Nils Brahe
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Nils Brahe | |
---|---|
October 14, 1604 - November 21, 1632 | |
Place of birth | Rydboholm, Sweden |
Place of death | Naumburg, Germany |
Allegiance | Sweden |
Rank | General |
Battles/wars | Polish-Swedish Wars Thirty Years' War |
Count Nils Brahe (October 14, 1604 - November 21, 1632) was a Swedish soldier and younger brother of Per Brahe. He served with distinction under King Gustavus Adolphus, who regarded him as the best general in the Swedish army after Lennart Torstenson.
Brahe was born at Rydboholm. He took part in the Polish-Swedish Wars, in which he first participated in the siege and capture of Riga (1621), and later served with distinction in Poland (1626-1627) and assisted in the defence of Stralsund in 1628. On April 16, 1628 he married baroness Anna Margareta Bielke at the Stockholm castle.
In 1630 he accompanied Gustavus into Germany, in the Thirty Years' War and in 1631 was appointed colonel of "the yellow regiment," the king’s world-renowned life-guards, at the head of which he captured the castle of Würzburg on October 8, 1631. Brahe took part in the long duel between Gustavus and Wallenstein around Nuremberg as general of infantry, and commanded the left wing at Lützen on November 6, 1632, where he was the only Swedish general officer present. At the very beginning of the fight he received a wound to his knee which was to prove fatal. He died two weeks afterwards at Naumburg, and was later reburied in the church at Östra Ryd.
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- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.