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COUNT OF GOTTFRIED HEINRICH PAPPENHEI...

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Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 740 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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COUNT OF GOTTFRIED HEINRICH PAPPENHEIM (1594—1632)  , imperial field marshal in the
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Thirty Years' War, was born on the 29th of May 1594 at the little
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town of Pappenheim on the
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Altmuhl, now in Bavaria, the seat of a
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free lordship of the
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empire, from which the ancient
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family to which he belonged derived its name.' He was educated at
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Altdorf and at
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Tubingen, and subsequently travelled in
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southern and central
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Europe, mastering the various
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languages, and seeking knightly adventures . His stay in these countries led him eventually to adopt the
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Roman Catholic faith (1614), to which he devoted the rest of his
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life . At the outbreak of the
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great war he abandoned the legal and
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diplomatic career on which he had embarked, and in his zeal for the faith took service in Poland and afterwards under the Catholic
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League . He soon became a
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lieutenant-colonel, and displayed brilliant courage at the
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battle of the White Hill near Prague (Nov . 8, 162o), where he was
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left for dead on the field . In the following
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year he fought against
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Mansfeld in western ' The family of Pappenheim is of great antiquity . In the 12th century they were known as the " marshals of Kalatin (Kalden)" ; in the 13th they first appear as
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counts and marshals of Pappenheim, their right to the hereditary marshalship of the empire being
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con-firmed to them by the emperor Louis IV. in 1334 . After the
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Golden Bull of 1355 they held both marshalship and castle of Pappenheim as fiefs of the Saxon electorate . In the 17th century the family was represented by several lines: those of Pappenheim (which held the margraviate of Stuhlingen till 1635), Treutlingen and Aletzheim, and the older branches (dating from the 13th and 14th centuries) of the marshals of
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Biberach and of
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Rechberg-Wertingen-Hohenreichen . Gottfried Heinrich, who belonged to the Treutlingen branch, was the only one of this ancient and widely-ramified family to attain great distinction, though many other members of it played a strenuous, if subordinate,
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part in the
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history of Germany . The family, mediatized under Bavaria in 1806, survives now only in the descendants of the Aletzheim branch . 20 Germany, and in 1623 became colonel of a regiment of
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cuirassiers, afterwards the famous " Pappenheimers." In the same year, as an ardent friend of Spain, the ally of his
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sovereign and the champion of his faith, he raised troops for the
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Italian war and served with the Spaniards in
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Lombardy and the Grisons .

It was his

long and heroic defence of the
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post of
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Riva on the Lake of Garda which first brought him conspicuously to the front . In 1626 Maximilian of Bavaria, the head of the League, recalled him to Germany and entrusted him with the suppression of a dangerous insurrection which had broken out in Upper Austria . Pappenheim swiftly carried out his task, encountering a most desperate resistance, but always successful; and in a few weeks he had crushed the
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rebellion with ruthless severity (actions of Efferdingen,
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Gmunden, Vocklabruck and Wolfsegg, 15th—3oth November 1626) . After this he served with Tilly against King Christian IV. of Denmark, and besieged and took Wolfenbtittel . His hope of obtaining the
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sovereignty and possessions of the evicted prince was, after a long intrigue, definitely disappointed . In 1628 he was made a count of the empire . The siege and storm of
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Magdeburg followed, and Pappenheim, like Tilly, has been accused of the most savage cruelty in this transaction . But it is known that, disappointed of
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Wolfenbuttel, Pappenheim desired the profitable sovereignty of Magdeburg, and it can hardly be maintained that he deliberately destroyed a prospective source of
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wealth . At any
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rate, the
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sack of Magdeburg was not more discreditable than that of most other towns taken by storm in the 17th century . From the military point of view Pappenheim's conduct was excellent; his
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measures were skilful, and his
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personal valour, as always, conspicuous . So much could not be said of his tactics at the battle of
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Breitenfeld, the loss of which was not a little due to the impetuous cavalry general, who was never so happy as when leading a great charge of horse . The retreat of the imperialists from the lost field he covered, however, with care and skill, and subsequently he won great glory by his operations on the
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lower Rhine and the Weser in
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rear of the victorious army of Gustavus Adolphus .

Much-needed reinforcements for the king of

Sweden were thus detained in front of Pappenheim's small and newly-raised force in the north . His operations were far-ranging and his restless activity dominated the country from Stade to Cassel, and from
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Hildesheim to Maastricht . Being now a field marshal in the imperial service, he was recalled to join Wallenstein, and assisted the generalissimo in Saxony against the Swedes; but. was again despatched towards Cologne and the lower Rhine . In his absence a great battle became imminent, and Pappenheim was hurriedly recalled . He appeared with his horsemen in the midst of the battle of Ltitzen (Nov . 6th—16th, 1632) . His furious attack was for the moment successful . As Rupert at Marston
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Moor sought Cromwell as his worthiest opponent, so now Pappenheim sought Gustavus . At about the same time as the king was killed, Pappenheim received a mortal wound in another part of the field . He died on the following day in the Pleissenburg at
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Leipzig . See Kriegsschriften von baierischen Officieren I . II .

V . (

Munich, 1820) ; Hess, Gottfried Heinrich Graf zu Pappenheim (Leipzig, 1855) ; Ersch and Gruber, Allgem..Encyklopadie, III . 11 (Leipzig, 1838) ; Wittich, in Allgem. deutsche Biographie,
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Band 25 (Leipzig, 1887), and
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works there quoted .

End of Article: COUNT OF GOTTFRIED HEINRICH PAPPENHEIM (1594—1632)
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