Ludwig, count von Cobenzl

foreign minister of Austria
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Also known as: Ludwig, Graf von Cobenzl
Quick Facts
Born:
November 21, 1753, Brussels [Belgium]
Died:
February 22, 1809, Vienna [Austria] (aged 55)
Also Known As:
Ludwig, Graf von Cobenzl
Title / Office:
foreign minister (1800-1805), Austria

Ludwig, count von Cobenzl (born November 21, 1753, Brussels [Belgium]—died February 22, 1809, Vienna [Austria]) was an Austrian diplomat and foreign minister who played a leading role in the Third Partition of Poland (1795) and the negotiations of several treaties with Napoleonic France. He was the cousin of Philipp, Graf von Cobenzl, an Austrian chancellor.

A protégé of the Austrian chancellor Wenzel Anton von Kaunitz, Cobenzl became minister at St. Petersburg in 1779. At the Third Partition of Poland in 1795, he gained sizable territories for his country in compensation for Austria’s exclusion from the Second Partition. At the peace negotiations with France at Campo Formio (1797), Rastatt (1797–99), and Lunéville (1801), the Holy Roman Empire lost the left bank of the Rhine to France. As foreign minister from 1800, Cobenzl, attempting to relieve tensions with France, recognized Napoleon’s imperial title in 1804 but nevertheless became embroiled in the War of the Third Coalition (1805), in which Napoleon again defeated Austria. Cobenzl was dismissed a few weeks after the disastrous Battle of Austerlitz in 1805.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.