Friedrich Wilhelm Ferdinand Ernst Heinrich von Forcade de Biaix explained

Birth Date:7 October 1787
Birth Place:Brieg, Silesia, Prussia[1]
Death Place:Rawitsch, Posen, Prussia
Burial Place:Rawitsch, Posen, Prussia
Spouse:Josephine Caroline von Neumann (1827)
Parents:Friedrich Heinrich Ferdinand Leopold von Forcade de Biaix
Johanna Christine Wilhelmine von Koschembahr und Skorkau from the house of Ossen
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Branch:Prussian Army
Unit:32nd Prussian Infantry Regiment (1802-1807)
18th Prussian Infantry Regiment (1807-1835)
Serviceyears:1802-1835
Commands:10th Division's Garrison Company, 18th Prussian Infantry Regiment (1833)
Awards:Knight of the Iron Cross 2nd Class (1814),
Distinguished Service Cross,
Kriegsdenkmünze für 1813/15
Rank:Major

Friedrich Wilhelm Ferdinand Ernst Heinrich von Forcade de Biaix,[2] aka Ferdinand von Forcade (7 October 1787 – 14 November 1835), Royal Prussian Major and Knight of the Iron Cross 2nd Class.

He was a grandson 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, a Huguenot descendant of the noble family of Forcade and one of a third generation of decorated Prussian Army officers in the Forcade de Biaix dynasty. His last command was as commanding officer of the 10th Prussian Division's Garrison Company. He served the Prussian Army with 32¾ years of service.

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".[3]

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 Heinrich Ferdinand Leopold von Forcade de Biaix[4] (1747–1808), a Royal Prussian lieutenant colonel, recipient of Kingdom of Prussia's highest military order of merit for heroism, Knight of the Order of Pour le Mérite and Castellan (Drost) of Neuenrade in the County of Mark. He married in 1782 at Ossen Manor in Oels, Silesia, to Wilhelmine von Koshembahr und Skorkau (1762–?), from the house of Ossen.[5] She was the daughter of Christian Leopold von Koschembahr und Skorkau, Herr of Ober- and Nieder-Ossen, Pühlau, Dörndorf and Jacobsdorf, and his 2nd wife Charlotte Wilhelmine von Wutgenau.

Marriage

Ferdinand von Forcade de Biaix married on 15 February 1827 in Fraustadt, Posen, with Josephine Caroline von Neumann (1795–1882), from Warsaw, the daughter of Johann August von Neumann and Franziska von Pawlowicz. Their marriage was childless. Although she was only 40 years old at the time of his death, she never remarried.

Other family

References

Literature

Notes and References

  1. Rawitsch Evangelical Military Parish, Marriages and Deaths Vol. 1834-1871 p. 3, Nr. 4 https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/61131/0492566-00090/777920?backurl=https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/75259292/person/34318568105/facts/citation/900276532205/edit/record (in German manuscript)
  2. Schlesische Provinzialblätter, Nov. 1787, Page 476 (Viewer Page 92) (in German)
  3. Champeaux, Page 105 (in French)
  4. Zedlitz-Neukirch, Band 4, Page 391 (in German)
  5. Zedlitz-Neukirch, Band 4, Page 390 (in German)
  6. VIFA - Ausländer im vorrevolutionären Russland, Institut für Ost- und Südeuropaforschung, Erik-Amburger-Datenbank, Datensatz: 86859 (in German)