And we complete the Mad Monarchist's look at the Hapsburg Emperors with Haus von Hapsburg-Lothringen.
From The Mad Monarchist (25 July 2014)
Concluded from Part II
Emperor Francis I: The reign of Francis I was one in which he
would be overshadowed by his wife and by a Bavarian rival for the
imperial throne. When Charles VI died his daughter Maria Theresa
succeeded him in his hereditary positions (Archduchess of Austria, Queen
of Hungary etc) but it was uncertain what would be the place of her
husband, Francis Stephen of Lorraine. He had practically been raised to
be the husband of Maria Theresa (his brother was the original choice but
died) and he did his part to gain friends and fortune for the
Hapsburgs, gaining the favor of British elites by joining the Freemasons
and challenging France over the Polish succession by which he traded
Lorraine for Tuscany in Italy. When his father-in-law died, the Bavarian
Charles VII was elected Emperor but quickly lost most of his territory
to Austrian troops as Marie Theresa was more than prepared to fight for
her land and titles (or those she wanted for her husband). Bavaria might
have remained an Austrian possession were it not for the intervention
of King Frederick the Great of Prussia. Maria Theresa managed to have
Francis I elected emperor in 1745 and he was co-regent of her hereditary
dominions but it was really Maria Theresa who ruled, which was well
enough because she was pretty darn good at it, being a principled,
decisive, religious and all around great ruler. Emperor Francis mostly
“ruled” from behind a desk doing paperwork and though he was not a
faithful husband he still did his part to secure the Hapsburg-Lorraine
succession by fathering sixteen children with Maria Theresa, among them
two future emperors and an ill-fated future Queen of France. He died in
1765, some time before his wife.
Emperor Joseph II: Known as the “People’s Emperor”, Joseph II
will always be remembered as one of the “Enlightened Despots”. His
personality changed after the death of his beloved first wife, making
him more cold and aloof. He tried to apply reason to government which
earned him friends and enemies alike. At home and abroad his desire was
to make Austria a great power, centralize government and unify his
diverse domains. His public popularity came for his emancipation of the
serfs, granting of religious freedom (up to a point) and providing
social welfare for the poor. Yet, he was also a very authoritarian man
and a very absolutist monarch who would tolerate no opposition. His
efforts to place the Catholic Church under state control earned him many
lasting enemies among the clerical faction and Church histories to this
day often speak more harshly of Joseph II than predecessors who
actually made war on the Pope or never practiced their religion at all.
To unify his people he tried to make German the official language of all
Hapsburg lands, which did not go over well, and he tried to make the
House of Hapsburg supreme in Germany, going to war with Frederick the
Great of Prussia in the process. He also fought less consequential wars
against the Turks and Hungarian rebels, which were practically family
traditions. He planned a rescue operation to save his sister, Queen
Marie Antoinette from the French Revolution but his offer was refused by
the brave royal couple who were reluctant to leave (at least at that
stage). A patron of the arts, particularly music, Joseph II was called
the “Musical King” and is most remembered now for his commissioning of
work from Mozart. He died in 1790 adored by the lowest but hated by many
for his interference in religion and Germanization policy. Still, he
set the example which almost all subsequent Hapsburg Emperors tried to
emulate.
Emperor Leopold II: Succeeding his elder brother, Leopold II had
to put down rebellions from Belgium to Hungary because of the unpopular
policies of his brother and he repealed the most provocative of these
but maintained the majority of them. He too was a proponent of
“enlightened” absolute monarchy and had originally been trained for the
priesthood. He ruled as Grand Duke of Tuscany where his aloof nature
made him less than popular, despite abolishing the death penalty and
instituting public health programs. As Emperor, he was cold and
calculating, refusing aid to French royalists and preferring to try to
eliminate Prussia as a rival in Germany than punishing republican
France. He also refused to allow any Papal Bulls read in his territory
without first approving of the document. Still, the treatment of his
sister and brother-in-law stirred his fury as an absolute monarch and he
agreed to make common cause with the other Crowned Heads of Europe to
stop the spread of republicanism. He died before any concerted action
could be taken in 1792 at the age of only 44. Whereas his brother Joe
had been much more single-minded and uncompromising, Kaiser Leo II was
always prepared to keep flexible and to always consider the “politics”
of any given situation. Unlike his brother, he certainly did his part to
secure the succession, having sixteen children just like his own
parents did. Overall, Emperor Leopold II might not have been the sort of
monarch to be widely admired but he was probably the right man for the
job at that time.
Emperor Francis II/I: The last Holy Roman (German) Emperor and
the first Emperor of Austria, Francis succeeded his father after being
raised in extremely strict fashion by his uncle Emperor Joseph II whom
he nonetheless idolized. Emperor Francis can be a hard man to
understand. He seemed not to really care that his aunt was guillotined
by revolutionaries and yet the honor of his house was of paramount
importance to him. His empire was well known for its vast network of
spies and powerful secret police, yet he was an approachable monarch who
always made time for any of his subjects who wished to speak with him.
Most of his reign was dominated by the war with Napoleonic France and he
was Napoleon’s most intractable enemy on the continent. When Napoleon
became so successful that he determined to make himself emperor, Francis
II feared that he might be able to so dominate Germany as to win
election so he dissolved the Holy Roman Empire and thenceforth ruled as
Emperor Francis I of Austria. It was a bitter blow to have to cede
territory to France and worse still to give his own daughter to Napoleon
in marriage. However, he saw the Austrian Empire through the crisis and
by his own very conservative nature, helped ensure that the peace was
practical and based on a respect for traditional authority. In the end,
his prestige also allowed the Austrian Emperors to become the hereditary
presidents of the German Confederation. He was a good, solid emperor
and though sometimes accused of being paranoid and tyrannical, the fact
is that he had reason to be and the steps he took prevented Austria from
falling apart due to radical nationalism. He died in 1835.
Emperor Ferdinand I: Although often dismissed, I have a bit of a
soft spot for Kaiser Ferdinand, sometimes known as “Ferdinand the Good”.
True, he was handicapped in a number of ways and suffered from very
severe epilepsy, however, he was not as totally incompetent as some seem
to think. He could speak several different languages, could write very
well and was a considerate and very religious man. Married to the
Italian Princess Maria Anna of Savoy, she was a devoted wife who took
good care of her husband, really being more of a nurse than a
traditional wife but he loved and appreciated her for her attentiveness
in what was really a sacrifice for her. If all had remained calm and
tranquil, it might have been possible for Ferdinand I to remain on the
throne with considerable help but that all changed with the outbreak of
the Revolutions of 1848. He realized that he was not up to the task and
the best thing to do would be to abdicate in favor of someone young and
fit who could handle the situation. So he did, handing power over to his
nephew after which he retired to Prague and lived quietly the rest of
his life. While there, he also proved to be a help to the local economy
and actually proved to be quite an astute businessman, amassing a
fortune that supported the family for the rest of the Hapsburg reign. He
died in 1875.
Emperor Francis Joseph I: One of the longest ruling monarchs in
modern European history, the events of the reign of Francis Joseph would
be too numerous to mention. He started out by suppressing
revolutionaries and remained ever vigilant to threat of rebellion
thereafter. Despite rising ethnic unrest, Francis Joseph made the
Austrian Empire a workable power with growing industry and a scientific
and artistic community that was second to none. However, in 1859 he
acted rashly in allowing himself to be provoked into war with France and
Sardinia in northern Italy, losing Lombardy in the process and a short
time later went to war with Denmark alongside the other German states.
The aftermath of this led to a short, disastrous war with Prussia which
saw Austria removed from German affairs in 1864. Any attempt at a
revival was dashed by the continuing danger of rebellion in Hungary
which Emperor Francis Joseph tried to put to rest by (rather
reluctantly) agreeing to the Compromise of 1867 which saw the Austrian
Empire become the “Dual-Monarchy” of Austria-Hungary with each having
separate and co-equal governments. In 1882 he signed on to the Triple
Alliance, a monarchist defense pact, with the German Empire and the
Kingdom of Italy. In 1908 Austria-Hungary annexed Bosnia which angered
Serbia and Russia (as well as Italy since they did not receive the
territorial compensations they had been promised) and pan-Slavism, led
by Serbia and backed up by Russia would become the dominant concern of
the latter years of Francis Joseph’s reign. He was always a dutiful
monarch and he learned from experience. He also became more sincerely
religious as he aged, possibly because of the many tragedies he faced in
his private life, though he was still not above using the imperial veto
to influence papal elections. Holding on to what he had been given
became his primary concern and the strength and preservation of the
monarchy was never far from his thoughts. When World War I came, he
probably viewed some sort of showdown with Serbia as inevitable but he
was still reluctant and had to be lied to before actually giving the
order to go to war. Too old, by that time, to play much of a part, he
died in 1916.
Blessed Emperor Charles I: Known as the “Peace Emperor”, it is rather
illustrative of his life that this nickname was due to intentions rather
than actual achievements. He was thrust into the position of heir to
the throne when Archduke Francis Ferdinand was shot in 1914 but already
displayed admirable qualities that would have served him well as
monarch. He was an accomplished soldier, known for his concern for the
welfare of his troops, his devotion to his wife and family and his deep
faith. When the Pope called for a peace without victors, only Charles
and the King of the Belgians took it seriously and made the attempt.
Unfortunately, it was a rather naïve and futile gesture that almost
brought about the early destruction of Austria-Hungary. His intentions
were noble and his virtue was far above his contemporaries but it was
simply beyond the realm of possibility that the Allies would have agreed
to such a proposal at that stage and even more ludicrous to think they
would have kept his secret when making the attempt public proved so
helpful to the Allied cause. The Germans were furious at such a betrayal
and made plans to invade and occupy Austria-Hungary at a moment’s
notice (it would not have been dissimilar to what happened to Italy in
1943). From that point, Austria-Hungary was more like Germany’s prisoner
than Germany’s ally and Emperor Charles had little choice but to see
things through to the end. He dismissed the old army leadership and took
command himself while also proposing new domestic plans in an effort to
regain the loyalty of the various ethnic minorities. However, it was to
no avail and the Allies had already agreed to the post-war
dismemberment of Austria-Hungary in any event. After a final, crushing
blow in 1918 the empire simply collapsed in on itself and Emperor
Charles was forced to relinquish power and go into exile. However, he
did not abdicate as he viewed the monarchy as a sacred trust that he
could not abandon. In 1921 he tried twice to regain his throne as King
of Hungary but was blocked by the ruling regent. He died in Portugal a
year later at the age of only 34. In 2004 Charles, the last Hapsburg
Emperor, was formally beatified by Pope John Paul II. He was a saintly
man and, like a number of “last” monarchs, too good for his own good in a
number of ways.
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