Neipperg completed military studies and after the death of his father acquired, in coregency with his brothers Alfred, Ferdinand and Gustav, lead the village of
Schwaigern with its annexation of
Burg Neipperg, the hunting grounds in
Kleingartach,
Bönningheim and
Erlingheim as well as lands in Schwaigern and a forest near Neipperg. In 1833, he and his brothers closed a trust on the succession, which gave all the property to the eldest son and regulated the succession in the event of the termination of a line of descendants. Neipperg served for a long time in the
Imperial Austrian Army as a cavalry officer in the garrison in Parma, where his stepmother Maria Luisa resided. He was promoted to colonel in 1848 and was commander of the Austrian garrison in Parma. He found himself to stem the weak insurrectional uprisings that took place in Parma and to support the heir to the throne,
Carlo III of Parma. He participated in the battles of the
First Italian War of Independence, distinguishing himself in Morozzo and
Custoza. Subsequently, he was military governor of Gorizia until 1865; having been promoted to
Feldmarschall-Leutnant in 1863. Fiercely anti-Prussian and a supporter of a federation of German states led by the
Austrian Empire, Neipperg participated in the
Austro-Prussian War at the head of the 4th Division of the
VIII Army Corps, composed of Austrian and
Nassauian troops. On 14 July 1866, due to the pleas of
Prince Alexander of Hesse and by Rhine for Austrian support in the
Campaign of the Main, he clashed with the troops of the Prussian general
August Karl von Goeben near
Aschaffenburg. The Prussians, in clear numerical superiority with 16,600 men, won a crushing victory over Neipperg's troops that forced the Austrians, now decimated, to a hasty flight. Neipperg, after having been military commander of
Bratislava and
Vienna, left the Imperial Austrian Army and for some years served as head of the local militia of the
Kingdom of Württemberg, leaving all military posts in 1878. Meanwhile he had been promoted to
General of the Cavalry in 1870. ==Personal life==