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Franz Joseph I. (1830-1916)

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Franz Joseph was born in the Schönbrunn Palace in
Vienna, the oldest son of Archduke Franz Karl (the younger son of
Emperor Franz), and his wife Princess Sophie of Bavaria. Because his
uncle, from 1835 the Emperor Ferdinand, was weak-minded, and his father
unambitious and retiring, the young Archduke "Franzl" was brought up by
his mother as a future Emperor with emphasis on devoutness,
responsibility and diligence. Franzl came to idealize his grandfather,
der Gute Kaiser Franz, who had died shortly before his fifth birthday,
as the ideal monarch. At the age of 13 young Archduke Franz started a
career as a colonel in the Austrian army. From that point onward, his
fashion was dictated by army style and for the rest of his life he
normally wore the uniform of a junior officer.
Franz Joseph was soon joined by three younger
brothers - Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian (born 1832, the future Emperor
Maximilian of Mexico); Archduke Karl Ludwig (born 1833), and Archduke
Ludwig Viktor (born 1842), but a sister, Maria Anna (born 1835), died
young, at the age of four.
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Following the resignation of the Chancellor Prince Metternich during the
Revolutions of 1848, the young Archduke, whom it was widely expected
would soon succeed his uncle on the throne, was appointed Governor of
Bohemia on 6 April, but never took up the post. Instead, Franz was sent
to the front in Italy, joining Field Marshal Radetzky on campaign on 29
April, receiving his baptism of fire on 5 May at Santa Lucia. By all
accounts he handled his first military experience calmly and with
dignity. Around the same time, the Imperial Family was fleeing
revolutionary Vienna for the calmer setting of Innsbruck, in the Tyrol.
Soon, the Archduke was called back from Italy, joining the rest of his
family at Innsbruck by mid-June. It was at Innsbruck at this time that
Franz Joseph first met his cousin Elisabeth, Duchess in Bavaria, his
future bride, then a girl of ten, but apparently the meeting made little
impact.Following victory over the Italians
at Custoza in late July, the court felt safe to return to Vienna, and
Franz Joseph travelled with them. But within a few months Vienna again
appeared unsafe, and in September the court left again, this time for
Olmütz in Moravia. By now, Prince Windischgrätz, the influential
military commander in Bohemia, was determined to see the young Archduke
soon put onto the throne. It was thought that a new ruler would not be
bound by the oaths to respect constitutional government to which
Ferdinand had been forced to agree, and that it was necessary to find a
young, energetic emperor to replace the kindly, but mentally unfit
Emperor. It was thus at Olmütz on 2 December that, by the abdication of
his uncle Ferdinand and the renunciation of his father, the
mild-mannered Franz Karl, Franz Joseph succeeded as Emperor of Austria.
It was at this time that he first became known by his second as well as
his first given name. The name "Franz Joseph" was chosen deliberately to
bring back memories of the new Emperors great-grand-uncle, Emperor
Joseph II, remembered as a modernizing reformer.
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Imperial absolutism, 1848–1860
Under the guidance of the new prime minister
Prince Schwarzenberg, the new emperor at first pursued a cautious
course, granting a constitution in early 1849. At the same time,
military campaigns were necessary against the Hungarians, who had
rebelled against Habsburg central authority under the name of their
ancient liberties. Franz Joseph was also almost immediately faced with a
renewal of the fighting in Italy, with King Charles Albert of Sardinia
taking advantage of setbacks in Hungary to resume the war in March 1849.
Soon, though, the military tide began to turn in favor of Franz Joseph
and the Austrian whitecoats. Almost immediately, Charles Albert was
decisively beaten by Radetzky at Novara, and forced both to sue for
peace and to abdicate his throne. In Hungary, the situation was more
grave and Austrian defeat was quite possible. Franz Joseph, sensing a
need to secure his right to rule sought help from a reactionary Russia.
With this Russian aid the Hungarian revolution was crushed by late
summer of 1849. With order now restored throughout the Empire, Franz
Joseph felt free to go back on the constitutional concessions he had
made, especially as the Austrian parliament, meeting at Kremsier, had
behaved, in the young Emperor's view, abominably. The 1849 constitution
was suspended, and a policy of absolutist centralism was established,
guided by the Minister of the Interior, Alexander Bach.
The next few years saw the seeming recovery of
Austria's position on the international scene following the near
disasters of 1848–1849. Under Schwarzenberg's guidance, Austria was able
to stymie Prussian scheming to create a new German Federation under
Prussian leadership, excluding Austria. After Schwarzenberg's premature
death in 1852, he could not be replaced by statesmen of equal stature,
and the Emperor effectively took over himself as prime minister.
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Assassination attempt in 1853On
February 18, 1853, the Emperor survived an assassination attempt by
Hungarian nationalist János Libényi. The emperor was taking a stroll
with one of his officers Maximilian Karl Lamoral Graf O’Donnell von
Tyrconnell on a city-bastion, when Libényi approached him. He
immediately struck the emperor from behind with a knife straight at the
neck. Franz Joseph almost always wore a uniform, which had a high collar
that almost completely enclosed the neck. It so happened that the collar
of his uniform was made out of very sturdy material. Even though the
Emperor was wounded and bleeding, this collar basically saved his life.
Count O'Donnell (descendant of the Irish noble dynasty O'Donnell of
Tyrconnell[1] struck Libényi down with his sabre[1]. O'Donnell, hitherto
only a Count by virtue of his Irish nobility, was thereafter made a
Count of the Habsburg Empire, conferred with the Commander's Cross of
the Royal Order of Leopold, and his customary O'Donnell arms were
augmented by the initials and shield of the ducal House of Austria, with
additionally the double-headed eagle of the Empire. These arms are
emblazoned on the portico of no. 2 Mirabel Platz in Salzburg, where
O'Donnell built his residence thereafter. Another witness who happened
to be nearby, the butcher Joseph Ettenreich, quickly overwhelmed Libényi.
For his deed he was later elevated to nobility by the Emperor and became
Joseph von Ettenreich. Libényi was subsequently put on trial and
condemned to death for attempted regicide. He was executed on the
Simmeringer Haide. After the unsuccessful attack the Emperor's brother
Ferdinand Maximilian Joseph, the later Emperor of Mexico, called upon
Europe's Royal families for donations to a new church on the site of the
attack. The church was to be a Votivgabe (a thank-you present to God)
for the rescue of the Emperor. It is located on Ringstraße in the
district of Alsergrund close to the University of Vienna, and is known
as the Votivkirche.
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Later years
Although in public life the Emperor was the
unquestioned director of affairs, in his private life his formidable
mother still had a crucial influence. Believing it necessary that the
Emperor should soon marry and produce heirs, she hoped to match Franz
Joseph with her sister Ludovika's eldest daughter, Helene ("Nené"), four
years the Emperor's junior. However, instead, the Emperor became
besotted with Nené's younger sister, Elisabeth ("Sisi"), a girl of
sixteen, and insisted on marrying her instead. Sophie, despite some
misgivings about her niece's appropriateness as an imperial consort,
acquiesced, and in 1854 the young couple were married. Their married
life was not happy: not only could Sisi never really adapt herself to
the court and always had disagreements with the Royal Family, but their
first daughter Sophie died as an infant, while the only son, Crown
Prince Rudolf died, allegedly by suicide in 1889, in the infamous
Mayerling episode with his young mistress Baroness Mary Vetsera. The
Empress herself was stabbed to death by an Italian anarchist in 1898;
Franz Joseph never fully recovered from the loss. According to the
future Empress-Consort Zita of Bourbon-Parma, he usually told his
relatives "You'll never know how important she was for me" or, according
to some sources, "She will never know how much I loved her" (although
there is no definite proof he actually said this).
The 1850s witnessed several failures of Austrian
external policy - the Crimean War and break-up with Russia,
Austro-Sardinian War of 1859 against armies of the House of Savoy, and
Napoleon III. The setbacks continued in the 1860s with Austro-Prussian
War of 1866. It resulted in Austrian-Hungarian Dualism in 1867. Franz
Joseph built a villa named Villa Schratt in Bad Ischl for his mistress,
Katharina Schratt, an actress with whom he had a long-standing
relationship which was, to a certain degree, tolerated by Sissi.
In 1914 the heir to the throne, Archduke Franz
Ferdinand, was assassinated in Sarajevo, leading to World War I.
Emperor Franz Joseph died in 1916, aged 86, in the
middle of the war. After the defeat in World War I, the Austro-Hungarian
Monarchy dissolved.
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Legacy
The archipelago Franz Josef Land in the Russian
high arctic was named in his honor in 1873. Franz Josef Glacier in New
Zealand's South Island also bears his name.
Franz Joseph founded in 1872 the Franz Joseph
University (Hungarian: Ferenc József Tudományegyetem, Romanian:
Universitatea Francisc Iosif) in the city of Cluj-Napoca (at that time a
part of Austria-Hungary under the name of Kolozsvár). The university was
moved to Szeged after Cluj rebecame a part of Romania, becoming the
University of Szeged.
Text Source: Wikipedia
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Katharina Schratt
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