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Who was Andreas Hofer?

Andreas Hofer is still revered by many in Tyrol as a hero today, more than 250 years after his death.

In any case, he is – alongside Ötzi and Reinhold Messner – one of the most famous Tyroleans.
He was born on 22 November 1767 at the Sandhof Inn in St. Leonhard in Passeier and, after a difficult childhood, became captain of a militia company in the Passeier Valley. He rose to the command of the Tyroleans in the battles against the Bavarians, who had occupied the land in 1806, as well as against Napoleon’s troops. In the main battles on the Bergisel mountain near Innsbruck (in part supported by Austrian troops) he three times succeeded in repelling superior enemy forces. On 15 August 1809 he established himself in the Hofburg Palace in Innsbruck, where he acted as Regent for two and a half months. On 14 October, in an unexpected turn, Austria was compelled to cede the now re-annexed Tyrol to Bavaria under the Treaty of Schönbrunn. Unable to comprehend this act, Hofer lost the fourth Battle of Bergisel on All Saints’ Day, 1809. In the weeks that followed he paid excessive heed to radical fellow fighters, issuing pointless orders to continue the fighting. The French revenged themselves with terrible retaliatory measures on the local population. At the end of November Hofer fled to a mountain hut, the “Pfandleralm”. Betrayed by a compatriot, he was captured there on 27 January 1810 and first taken to Meran with his son Johann, wife Anna and scribe Kajetan Sweth: he was subsequently brought in several stages to Mantua where, on the orders of Napoleon, he was shot on 20 February 1810 following a mock trial. He did not attempt to flee as he was wedded to the belief that he would have to pay for his actions.

Text: Albin Pixner, MuseumPasseier
English translation: Gareth Norbury
Literature:
Oberhofer Andreas, Der Andere Hofer. Der Mensch hinter dem Mythos. Schlern-Schriften, 2009.
Rohrer Josef, Heroes & Hofer. When Andreas Hofer came in the museum. 2009.

Andreas Hofer, coloured etching of Johann Georg Schedler, 1809.

Photo: MuseumPasseier

Arsio Palace

At the beginning of July 1809, with the region still free of French and Bavarian troops, the Tyroleans, assisted by small units of the Hapsburg army, were intent on organising the defence of their frontiers. On 4 July Andreas Hofer issued an invitation from Fondo for a congress of the commanders of the companies from the Noce valleys; the meeting was held two days later and also saw participation by delegates from Lavis and the Rendena and Giudicarie valleys. It was a particularly delicate moment: in addition to ruling on differences between the commanders, the discussions concerned the tax collection system established by Baron Josef von Hormayr, the administrative head of the Tyrol, which had created considerable discontent. The plan for defending the territory, issued on 27 June, provided for the sending of one company each from the Val di Non and the Val di Sol to the Tonale Pass, with a second company from the Anauno area to Riva del Garda; a third, raised from the communities of Spor, Flavon, Belfort, Fai and Zambana, would be sent to Lavarone.

The community of Revò welcomed Andreas Hofer with great enthusiasm, erecting arches and lighting fires on the mountaintops, offering him a meal based on bread, wine and cheese, and carrying out extraordinary maintenance on the bridge on the road to Cles for the occasion. Hofer stayed in the Arsio Palace, with a guard of 20 young men from the town, while another crowd of residents accompanied him on a pilgrimage to San Romedio.

At the congress of Revò, Hofer, as supreme commander of the Schützen, attempted to restore harmony between the leaders of the insurrection, which included such difficult decisions as the dismissal of Captain Malanotti and the rise to command of the formations of his opponents, de Stanchina and Taddei de Mauris.

Portrait of Andreas Hofer, painted by the Merano artist David Pinggera on the occasion of the 1909 Tyrolean celebrations for the centenary of the 1809 uprising.

Foto: Fondazione Museo storico del Trentino
Text: Marco Ischia, Fondazione Museo storico del Trentino
Bibliography:
Mosca Alberto, Andreas Hofer nelle Valli del Noce. Cles, Nitida immagine, 2009.
Mosca Alberto, Viva la libertà. Moja il Re di Baviera. La vicenda di Gianantonio Braito “amministratore camerale di Cles e Malè” sullo sfondo dell’insurrezione hoferiana del 1809. Cles, Nitida immagine, 2003.