Maria Theresa's Schonbrunn Summer Palace in Vienna |
By the time Maria Theresa ascended to the throne in 1740, her Habsburg family line had already ruled Austria for centuries.
The family name had been initiated in about 1020 when Count Radbot built a new family home in what is now Switzerland that they called Habichtsburg, or "Hawk's Castle."
A "hawk's beak" nose was a defining hereditary trait of the Habsburgs.
St. Stephen's Cathedral, Vienna |
Count Radbot's grandson, Otto II, began calling himself Otto von Habichtsburg, which morphed into von Habsburg and then simply Habsburg.
By the time their name was established, the family had already been powerful within the Holy Roman Empire for decades.
In those Medieval times, noble families practiced primogeniture, whereby the first-born son inherited the bulk of ancestral lands and family leadership.
St. Stephen's Church Interior |
The second son in such a family went into the clergy, like Count Radbot, meaning the Habsburgs were not the preeminent branch of the family tree from which they emerged.
In 1273, Rudolf von Habsburg was elected King of the Romans, a title Austrian Habsburg heirs would hold off-and-on --- mostly on --- until the Holy Roman Empire dissolved in 1806 after military defeat at the hands of Napoleon.
While Rudolf I took center stage in the Holy Roman Empire, however, his family was forced to leave their home in Habichtsburg.
An uprising of Swiss farmers seeking freedom from the aristocratic rule of the Habsburgs and the Holy Roman Empire overpowered the armor-clad nobles by sheer number and desire for liberty in a new, free Switzerland, foreshadowing our American Revolution.
Hungarian Parliament Building from deck of our gateway to history, AmaCerto |
In any case, the Habsburgs already controlled vast regions, so when they unceremoniously fled their beloved Habichtsburg in around 1279, they headed east on the Danube River to the eastern frontier of the Holy Roman Empire, near the border with Hungary.
They settled among the beautiful forests in Vienna, which became the family's seat of power from which they ruled the kingdom of Austria and sometimes the Holy Roman Empire.
By the time Maria Theresa took the family reigns, the Habsburgs had ruled Austria for 460 years.
Wes on road about halfway in Schonbrunn garden with gateway in the distance |
Nonetheless, you may not be surprised to learn that Charles VI's advisers weren't too keen on having a 23-year-old woman unexpectedly become their ruler.
Her French husband had already been defamed as a coward or spy by unfounded rumor and innuendo, which obviously didn't help.
What you might call a "Never Maria Theresa" movement spread through the royals, including her father's trusted advisers who should have been her support system but, while perhaps not treacherous, were at a minimum lacking faith in this presumably frivolous young woman being up to the job.
Church on the Danube from AmaCerto's port Vienna |
Charles VI had devoted much of his energy to the "Pragmatic Sanction" needed to allow his daughter to inherit his kingdoms.
Critics say being too devoted to gathering royal signatures came at the expense of his treasury and military prowess.
Engraving Outside St. Patrick's Church, Vienna |
The Habsburg way of plotting strategic marriages rather than war to acquire territories had served them well, but power abhors a vacuum, and as a woman, Maria Theresa could not ever become Emperor of Rome, no matter how many individual kingdoms she inherited.
By the way, while we refer to "the Holy Roman Empire," that is simply a convenient designation for historians to differentiate this Central Europe branch from the original Roman Empire and the Byzantines.
At the time, citizens of the realm simply called themselves Romans, even though Rome was not always part of the kingdom.
Habsburg heirs had held the position of King of the Romans since March 19, 1452, 40 years before Christopher Columbus "discovered" America. That date was when Frederick III, having won the Electoral College, was crowned by Pope Nicholas V.
St. Patrick's Church at Hofburg complex, Vienna |
That marriage resulted in Albert essentially inheriting the position King of the Romans when his father-in-law passed away, but King Albert II of the Holy Roman Empire, as he became known, was never crowned Emperor by the Pope.
In 1439, Albert II gallantly lost his life in battle with the Turks (which I guess would send him to Valhalla if he were a Viking, but that's a different show).
As a widow of the King, who had received that title as a result of his marriage to her, Elisabeth nonetheless lost rule of Bohemia and Hungary, because they became national kingdoms ruled by warlords rather submit to rule by a mere widow.
Pool On AmaCerto, refreshing rest spot on sunny day in Vienna |
When King Albert II died, Elisabeth was pregnant with his son.
Their son was crowned ruler of Austria, Bohemia and Hungary, but he died as a baby in 1440, which could have been suspicious if not for the fact that infant mortality was not that unusual back then. Elisabeth was not allowed to reclaim her crown.
Ergo, you may better understand the considerable risk taken by Maria Theresa when one month after her father's death, she made her husband Stephen Francis co-ruler of Austria, Bohemia and finally Hungary, in order to strengthen his claim to be King of the Romans.
Yes, the Habsburgs had managed to regain rule of both Bohemia and Hungary over time.
Maria Theresa, however, never allowed her co-ruler and beloved husband to make any decisions for her ancestral kingdoms.
Arsenal Historic Military Complex in Vienna |
King Frederick offered to support Maria Theresa's right to rule the rest of her lands if she would cede Silesia to him.
Her husband Stephen Francis advocated this pragmatic course, but Maria Theresa refused to cede "the jewel of the House of Austria."
In the meantime, France secretly drew up plans to split up the lands of Austria among other kingdoms. So much for deal sweeteners to be named later.
The War of Austrian Succession was ON!
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