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Maria Theresia (1717-1780)
| Maria
Theresa was the oldest daughter of Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
and Emperor Charles VI, who promulgated the Pragmatic Sanction to allow
her to succeed to the Habsburg monarchy. Opposition to her acceding to
the throne led to the War of the Austrian Succession in 1740. After
Emperor Charles VII, who claimed the throne, died in 1745, Maria Theresa
obtained the imperial crown for her husband, Francis I. Though she was
technically empress consort, Maria Theresa was the de facto ruler of the
nation, and she began styling herself Holy Roman Empress in 1745. Maria
Theresa had in fact already began her rule in 1740 during the Austrian
War of Succession. Maria Theresa
helped initiate financial and educational reforms, promoted commerce and
the development of agriculture, and reorganized the army, all of which
strengthened Austria's resources. Continued conflict with the Kingdom of
Prussia led to the Seven Years' War and later to the War of the Bavarian
Succession. She became dowager empress after the death of Francis and
accession of her son Joseph as emperor in 1765. Maria Theresa criticized
many of Joseph's actions but agreed to the First Partition of Poland
(1772). A key figure in the power politics of 18th century Europe, Maria
Theresa brought unity to the Habsburg Monarchy and was considered one of
its most capable rulers. Her 16 children also included Marie Antoinette
and Leopold II.
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| Family life
Maria Theresa Walburga Amalia Christina was
born in Vienna as the eldest daughter of Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor
and Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, whose sole male heir
- his son Leopold Johann - died as an infant in 1716. In 1713 Charles
issued the Pragmatic Sanction which guaranteed his daughter the right to
succeed to the Austrian throne and inherit his united lands on his
death. Initially, many Northern European monarchs agreed to the
Pragmatic Sanction when it was issued. One of the few not to sign was
Frederick the Great of Prussia who, soon after Maria Theresa assumed the
throne upon Charles' death on October 20, 1740, began the War of
Austrian Succession.
Maria Theresa was married to Francis I,
Holy Roman Emperor, Duke of Lorraine. She had 16 children by him, with
11 daughters (all of whom had the first name "Maria" [1]) and five sons.
Her youngest daughter was Maria Antonia, better known under her French
name Marie Antoinette, who would be promised in marriage to the later
King Louis XVI of France. After her husband's death, her son, Joseph II,
succeeded in the elective monarchy of the Holy Roman Empire, maintaining
the imperial Crown in the Habsburg line, in accordance with tradition.
Maria Theresa then made Joseph II co-regent of her Austrian dominions,
but she actually kept most of the power to herself, which led to tension
between her and her son. It was not until her death that Joseph could
fully exercise his powers.
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| Reign
Maria Theresa's father had not given her any
information on the workings of the government, leaving her to learn the
job on her own. Additionally, the army was weak and the treasury
depleted due to two wars near the end of her father's reign. The War of
the Austrian Succession began when Frederick II of Prussia invaded and
occupied Silesia. While Bavaria and France also invaded Austria's
western territories, it was "Frederick the Great" who became Maria
Theresa's primary foe during her reign. Therefore, she focused her
internal and external policies towards the defeat of Prussia, which
would help her regain the lands which had been taken from Austria. In
the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (1748), France gave the Austrian
Netherlands that it conquered back to Maria Theresa. In exchange, Maria
Theresa ceded Parma, Piacenza, and Guastalla to the Infante Philip of
Spain. By giving up these lands, Maria Theresa signaled to those
beneficiaries that she was in a weaker position and was slightly
vulnerable.[citation needed] After having been defeated in the First and
Second Silesian Wars, Maria Theresa began to modernize her realms with
the assistance of Friedrich Wilhelm Graf von Haugwitz. Defeat, however,
reduced her morale and effectiveness as a ruler. Her lack of
organization and optimism began to affect her realm.[citation needed]
She increased the size of the army by 200% and increased taxes in order
to guarantee a steady income for the government, and in particular for
the military. She centralized the government by combining the Austrian
and Bohemian chancellaries, formerly separate, into one administrative
office. Before these changes, justice and administration had been
overseen by the same officials- afterwards, she created a supreme court
with the sole responsibility of upholding justice in her lands. These
reforms strengthened the economy and the state in general. Maria
Theresa, along with the other Habsburgs, was a devout Roman Catholic.
She was educated by Jesuits at Mariazell, and in later life lacked the
religious cynicism of royal contemporaries such as Frederick II of
Prussia. Her conservative outlook involved an intolerant view of other
faiths. In 1741, she expelled the Jews from Prague. Her political
distrust of Great Britain rested in part on her view of the established
Church of England, whom she regarded as Protestant heretics.
Maria Theresa dropped Great Britain as an ally on
the advice of her state chancellor, Wenzel Anton von Kaunitz, and allied
with Russia and France. She established the Theresian Military Academy
(the first worldwide) in 1752 and an academy of engineering science in
1754. She also demanded that the University of Vienna be given money to
make the medical faculty more efficient. When she felt her army was
strong enough, she prepared an attack on Prussia in 1756. However, it
was Frederick II who attacked first, invading Saxony, another ally of
Austria, thus initiating the Seven Years' War. The war ended in 1763
when Maria Theresa signed the Treaty of Hubertusburg, recognizing
Prussian ownership of most of Silesia.
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Maria Theresias final day before death
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Her husband Francis
died two years later. Maria Theresa's devotion to him was so great that
she dressed in mourning clothes until her own death 15 years later.
During this time, she became more closeted from her people. Her focus
changed from attempting to regain Silesia to maintaining the peace. She
also recognized Joseph II, her eldest son, as coregent and Emperor.
However, she allowed him only limited powers because she felt that he
was too rash and arrogant.
In the 1760s,
smallpox claimed several victims in the royal family. Maria Theresa was
infected and received last rites in 1767, although she recovered.
Afterward, Maria Theresa became a strong supporter of inoculation (a
predecessor immunisation method to smallpox vaccination), setting a
strong example by requiring all of her children to be inoculated.
In the later years of her reign, Maria Theresa
focused on reforming laws along the lines of enlightened absolutism,
especially to strengthen the economy of the Habsburg territories,
especially after the loss of Silesia.
In 1771, she and Joseph II issued the Robot
Patent, a reform that regulated a serf's labor payments in her lands,
which provided some relief. Other important reforms included outlawing
witch-burning and torture, and, for the first time in Austrian history,
taking capital punishment off the penal code, as it was replaced with
forced labor. It was later reintroduced, but the progressive nature of
these reforms remains noted. Mandatory education was introduced in 1774;
the goal was to form an educated class from which civil servants could
be recruited.
Another installation of Maria Theresa's was a
decency police which was to patrol everywhere, especially Vienna, and
apprehend anyone suspected of doing something that could be deemed
indecent (possibly due to her husband's supposed infidelity). Arrested
prostitutes, for example, would be sent into villages in the eastern
parts of the realm, leading some contemporary writers to note that these
villages had 'exceptionally beautiful women' living there.
Maria Theresa died in Vienna in 1780, the only
female to rule during the 650-year-long Habsburg dynasty. She is buried
in tomb number 56 in the Imperial Crypt in Vienna. Her son Joseph II
succeeded her. She was a very strongwilled woman and was a leader of all
sorts. She was generous and kind to animals, and she will be remembered
for her good ruling.
Text Source: Wikipedia
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