Maurice de Saxe | |||||
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Count of Saxony Marshal General of France |
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Maurice de Saxe wearing the Polish Order of the White Eagle, 1748
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Born |
Goslar |
28 October 1696||||
Died | 20 November 1750 Château de Chambord |
(aged 54)||||
Burial | Saint Thomas Church, Strasbourg | ||||
Spouse | Johanna Viktoria von Loeben | ||||
Issue | August Adolf von Sachsen Marie-Aurore de Saxe |
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Father | Augustus II of Poland | ||||
Mother | Maria Aurora of Königsmarck |
Full name | |
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Hermann Maurice |
Maurice, Count of Saxony (German: Hermann Moritz Graf von Sachsen, French: Maurice de Saxe; 28 October 1696 – 20 November 1750) was a Franco-Saxon soldier in French service who became a Marshal and later also Marshal General of France. He is best known for his decisive victory at the Battle of Fontenoy.
Maurice was born at Goslar, an illegitimate son of Augustus II the Strong, King of Poland and Elector of Saxony, and the Countess Maria Aurora of Königsmarck. He was the first of eight extramarital children whom August acknowledged, although as many as 354 are claimed by sources, including Wilhelmine of Bayreuth, to have existed.
In 1698, the Countess sent him to his father in Warsaw. August had been elected King of Poland in the previous year, but the unsettled condition of the country obliged Maurice to spend the greater part of his youth outside its borders. This separation from his father made him independent and had an important effect on his future career.
At the age of twelve, Maurice served in the army of Prince Eugene of Savoy, at the sieges of Tournai and Mons and at the Battle of Malplaquet. A proposal at the end of the campaign to send him to a Jesuit college in Brussels was dropped due to the protests of his mother.
Upon his return to the camp of the Allies at the beginning of 1710, Maurice displayed a courage so impetuous that Prince Eugene admonished him to not confuse rashness with valour.