This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Reinhold von Rosen (1605 – 8 December 1667) was a Baltic nobleman fighting for Sweden and France. Reinhold was one of the great generals of the Thirty Years' War.
Birth and origins
editBorn in 1605 in Livonia, son of Otto von Rosen and his wife Catharina von Klebeck.
Career
editReinhold was one of the great generals of the Thirty Years' War. He served Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden in his youth. In 1632, at the Battle of Lützen in which Gustavus Adolphus fell, he commanded a cavalry regiment. He then served Bernard of Saxe-Weimar On 17 July 1635 he successfully defended the Protestant town of Zweibrücken menaced by imperial troops. When Bernard died in 1639, he and the entire Weimar army went into French service and served under Condé and Turenne. He fought under Turenne in his defeat against Mercy at the Battle of Herbsthausen and was taken prisoner.
Marriages
editRosen married three times. He had a daughter, Marie-Sophie von Rosen (1638–1686), who married Conrad von Rosen.
Death
editRosen died on 18 December 1667 in the castle he had built in Dettwiller.[1]
References
edit- Poten, Bernhard von (1889). "Reinhold von Rosen". In Liliencron, Rochus von (ed.). Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie. Vol. 29. Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot. pp. 197–198.
- ^ Poten 1889, p. 198"Auf dem von ihm erbauten Schlosse Dettweiler starb er an den Folgen einer 1638 vor Breisach erhaltenen Wunde am 18/28 December 1667 ..."