(Redirected from Count of Mansfeld)
'Ernst, Graf von Mansfeld' (also sometimes called 'Ernst, Graf von Mansfield', ' Ernst, Count of Mansfeld' or 'Peter Ernst, Graf von Mansfeld') (c.
1580 –
November 29,
1626),
German soldier, was an illegitimate son of
Graf Peter Ernst von Mansfeld (1517-1604), and passed his early years in his father's palace at
Luxembourg.
He gained his earliest military experiences in
Hungary, where his half-brother Charles (1543-1595), also a soldier of renown, held a high command in the
imperial army. Later he served under the
Archduke Leopold, until that prince's ingratitude, real or fancied, drove him into the arms of the enemies of the house of Habsburg. Although remaining a
Roman Catholic he allied himself with the
Protestant princes, and during the earlier part of the
Thirty Years' War he was one of their foremost champions.
He was despatched by
Charles Emmanuel, duke of Savoy, at the head of about 2000 men to aid the revolting
Bohemians when war broke out in 1618. He took
Pilsen, but in the summer of 1619 he was defeated at the
Battle of Sablat; after this he offered his services to the
emperor Ferdinand II and remained inactive while the titular king of Bohemia,
Frederick V, elector palatine of the Rhine, was driven in headlong rout from
Prague. Mansfeld, however, was soon appointed by Frederick to command his army in Bohemia, and in 1621 he took up his position in the
Upper Palatinate, successfully resisting the efforts made by
Tilly to dislodge him.
From the Upper he passed into the
Rhenish Palatinate. Here he relieved
Frankenthal and took
Hagenau; then, joined by his master, the elector Frederick, he defeated Tilly at
Wiesloch (
April 25,
1622) and plundered
Alsace and
Hesse. But Mansfeld's ravages were not confined to the lands of his enemies; they were ruinous to the districts he was commissioned to defend.
At length Frederick was obliged to dismiss Mansfeld's troops from his service. Then joining
Christian of Brunswick the count led his army through
Lorraine, devastating the country as he went, and in August 1622 defeating the
Spaniards at
Fleurus. He next entered the service of the
United Provinces and took up his quarters in
East Frisia, capturing fortresses and inflicting great hardships upon the inhabitants. A
mercenary and a leader of mercenaries, Mansfeld often interrupted his campaigns by journeys made for the purpose of raising money, or in other words of selling his services to the highest bidder, and in these diplomatic matters he showed considerable skill.
About 1624 he paid three visits to
London, where he was hailed as a hero by the populace, and at least one to
Paris.
James I was anxious to furnish him with men and money for the recovery of the Palatinate, but it was not until January 1625 that Mansfeld and his army of "raw and poor rascals" sailed from
Dover to
the Netherlands. Later in the year, the Thirty Years' War having been renewed under the leadership of
Christian IV of Denmark, he re-entered Germany to take part therein. But on
April 25,
1626 Wallenstein inflicted a severe defeat upon him at the bridge of
Dessau. Mansfeld, however, quickly raised another army, with which he intended to attack the hereditary lands of the house of
Austria, and pursued by Wallenstein he pressed forward towards
Hungary, where he hoped to accomplish his purpose by the aid of
Bethlem Gabor, prince of Transylvania. But when Gabor changed his policy and made peace with the emperor, Mansfeld was compelled to disband his troops. He set out for
Venice, but when he reached
Rakowitza he was taken ill, and here he died on the
November 29,
1626. He was buried at
Split.
Bibliography:
★ F. Stieve, ''Ernst von Mansfeld'' (Munich, 1890)
★ R. Reuss, ''Graf Ernst von Mansfeld im böhmischen Kriege'' (Brunswick, 1865)
★ A. C. de Villermont, ''Ernest de Mansfeldt'' (Brussels, 1866)
★ L. Graf Uetterodt zu Scharfenberg, ''Ernst Graf zu Mansfeld'' (Gotha; 1867)
★ J. Grossmann, ''Des Grafen Ernst von Mansfeld letzte Pläne und Thaten'' (Breslau, 1870)
★ E. Fischer, ''Des Mansfelders Tod'' (Berlin, 1873)
★
S. R. Gardiner, ''History of England'', vols. iv. and v. (1901);
★
J. L. Motley, ''Life and Death of John of Barneveld'' (ed. 1904; vol. ii)
Notes
Reference
★
External links
★
Prosopography of the Mansfeld family
★
Peter Ernst von Mansfeld at genealogics.org