Franz John was born in Bruck an der Leitha in lower Austria on the 20th of November 1815 as the son a sapper officer and enjoyed a military education at the imperial and royal military academy at Wiener Neustadt which started on the 27th of October 1827 and where he was always one of the more successful students among his contemporaries. Commissioned on the 24th of October 1835 as a Lieutenant he was assigned to Infantry Regiment Erherzog Franz Carl Number 52 in Italy. Following four years at regimental duty he was attached to the General-Quartermaster-Staff where he was finally fully accepted on the 19th of June 1845 and promoted to Oberlieutenant the next day. He was further promoted to Hauptmann on the 13th of March 1848. He participated as a general staff captain in the war against Piedmont in 1848/1849 initially at army headquarters seeing action in the street fighting during the uprising in Milan on the 20th and 21st of March 1848, in the battle of S. Lucia on the 6th of May, the assault on Montanara on the 29th of May and the engagement at Goito on the 30th of May. From the 7th of May he was assigned as the general staff officer to the brigade of Generalmajor Friedrich Fürst Liechtenstein where he took part in the capture of Vicenza on the 10th of June , in the battle of Sommacampagna and Sona on the 23rd of July as well as the battle of Custozza on the 25th of July. During the latter battle, when his brigade was in danger of being outflanked by the enemy, his prompt action in changing the direction of the brigade's front resulted not only in alleviating the danger but enabled the brigade to force the enemy's withdrawal. He further personally supervised the positioning of the brigade's attached artillery battery under heavy enemy fire which subsequently successfully compelled the Piedmontese artillery to vacate their firing positions. For his outstanding conduct in the battle of Custozza, Hauptmann John was consequently awarded the Order of the Iron Crown 3rd Class. The following day he again distinguished himself through his extraordinary bravery during the night battle at Volta which followed the pursuit of the enemy consequent to their defeat at Custozza. Amongst other feats during the night he successfully held the endangered left flank of the division until reinforcements arrived. As a consequence of his conduct during the night of 26th/27th July, Kaiser Franz I as the Grandmaster of the Order of the Military Order of Maria Theresia awarded Hauptmann John the Knights' Cross of the order at the 157th promotion on the 26th of March 1850 and he was subsequently raised to an Austrian Barony taking the title Freiherr von John. He saw further action during the war of 1848 including the engagement at Cremona on the 30th of July and at Milan on the 4th of August. With the recommencement of the war the following year he took part in the engagement at Gravellone on the 20th of March and the battle of Mortara on the 21st of March, Novara on the 23rd of March with further campaigning during the expedition into Tuscany and the assault at Livorno on the 10th and 11th of May 1849. His final service during the campaign of 1849 was the pursuit of Garibaldi's irregulars in Romagna until August. He was further awarded an imperial commendation on 24th of May 1848 and the Military Merit Cross on the 4th of February 1850 for his services during 1849. He was additionally awarded the Commanders' Cross of the Papal Saint Sylvester Order on the 26th of September 1849.
On the 5th of May 1867 he was made a life long member of the house of lords of the Austrian parliament and following the creation of the new Austro-Hungarian monarchy he became the Reich's war minister. At his own request he was relieved of this post on the 18th of January 1868 and simultaneously awarded the Grand Cross of the Order of Leopold. Just over a year later on the 27th of March 1869, he stepped down as chief of staff of the army and was appointed as the commanding general in Graz where he was promoted to Feldzeugmeister on the 23rd of April 1873.
Hi , I'm really interested to read your article but I can't see purple on grey!
ReplyDeleteis it ok now
ReplyDelete