Austrian Army 1740-80 (1) Cavalry (Men at Arms 271)

• Austrian Army 1740-80 (1) Cavalry (Men at Arms 271) •
Osprey Publishing | Author: B. Younghusband | 28 Jul 1992 | Pages: 48 | PDF

Austria was both a major participant and one of the causes of hostilities in the wars of the mid-18th century. The death of the Habsburg Emperor Charles VI in October 1740 set in motion the first of the major wars of the time. His heir was a daughter, Maria Theresa, who was destined become one of the greatest figures in the history of the 18th century. The Hapsburg territories were immense, and a key unifying factor was the army itself, that embraced all nationalities and drew its personnel from Hapsburg lands and beyond. This title, the first in a sequence of three, takes a close look at the organisation, uniforms and equipment of the cavalry of the Austrian Army during Maria Theresa’s reign, covering cuirassiers, dragoons, hussars, and chevauxleger.

• Austrian Army 1740-80 (2) Infantry (Men at Arms 276) •
Osprey Publishing | Author: B. Younghusband | 14 Nov 1994 | Pages: 48 | PDF

At the accession of Maria Theresa in 1740, the Austro-Hungarian army included 52 infantry regiments, of which three were Hungarian, three Netherlandish and one Italian. The remainder drew their recruits not only from the Habsburg territories, including Bohemia, Moravia and Silesia (the last being lost to Prussia in 1742), but from the autonomous states of the Holy Roman Empire and beyond. The proportion of Hungarian raised regiments was set to rise in the coming years though indeed ‘foreign’ personnel comprised an important part of the military etablishment. This title, the second in a sequence of three, details the organisation, uniform and equipment of the cosmopolitan Austrian Army from 1740-80, focusing on infantry troops.

• Austrian Army 1740-80 (3) Specialist Troops (Men at Arms 280) •
Osprey Publishing | Author: B. Younghusband | 13 Mar 1995 | Pages: 48 | PDF

Until at least the latter years of Maria Theresa’s reign, the Austrian artillery was acknowledged to be second to none in Europe; and it must have been no coincidence that Jean Baptiste de Gribeauval, who went on and so radically reformed the French artillery after he became inspector of artillery in 1776, had spend the Seven Years’ War on attachment to the Austrian army from the French. In this last of three volumes [Men-at arms 271 & 276] Philip Haythornwaite does a first class job of examining the composition and uniforms of these and other specialist troops of the Austrian army 1740-80, including the artillery units, engineers, Grenz, Jägers and medical troops..

Rating
( No ratings yet )
Like this post? Please share to your friends: