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Karl Gustav Von 1613-1676 Wrangel

swedish and germany

WRANGEL, KARL GUSTAV VON (1613-1676) , Swedish soldier, was descended from a family of Estonian origin, branches of which settled in Sweden, Russia and Germany. His father, Hermann von Wrangel (1587-1643), was a Swedish field marshal in Gustavus Adolphus's wars. Karl Gustav was born near Uppsala on Dec. 23, 1613, and at the age of twenty distinguished himself as a cavalry captain in the war against the Army of the League. Three years later he was colonel, and in 1638 major general, still serving in Germany. In 1644 he commanded a fleet at sea, which defeated the Danes at Fehmarn on the 23rd of October. In 1646 he returned to Germany as a field marshal and succeeded Torstensson as commander-in-chief of the Swedish army in Germany, which post he held during the last three cam paigns of the Thirty Years' War. Under Wrangel and Turenne the allied Swedish and French armies marched and fought in Bavaria and Wiirttemberg. At the outbreak of a fresh Polish

war in 1655 Wrangel commanded a fleet, but in 1656 he was serving on land again and commanding, along with the Great Elector of Brandenburg, in the three days' battle of Warsaw. In 1657 he invaded Jutland and in 1658 passed over the ice into the islands and took Kronborg. In 1657 he was appointed admiral and in 1664 general of the realm, and as such he was a member of the regency during the minority of Charles XI. But his last campaign was unfortunate. Commanding, ineffectively owing to his broken health, in the war against Brandenburg, he was recalled after his stepbrother Waldemar, Freiherr von Wrangel (1647-1676), had been defeated at Fehrbellin. He died at Riigen on July 5, 1676.