In 1794, aged 17, Francesca Scanagatta travelled north from northern Italy with her brother
Giacomo Scanagatta, who had been selected by their father to pursue a military career at the
Theresian Military Academy in
Wiener Neustadt, the principal officer-training institution of the Habsburg army. Francesca herself was expected to continue to
Vienna, where arrangements had been made for her to complete her education in a private household. During the journey, however, her brother became ill and admitted that he had little desire to enter military service. According to later accounts, Scanagatta proposed that he return home with a servant while she continued the journey in his place. Before parting, he entrusted her with the letter of introduction intended for the academy, addressed to Dr. Haller, surgeon to the staff responsible for receiving new cadets. Already travelling in male clothing for convenience during the journey, she proceeded to Wiener Neustadt and presented herself under the name "Franz Scanagatta". Haller accepted the new arrival as the expected cadet and arranged for the student to lodge in a private house rather than in the academy
barracks, a circumstance that helped prevent the deception from being discovered. Scanagatta was formally admitted to the academy on 1 July 1794. Over the following three years she studied military subjects including mathematics,
fortification, and
artillery, while also improving her knowledge of German and French and learning English. She trained in weapons handling and in both mounted and infantry exercises, and her instructors regarded her as a capable and diligent student. In 1796 the academy surgeon, Dr. Haller, wrote to her father in support of the cadet's continued training, describing the young student as "as though he were my own son" and urging that he be allowed to remain at the academy. At one point, her father travelled to
Wiener Neustadt in an attempt to persuade her to abandon the academy. Because his German was limited, he questioned the instructors in Latin about the conduct of "his daughter". Unaware of the situation, the professors replied using masculine forms, assuming they were discussing a son, and spoke approvingly of the cadet's progress. Scanagatta completed the course of study in early 1797. On 16 February 1797, aged 20, she passed the academy's final examination and was commissioned as a
Fähnrich (ensign) in the army of the
Holy Roman Empire, beginning the military career she had pursued under the identity of "Franz Scanagatta". Her commissioning marked the beginning of several years of active service in the Habsburg army during the
French Revolutionary Wars. ==Military service==