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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

Apponale Tower

At first light on 24 April 1809, a body of uprisers from the Noce valleys reached the Upper Garda, calling the population of Riva del Garda and Arco to revolt. In the town the bell of the Apponale tower was rung first, followed by the others. A crowd of a thousand rioters gathered and marched towards Torbole against a French detachment. Once the Upper Garda had been liberated, the uprisers took part in the fighting near Mori with the intention of taking possession of the township and of the right bank of the Adige River in order to strike to the side the French engaged near Volano against the main column of the Habsburg army.
On 5 June 1809, a body of French troops from the lake attempted to land at Riva, with the aim of later joining up with the column led by General Livier (about 1,500 men) that had been engaged for a couple of days in the Vallagarina. The landing of the French was hindered and prevented by the Bersaglieri of the Giudicarie valleys led by a man from Riva who was known as “il Gobbo (the Humpbacked) Koffler” (or “Kofler”) in the contemporary chronicles of Carlo Antonio Marcabruni from Riva. The Bersaglieri opened fire on the boats and forced them to put back to sea. A gendarmerie corporal and other French troopers, who had managed to disembark, were captured by the rioters and imprisoned in the Giudicarie.
The attempted landing of the French highlighted the delicacy of the Garda area, and a few companies of Bersaglieri were sent to garrison them, but this presence, instead of providing security to the city, only exasperated the inhabitants, who were left with the burden of maintaining the troops despite exhaustion of the municipal coffers and a shortage of provisions.
‘Gobbo Koffler’ was engaged during the summer in Vallarsa with a company of uprisers from the Upper Garda and even after the Tyrolean insurrection was extinguished in November, he was among the diehards who did not want to surrender. For this he was arrested on 16 November in Gavazzo, near Riva.

Riva del Garda and the northern shore of Lake Garda depicted in the Macdonald Atlas, a cartographic survey of Tyrol and other neighbouring territories, carried out by the French authorities on the occasion of the military operations conducted in this territory in 1800-1801 by the Grisons Army, commanded by General Jacques-Etienne-Joseph-Alexandre Macdonald.

Photo: Fondazione Museo storico del Trentino
Literature:
Carloni Saveria (ed.), ‘Cronaca di Carlo Antonio Marcabruni 1801-1826: note ossia memoria di cose particolari di mia patria e famiglia dall’anno 1801’. In: Il Sommolago: periodico di arte, storia e cultura. Arco (TN), a. XIX, No. 2, August 2002 [Monographies].
Fiorio Francesco Nicolò, Cronachetta rivana 1796-1813. Riva del Garda (TN): Miori, 1903
Ischia Marco, Andreas Hofer e l’Alto Garda. Dalle guerre napoleoniche alla rivoluzione dell’Anno Nove. Arco (TN), Il Sommolago, 2009
Ischia Marco, ‘La battaglia di Volano, 24 aprile 1809’. In: La Battaglia di Volano e gli atti del convegno Hofer, Lanz, Negrelli insorgenti per la fede. Volano (TN): Comune di Volano, 2011.
Pattini Alberto, La resistenza contro i francesi nella contea di Arco: 1703-1809. Trento, Temi, 1998
Zotti Raffaele. Storia della Valle Lagarina. Trento: Monauni, 1862-1863 [anastatic reprint: Bologna: Forni, 1969].