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House of Habsburg

The House of Habsburg (/ˈhæpsbɜːrɡ/), alternatively spelled Hapsburg in English[note 7] and also known as the House of Austria[note 8] is one of the most prominent and important dynasties in European history.[3][4]

House of Habsburg
Haus Habsburg
Imperial, Royal, and Ducal dynasty
Left: Habsburg "ancient", coat of arms of the Counts of Habsburg: Or, a lion rampant gules crowned azure ("Lion of Habsburg"); right: Habsburg "modern"/Austria, arms of the House of Habsburg, Archdukes of Austria: Gules, a fess argent ("Bindenschild"); originally the arms of the House of Babenburg, Dukes of Austria and Styria
Parent houseHouse of Eticho (?)
Country
EtymologyHabsburg Castle
Founded11th century
FounderRadbot of Klettgau
Current headKarl von Habsburg (cognatic line)
Final rulerMaria Theresa (agnatic line)
Charles I (cognatic line)
Titles
List
MottoA.E.I.O.U. and Viribus Unitis
Estate(s)
Dissolution29 November 1780; 242 years ago (1780-11-29) (in the agnatic line; continues in cognatic line)
Cadet branchesAgnatic: (all are extinct)

Cognatic:

The house takes its name from Habsburg Castle, a fortress built in the 1020s in present-day Switzerland by Radbot of Klettgau, who named his fortress Habsburg. His grandson Otto II was the first to take the fortress name as his own, adding "Count of Habsburg" to his title. In 1273, Count Radbot's seventh-generation descendant Rudolph of Habsburg was elected King of the Romans. Taking advantage of the extinction of the Babenbergs and of his victory over Ottokar II of Bohemia at the battle on the Marchfeld in 1278, he appointed his sons as Dukes of Austria and moved the family's power base to Vienna, where the Habsburg dynasty gained the name of "House of Austria" and ruled until 1918.

The throne of the Holy Roman Empire was continuously occupied by the Habsburgs from 1440 until their extinction in the male line in 1740 and, after the death of Francis I, from 1765 until its dissolution in 1806. The house also produced kings of Bohemia, Hungary, Croatia, Spain, Portugal and Galicia-Lodomeria, with their respective colonies; rulers of several principalities in the Low Countries and Italy; and in the 19th century, emperors of Austria and of Austria-Hungary as well as one emperor of Mexico. The family split several times into parallel branches, most consequentially in the mid-16th century between its Spanish and Austrian branches following the abdication of Charles V. Although they ruled distinct territories, the different branches nevertheless maintained close relations and frequently intermarried.

Members of the Habsburg family oversee the Austrian branch of the Order of the Golden Fleece and the Imperial and Royal Order of Saint George. The current head of the family is Karl von Habsburg.

Name

The origins of Habsburg Castle's name are uncertain. There is disagreement on whether the name is derived from the High German Habichtsburg (hawk castle), or from the Middle High German word hab/hap meaning ford, as there is a river with a ford nearby. The first documented use of the name by the dynasty itself has been traced to the year 1108.[5][6][7]

The Habsburg name was not continuously used by the family members, since they often emphasized their more prestigious princely titles. The dynasty was thus long known as the "House of Austria". Complementarily, in some circumstances the family members were identified by their place of birth. Charles V was known in his youth after his birthplace as Charles of Ghent. When he became king of Spain he was known as Charles of Spain, and after he was elected emperor, as Charles V (in French, Charles Quint).

In Spain, the dynasty was known as the Casa de Austria, including illegitimate sons such as John of Austria and John Joseph of Austria. The arms displayed in their simplest form were those of Austria, which the Habsburgs had made their own, at times impaled with the arms of the Duchy of Burgundy (ancient).

After Maria Theresa married Duke Francis Stephen of Lorraine, the idea of "Habsburg" as associated with ancestral Austrian rulership was used to show that the old dynasty continued as did all its inherited rights. When Francis I became Emperor of Austria, he adopted the old shield of Habsburg in his personal arms, together with Austria and Lorraine. This also reinforced the "Germanness" of the (French-speaking) Austrian Emperor and his claim to rule in Germany, not least against the Prussian Kings. Some younger sons who had no prospects of the throne were given the personal title of "count of Habsburg".

The surname of more recent members of the family such as Otto von Habsburg and Karl von Habsburg is taken to be "von Habsburg" or more completely "von Habsburg-Lothringen". Princes and members of the house use the tripartite arms adopted in the 18th century by Francis Stephen.

History

Counts of Habsburg

 
The Habsburg dominions around 1200 in the area of modern-day Switzerland are shown as      Habsburg, among the houses of      Savoy,      Zähringer and      Kyburg

The progenitor of the House of Habsburg may have been Guntram the Rich, a count in the Breisgau who lived in the 10th century, and forthwith farther back as the medieval Adalrich, Duke of Alsace, from the Etichonids from which Habsburg derives. His grandson Radbot of Klettgau founded the Habsburg Castle. That castle was the family seat during most of the 11th, 12th and 13th centuries.

In the 12th century, the Habsburgs became increasingly associated with the Staufer Emperors, participating in the imperial court and the Emperor's military expeditions; Werner II, Count of Habsburg died fighting for Emperor Frederick I Barbarossa in Italy. This association helped them to inherit many domains as the Staufers caused the extinction of many dynasties, some of which the Habsburgs were heirs to. In 1198, Rudolf II, Count of Habsburg fully dedicated the dynasty to the Staufer cause by joining the Ghibellines and funded the Staufer emperor Frederick II's war for the throne in 1211. The emperor was made godfather to his newly born grandson, the future king Rudolf.[8][9]

The Habsburgs expanded their influence through arranged marriages and by gaining political privileges, especially countship rights in Zürichgau, Aargau and Thurgau. In the 13th century, the house aimed its marriage policy at families in Upper Alsace and Swabia. They were also able to gain high positions in the church hierarchy for their members. Territorially, they often profited from the extinction of other noble families such as the House of Kyburg.[10][11]

Pivot to Eastern Alpine Duchies

By the second half of the 13th century, count Rudolph IV (1218–1291) had become an influential territorial lord in the area between the Vosges Mountains and Lake Constance. On 1 October 1273, he was elected as a compromise candidate as King of the Romans and received the name Rudolph I of Germany.[10] He then led a coalition against king Ottokar II of Bohemia who had taken advantage of the Great Interregnum in order to expand southwards, taking over the respective inheritances of the Babenberg (Austria, Styria, Savinja) and of the Spanheim (Carinthia and Carniola). In 1278, Rudolph and his allies defeated and killed Ottokar at the Battle of Marchfeld, and the lands he had acquired reverted to the German crown. With the Georgenberg Pact of 1286, Rudolph secured for his family the duchies of Austria and Styria. The southern portions of Ottokar's former realm, Carinthia, Carniola, and Savinja, went to Rudolph's allies from the House of Gorizia.[12][13]

Following Rudolph's death in 1291, Albert I's assassination in 1308, and Frederick the Fair's failure to secure the German/Imperial crown for himself, the Habsburgs temporarily lost their supremacy in the Empire. In the early 14th century, they also focused on the Kingdom of Bohemia. After Václav III’s death on 4 August 1306, there were no male heirs remaining in the Přemyslid dynasty. Habsburg scion Rudolph I was then elected but only lasted a year. The Bohemian kingship was an elected position,[14] and the Habsburgs were only able to secure it on a hereditary basis much later in 1626, following their submission of the Czech lands during the Thirty Years' War. After 1307, subsequent Habsburg attempts to gain the Bohemian crown were frustrated first by Henry of Bohemia (a member of the House of Gorizia) and then by the House of Luxembourg.

Instead, they were able to expand southwards: in 1311, they took over Savinja; after the death of Henry in 1335, they assumed power in Carniola and Carinthia; and in 1369, they succeeded his daughter Margaret in Tyrol. After the death of Albert III of Gorizia in 1374, they gained a foothold at Pazin in central Istria, followed by Trieste in 1382. Meanwhile, the original home territories of the Habsburgs in what is now Switzerland, including the Aargau with Habsburg Castle, were lost in the 14th century to the expanding Swiss Confederacy after the battles of Morgarten (1315) and Sempach (1386). Habsburg Castle itself was finally lost to the Swiss in 1415.

Albertinian / Leopoldian split and Imperial elections

 
Map showing the constituent lands of the Archduchy of Austria: the Duchy of Austria, comprising Upper Austria centered on Linz, and Lower Austria centered on Vienna; Inner Austria, centered on Graz, comprising the duchies of Styria, Carinthia and Carniola, and the lands of the Austrian Littoral; and Further Austria, comprising mostly the Sundgau territory with the town of Belfort in southern Alsace, the adjacent Breisgau region east of the Rhine, and usually the County of Tyrol. The area between Further Austria and the Duchy of Austria was the Archbishopric of Salzburg.

Rudolf IV's brothers Albert III and Leopold III ignored his efforts to preserve the integrity of the family domains, and enacted the separation of the so-called Albertinian and Leopoldian family lines on 25 September 1379 by the Treaty of Neuberg. The former would maintain Austria proper (then called Niederösterreich but comprising modern Lower Austria and most of Upper Austria), while the latter would rule over lands then labeled Oberösterreich, namely Inner Austria (Innerösterreich) comprising Styria, Carinthia and Carniola, and Further Austria (Vorderösterreich) consisting of Tyrol and the western Habsburg lands in Alsace and Swabia.[10]

By marrying Elisabeth of Luxembourg, the daughter of Emperor Sigismund in 1437, Duke Albert V of the Albertine line (1397–1439) became the ruler of Bohemia and Hungary, again expanding the family's political horizons. The next year, Albert was crowned as King of the Romans, known as such as Albert II. Following his early death in a battle against the Ottomans in 1439 and that of his son Ladislaus Postumus in 1457, the Habsburgs lost Bohemia once more as well as Hungary, for several decades. However, with the extinction of the House of Celje in 1456 and the House of Wallsee-Enns in 1466/1483, they managed to absorb significant secular enclaves within their territories, and create a contiguous domain stretching from the border with Bohemia to the Adriatic sea.

After the death of Leopold's eldest son William in 1406, the Leopoldian line was further split among his brothers into the Inner Austrian territory under Ernest the Iron and a Tyrolean/Further Austrian line under Frederick of the Empty Pockets. In 1440, Ernest's son Frederick III was chosen by the electoral college to succeed Albert II as the king. Several Habsburg kings had attempted to gain the imperial dignity over the years, but success finally arrived on 19 March 1452, when Pope Nicholas V crowned Frederick III as the Holy Roman Emperor in a grand ceremony held in Rome. In Frederick III, the Pope found an important political ally with whose help he was able to counter the conciliar movement.[10]

While in Rome, Frederick III married Eleanor of Portugal, enabling him to build a network of connections with dynasties in the west and southeast of Europe. Frederick was rather distant to his family; Eleanor, by contrast, had a great influence on the raising and education of Frederick's children and therefore played an important role in the family's rise to prominence. After Frederick III's coronation, the Habsburgs were able to hold the imperial throne almost continuously until 1806.[10]

Archdukes

Through the forged document called privilegium maius (1358/59), Duke Rudolf IV (1339–1365) introduced the title of Archduke to place the Habsburgs on a par with the Prince-electors of the Empire, since Emperor Charles IV had omitted to give them the electoral dignity in his Golden Bull of 1356. Charles, however, refused to recognize the title, as did his immediate successors.

Duke Ernest the Iron and his descendants unilaterally assumed the title "archduke". That title was only officially recognized in 1453 by Emperor Frederick III, himself a Habsburg.[15] Frederick himself used just "Duke of Austria", never Archduke, until his death in 1493. The title was first granted to Frederick's younger brother, Albert VI of Austria (died 1463), who used it at least from 1458. In 1477, Frederick granted the title archduke to his first cousin Sigismund of Austria, ruler of Further Austria. Frederick's son and heir, the future Emperor Maximilian I, apparently only started to use the title after the death of his wife Mary of Burgundy in 1482, as Archduke never appears in documents issued jointly by Maximilian and Mary as rulers in the Low Countries (where Maximilian is still titled "Duke of Austria"). The title appears first in documents issued under the joint rule of Maximilian and Philip (his under-age son) in the Low Countries.

Archduke was initially borne by those dynasts who ruled a Habsburg territory, i.e., only by males and their consorts, appanages being commonly distributed to cadets. These "junior" archdukes did not thereby become independent hereditary rulers, since all territories remained vested in the Austrian crown. Occasionally a territory might be combined with a separate gubernatorial mandate ruled by an archducal cadet. From the 16th century onward, archduke and its female form, archduchess, came to be used by all the members of the House of Habsburg (e.g., Queen Marie Antoinette of France was born Archduchess Maria Antonia of Austria).

Re-unification and expansion

 
Habsburg lands (in green), following the Battle of Mühlberg in 1547; excludes Holy Roman Empire, and the Spanish colonial empire

In 1457 Duke Frederick V of Inner Austria also gained the Austrian archduchy after his Albertine cousin Ladislaus the Posthumous had died without issue. 1490 saw the reunification of all Habsburg lines when Archduke Sigismund of Further Austria and Tyrol resigned in favor of Frederick's son Maximilian I.

As emperor, Frederick III took a leading role inside the family and positioned himself as the judge over the family's internal conflicts, often making use of the privilegium maius. He was able to restore the unity of the house's Austrian lands, as the Albertinian line was now extinct. Territorial integrity was also strengthened by the extinction of the Tyrolean branch of the Leopoldian line. Frederick's aim was to make Austria a united country, stretching from the Rhine to the Mur and Leitha.[10]

On the external front, one of Frederick's main achievements was the Siege of Neuss (1474–75), in which he coerced Charles the Bold of Burgundy to give his daughter Mary of Burgundy as wife to Frederick's son Maximilian.[10] The wedding took place on the evening of 16 August 1477 and ultimately resulted in the Habsburgs acquiring control of the Low Countries. After Mary's early death in 1482, Maximilian attempted to secure the Burgundian heritance to one of his and Mary's children Philip the Handsome. Charles VIII of France contested this, using both military and dynastic means, but the Burgundian succession was finally ruled in favor of Philip in the Treaty of Senlis in 1493.[16]

After the death of his father in 1493, Maximilian was proclaimed the new King of the Romans, receiving the name Maximilian I. Maximilian was initially unable to travel to Rome to receive the Imperial title from the Pope, due to opposition from Venice and from the French who were occupying Milan, as well a refusal from the Pope due to enemy forces being present on his territory. In 1508, Maximilian proclaimed himself as the "chosen Emperor," and this was also recognized by the Pope due to changes in political alliances. This had a historical consequence in that, in the future, the Roman King would also automatically become Emperor, without needing the Pope's consent. Emperor Charles V would be the last to be crowned by the Pope himself, at Bologna in 1530.[16]

Maximilian's rule (1493–1519) was a time of dramatic expansion for the Habsburgs. In 1497, Maximilian's son Philip, known as the Handsome or the Fair, married Joanna of Castile, also known as Joan the Mad, heiress of the Castile. Phillip and Joan had six children, the eldest of whom became Emperor Charles V and ruled the kingdoms of Castile and Aragon (including their colonies in the New World), Southern Italy, Austria, and the Low Countries in 1516, with his mother and nominal co-ruler Joanna, who was kept under confinement.[17]

The foundations for the later empire of Austria-Hungary were laid in 1515 by the means of a double wedding between Louis, only son of Vladislaus II, King of Bohemia and Hungary, and Maximilian's granddaughter Mary; and between her brother Archduke Ferdinand and Louis's sister Anna. The wedding was celebrated in grand style on 22 July 1515. All these children were still minors, so the wedding was formally completed in 1521. Vladislaus died on 13 March 1516, and Maximilian died on 12 January 1519, but the latter's designs were ultimately successful: upon Louis's death in battle in 1526, Ferdinand became king of Bohemia and Hungary.

The Habsburg dynasty achieved its highest position when Charles V was elected Holy Roman Emperor. Much of Charles's reign was dedicated to the fight against Protestantism, which led to its eradication throughout vast areas under Habsburg control.

Spanish and Austrian Habsburgs

 
The Iberian Union in 1598, under Philip II, King of Spain and Portugal
 
The Spanish and Austrian Habsburg European lands, ca 1700

Charles formally became the sole monarch of Spain upon the death of his imprisoned mother Queen Joan in 1555.

After the abdication of Charles V in 1556, the Habsburg dynasty split into the branch of the Austrian (or German) Habsburgs, led by Ferdinand, and the branch of the Spanish Habsburgs, initially led by Charles's son Philip.[18] Ferdinand I, King of Bohemia, Hungary,[19] and archduke of Austria in the name of his brother Charles V became suo jure monarch as well as the Habsburg Holy Roman Emperor (designated as successor already in 1531). Philip became King of Spain and its colonial empire as Philip II, and ruler of the Habsburg domains in Italy and the Low Countries. The Spanish Habsburgs also ruled Portugal for a time, known there as the Philippine dynasty (1580–1640).

The Seventeen Provinces and the Duchy of Milan were in personal union under the King of Spain, but remained part of the Holy Roman Empire. Furthermore, the Spanish king had claims on Hungary and Bohemia. In the secret Oñate treaty of 29 July 1617, the Spanish and Austrian Habsburgs settled their mutual claims.

Habsburg inbreeding and extinction of the male lines

 
Profile portrait of Leopold I highlighting his "Habsburg jaw", Deutsches Historisches Museum

The Habsburgs sought to consolidate their power by frequent consanguineous marriages, resulting in a cumulatively deleterious effect on their gene pool. Health impairments due to inbreeding included epilepsy, insanity, and early death. A study of 3,000 family members over 16 generations by the University of Santiago de Compostela suggests inbreeding may have played a role in their extinction.[20] Numerous members of the family showed specific facial deformities: an enlarged lower jaw with an extended chin known as mandibular prognathism or "Habsburg jaw", a large nose with hump and hanging tip ("Habsburg nose"), and an everted lower lip ("Habsburg lip"). The latter two are signs of maxillary deficiency. A 2019 study found that the degree of mandibular prognathism in the Habsburg family shows a statistically significant correlation with the degree of inbreeding. A correlation between maxillary deficiency and degree of inbreeding was also present but was not statistically significant.[21][22] Other scientific studies, however, dispute the ideas of any linkage between fertility and consanguinity.[23]

The gene pool eventually became so small that the last of the Spanish line, Charles II, who was severely disabled from birth (perhaps by genetic disorders) possessed a genome comparable to that of a child born to a brother and sister, as did his father, probably because of "remote inbreeding".[24][20]

The death of Charles II of Spain in 1700 led to the War of the Spanish Succession, and that of Emperor Charles VI in 1740 led to the War of the Austrian Succession. In the former, the House of Bourbon won the conflict and put a final end to the Habsburg rule in Spain. The latter, however, was won by Maria Theresa and led to the succession of the House of Habsburg-Lorraine (German: Haus Habsburg-Lothringen) becoming the new main branch of the dynasty, in the person of Maria Theresa's son, Joseph II. This new House was created by the marriage between Maria Theresa of Habsburg and Francis Stephan, Duke of Lorraine[25] (both of them were great-grandchildren of Habsburg emperor Ferdinand III, but from different empresses) this new House being a cadet branch of the female line of the House of Habsburg and the male line of the House of Lorraine. It is thought that extensive intra-family marriages within Spanish and Austrian lines contributed to the extinction of the main line.

House of Habsburg-Lorraine

On 6 August 1806, Emperor Francis I dissolved the Holy Roman Empire under pressure from Napoleon's reorganization of Germany. In anticipation of the loss of his title of Holy Roman Emperor, Francis had declared himself hereditary Emperor of Austria (as Francis I) on 11 August 1804, three months after Napoleon had declared himself Emperor of the French on 18 May 1804.

Emperor Francis I of Austria used the official full list of titles: "We, Francis the First, by the grace of God, Emperor of Austria; King of Jerusalem, Hungary, Bohemia, Dalmatia, Croatia, Slavonia, Galicia and Lodomeria; Archduke of Austria; Duke of Lorraine, Salzburg, Würzburg, Franconia, Styria, Carinthia, and Carniola; Grand Duke of Cracow; Grand Prince of Transylvania; Margrave of Moravia; Duke of Sandomir, Masovia, Lublin, Upper and Lower Silesia, Auschwitz and Zator, Teschen, and Friule; Prince of Berchtesgaden and Mergentheim; Princely Count of Habsburg, Gorizia, and Gradisca and of the Tyrol; and Margrave of Upper and Lower Lusatia and Istria".

The Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867 created a real union, whereby the Kingdom of Hungary was granted co-equality with the Empire of Austria, that henceforth didn't include the Kingdom of Hungary as a crownland anymore. The Austrian and the Hungarian lands became independent entities enjoying equal status.[27] Under this arrangement, the Hungarians referred to their ruler as king and never emperor (see k. u. k.). This prevailed until the Habsburgs' deposition from both Austria and Hungary in 1918 following defeat in World War I.

 
An ethno-linguistic map of Austria–Hungary, 1910

On 11 November 1918, with his empire collapsing around him, the last Habsburg ruler, Charles I of Austria (who also reigned as Charles IV of Hungary) issued a proclamation recognizing Austria's right to determine the future of the state and renouncing any role in state affairs. Two days later, he issued a separate proclamation for Hungary. Even though he did not officially abdicate, this is considered the end of the Habsburg dynasty.

In 1919, the new republican Austrian government subsequently passed a law banishing the Habsburgs from Austrian territory until they renounced all intentions of regaining the throne and accepted the status of private citizens. Charles made several attempts to regain the throne of Hungary, and in 1921 the Hungarian government passed a law that revoked Charles' rights and dethroned the Habsburgs. The Habsburgs did not formally abandon all hope of returning to power until Otto von Habsburg, the eldest son of Charles I, on 31 May 1961 renounced all claims to the throne.

In the interwar period, the House of Habsburg was a vehement opponent of National Socialism and Communism. In Germany, Adolf Hitler diametrically opposed the centuries-old Habsburg principles of largely allowing local communities under their rule to maintain traditional ethnic, religious and language practices, and he bristled with hatred against the Habsburg family. During the Second World War there was a strong Habsburg resistance movement in Central Europe, which was radically persecuted by the Nazis and the Gestapo. The unofficial leader of these groups was Otto von Habsburg, who campaigned against the Nazis and for a free Central Europe in France and the United States. Most of the resistance fighters, such as Heinrich Maier, who successfully passed on production sites and plans for V-2 rockets, Tiger tanks and aircraft to the Allies, were executed. The Habsburg family played a leading role in the fall of the Iron Curtain and the collapse of the Communist Eastern Bloc.[28][29][30][31][32]

Multilingualism

 
"PLUS OULTRE", motto of Charles V in French, on a ceiling of the Palace of Charles V in Granada

As they accumulated crowns and titles, the Habsburgs developed a unique family tradition of multilingualism that evolved over the centuries. The Holy Roman Empire had been multilingual from the start, even though most of its emperors were native German speakers.[33] The language issue within the Empire became gradually more salient as the non-religious use of Latin declined and that of national languages gained prominence during the High Middle Ages. Emperor Charles IV of Luxembourg was known to be fluent in Czech, French, German, Italian and Latin.[34]

The last section of his Golden Bull of 1356 specifies that the Empire's secular prince-electors "should be instructed in the varieties of the different dialects and languages" and that "since they are expected in all likelihood to have naturally acquired the German language, and to have been taught it from their infancy, [they] shall be instructed in the grammar of the Italian and Slavic tongues, beginning with the seventh year of their age so that, before the fourteenth year of their age, they may be learned in the same".[35] In the early 15th century, Strasbourg-based chronicler Jakob Twinger von Königshofen asserted that Charlemagne had mastered six languages, even though he had a preference for German.[33]: 306 

In the early years of the family's ascendancy, neither Rudolf I nor Albert I appear to have spoken French.[33]: 278  By contrast, Charles V of Habsburg is well known some having been fluent in several languages. He was native in French and also knew Dutch from his youth in Flanders. He later added some Castilian Spanish, which he was required to learn by the Castilian Cortes Generales. He could also speak some Basque, acquired by the influence of the Basque secretaries serving in the royal court.[36] He gained a decent command of German following the Imperial election of 1519, though he never spoke it as well as French.[37] A witticism sometimes attributed to Charles was: "I speak Spanish/Latin [depending on the source] to God, Italian to women, French to men and German to my horse."[38]

Latin was the administrative language of the Empire until the aggressive promotion of German by Joseph II in the late 18th century, which was partly reversed by his successors. From the 16th century, most if not all Habsburgs spoke French as well as German, and many also spoke Italian.[citation needed] Ferdinand I, Maximilian II and Rudolf II addressed the Bohemian Assembly in Czech, even though it is not clear that they were fluent. By contrast, there is little evidence that later Habsburgs in the 17th and 18th centuries spoke Czech, with the probable exception of Ferdinand III who made several stays in Bohemia and appears to have spoken Czech while there. In the 19th century, Francis I had notions of Czech, and Ferdinand I spoke it decently.[39]

Franz Joseph received a bilingual early education in French and German, then added Czech and Hungarian and later Italian and Polish. He also learned Latin and Greek.[40] After the end of the Habsburg Monarchy, Otto von Habsburg was fluent in English, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Spanish and Portuguese.[41]

Burials

List of Habsburg rulers

The Habsburgs' monarchical positions included:

Ancestors

  • Guntram the Rich (ca. 930–985 / 990) Father of:[44] The chronology of the Muri Abbey, burial place of the early Habsburgs, written in the 11th century, states that Guntramnus Dives (Guntram the Rich), was the ancestor of the House of Habsburg. Many historians believe this indeed makes Guntram the progenitor of the House of Habsburg. However, this account was 200 years after the fact, and much about him and the origins of the Habsburgs is uncertain.[45] If true, as Guntram was a member of the Etichonider family, it would link the Habsburg lineage to this family.
  • Lanzelin of Altenburg (died 991). Besides Radbot, below, he had sons named Rudolph I, Wernher, and Landolf.

Before the Albertine/Leopoldine division

Counts

 
Arms of the Counts of Habsburgs. The Habsburgs all but abandoned this for the arms of Austria. It only reappeared in their triarch family arms in 1805.

Before Rudolph rose to German king, the Habsburgs were Counts of Baden in what is today southwestern Germany and Switzerland.[44]

  • Radbot of Klettgau, built the Habsburg Castle (c. 985 – 1035). Besides Werner I, he had two other sons: Otto I, who would become Count of Sundgau in the Alsace, and Albrecht I. Founded the Muri Abbey, which became the first burial place of members of the House of Habsburg. It is possible that Radbot founded the castle Habichtsburg, the residence of the House of Habsburg, but another possible founder is Werner I.[46]
  • Werner I, Count of Habsburg (1025/1030–1096). Besides Otto II, there was another son, Albert II, who was reeve of Muri from 1111 to 1141 after the death of Otto II.
  • Otto II of Habsburg; first to name himself as "of Habsburg"[47] (died 1111) Father of:
  • Werner II of Habsburg (around 1135; died 1167) Father of:
  • Albrecht III of Habsburg (the Rich), died 1199. Under him, the Habsburg territories expanded to cover most of what is today the German-speaking part of Switzerland. Father of:
  • Rudolph II of Habsburg (b. c. 1160, died 1232) Father of:
  • Albrecht IV of Habsburg, (died 1239 / 1240); father of Rudolph IV of Habsburg, who would later become king Rudolph I of Germany. Between Albrecht IV and his brother Rudolph III, the Habsburg properties were split, with Albrecht keeping the Aargau and the western parts, the eastern parts going to Rudolph III. Albrecht IV was also a mutual ancestor of Sophia Chotek and of her husband Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria

Kings of the Romans

  • Rudolph I, emperor 1273–1291 (never crowned)  
  • Albert I, emperor 1298–1308 (never crowned)  

King of Bohemia

Dukes/Archdukes of Austria

  • Rudolph II, son of Rudolph I, duke of Austria and Styria together with his brother 1282–1283, was dispossessed by his brother, who eventually would be murdered by one of Rudolph's sons.
  • Albert I (Albrecht I), son of Rudolph I and brother of the above, duke from 1282 to 1308; was Holy Roman Emperor from 1298 to 1308. See also below.
  • Rudolph III, the oldest son of Albert I, designated duke of Austria and Styria 1298–1307
  • Frederick the Handsome (Friedrich der Schöne), brother of Rudolph III. Duke of Austria and Styria (with his brother Leopold I) from 1308 to 1330; officially co-regent of the emperor Louis IV since 1325, but never ruled.
  • Leopold I, brother of the above, duke of Austria and Styria from 1308 to 1326.
  • Albert II (Albrecht II), brother of the above, duke of Further Austria from 1326 to 1358, duke of Austria and Styria 1330–1358, duke of Carinthia after 1335.
  • Otto the Jolly (der Fröhliche), brother of the above, duke of Austria and Styria 1330–1339 (together with his brother), duke of Carinthia after 1335.
  • Rudolph IV the Founder (der Stifter), oldest son of Albert II. Duke of Austria and Styria 1358–1365, Duke of Tirol after 1363.

Division of Albertinian and Leopoldian lines

After the death of Rudolph IV, his brothers Albert III and Leopold III ruled the Habsburg possessions together from 1365 until 1379, when they split the territories in the Treaty of Neuberg, Albert keeping the Duchy of Austria and Leopold ruling over Styria, Carinthia, Carniola, the Windic March, Tirol, and Further Austria.

Kings of the Romans and Holy Roman Emperors (Albertinian line)

Kings of Hungary and Bohemia (Albertinian line)

Dukes of Austria (Albertinian line)

  • Albert III (Albrecht III), duke of Austria until 1395, from 1386 (after the death of Leopold) until 1395 also ruled over the latter's possessions.
  • Albert IV (Albrecht IV), duke of Austria 1395–1404, in conflict with Leopold IV.
  • Albert V (Albrecht V), duke of Austria 1404–1439, Holy Roman Emperor from 1438 to 1439 as Albert II. See also below.
  • Ladislaus Posthumus, son of the above, duke of Austria 1440–1457.

Dukes of Styria, Carinthia, Tyrol / Inner Austria (Leopoldian line)

  • Leopold III, duke of Styria, Carinthia, Tyrol, and Further Austria until 1386, when he was killed in the Battle of Sempach.
  • William (Wilhelm), son of the above, 1386–1406 duke in Inner Austria (Carinthia, Styria)
  • Leopold IV, son of Leopold III, 1391 regent of Further Austria, 1395–1402 duke of Tyrol, after 1404 also duke of Austria, 1406–1411 duke of Inner Austria
Leopoldian-Inner Austrian sub-line
Leopoldian-Tyrol sub-line
  • Frederick IV (Friedrich), brother of Ernst, 1402–1439 duke of Tyrol and Further Austria
  • Sigismund, also spelled Siegmund or Sigmund, 1439–1446 under the tutelage of the Frederick V above, then duke of Tyrol, and after the death of Albrecht VI in 1463 also duke of Further Austria.

Reunited Habsburgs until extinction of agnatic lines

Sigismund had no children and adopted Maximilian I, son of Emperor Frederick III. Under Maximilian, the possessions of the Habsburgs would be united again under one ruler, after he had re-conquered the Duchy of Austria after the death of Matthias Corvinus, who resided in Vienna and styled himself duke of Austria from 1485 to 1490.

Holy Roman Emperors, Archdukes of Austria

The abdications of Charles V in 1556 ended his formal authority over Ferdinand and made him suo jure ruler in Austria, Bohemia, Hungary, as well as Holy Roman Emperor.

Ferdinand's inheritance had been split in 1564 among his children, with Maximilian taking the Imperial crown and his younger brother Archduke Charles II ruling over Inner Austria (i.e. the Duchy of Styria, the Duchy of Carniola with March of Istria, the Duchy of Carinthia, the Princely County of Gorizia and Gradisca, and the Imperial City of Trieste, ruled from Graz). Charles's son and successor Ferdinand II in 1619 became Archduke of Austria and Holy Roman Emperor as well as King of Bohemia and Hungary in 1620. The Further Austrian/Tyrolean line of Ferdinand's brother Archduke Leopold V survived until the death of his son Sigismund Francis in 1665, whereafter their territories ultimately returned to common control with the other Austrian Habsburg lands. Inner Austrian stadtholders went on to rule until the days of Empress Maria Theresa in the 18th century.

Kings of Spain, Kings of Portugal (Spanish Habsburgs)

Habsburg Spain was a personal union between the Crowns of Castile and Aragon; Aragon was itself divided into the Kingdoms of Aragon, Catalonia, Valencia, Majorca, Naples, Sicily, Malta and Sardinia.[48] From 1581, they were kings of Portugal until they renounced this title in the 1668 Treaty of Lisbon. They were also Dukes of Milan, Lord of the Americas, and holder of multiple titles from territories within the Habsburg Netherlands. A full listing can be seen here.

The War of the Spanish Succession took place after the extinction of the Spanish Habsburg line, to determine the inheritance of Charles II.

Kings of Hungary (Austrian Habsburgs)

Kings of Bohemia (Austrian Habsburgs)

Titular Dukes of Burgundy, Lords of the Netherlands

Charles the Bold controlled not only Burgundy (both dukedom and county) but also Flanders and the broader Burgundian Netherlands. Frederick III managed to secure the marriage of Charles's only daughter, Mary of Burgundy, to his son Maximilian. The wedding took place on the evening of 16 August 1477, after the death of Charles.[49] Mary and the Habsburgs lost the Duchy of Burgundy to France, but managed to defend and hold onto the rest what became the 17 provinces of the Habsburg Netherlands. After Mary's death in 1482, Maximilian acted as regent for his son Philip the Handsome.

The Netherlands were frequently governed directly by a regent or governor-general, who was a collateral member of the Habsburgs. By the Pragmatic Sanction of 1549 Charles V combined the Netherlands into one administrative unit, to be inherited by his son Philip II. Charles effectively united the Netherlands as one entity. The Habsburgs controlled the 17 Provinces of the Netherlands until the Dutch Revolt in the second half of the 16th century, when they lost the seven northern Protestant provinces. They held onto the southern Catholic part (roughly modern Belgium and Luxembourg) as the Spanish and Austrian Netherlands until they were conquered by French Revolutionary armies in 1795. The one exception to this was the period of (1601–1621), when shortly before Philip II died on 13 September 1598, he renounced his rights to the Netherlands in favor of his daughter Isabella and her fiancé, Archduke Albert of Austria, a younger son of Emperor Maximilian II. The territories reverted to Spain on the death of Albert in 1621, as the couple had no surviving offspring, and Isabella acted as regent-governor until her death in 1633:

Habsburg-Lorraine

The War of the Austrian Succession took place after the extinction of the male line of the Austrian Habsburg line upon the death of Charles VI. The direct Habsburg line itself became totally extinct with the death of Maria Theresa of Austria, when it was followed by the House of Habsburg-Lorraine.

Holy Roman Emperors, Kings of Hungary and Bohemia, Archdukes of Austria (House of Habsburg-Lorraine, main line)

Queen Maria Christina of Austria of Spain, great-granddaughter of Leopold II, Holy Roman Emperor above. Wife of Alfonso XII of Spain and mother of Alfonso XIII of the House of Bourbon. Alfonso XIII's wife Victoria Eugenie of Battenberg was descended from King George I of Great Britain from the Habsburg Leopold Line {above}.

The House of Habsburg-Lorraine retained Austria and attached possessions after the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire; see below.

A son of Leopold II was Archduke Rainer of Austria whose wife was from the House of Savoy; a daughter Adelaide, Queen of Sardina was the wife of King Victor Emmanuel II of Piedmont, Savoy, and Sardinia and King of Italy. Their Children married into the Royal Houses of Bonaparte; Saxe-Coburg and Gotha {Bragança} {Portugal}; Savoy {Spain}; and the Dukedoms of Montferrat and Chablis.

Emperors of Austria (House of Habsburg-Lorraine, main line)

  • Francis I, Emperor of Austria 1804–1835: formerly Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor    

(→Family Tree)

Kings of Hungary (Habsburg-Lorraine)

Kings of Bohemia (Habsburg-Lorraine)

Italian branches

Grand dukes of Tuscany (House of Habsburg-Lorraine)

 

Francis Stephen assigned the grand duchy of Tuscany to his second son Peter Leopold, who in turn assigned it to his second son upon his accession as Holy Roman Emperor. Tuscany remained the domain of this cadet branch of the family until Italian unification.

Dukes of Modena (Austria-Este branch of the House of Habsburg-Lorraine)

The duchy of Modena was assigned to a minor branch of the family by the Congress of Vienna. It was lost to Italian unification. The Dukes named their line the House of Austria-Este, as they were descended from the daughter of the last D'Este Duke of Modena.

Duchess of Parma (House of Habsburg-Lorraine)

The duchy of Parma was likewise assigned to a Habsburg, but did not stay in the House long before succumbing to Italian unification. It was granted to the second wife of Napoleon I of France, Maria Luisa Duchess of Parma, a daughter of the Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor, who was the mother of Napoleon II of France. Napoleon had divorced his wife Rose de Tascher de la Pagerie (better known to history as Josephine de Beauharnais) in her favor.

Other monarchies

King of England

Empress consort of Brazil and Queen consort of Portugal (House of Habsburg-Lorraine)

Dona Maria Leopoldina of Austria (22 January 1797 – 11 December 1826) was an archduchess of Austria, Empress consort of Brazil and Queen consort of Portugal.

Empress consort of France (House of Habsburg-Lorraine)

  • Marie Louise of Austria 1810–1814

Emperor of Mexico (House of Habsburg-Lorraine)

 
Coat of Arms of the Mexican Empire adopted by Maximilian I in 1864

Maximilian, the adventurous second son of Archduke Franz Karl, was invited as part of Napoleon III's manipulations to take the throne of Mexico, becoming Emperor Maximilian I of Mexico. The conservative Mexican nobility, as well as the clergy, supported this Second Mexican Empire. His consort, Charlotte of Belgium, a daughter of King Leopold I of Belgium and a princess of the House of Saxe-Coburg Gotha, encouraged her husband's acceptance of the Mexican crown and accompanied him as Empress Carlota of Mexico. The adventure did not end well. Maximilian was shot in Cerro de las Campanas, Querétaro, in 1867 by the republican forces of Benito Juárez.

List of post-monarchical Habsburgs

Main Habsburg-Lorraine line

Charles I was expelled from his domains after World War I and the empire was abolished.[44]

 
Current personal arms of the head of the house of Habsburg, claiming only the personal title of Archduke

House of Habsburg-Tuscany

House of Habsburg-Este

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e Jure uxoris.
  2. ^ a b Queen consort.
  3. ^ a b Titular claim rather than de facto.
  4. ^ a b Contested.
  5. ^ Title given to Philip II by his father, Charles V, prior to his marriage with Mary of England. This was ensure that Philip would not be outranked by his wife.
  6. ^ Through Archduke Lorenz of Austria-Este.
  7. ^ German: Haus Habsburg, pronounced [haʊ̯s ˈhaːpsˌbʊʁk] ( listen); Spanish: Casa de Habsburgo [aβzˈβuɾɣo]; Hungarian: Habsburg-család, Italian: Casa di Asburgo, Dutch: Huis van Habsburg [ɦœy̯s vɑn ɦɑpsbʏɾx], Polish: dom Habsburgów, Portuguese: Casa de Habsburgo, Latin: Domus Habsburg, French: Maison des Habsbourg
  8. ^ German: Haus Österreich, pronounced [haʊ̯s ˈøːstəʁaɪ̯ç] ( listen); Spanish: Casa de Austria; Dutch: Huis van Oostenrijk [ɦœy̯s vɑn oːstə(n)ɾɛi̯k], Polish: dom Austrii, Latin: Domus Austriæ, French: Maison d'Autriche; Hungarian: Ausztria Háza; Italian: Casa d'Austria; Portuguese: Casa da Áustria

References

  1. ^ Kiva, Cross, and Crown: The Pescos Indians and New Mexico, p. 251.
  2. ^ Letters of Don Diego de Vargas to His Family from New Spain and New Mexico, p. 56.
  3. ^ "The House of Austria – the Habsburgs and the Empire".
  4. ^ "house of Habsburg | Rulers, Motto, History, Map, & Inbreeding". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2021-09-13.
  5. ^ "Habsburger-Gedenkjahr im Aargau", Neue Zürcher Zeitung, (page 17) 23 May 2008.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on September 21, 2008.
  7. ^ (in German). Archived from the original on December 23, 2008.
  8. ^ Jean Berenger, C.A. Simpson (2014). A History of the Habsburg Empire 1273-1700. Routledge. pp. 12–13. ISBN 978-1317895701.
  9. ^ Martyn Rady (2020). "1, Castle Habsburg and the 'fortinbras Effect'". The Habsburgs: The Rise and Fall of a World Power. Penguin UK. ISBN 978-0141987194.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Heinz-Dieter Heimann: Die Habsburger. Dynastie und Kaiserreiche. ISBN 3-406-44754-6.
  11. ^ Naumann 1855, pp. 11 passim.
  12. ^ Kos 1985, p. 260.
  13. ^ France Dolinar & al, Slovenski zgodovinski atlas (Ljubljana: Nova revija, 2011), p. 72.
  14. ^ Hugh Agnew. The Czechs and the Lands of the Bohemian Crown. Studies of Nationalities. Stanford: Hoover Institution Press, 2004. p. 29.
  15. ^ Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Furstliche Hauser Band XIV. Limburg ad der Lahn, Germany: C. A. Starke Verlag. 1991. pp. 91–93. ISBN 978-3-7980-0700-0.
  16. ^ a b Erbe 2000, p. ?.
  17. ^ Callaghan 2019, pp. 112–114.
  18. ^ Wilson, Peter H. (October 27, 2010). The Thirty Years War: A Sourcebook. Macmillan International Higher Education. ISBN 9781137069771 – via Google Books.
  19. ^ The Hungary was partly under Habsburg rule from 1526. For 150 years most of the country was occupied by the Ottoman Turks but these territories were re-conquered in 1683–1699.
  20. ^ a b Ceballos, FC; Alvarez, G (2013). "Royal dynasties as human inbreeding laboratories: the Habsburgs". Heredity. 111 (2): 114–121. doi:10.1038/hdy.2013.25. PMC 3716267. PMID 23572123.
  21. ^ Vilas, Román; Ceballos, Francisco C.; Al-Soufi, Laila; González-García, Raúl; Moreno, Carlos; Moreno, Manuel; Villanueva, Laura; Ruiz, Luis; Mateos, Jesús; González, David; Ruiz, Jennifer (2019-12-02). "Is the "Habsburg jaw" related to inbreeding?". Annals of Human Biology. 46 (7–8): 553–561. doi:10.1080/03014460.2019.1687752. ISSN 0301-4460. PMID 31786955. S2CID 208536371.
  22. ^ Hollway, Deon (December 2014). "The Habsburg Chin". History Magazine. Vol. 16, no. 2. pp. 6–7.
  23. ^ Bittles & Grant 2002, pp. 111–130.
  24. ^ Alvarez, Gonzalo; Ceballos, Francisco C.; Quinteiro, Celsa (April 15, 2009). Bauchet, Marc (ed.). "The Role of Inbreeding in the Extinction of a European Royal Dynasty". PLOS ONE. 4 (4): e5174. Bibcode:2009PLoSO...4.5174A. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0005174. PMC 2664480. PMID 19367331.
  25. ^ Maria Theresa was originally engaged to Léopold Clément of Lorraine, older brother of Francis Stephan.
  26. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Austria-Hungary" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 2–39.
  27. ^ Microsoft Encarta: The height of the dual monarchy.
  28. ^ Timothy Snyder "The Red Prince: The Secret Lives of a Habsburg Archduke" (2008); James Longo "Hitler and the Habsburgs: The Fuhrer's Vendetta Against the Austrian Royals" (2018); Bob Carruthers "Hitler's Violent Youth: How Trench Warfare and Street Fighting Moulded Hitler" (2015).
  29. ^ On Habsburg and the diversity: Pieter M. Judson "The Habsburg Empire. A New History" (Harvard 2016); Christopher Clark "The Sleepwalkers" (New York 2012).
  30. ^ Wolfgang Mueller "Die sowjetische Besatzung in Österreich 1945-1955 und ihre politische Mission" (German - "The Soviet occupation in Austria 1945-1955 and its political mission"), 2005, p. 24.
  31. ^ Otmar Lahodynsky: Paneuropäisches Picknick: Die Generalprobe für den Mauerfall (Pan-European picnic: the dress rehearsal for the fall of the Berlin Wall - German), in: Profil 9 August 2014; Thomas Roser: DDR-Massenflucht: Ein Picknick hebt die Welt aus den Angeln (German - Mass exodus of the GDR: A picnic clears the world) in: Die Presse, 16 August 2018.
  32. ^ Elisabeth Boeckl-Klamper, Thomas Mang, Wolfgang Neugebauer: Gestapo-Leitstelle Wien 1938–1945. Vienna 2018, ISBN 978-3-902494-83-2, pp. 299–305.
  33. ^ a b c Jean-Marie Moeglin (2011). L'Empire et le Royaume: Entre indifférence et fascination 1214-1500. Villeneuve-d'Ascq: Presses universitaires du Septentrion.
  34. ^ "Charles IV – the greatest Czech". Prague.eu.
  35. ^ "The Golden Bull of the Emperor Charles IV 1356 A.D." Yale Law School - The Avalon Project.
  36. ^ Madariaga Orbea, Juan (2014). Sociedad y lengua vasca en los siglos XVII y XVIII. Euskaltzaindia. p. 712.
  37. ^ Charles V, Pierre Chaunu and Michèle Escamilla.
  38. ^ Cornelius August Wilkens (1897). "VIII. Juan de Valdés". Spanish Protestants in the Sixteenth Century. William Heinemann. p. 66. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
  39. ^ "Habsburci a jejich jazyková vybavenost". Fórum zájemců o historii. 2010.
  40. ^ Mutschlechner, Martin. "Franz Joseph: childhood and upbringing". The World of the Habsburgs.
  41. ^ Foltýnová, Terezie (2014). "Dr. Otto von Habsburg a jeho proevropský přínos (Dr. Otto von Habsburg and his pro-European contribution)". Masaryk University. Brno.
  42. ^ The Kingdom of Germany formed the central part of the Holy Roman Empire. Its rulers were styled King of the Romans before their coronation as Emperors.
  43. ^ Geoffrey Parker. The Grand Strategy of Philip II, (2000)
  44. ^ a b c Montgomery-Massingberd, Hugh. "Burke’s Royal Families of the World: Volume I Europe & Latin America, 1977, pp. 18, 32. ISBN 0-85011-023-8
  45. ^ Heinz-Dieter Heimann (2001). Die Habsburger: Dynastie und Kaiserreiche. C. H. Beck. p. 22. ISBN 978-3-406-44754-9.
  46. ^ Bönner, Andreas (2010). Die Religionspolitik der Habsburger Kaiser in der Zeit des Dreißigjährigen Krieges. GRIN Verlag. p. 7. ISBN 978-3-640-50510-4.
  47. ^ "The World of Habsburgs". 2011. Retrieved 2019-04-21.
  48. ^ Cowans 2003, pp. 26–27.
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External links

Royal house
House of Habsburg
Founding year: 12th century
Preceded by Ruling House of the Duchy of Austria
1282–1453
Duchy Elevated
Became Archduchy
Preceded by Ruling House of Holy Roman Empire
1440–1740
Succeeded by
New title
Union of Austria and Hungary
Ruling House of Archduchy of Austria
1453–1780
House of Habsburg-Lorraine
Extinction of direct male line
Preceded by Ruling House of Kingdom of Hungary
1526–1780
Ruling House of Kingdom of Croatia
1527–1780
Ruling House of Kingdom of Bohemia
1526–1780
Preceded by Ruling House of Kingdom of Portugal and the Algarves
1580–1640
Succeeded by
Preceded by Ruling House of Kingdom of Spain
1504–1700
Succeeded by
Preceded by Ruling House of Kingdom of Sicily
1720–1734
Preceded by Ruling House of the Duchy of Burgundy and the Burgundian Netherlands
1477–1700
Preceded by Ruling House of Kingdom of Naples
1713–1735
Ruling House of Kingdom of Sardinia
1713–1735
Succeeded by
Ruling House of the Duchy of Burgundy and the Burgundian Netherlands
1713–1780
Succeeded by

house, habsburg, habsburg, redirects, here, lorraine, lorraine, other, uses, habsburg, disambiguation, ɜːr, alternatively, spelled, hapsburg, english, note, also, known, house, austria, note, most, prominent, important, dynasties, european, history, haus, habs. Habsburg redirects here For the House of Habsburg Lorraine see House of Habsburg Lorraine For other uses see Habsburg disambiguation The House of Habsburg ˈ h ae p s b ɜːr ɡ alternatively spelled Hapsburg in English note 7 and also known as the House of Austria note 8 is one of the most prominent and important dynasties in European history 3 4 House of HabsburgHaus HabsburgImperial Royal and Ducal dynastyLeft Habsburg ancient coat of arms of the Counts of Habsburg Or a lion rampant gules crowned azure Lion of Habsburg right Habsburg modern Austria arms of the House of Habsburg Archdukes of Austria Gules a fess argent Bindenschild originally the arms of the House of Babenburg Dukes of Austria and StyriaParent houseHouse of Eticho CountryList Holy Roman EmpireHabsburg monarchy Archduchy of Austria Kingdom of Hungary Kingdom of Croatia Kingdom of Bohemia Kingdom of Galicia and LodomeriaIberian Union Kingdom of Spain Kingdom of Portugal Low Countries Kingdom of Naples Kingdom of SicilySecond Mexican EmpireKingdom of BulgariaKingdom of England note 1 Kingdom of Ireland note 1 other smaller historical statesEtymologyHabsburg CastleFounded11th centuryFounderRadbot of KlettgauCurrent headKarl von Habsburg cognatic line Final rulerMaria Theresa agnatic line Charles I cognatic line TitlesList Holy Roman EmperorEmperor of AustriaEmperor of MexicoEmpress of France note 2 Empress of Brazil note 2 King of the RomansKing of GermanyKing of SpainKing of ItalyKing of CastileKing of AragonKing of ValenciaKing of MallorcaKing of LeonKing of BulgariaKing of SicilyKing of NaplesKing of NavarreKing of HungaryKing of Jerusalem note 3 King of BohemiaKing of CroatiaKing of DalmatiaKing of SlavoniaKing of IllyriaKing of Poland note 4 King of PortugalKing of Galicia and LodomeriaKing of JaenKing of England note 1 King of Ireland note 1 King of New Mexico 1 2 King of the IndiesKing of SerbiaKing of the East and West IndiesKing of Chile note 5 King of France note 3 Archduke of AustriaRoyal Prince of Belgium note 6 Grand Duke of Lithuania note 4 Grand Prince of TransylvaniaDuke of AustriaDuke of BurgundyDuke of GueldersDuke of LuxembourgDuke of Parma and PiacenzaDuke of Modena and ReggioDuke of MilanDuke of LothierDuke of BrabantDuke of LimburgDuke of GelderlandDuke of StyriaDuke of CarniolaDuke of WurttembergDuke of CarinthiaDuke of AnjouDuke of AlenconDuke of AngoulemeDuke of AquitaineDuke of BerryDuke of BourbonDuke of BrittanyDuke of BraganzaDuke of BukovinaDuke of BurgundyDuke of CalabriaDuke of ChatelleraultDuke of DurazzoDuke of EnghienDuke of LorraineDuke of LuccaDuke of MontpensierDuke of NemoursDuke of NormandyDuke of OrleansDuke of ParmaDuke of SlavoniaDuke of TouraineDuke of VendomeMargrave of NamurMargrave of MoraviaLord of BiscayLord of MechelenLord of MolinaPrince of SwabiaCount of ArtoisCount of HollandCount of FlandersCount of KlettgauCount of ThurgauCount of OnertauCount of AltemburgCount of HainautCount of CharolaisCount of ZeelandCount of ZutphenCount of HainautCount of HollandCount of ZeelandCount of NamurCount of BarcelonaCount of RoussillonCount of CerdanyaCount of KyburgCount of Haut RhinCount of GorizaCount of NamurCount of CovadongaCount of GironaCount of OsonaCount of BesaluCount of AnjouCount of ArtoisCount of ChampagneCount of CharolaisCount of ChartresCount of ClermontCount of DreuxCount of EtampesCount of HainautCount of HollandCount of ZeelandCount of NamurCount of CharolaisMargrave of AntwerpLandgrave of AlsaceDuke of LimburgDuke of LuxemburgDuke of LorraineDuke of GueldersCount of FlandersCount of ArtoisCount of EuCount of EvreuxCount of GravinaCount of HainautCount of HollandCount of La MarcheCount of LonguevilleCount of MontpensierCount of MortainCount of NeversCount of PercheCount of PoitiersCount of CharolaisMargrave of AntwerpLandgrave of AlsaceCount of ProvenceCount of SoissonsCount of ToulouseCount of ValoisCount of VendomeCount of VermandoisCount of VertusCount of HabsburgCount Palatine of BurgundyMarquis of OristanoMarquis of GoceanoVarious Habsburg European titlesMottoA E I O U and Viribus UnitisEstate s Hofburg formal seat Prague Castle formal seat Habsburg Castle ancestral Dissolution29 November 1780 242 years ago 1780 11 29 in the agnatic line continues in cognatic line Cadet branchesAgnatic all are extinct Habsburg Spain Habsburg Laufenburg Habsburg KyburgCognatic Habsburg Lorraine Habsburg TuscanyThe house takes its name from Habsburg Castle a fortress built in the 1020s in present day Switzerland by Radbot of Klettgau who named his fortress Habsburg His grandson Otto II was the first to take the fortress name as his own adding Count of Habsburg to his title In 1273 Count Radbot s seventh generation descendant Rudolph of Habsburg was elected King of the Romans Taking advantage of the extinction of the Babenbergs and of his victory over Ottokar II of Bohemia at the battle on the Marchfeld in 1278 he appointed his sons as Dukes of Austria and moved the family s power base to Vienna where the Habsburg dynasty gained the name of House of Austria and ruled until 1918 The throne of the Holy Roman Empire was continuously occupied by the Habsburgs from 1440 until their extinction in the male line in 1740 and after the death of Francis I from 1765 until its dissolution in 1806 The house also produced kings of Bohemia Hungary Croatia Spain Portugal and Galicia Lodomeria with their respective colonies rulers of several principalities in the Low Countries and Italy and in the 19th century emperors of Austria and of Austria Hungary as well as one emperor of Mexico The family split several times into parallel branches most consequentially in the mid 16th century between its Spanish and Austrian branches following the abdication of Charles V Although they ruled distinct territories the different branches nevertheless maintained close relations and frequently intermarried Members of the Habsburg family oversee the Austrian branch of the Order of the Golden Fleece and the Imperial and Royal Order of Saint George The current head of the family is Karl von Habsburg Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Counts of Habsburg 2 2 Pivot to Eastern Alpine Duchies 2 3 Albertinian Leopoldian split and Imperial elections 2 4 Archdukes 2 5 Re unification and expansion 2 6 Spanish and Austrian Habsburgs 2 7 Habsburg inbreeding and extinction of the male lines 2 8 House of Habsburg Lorraine 3 Multilingualism 4 Burials 5 List of Habsburg rulers 5 1 Ancestors 5 2 Before the Albertine Leopoldine division 5 2 1 Counts 5 2 2 Kings of the Romans 5 2 3 King of Bohemia 5 2 4 Dukes Archdukes of Austria 5 3 Division of Albertinian and Leopoldian lines 5 3 1 Kings of the Romans and Holy Roman Emperors Albertinian line 5 3 2 Kings of Hungary and Bohemia Albertinian line 5 3 3 Dukes of Austria Albertinian line 5 3 4 Dukes of Styria Carinthia Tyrol Inner Austria Leopoldian line 5 3 4 1 Leopoldian Inner Austrian sub line 5 3 4 2 Leopoldian Tyrol sub line 5 4 Reunited Habsburgs until extinction of agnatic lines 5 4 1 Holy Roman Emperors Archdukes of Austria 5 4 2 Kings of Spain Kings of Portugal Spanish Habsburgs 5 4 3 Kings of Hungary Austrian Habsburgs 5 4 4 Kings of Bohemia Austrian Habsburgs 5 4 5 Titular Dukes of Burgundy Lords of the Netherlands 5 5 Habsburg Lorraine 5 5 1 Holy Roman Emperors Kings of Hungary and Bohemia Archdukes of Austria House of Habsburg Lorraine main line 5 5 2 Emperors of Austria House of Habsburg Lorraine main line 5 5 3 Kings of Hungary Habsburg Lorraine 5 5 4 Kings of Bohemia Habsburg Lorraine 5 6 Italian branches 5 6 1 Grand dukes of Tuscany House of Habsburg Lorraine 5 6 2 Dukes of Modena Austria Este branch of the House of Habsburg Lorraine 5 6 3 Duchess of Parma House of Habsburg Lorraine 5 7 Other monarchies 5 7 1 King of England 5 7 2 Empress consort of Brazil and Queen consort of Portugal House of Habsburg Lorraine 5 7 3 Empress consort of France House of Habsburg Lorraine 5 7 4 Emperor of Mexico House of Habsburg Lorraine 6 List of post monarchical Habsburgs 6 1 Main Habsburg Lorraine line 6 2 House of Habsburg Tuscany 6 3 House of Habsburg Este 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksName EditThe origins of Habsburg Castle s name are uncertain There is disagreement on whether the name is derived from the High German Habichtsburg hawk castle or from the Middle High German word hab hap meaning ford as there is a river with a ford nearby The first documented use of the name by the dynasty itself has been traced to the year 1108 5 6 7 The Habsburg name was not continuously used by the family members since they often emphasized their more prestigious princely titles The dynasty was thus long known as the House of Austria Complementarily in some circumstances the family members were identified by their place of birth Charles V was known in his youth after his birthplace as Charles of Ghent When he became king of Spain he was known as Charles of Spain and after he was elected emperor as Charles V in French Charles Quint In Spain the dynasty was known as the Casa de Austria including illegitimate sons such as John of Austria and John Joseph of Austria The arms displayed in their simplest form were those of Austria which the Habsburgs had made their own at times impaled with the arms of the Duchy of Burgundy ancient After Maria Theresa married Duke Francis Stephen of Lorraine the idea of Habsburg as associated with ancestral Austrian rulership was used to show that the old dynasty continued as did all its inherited rights When Francis I became Emperor of Austria he adopted the old shield of Habsburg in his personal arms together with Austria and Lorraine This also reinforced the Germanness of the French speaking Austrian Emperor and his claim to rule in Germany not least against the Prussian Kings Some younger sons who had no prospects of the throne were given the personal title of count of Habsburg The surname of more recent members of the family such as Otto von Habsburg and Karl von Habsburg is taken to be von Habsburg or more completely von Habsburg Lothringen Princes and members of the house use the tripartite arms adopted in the 18th century by Francis Stephen History EditCounts of Habsburg Edit The Habsburg dominions around 1200 in the area of modern day Switzerland are shown as Habsburg among the houses of Savoy Zahringer and Kyburg The progenitor of the House of Habsburg may have been Guntram the Rich a count in the Breisgau who lived in the 10th century and forthwith farther back as the medieval Adalrich Duke of Alsace from the Etichonids from which Habsburg derives His grandson Radbot of Klettgau founded the Habsburg Castle That castle was the family seat during most of the 11th 12th and 13th centuries In the 12th century the Habsburgs became increasingly associated with the Staufer Emperors participating in the imperial court and the Emperor s military expeditions Werner II Count of Habsburg died fighting for Emperor Frederick I Barbarossa in Italy This association helped them to inherit many domains as the Staufers caused the extinction of many dynasties some of which the Habsburgs were heirs to In 1198 Rudolf II Count of Habsburg fully dedicated the dynasty to the Staufer cause by joining the Ghibellines and funded the Staufer emperor Frederick II s war for the throne in 1211 The emperor was made godfather to his newly born grandson the future king Rudolf 8 9 The Habsburgs expanded their influence through arranged marriages and by gaining political privileges especially countship rights in Zurichgau Aargau and Thurgau In the 13th century the house aimed its marriage policy at families in Upper Alsace and Swabia They were also able to gain high positions in the church hierarchy for their members Territorially they often profited from the extinction of other noble families such as the House of Kyburg 10 11 Pivot to Eastern Alpine Duchies Edit By the second half of the 13th century count Rudolph IV 1218 1291 had become an influential territorial lord in the area between the Vosges Mountains and Lake Constance On 1 October 1273 he was elected as a compromise candidate as King of the Romans and received the name Rudolph I of Germany 10 He then led a coalition against king Ottokar II of Bohemia who had taken advantage of the Great Interregnum in order to expand southwards taking over the respective inheritances of the Babenberg Austria Styria Savinja and of the Spanheim Carinthia and Carniola In 1278 Rudolph and his allies defeated and killed Ottokar at the Battle of Marchfeld and the lands he had acquired reverted to the German crown With the Georgenberg Pact of 1286 Rudolph secured for his family the duchies of Austria and Styria The southern portions of Ottokar s former realm Carinthia Carniola and Savinja went to Rudolph s allies from the House of Gorizia 12 13 Following Rudolph s death in 1291 Albert I s assassination in 1308 and Frederick the Fair s failure to secure the German Imperial crown for himself the Habsburgs temporarily lost their supremacy in the Empire In the early 14th century they also focused on the Kingdom of Bohemia After Vaclav III s death on 4 August 1306 there were no male heirs remaining in the Premyslid dynasty Habsburg scion Rudolph I was then elected but only lasted a year The Bohemian kingship was an elected position 14 and the Habsburgs were only able to secure it on a hereditary basis much later in 1626 following their submission of the Czech lands during the Thirty Years War After 1307 subsequent Habsburg attempts to gain the Bohemian crown were frustrated first by Henry of Bohemia a member of the House of Gorizia and then by the House of Luxembourg Instead they were able to expand southwards in 1311 they took over Savinja after the death of Henry in 1335 they assumed power in Carniola and Carinthia and in 1369 they succeeded his daughter Margaret in Tyrol After the death of Albert III of Gorizia in 1374 they gained a foothold at Pazin in central Istria followed by Trieste in 1382 Meanwhile the original home territories of the Habsburgs in what is now Switzerland including the Aargau with Habsburg Castle were lost in the 14th century to the expanding Swiss Confederacy after the battles of Morgarten 1315 and Sempach 1386 Habsburg Castle itself was finally lost to the Swiss in 1415 Albertinian Leopoldian split and Imperial elections Edit Map showing the constituent lands of the Archduchy of Austria the Duchy of Austria comprising Upper Austria centered on Linz and Lower Austria centered on Vienna Inner Austria centered on Graz comprising the duchies of Styria Carinthia and Carniola and the lands of the Austrian Littoral and Further Austria comprising mostly the Sundgau territory with the town of Belfort in southern Alsace the adjacent Breisgau region east of the Rhine and usually the County of Tyrol The area between Further Austria and the Duchy of Austria was the Archbishopric of Salzburg Rudolf IV s brothers Albert III and Leopold III ignored his efforts to preserve the integrity of the family domains and enacted the separation of the so called Albertinian and Leopoldian family lines on 25 September 1379 by the Treaty of Neuberg The former would maintain Austria proper then called Niederosterreich but comprising modern Lower Austria and most of Upper Austria while the latter would rule over lands then labeled Oberosterreich namely Inner Austria Innerosterreich comprising Styria Carinthia and Carniola and Further Austria Vorderosterreich consisting of Tyrol and the western Habsburg lands in Alsace and Swabia 10 By marrying Elisabeth of Luxembourg the daughter of Emperor Sigismund in 1437 Duke Albert V of the Albertine line 1397 1439 became the ruler of Bohemia and Hungary again expanding the family s political horizons The next year Albert was crowned as King of the Romans known as such as Albert II Following his early death in a battle against the Ottomans in 1439 and that of his son Ladislaus Postumus in 1457 the Habsburgs lost Bohemia once more as well as Hungary for several decades However with the extinction of the House of Celje in 1456 and the House of Wallsee Enns in 1466 1483 they managed to absorb significant secular enclaves within their territories and create a contiguous domain stretching from the border with Bohemia to the Adriatic sea After the death of Leopold s eldest son William in 1406 the Leopoldian line was further split among his brothers into the Inner Austrian territory under Ernest the Iron and a Tyrolean Further Austrian line under Frederick of the Empty Pockets In 1440 Ernest s son Frederick III was chosen by the electoral college to succeed Albert II as the king Several Habsburg kings had attempted to gain the imperial dignity over the years but success finally arrived on 19 March 1452 when Pope Nicholas V crowned Frederick III as the Holy Roman Emperor in a grand ceremony held in Rome In Frederick III the Pope found an important political ally with whose help he was able to counter the conciliar movement 10 While in Rome Frederick III married Eleanor of Portugal enabling him to build a network of connections with dynasties in the west and southeast of Europe Frederick was rather distant to his family Eleanor by contrast had a great influence on the raising and education of Frederick s children and therefore played an important role in the family s rise to prominence After Frederick III s coronation the Habsburgs were able to hold the imperial throne almost continuously until 1806 10 Archdukes Edit Through the forged document called privilegium maius 1358 59 Duke Rudolf IV 1339 1365 introduced the title of Archduke to place the Habsburgs on a par with the Prince electors of the Empire since Emperor Charles IV had omitted to give them the electoral dignity in his Golden Bull of 1356 Charles however refused to recognize the title as did his immediate successors Duke Ernest the Iron and his descendants unilaterally assumed the title archduke That title was only officially recognized in 1453 by Emperor Frederick III himself a Habsburg 15 Frederick himself used just Duke of Austria never Archduke until his death in 1493 The title was first granted to Frederick s younger brother Albert VI of Austria died 1463 who used it at least from 1458 In 1477 Frederick granted the title archduke to his first cousin Sigismund of Austria ruler of Further Austria Frederick s son and heir the future Emperor Maximilian I apparently only started to use the title after the death of his wife Mary of Burgundy in 1482 as Archduke never appears in documents issued jointly by Maximilian and Mary as rulers in the Low Countries where Maximilian is still titled Duke of Austria The title appears first in documents issued under the joint rule of Maximilian and Philip his under age son in the Low Countries Archduke was initially borne by those dynasts who ruled a Habsburg territory i e only by males and their consorts appanages being commonly distributed to cadets These junior archdukes did not thereby become independent hereditary rulers since all territories remained vested in the Austrian crown Occasionally a territory might be combined with a separate gubernatorial mandate ruled by an archducal cadet From the 16th century onward archduke and its female form archduchess came to be used by all the members of the House of Habsburg e g Queen Marie Antoinette of France was born Archduchess Maria Antonia of Austria Re unification and expansion Edit Habsburg lands in green following the Battle of Muhlberg in 1547 excludes Holy Roman Empire and the Spanish colonial empire In 1457 Duke Frederick V of Inner Austria also gained the Austrian archduchy after his Albertine cousin Ladislaus the Posthumous had died without issue 1490 saw the reunification of all Habsburg lines when Archduke Sigismund of Further Austria and Tyrol resigned in favor of Frederick s son Maximilian I As emperor Frederick III took a leading role inside the family and positioned himself as the judge over the family s internal conflicts often making use of the privilegium maius He was able to restore the unity of the house s Austrian lands as the Albertinian line was now extinct Territorial integrity was also strengthened by the extinction of the Tyrolean branch of the Leopoldian line Frederick s aim was to make Austria a united country stretching from the Rhine to the Mur and Leitha 10 On the external front one of Frederick s main achievements was the Siege of Neuss 1474 75 in which he coerced Charles the Bold of Burgundy to give his daughter Mary of Burgundy as wife to Frederick s son Maximilian 10 The wedding took place on the evening of 16 August 1477 and ultimately resulted in the Habsburgs acquiring control of the Low Countries After Mary s early death in 1482 Maximilian attempted to secure the Burgundian heritance to one of his and Mary s children Philip the Handsome Charles VIII of France contested this using both military and dynastic means but the Burgundian succession was finally ruled in favor of Philip in the Treaty of Senlis in 1493 16 After the death of his father in 1493 Maximilian was proclaimed the new King of the Romans receiving the name Maximilian I Maximilian was initially unable to travel to Rome to receive the Imperial title from the Pope due to opposition from Venice and from the French who were occupying Milan as well a refusal from the Pope due to enemy forces being present on his territory In 1508 Maximilian proclaimed himself as the chosen Emperor and this was also recognized by the Pope due to changes in political alliances This had a historical consequence in that in the future the Roman King would also automatically become Emperor without needing the Pope s consent Emperor Charles V would be the last to be crowned by the Pope himself at Bologna in 1530 16 Maximilian s rule 1493 1519 was a time of dramatic expansion for the Habsburgs In 1497 Maximilian s son Philip known as the Handsome or the Fair married Joanna of Castile also known as Joan the Mad heiress of the Castile Phillip and Joan had six children the eldest of whom became Emperor Charles V and ruled the kingdoms of Castile and Aragon including their colonies in the New World Southern Italy Austria and the Low Countries in 1516 with his mother and nominal co ruler Joanna who was kept under confinement 17 The foundations for the later empire of Austria Hungary were laid in 1515 by the means of a double wedding between Louis only son of Vladislaus II King of Bohemia and Hungary and Maximilian s granddaughter Mary and between her brother Archduke Ferdinand and Louis s sister Anna The wedding was celebrated in grand style on 22 July 1515 All these children were still minors so the wedding was formally completed in 1521 Vladislaus died on 13 March 1516 and Maximilian died on 12 January 1519 but the latter s designs were ultimately successful upon Louis s death in battle in 1526 Ferdinand became king of Bohemia and Hungary The Habsburg dynasty achieved its highest position when Charles V was elected Holy Roman Emperor Much of Charles s reign was dedicated to the fight against Protestantism which led to its eradication throughout vast areas under Habsburg control Spanish and Austrian Habsburgs Edit The Iberian Union in 1598 under Philip II King of Spain and Portugal The Spanish and Austrian Habsburg European lands ca 1700 Charles formally became the sole monarch of Spain upon the death of his imprisoned mother Queen Joan in 1555 After the abdication of Charles V in 1556 the Habsburg dynasty split into the branch of the Austrian or German Habsburgs led by Ferdinand and the branch of the Spanish Habsburgs initially led by Charles s son Philip 18 Ferdinand I King of Bohemia Hungary 19 and archduke of Austria in the name of his brother Charles V became suo jure monarch as well as the Habsburg Holy Roman Emperor designated as successor already in 1531 Philip became King of Spain and its colonial empire as Philip II and ruler of the Habsburg domains in Italy and the Low Countries The Spanish Habsburgs also ruled Portugal for a time known there as the Philippine dynasty 1580 1640 The Seventeen Provinces and the Duchy of Milan were in personal union under the King of Spain but remained part of the Holy Roman Empire Furthermore the Spanish king had claims on Hungary and Bohemia In the secret Onate treaty of 29 July 1617 the Spanish and Austrian Habsburgs settled their mutual claims Habsburg inbreeding and extinction of the male lines Edit Profile portrait of Leopold I highlighting his Habsburg jaw Deutsches Historisches Museum The Habsburgs sought to consolidate their power by frequent consanguineous marriages resulting in a cumulatively deleterious effect on their gene pool Health impairments due to inbreeding included epilepsy insanity and early death A study of 3 000 family members over 16 generations by the University of Santiago de Compostela suggests inbreeding may have played a role in their extinction 20 Numerous members of the family showed specific facial deformities an enlarged lower jaw with an extended chin known as mandibular prognathism or Habsburg jaw a large nose with hump and hanging tip Habsburg nose and an everted lower lip Habsburg lip The latter two are signs of maxillary deficiency A 2019 study found that the degree of mandibular prognathism in the Habsburg family shows a statistically significant correlation with the degree of inbreeding A correlation between maxillary deficiency and degree of inbreeding was also present but was not statistically significant 21 22 Other scientific studies however dispute the ideas of any linkage between fertility and consanguinity 23 The gene pool eventually became so small that the last of the Spanish line Charles II who was severely disabled from birth perhaps by genetic disorders possessed a genome comparable to that of a child born to a brother and sister as did his father probably because of remote inbreeding 24 20 The death of Charles II of Spain in 1700 led to the War of the Spanish Succession and that of Emperor Charles VI in 1740 led to the War of the Austrian Succession In the former the House of Bourbon won the conflict and put a final end to the Habsburg rule in Spain The latter however was won by Maria Theresa and led to the succession of the House of Habsburg Lorraine German Haus Habsburg Lothringen becoming the new main branch of the dynasty in the person of Maria Theresa s son Joseph II This new House was created by the marriage between Maria Theresa of Habsburg and Francis Stephan Duke of Lorraine 25 both of them were great grandchildren of Habsburg emperor Ferdinand III but from different empresses this new House being a cadet branch of the female line of the House of Habsburg and the male line of the House of Lorraine It is thought that extensive intra family marriages within Spanish and Austrian lines contributed to the extinction of the main line House of Habsburg Lorraine Edit Main article House of Habsburg Lorraine Austria Hungary in 1915 Kingdoms and countries of Austria Hungary Cisleithania Empire of Austria 26 1 Bohemia 2 Bukovina 3 Carinthia 4 Carniola 5 Dalmatia 6 Galicia 7 Kustenland 8 Lower Austria 9 Moravia 10 Salzburg 11 Silesia 12 Styria 13 Tirol 14 Upper Austria 15 Vorarlberg Transleithania Kingdom of Hungary 26 16 Hungary proper 17 Croatia Slavonia 18 Bosnia and Herzegovina Austro Hungarian condominium On 6 August 1806 Emperor Francis I dissolved the Holy Roman Empire under pressure from Napoleon s reorganization of Germany In anticipation of the loss of his title of Holy Roman Emperor Francis had declared himself hereditary Emperor of Austria as Francis I on 11 August 1804 three months after Napoleon had declared himself Emperor of the French on 18 May 1804 Emperor Francis I of Austria used the official full list of titles We Francis the First by the grace of God Emperor of Austria King of Jerusalem Hungary Bohemia Dalmatia Croatia Slavonia Galicia and Lodomeria Archduke of Austria Duke of Lorraine Salzburg Wurzburg Franconia Styria Carinthia and Carniola Grand Duke of Cracow Grand Prince of Transylvania Margrave of Moravia Duke of Sandomir Masovia Lublin Upper and Lower Silesia Auschwitz and Zator Teschen and Friule Prince of Berchtesgaden and Mergentheim Princely Count of Habsburg Gorizia and Gradisca and of the Tyrol and Margrave of Upper and Lower Lusatia and Istria The Austro Hungarian Compromise of 1867 created a real union whereby the Kingdom of Hungary was granted co equality with the Empire of Austria that henceforth didn t include the Kingdom of Hungary as a crownland anymore The Austrian and the Hungarian lands became independent entities enjoying equal status 27 Under this arrangement the Hungarians referred to their ruler as king and never emperor see k u k This prevailed until the Habsburgs deposition from both Austria and Hungary in 1918 following defeat in World War I An ethno linguistic map of Austria Hungary 1910 On 11 November 1918 with his empire collapsing around him the last Habsburg ruler Charles I of Austria who also reigned as Charles IV of Hungary issued a proclamation recognizing Austria s right to determine the future of the state and renouncing any role in state affairs Two days later he issued a separate proclamation for Hungary Even though he did not officially abdicate this is considered the end of the Habsburg dynasty In 1919 the new republican Austrian government subsequently passed a law banishing the Habsburgs from Austrian territory until they renounced all intentions of regaining the throne and accepted the status of private citizens Charles made several attempts to regain the throne of Hungary and in 1921 the Hungarian government passed a law that revoked Charles rights and dethroned the Habsburgs The Habsburgs did not formally abandon all hope of returning to power until Otto von Habsburg the eldest son of Charles I on 31 May 1961 renounced all claims to the throne In the interwar period the House of Habsburg was a vehement opponent of National Socialism and Communism In Germany Adolf Hitler diametrically opposed the centuries old Habsburg principles of largely allowing local communities under their rule to maintain traditional ethnic religious and language practices and he bristled with hatred against the Habsburg family During the Second World War there was a strong Habsburg resistance movement in Central Europe which was radically persecuted by the Nazis and the Gestapo The unofficial leader of these groups was Otto von Habsburg who campaigned against the Nazis and for a free Central Europe in France and the United States Most of the resistance fighters such as Heinrich Maier who successfully passed on production sites and plans for V 2 rockets Tiger tanks and aircraft to the Allies were executed The Habsburg family played a leading role in the fall of the Iron Curtain and the collapse of the Communist Eastern Bloc 28 29 30 31 32 Multilingualism Edit PLUS OULTRE motto of Charles V in French on a ceiling of the Palace of Charles V in Granada As they accumulated crowns and titles the Habsburgs developed a unique family tradition of multilingualism that evolved over the centuries The Holy Roman Empire had been multilingual from the start even though most of its emperors were native German speakers 33 The language issue within the Empire became gradually more salient as the non religious use of Latin declined and that of national languages gained prominence during the High Middle Ages Emperor Charles IV of Luxembourg was known to be fluent in Czech French German Italian and Latin 34 The last section of his Golden Bull of 1356 specifies that the Empire s secular prince electors should be instructed in the varieties of the different dialects and languages and that since they are expected in all likelihood to have naturally acquired the German language and to have been taught it from their infancy they shall be instructed in the grammar of the Italian and Slavic tongues beginning with the seventh year of their age so that before the fourteenth year of their age they may be learned in the same 35 In the early 15th century Strasbourg based chronicler Jakob Twinger von Konigshofen asserted that Charlemagne had mastered six languages even though he had a preference for German 33 306 In the early years of the family s ascendancy neither Rudolf I nor Albert I appear to have spoken French 33 278 By contrast Charles V of Habsburg is well known some having been fluent in several languages He was native in French and also knew Dutch from his youth in Flanders He later added some Castilian Spanish which he was required to learn by the Castilian Cortes Generales He could also speak some Basque acquired by the influence of the Basque secretaries serving in the royal court 36 He gained a decent command of German following the Imperial election of 1519 though he never spoke it as well as French 37 A witticism sometimes attributed to Charles was I speak Spanish Latin depending on the source to God Italian to women French to men and German to my horse 38 Latin was the administrative language of the Empire until the aggressive promotion of German by Joseph II in the late 18th century which was partly reversed by his successors From the 16th century most if not all Habsburgs spoke French as well as German and many also spoke Italian citation needed Ferdinand I Maximilian II and Rudolf II addressed the Bohemian Assembly in Czech even though it is not clear that they were fluent By contrast there is little evidence that later Habsburgs in the 17th and 18th centuries spoke Czech with the probable exception of Ferdinand III who made several stays in Bohemia and appears to have spoken Czech while there In the 19th century Francis I had notions of Czech and Ferdinand I spoke it decently 39 Franz Joseph received a bilingual early education in French and German then added Czech and Hungarian and later Italian and Polish He also learned Latin and Greek 40 After the end of the Habsburg Monarchy Otto von Habsburg was fluent in English French German Hungarian Italian Spanish and Portuguese 41 Burials EditThis section is empty You can help by adding to it September 2018 See also Muri Abbey Konigsfelden Monastery Speyer Cathedral Ducal Crypt Vienna Court Church El Escorial Seckau Abbey Imperial Crypt and Palatinal CryptList of Habsburg rulers EditSee also List of rulers of Austria List of German monarchs List of Bohemian monarchs List of Hungarian monarchs and List of Spanish monarchs The Habsburgs monarchical positions included Holy Roman Emperors intermittently from 1273 until 1806 and Roman German kings 42 Rulers of Austria as dukes from 1278 until 1453 as archdukes from 1453 and as emperors from 1804 until 1918 Kings of Bohemia 1306 1307 1437 1439 1453 1457 1526 1918 Kings of Spain 1516 1700 Kings of Hungary and Croatia 1526 1918 King of England and Ireland 1554 1558 note 1 43 Kings of Portugal 1581 1640 Grand princes of Transylvania 1690 1867 Kings of Galicia and Lodomeria 1772 1918 Emperor of Mexico 1864 1867 Ancestors Edit Guntram the Rich ca 930 985 990 Father of 44 The chronology of the Muri Abbey burial place of the early Habsburgs written in the 11th century states that Guntramnus Dives Guntram the Rich was the ancestor of the House of Habsburg Many historians believe this indeed makes Guntram the progenitor of the House of Habsburg However this account was 200 years after the fact and much about him and the origins of the Habsburgs is uncertain 45 If true as Guntram was a member of the Etichonider family it would link the Habsburg lineage to this family Lanzelin of Altenburg died 991 Besides Radbot below he had sons named Rudolph I Wernher and Landolf Before the Albertine Leopoldine division Edit Counts Edit Arms of the Counts of Habsburgs The Habsburgs all but abandoned this for the arms of Austria It only reappeared in their triarch family arms in 1805 Before Rudolph rose to German king the Habsburgs were Counts of Baden in what is today southwestern Germany and Switzerland 44 Radbot of Klettgau built the Habsburg Castle c 985 1035 Besides Werner I he had two other sons Otto I who would become Count of Sundgau in the Alsace and Albrecht I Founded the Muri Abbey which became the first burial place of members of the House of Habsburg It is possible that Radbot founded the castle Habichtsburg the residence of the House of Habsburg but another possible founder is Werner I 46 Werner I Count of Habsburg 1025 1030 1096 Besides Otto II there was another son Albert II who was reeve of Muri from 1111 to 1141 after the death of Otto II Otto II of Habsburg first to name himself as of Habsburg 47 died 1111 Father of Werner II of Habsburg around 1135 died 1167 Father of Albrecht III of Habsburg the Rich died 1199 Under him the Habsburg territories expanded to cover most of what is today the German speaking part of Switzerland Father of Rudolph II of Habsburg b c 1160 died 1232 Father of Albrecht IV of Habsburg died 1239 1240 father of Rudolph IV of Habsburg who would later become king Rudolph I of Germany Between Albrecht IV and his brother Rudolph III the Habsburg properties were split with Albrecht keeping the Aargau and the western parts the eastern parts going to Rudolph III Albrecht IV was also a mutual ancestor of Sophia Chotek and of her husband Archduke Franz Ferdinand of AustriaKings of the Romans Edit Rudolph I emperor 1273 1291 never crowned Albert I emperor 1298 1308 never crowned King of Bohemia Edit Rudolph I king of Bohemia 1306 1307Dukes Archdukes of Austria Edit Rudolph II son of Rudolph I duke of Austria and Styria together with his brother 1282 1283 was dispossessed by his brother who eventually would be murdered by one of Rudolph s sons Albert I Albrecht I son of Rudolph I and brother of the above duke from 1282 to 1308 was Holy Roman Emperor from 1298 to 1308 See also below Rudolph III the oldest son of Albert I designated duke of Austria and Styria 1298 1307 Frederick the Handsome Friedrich der Schone brother of Rudolph III Duke of Austria and Styria with his brother Leopold I from 1308 to 1330 officially co regent of the emperor Louis IV since 1325 but never ruled Leopold I brother of the above duke of Austria and Styria from 1308 to 1326 Albert II Albrecht II brother of the above duke of Further Austria from 1326 to 1358 duke of Austria and Styria 1330 1358 duke of Carinthia after 1335 Otto the Jolly der Frohliche brother of the above duke of Austria and Styria 1330 1339 together with his brother duke of Carinthia after 1335 Rudolph IV the Founder der Stifter oldest son of Albert II Duke of Austria and Styria 1358 1365 Duke of Tirol after 1363 Division of Albertinian and Leopoldian lines Edit After the death of Rudolph IV his brothers Albert III and Leopold III ruled the Habsburg possessions together from 1365 until 1379 when they split the territories in the Treaty of Neuberg Albert keeping the Duchy of Austria and Leopold ruling over Styria Carinthia Carniola the Windic March Tirol and Further Austria Kings of the Romans and Holy Roman Emperors Albertinian line Edit Albert II emperor 1438 1439 never crowned Frederick III emperor 1440 1493 Kings of Hungary and Bohemia Albertinian line Edit Albert king of Hungary and Bohemia 1437 1439 Ladislaus V Posthumus king of Hungary 1444 1457 and Bohemia 1453 1457 Dukes of Austria Albertinian line Edit Albert III Albrecht III duke of Austria until 1395 from 1386 after the death of Leopold until 1395 also ruled over the latter s possessions Albert IV Albrecht IV duke of Austria 1395 1404 in conflict with Leopold IV Albert V Albrecht V duke of Austria 1404 1439 Holy Roman Emperor from 1438 to 1439 as Albert II See also below Ladislaus Posthumus son of the above duke of Austria 1440 1457 Dukes of Styria Carinthia Tyrol Inner Austria Leopoldian line Edit Leopold III duke of Styria Carinthia Tyrol and Further Austria until 1386 when he was killed in the Battle of Sempach William Wilhelm son of the above 1386 1406 duke in Inner Austria Carinthia Styria Leopold IV son of Leopold III 1391 regent of Further Austria 1395 1402 duke of Tyrol after 1404 also duke of Austria 1406 1411 duke of Inner AustriaLeopoldian Inner Austrian sub line Edit Ernest the Iron der Eiserne 1406 1424 duke of Inner Austria until 1411 together and competing with his brother Leopold IV Frederick V Friedrich son of Ernst became emperor Frederick III in 1440 He was duke of Inner Austria from 1424 on Guardian of Sigismund 1439 1446 and of Ladislaus Posthumus 1440 1452 See also below Albert VI Albrecht VI brother of the above 1446 1463 regent of Further Austria duke of Austria 1458 1463 Ernestine line of Saxon princes ancestor of George I of Great Britain descended from sister of Frederick III also Prince Frederick Charles of Hesse King of Finland 1918Leopoldian Tyrol sub line Edit Frederick IV Friedrich brother of Ernst 1402 1439 duke of Tyrol and Further Austria Sigismund also spelled Siegmund or Sigmund 1439 1446 under the tutelage of the Frederick V above then duke of Tyrol and after the death of Albrecht VI in 1463 also duke of Further Austria Reunited Habsburgs until extinction of agnatic lines Edit Sigismund had no children and adopted Maximilian I son of Emperor Frederick III Under Maximilian the possessions of the Habsburgs would be united again under one ruler after he had re conquered the Duchy of Austria after the death of Matthias Corvinus who resided in Vienna and styled himself duke of Austria from 1485 to 1490 Holy Roman Emperors Archdukes of Austria Edit Maximilian I emperor 1508 1519 Charles V emperor 1519 1556 his arms are explained in an article about them The abdications of Charles V in 1556 ended his formal authority over Ferdinand and made him suo jure ruler in Austria Bohemia Hungary as well as Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand I emperor 1556 1564 Family Tree Maximilian II emperor 1564 1576 Rudolf II emperor 1576 1612 Matthias emperor 1612 1619 Ferdinand s inheritance had been split in 1564 among his children with Maximilian taking the Imperial crown and his younger brother Archduke Charles II ruling over Inner Austria i e the Duchy of Styria the Duchy of Carniola with March of Istria the Duchy of Carinthia the Princely County of Gorizia and Gradisca and the Imperial City of Trieste ruled from Graz Charles s son and successor Ferdinand II in 1619 became Archduke of Austria and Holy Roman Emperor as well as King of Bohemia and Hungary in 1620 The Further Austrian Tyrolean line of Ferdinand s brother Archduke Leopold V survived until the death of his son Sigismund Francis in 1665 whereafter their territories ultimately returned to common control with the other Austrian Habsburg lands Inner Austrian stadtholders went on to rule until the days of Empress Maria Theresa in the 18th century Ferdinand II emperor 1619 1637 Ferdinand III emperor 1637 1657 Family Tree Leopold I emperor 1658 1705 Josef I emperor 1705 1711 Charles VI emperor 1711 1740 Maria Theresa of Austria Habsburg heiress and wife of emperor Francis I Stephen reigned as Archduchess of Austria and Queen of Hungary and Bohemia 1740 1780 Kings of Spain Kings of Portugal Spanish Habsburgs Edit See also Spanish Habsburgs and Philippine Dynasty Habsburg Spain was a personal union between the Crowns of Castile and Aragon Aragon was itself divided into the Kingdoms of Aragon Catalonia Valencia Majorca Naples Sicily Malta and Sardinia 48 From 1581 they were kings of Portugal until they renounced this title in the 1668 Treaty of Lisbon They were also Dukes of Milan Lord of the Americas and holder of multiple titles from territories within the Habsburg Netherlands A full listing can be seen here Philip I of Castile the Handsome first son of Maximilian I founded the Spanish Habsburgs in 1496 by marrying Joanna the Mad daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella Philip died in 1506 leaving the thrones of Castile and Aragon to be inherited and united into the throne of Spain by his son Charles I 1516 1556 aka Charles V Holy Roman Emperor divided the House into Austrian and Spanish lines The meanings of his arms are analyzed here Philip II the Prudent 1556 1598 also Philip I of Portugal 1581 1598 and Philip I of England with his wife Mary I of England 1554 1558 The meanings of his arms are analyzed here Philip III the Pious also Philip II of Portugal 1598 1621 Philip IV the Great 1621 1665 also Philip III of Portugal 1621 1640 Charles II the Bewitched El Hechizado 1665 1700 The War of the Spanish Succession took place after the extinction of the Spanish Habsburg line to determine the inheritance of Charles II Kings of Hungary Austrian Habsburgs Edit Ferdinand I king of Hungary 1526 1564 Maximilian I king of Hungary 1563 1576 Rudolf I king of Hungary 1572 1608 Matthias II king of Hungary 1608 1619 Ferdinand II king of Hungary 1618 1637 Ferdinand III king of Hungary 1625 1657 Ferdinand IV king of Hungary 1647 1654 Leopold I king of Hungary 1655 1705 Joseph I king of Hungary 1687 1711 Charles III king of Hungary 1711 1740 Maria Theresa queen of Hungary 1741 1780Kings of Bohemia Austrian Habsburgs Edit Ferdinand I king of Bohemia 1526 1564 Maximilian I king of Bohemia 1563 1576 Rudolph II king of Bohemia 1572 1611 Matthias king of Bohemia 1611 1618 Ferdinand II king of Bohemia 1620 1637 Ferdinand III king of Bohemia 1625 37 1657 Ferdinand IV king of Bohemia 1647 1654 joint rule Leopold I king of Bohemia 1655 1705 Joseph I king of Bohemia 1687 1711 Charles VI king of Bohemia 1711 1740 Maria Theresa queen of Bohemia 1743 1780Titular Dukes of Burgundy Lords of the Netherlands Edit Charles the Bold controlled not only Burgundy both dukedom and county but also Flanders and the broader Burgundian Netherlands Frederick III managed to secure the marriage of Charles s only daughter Mary of Burgundy to his son Maximilian The wedding took place on the evening of 16 August 1477 after the death of Charles 49 Mary and the Habsburgs lost the Duchy of Burgundy to France but managed to defend and hold onto the rest what became the 17 provinces of the Habsburg Netherlands After Mary s death in 1482 Maximilian acted as regent for his son Philip the Handsome Philip the Handsome 1482 1506 Charles V 1506 1555 Margaret of Austria Duchess of Savoy regent 1507 1515 and 1519 1530 Mary of Hungary dowager queen of Hungary sister of Charles V governor of the Netherlands 1531 1555 Margaret of Parma illegitimate daughter of Charles V Duchess of Parma and mother of Alexander Farnese Duke of Parma governor 1559 1567 Don John of Austria illegitimate son of Charles V victor of Lepanto governor of the Netherlands 1576 1578 Alexander Farnese Duke of Parma son of Margaret of Parma governor of the Netherlands 1578 1592 The Netherlands were frequently governed directly by a regent or governor general who was a collateral member of the Habsburgs By the Pragmatic Sanction of 1549 Charles V combined the Netherlands into one administrative unit to be inherited by his son Philip II Charles effectively united the Netherlands as one entity The Habsburgs controlled the 17 Provinces of the Netherlands until the Dutch Revolt in the second half of the 16th century when they lost the seven northern Protestant provinces They held onto the southern Catholic part roughly modern Belgium and Luxembourg as the Spanish and Austrian Netherlands until they were conquered by French Revolutionary armies in 1795 The one exception to this was the period of 1601 1621 when shortly before Philip II died on 13 September 1598 he renounced his rights to the Netherlands in favor of his daughter Isabella and her fiance Archduke Albert of Austria a younger son of Emperor Maximilian II The territories reverted to Spain on the death of Albert in 1621 as the couple had no surviving offspring and Isabella acted as regent governor until her death in 1633 the Archdukes Albert and Isabella 1601 1621 Habsburg Lorraine Edit The War of the Austrian Succession took place after the extinction of the male line of the Austrian Habsburg line upon the death of Charles VI The direct Habsburg line itself became totally extinct with the death of Maria Theresa of Austria when it was followed by the House of Habsburg Lorraine Holy Roman Emperors Kings of Hungary and Bohemia Archdukes of Austria House of Habsburg Lorraine main line Edit Francis I Stephen emperor 1745 1765 Family Tree Joseph II emperor 1765 1790 Leopold II emperor 1790 1792 Family Tree Francis II emperor 1792 1806 Family Tree Queen Maria Christina of Austria of Spain great granddaughter of Leopold II Holy Roman Emperor above Wife of Alfonso XII of Spain and mother of Alfonso XIII of the House of Bourbon Alfonso XIII s wife Victoria Eugenie of Battenberg was descended from King George I of Great Britain from the Habsburg Leopold Line above The House of Habsburg Lorraine retained Austria and attached possessions after the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire see below A son of Leopold II was Archduke Rainer of Austria whose wife was from the House of Savoy a daughter Adelaide Queen of Sardina was the wife of King Victor Emmanuel II of Piedmont Savoy and Sardinia and King of Italy Their Children married into the Royal Houses of Bonaparte Saxe Coburg and Gotha Braganca Portugal Savoy Spain and the Dukedoms of Montferrat and Chablis Emperors of Austria House of Habsburg Lorraine main line Edit Francis I Emperor of Austria 1804 1835 formerly Francis II Holy Roman Emperor Family Tree Ferdinand I Emperor of Austria 1835 1848 Francis Joseph Emperor of Austria 1848 1916 Charles I Emperor of Austria 1916 1918 He died in exile in 1922 His wife was of the House of Bourbon Parma Kings of Hungary Habsburg Lorraine Edit Joseph II king of Hungary 1780 1790 Leopold II king of Hungary 1790 1792 Francis king of Hungary 1792 1835 Ferdinand V king of Hungary and Bohemia 1835 1848 Francis Joseph I king of Hungary 1867 1916 Charles IV king of Hungary 1916 1918Kings of Bohemia Habsburg Lorraine Edit Joseph II king of Bohemia 1780 1790 Leopold II king of Bohemia 1790 1792 Francis II king of Bohemia 1792 1835 Ferdinand V king of Bohemia 1835 1848 Francis Joseph king of Bohemia 1848 1916 Charles I king of Bohemia 1916 1918Italian branches Edit Grand dukes of Tuscany House of Habsburg Lorraine Edit Francis Stephen 1737 1765 later Francis I Holy Roman Emperor Francis Stephen assigned the grand duchy of Tuscany to his second son Peter Leopold who in turn assigned it to his second son upon his accession as Holy Roman Emperor Tuscany remained the domain of this cadet branch of the family until Italian unification Peter Leopold 1765 1790 later Leopold II Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand III 1790 1800 1814 1824 Family Tree Leopold II 1824 1849 1849 1859 Ferdinand IV 1859 1860Dukes of Modena Austria Este branch of the House of Habsburg Lorraine Edit The duchy of Modena was assigned to a minor branch of the family by the Congress of Vienna It was lost to Italian unification The Dukes named their line the House of Austria Este as they were descended from the daughter of the last D Este Duke of Modena Francis IV 1814 1831 1831 1846 Family Tree Francis V 1846 1848 1849 1859Duchess of Parma House of Habsburg Lorraine Edit The duchy of Parma was likewise assigned to a Habsburg but did not stay in the House long before succumbing to Italian unification It was granted to the second wife of Napoleon I of France Maria Luisa Duchess of Parma a daughter of the Francis II Holy Roman Emperor who was the mother of Napoleon II of France Napoleon had divorced his wife Rose de Tascher de la Pagerie better known to history as Josephine de Beauharnais in her favor Maria Luisa 1814 1847 Family Tree Other monarchies Edit King of England Edit Philip II of Spain Jure uxoris King with Mary I of England 1554 1558 Empress consort of Brazil and Queen consort of Portugal House of Habsburg Lorraine Edit Dona Maria Leopoldina of Austria 22 January 1797 11 December 1826 was an archduchess of Austria Empress consort of Brazil and Queen consort of Portugal Empress consort of France House of Habsburg Lorraine Edit Marie Louise of Austria 1810 1814Emperor of Mexico House of Habsburg Lorraine Edit Coat of Arms of the Mexican Empire adopted by Maximilian I in 1864 Maximilian the adventurous second son of Archduke Franz Karl was invited as part of Napoleon III s manipulations to take the throne of Mexico becoming Emperor Maximilian I of Mexico The conservative Mexican nobility as well as the clergy supported this Second Mexican Empire His consort Charlotte of Belgium a daughter of King Leopold I of Belgium and a princess of the House of Saxe Coburg Gotha encouraged her husband s acceptance of the Mexican crown and accompanied him as Empress Carlota of Mexico The adventure did not end well Maximilian was shot in Cerro de las Campanas Queretaro in 1867 by the republican forces of Benito Juarez Maximilian I 1864 1867 Family Tree List of post monarchical Habsburgs EditSee also Carloctavismo Main Habsburg Lorraine line Edit Charles I was expelled from his domains after World War I and the empire was abolished 44 Current personal arms of the head of the house of Habsburg claiming only the personal title of Archduke Charles I 1918 1922 Family Tree Otto von Habsburg 1922 2007 50 Zita of Bourbon Parma guardian 1922 1930 Karl von Habsburg 2007 present House of Habsburg Tuscany Edit Ferdinand IV 1860 1908 Archduke Joseph Ferdinand Prince of Tuscany 1908 1942 Archduke Peter Ferdinand Prince of Tuscany 1942 1948 Archduke Gottfried Prince of Tuscany 1948 1984 Archduke Leopold Franz Prince of Tuscany 1984 1993House of Habsburg Este Edit Francis V 1859 1875 Franz Ferdinand Archduke of Austria Este amp Crown Prince of Austria Hungary 1875 1914 Karl Archduke of Austria Este 1914 1917 Robert Archduke of Austria Este 1917 1996 Lorenz Archduke of Austria Este 1996 Present See also EditA E I O U Habsburg monarchy Habsburg Spain Royal intermarriage Habsburg family tree Heraldry of the House of Habsburg French Habsburg rivalry Habsburg MythNotes Edit a b c d e Jure uxoris a b Queen consort a b Titular claim rather than de facto a b Contested Title given to Philip II by his father Charles V prior to his marriage with Mary of England This was ensure that Philip would not be outranked by his wife Through Archduke Lorenz of Austria Este German Haus Habsburg pronounced haʊ s ˈhaːpsˌbʊʁk listen Spanish Casa de Habsburgo abzˈbuɾɣo Hungarian Habsburg csalad Italian Casa di Asburgo Dutch Huis van Habsburg ɦœy s vɑn ɦɑpsbʏɾx Polish dom Habsburgow Portuguese Casa de Habsburgo Latin Domus Habsburg French Maison des Habsbourg German Haus Osterreich pronounced haʊ s ˈoːsteʁaɪ c listen Spanish Casa de Austria Dutch Huis van Oostenrijk ɦœy s vɑn oːste n ɾɛi k Polish dom Austrii Latin Domus Austriae French Maison d Autriche Hungarian Ausztria Haza Italian Casa d Austria Portuguese Casa da AustriaReferences Edit Kiva Cross and Crown The Pescos Indians and New Mexico p 251 Letters of Don Diego de Vargas to His Family from New Spain and New Mexico p 56 The House of Austria the Habsburgs and the Empire house of Habsburg Rulers Motto History Map amp Inbreeding Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2021 09 13 Habsburger Gedenkjahr im Aargau Neue Zurcher Zeitung page 17 23 May 2008 art tv ch Archived from the original on September 21 2008 Kanton Aargau in German Archived from the original on December 23 2008 Jean Berenger C A Simpson 2014 A History of the Habsburg Empire 1273 1700 Routledge pp 12 13 ISBN 978 1317895701 Martyn Rady 2020 1 Castle Habsburg and the fortinbras Effect The Habsburgs The Rise and Fall of a World Power Penguin UK ISBN 978 0141987194 a b c d e f g Heinz Dieter Heimann Die Habsburger Dynastie und Kaiserreiche ISBN 3 406 44754 6 Naumann 1855 pp 11 passim sfn error no target CITEREFNaumann1855 help Kos 1985 p 260 France Dolinar amp al Slovenski zgodovinski atlas Ljubljana Nova revija 2011 p 72 Hugh Agnew The Czechs and the Lands of the Bohemian Crown Studies of Nationalities Stanford Hoover Institution Press 2004 p 29 Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels Furstliche Hauser Band XIV Limburg ad der Lahn Germany C A Starke Verlag 1991 pp 91 93 ISBN 978 3 7980 0700 0 a b Erbe 2000 p sfn error no target CITEREFErbe2000 help Callaghan 2019 pp 112 114 sfn error no target CITEREFCallaghan2019 help Wilson Peter H October 27 2010 The Thirty Years War A Sourcebook Macmillan International Higher Education ISBN 9781137069771 via Google Books The Hungary was partly under Habsburg rule from 1526 For 150 years most of the country was occupied by the Ottoman Turks but these territories were re conquered in 1683 1699 a b Ceballos FC Alvarez G 2013 Royal dynasties as human inbreeding laboratories the Habsburgs Heredity 111 2 114 121 doi 10 1038 hdy 2013 25 PMC 3716267 PMID 23572123 Vilas Roman Ceballos Francisco C Al Soufi Laila Gonzalez Garcia Raul Moreno Carlos Moreno Manuel Villanueva Laura Ruiz Luis Mateos Jesus Gonzalez David Ruiz Jennifer 2019 12 02 Is the Habsburg jaw related to inbreeding Annals of Human Biology 46 7 8 553 561 doi 10 1080 03014460 2019 1687752 ISSN 0301 4460 PMID 31786955 S2CID 208536371 Hollway Deon December 2014 The Habsburg Chin History Magazine Vol 16 no 2 pp 6 7 Bittles amp Grant 2002 pp 111 130 Alvarez Gonzalo Ceballos Francisco C Quinteiro Celsa April 15 2009 Bauchet Marc ed The Role of Inbreeding in the Extinction of a European Royal Dynasty PLOS ONE 4 4 e5174 Bibcode 2009PLoSO 4 5174A doi 10 1371 journal pone 0005174 PMC 2664480 PMID 19367331 Maria Theresa was originally engaged to Leopold Clement of Lorraine older brother of Francis Stephan a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Austria Hungary Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 3 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 2 39 Microsoft Encarta The height of the dual monarchy Timothy Snyder The Red Prince The Secret Lives of a Habsburg Archduke 2008 James Longo Hitler and the Habsburgs The Fuhrer s Vendetta Against the Austrian Royals 2018 Bob Carruthers Hitler s Violent Youth How Trench Warfare and Street Fighting Moulded Hitler 2015 On Habsburg and the diversity Pieter M Judson The Habsburg Empire A New History Harvard 2016 Christopher Clark The Sleepwalkers New York 2012 Wolfgang Mueller Die sowjetische Besatzung in Osterreich 1945 1955 und ihre politische Mission German The Soviet occupation in Austria 1945 1955 and its political mission 2005 p 24 Otmar Lahodynsky Paneuropaisches Picknick Die Generalprobe fur den Mauerfall Pan European picnic the dress rehearsal for the fall of the Berlin Wall German in Profil 9 August 2014 Thomas Roser DDR Massenflucht Ein Picknick hebt die Welt aus den Angeln German Mass exodus of the GDR A picnic clears the world in Die Presse 16 August 2018 Elisabeth Boeckl Klamper Thomas Mang Wolfgang Neugebauer Gestapo Leitstelle Wien 1938 1945 Vienna 2018 ISBN 978 3 902494 83 2 pp 299 305 a b c Jean Marie Moeglin 2011 L Empire et le Royaume Entre indifference et fascination 1214 1500 Villeneuve d Ascq Presses universitaires du Septentrion Charles IV the greatest Czech Prague eu The Golden Bull of the Emperor Charles IV 1356 A D Yale Law School The Avalon Project Madariaga Orbea Juan 2014 Sociedad y lengua vasca en los siglos XVII y XVIII Euskaltzaindia p 712 Charles V Pierre Chaunu and Michele Escamilla Cornelius August Wilkens 1897 VIII Juan de Valdes Spanish Protestants in the Sixteenth Century William Heinemann p 66 Retrieved 24 July 2015 Habsburci a jejich jazykova vybavenost Forum zajemcu o historii 2010 Mutschlechner Martin Franz Joseph childhood and upbringing The World of the Habsburgs Foltynova Terezie 2014 Dr Otto von Habsburg a jeho proevropsky prinos Dr Otto von Habsburg and his pro European contribution Masaryk University Brno The Kingdom of Germany formed the central part of the Holy Roman Empire Its rulers were styled King of the Romans before their coronation as Emperors Geoffrey Parker The Grand Strategy of Philip II 2000 a b c Montgomery Massingberd Hugh Burke s Royal Families of the World Volume I Europe amp Latin America 1977 pp 18 32 ISBN 0 85011 023 8 Heinz Dieter Heimann 2001 Die Habsburger Dynastie und Kaiserreiche C H Beck p 22 ISBN 978 3 406 44754 9 Bonner Andreas 2010 Die Religionspolitik der Habsburger Kaiser in der Zeit des Dreissigjahrigen Krieges GRIN Verlag p 7 ISBN 978 3 640 50510 4 The World of Habsburgs 2011 Retrieved 2019 04 21 Cowans 2003 pp 26 27 sfn error no target CITEREFCowans2003 help Heinz Dieter Heimann Die Habsburger Dynastie und Kaiserreiche ISBN 3 406 44754 6 pp 38 45 Otto von Habsburg heir to Austria s last emperor dies at 98 The Local Germany s News in English 2011 07 04 Retrieved 18 December 2012 Sources EditAgamov A M Dynasties of Europe 400 2016 Complete Genealogy of Sovereign Houses in Russian Moscow 2017 pp 27 33 Bittles AH Grant JC 2002 Does inbreeding lead to decreased human fertility Human Biology 29 2 111 130 doi 10 1080 03014460110075657 PMID 11874619 S2CID 31317976 Brewer Ward Daniel A The House of Habsburg A Genealogy of the Descendants of Empress Maria Theresia Clearfield 1996 Crankshaw Edward The Fall of the House of Habsburg Sphere Books Limited London 1970 First published by Longmans in 1963 Evans Robert J W The Making of the Habsburg Monarchy 1550 1700 An Interpretation Clarendon Press 1979 Fichtner Paula Sutter 1976 Dynastic Marriage in Sixteenth Century Habsburg Diplomacy and Statecraft An Interdisciplinary Approach The American Historical Review 81 2 243 265 doi 10 2307 1851170 JSTOR 1851170 McGuigan Dorothy Gies The Habsburgs Doubleday 1966 Kos Milko 1985 Srednjeveska kultur druzbena in politicna zgodovina Slovencev Slovenska Matica Palmer Alan Napoleon and Marie Louise The Emperor s Second Wife St Martin s Press 2001 Rady Martyn The Habsburgs To Rule the World Basic Books 2020 Wandruszka Adam The House of Habsburg Six Hundred Years of a European Dynasty Doubleday 1964 Greenwood Press 1975 External links Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Habsburg Wikimedia Commons has media related to House of Habsburg Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Habsburgs Newspaper clippings about House of Habsburg in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW The World of the Habsburgs Royal house House of HabsburgFounding year 12th centuryPreceded byPremyslid dynasty Ruling House of the Duchy of Austria1282 1453 Duchy Elevated Became ArchduchyPreceded byHouse of Luxembourg Ruling House of Holy Roman Empire1440 1740 Succeeded byHouse of WittelsbachNew titleUnion of Austria and Hungary Ruling House of Archduchy of Austria1453 1780 House of Habsburg Lorraine Extinction of direct male linePreceded byHouse of Jagiellon Ruling House of Kingdom of Hungary1526 1780Ruling House of Kingdom of Croatia1527 1780Ruling House of Kingdom of Bohemia1526 1780Preceded byHouse of Aviz Ruling House of Kingdom of Portugal and the Algarves1580 1640 Succeeded byHouse of BraganzaPreceded byHouse of Trastamara Ruling House of Kingdom of Spain1504 1700 Succeeded byHouse of BourbonPreceded byHouse of Savoy Ruling House of Kingdom of Sicily1720 1734Preceded byHouse of Valois Ruling House of the Duchy of Burgundy and the Burgundian Netherlands1477 1700Preceded byHouse of Bourbon Ruling House of Kingdom of Naples1713 1735Ruling House of Kingdom of Sardinia1713 1735 Succeeded byHouse of SavoyRuling House of the Duchy of Burgundy and the Burgundian Netherlands1713 1780 Succeeded byHouse of Habsburg Lorraine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title House of Habsburg amp oldid 1131809459, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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