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Leopold Josef Graf Daun
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Leopold Josef Graf Daun', 'Fürst von Thiano' (Count 'Leopold Joseph von Daun' or 'Dhaun') (
September 24,
1705 –
February 5,
1766), 'Prince of Thiano',
Austrian field marshal, was born at
Vienna, as son of
Count Wirich Philipp von Daun.
Background
He was intended for the church, but his natural inclination for the army, in which his father and grandfather had been distinguished generals, proved irresistible. In 1718 he served in the
campaign in
Sicily, in his father's regiment. He had already risen to the rank of ''Oberst'' (Colonel) when he saw further active service in Italy and on the Rhine in the
War of the Polish Succession (1734-35). He continued to add to his distinctions in the war against the
Ottoman Empire (1737-39), in which he attained the rank of ''Feldmarschallleutnant'' (Major-General). In the
War of the Austrian Succession (1740-42), Daun distinguished himself by the careful leadership which was afterwards his greatest
military quality.
He was present at
Chotusitz and
Prague, and led the advanced guard of
Khevenhüller's army in the victorious Danube campaign of 1743. Field Marshal
Traun, who succeeded Khevenhüller in 1744, thought equally highly of Daun, and entrusted him with the rearguard of the Austrian army when it escaped from the French to attack
Frederick the Great. He held important commands in the battles of
Hohenfriedberg and
Soor, and in the same year (1745) was promoted to the rank of ''Feldzeugmeister'' (Lieutenant General). After this he served in the Low Countries, and was present at the
Battle of Val. He was highly valued by
Maria Theresa, who made him commandant of Vienna and a Knight of the Golden Fleece, and in 1754 he was elevated to the rank of ''Feldmarschall'' (Field-Marshal).

Statue of Leopold Josef Graf Daun, on the Maria Theresa memorial, Vienna
During the interval of peace that preceded the
Seven Years' War he was engaged in carrying out an elaborate scheme for the reorganization of the Austrian army, and it was chiefly through his efforts that the
Theresian Military Academy was established at
Wiener-Neustadt in
1751. He was not actively employed in the first campaigns of the war, but in
1757 he was placed at the head of the army which was raised to relieve
Prague. On
June 18,
1757 Daun defeated Frederick for the first time in his career in the desperately fought
Battle of Kolin. In commemoration of this brilliant exploit the queen immediately instituted a military order bearing her name, and Daun was awarded the first Grand Cross of that order. The union of the relieving army with the forces of Prince Charles at Prague reduced Daun to the position of second in command, and in that capacity he took part in the pursuit of the
Prussians and the victory of
Breslau.
Frederick now reappeared and won the most brilliant victory of the age at
Leuthen. Daun was present on that field, but was not held accountable for the disaster, and when Prince Charles resigned his command, Daun was appointed in his place. With the campaign of 1758 began the war of manoeuvre in which Daun, though he missed, through over-caution, many opportunities of crushing the Prussians, at least maintained a steady and cool resistance to the fiery strategy of Frederick. In
1758 Major-General
Laudon, acting under Daun's instructions, forced the king to raise the siege of
Olmütz (
Battle of Domašov), and later in the same year Daun himself surprised Frederick at Hochkirch and inflicted a severe defeat upon him (October 14th). In the following year the war of manoeuvre continued, and on the 20th and 21st of November he surrounded the entire corps of General
Finck at
Maxen, forcing the Prussians to surrender. These successes were counterbalanced in the following year by the defeat of Loudon at
Liegnitz, which was attributed to the dilatoriness of Daun, and Daun's own defeat in the great
Battle of Torgau. In this engagement Daun was so severely wounded that he had to return to Vienna to recuperate.
He continued to command until the end of the war, and afterwards worked with the greatest energy at the reorganization of the imperial forces. In 1762 he had been appointed president of the
Hofkriegsrath. By order of Maria Theresa a monument to his memory was erected by
Balthasar Ferdinand Moll in the church of the Augustinians, with an inscription describing him as the "saviour of her states." In
1888 the 56th Regiment of Austrian Infantry was named after him. As a general Daun has been criticized for the dilatoriness of his operations, but wariness was not misplaced when one faced a general like Frederick, who was quick and unpredictable. His inability to exploit a victory, on the other hand, might not be so easily excused.
His daughter married the
Marquis of Pombal, the noted Portuguese
statesman.
[1]
Notes
★ For an overview of the system of military ranks that existed in the Austro-Hungarian Empire up to the first World War see
Comparative military ranks of World War I
The name Daun comes from Austria and means 'feather down'.
Footnotes
1. The wife of the Marquis of Pombal was actually his first cousin, not his daughter. Gräfin Eleonora von und zu Daun was the daughter of Graf Heinrich Reichard Lorenz von und zu Daun and Gräfin Maria Josepha Violante von Poymund und Payersberg. Heinrich was the son of Graf Wilhelm Johann Anton von und zu Daun and Gräfin Anna Maria Magdalena von Althann, who were also the parents of Graf Wirich Philipp Lorenz von Daun, Marchese di Rivoli, Principe di Teano, father of Leopold Joseph. See Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.), Reference: XI 20-21
Further reading
See ''Der deutsche Fabius Cunctator, oder Leben und Thaten seiner Excellentz, des Herrn Leopold Joseph Maria Reichsgrafen von Daun ... '' (S.l.: s.n., 1759-1760), and works dealing with the wars of the period.
References
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