Karl Georg Huyn

Karl Georg Huyn was the son to Johann Carl Huyn and Natalie Born, he was also promoted to colonel general and the last military governor in Galicia from 1917–1919.[1]

Karl Georg Huyn
General of the cavalry, Karl Georg Graf Huyn
Born
Karl Georg Graf Huyn

(1857-11-18)November 18, 1857
Died21 February 1938(1938-02-21) (aged 90)
OccupationMilitary General/Govenor
Years active1879–1916 1917-1919
Military career
Allegiance Austria-Hungary
Years of service1879–1917
RankGeneral of the cavalry

Biography

Following his father, Karl Georg Huyn attended Theresian Military Academy, located in Wiener Neustadt, after attending a military school in Sankt Pölten. He excelled in the school, later to become a lieutenant in the Dragoon Regiment No.2 on April 24, 1879. The following year he was transferred to the Uhlan Regiment No. 11.

From 1881 to 1883 he attended a war school in Vienna and completed it with great success. Afterwards he was appointed to the general staff in Maribor and later to Lviv as a first lieutenant in 1884.

Huyn was promoted to captain in 1887, serving briefly in Przemyśl as part of the Second Army Corps from Vienna. In April 1891 he was awarded the Knight's Cross and the Order of the Golden Lion in the Netherlands. After his marriage to Maria Ignatia Countess Lutzow on March 16, 1892, Huyn was a Major for a military attaché appointed in Bucharest. In the same year he was appointed the chief of staff of the cavalry in Kraków.

He was promoted to general of the cavalry shortly before the outbreak of World War 1 and Huyn was given command of the newly formed XVII Corps that formed part of the 4th army under general Moritz von Auffenberg. After several unsuccessful operations in the Komarów area, Karl Georg Huyn was relieved of his command at the instigation of Auffenberg and was ordered off to Vienna.

In 1917 he was given the post of military governor of Galicia in Lviv, so on March 1, 1917 he was appointed governor in the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria with the Grand Duchy of Kraków. In 1918 he resisted liquidation, thinking it was impossible for Poland to form up again. It was lost in 1919 due to the collapse of Austria-Hungary after the Treaty of Versailles.[2] He died on February 21, 1938 at the age of 90.

References

  1. Huyn Karl Georg Graf von (PDF) (Volume 3 ed.). Vienna: publisher of the Austrian Academy of Sciences. 1965. p. 21.
  2. Wolff, Larry (January 9, 2012). The Idea of Galicia. Stanford University Press. p. 367.
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