Leopold I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau

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Leopold I
Image:Leopold I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau.jpeg
Reigned August 7, 1693 - April 7, 1747
Preceded by John George II
Succeeded by Leopold II
Born July 3, 1676
Dessau, Anhalt-Dessau
Died April 7, 1747 (aged 70)
Dessau, Anhalt-Dessau
Family Leopold II
Dietrich
Moritz
Married Anna Louise Föse

Leopold I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau (b. Dessau, 3 July 1676 - d. Dessau, 7 April 1747) was a German prince member of the House of Ascania and ruler of the Principality of Anhalt-Dessau, also he was a Generalfeldmarschall in the Prussian Army. Nicknamed "the Old Dessauer" (German: der alte Dessauer), was a minor field commander but a talented drill master who modernized the Prussian infantry.

He was the second but eldest and only surviving son of John George II, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau by his wife Henriette Katharina, daughter of Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange.

Contents

[edit] Early Life

From his earliest youth he was devoted to the profession of arms, for which he educated himself physically and mentally. He became colonel of a Prussian regiment in 1693, and in the same year his father's death placed him at the head of his own principality; thereafter, during the whole of his long life, he performed the duties of a sovereign prince and a Prussian officer.

His first campaign was that of 1695 in the Netherlands, in which he was present at the Siege of Namur. He remained in the field to the end of the war of 1697, the affairs of the principality being managed chiefly by his mother, the Dowager Princess Henriette Katharina (in fact, she acted as regent since the death of his father until he reached adulthood in that year, but continue in charge of the government of Anhalt-Dessau during some time after his majority).

[edit] Marriage and Issue

As a young prince, Leopold fell in love with Anna Louise Föse (Fösen according some sources) (b. Dessau, 22 March 1677 - d. Dessau, 5 February 1745), an apothecary's daughter of Dessau. His mother, the Dowager Princess, tried to break up the relation, sending her son abroad for an extended travel, to no avail. Oficially became an adult in 1697, he married with his beloved Anna Louise in Dessau one year later, on 8 September 1698. They had ten children:

  1. William Gustav, Hereditary Prince of Anhalt-Dessau (b. Dessau, 20 June 1699 - d. Dessau, 16 December 1737).
  2. Leopold II Maximilian, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau (b. Dessau, 25 December 1700 - d. Dessau, 16 December 1751).
  3. Dietrich (b. Dessau, 2 August 1702 - d. Dessau, 2 December 1769), later Regent.
  4. Frederick Henry Eugen (b. Dessau, 27 December 1705 - d. Dessau, 2 March 1781).
  5. Henriette Marie Louise (b. Dessau, 3 August 1707 - d. Dessau, 7 August 1707).
  6. Louise (b. Dessau, 21 August 1709 - d. Bernburg, 29 July 1732), married on 25 November 1724 to Victor Frederick, Prince of Anhalt-Bernburg.
  7. Maurice (b. Dessau, 31 October 1712 - d. Dessau, 11 April 1760).
  8. Anna Wilhelmine (b. Dessau, 13 June 1715 - d. Dessau, 2 April 1780).
  9. Leopoldine Marie (b. Oranienbaum, 12 December 1716 - d. Kolberg, 27 January 1782), married on 13 February 1739 to Henry Frederick, Margrave of Brandenburg-Schwedt.
  10. Henriette Amalie (b. Dessau, 7 December 1720 - d. Dessau, 5 December 1793).

On 29 December 1701 Anna Louise was created Imperial Princess (German: Reichsfürstin) by the Emperor, who also declared that their children would be considered princes and princesses of Anhalt and would enjoy all the rights that other princes of the Empire enjoy. The King Frederick I of Prussia extended his personal guarantee on 12 March 1702, promising to recognize the rights of the issue of this marriage. The agnates of all the branches of Anhalt also gave their agreement a few days later, on 21 March.[1]

Leopold and Anna Louise had a long and happy marriage, and the Princess acquired an influence over the stern nature of her husband which she never ceased to exert on behalf of his subjects, and after the death of Leopold's mother she performed the duties of regent when he was absent on campaign. Often, too, she accompanied him into the field.

At the end of his life, however, Leopold had two illegitimate sons by one Sophie Eleonore Söldner (b. Ellrich, 7 September 1710 - d. Dessau, 16 September 1779):[2]

  1. John Georg Henry von Berenhorst (b. Sandersleben, 26 October 1733 - d. Dessau, 30 October 1814), who married firstly in Zöberitz on 8 May 1781 to Katharina Christiane Maria Otto; they were divorced in 1783. In Köthen on 26 October 1783 he married secondly with Henriette Christine Karoline von Bülow (b. Predel, 30 June 1765 - d. Dessau, 29 August 1813), with he had six children, one son: Georg John (whose descendants in male line were extinct in 1952) and five daughters: Louise Sophie, Eugenie Johanne (d. in infancy), Wilhelmine Henriette, Klara Hedwig and Thekla Pauline, who, from her first marriage with Julius, Freiherr von Richthofen, was a great-grandmother of Manfred von Richthofen.
  2. Karl Franz von Berenhorst (b. Sandersleben, 1 March 1735 - d. Dessau, 6 June 1804), married in Schweinitz on 7 February 1785 to Johanne Eleonore Scholtz. Their two sons, Henry Karl and George Franz, were killed in battle. None of them were married or had children.

[edit] Military career

[edit] War of the Spanish Succession

Leopold's career as a soldier in important commands begins with the outbreak of the War of the Spanish Succession. He had made many improvements in the Prussian army, notably the introduction of the iron ramrod about 1700, and he now took the field at the head of a Prussian corps on the Rhine, serving at the sieges of Kaiserswerth and Venlo. In the following year (1703), having obtained the rank of lieutenant-general, Leopold took part in the siege of Bonnand fought in the Battle of Hochstadt, in which the Austrians and their Prussian allies were defeated by the French under Marshal Claude-Louis-Hector de Villars (September 20,1703). In the campaign of 1704 the Prussian contingent served under Louis William, Margrave of Baden-Baden and subsequently under Prince Eugène of Savoy, and fought at Blenheim.

In 1705 he was sent with a Prussian corps to join Prince Eugène in Italy, and on August 6 fought at Battle of Cassano. In the Battle of Turin, he was the first to enter the hostile entrenchments (September 7, 1706). He served in one more campaign in Italy, and then wentunder Eugène to join Marlborough in the Netherlands, being present in 1709 at the siege of Tournai and the Battle of Malplaquet.

In 1710 he succeeded to the command of the whole Prussian contingent at the front, and in 1712, at the particular desire of the crown prince, Frederick William, who had served with him as a volunteer, he was made a general field marshal. Shortly before this he had executed a coup de main on the castle of Mors, which was held by the Dutch in defiance of the claims of the king of Prussia to the possession. The operation was effected with absolute precision and the castle was seized without a shot being fired. In the earlier part of the reign of Frederick William I, the prince of Dessau was one of the most influential members of the Prussian governing circle.

[edit] Great Northern War

Although Prussian was hostile to Sweden, the Prussians were afraid to participate in the Great Northern War. Only after Russians destroyed most of the Swedish army, Prussia entered the war against Sweden (1715). Leopold accompanied the king to the front, commanded an army of 40,000 men, and defeated much smaller force of Charles XII of Sweden in a severe battle on the island of Rügen (November 16) and in conquest together with the Danish army of Stralsund. Leopold's Generaladjutant during the campaign was Friedrich Wilhelm von Dossow. In the years of peace, and especially after a court quarrel (1725) and duel with General Friedrich Wilhelm von Grumbkow, he devoted himself to the training of the Prussian Army.

[edit] Training the Prussian Army

The reputation it had gained in the wars of 1675 to 1715, though good, was even in 1740 accounted one of the minor armies of Europe. His outstanding achievement was a training of the Prussian infantry. The "Old Dessauer" was one of the sternest disciplinarians in an age of stern discipline, and the technical training of the infantry, under his hand, made the Prussian infantry into formidable fighting force (see War of the Austrian Succession). He was essentially an infantry soldier; in his time artillery did not decide battles, but he suffered the cavalry service, in which he felt little interest, to be comparatively neglected, with results which appeared at Battle of Mollwitz. Frederick II of Prussia formed the cavalry of Hohenfriedberg and Leuthen himself, but had it not been for the infantry trained by the "Old Dessauer" he would never have had the opportunity of doing so.

Thus Leopold, heartily supported by Frederick William, who was himself called the great drill-master of Europe, turned to good account the twenty years following the peace with Sweden. During this time two incidents in his career call for special mention: first, his intervention in the case of the crown prince Frederick, who was condemned to death for desertion, and his continued and finally successful efforts to secure Frederick's reinstatement in the Prussian army; and secondly, his part in the War of the Polish Succession on the Rhine, where he served under his old chief Eugène of Savoy and held the office of field marshal of the Empire.

[edit] Service under Frederick the Great

With the death of Frederick William in 1740, Frederick succeeded to the Prussian throne, and a few months later initiated the invasion and conquest of Silesia, the first act in the long Silesian Wars and the test of the work of the "Old Dessauer's" lifetime. The prince himself was not often employed in the king's own army, though his sons held high commands under Frederick. The king, indeed, found Leopold, somewhat difficult to manage, and the prince spent most of the campaigning years up to 1745 in command of an army of observation on the Saxon frontier.

Early in that year his wife died. He was now over seventy, but his last campaign was destined to be the best of his long career. A combined effort of the Austrians and Saxons to retrieve the disasters of the summer by a winter campaign towards Berlin itself led to a hurried concentration of the Prussians. Frederick from Silesia checked the Austrian main army and hastened towards Dresden. But before he had arrived, Leopold, no longer in observation, had decided the war by his overwhelming victory over Saxons at Kesselsdorf on December 14, 1745. It was his habit to pray before battle, for he was a devout Lutheran. On this last field his words were, "O Lord God, let me not be disgraced in my old days. Or if Thou wilt not help me, do not help these scoundrels, but leave us to try it ourselves." With this great victory Leopold's career ended. He retired from active service, and the short remainder of his life was spent at Dessau.

He was succeeded by his son, Leopold II Maximilian of Anhalt-Dessau. Another of his sons Dietrich of Anhalt-Dessau was a Prussian general. Most famous of his sons was Moritz of Anhalt-Dessau.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Morganatic and Unequal Marriages in German Law
  2. ^ Complete Genealogy of the House of Ascania
  • Varnhagen von Ense, Preussische biographische Denkmale, vol. ii. (3rd ed., 1872); Militär Konversations-Lexikon, vol. ii. (Leipzig, 1833).
  • Anon., Fürst Leopold I. von Anhalt und seine Söhne (Dessau, 1852).
  • G Pauli, Leben grosser Heiden, vol. vi.
  • von Orlich, Prinz Moritz von Anhalt-Dessau (Berlin, 1842); *Crousatz, Militärische Denkwürdigkeiten des Fürsten Leopold von Anhalt-Dessau (1875).
  • supplements to Militär Wochenblatt (1878 and 1889); *Siebigk, Selbstbiographie des Fürsten Leopold von Anhalt-Dessau (Dessau, 1860 and 1876).
  • Hosaus, Zur Biographie des Fürsten Leopold von Anhalt-Dessau (Dessau, 1876).
  • Würdig, Des Alten Dessauers Leben und Taten (3rd ed., Dessau, 1903).
  • Briefe König Friedrich Wilhelms I. an den Fürsten L. (Berlin, 1905).
  • This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

[edit] Ancestry

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
John George I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
John Casimir, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Dorothea of Mansfeld-Arnstein
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
John George II, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Maurice, Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Agnes of Hesse-Kassel
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Juliane of Nassau-Siegen
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Leopold I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
William I of Orange
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Louise de Coligny
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Henriette of Orange-Nassau
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
John Albert I of Solms-Braunfels
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Amalia of Solms-Braunfels
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Agnes of Sayn-Wittgenstein
 
 
 
 
 
 


Leopold I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau
Born: July 3 1676 Died: April 7 1747
Regnal titles
Preceded by
John George II
Prince of Anhalt-Dessau
1693-1747
Succeeded by
Leopold II
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