Niklaus Franz von Bachmann

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Portrait by Felix Maria Diogg, 1817

Niklaus Leodegar Franz Ignaz von Bachmann (27 March 1740 – 11 February 1831) was a Swiss military officer who served as commander-in-chief (General) of the Swiss Army at the end of the Napoleonic Wars.

Bachmann was born on 27 March 1740 in Näfels, Switzerland, into a family of Swiss mercenaries.[1][2] He was the son of Karl Leonhard von Bachmann, a maréchal de camp in the French Army, and Elisabeth Keller.[1] Among his ancestors were Kaspar von Gallati (1535–1619) and Kaspar Freuler (1595–1651), first and fourth colonels of the Regiment of Swiss Guards of the King of France. His sister Maria Dorothea married Freiherr Franz Josef Muller von Friedberg, Prime Minister of the Prince-abbot of St. Gall, and was the mother of the politician Karl von Müller-Friedberg [de], founder and first Landamman of the Canton of St. Gallen.

Military career

Later life

References

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