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Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor

Francis I (Francis Stephen; French: François Étienne; German: Franz Stefan; Italian: Francesco Steffano; 8 December 1708 – 18 August 1765)[1] was Holy Roman Emperor, Archduke of Austria, Duke of Lorraine and Bar, and Grand Duke of Tuscany. He became the ruler of the Holy Roman Empire, Austria, and Tuscany through his marriage to Maria Theresa, daughter of Emperor Charles VI. Francis was the last non-Habsburg monarch of both the Empire and Austria, which were effectively governed by Maria Theresa. The couple were the founders of the Habsburg-Lorraine dynasty, and their marriage produced sixteen children.

Francis I
Portrait by Martin van Meytens, c. 1745
Holy Roman Emperor
Reign13 September 1745 – 18 August 1765
Coronation4 October 1745, Frankfurt
PredecessorCharles VII
SuccessorJoseph II
Grand Duke of Tuscany
Reign12 July 1737 – 18 August 1765
PredecessorGian Gastone
SuccessorLeopold I
Duke of Lorraine and Bar
Reign27 March 1729 – 9 July 1737
PredecessorLeopold
SuccessorStanislas
Born(1708-12-08)8 December 1708
Ducal Palace of Nancy, Lorraine, Holy Roman Empire
Died18 August 1765(1765-08-18) (aged 56)
Palace of Innsbruck, Austria
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1736)
Issue
Names
Francis Stephen
HouseLorraine
FatherLeopold, Duke of Lorraine
MotherÉlisabeth Charlotte d'Orléans
ReligionCatholicism
Signature

Francis was the fourth (but oldest surviving) son of Leopold, Duke of Lorraine, and the French princess Élisabeth Charlotte d'Orléans. Duke Leopold died in 1729, and was succeeded by his son. In 1736, Francis married Maria Theresa. In 1738, he left the Duchy of Lorraine and Bar for the deposed Polish king Stanisław Leszczyński in exchange for the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, as one of the terms ending the War of the Polish Succession. Following the death of his father-in-law Charles VI in 1740, Francis and his wife became the rulers of the Habsburg domains. Maria Theresa gave her husband responsibility for the empire's financial affairs, which he handled well. Francis' death in 1765 left Maria Theresa as sole ruler.

Early life

 
Francis Stephen of Lorraine as a child

Francis was born in Nancy, Lorraine (now in France), the oldest surviving son of Leopold, Duke of Lorraine, and his wife Princess Élisabeth Charlotte d'Orléans. He was connected with the Habsburgs through his grandmother Eleonore, daughter of Emperor Ferdinand III.[2] He was very close to his brother Charles and sister Anne Charlotte.

Emperor Charles VI favoured the family, who, besides being his cousins, had served the house of Austria with distinction. He had designed to marry his daughter Maria Theresa to Francis' older brother Leopold Clement. On Leopold Clement's death, Charles adopted the younger brother as his future son-in-law. Francis was brought up in Vienna with Maria Theresa with the understanding that they were to be married, and a real affection arose between them.[2]

At the age of 15, when he was brought to Vienna, he was established in the Silesian Duchy of Teschen, which had been mediatised and granted to his father by the emperor in 1722. Francis succeeded his father as Duke of Lorraine in 1729.[2] In 1731 he was initiated into freemasonry (Grand Lodge of England) by John Theophilus Desaguliers at a specially convened lodge in The Hague at the house of the British Ambassador, Philip Stanhope, 4th Earl of Chesterfield.[3] During a subsequent visit to England, Francis was made a Master Mason at another specially convened lodge at Houghton Hall, the Norfolk estate of British Prime Minister Robert Walpole.[4]

 
Francis at the age of 15 in his hunting attire

Maria Theresa arranged for Francis to become "Lord Lieutenant" (locumtenens) of Hungary in 1732. He was not excited about this position, but Maria Theresa wanted him closer to her. In June 1732 he agreed to go to the Hungarian capital, Pressburg (today's Bratislava).

When the War of the Polish Succession broke out in 1733, France used it as an opportunity to seize Lorraine, since France's prime minister, Cardinal Fleury, was concerned that, as a Habsburg possession, it would bring Austrian power too close to France.

A preliminary peace was concluded in October 1735 and ratified in the Treaty of Vienna in November 1738. Under its terms, Stanisław I, the father-in-law of King Louis XV and the losing claimant to the Polish throne, received Lorraine, while Francis, in compensation for his loss, was made heir to the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, which he would inherit in 1737.

Although fighting stopped after the preliminary peace, the final peace settlement had to wait until the death of the last Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany, Gian Gastone de' Medici in 1737, to allow the territorial exchanges provided for by the peace settlement to go into effect.

In March 1736 the Emperor persuaded Francis, his future son-in-law, to secretly exchange Lorraine for the Grand Duchy of Tuscany. France had demanded that Maria Theresa's fiancé surrender his ancestral Duchy of Lorraine to accommodate the deposed King of Poland. The Emperor considered other possibilities (such as marrying her to the future Charles III of Spain) before announcing the engagement of the couple. If something were to go wrong, Francis would become governor of the Austrian Netherlands.

Elisabeth of Parma had also wanted the Grand Duchy of Tuscany for her son Charles III of Spain; Gian Gastone de' Medici was childless and was related to Elisabeth via her great-grandmother Margherita de' Medici. As a result, Elisabeth's sons could claim by right of being a descendant of Margherita.

On 31 January 1736 Francis agreed to marry Maria Theresa. He hesitated three times (and laid down the feather before signing). Especially his mother Élisabeth Charlotte d'Orléans and his brother Prince Charles Alexander of Lorraine were against the loss of Lorraine. On 1 February, Maria Theresa sent Francis a letter: she would withdraw from her future reign, when a male successor for her father appeared.

Marriage

 
Francis I and his family (by Martin van Meytens)

They married on 12 February in the Augustinian Church, Vienna. The wedding was held on 14 February 1736. The (secret) treaty between the Emperor and Francis was signed on 4 May 1736. On 5 January 1737, instruments of cession were signed at Pontremoli between Spain and the Empire, with Spain ceding Parma, Piacenza and Tuscany to the Holy Roman Empire and the Empire recognizing Don Carlos of Spain as King of Naples and Sicily.[5] On 10 January, the Spanish troops began their withdrawal from Tuscany, and were replaced by 6,000 Austrians.[6] On 24 January 1737 Francis received Tuscany from his father-in-law.[7] Until then, Maria Theresa was Duchess of Lorraine.

Gian Gastone de' Medici, who died on 9 July 1737, was the second cousin of Francis (Gian Gastone and Francis' father Leopold were both great-grandchildren of Francis II, Duke of Lorraine), who also had Medici blood through his maternal great-great-grandmother Marie de' Medici, Queen consort of France and Navarre. In June 1737 Francis went to Hungary again to fight against the Turks. In October 1738 he was back in Vienna. On 17 December 1738 the couple travelled south, accompanied by his brother Charles to visit Florence for three months. They arrived on 20 January 1739.

In 1744 Francis' brother Charles married a younger sister of Maria Theresa, Archduchess Maria Anna of Austria. In 1744 Charles became governor of the Austrian Netherlands, a post he held until his death in 1780.

Reign

 
Coat of arms of Francis I

In the Treaty of Füssen, Maria Theresa secured his election as Emperor, which took place on 13 September 1745. He succeeded Charles VII, and she made him co-regent of her hereditary dominions.[2]

Francis was well content to leave the wielding of power to his able wife. He had a natural fund of good sense and brilliant business capacity and was a useful assistant to Maria Theresa in the laborious task of governing the complicated Austrian dominions, but he was not active in politics or diplomacy.[2] However, his wife left him in charge of the financial affairs, which he managed well until his death.[8] Heavily indebted and on the verge of bankruptcy at the end of the Seven Years' War, the Austrian Empire was in a better financial condition than France or Great Britain in the 1780s. He also took a great interest in the natural sciences.

Francis was a serial adulterer; many of his affairs well-known and indiscreet, notably one with Princess Maria Wilhelmina of Auersperg, who was thirty years his junior. This particular affair was remarked upon in the letters and journals of visitors to the court and in those of his children.[9]

He died suddenly in his carriage while returning from the opera at Innsbruck on 18 August 1765.[2] He is buried in tomb number 55 in the Imperial Crypt in Vienna.

Maria Theresa and Francis I had sixteen children, amongst them the last pre-revolutionary queen consort of France, their youngest daughter, Marie Antoinette (1755–1793). Francis was succeeded as Emperor by his eldest son, Joseph II, and as Grand Duke of Tuscany by his younger son, Peter Leopold (later Emperor Leopold II). Maria Theresa retained the government of her dominions until her own death in 1780.

Issue

Name Birth Death Notes
1 Archduchess Maria Elisabeth of Austria 5 February 1737 7 June 1740 died in childhood, no issue
2 Archduchess Maria Anna 6 October 1738 19 November 1789 died unmarried, no issue
3 Archduchess Maria Carolina of Austria 12 January 1740 25 January 1741 died in childhood likely from smallpox, no issue
4 Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II 13 March 1741 20 February 1790 married 1) Princess Isabella Maria of Parma (1741–1763), married 2) Princess Marie Josephe of Bavaria (1739–1767) – second cousin, had issue from his first marriage (two daughters, who died young)
5 Archduchess Maria Christina of Austria 13 May 1742 24 June 1798 married Prince Albert of Saxony, Duke of Teschen (1738–1822), her second cousin, had issue (one stillborn daughter)
6 Archduchess Maria Elisabeth of Austria 13 August 1743 22 September 1808 died unmarried, no issue
7 Archduke Charles Joseph of Austria 1 February 1745 18 January 1761 died of smallpox, no issue
8 Archduchess Maria Amalia of Austria 26 February 1746 9 June 1804 married Ferdinand, Duke of Parma (1751–1802), had issue.
9 Holy Roman Emperor Leopold II 5 May 1747 1 March 1792 married Infanta Maria Luisa of Spain (1745–1792), had issue. Grand Duke of Tuscany from 1765 (abdicated 1790), Holy Roman Emperor from 1790, Archduke of Austria, King of Hungary and King of Bohemia from 1790.
10 Archduchess Maria Carolina of Austria 17 September 1748 17 September 1748 died during birth.
11 Archduchess Maria Johanna Gabriela of Austria 4 February 1750 23 December 1762 died of smallpox, no issue
12 Archduchess Maria Josepha of Austria 19 March 1751 15 October 1767 died of smallpox, no issue
13 Archduchess Maria Carolina of Austria 13 August 1752 7 September 1814 married King Ferdinand IV of Naples and Sicily (1751–1825); had issue
14 Archduke Ferdinand of Austria 1 June 1754 24 December 1806 married Maria Beatrice d'Este, Duchess of Massa, heiress of Breisgau and of Modena, had issue (Austria-Este). Duke of Breisgau from 1803.
15 Archduchess Maria Antonia of Austria 2 November 1755 16 October 1793 married Louis XVI of France and Navarre (1754–1793) and became Marie Antoinette, Queen of France and Navarre.
16 Archduke Maximilian Franz of Austria 8 December 1756 27 July 1801 Archbishop-Elector of Cologne, 1784.
 
Silver coin: 10 paoli Grand Duchy of Tuscany - Francis, 1747
 
Silver coin: 1 conventionsthaler Augsburg Free City - Francis I, 1765

Ancestry

See also

References

  1. ^ Encyclopedia of Austria: Franz I
  2. ^ a b c d e f Chisholm 1911.
  3. ^ Audrey Carpenter, John Theophilus Desaguliers: A Natural Philosopher, Engineer and Freemason in Newtonian England, (London : Continuum, 2011), ISBN 978-1-4411-2778-5, p. 47
  4. ^ Malcolm Davies, The masonic muse : songs, music, and musicians associated with Dutch freemasonry, 1730–1806. (Utrecht : Koninklijke Vereniging voor Nederlandse Muziekgeschiedenis, 1995), ISBN 90-6375-199-0, pp. 22–23
  5. ^ Hargreaves-Mawdsley, W. N., Eighteenth-Century Spain 1700–1788: A Political, Diplomatic and Institutional History. Palgrave Macmillan UK. London, 1979. ISBN 978-1-349-01805-5
  6. ^ Hale, Florence and the Medici, Orion books, p 192. London, 1977, ISBN 1-84212-456-0.
  7. ^ Maria Theresia und ihre Zeit. Exhibition from 13 May till October 1980 in Vienna, Schloss Schönbrunn, p. 28, see also pp. 37, 38, 41, 47, 52, 53 for the other details described here.
  8. ^ Jean-Paul Bled, Maria-Theresa
  9. ^ Farquhar, Michael (2001). A Treasure of Royal Scandals, p. 89. Penguin Books, New York. ISBN 0-7394-2025-9.
  10. ^ Genealogie ascendante jusqu'au quatrieme degre inclusivement de tous les Rois et Princes de maisons souveraines de l'Europe actuellement vivans [Genealogy up to the fourth degree inclusive of all the Kings and Princes of sovereign houses of Europe currently living] (in French). Bourdeaux: Frederic Guillaume Birnstiel. 1768. p. 81.

External links

  •   Media related to Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor at Wikimedia Commons
  • Tomáš Kleisner – Jan Boublík, Coins and Medals of the Emperor Francis Stephen of Lorraine Prague 2011 ISBN 978-80-7036-316-4
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Francis I.". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 10 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 933.
Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor
Born: 8 December 1708 Died: 18 August 1765
Regnal titles
Preceded by Grand Duke of Tuscany
1737–1765
Succeeded by
Preceded by Duke of Lorraine
1729–1737
Succeeded by
Duke of Teschen
1729–1765
Succeeded by
Preceded by King in Germany
1745–1764
Holy Roman Emperor
1745–1765
Preceded byas sole ruler Archduke of Austria
Ruler of the Austrian Netherlands

21 November 1740–1765
with Maria Theresa
Succeeded byas sole ruler


francis, holy, roman, emperor, confused, with, francis, holy, roman, emperor, later, styled, francis, emperor, austria, francis, francis, stephen, french, françois, Étienne, german, franz, stefan, italian, francesco, steffano, december, 1708, august, 1765, hol. Not to be confused with Francis II Holy Roman Emperor later styled Francis I as Emperor of Austria Francis I Francis Stephen French Francois Etienne German Franz Stefan Italian Francesco Steffano 8 December 1708 18 August 1765 1 was Holy Roman Emperor Archduke of Austria Duke of Lorraine and Bar and Grand Duke of Tuscany He became the ruler of the Holy Roman Empire Austria and Tuscany through his marriage to Maria Theresa daughter of Emperor Charles VI Francis was the last non Habsburg monarch of both the Empire and Austria which were effectively governed by Maria Theresa The couple were the founders of the Habsburg Lorraine dynasty and their marriage produced sixteen children Francis IPortrait by Martin van Meytens c 1745Holy Roman EmperorReign13 September 1745 18 August 1765Coronation4 October 1745 FrankfurtPredecessorCharles VIISuccessorJoseph IIGrand Duke of TuscanyReign12 July 1737 18 August 1765PredecessorGian GastoneSuccessorLeopold IDuke of Lorraine and BarReign27 March 1729 9 July 1737PredecessorLeopoldSuccessorStanislasBorn 1708 12 08 8 December 1708Ducal Palace of Nancy Lorraine Holy Roman EmpireDied18 August 1765 1765 08 18 aged 56 Palace of Innsbruck AustriaBurialImperial CryptSpouseMaria Theresa m 1736 wbr IssueArchduchess Maria Elisabeth Archduchess Maria Anna Archduchess Maria Carolina Joseph II Holy Roman Emperor Maria Christina Duchess of Teschen Archduchess Maria Elisabeth Archduke Charles Joseph Maria Amalia Duchess of Parma Leopold II Holy Roman Emperor Archduchess Maria Carolina Archduchess Johanna Gabriela Archduchess Maria Josepha Maria Carolina Queen of Naples and Sicily Ferdinand Duke of Breisgau Maria Antonia Queen of France Maximilian Francis Archbishop Elector of CologneNamesFrancis StephenHouseLorraineFatherLeopold Duke of LorraineMotherElisabeth Charlotte d OrleansReligionCatholicismSignatureFrancis was the fourth but oldest surviving son of Leopold Duke of Lorraine and the French princess Elisabeth Charlotte d Orleans Duke Leopold died in 1729 and was succeeded by his son In 1736 Francis married Maria Theresa In 1738 he left the Duchy of Lorraine and Bar for the deposed Polish king Stanislaw Leszczynski in exchange for the Grand Duchy of Tuscany as one of the terms ending the War of the Polish Succession Following the death of his father in law Charles VI in 1740 Francis and his wife became the rulers of the Habsburg domains Maria Theresa gave her husband responsibility for the empire s financial affairs which he handled well Francis death in 1765 left Maria Theresa as sole ruler Contents 1 Early life 2 Marriage 3 Reign 4 Issue 5 Ancestry 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEarly life Edit Francis Stephen of Lorraine as a child Francis was born in Nancy Lorraine now in France the oldest surviving son of Leopold Duke of Lorraine and his wife Princess Elisabeth Charlotte d Orleans He was connected with the Habsburgs through his grandmother Eleonore daughter of Emperor Ferdinand III 2 He was very close to his brother Charles and sister Anne Charlotte Emperor Charles VI favoured the family who besides being his cousins had served the house of Austria with distinction He had designed to marry his daughter Maria Theresa to Francis older brother Leopold Clement On Leopold Clement s death Charles adopted the younger brother as his future son in law Francis was brought up in Vienna with Maria Theresa with the understanding that they were to be married and a real affection arose between them 2 At the age of 15 when he was brought to Vienna he was established in the Silesian Duchy of Teschen which had been mediatised and granted to his father by the emperor in 1722 Francis succeeded his father as Duke of Lorraine in 1729 2 In 1731 he was initiated into freemasonry Grand Lodge of England by John Theophilus Desaguliers at a specially convened lodge in The Hague at the house of the British Ambassador Philip Stanhope 4th Earl of Chesterfield 3 During a subsequent visit to England Francis was made a Master Mason at another specially convened lodge at Houghton Hall the Norfolk estate of British Prime Minister Robert Walpole 4 Francis at the age of 15 in his hunting attire Maria Theresa arranged for Francis to become Lord Lieutenant locumtenens of Hungary in 1732 He was not excited about this position but Maria Theresa wanted him closer to her In June 1732 he agreed to go to the Hungarian capital Pressburg today s Bratislava When the War of the Polish Succession broke out in 1733 France used it as an opportunity to seize Lorraine since France s prime minister Cardinal Fleury was concerned that as a Habsburg possession it would bring Austrian power too close to France A preliminary peace was concluded in October 1735 and ratified in the Treaty of Vienna in November 1738 Under its terms Stanislaw I the father in law of King Louis XV and the losing claimant to the Polish throne received Lorraine while Francis in compensation for his loss was made heir to the Grand Duchy of Tuscany which he would inherit in 1737 Although fighting stopped after the preliminary peace the final peace settlement had to wait until the death of the last Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany Gian Gastone de Medici in 1737 to allow the territorial exchanges provided for by the peace settlement to go into effect In March 1736 the Emperor persuaded Francis his future son in law to secretly exchange Lorraine for the Grand Duchy of Tuscany France had demanded that Maria Theresa s fiance surrender his ancestral Duchy of Lorraine to accommodate the deposed King of Poland The Emperor considered other possibilities such as marrying her to the future Charles III of Spain before announcing the engagement of the couple If something were to go wrong Francis would become governor of the Austrian Netherlands Elisabeth of Parma had also wanted the Grand Duchy of Tuscany for her son Charles III of Spain Gian Gastone de Medici was childless and was related to Elisabeth via her great grandmother Margherita de Medici As a result Elisabeth s sons could claim by right of being a descendant of Margherita On 31 January 1736 Francis agreed to marry Maria Theresa He hesitated three times and laid down the feather before signing Especially his mother Elisabeth Charlotte d Orleans and his brother Prince Charles Alexander of Lorraine were against the loss of Lorraine On 1 February Maria Theresa sent Francis a letter she would withdraw from her future reign when a male successor for her father appeared Marriage Edit Francis I and his family by Martin van Meytens They married on 12 February in the Augustinian Church Vienna The wedding was held on 14 February 1736 The secret treaty between the Emperor and Francis was signed on 4 May 1736 On 5 January 1737 instruments of cession were signed at Pontremoli between Spain and the Empire with Spain ceding Parma Piacenza and Tuscany to the Holy Roman Empire and the Empire recognizing Don Carlos of Spain as King of Naples and Sicily 5 On 10 January the Spanish troops began their withdrawal from Tuscany and were replaced by 6 000 Austrians 6 On 24 January 1737 Francis received Tuscany from his father in law 7 Until then Maria Theresa was Duchess of Lorraine Gian Gastone de Medici who died on 9 July 1737 was the second cousin of Francis Gian Gastone and Francis father Leopold were both great grandchildren of Francis II Duke of Lorraine who also had Medici blood through his maternal great great grandmother Marie de Medici Queen consort of France and Navarre In June 1737 Francis went to Hungary again to fight against the Turks In October 1738 he was back in Vienna On 17 December 1738 the couple travelled south accompanied by his brother Charles to visit Florence for three months They arrived on 20 January 1739 In 1744 Francis brother Charles married a younger sister of Maria Theresa Archduchess Maria Anna of Austria In 1744 Charles became governor of the Austrian Netherlands a post he held until his death in 1780 Reign Edit Coat of arms of Francis I In the Treaty of Fussen Maria Theresa secured his election as Emperor which took place on 13 September 1745 He succeeded Charles VII and she made him co regent of her hereditary dominions 2 Francis was well content to leave the wielding of power to his able wife He had a natural fund of good sense and brilliant business capacity and was a useful assistant to Maria Theresa in the laborious task of governing the complicated Austrian dominions but he was not active in politics or diplomacy 2 However his wife left him in charge of the financial affairs which he managed well until his death 8 Heavily indebted and on the verge of bankruptcy at the end of the Seven Years War the Austrian Empire was in a better financial condition than France or Great Britain in the 1780s He also took a great interest in the natural sciences Francis was a serial adulterer many of his affairs well known and indiscreet notably one with Princess Maria Wilhelmina of Auersperg who was thirty years his junior This particular affair was remarked upon in the letters and journals of visitors to the court and in those of his children 9 He died suddenly in his carriage while returning from the opera at Innsbruck on 18 August 1765 2 He is buried in tomb number 55 in the Imperial Crypt in Vienna Maria Theresa and Francis I had sixteen children amongst them the last pre revolutionary queen consort of France their youngest daughter Marie Antoinette 1755 1793 Francis was succeeded as Emperor by his eldest son Joseph II and as Grand Duke of Tuscany by his younger son Peter Leopold later Emperor Leopold II Maria Theresa retained the government of her dominions until her own death in 1780 Issue Edit Name Birth Death Notes1 Archduchess Maria Elisabeth of Austria 5 February 1737 7 June 1740 died in childhood no issue2 Archduchess Maria Anna 6 October 1738 19 November 1789 died unmarried no issue3 Archduchess Maria Carolina of Austria 12 January 1740 25 January 1741 died in childhood likely from smallpox no issue4 Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II 13 March 1741 20 February 1790 married 1 Princess Isabella Maria of Parma 1741 1763 married 2 Princess Marie Josephe of Bavaria 1739 1767 second cousin had issue from his first marriage two daughters who died young 5 Archduchess Maria Christina of Austria 13 May 1742 24 June 1798 married Prince Albert of Saxony Duke of Teschen 1738 1822 her second cousin had issue one stillborn daughter 6 Archduchess Maria Elisabeth of Austria 13 August 1743 22 September 1808 died unmarried no issue7 Archduke Charles Joseph of Austria 1 February 1745 18 January 1761 died of smallpox no issue8 Archduchess Maria Amalia of Austria 26 February 1746 9 June 1804 married Ferdinand Duke of Parma 1751 1802 had issue 9 Holy Roman Emperor Leopold II 5 May 1747 1 March 1792 married Infanta Maria Luisa of Spain 1745 1792 had issue Grand Duke of Tuscany from 1765 abdicated 1790 Holy Roman Emperor from 1790 Archduke of Austria King of Hungary and King of Bohemia from 1790 10 Archduchess Maria Carolina of Austria 17 September 1748 17 September 1748 died during birth 11 Archduchess Maria Johanna Gabriela of Austria 4 February 1750 23 December 1762 died of smallpox no issue12 Archduchess Maria Josepha of Austria 19 March 1751 15 October 1767 died of smallpox no issue13 Archduchess Maria Carolina of Austria 13 August 1752 7 September 1814 married King Ferdinand IV of Naples and Sicily 1751 1825 had issue14 Archduke Ferdinand of Austria 1 June 1754 24 December 1806 married Maria Beatrice d Este Duchess of Massa heiress of Breisgau and of Modena had issue Austria Este Duke of Breisgau from 1803 15 Archduchess Maria Antonia of Austria 2 November 1755 16 October 1793 married Louis XVI of France and Navarre 1754 1793 and became Marie Antoinette Queen of France and Navarre 16 Archduke Maximilian Franz of Austria 8 December 1756 27 July 1801 Archbishop Elector of Cologne 1784 Silver coin 10 paoli Grand Duchy of Tuscany Francis 1747 Silver coin 1 conventionsthaler Augsburg Free City Francis I 1765Ancestry EditAncestors of Francis I Holy Roman Emperor 10 16 Francis II Duke of Lorraine8 Nicholas II Duke of Lorraine17 Christina of Salm4 Charles V Duke of Lorraine18 Henry II Duke of Lorraine9 Claude Francoise of Lorraine19 Margherita Gonzaga2 Leopold Duke of Lorraine20 Ferdinand II Holy Roman Emperor10 Ferdinand III Holy Roman Emperor21 Maria Anna of Bavaria5 Eleonore of Austria22 Charles II Gonzaga Duke of Nevers11 Eleonora Gonzaga23 Maria Gonzaga Duchess of Montferrat1 Francis I Holy Roman Emperor24 Henry IV of France12 Louis XIII of France25 Marie de Medici6 Philippe I Duke of Orleans26 Philip III of Spain13 Anne of Austria27 Margaret of Austria3 Elisabeth Charlotte of Orleans28 Frederick V Elector Palatine14 Charles I Louis Elector Palatine29 Elizabeth Stuart7 Elizabeth Charlotte of Simmern30 William V Landgrave of Hesse Kassel15 Charlotte of Hesse Kassel31 Amalie Elisabeth of Hanau MunzenbergSee also EditFranz Joseph Toussaint Kings of Germany family tree List of people with the most children Francis Stephen AwardReferences Edit Encyclopedia of Austria Franz I a b c d e f Chisholm 1911 Audrey Carpenter John Theophilus Desaguliers A Natural Philosopher Engineer and Freemason in Newtonian England London Continuum 2011 ISBN 978 1 4411 2778 5 p 47 Malcolm Davies The masonic muse songs music and musicians associated with Dutch freemasonry 1730 1806 Utrecht Koninklijke Vereniging voor Nederlandse Muziekgeschiedenis 1995 ISBN 90 6375 199 0 pp 22 23 Hargreaves Mawdsley W N Eighteenth Century Spain 1700 1788 A Political Diplomatic and Institutional History Palgrave Macmillan UK London 1979 ISBN 978 1 349 01805 5 Hale Florence and the Medici Orion books p 192 London 1977 ISBN 1 84212 456 0 Maria Theresia und ihre Zeit Exhibition from 13 May till October 1980 in Vienna Schloss Schonbrunn p 28 see also pp 37 38 41 47 52 53 for the other details described here Jean Paul Bled Maria Theresa Farquhar Michael 2001 A Treasure of Royal Scandals p 89 Penguin Books New York ISBN 0 7394 2025 9 Genealogie ascendante jusqu au quatrieme degre inclusivement de tous les Rois et Princes de maisons souveraines de l Europe actuellement vivans Genealogy up to the fourth degree inclusive of all the Kings and Princes of sovereign houses of Europe currently living in French Bourdeaux Frederic Guillaume Birnstiel 1768 p 81 External links Edit Media related to Francis I Holy Roman Emperor at Wikimedia Commons Tomas Kleisner Jan Boublik Coins and Medals of the Emperor Francis Stephen of Lorraine Prague 2011 ISBN 978 80 7036 316 4 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Francis I Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 10 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 933 Francis I Holy Roman EmperorHouse of LorraineBorn 8 December 1708 Died 18 August 1765Regnal titlesPreceded byGian Gastone de Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany1737 1765 Succeeded byLeopold IIPreceded byLeopold Duke of Lorraine1729 1737 Succeeded byStanislaw IDuke of Teschen1729 1765 Succeeded byJoseph IIPreceded byCharles VII King in Germany1745 1764Holy Roman Emperor1745 1765Preceded byMaria Theresaas sole ruler Archduke of AustriaRuler of the Austrian Netherlands21 November 1740 1765with Maria Theresa Succeeded byMaria Theresaas sole ruler Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Francis I Holy Roman Emperor amp oldid 1133067678, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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