Hugo Raab

Friherre Major General Claes Fredrik Hugo Raab (25 November 1831 – 11 December 1881) was a Swedish Army officer. Raab fought in the Second Schleswig War as a volunteer and later in his career became the first Chief of the General Staff. With his international outlook, his concrete experience of the everyday life of the war and his great work capacity, Raab was one of the Swedish Army's foremost officers during the 19th century.[1] He contributed actively to lifting the army out of its difficult recession in the 1860s and initiated the modernization of higher staff functions, officer training and organization which in 1885 would result in a decisive decision on an extension of the conscription defence and rounded off with the replacement of the Allotment system with a conscription-based defence in 1901.[1]


Hugo Raab
Birth nameClaes Fredrik Hugo Raab
Born(1831-11-25)25 November 1831
Ryssby, Sweden
Died11 December 1881(1881-12-11) (aged 50)
Stockholm, Sweden
AllegianceSweden
Service/branchSwedish Army
Years of service1850–1881
RankMajor General
Commands heldMilitary Office of the Ministry of Land Defence
General Staff
Battles/warsSecond Schleswig War

Career

Raab was born on 27 November 1831 at Ryssbylund manor in Ryssby Parish, Kalmar County, Sweden.[1][2] Raab was educated at the Royal War Academy from 1847 to 1850 and was commissioned as an officer in Kalmar Regiment with the rank of Underlöjtnant the same year. Raab was employed as an adjutant to Carl von Mansbach, the Swedish-Norwegian minister in Berlin, and he attended the Prussian Staff College from 1855 to 1858. During that time, he was promoted (1857) to lieutenant of Kalmar Regiment. After returning to Sweden, in 1859, he was appointed General Staff Officer. When the Second Schleswig War broke out in 1864, Raab sought and obtained a position as a senior lieutenant in the Danish Army.[2] Initially employed at the headquarters, he participated in the battle of Dybbøl on 17 March, but was soon seconded from there and assumed command of the 1st Company of Swedish and Norwegian volunteers of captain Aaröe's corps. Best known among the expeditions carried out by this company under Raab's leadership is the nightly operation to Loit church village in Schleswig, at which time several prisoners were taken.[2] For his participation in the war, however, Raab did not only receive praise, for many considered it less appropriate, since he had to thank Prussia for a not insignificant part of his military education. On the other hand, however, Raab, like his father, was a warm friend of the Scandinavian idea.[2]

In 1865, Raab was promoted to captain of the Swedish Army and was appointed the same year as information officer in tactics, regulations and war articles at the Military Academy Karlberg. From January 1866 to September 1873, he was a teacher of warfare and war history at the Higher Artillery School (Högre artilleriläroverket, later the Royal Swedish Army Staff College) in Marieberg.[2] During this time, he was promoted to captain in Kalmar Regiment in 1869, in 1870 to major in the army and in 1872 to lieutenant colonel in the army. The same year he assumed the post of Chief of the Military Office of the Ministry of Land Defence. In 1873 he drew up the proposal for criteria for a new, based on general conscription, fully contemporary army organization, which, after being examined by a committee, in whose work Raab was ordered to participate, was the basis for King in Council's presentation on the subject to the Riksdag of 1875.[2] In 1873, Raab was appointed colonel and chief of the General Staff, whose organization he was commissioned to construct. During the following years he also served as a member of several committees on the land defense (lantförsvaret). In 1877, Raab was promoted to major general of the army. In 1880 he was appointed a member of the then large Land Defense Committee (Lantförsvarskommittén).[2]

Raab also worked as a military writer. Among his published works, except for dissertations - Kriget i Italien 1859 ("Italian War of 1859") (1859), Slaget vid Dennewitz ("Battle of Dennewitz") (1865) etc - and essays in Kungl. Krigsvetenskapsakademiens handlingar och tidskrift, including Några ord om tidens kraf på lätt infanteri (1857), Om ändamålet med Stockholms befästande (1860), Den adliga rusttjensten (1870) and (together with Jesper Crusebjörn) Kort sammanfattning af de vigtigaste bestämmelserna rörande arméns organisation (1870).[2]

Raab became a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of War Sciences in 1863 and was editor of its journal from 1870 to 1871. He was gifted with a clear look, a lot of willpower and great work ability. With indomitable energy, he fought his way into the end for the attainment of the objective, which he made to his life's work: the raising of his country's defense capability. He considered the most important means for this to be the temporal transformation of the army organization. His work in this direction, however, he never saw crowned with success. On the other hand, he succeeded in making important improvements in other areas of the Swedish defense system, such as the General Staff's organization and the reforming of the Royal Swedish Army Staff College.[2]

Legacy

The Hugo Raab Prize (Hugo Raab-priset) is awarded annually to a researcher, teacher or student at the Swedish Defence University who has performed one or several scientific works of outstanding quality over the past three years. The Hugo Raab Prize was established to promote scientific quality at the Swedish Defence University.[3]

The Hugo Raab Day (Hugo Raab-dagen) is the Swedish Defence University's annual celebration day[4] which usually occurs in November-December.[5]

Personal life

Raab married on 7 September 1869 in Stockholm to Lovisa (Louise) Johanna Charlotta Grill (19 May 1841 in Stockholm – 23 January 1908 in Stockholm), the daughter of Johan Daniel Grill, a physician, and Sofia Elisabeth Grill.[1]

Dates of rank

Swedish Army

Danish Army

Awards and decorations

Honours

Bibliography

  • Raab, Hugo (1857). Några ord om tidens kraf på lätt infanteri (in Swedish). Stockholm. SELIBR 2980175.
  • Raab, Hugo (1860). Kriget i Italien 1859: militäriskt utkast (in Swedish). Stockholm: Bonnier. SELIBR 2736561.
  • Raab, Hugo (1860). Om ändamålet med Stockholms befästande: i anledning af J.Mankells skrift i samma ämne (in Swedish). Stockholm. SELIBR 2980176.
  • Raab, Hugo, ed. (1861). Soldaten: utg. av Hugo Raab (in Swedish). Stockholm. SELIBR 3249451.
  • Raab, Hugo; Crusebjörn, Jesper (1870). Kort sammanfattning af de vigtigaste bestämmelserna rörande arméns organisation: till ledning för undervisningen i militärskolorna (in Swedish). Stockholm: P. A. Norstedt & söner. SELIBR 19415607.
  • Raab, Hugo; Crusebjörn, Jesper (1870). Kort sammanfattning af de vigtigaste bestämmelserna rörande arméns organisation (in Swedish). Stockholm: Ad Bonnier. SELIBR 1584501.

References

  1. Ericson, Lars (1995–1997). "C F Hugo Raab". Svenskt biografiskt lexikon (in Swedish). 29. National Archives of Sweden. p. 591. Retrieved 2019-11-29.
  2. Westrin, Theodor; Berg, Ruben G:son; Söderberg, Verner, eds. (1915). Nordisk familjebok: konversationslexikon och realencyklopedi (in Swedish). 22 (New, rev. and richly ill. ed.). Stockholm: Nordisk familjeboks förl. pp. 804–805. SELIBR 8072220.
  3. "Hugo Raab-priset" [The Hugo Raab Prize] (in Swedish). Swedish Defence University. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  4. "DMF stipendieutlysning 2019" (PDF) (in Swedish). Stockholm University. 2019-05-09. p. 1. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  5. "Utlysning av stipendium" (PDF) (in Swedish). University of Gothenburg. 2011-03-31. p. 1. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  6. Sveriges statskalender för år 1881 (in Swedish). Stockholm: P.A. Nordstedt & Söner. 1880. p. 118.

Further reading

  • Artéus, Gunnar, ed. (2003). Hugo Raab: förkämpe för ett modernt försvar (in Swedish). Stockholm: Försvarshögskolan. ISBN 9189683382. SELIBR 9195410.
  • Tiselius, Elias (1953). Hugo Raab, banbrytaren för vår värnpliktsarme. Militärlitteraturföreningen ; 207 (in Swedish). Stockholm: [fören.] SELIBR 1443805.
Military offices
Preceded by
Carl Leijonhufvud
Military Office of the Ministry of Land Defence
1872–1873
Succeeded by
Axel Ryding
Preceded by
None
General Staff
1873–1881
Succeeded by
Axel Ryding
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