susan alicia
Heir Presumptive
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2003
- Messages
- 2,527
- Country
- Netherlands
was also wondering, does he say controversial things?
Warren said:
Why is this?
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Warren said:
Why is this?
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Warren said:
Why is this?
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Archduchess Margherita was born in 1930, the elder daughter of Prince Amedeo of Savoy, 3rd Duke of Aosta and Princess Anna of Bourbon-Orléans. She married Archduke Robert (1915-1996) in 1953. She is the mother of Archduke Lorenz of Austria-Este who is married to Princess Astrid of Belgium; Archduke Martin, who married Princess Katharina von Isenburg last year; and two daughters who married Counts. So far Margherita has 15 grandchildren.Synnadene said:Please post informations and pics about:
MARGHERITA di SAVOIA-AOSTA, wife of Archduke Robert
ANNA EUGENIE VON ARENBERG, wife of Archduke Felix
YOLANDE DE LIGNE, wife of Archduke Karl Ludwig
XENIA TSCHERNYSCHEW-BEZOBRAZOW,1st wife of Archduke Rudolf
ANNA GABRIELE VON WREDE, 2nd wife of Archduke Rudolf
Thanks!!!
There are literally dozens of Habsburgs and Habsburg-Lorraines (aka -Lothringen). If an Archduke's bride is recognised as "equal" by Archduke Otto as Head of the Imperial House, the children bear the of title Archduke or Archduchess of Austria, with the style of Imperial and Royal Highness.Serena said:Do you have informations or photos of the "younger" generation of the house "Habsburg Lothringen"?! I read something about a Marie Valerie H-L (born 1982) ...
There is an Archduchess Marie Valerie. She is the daughter of Archduke Hubert Salvator of Austria, Prince of Tuscany (ie, of the Tuscan Branch of the House of Habsburg) and Princess Rosemary zu Salm-Salm. She was born in 1941 and married Max, Margrave of Baden, Head of the Grand Ducal House of Baden. Max is the son of Princess Theodora of Greece and Denmark, one of Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh's sisters.Serena said:Ah, thank you for the information! So Hedwig Lichem-Lowenburg is Countess Marie Valerie`s mother?! Hm, I read Marie Valerie is an Archduchess?! Are there any other "young" Archduchess or Archdukes?!
a half answer here: http://www.theroyalforums.com/forums/showthread.php?t=6694Marengo said:Which Archdukes did not approve of the wedding (or did not attend it?)
No, Archduchess Eilika is still Lutheran. A rare example of a Catholic/Protestant marriage within the House of Habsburg.Furthermore I would like to know if Archduchess Eilika converted to Catholicism prior of during her marriage?
That's the way this family works; Archduke Otto is Head of the House of Habsburg and the rest of the family accept the fact. I think the situation would be very similar in Liechtenstein; I doubt too many princes or princesses would dare to cross Prince Hans Adam in his role as Head of the Princely House!kelly9480 said:Prinz Lorenz apparently said something about having to accept that Otto was head of the house and therefore made decisions they all had to accept...but if that's the family mentality, it may explain why so many of them were present -- not because they personally approve, but because he calls the shots.
Check this out:Marengo said:Now something else: I have met a dutchman who claims to be a descendent of Empress Elisabeth and Emperor Franz-Joseph through Gisele's daughter Elisabeth of Bavaria (b. 1874). I wondered if this could be true and if there is an internetpage with the descendants of Sissi?
I've just checked five books; only one of them mentions Franz Karl by name. Very curious for the illustrious Emperor's father to become such a non-person. The best I can come up with from these sources is that the Emperor Franz I raised Franz Josef as his successor (even as a child; Franz Josef was just 5 when Franz I died).Mapple said:A question about the events of 1848 in Austria. Why did Archduke Franz Karl renounced his succession rights in favour of his son Franz Joseph, and was it readily accepted by everyone? It was at the end of the Revolution of 1848, if I remember correctly.
I see... It seems that Franz Karl was totally uninterested in becoming emperor, otherwise there would have been some erm... disturbance.Warren said:...
When the timing was right in 1848 and the revolutionary fervour had settled, the simpleton Emperor Ferdinand IV was eased out gracefully by Metternich, and Franz Josef took the throne in a smooth and accepted transition of power. This, after one of the authors had stated that Metternich and the Habsburg family were sticklers for traditional succession (which is why they allowed Ferdinand to take the throne although he was obviously unfit). But the "usurpation" of his own father's rights by Franz Josef passes without comment. Sorry, no idea!
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You are correct. The abdication/succession plan was smoothly executed by Prince Schwarzenberg, with assistance from Archduchess Sophia.Mapple said:I see... It seems that Franz Karl was totally uninterested in becoming emperor, otherwise there would have been some erm... disturbance.
I've thought that it was Schwarzenberg who engineered the abdication of Ferdinand and ascencion of Franz Joseph, Metternich having been pressurised into resigning by then.
Jil said:What happened to the children of Archduke Franz Ferdinand after he and his wife were killed? Who raised them? Did they remain in Austria? I hope they were able to grow up and have happy lives later on.
Jil said:Thanks Lady jennifer for the info! It is sad that all of the children of Franz Ferdinand ended up in a concertraction camp!