Authors: Brigitte Hamann
B
RIGITTE
H
AMANN
S
o as to be able to develop the most important themes, I have occasionally abandoned strict chronological order, preferring to summarize the ample available material by subject. The most significant dates are therefore placed at the beginning to make it easier for readers to get their bearings.
August 18, 1830 | Franz Joseph born in Vienna |
December 24, 1837 | Elisabeth born in Munich |
December 2, 1848 | Emperor Franz Joseph’s accession to the throne |
1849 | Subjugation of Hungary with Russian military aid |
July 1853 to March 18, 1853 | Crimean War. Consequences: Russia loses her preeminence in Europe to France; enmity between Austria and Russia |
August 18, 1853 | Engagement in Bad Ischl |
April 24, 1854 | Wedding in the Augustinerkirche, Vienna |
March 5, 1855 | Birth of Archduchess Sophie (d. 1857) |
July 15, 1856 | Birth of Archduchess Gisela |
August 21, 1858 | Birth of Crown Prince Rudolf |
June 1859 | Austria wages war against Sardinia and France; Austria is defeated at Magenta and retreats from Solferino |
November 1859 | Peace of Zurich; Austria loses Lombardy |
February 1861 | The King and Queen of the Two Sicilies flee from Naples to Rome |
March 1861 | Victor Emmanuel assumes the title of King of Italy |
September 1862 | Bismarck becomes Prussian Minister-President |
August 1863 | Congress of German Princes, Frankfurt |
April 1864 | Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian accepts the imperial crown of Mexico |
1864 | The Danish War over Schleswig-Holstein, with Austria and Prussia fighting together |
June-July 1866 | War between Austria and Prussia; defeat of Königgrätz on July 3, 1866. War between Austria and Italy; victories of Custozza and Lissa |
August 1866 | Peace of Prague; dissolution of the German Confederation. No territorial losses of Austria to Prussia; loss of Venetia to Italy. |
1867–1871 | Beust serves as prime minister and chancellor |
June 8, 1867 | Franz Joseph crowned King of Hungary |
June 19, 1867 | Emperor Ferdinand Maximilian of Mexico executed |
August 1867 | Franz Joseph and Napoleon III meet in Salzburg |
April 22, 1868 | Birth of Archduchess Marie Valerie |
1870–1871 | Franco-Prussian War; France becomes a republic; the German Empire is created |
1871–1879 | Andrássy serves as imperial and royal foreign minister |
May 27, 1872 | Death of Archduchess Sophie |
1873 | World Exhibition, Vienna |
1875 | Death of Emperor Ferdinand I; Franz Joseph is his principal heir |
1878 | Occupation of the Turkish provinces of Bosnia and Hercegovina |
October 1879 | Conclusion of the Dual Alliance between Germany and Austria |
1879–1893 | Eduard Taaffe serves as prime minister |
1881 | Marriage of Crown Prince Rudolf and Stephanie of Belgium |
May 1882 | Triple Alliance among Germany, Austria, and Italy |
June 13, 1886 | Death of Ludwig II of Bavaria |
June 1888 | Wilhelm II succeeds to the German throne |
January 30, 1889 | Suicide of the Crown Prince at Mayerling |
February 18, 1890 | Death of Gyula Andrássy |
July 1890 | Wedding of Marie Valerie and Archduke Franz Salvator of Tuscany |
1897 | Badeni crisis, with dangerous ethnic riots |
September 10, 1898 | Assassination of Empress Elisabeth in Geneva |
November 21, 1916 | Death of Emperor Franz Joseph in Vienna |
The principal sources are cited with the following abbreviations:
Albrecht | Hungarian State Archives, Budapest. Papers of Archduke Albrecht. Quoted from the microfilm in Haus-, Hof- und Staatsarchiv, Vienna, by reel number. |
Amélie D. | Sexau Papers. Diary of Duchess Amélie von Urach. Partial copy. |
Amélie M. | Sexau Papers. Memoirs of Duchess Amélie von Urach to her grandmother Ludovika. Copy. |
Bern | Swiss Federal Archives, Bern. Political Reports of the Swiss Envoy in Vienna: E 2300 Wien. |
Bourgoing | Jean de Bourgoing, ed., Briefe Kaiser Franz Josephs an Frau Katharina Schratt (Vienna, 1949). |
Braun Papers | Haus-, Hof- und Staatsarchiv, Vienna. Papers of Court Councillor Baron Adolf von Braun. |
Corti Papers | Haus-, Hof- und Staatsarchiv, Vienna. Papers of Egon Caesar Conte Corti, materials for biography of Elisabeth. |
Crenneville | Haus-, Hof- und Staatsarchiv, Vienna. Papers of Count Franz Folliot de Crenneville. |
Elisabeth | Swiss Federal Archives, Bern. Literary Bequest of Empress Elisabeth of Austria: J I. 64. |
Festetics | Széchenyi Library, Budapest. Manuscript Collection. Diary of Countess Marie Festetics. |
Fürstenberg | Fürstenberg Family Archives in Weitra/Waldviertel. Letters from Landgravine Therese to her family. |
Grünne | Grünne Family Archives in Dobersberg/Waldviertel. Letters from Empress Elisabeth to Karl Count Grünne. |
Hübner | Historical Institute, University of Padua. Diary of Count Alexander von Hübner. |
Khevenhüller | Haus-, Hof- und Staatsarchiv, Vienna. Depot Khevenhüller. Diary of Prince Carl Khevenhüller-Metsch. |
Nostitz | Georg Nostitz-Rieneck, Briefe Kaiser Franz Joseph an Kaiserin Elis abeth , 2 vols. (Vienna, 1966). |
Rudolf | Haus-, Hof- und Staatsarchiv, Vienna. Family Archives, Papers of Crown Prince Rudolf. |
Scharding | Carlo Scharding, Das Schicksal der Kaiserin Elisabeth (privately printed, n.p., n.d.), with letters from Countess de Jonghe to her family. |
Schnürer | Franz Schnürer, ed., Briefe Kaiser Franz Josephs I. an seine Mutter 1838–1872 (Munich, 1930). |
Sexau Papers | Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Munich. Manuscript Collection. Papers of Richard Sexau. Materials for the biography of Duke Karl Theodor of Bavaria. |
Sophie | Haus-, Hof- und Staatsarchiv, Vienna. Papers of Archduchess Sophie. Diary. |
Valerie | Sexau Papers. Diary of Archduchess Marie Valerie. Partial copy. |
In addition, the following abbreviations are used throughout the notes: | |
AA | Archiv des Auswärtigen Amtes (Foreign Office Archives), Bonn |
BAB | Schweizer Bundesarchiv (Swiss Federal Archives), Bern |
BStB | Bayerische Staatsbibliothek (Bavarian State Library), Munich |
DStB | Deutsche Staatsbibliothek (German State Library), Berlin |
FA | Familienarchiv (Family Archives) |
GHA | Geheimes Hausarchiv (Secret Family Archives), Munich |
HHStA | Haus-, Hof- und Staatsarchiv, Vienna |
I.B. | Informationsbüro |
NFP | Neue Freie Presse |
NWT | Neues Wiener Tagblatt |
OMeA | Obersthofmeisteramt (Office of Chief Chamberlain) |
SStA | Sächsisches Staatsarchiv (Saxon State Archives), Dresden |
StbW | Stadtbibliothek (Municipal Library), Vienna |
CHAPTER ONE
O
n Thursday, August 18, 1853—the twenty-third birthday of Emperor Franz Joseph I—a fifteen-year-old girl from
provincial
Possenhofen in Bavaria took her place in Austrian history. It was on that day that the Emperor asked for the hand of his cousin, Duchess Elisabeth of Bavaria. To no one’s surprise, he was accepted.
Until that moment nothing had occurred to call the bride to anyone’s notice. She was a shy young thing, only just past childhood, a long way from being fully developed. She was remarkably slender, with long
dark-blond
braids and light-brown eyes with a melancholy cast. She had grown up a child of nature, among seven high-spirited brothers and sisters, far from all the pressures of court life. She excelled at horseback riding, swimming, fishing, mountain climbing. She loved her home, especially the
Bavarian hills and Lake Starnberg, on whose shores stood the small castle of Possenhofen, the family summer residence. Elisabeth spoke Bavarian dialect, and her playmates were the children of the local peasantry. Her upbringing and manners left a good deal to be desired. Like her father and her brothers and sisters, she set little store by ceremony and protocol—which did not matter much at the Munich court. Since the ducal branch of the Wittelsbachs had no official function at court in any case, the family could afford to indulge in a colorful private life.
Elisabeth’s mother, Duchess Ludovika, had for some time been searching for a suitable match for Elisabeth, her second daughter. She had already made cautious and not very confident inquiries in Saxony. “I would certainly consider it a great happiness to think of Sisi as one of you … but alas, it is not likely to happen—for the only one who could be hoped for [presumably Prince Georg, second son of Johann, King of Saxony] is unlikely to consider her; first, I seriously question whether he would find her attractive, and then, he is surely looking for a fortune … true, she’s pretty because she is very young and animated, but she has no single pretty feature.”
1
When Sisi returned from Dresden in the spring of 1853, it was without a groom.
She stood completely in the shadow of her older sister, Helene, who was much more beautiful, better educated, more serious, and more widely admired; Helene was intended for a higher destiny—marriage to the Emperor of Austria. Compared to the older daughter, Sisi was the family ugly duckling. The fact that it was little Elisabeth who made the most brilliant match of the nineteenth century surprised no one more than herself.
*
The groom, Emperor Franz Joseph, was an exceptionally good-looking young man, with blond hair, soft features, and a very delicate, slender figure, flatteringly emphasized by the close-fitting general’s uniform he habitually wore. No wonder that he was the idol of all the Viennese countesses, all the more as he proved himself a passionate and spirited dancer at the balls of the high nobility.
This charming youngster with the exceptional good manners was one of the most powerful men of his day. His complete title was: Franz Joseph I, by the grace of God Emperor of Austria; King of Hungary and Bohemia; King of Lombardy and Venice, of Dalmatia, Croatia, Slavonia, Galicia, Lodomeria, and Illyria; King of Jerusalem, etc.; Archduke of Austria; Grand Duke of Tuscany and Cracow; Duke of Lorraine, of Salzburg, Styria, Carinthia, Carniola, and Bukovina; Grand Duke of Transylvania,
Margrave of Moravia; Duke of Upper and Lower Silesia, of Modena, Parma, Piacenza, and Guastalla, of Auschwitz and Zator, of Teschen, Friuli, Ragusa, and Zara; Count with Princely Rank of Habsburg and Tyrol, of Kyburg, Gorizia, and Gradiska; Prince of Trent and Bressanone; Margrave of Upper and Lower Lusatia and in Istria; Count of Hohenembs, Feldkirch, Bregenz, Sonnenberg, etc.; Lord of Trieste, of Cattaro, and in the Wendic Mark; Grand Voivode of the Voivodeship of Serbia, etc., etc.