Marshal James Keith, written by himself (1714–1734; edited by Thomas Constable for the Spalding Club, 1843); T . Carlyle, Frederick the
See also:
Great, passim; V . Paczynaski-Tenczyn, Leben
See also:
des G .

F.M .

Jakob Keith (Berlin, 1889) ; Peter Buchan, Account of the
See also:
Family of Keith (Edinburgh, 1878) ; Anon., Memoir of Marshal Keith (Peterhead, 1869) ; Pauli, Leben grosser Helden, part iv .

End of Article: FRANCIS EDWARD JAMES KEITH (1696-1758)
[back]
KEITH
[next]
GEORGE KEITH (c. 1639-1716)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.