Friedrich Heinrich Ferdinand Leopold von Forcade de Biaix explained

Honorific Prefix:Sir
Birth Name:Frederic Henri Ferdinand Leopold de Forcade[1]
Native Name:Friedrich Heinrich Ferdinand Leopold von Forcade de Biaix
Birth Date:19 December 1747
Birth Place:Berlin, Brandenburg
Death Place:Gut Schleibtz, Oels, Silesia
Castellan (Drost) in Neuenrade
Module:
Embed:yes
Branch:Prussian Army
Unit:23rd Prussian Infantry Regiment (1761–1767)
Vernezobre Regiment (1767–1774)
28th Prussian Infantry Regiment
Serviceyears:1761–1793
Commands:15th Fusilier Battalion
10th Fusilier Battalion
Awards:Knight of the Order of Pour le Mérite (1791)
Rank:Lieutenant Colonel
Children:7, most notably:
Friedrich Wilhelm Leopold Konstantin Quirin von Forcade de Biaix
Wilhelm Friedrich Erdmann Ferdinand von Forcade de Biaix
Friedrich Wilhelm Ferdinand Ernst Heinrich von Forcade de Biaix
Spouse:Johanna Christine Wilhelmine von Koschembahr und Skorkau, from the house of Ossen (1782)
Parents:His Excellency, Lieutenant General Sir Friedrich Wilhelm Quirin von Forcade de Biaix and Marie de Montolieu, Baronne de St.-Hippolyte

Friedrich Heinrich Ferdinand Leopold von Forcade de Biaix,[2] aka Heinrich Friedrich Ferdinand Leopold von Forcade de Biaix,[3] aka Friedrich Heinrich Ferdinand Leopold Marquis de Forcade de Biaix[4] (* 19 December 1747, Berlin; † 12 October 1808, Schleibitz Manor,[5] Oels, Silesia), was a Royal Prussian lieutenant colonel. He served in the Prussian Army from 1761 to 1793. His last command was as commanding officer of the 10th Prussian Fusilier Battalion, with which he served in the Rhine Campaigns of 1791, where he was awarded the Kingdom of Prussia's highest military order of merit for heroism, Knight of the Order of Pour le Mérite (1791). He left the Prussian Army after 32 years of service in 1793 as the result of invalidity. At the time of his death, he was the owner of Schleibitz Manor,[6] near Oels, Silesia.

He was the third son, of Royal Prussian Lieutenant General Friedrich Wilhelm Quirin von Forcade de Biaix, one of King Frederick the Great's most active and most treasured officers. His baptismal godfather was none less than His Majesty Frederick the Great. As a gift, the King ordered his father to accept the hereditary title of Drost zu Neuenrade ("Castellan of Neuenrade") in the County of Mark with the royal command that it be transferred to him upon his death. After his father's death in 1765, he became Castellan (Drost) of Neuenrade.

Military career

He followed the military tradition of his family, and:

Family

Coat of arms

The family motto of the Prussian branch is "In Virtute Pertinax".[8]

Coat of arms

An escutcheon with the field divided into four parts. Left half: argent tincture, a gules lion holding a sinople eradicated oak tree between its paws; azure tincture charged with three or mullets; Right half: a gules castle with three towers on an argent tincture; sinople tincture charged with three argent roses below it. A Grafenkrone (count's coronet) as helmut on top of the escutcheon, crested with a or fleur-de-lis. Two or lions supporting the escutcheon. Motto: "In Virtute Pertinax".

Heraldic symbolism

The lion symbolizes courage; the eradicated oak tree symbolizes strength and endurance; the towers are symbols of defense and of individual fortitude; the mullets (5-star) symbolizes divine quality bestowed by god; the rose is a symbol of hope and joy; the fleur-de-lis is the floral emblem of France; the coronet is a symbol of victory, sovereignty and empire. A count's coronet to demonstrate rank and because the family originally served the counts of Foix and Béarn during the English Wars in the Middle Ages.

Parents

His father was Friedrich Wilhelm Quirin von Forcade de Biaix (1699–1729), one of King Frederick the Great's most active and most treasured officers.[9] [10] Twice wounded and left for dead on the battlefield, he was Regimentschef of the 23rd Prussian Infantry Regiment,[11] [12] recipient of the Kingdom of Prussia's highest military order of merit for heroism, Knight of the Order of Pour le Mérite,[13] Knight of the Order of the Black Eagle,[14] Canon of Havelberg, Castellan of Neuenrade in the County of Mark, Lord Seneschal of Zinna, President of the Ober-Collegium Sanitatis in Berlin and Lieutenant governor of Breslau. He married in 1727 at the French Cathedral in Berlin with Marie de Montolieu, Baronne de St.-Hippolyte[15] aka Maria von Montaulieu, Freiin von St.-Hippolyte (1709–1767), daughter of Sardinian and Prussian Major General Louis de Montolieu, Baron de St.-Hippolyte († 1738, Berlin), also a Huguenot exile.

Marriage

Friedrich Heinrich Ferdinand Leopold von Forcade de Biaix married on 15 April 1782 at Ossen Manor in Oels, Silesia, to Wilhelmine von Koshembahr und Skorkau from the house of Ossen,[9] (* 13 January 1761, Ossen Manor, Oels; † 9 July 1816, Breslau), the daughter of Christian Leopold von Koschembahr und Skorkau, Herr of Ober- and Nieder-Ossen, Pühlau, Dörndorf and Jacobsdorf, and his second wife Charlotte Wilhelmine Wutge von Wutgenau.

Children

The couple had at least seven children from their marriage; known are five sons and two daughters. Three sons survived into adulthood.

Other family

Titles and offices

Historical terms, in particular those related to offices, titles and awards, are often outdated in their usage to the point that modern dictionaries no longer contain them. To understand their meaning in the present day context it is necessary to look into dictionaries from the period. Historical terms in German used in the production of this article, and their English definitions, include:

Drost zu Neuenrade

Castellan of Neuenrade

References

Literature

Notes and References

  1. Berlin-Friedrichstadt, Baptisms Vol. 1743–1753, p. 228 (in French manuscript)
  2. Zedlitz-Neukirch, Band 4, Page 391 (in German)
  3. Blažek, Part 3, Page 131 (in German)
  4. Lehmann, Band 1, Page 209, Nr. 145 (in German)
  5. Zedlitz-Neukirch, Band 2, Page 180 (in German)
  6. Blažek, Part 3, Page 132 (in German)
  7. Gieraths, Band 8, Page 189 (in German)
  8. Champeaux, Page 105 (in French)
  9. Zedlitz-Neukirch, Band 4, Page 390 (in German)
  10. Zedlitz-Neukirch, Band 2, Page 179 (in German)
  11. Heinsius, Issue 52, Page 241, Nr. V (in German)
  12. Gieraths, Band 8, Page 79 (in German)
  13. König, Band 1, Page 430 (in German)
  14. Ledebur, Band 17, Page 43 (in German)
  15. König, Band 1, Page 431 (in German)
  16. VIFA – Ausländer im vorrevolutionären Russland, Institut für Ost- und Südeuropaforschung, Erik-Amburger-Datenbank, Datensatz: 86859 (in German)
  17. Zedlitz-Neukirch, Band 4, Page 392 (in German)