Author Archives: Susan

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April 21, 2016 marks the 90th birthday of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom. She is the oldest British monarch and the longest reigning. Send a birthday message to The Queen at British Monarchy: Send a birthday message to The Queen.

Learn more about Queen Elizabeth II at the following links:
Unofficial Royalty: Queen Elizabeth II
Unofficial Royalty: Wedding of Queen Elizabeth II and Lt Philip Mountbatten, RN
Unofficial Royalty: Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II at Westminster Abbey
Official Website of the British Monarchy

Ferdinand I, Emperor of Austria

by Susan Flantzer  © Unofficial Royalty 2016

Ferdinand I, Emperor of Austria; Credit – Wikipedia

Emperor Ferdinand I of Austria, the eldest son of the Holy Roman Emperor Franz II (later Emperor Franz I of Austria) and his second wife, Maria Theresa of the Two Sicilies, double first cousins, was born on April 19, 1793, in Vienna, Austria. The overjoyed father wrote to his relatives that “a healthy prince” was born, but that proved to be wrong. Ferdinand was a weak infant with a too-large head and was kept alive only with great difficulty by the doctors and the nursing staff. He was developmentally delayed and suffered from epilepsy, hydrocephalus, neurological problems, and a speech impediment

Ferdinand had eleven siblings, with seven surviving childhood. While pregnant with her twelfth child, his mother Maria Theresa fell ill with the lung infection pleurisy. Her doctor bled her, and this caused premature labor. Maria Theresa gave birth to her twelfth child, who lived only three days. On April 13, 1807, a week after giving birth, Maria Theresa died at the age of 34.

Ferdinand had eleven siblings:

Franz, Maria Theresa, and their children; Credit – Wikipedia

Ferdinand had a half-sister, Archduchess Ludovika Elisabeth of Austria, from his father’s first marriage to Elisabeth of Württemberg. Elisabeth died the day after her daughter’s birth, and her daughter died when she was 16 months old. Ferdinand’s father, Emperor Franz, made two more marriages, both childless, to another first cousin, Maria Ludovika of Austria-Este, who died of tuberculosis, and to Caroline Augusta of Bavaria, who survived him.

Ferdinand learned to walk and talk late, and his condition and behavior caused great concern. Because of his frail constitution, he did not receive the education appropriate for the heir to the throne. It was not until 1802, when Ferdinand was nine years old, that he began to receive anything like a formal education. Franz Maria, Freiherr von Carnea-Steffaneo, head of the Imperial Court Library, took over Ferdinand’s upbringing. He treated Ferdinand with a great deal of understanding and furthered Ferdinand’s development considerably. However, Ferdinand’s mother did not think much of Carnea-Steffaneo and dismissed him.

Ferdinand’s stepmother, Maria Ludovica, who married Ferdinand’s father in 1808, dismissed Ferdinand’s teachers because she considered them unfit to teach. She engaged Josef Kalasanz, Freiherr von Erberg, who served as Ferdinand’s tutor from 1809 – 1814. Freiherr von Erberg was a botanist, cultural historian, collector, and patron of the arts, and had served as a chamberlain at the Imperial Court. Previously, Ferdinand had been shielded from the public because he had tantrums when he did not get his way. His new tutor increased Ferdinand’s independence and began teaching him reading and writing. Ferdinand also had lessons in riding, dancing, fencing, and piano. His drawing talent was encouraged, and he learned about gardening. In 1814, Freiherr von Erberg became ill, and he was dismissed. Maria Ludovika decided that Ferdinand’s education was complete, however, he received additional instruction in military affairs and scientific and technical subjects.

In February 1831, Ferdinand married Maria Anna of Savoy, the daughter of Vittorio Emanuele I, King of Sardinia and Duke of Savoy and Archduchess Maria Teresa of Austria-Este. The marriage was childless and probably never consummated, but the couple remained devoted to each other.

Maria Anna of Savoy; Credit – Wikipedia

When his father died on March 2, 1835, Ferdinand became Emperor of Austria, King of Hungary and Croatia, and King of Bohemia. Ferdinand has been depicted as feeble-minded and incapable of ruling, but he kept a coherent and legible diary. His epilepsy caused him to have as many as twenty seizures per day, and this severely restricted his ability to rule with any effectiveness. His father’s will stipulated that Ferdinand’s uncle, Archduke Ludwig, be consulted on government matters, and during Ferdinand’s reign, a council called the Secret State Conference controlled the government. Ferdinand is famous for telling his cook, “I am the Emperor and I want dumplings” when the cook told him that the apricots needed for the traditional apricot dumplings (German: Marillenknödel) were not in season.

Emperor Ferdinand in the 1860s; Credit – Wikipedia

Ferdinand abdicated the throne in favor of his nephew Franz Joseph during the Revolutions of 1848. He lived the rest of his life at Hradčany Palace in Prague, Kingdom of Bohemia (now the Czech Republic). He died on June 29, 1875, at the age of 82, and was buried in the Ferdinandsgruft (Ferdinand’s Vault) in the Imperial Crypt in Vienna. Maria Anna survived her husband by nine years and died at the age of 80 on May 4, 1884, in Prague (now the Czech Republic), then part of the Kingdom of Bohemia. Empress Maria Anna was buried next to her husband in the Imperial Crypt.
Unofficial Royalty: A Visit to the Kaisergruft (Imperial Crypt) in Vienna

Tomb of Emperor Ferdinand I of Austria; Photo Credit – Susan Flantzer

This article is the intellectual property of Unofficial Royalty and is NOT TO BE COPIED, EDITED, OR POSTED IN ANY FORM ON ANOTHER WEBSITE under any circumstances. It is permissible to use a link that directs to Unofficial Royalty.

Austria Resources at Unofficial Royalty

Caroline Augusta of Bavaria, Empress of Austria

by Susan Flantzer
© Unofficial Royalty 2016

Caroline Augusta of Bavaria, Empress of Austria; Credit – Wikipedia

Caroline Augusta of Bavaria was born on February 8, 1792, in Mannheim, then in the Electorate of the Palatinate, now in Baden-Württemberg, Germany. She was the third daughter and the fourth of the five children of Maximilian IV Joseph, Prince-Elector of Bavaria and his first wife Augusta Wilhelmine of Hesse-Darmstadt. At the age of two, Caroline Augusta contracted smallpox and her face was left scarred. When Caroline Augusta was four years old, her mother died of tuberculosis.

Caroline Augusta had four siblings:

In 1797, Caroline Augusta’s father married his second wife Caroline of Baden, and Caroline Augusta had seven half-siblings, including two sets of identical twin sisters:

Caroline Augusta’s father was an ally of Napoleon and as a consequence of a treaty signed in December 1805 by Napoleon and Caroline of Augusta’s future husband Emperor Franz I of Austria, certain Austrian holdings in Germany were passed to her father and he became King Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria.  Napoleon had also elevated another ally Friedrich Wilhelm Karl, Elector of Württemberg to the status of King. As a symbol of this alliance with Napoleon, Friedrich’s daughter Catharina married Napoleon’s youngest brother Jérôme Bonaparte, the king of the newly created Kingdom of Westphalia. To prevent Napoleon from arranging a marriage for his heir Crown Prince Wilhelm, King Friedrich I of Württemberg arranged a marriage of convenience between his son Wilhelm and Caroline Augusta of Bavaria. The couple was married in Lutheran and Catholic ceremonies in Munich, Kingdom of Bavaria, now in Germany, on June 8, 1808. After the marriage ceremony, Wilhelm told Caroline Augusta, “We are victims of politics.”

Wilhelm and Caroline Augusta’s marriage was never consummated and the couple lived apart in separate wings in the Royal Palace in Stuttgart, the capital of the Kingdom of Württemberg. Wilhelm, who was nine years older, paid no attention to the 16-year-old Caroline Augusta, who was often lonely. She spent her time writing letters to her favorite brother Crown Prince Ludwig, learning Italian and English, walking, reading, and painting. After Napoleon’s fall in 1814, Wilhelm and Caroline Augusta’s marriage was dissolved by a Lutheran consistory set up by King Friedrich I of Württemberg. Caroline Augusta received a generous financial settlement and went to live with an aunt in Neuburg an der Donau, Bavaria. Pope Pius VII dissolved her first marriage on January 12, 1816, so she could be married again in the Catholic Church.

Emperor Franz I with his wife Caroline Augusta at the theater; Credit – Wikipedia

Caroline Augusta’s brother Crown Prince Ludwig held some marriage negotiations for his sister without the knowledge of their father. Ludwig had communicated with the widowed Ferdinando III, Grand Duke of Tuscany, the brother of Franz I, Emperor of Austria. However, when Emperor Franz heard of his brother’s possible marriage plans with Caroline Augusta, he became interested in her for himself. Franz had been widowed for a third time in April 1816. Ferdinand withdrew his marriage proposal for Caroline Augusta in favor of his brother. On October 29, 1816, Caroline Augusta and Franz were married by proxy in Munich, Bavaria. The groom was represented by the bride’s brother Crown Prince Ludwig. On November 10, 1816, Caroline Augusta and Franz were married in person at the Augustinerkirche near the Hofburg Palace in Vienna, Austria.

Family of Franz I, Emperor of Austria: From left to right: Caroline Augusta of Bavaria, Empress of Austria; Franz I, Emperor of Austria; Napoleon II of France, Duke of Reichstadt (Franz’s grandson); Princess Sophie of Bavaria, Archduchess of Austria; Marie-Louise of Austria, Duchess of Parma (Franz’s daughter and Napoleon II’s mother); the future Ferdinand I, Emperor of Austria; and Archduke Franz Karl of Austria in 1826 by Leopold Fertbauer; Credit – Wikipedia

The couple had no children and Caroline Augusta played no role in politics instead, she devoted herself to charitable activities. Through her efforts, child-care institutions, hospitals, and homes for workers were built. After her husband, Emperor Franz I of Austria died in 1835, Caroline Augusta lived in Salzburg to stay out of the way of her half-sister Sophie who had married Franz’s son Archduke Franz Karl in 1824. Emperor Franz I had been succeeded by his son Ferdinand who abdicated in 1848. At that time, Archduke Franz Karl was persuaded to renounce his succession rights in favor of his eldest son Franz Joseph, who reigned from 1847 – 1916. Caroline Augusta was on good terms with her nephew Franz Joseph and his wife Elisabeth of Bavaria (Sissi) who was her niece.

Caroline Augusta in old age; Photo Credit – Wikipedia

The Dowager Empress Caroline Augusta died on February 9, 1873, a day after her 81st birthday. She was buried in Vienna at the Capuchin Church in the Imperial Crypt in the Franzensgruft (Franz’s Vault) where her husband and his three other wives are also buried.

Tomb of Caroline Augusta of Bavaria, fourth wife of Holy Roman Emperor Franz II/Emperor Franz I of Austria; Photo Credit – Susan Flantzer

This article is the intellectual property of Unofficial Royalty and is NOT TO BE COPIED, EDITED, OR POSTED IN ANY FORM ON ANOTHER WEBSITE under any circumstances. It is permissible to use a link that directs to Unofficial Royalty.

Austria Resources at Unofficial Royalty

Maria Ludovika of Austria-Este, Empress of Austria

by Susan Flantzer  © Unofficial Royalty 2016

Maria Ludovika of Austria-Este, Empress of Austria; Credit – Wikipedia

Maria Ludovika was the third of the four wives of Franz I, Emperor of Austria. On December 14, 1787, Archduchess Maria Ludovika of Austria-Este, Princess of Modena, was born at the Royal Villa of Monza, built between 1777 and 1780, when Lombardy (now in Italy) was part of the Austrian Empire. She was the youngest of the ten children of Archduke Ferdinand Karl of Austria-Este and Maria Beatrice Ricciarda d’Este. Maria Ludovika’s father was the fourth son and fourteenth child of Maria Theresa, Archduchess of Austria, and (in her own right) Queen of Hungary, Croatia, and Bohemia, and Franz Stefan, Duke of Lorraine, Holy Roman Emperor.  Maria Theresa had arranged a treaty whereby her son Ferdinand would marry the only child of Ercole III d’Este, Duke of Modena and Reggio, become his heir, and form the House of Austria-Este, a cadet branch of the House of Habsburg and the House of Este.

Maria Ludovika’s parents, Ferdinand and Maria Beatrice; Credit – Wikipedia

Maria Ludovika had nine siblings:

Maria Ludovika’s education was overseen by her strict grandmother Maria Theresa, who had arranged her parents’ marriage. She spent her early years at her birthplace, the beautiful Royal Villa of Monza in Milan, modeled after her father’s birthplace, Schönbrunn Palace in Vienna. In 1796, when Maria Ludovika was nine years old, Napoleon‘s invasion of Milan forced the family to flee the French forces. The family fled to Trieste and then to Wiener Neustadt, a city just south of Vienna. Finally, the family settled in the Palais Dietrichstein in Minoritenplatz in Vienna. This experience gave Maria Ludovika a lifelong hatred of Napoleon. Maria Ludovika’s father died in Vienna in 1806, but after Napoleon’s final defeat, the Congress of Vienna recognized her eldest brother Ferdinand as Duke of Modena.

In 1807, Maria Ludovika’s first cousin, Franz I, Emperor of Austria, King of Hungary and Bohemia became a widower for the second time when his second wife Maria Theresa of Naples and Sicily (his double first cousin, also a first cousin of Maria Ludovika) died after childbirth along with her 12th child. The 39-year-old Emperor consoled his grief with visits to his aunt (by marriage), Maria Beatrice Ricciarda, and fell in love with the beautiful and literate Maria Ludovika, who was 19 years old. Maria Ludovika and Franz were married on January 6, 1808, in a ceremony conducted by the bride’s brother Karl, Archbishop of Esztergom, Primate of Hungary. The marriage was childless.

Franz’s father, Holy Roman Emperor Leopold II, and Maria Ludovika’s father were brothers. Franz became Holy Roman Emperor at age 24 in 1792 after the two-year reign of his father. Holy Roman Emperor Franz II feared that Napoleon could take over his personal lands within the Holy Roman Empire, so in 1804 he proclaimed himself Emperor Franz I of Austria. Two years later, after Napoleon’s victory at the Battle of Austerlitz, the Holy Roman Empire was dissolved. The lands held by the Holy Roman Emperor were given to Napoleon’s allies, creating the Kingdom of Bavaria, the Kingdom of Württemberg, and the Grand Duchy of Baden.

The French had protested Franz’s marriage to Maria Ludovika, and there were fears in Vienna that the new Empress’ hatred of Napoleon could cause Austria to go back to war. In 1809, Austria did attack France again, hoping to gain an advantage over Napoleon because of France’s involvement in the Peninsular War in Spain and Portugal. Austria was again defeated, and this time, Franz was forced to ally himself with Napoleon. He had to cede territory to the French Empire, join the Continental System, and marry his eldest daughter, Marie-Louise, to Napoleon, who had divorced his first wife Joséphine because she had failed to produce an heir. Maria Ludovika, who was only four years older than her stepdaughter, was vehemently against the marriage. After Napoleon’s final defeat, Franz and Maria Ludovika hosted the Congress of Vienna from September 1814 to June 1815. The objective of the Congress was to provide a long-term peace plan for Europe by settling critical issues arising from the Napoleonic Wars.

Maria Ludovika, Empress of Austria; Credit – Wikipedia

During the years of the Napoleonic conflicts, Maria Ludovika was ill with tuberculosis. After the Congress of Vienna, she visited her former home in Modena, now liberated, and other Italian cities with her husband. Maria Ludovika was now very ill and weak and told her mother that she wanted to die. In March 1816, she was in Verona, and too ill to continue her travels. Her physician, who was traveling with her, called in numerous famous doctors, but to no avail. On April 7, 1816, 28-year-old Maria Ludovika died at the Palazzo Canossa in Verona, Kingdom of Lombardy-Venetia, now in Italy, with her husband at her bedside. Maria Ludovika was buried at the Capuchin Church in the Imperial Crypt in the Franzensgruft (Franz’s Vault) in Vienna, Austria, where her husband and his three other wives are also buried.

Tomb of Maria Ludovika of Austria-Este; Credit – Wikipedia

This article is the intellectual property of Unofficial Royalty and is NOT TO BE COPIED, EDITED, OR POSTED IN ANY FORM ON ANOTHER WEBSITE under any circumstances. It is permissible to use a link that directs to Unofficial Royalty.

Austria Resources at Unofficial Royalty

Franz I, Emperor of Austria, Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor

by Susan Flantzer
© Unofficial Royalty 2016

Franz I, Emperor of Austria; Credit – Wikipedia

One day in February 1768, Maria Theresa, Archduchess of Austria and Queen of Hungary, Croatia, and Bohemia in her own right, rushed into the court theater at the Hofburg Palace in Vienna shouting, “Our Leopold has a boy!”, announcing the birth of her grandson, the future Franz II, Holy Roman Emperor who would later be Franz I, Emperor of Austria.

Maria Theresa had been the only surviving child of her father Holy Roman Emperor Karl VI. Throughout his reign, Charles expected to have a male heir and never really prepared Maria Theresa for her future role as sovereign.  When her father died in 1740, Maria Theresa became Queen of Hungary, Croatia, and Bohemia in her own right.  She was unable to become the sovereign of the Holy Roman Empire because she was female. Maria Theresa’s right to succeed her father was the cause of the eight-year-long War of the Austrian Succession.

The Habsburgs had been elected Holy Roman Emperors since 1438, but in 1742 Holy Roman Emperor Karl VII from the German House of Wittelsbach was elected. He died in 1745 and via a treaty, Maria Theresa arranged for her husband Francis Stephen, Duke of Lorraine to be elected Holy Roman Emperor.  Despite the snub, Maria Theresa wielded the real power. Upon the death of her husband, Maria Theresa’s eldest son Joseph was elected Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II, but Maria Theresa continued to wield the real power. Joseph had married twice, but both wives died of smallpox. His first marriage had produced two daughters, one died at age seven and the other died shortly after birth. Maria Theresa’s Leopold was her second surviving son, and therefore the heir and the birth of his son ensured the succession of the throne.

The Holy Roman Empire was a limited elective monarchy composed of hundreds of kingdoms, principalities, duchies, counties, prince-bishoprics, and Free Imperial Cities in central Europe. The Holy Roman Empire was not really holy since, after Holy Roman Emperor Charles V in 1530, no emperors were crowned by the pope or a bishop. It was not Roman but rather German because it was mainly in the regions of present-day Germany and Austria. It was an empire in name only – the territories it covered were mostly independent each with its own ruler. The Holy Roman Emperor directly ruled over only his family territories, and could not issue decrees and rule autonomously over the Holy Roman Empire. A Holy Roman Emperor was only as strong as his army and alliances, including marriage alliances, made him. His power was severely restricted by the many sovereigns of the constituent monarchies of the Holy Roman Empire. From the 13th century, prince-electors, or electors for short, elected the Holy Roman Emperor from among the sovereigns of the constituent states.

Frequently but not always, it was common practice to elect the deceased Holy Roman Emperor’s heir. The Holy Roman Empire was an elective monarchy. No person had a legal right to the succession simply because he was related to the current Holy Roman Emperor. However, the Holy Roman Emperor could and often did, while still alive, have a relative (usually a son) elected to succeed him after his death. This elected heir apparent used the title King of the Romans.

Learn more at Unofficial Royalty: What was the Holy Roman Empire?

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Franz’s grandmother Maria Theresa, Archduchess of Austria, Queen of Hungary, Croatia, and Bohemia; Credit – Wikipedia

Franz Joseph Karl was born on February 12, 1768, in Florence, the capital of Tuscany, now in Italy, where his father reigned as Grand Duke from 1765–90. Franz was the eldest son and the second of the sixteen children of Pietro Leopoldo I, Grand Duke of Tuscany (later Leopold II, Holy Roman Emperor) and Infanta Maria Luisa of Spain, the daughter of King Carlos III of Spain. Franz’s paternal grandparents were the formidable and powerful Empress Maria Theresa, who was in her own right Archduchess of Austria, Queen of Hungary, Queen of Croatia, and Queen of Bohemia, and Francis Stephen, Holy Roman Emperor, Grand Duke of Tuscany, and Duke of Lorraine. Even though her husband was the nominal Holy Roman Emperor, Maria Theresa wielded the real power.  Franz’s maternal grandparents were Carlos III, King of Spain and Maria Amalia of Saxony.

Franz at the age of 2, 1770, by Anton Raphael Mengs; Credit – Wikipedia

Franz had fifteen siblings:

Franz with his parents and siblings, circa 1784-1785; Credit – Wikipedia

Franz had a happy childhood surrounded by his numerous siblings in Florence. His father Leopold was active in his children’s upbringing and encouraged freedom and self-expression. His children were encouraged to run about freely and participate in energetic play. Archduchess Maria Christina, the children’s paternal aunt, recalled with delight being rolled on the floor with her nieces and nephews. The children’s education was a hands-on one. The British ambassador Sir Horace Mann was impressed with Franz’s education: “He played at Geography by the dissected maps that I was desired to get from England, and on all his walks and rides he is accompanied by people who amuse him and instruct him. He has learned the principal modern languages as the natives do, having attendants of different nations who always speak their own language to him, by which means, they are familiar to him.” This pleasant life ended for Franz in 1784 when he was 16 years old. His uncle, Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II, summoned him to the imperial court in Vienna to be prepared as a future emperor.

Soon after he arrived in Vienna, Franz received a memo from his uncle listing his deficiencies: “physical development has been completely neglected,” “stunted in growth,” “very backward in bodily dexterity,” “a spoiled mother’s boy.” Joseph told Franz that if he did not improve methods involving “fear and unpleasantness” would be used. Franz learned to control his feelings and the expression of his opinions based on his uncle’s demands. He was sent to join a military regiment in Hungary to complete his education.

Elisabeth of Württemberg, Archduchess of Austria; Credit – Wikipedia

A bride was chosen for Franz by the Emperor. Duchess Elisabeth of Württemberg, daughter of Friedrich II Eugen, Duke of Württemberg and Friederike of Brandenburg-Schwedt, was chosen for political reasons and sent to Vienna in 1762 when she was 15-years old. Brought up as a Lutheran, Elisabeth was educated at the Monastery of the Salesian Sisters in Vienna, where she converted to Roman Catholicism. Franz and Elisabeth were married on January 6, 1788. On February 18, 1790, Elisabeth gave birth to a premature daughter Archduchess Ludovika Elisabeth of Austria, and then she died early on the morning of February 19, 1790, at the age of 22. The next day, on February 20, 1790, Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II died at the age of 49. The infant Archduchess did not survive long, dying on June 24, 1791. Within a week of his 22nd birthday, Franz became a widower and the heir to the throne, which now passed to his father, Holy Roman Emperor Leopold II. Franz’s father’s reign was only two years and at age 24, he became Franz II, Holy Roman Emperor.

Maria Theresa of Naples and Sicily; Credit – Wikipedia

Franz married again, a little more than six months after the death of his first wife. On September 15, 1790, Franz married Maria Theresa of Naples and Sicily, the eldest daughter of King Ferdinand IV and III of Naples and Sicily (later King Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies) and Archduchess Marie Caroline of Austria. Franz and Maria Theresa were double first cousins, which meant they had the same two sets of grandparents. The couple had twelve children but only seven survived childhood. While pregnant with her twelfth child, Maria Theresa fell ill with the lung infection pleurisy. Her doctor bled her and this caused premature labor. Maria Theresa gave birth to her twelfth child who lived only three days. On April 13, 1807, a week after giving birth, Maria Theresa died at the age of 34. Franz was inconsolable and had to be forcibly removed from his wife’s body.

Franz and Maria Theresa’s children:

Franz, Maria Theresa, and their children; Credit – Wikipedia

Austria took part in the French Revolutionary Wars, lasting from 1792 until 1802, resulting from the French Revolution, which saw the rise of an unknown French general named Napoleon Bonaparte. During the Napoleonic Wars of the early 19th century, Holy Roman Emperor Franz II feared that Napoleon could take over the personal, hereditary Habsburg lands within the Holy Roman Empire, so in 1804 he proclaimed himself Emperor Franz I of Austria. After Napoleon’s victory at the Battle of Austerlitz, in 1806, the Holy Roman Empire was dissolved. The lands of the Holy Roman Empire were given to Napoleon’s allies, creating the Kingdom of Bavaria, the Kingdom of Württemberg, and the Grand Duchy of Baden. In 1809, Franz attacked France again but was again defeated. This time, Franz was forced to ally himself with Napoleon, ceding territory to the French Empire, and marrying his daughter Marie-Louise to Emperor Napoleon. In 1813, for the final time, Austria turned against France and joined Great Britain, Russia, Prussia, and Sweden in their war against Napoleon. Austria played a major role in the final defeat of France, and Emperor Franz I of Austria, represented by Clemens von Metternich, presided over the Congress of Vienna held in Vienna from September 1814 to June 1815. The objective of the Congress was to provide a long-term peace plan for Europe by settling critical issues arising from the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars.

Napoleon meets Franz following the Battle of Austerlitz; Credit – Wikipedia

Franz married two more times. On January 6, 1808, he married another first cousin, Maria Ludovika of Austria-Este, the daughter of Archduke Ferdinand of Austria-Este and Maria Beatrice Ricciarda d’Este. Maria Ludovika was a great enemy of Napoleon and protested the marriage of her stepdaughter Marie-Louise to Napoleon. Franz and Maria Ludovika had no children, and Maria Ludovika died on April 7, 1816, of tuberculosis at the age of 28.

Maria Ludovika of Austria-Este; Credit – Wikipedia

Franz’s fourth and last wife was Princess Caroline Augusta of Bavaria, daughter of Maximilian I Joseph, King of Bavaria and Augusta Wilhelmine of Hesse-Darmstadt. The couple married on October 29, 1816, but had no children.

Caroline Augusta of Bavaria; Credit – Wikipedia

On March 2, 1835, the day after the 43rd anniversary of his father’s death, Franz died suddenly of a fever at the age of 67. For three days, the people of Vienna filed past his coffin. His coffin was then brought in the traditional procession to the Capuchin Church (German: Kapuzinerkirche) in Vienna, Austria, where the Imperial Crypt (German: Kaisergruft), the traditional burial place of the Habsburgs, lies underneath the rather plain church. Franz’s remains lie in the Franzensgruft (Franz’s Vault) surrounded by the tombs of his four wives.

Tomb of Holy Roman Emperor Franz II/Emperor Franz I of Austria; Photo Credit – Susan Flantzer

This article is the intellectual property of Unofficial Royalty and is NOT TO BE COPIED, EDITED, OR POSTED IN ANY FORM ON ANOTHER WEBSITE under any circumstances. It is permissible to use a link that directs to Unofficial Royalty.

Austria Resources at Unofficial Royalty

April 1916: Royalty and World War I

by Susan Flantzer

Michael Hugh Hicks-Beach, Viscount Quenington

Viscount Quenington

Michael Hicks-Beach, Viscount Quenington; Photo Credit – http://www.illustratedfirstworldwar.com

Michael Hugh Hicks-Beach was born on January 19, 1877 at 40 Portman Square in London, England. He was the only son and the second of the four children of Sir Michael Hicks-Beach, a Member of Parliament and Chancellor of the Exchequer, and his second wife, Lady Lucy Catherine Fortescue, daughter of Hugh Fortescue, 3rd Earl Fortescue. Michael had one elder sister and two younger sisters.

  • Lady Eleanor Hicks-Beach (1875 – 1960), married Lt.-Col. Sir John Keane, 5th Baronet; had issue
  • Lady Susan Hicks-Beach (1878 – 1965), unmarried
  • Lady Victoria Hicks-Beach (1879 – 1963), unmarried

Michael was educated at Eton College and then attended Christ Church College at the University of Oxford.  He served as a Captain in the 4th (Militia) Battalion of the Gloucestershire Regiment at St Helena during the Second Boer War.  From 1906 until his death, Michael was a Conservative Member of Parliament from Tewkesbury and was a board member of Lloyds Bank. In 1915, when his father was created 1st Earl St Aldwyn, Michael then held the courtesy title Viscount Quenington, one of his father’s subsidiary titles.

On September 28, 1909, Michael married Marjorie Dent-Brocklehurst of Sudeley Castle, the castle where Catherine Parr, the widow of King Henry VIII, lived the last years of her life. The couple had two children:

  • Lady Delia Mary Hicks-Beach (1910 – 2006), married Brigadier Sir Michael Dillwyn-Venables-Llewelyn, 3rd Baronet; had issue
  • Michael John Hicks-Beach, 2nd Earl St Aldwyn (1912 – 1992), married Diana Mary Christian Mills, had issue including Michael Henry Hicks-Beach, 3rd Earl St. Aldwyn

At the start of World War I, Michael joined the Royal Gloucestershire Hussars as a 2nd Lieutenant and served during the Gallipoli Campaign.  After evacuation from Gallipoli, the Royal Gloucestershire Hussars went to Egypt where took part in many of the battles that formed the Sinai and Palestine Campaign, and Michael served with them as a Lieutenant and an Adjutant.

Michael’s wife Marjorie (Viscountess Quenington) went to Egypt to serve in the Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD), a voluntary organization providing field nursing services, and died from typhus in Cairo, Egypt on March 15, 1916.

About seven weeks later, on April 23, 1916, Michael died of wounds received when serving as Adjutant during the Battle of Katia, 40 miles from the Suez Canal, near Katia, Egypt. He and his wife were buried side by side at the Cairo New British Protestant Cemetery.

Cairo New British Protestant Cemetery; Photo Credit – www.findagrave.com

On April 30, 1916, just a week after Michael’s death, his father Michael Edward Hicks-Beach, 1st Earl St Aldwyn died, and his three year old grandson succeeded him as the 2nd Earl St Aldwyn. A joint memorial was held for Michael Edward Hicks-Beach, 1st Earl St Aldwyn and Michael Hugh Hicks-Beach, Viscount Quenington on May 4, 1916 at St. Margaret’s Church, Westminster, London.

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Timeline: April 1, 1916 – April 30, 1916

  • April 23Battle of Katia in Ogratina, Katia and Duidar east of the Suez Canal and north of El Ferdan Station in present-day Egypt
  • April 27 – 29German gas attack on British troops at Hulluch, France
  • April 29 – British forces under siege at Kut-al-Amara, Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) surrender to the Ottomans, first Siege of Kut ends

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A Note About German Titles

Many German royals and nobles died in World War I. The German Empire consisted of 27 constituent states, most of them ruled by royal families. Scroll down to German Empire here to see what constituent states made up the German Empire.  The constituent states retained their own governments, but had limited sovereignty. Some had their own armies, but the military forces of the smaller ones were put under Prussian control. In wartime, armies of all the constituent states would be controlled by the Prussian Army and the combined forces were known as the Imperial German Army.  German titles may be used in Royals Who Died In Action below. Refer to Unofficial Royalty: Glossary of German Noble and Royal Titles.

24 British peers were also killed in World War I and they will be included in the list of those who died in action. In addition, more than 100 sons of peers also lost their lives, and those that can be verified will also be included.

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April 1916 – Royals/Nobles/Peers/Sons of Peers Who Died In Action

The list is in chronological order and does contain some who would be considered noble instead of royal. The links in the last bullet for each person is that person’s genealogical information from Leo’s Genealogics Website or to The Peerage website.  If a person has a Wikipedia page, their name will be linked to that page.

Captain and Brevet Major The Honorable Josceline Foljambe

 

Hugo Francis Charteris, Lord Elcho

Michael Hicks-Beach, Viscount Quenington and Member of Parliament

Georg, Freiherr von Saalfeld

Prince George of Denmark, Duke of Cumberland

by Susan Flantzer © Unofficial Royalty 2016

Prince George of Denmark, Duke of Cumberland; Credit – Wikipedia

The husband of Queen Anne of Great Britain, Prince George of Denmark (Jørgen in Danish) was born at Copenhagen Castle in Denmark on April 2, 1653. He was the younger of the two sons and the fifth of the eight children of King Frederik III of Denmark and Sophie Amalie of Brunswick-Lüneburg.

George had seven siblings:

George was educated by the Hanoverian statesman Baron Otto Grote zu Schauen and then later by Danish Bishop Christen Jensen Lodberg.  From 1668 – 1669, George undertook the traditional Grand Tour and visited France, England, Italy, and Germany. After his father died in 1670, he returned to Denmark, where his older brother succeeded to the throne as King Christian V. In 1674, George was briefly a candidate for the Polish throne, however, from the outset, there was little chance of success because George was a staunch Lutheran and would not convert to Catholicism.

On July 28, 1683, at the Chapel Royal in St. James’ Palace in London, England, George married Anne of England (the future Queen Anne), the youngest of the two surviving daughters of James, Duke of York (the future King James II of England) and his first wife Anne Hyde. Even though the marriage was arranged, the couple was happy and they were faithful to each other. The couple’s London residence was a set of buildings at Whitehall Palace in London, England, called the Cockpit-in-Court.

The future Queen Anne; Credit – Wikipedia

Prince George of Denmark; Credit – Wikipedia

Anne became pregnant a few months after the wedding, but she gave birth to a stillborn daughter in May 1684. Anne’s obstetrical history is tragic. She had 17 pregnancies with only five children being born alive. Two died on the day of their birth, two died at less than two years old, within six days of each from smallpox, and one died at age 11. Anne suffered from what was diagnosed as gout and had pain in her limbs, stomach, and head. Based on these symptoms and her obstetrical history, Anne may have had systemic lupus erythematosus, which causes an increased rate of fetal death.

  • Stillborn daughter (May 12, 1684)
  • Mary (June 2, 1685 – February 8, 1687), died of smallpox
  • Anne Sophia (May 12, 1686 – February 2, 1687), died of smallpox
  • Miscarriage (January 21, 1687)
  • Stillborn son (October 22, 1687)
  • Miscarriage (April 16, 1688)
  • Prince William, Duke of Gloucester (July 24, 1689 – July 30, 1700)
  • Mary (born and died October 14, 1690)
  • George (born and died April 17, 1692)
  • Stillborn daughter (March 23, 1693)
  • Miscarriage (January 21, 1694)
  • Miscarriage of daughter (February 17 or 18, 1696)
  • Miscarriage (September 20, 1696)
  • Miscarriage (March 25, 1697)
  • Miscarriage of twins (early December 1697)
  • Stillborn son (September 15, 1698)
  • Stillborn son (January 24, 1700)

Anne & her longest surviving child, Prince William, Duke of Gloucester; Credit – Wikipedia

George was naturalized as an English subject in 1683, invested as a Knight of the Garter in 1684, and created Duke of Cumberland, Earl of Kendal, and Baron Wokingham in 1689. Prince George played no part in politics and had no real ambitions. His uncle by marriage, King Charles II, famously said of George, “I have tried him drunk, and I have tried him sober, and drunk or sober, there is nothing there.

Upon the death of King Charles II in 1685, George’s father-in-law, the Roman Catholic Duke of York, came to the throne as King James II. Anne and George became the center of Protestant opposition against the new king. On November 5, 1688, William III, Prince of Orange landed in England with an invasion army. Married to Anne’s elder sister Mary, William III, Prince of Orange, was the only child of Mary, Princess Royal, the eldest daughter of King Charles I of England, so he was third in the line of succession to the throne. The Glorious Revolution resulted in King James II fleeing to France, and Anne’s sister and brother-in-law becoming joint monarchs, King William III and Queen Mary II.

On December 28, 1694, Anne’s sister Queen Mary II died of smallpox. She was just 32 years old. King William III continued to reign alone for the remainder of his life. As William and Mary had no children, Anne was now the heir presumptive to the throne, and her son William was second in the line of succession.

Prince William, Duke of Gloucester; Credit – Wikipedia

On July 24, 1700, Anne’s son, Prince William, Duke of Gloucester, celebrated his eleventh birthday at a party held at Windsor Castle. Jenkin Lewis, his servant, reported, “He complained a little the next day, but we imputed that to the fatigues of a birthday so that he was much neglected.” In the evening, William complained of a sore throat and chills. Two days later, he was no better and had developed a fever and was delirious. The doctors suspected smallpox, but no rash appeared, so they used the usual treatments of the time, bleeding and blistering, which, no doubt, made William’s condition worse.

William died on the morning of July 30, 1700, at Windsor Castle, probably of pneumonia. His body was taken to the Palace of Westminster, where it lay in state in his apartments. William was interred in the Henry VII Chapel at Westminster Abbey during the evening of August 7, 1700. His uncle, King William III wrote to the Duke of Marlborough, that William’s death was “so great a loss to me as well as to all of England, that it pierces my heart.”

Anne and her husband George were devastated. This death and the failure of the Protestant Stuarts to produce heirs meant the end of the Protestant Stuart dynasty as the legitimate descendants of King Charles I were either childless or Roman Catholic. The Act of Settlement 1701 secured the Protestant succession to the throne after William’s sister-in-law and heir presumptive, Princess Anne. The act excluded the former King James II (who died a few months after the act received royal assent) and the Roman Catholic children from his second marriage. Also excluded were the descendants of King James II’s sister Henrietta, the youngest daughter of King Charles I. Parliament’s choice was limited to the Protestant descendants of Elizabeth Stuart, Electress Palatine, the only other child of King James I not to have died in childhood. The senior Protestant descendant was Elizabeth’s youngest daughter, Sophia, Electress of Hanover. The Act of Settlement put Sophia of Hanover and her Protestant heirs in the line of succession after Anne.

On February 20, 1702, King William III went riding on his horse at Hampton Court Palace. The horse stumbled on a molehill, and King William III fell and broke his collarbone. After a surgeon set his collarbone, William refused to rest. He insisted on returning to Kensington Palace. A week later, the fracture was not mending well, and William’s right hand and arm were puffy and did not look right. His condition continued to worsen. By March 3, William had a fever and had difficulty breathing. King William III died on March 8, 1702, and was succeeded by his sister-in-law and cousin Anne.

Queen Anne’s coronation took place on St. George’s Day, April 23, 1702. Despite being only 37 years old, Anne was so overweight and infirm that she had to be carried in a sedan chair to Westminster Abbey. At the coronation, Anne’s husband, Prince George, paid homage to her. He was the first husband of a reigning queen to do so, and it was not to be repeated until Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, paid homage to his wife Queen Elizabeth II at her 1953 coronation.

Anne with her husband, Prince George of Denmark,1706; Credit – Wikipedia

In March 1706, George became seriously ill but seemed to recover. He spent much of the summer of 1708 at Windsor Castle with asthma that was so bad he was not expected to live. Prince George died on October 28, 1708, at Kensington Palace in London at the age of 55. Queen Anne deeply grieved for him. She was desperate to remain with George’s body but reluctantly left after persuasion from her childhood friend and favorite, Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough. George was buried privately at midnight on November 13, 1708, at Westminster Abbey in a vault under the monument to George Monck, Duke of Albemarle in the Henry VII Chapel. Charles II, William III, Mary II, and George’s wife Anne were also buried in this vault.

Inscription on the floor of the Henry VII Chapel at Westminster Abbey marking the graves of Queen Anne & Prince George; Credit – findagrave.com

Stuart Vault at Westminster Abbey;  Credit – www.westminster-abbey.org

House of Stuart Resources at Unofficial Royalty

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Queen Anne of Great Britain

by Susan Flantzer  © Unofficial Royalty 2016

Queen Anne of Great Britain; Credit – Wikipedia

Her Highness The Lady Anne was the fourth child and second daughter of James, Duke of York (the future King James II of England) and his first wife Anne Hyde. Anne was born at St. James’ Palace in London, England on February 6, 1665.

Anne had seven siblings, of whom only Anne and her elder sister Mary survived childhood:

The Family of James, Duke of York. The Duke (later King James II and VII) and Duchess of York (previously Anne Hyde) were painted by Peter Lely in between 1668 and 1670. Their two daughters, Mary (left) and Anne (right), later Queen Mary II and Queen Anne, were added by Benedetto Gennari in or after 1680. Windsor Castle is in the background; Credit – Wikipedia

Anne was christened into the Church of England on May 9, 1665, at the Chapel Royal in St. James’ Palace in London, England. Her godparents were:

Anne’s mother and father converted to Roman Catholicism, but on the orders of King Charles II, Anne and her sister Mary were brought up in the Church of England. Anne’s mother died of breast cancer in 1671, when Anne was 6 years old. At that time, Anne and her elder sister Mary were declared “children of the state” and their education became the responsibility of their uncle King Charles II. The two sisters were moved away from their father’s Catholic influence and given their own household at Richmond Palace on the River Thames under the care of Sir Edward Villiers and his wife Frances. The Villiers daughters were educated with Mary and Anne, and the girls had lessons in religion, French, drawing, music, and dancing.

In 1673, Anne’s father James made a second marriage with the Catholic 15-year-old Maria Beatrice of Modena. Anne was only seven years younger than her stepmother and James told his daughters that he had provided them with a new playmate.

Anne had seven half-siblings via her father’s second marriage with Maria Beatrice of Modena, but only two survived childhood:

Around 1671, Anne first met Sarah Jennings who eventually became her great friend and very influential adviser. Sarah and Anne became closer friends when Sarah was appointed a maid of honor to Maria Beatrice of Modena, Anne’s stepmother. Sarah married John Churchill, the future 1st Duke of Marlborough. During Anne’s reign, John Churchill served Anne as a general in the War of the Spanish Succession. Anne had Blenheim Palace built for John Churchill in Oxfordshire as a reward from a grateful nation for the duke’s military victories against the French and Bavarians during the War of the Spanish Succession, culminating in the 1704 Battle of Blenheim. Sarah fell out of favor with Anne in 1711 and Abigail Masham, a cousin of Sarah, became Anne’s favorite and remained so until Anne’s death. Among the more famous descendants of the Marlboroughs are Sir Winston Churchill and Diana, Princess of Wales.

In December of 1680, George, The Hereditary Prince of Brunswick-Lüneburg (the future King George I) made a three-month visit to his future kingdom of Great Britain and rumors were flying that he would become the husband of his second cousin Princess Anne, the future Queen Anne, whom he later succeeded. However, on July 28, 1683, at the Chapel Royal in St. James’ Palace, Anne married the Protestant Prince George of Denmark, son of King Frederik III of Denmark and Sophie Amalie of Brunswick-Lüneburg and brother of King Christian V of Denmark. Even though the marriage was arranged, the marriage was happy and they were faithful to each other. The couple’s London residence was a set of buildings at Whitehall Palace called the Cockpit-in-Court. Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough became one of Anne’s ladies-in-waiting.

Anne, circa 1684; Credit – Wikipedia

Prince George of Denmark, circa 1687; Credit – Wikipedia

Anne became pregnant a few months after the wedding, but she gave birth to a stillborn daughter in May 1684. Anne’s obstetrical history is tragic. She had 17 pregnancies with only five children being born alive. Two died on the day of their birth, two died at less than two years old within six days of each from smallpox, and one died at age 11. Anne suffered from what was diagnosed as gout and had pain in her limbs, stomach, and head. Based on these symptoms and her obstetrical history, Anne may have had systemic lupus erythematosus which causes an increased rate of fetal death.

  • Stillborn daughter (May 12, 1684)
  • Mary (June 2, 1685 – February 8, 1687), died of smallpox
  • Anne Sophia (May 12, 1686 – 2 February 2, 1687, died of smallpox
  • Miscarriage (January 21, 1687)
  • Stillborn son (October 22, 1687)
  • Miscarriage (April 16, 1688)
  • Prince William, Duke of Gloucester (July 24, 1689 – July 30, 1700
  • Mary (born and died October 14, 1690)
  • George (born and died April 17, 1692)
  • Stillborn daughter (March 23, 1693)
  • Miscarriage (January 21, 1694)
  • Miscarriage of daughter (February 17 or 18, 1696)
  • Miscarriage (September 20, 1696)
  • Miscarriage (March 25, 1697)
  • Miscarriage of twins (early December 1697)
  • Stillborn son (September 15, 1698)
  • Stillborn son (January 24, 1700)

Anne and her longest surviving child, Prince William, Duke of Gloucester; Credit – Wikipedia

In 1685, Anne’s uncle King Charles II died without any legitimate children despite having at least 14 illegitimate children. Anne’s father, who had converted to Roman Catholicism, succeeded his brother as King James II. Anne and her elder sister Mary, who had married their first cousin Willem III, Prince of Orange, were James’ only surviving children and were first and second in the line of succession followed by William who was third as the only child of King Charles I’s eldest surviving daughter Mary, Princess Royal. King James II was now set on restoring Catholicism to England. He issued a Declaration of Indulgence removing restrictions that had been imposed on those that did not conform to the Church of England. England might have tolerated King James II knowing that his heirs were the Protestant daughters of his first wife Anne Hyde, Mary and Anne. However, on June 10, 1688, James’ second wife Maria Beatrice of Modena, who had no surviving children, gave birth to a son, James Francis Edward. Immediately, false rumors swirled that the infant had been smuggled into the queen’s chambers in a warming pan.

On November 5, 1688, Willem III, Prince of Orange, the nephew and son-in-law of King James II, landed in England vowing to safeguard the Protestant interest. He marched to London, gathering many supporters. James panicked and sent his wife and infant son to France. He tried to flee to France about a month later but was captured. William had no desire to make his uncle a martyr, so he allowed him to escape. James was received in France by his cousin King Louis XIV, who offered him a palace and a pension.

Back in England, Parliament refused to depose James but declared that having fled to France, James had effectively abdicated the throne and that therefore the throne had become vacant. James’s elder daughter Mary was declared Queen Mary II and she was to rule jointly with her husband Willem, who would be King William III. This overthrow of King James II is known as the Glorious Revolution. James was determined to regain the throne and landed in Ireland with a French force in 1689. He was defeated by his nephew William at the Battle of the Boyne on July 1, 1690, and was forced to withdraw once again to France where he lived in exile for the rest of his life. William and Mary were crowned at Westminster Abbey on April 11, 1689.

On December 28, 1694, Anne’s sister Queen Mary II died of smallpox. She was just 32 years old. King William III continued to reign alone for the remainder of his life. As William and Mary had no children, Anne was now the heir presumptive to the throne and her son William was second in the line of succession.

On July 24, 1700, Prince William, Duke of Gloucester celebrated his eleventh birthday at a party held at Windsor Castle. Jenkin Lewis, his servant, reported, “He complained a little the next day, but we imputed that to the fatigues of a birthday so that he was much neglected.” In the evening, William complained of a sore throat and chills. Two days later, he was no better and had developed a fever and was delirious. The doctors suspected smallpox, but no rash appeared, so they used the usual treatments of the time, bleeding and blistering, which no doubt, made William’s condition worse. William died on the morning of July 30, 1700, at Windsor Castle, probably of pneumonia. His body was taken to the Palace of Westminster where it lay in state in his apartments. William was interred in the Henry VII Chapel at Westminster Abbey during the evening of August 7, 1700. His uncle King William III wrote to the Duke of Marlborough that William’s death was “so great a loss to me as well as to all of England, that it pierces my heart.”

Prince William, Duke of Gloucester, shortly before his death; Credit – Wikipedia

Anne and her husband George were devastated. This death and the failure of the Protestant Stuarts to produce heirs meant the end of the Protestant Stuart dynasty as the legitimate descendants of King Charles I were either childless or Roman Catholic. The Act of Settlement 1701 secured the Protestant succession to the throne after William’s sister-in-law and heir presumptive Princess Anne. The act excluded the former King James II (who died a few months after the act received royal assent) and the Roman Catholic children from his second marriage. It also excluded the descendants of King James II’s sister Henrietta, the youngest daughter of King Charles I. Parliament’s choice was limited to the Protestant descendants of Elizabeth Stuart, Electress Palatine, the only other child of King James I not to have died in childhood. The senior Protestant descendant was Elizabeth Stuarts’s youngest daughter Sophia, Electress of Hanover. The Act of Settlement put Sophia of Hanover and her Protestant heirs in the line of succession after Anne.

Queen Anne, circa 1702; Credit – Wikipedia

On February 20, 1702, King William III went riding on his horse at Hampton Court Palace. The horse stumbled on a molehill and fell and broke his collarbone. The collarbone was set by a surgeon, but instead of resting, William insisted on returning to Kensington Palace that evening. A week later, it was discovered that the fracture was not mending well and William’s right hand and arm were puffy and did not look right. His condition continued to worsen and by March 3, William had a fever and had difficulty breathing. King William III died on March 8, 1702, and was succeeded by his sister-in-law and cousin Anne. Queen Anne’s coronation took place on St George’s Day, April 23, 1702. Despite being only 37 years old, Anne was so overweight and infirm that she had to be carried in a sedan chair to Westminster Abbey. At the coronation, Anne’s husband Prince George paid homage to her. He was the first husband of a reigning queen to do so and it was not to be repeated until Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh paid homage to his wife Queen Elizabeth II at her 1953 coronation.

Queen Anne; Credit – Wikipedia

During Queen Anne’s reign, England was engaged in the War of the Spanish Succession, in which England, Austria, and the Dutch Republic fought against France and Spain. On March 6, 1707, the Acts of Union were passed. England and Scotland were united into a single kingdom called Great Britain. Anne’s husband, Prince George died at age 55 on October 28, 1708, at Kensington Palace and was buried at Westminster Abbey. Anne deeply grieved for her husband and wrote to his nephew King Frederik IV of Denmark, “the loss of such a husband, who loved me so dearly and so devotedly, is too crushing for me to be able to bear it as I ought.”

Anne with her husband, Prince George of Denmark; Credit – Wikipedia

Queen Anne suffered a stroke on July 30, 1714. She died at Kensington Palace on August 1, 1714, at the age of 49 after suffering another stroke. Her remains were buried at Westminster Abbey in a vault under the monument to George Monck, 1st Duke of Albemarle in the Henry VII Chapel. Charles II, William III, Anne’s sister Mary II, and Anne’s husband George of Denmark were also buried in this vault. Anne had become so obese that her coffin was much larger than the other coffins in the vault as can be seen in the drawing below. Electress Sophia of Hanover, the heir to the throne according to the Act of Settlement, had died on June 8, 1714, just six weeks before the death of Queen Anne, and so Sophia’s son became King George I and started the Hanover dynasty.

Inscription on the floor of the Henry VII Chapel at Westminster Abbey marking the graves of Queen Anne and Prince George; Credit – findagrave.com

Stuart Royal Vault at Westminster Abbey; Photo Credit – www.westminster-abbey.org

This article is the intellectual property of Unofficial Royalty and is NOT TO BE COPIED, EDITED, OR POSTED IN ANY FORM ON ANOTHER WEBSITE under any circumstances. It is permissible to use a link that directs to Unofficial Royalty.

Recommended Book: Ungrateful Daughters: The Stuart Princesses Who Stole Their Father’s Throne by Maureen Waller, 2002

House of Stuart Resources at Unofficial Royalty

Queen Mary II of England

by Susan Flantzer  © Unofficial Royalty 2016

Queen Mary II of England; Credit – Wikipedia

Her Highness The Lady Mary was the eldest daughter and the second child of James, Duke of York (the future King James II of England) and his first wife, Anne Hyde.  Mary was born at St. James’ Palace in London, England, on April 30, 1662. Her elder brother Charles lived for only six months and died before Mary was born. Except for the short time one or more of her three younger brothers were alive, Mary was second in line to the throne after her father, brother of King Charles II.

Mary had seven siblings, of whom only Mary and her sister Anne survived childhood:

The Family of James, Duke of York. The Duke (later King James II and VII) and Duchess of York (previously Anne Hyde). Their two daughters, Mary (left) and Anne (right), later Queen Mary II and Queen Anne, were added in or after 1680. Windsor Castle is in the background; Credit – Wikipedia

Mary was christened in the Church of England on May 9, 1662, at the Chapel Royal in St. James’ Palace. Her godparents were:

Mary’s mother and father converted to Roman Catholicism, but on the orders of King Charles II, Mary and her sister Anne were brought up in the Church of England. Mary’s mother died of breast cancer in 1671 when Mary was 9 years old. At that time, Mary and her younger sister Anne were declared “children of the state” and their education became the responsibility of their uncle, King Charles II. The two sisters were moved away from their father’s Catholic influence and given their own household at Richmond Palace on the River Thames under the care of Sir Edward Villiers and his wife Frances. The Villiers daughters were educated with Mary and Anne, and the girls had lessons in religion, French, drawing, music, and dancing.

In 1673, Mary’s father James made a second marriage with the Catholic 15-year-old Maria Beatrice of Modena. Mary was only four years younger than her stepmother, and James told his daughters that he had provided them with a new playmate.

Mary had seven half-siblings via her father’s second marriage with Maria Beatrice of Modena, but only two survived childhood:

In 1677, when Mary was 15 years old, it became apparent that Catherine of Braganza, the wife of King Charles II, would not provide a Stuart heir. In addition, Maria Beatrice of Modena had two miscarriages and two daughters, one had died in infancy, and one was sickly and not expected to survive. Mary’s marriage became a matter of dynastic importance for the House of Stuart. The bridegroom her uncle chose for her was William III, Prince of Orange, her first cousin. William was the only child of Mary’s paternal aunt Mary, Princess Royal and Willem II, Prince of Orange, who had died of smallpox a few days before his son’s birth. William was fourth in line to the English throne after his uncle James and his cousins Mary and Anne.

William III, Prince of Orange; Credit -Wikipedia

15-year-old Mary and 27-year-old William were married on November 4, 1677, in Mary’s bedchamber at St. James’ Palace with only the closest relatives attending. The bride was miserable, the groom acted with cool correctness, the father of the bride was grimly resigned to the marriage, and the stepmother of the bride, who was very pregnant, was in tears at the prospect of losing her stepdaughter. The bride’s aunt Catherine of Braganza tried to comfort Mary saying, “When I came to England I had not even seen the King,” to which Mary replied, “Madam, you came into England, but I am going out of England.” Mary’s sister Anne and her governess Lady Frances Villiers were unable to attend as they were both ill with smallpox. Only the bride and groom’s uncle, King Charles II, was his usual cheerful and tactless self. Upon closing the curtains around the marital bed, Charles remarked, “Now nephew, to your work! Hey! St. George for England!”

Mary in the year of her marriage; Credit – Wikipedia

William and Mary made a formal entry into The Hague, the seat of William’s Dutch Republic, on December 14, 1677. Mary soon became pregnant but suffered a miscarriage, which may have prevented any future successful pregnancies. It is suspected that she had at least two more miscarriages. Her inability to have children was Mary’s greatest unhappiness. Despite their physical mismatch, Mary was quite tall (5 feet 11 inches/180 cm) and towered over the undersized and asthmatic William (5 feet 6 inches/167 cm), William adored Mary, and Mary was devoted to William. Unlike his uncles, Charles II and James II, who had many mistresses, William reputedly had only one mistress, Elizabeth Hamilton, Countess of Orkney.

In 1685, William and Mary’s uncle, King Charles II, died without any legitimate children despite having at least 14 illegitimate children. Mary’s father, who had converted to Roman Catholicism, succeeded his brother as King James II. Mary and her younger sister Anne were James’ only surviving children and were first and second in the line of succession, followed by William, who was third as the only child of King Charles I’s eldest surviving daughter. King James II was now set on a course of restoring Catholicism to England. He issued a Declaration of Indulgence removing restrictions imposed on those who did not conform to the Church of England. England might have tolerated King James II, knowing that his heirs were the Protestant daughters of his first wife Anne Hyde, Mary and Anne. However, on June 10, 1688, James’ second wife, Maria Beatrice of Modena, who had no surviving children, gave birth to a Catholic son, James Francis Edward. Immediately, false rumors swirled that the infant had been smuggled into the queen’s chambers in a warming pan.

On November 5, 1688, William III, Prince of Orange, the nephew and son-in-law of King James II, landed in England vowing to safeguard the Protestant interest. He marched to London, gathering many supporters. James II panicked and sent his wife and infant son to France. He tried to flee to France about a month later but was captured. William had no desire to make his uncle a martyr, so he allowed him to escape. James was received in France by his first cousin, King Louis XIV, who offered him a palace and a pension.

Back in England, Parliament refused to depose James but declared that, having fled to France, James had effectively abdicated the throne and the throne had become vacant. James’s elder daughter Mary was declared Queen Mary II, and she was to rule jointly with her husband William, who would be King William III. This overthrow of King James II is known as the Glorious Revolution. James was determined to regain the throne and landed in Ireland with a French force in 1689. He was defeated by his nephew William at the Battle of the Boyne on July 1, 1690, and was forced to withdraw again to France, where he lived in exile for the rest of his life.

William and Mary were crowned at Westminster Abbey in London, England, on April 11, 1689. Since they were joint sovereigns, a duplicate coronation chair and a duplicate set of regalia were required for the coronation ceremony. At previous coronations, monarchs had sworn to uphold the laws made by their ancestors. However, William and Mary swore to rule according to “the statutes in Parliament agreed upon and laws and customs of the same” and promised to uphold the Protestant reformed religion.

On December 16, 1689, Parliament passed the Bill of Rights 1689, which limited the monarch’s powers and set out the rights of Parliament. The Bill of Rights 1689, along with the Act of Settlement 1701, are still in effect in the United Kingdom and Commonwealth realms, although both have been amended by the Perth Agreement 2011, which took effect on March 26, 2015. The Bill of Rights also confirmed the succession to the throne. Following the death of either William or Mary, the other was to continue to reign. Next in the line of succession would be any children of the couple, followed by Mary’s sister Anne and her children. Last in the line of succession stood any children William III might have had from any subsequent marriage. Beginning in 1690, William was often on military campaigns in Europe and left Mary to reign. She was not keen on assuming such power but did so with the advice of a nine-member Cabinet Council.

William and Mary left a legacy in the United States. In 1693, William and Mary granted a royal charter to found the College of William and Mary, now in present-day Williamsburg, Virginia. It is the second oldest university in the United States after Harvard University and the only university in the United States with a royal charter. The College of William and Mary educated American Presidents Thomas Jefferson, James Monroe, and John Tyler, and other key figures important to the development of the United States as a nation, including Supreme Court Chief Justice John Marshall, Speaker of the House of Representatives Henry Clay, sixteen members of the Continental Congress, and four signers of the Declaration of Independence.  Another alumnus of The College of William and Mary is this writer’s son.

William and Mary depicted on the ceiling of the Painted Hall, Greenwich; Credit – Wikipedia

In early December 1694, Mary became ill. Smallpox was spreading through London, and it was feared that Mary might have contracted the disease, a disease that had previously killed both of William’s parents. Mary was in a weakened state, having been upset about William’s latest illness and the sudden death of John Tillotson, Archbishop of Canterbury. One morning when Mary awoke, she felt particularly ill and noticed a rash on her arms. Eventually, the doctors confirmed that Mary was suffering from smallpox, which she accepted with an attitude that surprised all around her. The first thing Mary did was to send away everyone who had not had smallpox. William, who had survived the disease, had a bed put in Mary’s room and oversaw her medical care.

Prayers were said for Mary in all the churches on Christmas Day 1694. Mary said that she had slept well and felt better. The rashes seemed to have disappeared, and the doctors thought that perhaps it had been measles. However, when Mary was examined in the evening, the nine doctors attending her discovered that the rashes had turned inward and sunk into her skin, which was not a good sign. Mary had an uncomfortable night, and her throat was hemorrhaging. The desperate doctors tried all sorts of remedies: bleeding Mary, applying hot irons to her forehead, and giving her various potions. Mary was told that she was dying. The usual unemotional William broke down and burst into tears. Mary begged him to control himself and not to make her suffer by seeing him so upset. She told him that she was “not so bad” to which William replied, “that if God caused this blow to fall, it would be all over for me.”

Dr. John Radcliffe, the renowned doctor, examined Mary on December 27. He confirmed that Mary’s condition was hopeless. Mary received Communion and tried to pray, but she was too weak, and in a whisper, asked others to pray for her. In the evening, Mary was much weaker. She tried to talk to William, but the effort was too much for her. William approached her in tears, and Mary motioned him away. Soon she lapsed into unconsciousness. In the early morning of December 28, 1694, Mary peacefully died. She was just 32 years old. William was terribly grief-stricken, collapsed at Mary’s bedside, and had to be carried, nearly insensible, from the room. For a few days, it was feared that William, too, would die.

Mary II lying in state

Queen Mary II lying in state © Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Mary lay in state in the Banqueting Hall of Whitehall Palace. Despite the cold weather, large crowds lined up to file past their Queen and pay their respects. On March 5, 1695, in a heavy snowstorm, the funeral procession traveled the short distance from Whitehall Palace to Westminster Abbey. The King was not present, according to custom, but all members of both Houses of Parliament, all wearing black, attended the funeral. The noted English composer Henry Purcell specially composed Music for the Funeral of Queen Mary.

Queen Mary II was buried in a vault under the monument to George Monck, Duke of Albemarle, in the Henry VII Chapel of Westminster Abbey. Charles II, Mary’s husband William III, Mary’s sister Anne, and her husband George of Denmark were also buried in this vault. A joint monument for William III and Mary II was designed but never constructed. An inscription on the floor marks her grave. William reigned alone until he died in 1702, when he was succeeded by Mary’s sister Anne.

Inscription on the floor of the Henry VII Chapel at Westminster Abbey marking the grave of Mary II;  Credit – findagrave.com

Stuart Royal Vault at Westminster Abbey;  Credit – www.westminster-abbey.org

This article is the intellectual property of Unofficial Royalty and is NOT TO BE COPIED, EDITED, OR POSTED IN ANY FORM ON ANOTHER WEBSITE under any circumstances. It is permissible to use a link that directs to Unofficial Royalty.

Recommended Book: William and Mary by John Van der Kiste, 2003
Recommended Book: Ungrateful Daughters: The Stuart Princesses Who Stole Their Father’s Throne by Maureen Waller, 2002

House of Stuart Resources at Unofficial Royalty

King William III of England, also Willem III, Prince of Orange

by Susan Flantzer  © Unofficial Royalty 2016

King William III of England; Credit – Wikipedia

King William III of England was born on November 14, 1650, at Binnenhof Palace in The Hague in the Dutch Republic, now in the Netherlands. He was the only child of Willem II, Prince of Orange and Stadtholder of the United Provinces of the Netherlands, and Mary, Princess Royal, the eldest daughter of King Charles I of England. William’s father died at age 24 of smallpox eight days before William’s birth, so from birth, William was the sovereign Prince of Orange. His 19-year-old widowed mother wanted to name her son Charles after her brother (King Charles II of England), but her mother-in-law insisted that her grandson be named William Henry (in Dutch Willem Hendrik), and she got her way. During William’s minority as Prince of Orange, his mother had to share his guardianship with his paternal grandmother Amalia of Solms-Braunfels and Friedrich Wilhelm, Elector of Brandenburg, whose wife Louise Henriette of Nassau, was the elder sister of William’s father.

William III, Prince of Orange in 1654; Credit – Wikipedia

The infant Willem III, Prince of Orange had an impressive royal genealogy. He was the great-grandson of Willem I, Prince of Orange, better known as William the Silent, the founder of the House of Orange-Nassau and the ancestor of the monarchy of the Netherlands. His maternal grandparents were King Charles I of England and Princess Henrietta Maria of France. His great-grandparents on his mother’s side were King James I of England/James VI of Scotland (son of Mary, Queen of Scots) and Princess Anne of Denmark (daughter of King Frederik II of Denmark), and King Henri IV of France and Marie de’Medici.

William’s parents: Mary, Princess Royal and William II, Prince of Orange in 1647 by Gerard van Honthorst; Credit – Wikipedia

William’s early education, conducted by tutors, was designed to prepare him to carry out the destiny of the House of Orange-Nassau and to raise him in the Reformed Church which used the theology of John Calvin. From 1659-1666, William attended the University of Leiden although he never formally enrolled as a student. On December 23, 1660, his mother died at the age of 29 of smallpox while visiting her brother King Charles II in London.

Portrait of William III of Orange, aged 10, within a flower garland filled with symbols of the House of Orange; Credit – Wikipedia

In 1667, William was admitted to the Council of State of the Dutch Provinces. His first visit to England was in 1670 where he met Mary, his eight-year-old first cousin, daughter of his uncle James, Duke of York (the future King James II of England), who later became his wife. William was appointed Stadtholder of the United Provinces in 1672, an office practically hereditary in his family. However, 1672 is known in Dutch history as Rampjaar (disaster year). France under King Louis XIV invaded the United Provinces in the Franco-Dutch War. William led the Dutch forces against the French and in 1678 he forced a peace with France in which the Dutch received all the terms they wanted.

William in 1672; Credit – Wikipedia

During the war with France, William’s uncle King Charles II of England acted as a mediator between France and the Netherlands. Savvy William negotiated a political marriage with England by marrying his first cousin Mary, the elder surviving daughter of James, Duke of York, later King James II of England/James VII of Scotland. 27-year-old William and a weepy 15-year-old Mary, prodded on by her uncle King Charles II, were married at St. James’ Palace in London on November 4, 1677. William and Mary formally entered into The Hague on December 14, 1677. Mary soon became pregnant but suffered a miscarriage which may have prevented any successful pregnancies. It is suspected that she had at least two more miscarriages. Her inability to have children was Mary’s greatest unhappiness. Despite their physical mismatch, Mary was quite tall (5 feet 11 inches; 180 cm) and towered over the undersized and asthmatic William (5 feet 6 inches; 167 cm), William adored Mary, and Mary was devoted to William. Unlike his uncles, Charles II and James II who had many mistresses, William reputedly had only one mistress, Elizabeth Hamilton, Countess of Orkney.

Mary in 1677 by Sir Peter Lely; Credit – Wikipedia

In 1685, William and Mary’s uncle King Charles II died without any legitimate children despite having at least 14 illegitimate children. Mary’s father, who had converted to Roman Catholicism, succeeded his brother as King James II. Mary and her younger sister Anne were James’ only surviving children and were first and second in the line of succession followed by William who was third as the only child of King Charles I’s eldest surviving daughter. King James II was set on a course to restore Catholicism to England. He issued a Declaration of Indulgence removing restrictions imposed on those that did not conform to the Church of England. England might have tolerated King James II knowing that his heirs were the Protestant daughters of his first wife Anne Hyde, Mary and Anne. However, on June 10, 1688, James’ second wife Maria Beatrice of Modena, who had no surviving children, gave birth to a son, James Francis Edward. Immediately, false rumors swirled that the infant had been smuggled into the queen’s chambers in a warming pan.

On November 5, 1688, William III, Prince of Orange, the nephew and son-in-law of King James II, landed in England vowing to safeguard the Protestant interest. He marched to London, gathering many supporters. James panicked and sent his wife and infant son to France. He tried to flee to France about a month later but was captured. William had no desire to make his uncle a martyr, so he allowed him to escape. James was received in France by his first cousin King Louis XIV of France, who offered him a palace and a pension.

Back in England, Parliament refused to depose James but declared that having fled to France, James had effectively abdicated the throne. Therefore, the throne had become vacant. James’s elder daughter Mary was declared Queen Mary II and was to rule jointly with her husband William, who would be King William III. This overthrow of King James II is known as the Glorious Revolution.  James was determined to regain the throne and landed in Ireland with a French force in 1689. James’ nephew William defeated him at the Battle of the Boyne on July 1, 1690. James was forced to withdraw again to France where he lived in exile for the rest of his life.

The Battle of the Boyne by Jan van Huchtenburg; Credit – Wikipedia

William and Mary were crowned at Westminster Abbey in London, England on April 11, 1689. Since they were joint sovereigns, a duplicate coronation chair and a duplicate set of regalia were required for the coronation ceremony. At previous coronations, monarchs had sworn to uphold the laws made by their ancestors. However, William and Mary swore to rule according to “the statutes in Parliament agreed upon and laws and customs of the same” and promised to uphold the Protestant reformed religion.

On December 16, 1689, Parliament passed the Bill of Rights 1689 which limited the monarch’s powers and set out the rights of Parliament. The Bill of Rights 1689 and the Act of Settlement 1701 are still in effect in the United Kingdom and Commonwealth realms. However, both have been amended by the Perth Agreement 2011 which took effect on March 26, 2015. The Bill of Rights also confirmed the succession to the throne. Following the death of either William or Mary, the other was to continue to reign. Next in the line of succession would be any children of the couple, followed by Mary’s sister Anne and her children. Last in the line of succession stood any children William III might have from any future marriage. Beginning in 1690, William was often on military campaigns and Mary was left to reign. She was not keen on assuming such power but did so with the advice of a nine-member Cabinet Council.

William and Mary left a legacy in the United States. In 1693, William and Mary granted a royal charter to found the College of William and Mary, now in present-day Williamsburg, Virginia. It is the second oldest university in the United States after Harvard University and the only university in the United States with a royal charter. The College of William and Mary educated American Presidents Thomas Jefferson, James Monroe, and John Tyler and other key figures important to the development of the United States as a nation, including Supreme Court Chief Justice John Marshall, Speaker of the House of Representatives Henry Clay, sixteen members of the Continental Congress, and four signers of the Declaration of Independence. Another alumnus of The College of William and Mary is this writer’s son.

William and Mary depicted on the ceiling of the Painted Hall, Greenwich, by Sir James Thornhill; Credit – Wikipedia

Mary died of smallpox at Kensington Palace in London, England on December 28, 1694, at the age of 32. The same disease had killed both of William’s parents. William was devastated by Mary’s death and said “from being the happiest” he was “now going to be the miserablest creature on earth.” William continued to reign alone for the remainder of his life.

Queen Mary II, 1690 by Sir Godfrey Kneller – Credit – Wikipedia

Perhaps the greatest blow in William’s last years was the death of the 11-year-old William, Duke of Gloucester, the only surviving child of his sister-in-law and his heir presumptive Princess Anne in July of 1700. This death and the failure of the Protestant Stuarts to produce heirs meant the end of the Protestant Stuart dynasty, as the legitimate descendants of King Charles I were either childless or Roman Catholic. The Act of Settlement 1701 secured the Protestant succession to the throne after William’s sister-in-law and heir presumptive Princess Anne. The act excluded the former King James II (who died a few months after the act received royal assent) and the Roman Catholic children from his second marriage and also excluded the descendants of King James II’s sister Henrietta, the youngest daughter of King Charles I. Parliament’s choice was limited to the Protestant descendants of Elizabeth Stuart, Electress Palatine, the only other child of King James I not to have died in childhood. The senior Protestant descendant was Elizabeth’s youngest daughter Sophia, Electress of Hanover.  The Act of Settlement put Sophia of Hanover and her Protestant heirs in the line of succession after Anne. Ultimately, Sophia died on June 8, 1714, before the death of Queen Anne on August 1, 1714, and Sophia’s son became King George I and started the Hanover dynasty.

Princess Anne embraces her only surviving child, the Duke of Gloucester, in a painting by Sir Godfrey Kneller, c. 1694; Credit – Wikipedia

On February 20, 1702, William went riding on his horse Sorrel at Hampton Court Palace. The horse stumbled on a molehill and fell. William tried to pull the horse up by the reins, but the horse’s movements caused William to fall on his right shoulder. His collarbone was broken and was set by a surgeon. However, instead of resting, William insisted on returning to Kensington Palace that evening by coach. A week later, it was discovered that the fracture was not mending well and William’s right hand and arm were puffy and did not look right. His condition continued to worsen and by March 3, William had a fever and had difficulty breathing. King William III died on March 8, 1702. When the servants undressed William’s body, they found Mary’s small gold ring on a black ribbon around his neck. He had made it into a locket after Mary’s death and it contained a lock of Mary’s hair. While Mary had been buried with pomp, William was buried at Westminster Abbey in a private, modest ceremony at midnight on April 12, 1702.

Inscription on the floor of the Henry VII Chapel at Westminster Abbey marking the grave of William III; Credit – findagrave.com

Stuart Royal Vault at Westminster Abbey; Credit – www.westminster-abbey.org

This article is the intellectual property of Unofficial Royalty and is NOT TO BE COPIED, EDITED, OR POSTED IN ANY FORM ON ANOTHER WEBSITE under any circumstances. It is permissible to use a link that directs to Unofficial Royalty.

Recommended Book: William and Mary by John Van der Kiste, 2003

House of Stuart Resources at Unofficial Royalty