Franz von Lauer

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Born11 May 1736 (1736-05-11)
Died11 September 1803(1803-09-11) (aged 67)
BranchEngineers
Franz von Lauer
Franz von Lauer
Born11 May 1736 (1736-05-11)
Died11 September 1803(1803-09-11) (aged 67)
AllegianceHabsburg monarchy Habsburg monarchy
BranchEngineers
Service years1755–1801
RankFeldzeugmeister
Conflicts
AwardsMilitary Order of Maria Theresa,
KC 1789, CC 1795

Franz von Lauer (11 May 1736 – 11 September 1803) entered the Imperial Army as a military engineer in 1755 and ended his career as Feldzeugmeister. After serving in the Seven Years' War, by 1783 he had reached the rank of oberst, or colonel. He fought against Ottoman Turkey at Belgrade and became a general officer for his distinguished effort as a siege specialist.

During the War of the First Coalition against the First French Republic, he directed the sieges of Fort-Louis in 1793 and Mannheim in 1795. In 1796, he was named chief of staff of the army sent to oppose Napoleon Bonaparte in Italy, fighting at Bassano and Mantua. In 1800, he was appointed deputy commander of the main army in southern Germany, which ended in disastrous defeat at Hohenlinden in December. He was made the scapegoat for this failure and dismissed from the service shortly thereafter.

Born in 1736, Lauer studied at the Imperial and Royal Technical Military Academy and joined the Imperial Army in 1755. After being promoted to captain during the Seven Years' War, he continued his military studies and became an expert in siege warfare and fortifications.[1] While supervising the construction of fortifications, he received promotion to major in 1773, Oberstleutnant in 1779, and Oberst in 1783. During the Austro-Turkish War (1787-1791) he earned appointment to the rank of General-Feldwachtmeister and the Knight's Cross of the Military Order of Maria Theresa for his distinguished actions at the Siege of Belgrade in 1789. He was appointed the noble rank of Freiherr in 1790.[2]

War of the First Coalition

A map from the 1700s shows Fort-Louis in the center.
Map of Fort-Louis

Lauer fought on the upper Rhine River under the command of Dagobert Sigmund von Wurmser in 1793–1794. On 13 October 1793, Wurmser defeated the French in the First Battle of Wissembourg and the next day Lauer employed his expertise to besiege Fort-Louis. A strong position situated on an island in the Rhine River and held by a garrison of 4,500, on 14 November he accepted its surrender.[3] Still with Wurmser, he fought at the successful Siege of Mannheim in late 1795. For notable actions in capturing the Neckerauer redoubt on 30 October, he earned the Commander's Cross of the Military Order of Maria Theresa. Promotion to Feldmarschall-Leutnant followed on 4 March 1796.[2]

When the Siege of Mantua was briefly raised in early August 1796, Lauer supervised repairs to its fortifications.[4] On 19 August, Emperor Francis II ordered Wurmser to make another attempt to relieve the town and named Lauer as his chief-of-staff. When drawing up the plan of attack, Lauer assumed that losses would prevent the French from quickly reacting to an Austrian offensive.[5] This belief proved mistaken when Bonaparte hurled three divisions north into the upper Adige River valley. After overwhelming Paul Davidovich's covering force at the Battle of Rovereto, the French commander sent his troops marching east, then south down the Brenta River valley. Bonaparte crushed Wurmser at the Battle of Bassano on 8 September, then followed him as he marched toward Mantua. Ultimately, Wurmser became trapped in Mantua along with nearly 30,000 soldiers.[6] "To his credit, Lauer thereafter proved the key man during the very stubborn defense of Mantua."[7] The fortress finally surrendered on 2 February 1797.[8]

After the War of the First Coalition Lauer became the Director-General of Engineers, a post that he held from April 1797 to February 1801.[2]

War of the Second Coalition

Notes

References

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