Joseph Piosasque de Non

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Joseph Count Piosasque de Non (born September 25, 1681 in Turin , † May 3, 1776 in Munich ) was a Bavarian field marshal and diplomat .

Life

According to Johann Heinrich Zedler, the de Non family was "a dynasty, flourishing partly in the Duchy of Savoy and partly in the Electorate of Bavaria."

Italian nobles came to Bavaria with the Electress Henriette Adelaide of Savoy . The Minucci , Livizzani, Rambaldi, Gabrielli, Nogarola, Arco and di None were established through the purchase of court brands and noble seats. The young Giuseppe Piossasco di None visited the royal Bavarian pagerie from 1692 . He learned from a language professor, dance master, fencing master and "engineer, mathematics and fortification instructor." From 1695 he served as an officer in the Bavarian army in the campaigns in Flanders, from 1701 in the War of the Spanish Succession , in the train to Tyrol in 1703 and the Battle of Höchstädt in 1704.

After the Turkish war in the carnival of 1718, the festival society in the imperial hall of the residence disguised itself in costumes of various peoples. Piosasque appeared as a Turk. At the beginning of April he married Violanta von Toerring - Seefeld. The marriage had seven children. The palace at Theatinerstrasse 16 was not completed until 1732 . Piosasque followed Elector Karl Albrecht in the War of the Austrian Succession , was wounded near Belgrade and in 1739 was appointed Lieutenant Field Marshal . From July 10, 1742, Piosasque was general of the cavalry . From 1743 Piosasque acted as the Bavarian ambassador to France. Under Elector Maximilian III. Joseph also served as captain of the Hartschier bodyguard. He was also a Bavarian chamberlain and finally held the military rank of field marshal. In 1774 he was listed in the Churbayerischer Hof- und Staatskalender as "his Roman imperial majesty Karl VII. Real secret advice , keeper of Dachau " . An obituary was published in 1776 in the Churbaier Intelligence Journal. The field marshal was buried in the cathedral chapter crypt of the Munich Frauenkirche .

literature

  • Andreas Lazarus von Imhof: Newly opened history room , vol. 7, Basel 1756, p. 49.
  • Churbaierisches Intellölkerblatt , Munich 1776, p. 190.
  • Churpfalzbaierisches Intellektivenblatt , Munich July 28, 1786, p. 262.
  • Münchner Intellektivenblatt , Munich 1796, p. 239.
  • Genealogical Reich and State Handbook , Frankfurt am Main 1802, Vol. 1, p. 424
  • Maximilian Samson, Friedrich Schoell: Histoire du XVIII Siècle , Vol. 2, Paris 1833, p. 72.
  • Felix Joseph Lipowsky: Life and government history of the Elector of Bavaria Karl Albert, later Emperor Karl VII. , Munich 1830, p. 56.
  • ders .: Des Ferdinand Maria ... life and government history , Munich 1831, p. 47.
  • Letters from Braunau January 8, 11, 16, 1742 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Johann Heinrich Zedler: Universal Lexikon , Vol. 24, Halle 1732, col. 1228.
  2. ^ Genealogy of Upper Bavaria
  3. Letters from Bohemia written in 1741 and reports by the "Commandanten von Braunau, the captain of the bodyguard" from the following year have been preserved.
  4. ^ Academy of Sciences in Munich , meeting on February 9, 1878, p. 107.
  5. ^ Anton Mayer: The cathedral church to UL Frau in Munich , Munich 1868, p. 450; (Digital scan)