The Mad Monarchist looks at his personal favourites amongst the Emperors of Haus Habsburg.
From The Mad Monarchist (31 May 2012)
I - Emperor Charles V: Charles V
was elected Holy Roman Emperor in 1519. His coronation by Pope Clement
VII in Bologna in 1530 was the last ceremony of its kind to date. As the
ruler of the lands around Austria, the Low Countries and Spain, with
new explorations claiming territory in the Americas, his was the first
empire upon which it was said that the sun never set. He was also a man
beset by enemies but had a level of determination up to the task,
fighting Protestant rebels in Germany, the French in northern Italy and
the Turks in Eastern Europe and the Mediterranean. In 1525 he won a
great victory of France at Pavia, after which the King of France and the
Pope allied against him. Charles later made peace with the Protestants,
captured Tunis in North Africa, reformed the law code, defeated a
French attack on the Low Countries and sent Magellan on his historic
voyage of circumnavigation. In 1556 he abdicated and retired to a life
of prayer.
II - Empress Maria Theresa: After inheriting the throne of her
father in 1740, Empress Maria Theresa was immediately attacked by a
large alliance of nations who meant to prevent her succession including
the great Frederick II of Prussia, the finest soldier in Europe. Though
she was only 23, she refused to give in or show weakness and put up a
spirited struggle, losing some territory but retaining her crown. She
restored the Austrian economy by taxing the nobility and lowering taxes
on the common people. She reformed the army, improved the legal system
and made education available to everyone. Under her rule, the peasants
gained their freedom and the right to own their own land. The Empress
was a devout and pious Catholic woman and gave refuge to the Society of
Jesus when others (even her own son) exiled them. In 1772 she gained
territory for Austria in the first partition of Poland, perhaps the only
regrettable decision she ever made.
III - Emperor Joseph II: Elected Holy Roman Emperor in 1765,
Joseph II was an “Enlightened Despot” in every sense of the word. He was
ambitious, not very personally charming, autocratic and at the same
time extremely forward thinking. He was the first to grant (limited)
freedom of religion in the Hapsburg lands, freed the serfs and tried to
enforce German as the official common language of the empire. His dream
was to make the Hapsburg Empire the most powerful in Europe, leading to
clashes with Prussia and the Turks. Joseph II was a great patron of
music, most famously commissioning work from Mozart. He built the first
truly public parks and housing for the poor. Because of all he did to
improve their lives the common folk adored him, hailing him as the
“People’s Emperor”. Unfortunately, he brought religion under state
control and so earned the wrath of the clergy and many nobles. Though he
heard mass every morning of his life he was suspected of being a
skeptic.
IV - Emperor Francis Joseph I: Not the most successful Hapsburg
emperor in history by any means, Francis Joseph was nevertheless a
monarch who refused to adjust his principles, a good and upright man who
always sought to do his duty to the best of his ability and to serve
the best interests of his people. He came to the throne in 1848, put
down the revolutions and reestablished the House of Hapsburg as the
great stabilizing force in central Europe. His personal life was beset
by tragedy and the international situation for Austria (later
Austria-Hungary) declined after a series of diplomatic and military
disasters. Nonetheless, Francis Joseph held things together by his own
integrity, work ethic and devotion to duty. The country was also
developing rapidly and the prestige of the monarchy remained strong
until the onset of the First World War in 1914, a conflict the Emperor
had deep concerns over and which he had to be deceived into declaring.
V - Emperor Charles I: Coming to the throne in the midst of World
War I in 1916, the new monarch already had a reputation as a brave
soldier, devoted husband and father and a sincere man of God. He saw
monarchy as a sacred duty and behaved accordingly. The Emperor viewed
the alliance with Germany as a prison, distrusted the Germans and
devoted himself to extricating Austria-Hungary from the First World War.
He showed himself willing to sacrifice considerable territories if only
he could gain peace but the Allies proved implacable. He agreed to
reorganizing the Hapsburg empire into a confederation of autonomous
national states but was never allowed the time to carry out such a plan.
When the end came in 1918 he bowed to the inevitable but refused to
abdicate, viewing such a thing as a renunciation of his responsibility
to God. After being forced into exile he tried twice to regain his
Hungarian throne but was loathe to shed the blood of his own people.
Not so favorites: Emperor Ferdinand I for not taking religion more
into account and his son Maximilian II for not making up his mind on
which faith he wanted to follow and, yes, Joseph II -who makes my best
and worst lists at the same time for his needless religious antagonism.
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