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  1. Christian, count von Haugwitz was a Prussian minister and diplomat, the principal author of Prussian foreign policy from 1792 to 1806, who was held largely responsible for the catastrophic war against Napoleon (1806) that made Prussia a French satellite.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. Christian Graf von Haugwitz. Christian August Heinrich Kurt Graf von Haugwitz (11 June 1752 – 1832) was a German statesman, best known for serving as Foreign Minister of Prussia during the Napoleonic Wars.

  3. Christian August Heinrich Curt von Haugwitz, ab 1786 Graf von Haugwitz (* 11. Juni 1752 auf Peuke bei Oels, Niederschlesien; † 9. Februar 1832 in Venedig, Italien) war ein preußischer Jurist, Staatsmann und Diplomat.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › HaugwitzHaugwitz - Wikipedia

    The Haugwitzs are an ancient aristocratic family from the Lusatia region. It spread to the area of Germany (Meissen), Silesia (where more than 12 lineages were created), then to Bohemia and Moravia.

  5. HAUGWITZ, Christian August Heinrich Kurt Graf von. Born into the Silesian (Protestant) branch of the ancient Haugwitz family, he studied law before being elected in 1791 by the Silesian estates as general director of the province.

  6. Christian August Heinrich Haugwitz, Graf von (hīn´rĬkh gräf fən houk´vĬts), 1752–1832, Prussian foreign minister (1802–4, 1805–6). In 1805, after the French victory at Austerlitz, Haugwitz tried to appease Napoleon I by concluding treaties with France that involved humiliating Prussian subservience to French policy and open Franco ...

  7. Count Christian von Haugwitz,1 who was without a doubt the driving force behind Prussia's involvement, was looking for a way to end the isolationist neutral system that Prussia had followed since 1795 when, under Friedrich Wilhelm II, Prussia made a separate peace with France. By the treaty of Basle, all the German states within an agreed