Franz Joseph Martin, Freiherr von Albini auf Dürrenried (14 May 1748 – 8 January 1816) was a German judge and statesman, noted for organising the defence of German states against the French Revolution.
When the armies of Revolutionary France began making incursions into Germany in 1794 he represented the general arming of the people against the French occupation.
On the re-opening of hostilities in 1799 he was given the rank of Feldzeugmeister in the Austrian Army and appointed to command a 20,000-man corps of German volunteers raised on the right bank of the Rhine under Graf Sztaray.
During Claude Lecourbe's offensive of 16 November he again threatened the French left wing on the right bank of the Neckar.
[1] In 1806 he was made Governor of Regensburg, and for a short period Commissioner of Frankfurt 19–25 September 1806.