Henry de Hinuber
Henry de Hinuber | |
|---|---|
| Native name | Eduard Christoph Heinrich von Hinüber |
| Other name(s) | Heinrich von Hinüber |
| Nickname(s) | Harry |
| Born | 25 January 1767 London, England |
| Died | 2 December 1833 (aged 66) Frankfurt, German Confederation |
| Allegiance | |
| Branch | |
| Years of service |
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| Rank | Lieutenant-general |
| Unit | King's German Legion |
| Commands |
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| Battles / wars | |
| Awards | Army Gold Medal |
| Spouse(s) |
Sophie Marie Lucie Eleonore Fahle
(m. 1815) |
Lieutenant-General Henry de Hinuber, KCB, KCH (25 January 1767 – 2 December 1833), known in Hanover as Eduard Christoph Heinrich von Hinüber, was a Hanoverian army officer who commanded units of the King's German Legion (KGL) during the Napoleonic Wars. Initially serving in the Hanoverian Army, in 1782 he fought in the Second Anglo-Mysore War in India. He was present at the Siege of Cuddalore and continued on in India until 1792. The French Revolutionary Wars began a year later and Hinuber served in the Flanders Campaign.
Hinuber was one of the first Hanoverians to offer his services to the British Army when Hanover was invaded in 1803. Given command of the 3rd Line Battalion of the KGL, he fought in the Hanover and Copenhagen Expeditions before commanding a brigade in a diversionary attack in the Bay of Naples in 1809. He was promoted to major-general in 1811 and given command of a brigade in Lord Wellington's Peninsular War army in 1813.
Hinuber commanded his brigade at the Battle of Nivelle in 1813 and then at the Siege of Bayonne the following year, when he led the response to the French counter-attack. At the start of the Hundred Days, Hinuber was in command of the 4th Division but, replaced by a more senior officer, he refused another command and missed the Battle of Waterloo. He joined the army of the new Kingdom of Hanover in 1816, commanding several infantry brigades, and was promoted to lieutenant-general in both British and Hanoverian service. In 1831 Hinuber received his last command, the 2nd Division of a corps of the German Federal Army. He died in Frankfurt two years later.