*** Welcome to piglix ***

Georg von Derfflinger

Georg von Derfflinger
Georg von Derfflinger.png
Born (1606-03-20)20 March 1606
Neuhofen an der Krems, Archduchy of Austria, Holy Roman Empire
Died 14 February 1695(1695-02-14) (aged 88)
Gusow, Margraviate of Brandenburg, Holy Roman Empire
Allegiance Blason Jean-Georges IV de Saxe.svg Saxony (until 1632)
Arms of the House of Vasa.svg Sweden (until 1648)
Wappen Mark Brandenburg.pngCoat of arms - Ducal Prussia.png Brandenburg-Prussia (from 1654)
Years of service c. 1625–1690
Battles/wars Thirty Years' War
Scanian War

Georg von Derfflinger (20 March 1606 – 14 February 1695) was a field marshal in the army of Brandenburg-Prussia during and after the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648).

Born 1606 at Neuhofen an der Krems in Austria, into a family of poor Protestant peasants, Derfflinger had to leave his home due to religious persecution under the Catholic Habsburg dynasty in the course of the Counter-Reformation. He probably fought side-by-side with insurgent Bohemian nobles led by Jindřich Matyáš Thurn and served in the armed forces of various Protestant combatant powers, at first in the Saxon army, but most of the time in that of Sweden. Until the 1648 Peace of Westphalia he distinguished himself as an able and daring cavalry leader and gained a reputation for brilliance and bravery, which in 1654 persuaded Elector Frederick William of Brandenburg to offer Derfflinger a senior position in his army.

Derfflinger was supposedly a notorious drunkard who constantly drank schnapps, but his fondness for alcohol did not impede his military abilities. His marriage in 1646 to an heiress of the Brandenburg nobility had already secured him a number of possessions, which he was able to augment with estates granted to him for his military exploits. A lifelong soldier, Derfflinger had no formal education, but was entrusted by the Elector with numerous important military tasks and played a central role in the reform of the Brandenburgian cavalry and artillery. He had a very stormy relationship with Frederick William and argued with him incessantly, at one point quitting. In order to gain back the Elector's employ, he wrote down a list of incredible demands, which included a clause stipulating that no man charge into battle ahead of him and that he take a certain percentage of plunder and captured officers from every engagement.


...
Wikipedia

...