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{{Infobox military person
'''Hannibal Freiherr<ref>{{German title Freiherr}}</ref> von Degenfeld''' (1648–1691) was a [[Electorate of Saxony|Saxon]] military commander who entered the service of the [[Electorate of Bavaria]], commanding the Bavarian relief contingent during the [[Battle of Vienna]], and subsequently served the [[Republic of Venice]] during the [[Morean War]].
|name = Hannibal von Degenfeld
|image = Hannibal von Degenfeld, by Wolfgang Philipp Kilian.jpg
|image_upright =
|alt =
|caption = Engraving of Hannibal von Degenfeld at the time of the [[Battle of Vienna]], by {{ill|Wolfgang Philipp Kilian|de}}
|birth_date = 1647 or 1648
|birth_place =
|death_date = 12 October 1691
|death_place = [[Nauplia]]
|death_cause = Disease
|placeofburial = Nauplia
|placeofburial_label =
|placeofburial_coordinates = <!--{{coord|LAT|LONG|display=inline,title}}-->
|allegiance = [[Republic of Venice]] (1666–1669, 1684–1685, 1691)<br>[[Dutch Republic]] (1672–1674)<br>[[Denmark–Norway]] (1674–1678), [[Electorate of Bavaria]] (1681–1683)
|serviceyears =
|serviceyears_label =
|rank =
|battles = [[Siege of Candia]], [[Siege of Groningen (1672)]], [[Siege of Wismar (1675)]], [[Siege of Marstrand (1677)]], [[Battle of Vienna]], [[Battle of Kalamata (1685)]]
|spouse = <!--{{marriage|name|start date|end date}}; add spouse if reliably sourced-->
|children =
|relations =
}}
'''Hannibal Freiherr<ref>{{German title Freiherr}}</ref> von Degenfeld''' (1647/8–1691) was a German military commander who entered served the [[Republic of Venice]] during the [[Siege of Candia]] and the [[Morean War]], helped establish the regular [[Bavarian Army]] and commanded it during the [[Battle of Vienna]], and fought for the Dutch in the [[Franco-Dutch War]] and [[Denmark–Norway]] in the [[Scanian War]].


==Life==
==Life==
===Origin and family===
Born in 1648, Hannibal von Degenfeld was the youngest son of [[Christoph Martin von Degenfeld]] (1599–1653) and Anna Maria Adelmann von Adelmannsfelden. His father was a military commander who served in both the [[Habsburg monarchy|Habsburgs]] and their enemies during the [[Thirty Years War]], and in 1642–1649 was in [[Republic of Venice|Venetian]] service in [[Dalmatia]] during the [[Cretan War (1645–1669)|Cretan War]] against the [[Ottoman Empire]].{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|pp=23–25}} Hannibal's five brothers followed their father's military career, two of them dying on the battlefield; three of them also entered the service of Venice in the Cretan War.{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|p=25}} Of his sisters, the most notable was [[Marie Luise von Degenfeld|Luise]], who married the [[Raugrave]] [[Charles I Louis, Elector Palatine]].{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|p=25}}
Born in 1647{{sfn|Thürheim|1881|p=155}} or 1648,{{sfn|Rockstroh|2011}}{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|p=25}} Hannibal von Degenfeld was the youngest son of [[Christoph Martin von Degenfeld]] (1599–1653) and Anna Maria Adelmann von Adelmannsfelden. His father was a Protestant military commander from [[Swabia]] who served in both the [[Habsburg monarchy|Habsburgs]] and their enemies, the Swedes and French, during the [[Thirty Years War]], and in 1642–1649 was in [[Republic of Venice|Venetian]] service in [[Dalmatia]] during the [[Cretan War (1645–1669)|Cretan War]] against the [[Ottoman Empire]].{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|pp=23–25}} Hannibal's five brothers followed their father's military career, two of them dying on the battlefield; three of them also entered the service of Venice in the Cretan War.{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|p=25}} Of his sisters, the most notable was [[Marie Luise von Degenfeld|Luise]], who married the [[Raugrave]] [[Charles I Louis, Elector Palatine]].{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|p=25}}


===Education and the Siege of Candia===
Degenfeld entered the service of [[John George III, Elector of Saxony]], whose [[Royal Saxon Army|army]], though small, was renowned for its military prowess.{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|pp=25–26}} By 1674, Degenfeld was colonel and commander of a regiment of foot, a post he held until 1677, when he left Saxon service in pursuit of opportunities for swifter advancement. He entered the service of the [[Electorate of Bavaria]], rising quickly to the rank of [[field marshal lieutenant]] and president of the [[Ministry of War (Kingdom of Bavaria)|Aulic War Council]] by 1682. In this capacity he commanded the Bavarian corps sent to the ppBattle of Vienna|relief]] of the Ottoman siege of [[Vienna]] in 1683, nominally headed by Elector [[Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria|Maximilian II Emanuel]].{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|p=26}} After the [[Siege of Esztergom (1683)|capture]] of [[Esztergom]] the Bavarian troops returned home, but Degenfeld accepted a request from the Republic of Venice to enter its service. He was appointed in command of the ground forces being assembled for a campaign against the Ottomans in Greece, under the overall command of the Venetian [[Francesco Morosini]] as [[Captain General of the Sea]].{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|p=26}}
After his father's death, like his other siblings, Hannibal von Degenfeld came under the custody of his eldest brother, [[Ferdinand von Degenfeld|Ferdinand]].{{sfn|Thürheim|1881|p=155}}{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|p=25}} Degenfeld was sent to the care of a certain Wolfstehl in [[Heilbronn]], who took in and educated many sons of the nobility. There Degenfeld learned French, exercised in knightly manner, and visited the local school.{{sfn|Thürheim|1881|p=155}} In 1666, having reached adulthood, he was sent to Crete,{{sfn|Thürheim|1881|p=155}} where his brothers [[Adolf von Degenfeld|Adolf]] and [[Christoph von Degenfeld|Christoph]] were commanding a Venetian regiment during the [[Siege of Candia]].{{sfn|Thürheim|1881|pp=110–112}} Degenfeld distinguished himself through bravery and ability, coming to command a company and the rank of major in his brothers' regiment.{{sfn|Thürheim|1881|p=155}} At the end of the war in 1669, the [[Venetian Senate]] awarded him a yearly pension of 500 ducats with the request to return to Venetian service whenever the Republic would call upon him.{{sfn|Thürheim|1881|p=156}}


===Dutch and Danish service===
Degenfeld arrived in Greece in 1685, in time for the first operations in the [[Morea]] peninsular. He led the Venetian army in the [[Siege of Coron (1685)|Siege of Coron]] and the subsequent victorious [[Battle of Kalamata (1685)|Battle of Kalamata]], where he defeated the Ottomans under the [[Kapudan Pasha]].{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|p=26}} Due to ongoing disagreements with Morosini, he took his leave the following year, and was replaced by [[Otto Wilhelm Königsmarck]]. However, after the death of Königsmarck and [[Girolamo Corner]] of disease, and the ascent of Morosini to the [[Doge of Venice|dogeship]], he was recalled to service as captain-general in spring 1691. On 3 August he left Venice with new troops and arrived in [[Nauplia]] on 4 September, where he also fell ill and died on 12 October.{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|p=26}}
As was usual at the time, Degenfeld often switched service from one master to another, in pursuit of opportunities for swifter advancement.{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|p=26}} He entered service under [[John Frederick, Duke of Brunswick]], with the rank of lieutenant colonel, but went over the [[Dutch Republic]] when John Frederick allied himself with the France. In the subsequent [[Franco-Dutch War]], Degenfeld participated in the [[Siege of Groningen (1672)|defence]] of Groningen.{{sfn|Thürheim|1881|p=156}} In 1674 Degenfeld entered the service of the [[King of Denmark]], [[Christian V of Denmark|Christian V]], and formed a new regiment, the [[Scanian Regiment|Hereditary Prince Frederik's Life Regiment]], partly from existing independent companies and partly from new recruits. In 1675 a court martial condemned him for the regiment's indiscipline, but the king pardoned and restored him to his command.{{sfn|Rockstroh|2011}}

[[File:Marstrand och Karlstens fästning 1677..jpg|thumb|250px|View of the siege of Marstrand in 1677]]
In the [[Scanian War]] he participated in the [[Siege of Wismar (1675)|capture]] of [[Wismar]] and served as commandant of [[Rostock]]. Dismissed in 1676, he was restored to service with the rank of major general, conditional on recruiting a regiment. In this Degenfeld was unsuccessful, but was confirmed in his rank and sent with the Norwegian forces under [[Ulrik Frederik Gyldenløve]] to Norway. His conduct during the capture of [[Marstrand]] was praised, but he soon fell out with Gyldenløve and the other commanders, resigning from the Norwegian army in March 1678.{{sfn|Rockstroh|2011}} On 19 January 1678, he married Anna Maria Gersdorff (her second of three marriages), with whom he had a daughter, Maria Antonia.{{sfn|Rockstroh|2011}}{{sfn|Thürheim|1881|p=159}} Degenfeld returned to Denmark, where he was appointed commandant of the infantry and fortresses in [[Jutland]], as well as governor of [[Vejle County]]. He nevertheless applied to resign his commission with the Danish army in the same year, which was granted on New Year's Day 1679, with the simultaneous award of the rank of lieutenant general.{{sfn|Rockstroh|2011}}

===Bavarian service===
In 1681 Degenfeld entered the service of the [[Electorate of Bavaria]], rising quickly to the rank of [[field marshal lieutenant]] and president of the [[Ministry of War (Kingdom of Bavaria)|Aulic War Council]] by 1682.{{sfn|Thürheim|1881|p=156}}{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|p=26}} He played a crucial role in the reforms that resulted in the establishment of a standing [[Bavarian Army]] under Elector [[Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria|Maximilian II Emanuel]]. The official Bavarian Army history describes Degenfeld as the reforms' "spiritual father", Maximilian Emanuel's "first counselor and aide",{{sfn|Staudinger|1904|p=24}} and the "founder of the new army".{{sfn|Staudinger|1904|p=575}}

Degenfeld took command of a training camp established near [[Schwabing]] in 1682, where the Bavarian troops exercised in various forms of warfare.{{sfn|Staudinger|1904|pp=32–37}} 12 October 1862, the day when the army drew up for the first time in combat formation, was later celebrated as the founding day of the Bavarian Army.{{sfn|Braun|1987|p=15}} During his tenure, Degenfeld formed the artillery as a separate corps and introduced modern six-pounder regimental guns,{{sfn|Staudinger|1904|pp=42, 125–127}} improved the army's logistical train,{{sfn|Staudinger|1904|p=42}} and introduced [[hand grenade]]s and [[grenadiers]].{{sfn|Staudinger|1904|pp=36, 42}} One of the four Bavarian regiments of foot that were constituted at that time, the future {{ill|Royal Bavarian 2nd Infantry Regiment "Crown Prince"|de|Königlich Bayerisches 2. Infanterie Regiment „Kronprinz“}}, was named "Regiment Degenfeld".{{sfn|Staudinger|1904|p=31}}

In 1683 Degenfeld commanded the Bavarian forces sent to the [[Battle of Vienna|relief]] of the Ottoman siege of [[Vienna]], though nominally headed by Elector Maximilian Emanuel himself.{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|p=26}}{{sfn|Wheatcroft|2008|p=168}}{{sfn|Staudinger|1904|pp=577–578}} After the relief of Vienna, and as a result of perceived slights from the Elector, who now conceived himself as a war leader on his own account, Degenfeld requested to be released from Bavarian service, which was granted on 12 October.{{sfn|Staudinger|1904|p=177, 578}}

===Venetian service in the Morea===
[[File:Piazza di Calamata - Coronelli Vincenzo - 1687.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Engraving commemorating the victory at Kalamata, by [[Vincenzo Coronelli]]]]
In 1684 Degenfeld accepted a request from the Republic of Venice to enter its service. He was appointed in command of the ground forces being assembled for a campaign against the Ottomans in Greece, under the overall command of the Venetian [[Francesco Morosini]] as [[Captain General of the Sea]].{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|p=26}} Degenfeld arrived in Greece in 1685, in time for the first operations in the [[Morea]], with some 3,000 Saxon troops sent to reinforce the Venetian army. He assumed command of the Venetian forces in the Morea and led them in the capture of the castle of [[Zarnata]] and in the subsequent [[Battle of Kalamata (1685)|Battle of Kalamata]], where he defeated the Ottomans under the [[Kapudan Pasha]]. This led to the capture of the fortresses of [[Passavas]] and [[Kelefa]], which removed Ottoman control from the [[Mani Peninsula]].{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|p=26}}{{sfn|Thürheim|1881|pp=156–157}}

Due to ongoing disagreements with Morosini, he took his leave the following year, and was replaced by [[Otto Wilhelm Königsmarck]]. However, after the death of Königsmarck and [[Girolamo Corner]] of disease, and the ascent of Morosini to the [[Doge of Venice|dogeship]], he was recalled to service as captain-general in spring 1691. On 3 August he left Venice with new troops and arrived in [[Nauplia]] on 4 September, where he also fell ill and died on 12 October. He was accorded a state funeral and buried in the local cathedral.{{sfn|Pfister|von Landmann|1877|p=26}}{{sfn|Thürheim|1881|pp=157–159}}


==References==
==References==
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==Sources==
==Sources==
* {{cite book | editor-last = Braun | editor-first = Rainer | title = Bayern und seine Armee: Eine Ausstellung des Bayerischen Hauptstaatsarchivs aus den Beständen des Kriegsarchivs, München, 9. Juli-30. August 1987 | publisher = Generaldirektion der Staatlichen Archive Bayerns | year = 1987 | isbn = 3921635101 | language = German}}
* {{cite encyclopedia | last1 = Pfister | first1 = Albert | last2 = von Landmann | first2 = Carl | title = Degenfeld, Christoph Martin Freiherr von | encyclopedia = Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie, herausgegeben von der Historischen Kommission bei der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften | volume = 5 | year = 1877 | pages = 23–26 | url= https://de.wikisource.org/w/index.php?title=ADB:Degenfeld,_Christoph_Martin_Freiherr_von | language = German}}
* {{cite encyclopedia | last1 = Pfister | first1 = Albert | last2 = von Landmann | first2 = Carl | title = Degenfeld, Christoph Martin Freiherr von | encyclopedia = Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie, herausgegeben von der Historischen Kommission bei der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften | volume = 5 | year = 1877 | pages = 23–26 | url= https://de.wikisource.org/w/index.php?title=ADB:Degenfeld,_Christoph_Martin_Freiherr_von | language = German}}
* {{cite encyclopedia | last = Rockstroh | first = K. C. | title = Hannibal v. Degenfeld | encyclopedia = [[Dansk Biografisk Leksikon]] | edition = 3rd | language = Danish | year = 2011 | url = https://biografiskleksikon.lex.dk/Hannibal_v._Degenfeld}}
* {{cite book | last = Staudinger | first = Karl | title = Geschichte des bayerischen Heeres: Geschichte des kurbayerischen Heeres unter Kurfürst Max II. Emanuel 1680–1726 | publisher = J. Lindauer | year = 1904 | location = Munich | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Ae-gAAAAMAAJ | language = German}}
* {{cite book | last = Thürheim | first = Andreas | title = Christoph Martin, Freiherr von Degenfeld, General der Venezianer, General-Gouverneur von Dalmazien und Albanien, und dessen Söhne (1600—1733) | location = Vienna | year = 1881 | publisher = Wilhelm Braumüller | url = https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_ms8HAAAAIAAJ_2 | language = German}}
* {{cite book | last = Thürheim | first = Andreas | title = Christoph Martin, Freiherr von Degenfeld, General der Venezianer, General-Gouverneur von Dalmazien und Albanien, und dessen Söhne (1600—1733) | location = Vienna | year = 1881 | publisher = Wilhelm Braumüller | url = https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_ms8HAAAAIAAJ_2 | language = German}}
* {{cite book | last = Wheatcroft | first = Andrew | title = The Enemy at the Gate: Habsburgs, Ottomans and the Battle for Europe | publisher = Pimlico | year = 2008 | location = London | isbn = 978-1-40908682-6 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=HCmwFM8_QCoC}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Degenfeld, Hannibal}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Degenfeld, Hannibal}}
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[[Category:17th-century German people]]
[[Category:17th-century German people]]
[[Category:Bavarian generals]]
[[Category:Bavarian generals]]
[[Category:Cretan War (1645–1669)]]
[[Category:Deaths from disease]]
[[Category:Deaths from disease]]
[[Category:Military personnel of the Franco-Dutch War]]
[[Category:Morean War]]
[[Category:Morean War]]
[[Category:People from the Electorate of Bavaria]]
[[Category:People from the Electorate of Bavaria]]
[[Category:People from the Electorate of Saxony]]
[[Category:People of the Great Turkish War]]
[[Category:People of the Great Turkish War]]
[[Category:People of the Scanian War]]
[[Category:Republic of Venice people of the Ottoman–Venetian Wars]]
[[Category:Republic of Venice people of the Ottoman–Venetian Wars]]
[[Category:Republic of Venice generals]]
[[Category:Republic of Venice generals]]

Revision as of 13:17, 27 June 2024

Hannibal von Degenfeld
Engraving of Hannibal von Degenfeld at the time of the Battle of Vienna, by Wolfgang Philipp Kilian [de]
Born1647 or 1648
Died12 October 1691
Nauplia
Cause of deathDisease
Buried
Nauplia
AllegianceRepublic of Venice (1666–1669, 1684–1685, 1691)
Dutch Republic (1672–1674)
Denmark–Norway (1674–1678), Electorate of Bavaria (1681–1683)
Battles/warsSiege of Candia, Siege of Groningen (1672), Siege of Wismar (1675), Siege of Marstrand (1677), Battle of Vienna, Battle of Kalamata (1685)

Hannibal Freiherr[1] von Degenfeld (1647/8–1691) was a German military commander who entered served the Republic of Venice during the Siege of Candia and the Morean War, helped establish the regular Bavarian Army and commanded it during the Battle of Vienna, and fought for the Dutch in the Franco-Dutch War and Denmark–Norway in the Scanian War.

Leben

Origin and family

Born in 1647[2] or 1648,[3][4] Hannibal von Degenfeld was the youngest son of Christoph Martin von Degenfeld (1599–1653) and Anna Maria Adelmann von Adelmannsfelden. His father was a Protestant military commander from Swabia who served in both the Habsburgs and their enemies, the Swedes and French, during the Thirty Years War, and in 1642–1649 was in Venetian service in Dalmatia during the Cretan War against the Ottoman Empire.[5] Hannibal's five brothers followed their father's military career, two of them dying on the battlefield; three of them also entered the service of Venice in the Cretan War.[4] Of his sisters, the most notable was Luise, who married the Raugrave Charles I Louis, Elector Palatine.[4]

Education and the Siege of Candia

After his father's death, like his other siblings, Hannibal von Degenfeld came under the custody of his eldest brother, Ferdinand.[2][4] Degenfeld was sent to the care of a certain Wolfstehl in Heilbronn, who took in and educated many sons of the nobility. There Degenfeld learned French, exercised in knightly manner, and visited the local school.[2] In 1666, having reached adulthood, he was sent to Crete,[2] where his brothers Adolf and Christoph were commanding a Venetian regiment during the Siege of Candia.[6] Degenfeld distinguished himself through bravery and ability, coming to command a company and the rank of major in his brothers' regiment.[2] At the end of the war in 1669, the Venetian Senate awarded him a yearly pension of 500 ducats with the request to return to Venetian service whenever the Republic would call upon him.[7]

Dutch and Danish service

As was usual at the time, Degenfeld often switched service from one master to another, in pursuit of opportunities for swifter advancement.[8] He entered service under John Frederick, Duke of Brunswick, with the rank of lieutenant colonel, but went over the Dutch Republic when John Frederick allied himself with the France. In the subsequent Franco-Dutch War, Degenfeld participated in the defence of Groningen.[7] In 1674 Degenfeld entered the service of the King of Denmark, Christian V, and formed a new regiment, the Hereditary Prince Frederik's Life Regiment, partly from existing independent companies and partly from new recruits. In 1675 a court martial condemned him for the regiment's indiscipline, but the king pardoned and restored him to his command.[3]

View of the siege of Marstrand in 1677

In the Scanian War he participated in the capture of Wismar and served as commandant of Rostock. Dismissed in 1676, he was restored to service with the rank of major general, conditional on recruiting a regiment. In this Degenfeld was unsuccessful, but was confirmed in his rank and sent with the Norwegian forces under Ulrik Frederik Gyldenløve to Norway. His conduct during the capture of Marstrand was praised, but he soon fell out with Gyldenløve and the other commanders, resigning from the Norwegian army in March 1678.[3] On 19 January 1678, he married Anna Maria Gersdorff (her second of three marriages), with whom he had a daughter, Maria Antonia.[3][9] Degenfeld returned to Denmark, where he was appointed commandant of the infantry and fortresses in Jutland, as well as governor of Vejle County. He nevertheless applied to resign his commission with the Danish army in the same year, which was granted on New Year's Day 1679, with the simultaneous award of the rank of lieutenant general.[3]

Bavarian service

In 1681 Degenfeld entered the service of the Electorate of Bavaria, rising quickly to the rank of field marshal lieutenant and president of the Aulic War Council by 1682.[7][8] He played a crucial role in the reforms that resulted in the establishment of a standing Bavarian Army under Elector Maximilian II Emanuel. The official Bavarian Army history describes Degenfeld as the reforms' "spiritual father", Maximilian Emanuel's "first counselor and aide",[10] and the "founder of the new army".[11]

Degenfeld took command of a training camp established near Schwabing in 1682, where the Bavarian troops exercised in various forms of warfare.[12] 12 October 1862, the day when the army drew up for the first time in combat formation, was later celebrated as the founding day of the Bavarian Army.[13] During his tenure, Degenfeld formed the artillery as a separate corps and introduced modern six-pounder regimental guns,[14] improved the army's logistical train,[15] and introduced hand grenades and grenadiers.[16] One of the four Bavarian regiments of foot that were constituted at that time, the future Royal Bavarian 2nd Infantry Regiment "Crown Prince" [de], was named "Regiment Degenfeld".[17]

In 1683 Degenfeld commanded the Bavarian forces sent to the relief of the Ottoman siege of Vienna, though nominally headed by Elector Maximilian Emanuel himself.[8][18][19] After the relief of Vienna, and as a result of perceived slights from the Elector, who now conceived himself as a war leader on his own account, Degenfeld requested to be released from Bavarian service, which was granted on 12 October.[20]

Venetian service in the Morea

Engraving commemorating the victory at Kalamata, by Vincenzo Coronelli

In 1684 Degenfeld accepted a request from the Republic of Venice to enter its service. He was appointed in command of the ground forces being assembled for a campaign against the Ottomans in Greece, under the overall command of the Venetian Francesco Morosini as Captain General of the Sea.[8] Degenfeld arrived in Greece in 1685, in time for the first operations in the Morea, with some 3,000 Saxon troops sent to reinforce the Venetian army. He assumed command of the Venetian forces in the Morea and led them in the capture of the castle of Zarnata and in the subsequent Battle of Kalamata, where he defeated the Ottomans under the Kapudan Pasha. This led to the capture of the fortresses of Passavas and Kelefa, which removed Ottoman control from the Mani Peninsula.[8][21]

Due to ongoing disagreements with Morosini, he took his leave the following year, and was replaced by Otto Wilhelm Königsmarck. However, after the death of Königsmarck and Girolamo Corner of disease, and the ascent of Morosini to the dogeship, he was recalled to service as captain-general in spring 1691. On 3 August he left Venice with new troops and arrived in Nauplia on 4 September, where he also fell ill and died on 12 October. He was accorded a state funeral and buried in the local cathedral.[8][22]

References

  1. ^ Regarding personal names: Freiherr is a former title (translated as 'Baron'). In Germany since 1919, it forms part of family names. The feminine forms are Freifrau and Freiin.
  2. ^ a b c d e Thürheim 1881, p. 155.
  3. ^ a b c d e Rockstroh 2011.
  4. ^ a b c d Pfister & von Landmann 1877, p. 25.
  5. ^ Pfister & von Landmann 1877, pp. 23–25.
  6. ^ Thürheim 1881, pp. 110–112.
  7. ^ a b c Thürheim 1881, p. 156.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Pfister & von Landmann 1877, p. 26.
  9. ^ Thürheim 1881, p. 159.
  10. ^ Staudinger 1904, p. 24.
  11. ^ Staudinger 1904, p. 575.
  12. ^ Staudinger 1904, pp. 32–37.
  13. ^ Braun 1987, p. 15.
  14. ^ Staudinger 1904, pp. 42, 125–127.
  15. ^ Staudinger 1904, p. 42.
  16. ^ Staudinger 1904, pp. 36, 42.
  17. ^ Staudinger 1904, p. 31.
  18. ^ Wheatcroft 2008, p. 168.
  19. ^ Staudinger 1904, pp. 577–578.
  20. ^ Staudinger 1904, p. 177, 578.
  21. ^ Thürheim 1881, pp. 156–157.
  22. ^ Thürheim 1881, pp. 157–159.

Sources

  • Braun, Rainer, ed. (1987). Bayern und seine Armee: Eine Ausstellung des Bayerischen Hauptstaatsarchivs aus den Beständen des Kriegsarchivs, München, 9. Juli-30. August 1987 (in German). Generaldirektion der Staatlichen Archive Bayerns. ISBN 3921635101.
  • Pfister, Albert; von Landmann, Carl (1877). "Degenfeld, Christoph Martin Freiherr von". Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie, herausgegeben von der Historischen Kommission bei der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften (in German). Vol. 5. pp. 23–26.
  • Rockstroh, K. C. (2011). "Hannibal v. Degenfeld". Dansk Biografisk Leksikon (in Danish) (3rd ed.).
  • Staudinger, Karl (1904). Geschichte des bayerischen Heeres: Geschichte des kurbayerischen Heeres unter Kurfürst Max II. Emanuel 1680–1726 (in German). Munich: J. Lindauer.
  • Thürheim, Andreas (1881). Christoph Martin, Freiherr von Degenfeld, General der Venezianer, General-Gouverneur von Dalmazien und Albanien, und dessen Söhne (1600—1733) (in German). Vienna: Wilhelm Braumüller.
  • Wheatcroft, Andrew (2008). The Enemy at the Gate: Habsburgs, Ottomans and the Battle for Europe. London: Pimlico. ISBN 978-1-40908682-6.