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  1. Dagobert Sigmund von Wurmser (7 de mayo de 1724 - 22 de agosto de 1797) fue un mariscal de campo austríaco durante las guerras revolucionarias francesas. Aunque luchó en la Guerra de los Siete Años, la Guerra de Sucesión de Baviera, montó varias campañas exitosas en Renania en los años iniciales de las Guerras Revolucionarias ...

  2. Imperial and Royal Privy Councilor; Imperial and Royal Chamberlain. Signature. Dagobert Sigismund, Count von Wurmser (7 May 1724 – 22 August 1797) was an Austrian field marshal during the French Revolutionary Wars. Although he fought in the Seven Years' War, the War of the Bavarian Succession, and mounted several successful ...

    • 1741–1763 (France), 1763–1796
  3. Graf Dagobert Sigmund von Wurmser, auch Dagobert Siegmund von Wurmser (* 7. Mai 1724 in Straßburg; † 22. August 1797 in Wien) war ein österreichischer Feldmarschall . Inhaltsverzeichnis. 1 Leben. 2 Familie. 3 Rezeption. 4 Literatur. 5 Einzelnachweise. Leben.

  4. militar austríaco / De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre. Dagobert Sigmund von Wurmser (7 de mayo de 1724 - 22 de agosto de 1797) fue un mariscal de campo austríaco durante las guerras revolucionarias francesas.

  5. After driving the Austrian army out of northwest and north-central Italy, the French invested the fortress of Mantua starting in early June 1796. In late July, a new Austrian commander, Dagobert Sigmund von Wurmser led an army to the relief of Joseph Canto d'Irles' garrison from the north.

    • 4 July – 1 August 1796, 27 August 1796 – 2 February 1797
  6. Dagobert Sigismund Graf Würmser (1724-1797) was an Alsatian officer who spent most of his military career in Austrian service, eventually rising to the rank of Field Marshal. He is best known for his two failures to raise Napoleon's siege of Mantua in 1796-97 but before that he had been successful against the French on the Rhine.

  7. role in Siege of Mantua. In Siege of Mantua. The two Austrian commanders, Count Dagobert Siegmund Graf von Wurmser and Baron Josef Alvintzy, in four successive tries, repeated the same mistakes of giving priority to lifting the Siege of Mantua, rather than first trying to destroy Napoleon’s 40,000-man Army of Italy, and of deploying their ...