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Erich Lassota von Steblau
Erich Lassota von Steblau ( 1550/55 – 1616) was a diplomat and military officer from
Silesia. Born in an aristocratic family, he studied at the
University of Padua before joining the
War of the Portuguese Succession on the side of King
Philip II of Spain. After the war, he became employed by
Archduke Maximilian of Austria, and accompanied the archduke in his failed attempt to
obtain the Polish throne. Lassota accompanied Maximilian in captivity, until he could return to his family estate in 1590. He was then sent on a mission to try to form an alliance with Russia against Maximilian's Swedish rivals but failed and was again taken prisoner. He remained in Swedish captivity for three years. Following this, he was again sent on a mission by Maximilian, this time successful, to the
Zaporozhian Cossacks in present-day Ukraine, in order to convince the Cossacks to join the Imperial forces in its
War against the Ottoman Empire. After his return, Lassota was promoted to Inspector General of
Upper Hungary, a position he kept until the uprising of
Stephen Bocskai in 1604, when his property was despoiled by the rebels. He continued to remain in Habsburg service, however, and in 1611, he was appointed to the Imperial Council. He died in 1616, in
Košice.
Erich Lassota von Steblau left behind a diary, which has been preserved in the city library of
Bautzen in Germany. The diary forms an important text source on the 16th-century history of the countries he visited. It was discovered in the 19th century and has since been published in modern German editions and also translated into Spanish, Portuguese, Russian, and Polish.
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