Last modified: 2024-05-18 by martin karner
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Niklaus Franz von Bachmann from
Näfels (Glarus) was a Swiss general who fought in the Napoleonic Wars on the side of the
Britsh-Austrian-Russian coalition (War of the Second Coalition).
He is considered to be the rediscoverer of the Swiss Cross, which had
been forgotten since the late Middle Ages as a common symbol of the confederate troops.
In 1799 he took
over command of the Swiss troops fighting against Napoleon on the Allied side. In the spring of 1800 he
introduced the red armband with the
white cross for his troops (source).
This can be seen as the birth of the
modern Swiss Flag, although the flag as such had not yet been introduced (This only happened
in 1821
through the efforts of General Dufour). The red armband was introduced in the Swiss troops as a common sign
in 1815, when the Diet appointed Bachmann
commander-in-chief of the federal troops.
The flag presented here was handed over to Bachmann's regiment on 15 March 1800 in Schwabmünchen,
south of Augsburg (Bavaria). The cloth was originally red,
before it faded over time. On the obverse it
shows the Latin motto Pro Deo et Patria (For God and Fatherland) surrounded by a wreath of oak
and laurel leaves.
The reverse has the same design, but with the motto in German (Für Gott und
Vatterland). When the regiment was dissolved in February 1801 after the war had ended,
Bachmann took
the flag with him to his home in Näfels. In 1891 his great-granddaughter donated the flag to the
Historical Association of the Canton Glarus.
Afterwards, through unknown circumstances, its trace was
lost and it was considered missing. In 1948 the Historical Association luckily found the flag and bought
it back
from a Monsieur de Pacquement from Paris and brought it back home to the Cantonal Museum in
Näfels. In 2012 it was transferred to the Cantonal Archive in Glarus
for conservation reasons.
Source and photos: Südostschweiz/Glarner Nachrichten, 28.3.2024
Martin Karner, 17 May 2024