Sisi's Legacy: The truth about Empress Elisabeth |History Stories Special

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The Viennese court was in turmoil. Arch Duchess Gisela had arrived because her mother, the eternally young and beautiful empress Elizabeth was dead. The image of the sweet likeable Sisi, the loving mother survives to this day. But what was Sisi really like? Of four children two survived both inheriting a substantial fortune. Sisi's granddaughter Elizabeth Marie also  lived in the shadow of the eccentric empress.   As toddlers they grew up without her mother in a golden cage. Her son Rudolph was under constant surveillance his suicide a tragedy. How did this woman shape the lives  of her children and grandchildren? In 1955, the first of three legendary "Sissi" films flickered across the cinema screen. It distorted the image of empress Elizabeth of Austria Sisi fascinated people then and still today. But such images have nothing to do  with historical reality. Sisi worked hard to cultivate her image as an aloof beauty. It was a mission she devoted herself  to with all her might a veritable cult. With her children on the other hand, she  had a rather dysfunctional relationship. (Michaela Lindinger, Curator) "Elizabeth simply didn't know what to do with her children or for that matter with children in general. She was a woman. If she had been able to live as she wanted, she would most likely not have had children at all." (Katrin Unterreiner, Art Historian) "There are women who do not find happiness in their role as mothers. Empress Elizabeth was a woman who  was so preoccupied with herself, that children just got in  the way of this obsession. She was never a happy mother."   With Franz Joseph, Elizabeth had a total of four children   of whom however only two would survive her. Nevertheless, she was at the top of a remarkable family pyramid.   Fifteen grandchildren and 55 great-grandchildren  are descended from the imperial marriage. (Martin Mutschlechner, curator) "The biological chain had to be maintained  over the generations. That meant that the priority was to produce offspring.    In the best case, healthy male offspring. Empresses in particular were often reduced to functioning as child-bearing-machines." After her marriage, Sisi tried to hide out in Luxembourg Palace at the gates of Vienna. An immense amount was expected of her. When Sisi finally became pregnant, conflict arose with her mother-in-law who had very precise ideas about how the young Empress ought to behave. (Michael Wohlfahrt, curator) "The people who went for a walk in the park were supposed to see that the Empress was really pregnant. Well, she hated it. Because Elizabeth was a very shy person. who couldn't stand being stared at. It was a nightmare for her of course." The tension eased only once she had given birth to a daughter who bore the name of the hated mother-in-law: Sophie. (Michael Wohlfahrt, curator) "The Imperial couple was particularly intertwined with this first child. And Emperor Franz Joseph was even present at her birth which was very extraordinary. And he also built up a very special relationship with his first daughter.   And loved her madly." One year later only a daughter again. Still no heir to the throne. The children's chambers were set up for Gisela and Sophie   in the Vienna Hofburg.  These rooms were far away from their parents' wing    near their grandmother. Life at court wanted it this way. Raising children was not the task of an Empress.   (Michaela Lindinger, Curator) "A Habsburg child is not just some baby or a toddler   one has to put up with.   But a future Prince. Possibly even a future Emperor or Empress in another country. Anything was possible." (Michael Wohlfahrt, curator) "The children's rooms were all furnished and equipped with toys. The girls had already been specially prepared   for their future role as princesses. That is, you have to imagine, there were dolls houses everywhere.    The girls had also already been prepared for the fact that they would one day be expected to dress elegantly and would, therefore, need to know how to style their wardrobe." In the spring of 1857, the Imperial family embarked on a long-awaited trip to Hungary. Even though both children were ill. (Katrin Unterreiner, Art Historian) "When a young family appears, hearts fly to them even more.   So that's something which reigning monarchies still work with today. What no one suspected was that the elder daughter Sophie was terminally ill.  Franz Joseph's mother warned them not to take her with them. (Michaela Lindinger, Curator) "She definitely told the empress: Don't take the children, it's too dangerous.   But Sisi got her way and the disaster happened." On the 29th of May, daughter Sophie died  in her mother's arms after hours of agony. Franz Joseph nevertheless continued his trip to Hungary leaving Sisi to make the two-day return journey alone. He sent a telegram from Hungary to his mother. Our little girl is now an angel in heaven. "At 10:30 last night after a long struggle  she found peace at last. We are annihilated." (Walter Hoff, psychoanalyst) "The death of a child is naturally a  traumatic experience for all parents.   And sooner or later one begins to question  oneself what actually went wrong there anyway? I think it was a heavy blow that  affected both parents very differently. Sisi fell into a severe depression. For months, day after day, she went to Sophie's tomb in  the Imperial Capuchin Crypt to mourn. This loss haunted Franz Joseph all his life. He felt the pressure of Court Society from lackies and ministers alike.   The continuity of his house was not assured.  A male successor had to be found as soon as possible. The birth of Rudolph, heir to the throne,  seemed like a Salvation from the crisis.   (Martin Mutschlechner, curator) "Finally, one can only say, the time came for a healthy boy to be born. (Michaela Lindinger, Curator) "Her family was happy   that this responsibility had now finally been fulfilled.   She had given birth to the heir to the throne. The child was healthy. The entire country rejoiced   from a sense of genuine relief for the empress and for the entire state." Elizabeth believed that she had fulfilled her Imperial duties. After falling ill sometime later, she started to travel. (Katrin Unterreiner, Art Historian) "She certainly didn't pick Madeira –  the one place that was furthest away from all possible short holiday destinations or spas – by chance." (Michael Wohlfahrt, curator) "A photograph was taken of her sitting with her ladies and waiting, all wearing sailor costumes. And this photo was of course sent to Vienna causing a scandal at court. The poor Emperor was pitied by society because he was always so dutiful and did everything to ensure that his children were well taken care of while his wife, by contrast, was having fun at state expense." In far away Vienna, Gisela and Rudolph  grew up without their mother. (Katrin Unterreiner, Art Historian) "Just imagine that: in the decisive years and months of their lives  she was simply away for two years. They couldn't remember her at all and always cried bitterly   when they were called to the strange  woman who wanted to hug them. And they always cried and resisted because this person was a complete stranger to them." (Walter Hoff, psychoanalyst) "The tragedy is, that once the brain has adapted to the environment, such impressions are very, very difficult to overcome later in life. If at all." Rudolph and Gisela shared a very close relationship throughout their lives. Even after being separated at the age of six. A new phase of life then began for the heir to the throne. Emperor Franz Joseph wanted a strong  and courageous son. In short: a soldier   Shortly after his son's birth, he  made Rudolph a colonel in his army.   He ignored the fact, however,  that his son was weak and sickly. (Michael Wohlfahrt, curator) "Emperor Franz Joseph had a huge soft spot for the military which had started in childhood.   This was very evident in his living rooms which were filled from top to bottom with battle scenes combat scenes. And so, of course, he expected his  son to develop the same ponchon   and in fact determined from the outset  that Rudolph should become a soldier." Franz Joseph wanted to slow down the mental development of his bright son so that the body could keep up, as he himself said. A friend of the emperor, Count  Gondrecourt, worked out a program of physical and psychological hardening for the boy. He had Rudolph exercise in the snow and exposed him to wild boar. (Michaela Lindinger, Curator) "This military style of Education was a huge problem. It's an approach to upbringing which looks completely absurd from today's point of view   Such as when he's woken up in the middle of the night by gunshots and is told he's in serious danger and has to get out of bed." (Walter Hoff, psychoanalyst) "I think that such experiences naturally destroy one's trust   in a good World in which nothing bad can happen to me. In psychoanalysis, there is something called 'basic trust'   which is formed in the first years of life. And now imagine what it's like for a child when  that doesn't happen. It experiences a state of absolute helplessness.   It is in a world in which it is more or less completely lost. (Katrin Unterreiner, Art Historian) "And there was no one there who would have noticed it in any way. And certainly no female caregiver. An informant told Elizabeth how her son was suffering. The empress intervened. (Katrin Unterreiner, Art Historian) "Then she really pulled the rip cord  and made sure that it was stopped immediately. And used all the power she  had over her husband, Emperor Franz Joseph." Sisi's maternal care, however, was short-lived. In the in the so-called 'Ischgl-Ultimatum' she simultaneously demanded her unrestricted freedom of movement. Then she left the Viennese Court once again.   The children remained with their father. She now spent more and more time in Budapest    where she met with the former revolutionary count Andrássy.  (Katrin Unterreiner, Art Historian) "Elizabeth was very attracted to the hungarians, to this proud non-submissive nation." To appease the dissatisfied, the Emperor avoided secession by creating a balance   and thus the dual monarchy was introduced.   The Emperor and Empress being additionally  crowned king and queen of Hungary. (Katrin Unterreiner, Art Historian) "And here she allowed herself, just once, to be harnessed for the interests of the Imperial house." For the kingdom, but also for family life, a phase  of relaxation was called for. In the summer months, parents and children regularly traveled to  the South's kamagot with a small Entourage. (Valentin Habsburg-Lothringen, Imperial Villa) "From 1877 onwards, it was much easier because the development of the Railway system had made it much faster and more  convenient so it was possible to travel   within seven to eight hours which  I think definitely became a ritual. The Imperial family found a retreat in  Bad Ischgl.    The 'Kaiser Villa' became the source of many memories for Sisi's children.  The Villa is still owned by the family today. (Valentin Habsburg-Lothringen, Imperial Villa) "It is a very private house. The other monarchs lived in more, I would say, ostentatious houses than this one. He was rather modest, I would say, compared to other European regions at the time. In any case, this became a fixed part of the year.    It must have been extremely pleasant for the children, too. To enjoy such a carefree existence, to be far less caught up in the corset of ceremonial court life."  During that time, the family increased for the last time.  Marie-Valerie was born in Hungary and took up a  special place within the family. Sisi showered  her with love and affection. At the Viennese Court Marie-Valerie would soon be nicknamed 'The Only One'. (Martin Mutschlechner, curator) "That meant, there was jealousy among the siblings. So the older siblings had a certain jealousy towards Marie-Valerie  who was really spoiled  by her mother and developed accordingly."   With Marie-Valerie, Sisi wanted to catch up  on everything she had missed with her older children.  Marie-Valerie always had to be close to  her. So mother and daughter traveled to Corfu,   to Rome, to Murano, to Ischgl, briefly to Vienna for the grandfather's death, then to Possenhofen in Bavaria,  and finally back to Budapest to Gödöllö Castle.   'The Empress, the Traveler' chanted the populace, mocking the restless mother. Marie-Valerie grew up in transit (Walter Hoff, psychoanalyst) "But here too, if we take a closer look at the relationship between   Marie-Valerie and Elizabeth, we will  notice that it's not this empathetic loving relationship    but one would say that Marie-Valerie was supposed to become a mirror image of her mother.  She didn't have a chance to be independent." Marie-Valerie suffered from Elizabeth's suppressive mothering.  The older she got the more stubborn, she became. The diary became a mirror of Marie- Valerie's soul.   She kept it meticulously for the rest of her life. She understood early on that she was her mother's only confidante.  A container into which all her mother's  world weariness would be poured.  "Terrible to think that I am the  only bond that ties Mama to this earth.   How often she has told me. What a responsibility, this motherly love is for me. Eventually, Marie-Valerie distanced herself emotionally from her mother and sought closeness to her father. (Michael Wohlfahrt, curator) "There is this scene: The Emperor is sitting at his desk while  Valerie as a child is sitting very quietly in a   corner of the writing room for hours watching  her father work. And he looks over at her now   and again to ask if she isn't bored and she  says no it's good to sit here only to watch you. And he just shakes his head and says  'Strange pleasure' and continues with his work." The eldest daughter Gisela also felt the sudden zeal of her mother. In 1872, Sisi decided the teenager's fate:    Prince Leopold of Bavaria was to be her husband. A royal relative from her Homeland. Gisela, herself, was not consulted. (Katrin Unterreiner, Art Historian) "Gisela was fifteen, the same age her mother had been when she'd been sold off to the Emperor of Austria. An incident, she never stopped complaining about all her life.  Nevertheless, she sold off her own daughter at fifteen.   It was actually a great trauma for the siblings  to be torn apart. But Elizabeth didn't really care." Gisela married her Bavarian Prince  and moved with him to Munich.   When she had a child a short time later, her  parents reacted very differently.   While Franz Joseph became fully absorbed in his new  role as grandfather, for Sisi it was a shock. The eternally young, eternally beautiful Empress   who preferred to be by herself  had become a grandmother at 36. She begrudged her own daughter  the happiness of a family.   In her poem she called Gisela a rake- thin sow and her children piglets. Marie-Valerie saw her mother take refuge in a world  of travel, riding and writing poetry. Elizabeth had an expensive  Villa built for herself on Corfu.   Marie-Valerie remained at her side,  daughter, friend and confidant all in one. Sisi nestled in and invented an alter  ego for herself calling herself the fairy queen Titania,  a character from Shakespeare.     Despite the non-stop changes of location, and Sisi's crushing care, Marie-Valerie had to  follow a strict curriculum: In January 1886, Marie-Valerie danced at a court  ball with the young Archduke Franz Salvator.   He came from the Tuscan branch of the Habsburgs.  The Italian relatives were known for their loose manners which earned them the reputation of the 'scandal line'.  Marie Valerie liked the young man. (Michael Habsburg-Lothringen, Historian) "Marie-Valerie was of course always in search of a brightening up,  a livening up.    And I think she succeeded very well in this by marrying Franz Salvator who was Italian by nature  and a person who didn't hide his cheerfulness." (Katrin Unterreiner, Art Historian) "Elizabeth succeeded in spoiling her daughter Marie-Valerie's entire Bridal time   the day of the wedding itself was a complete  disaster because she constantly made her feel guilty.   She always said now you'll leave me, too,  and I'll be alone forever. And Marie-Valerie, the good soul, suffered terribly. Believing herself to be only selfish for wanting to get married   and anguishing over whether she shouldn't rather  call it all off and remain with her mother. Sisi was disappointed and felt abandoned  by Marie-Valerie.   'Every new life is a disgrace', she wrote when her daughter  announced the birth of a child. Franz Joseph hardly got to see his Sisi in the next few years. Instead she provided him with a mistress, the actress Katharina Schratt,   already a companion to the Emperor, was to take on the role that the Empress herself could not fill. (Michael Habsburg-Lothringen, Historian) "On this issue, Marie-Valerie could not understand her mother   who merely said she was happy that the Emperor had someone to talk to. For Marie-Valerie, this woman had been deliberately installed by her mother, an action she could not condone." (Michaela Lindinger, Curator) "Above all, in her very Catholic morality, she rejected the fact that the Empress, that is her mother, also encouraged this 'traffic', as she called it."   (Martin Mutschlechner, curator) "This need for closeness was something  Elizabeth could not or did not want to give.   Katharina Schratt really managed to let him just  be human for once, so to speak, over coffee ans cake." Katharina Schratt was at the Emperor's side as a friend  and confidante for the rest of his life.   Marie-Valerie on the other hand expressed her  moral indignation by moving with her husband and   flock of children to Wallsee Castle in lower Austria,  a huge complex still owned by the family today.   Her arch-catholic upbringing  remained with her for a long time.   She endowed three churches and became  socially involved in her new hometown.   In the private chambers of the model family,  time has seemed to stand still. The furniture, which is over 100 years old, is a reminder  of the presence of the Imperial extended family.   (Michael Habsburg-Lothringen, Historian) "Wallsee became the family center. The family eventually expanding from four to ten children. For Emperor Franz Joseph, this was the moment when Easter and Christmas holidays were always to be spent with his daughter and her family. He was there to witness  firsthand their growth and prosperity." The Castle's collection also houses  Marie-Valerie's numerous diaries.   The emperor's daughter's most intimate thoughts  however remain under lock and key to this day. The late 19th century. The emperor planned to transform Vienna into a modern cosmopolitan city.  The so-called 'Ringstraßen'-Era began. The population grew to almost 2 million. Vienna was booming Meanwhile, Rudolph grew up alone in the Hofburg.  Liberal teachers had started to open his eyes to the world around him, causing the intelligent  teenager to become increasingly critical.    (Martin Mutschlechner, curator) "He didn't just want to be born    into the position of Crown Prince but he really wanted to be better in many respects  than those around him to show that he   deserved this position not only by birth  but also through his personal achievements." Rudolph faced a dilemma: on the one hand he  was experiencing a world in upheaval   on the other hand he was supposed to slip into  the role set down by his ancestors as quickly as  possible. And embody the future of the dynasty.    Rudolph's parents understood little of his inner conflict yet it reflected their own relationship:  a marriage that had failed. The Empress collected photos of beautiful people    and escaped into a dream world of travel the Emperor continued to work tirelessly on the affairs of state and was adept at keeping his son at arm's length. (Katrin Unterreiner, Art Historian) "For Franz Joseph, it was a matter of preserving what existed. and doing everything possible to ensure that what existed would continue to exist. Rudolph was friends with the leading intellectuals of his time,   with the leading journalists. And he came into contact with very liberal ideas.   Rudolph was the first Habsburg to have any idea  what was really going on in the world.  And that's why Franz Joseph didn't really know anything about his son's world of thought  but also because he didn't want to know. Rank and Imperial position made Rudolph the most  sought after Bachelor of the time. But that alone was not what made women's hearts beat faster. Rudolph had inherited his mother's charm.   He was seductive through and through, unpredictable, abysmal. Women fell at his feet in rows.   (Katrin Unterreiner, Art Historian) "Franz Joseph have had a perfectly functioning system of informers and knew in precise detail about every mistress  about every visit to every brothel." The political strategists in the Hofburg  wanted to marry off the heir to the throne   as soon as possible in order to put  an end to his free-spirited tendencies. Rudolph found what he was looking  for in Belgium and married the 16-year old daughter of King Leopold II – more out of a sense of Duty it seems than love. (Martin Mutschlechner, curator) "However, it very soon turned out that the two were completely contrary in character. Rudolph had a pronounced liberal attitude, questioning conventions whereas Stephanie thoroughly enjoyed her existence as Crown Princess,  as the future first woman of the Empire." Despite all expectations, a romance developed.  After a short time, Rudolph became the father of a daughter.  Elizabeth Marie. Nicknamed "Erzsi" who was later to cause a sensation in the Imperial family. Democracy, Industrialization, science.   Rudolph's response to all of these was diametrically opposed to the interests of the powerful among the nobility and clergy. The only thing left for the heir to the throne to do   was write revolutionary texts. (Michaela Lindinger, Curator) "Rudolph wrote that he was being watched day and night. He then invented cipher sheets through which he communicated with  the editors in chief. Disguising his articles so that his father wouldn't recognize his handwriting." It was practically like a surveillance  state from which he wanted to escape." Rudolph fell seriously ill he had caught  a venereal disease during his nocturnal   wanderings probably severe gonorrhea  affecting also his joints and eyes. The Crown Prince numbed himself with alcohol,  drugs and fleeting love affairs and spoke   increasingly of suicide. At the end of 1888, the young baroness Mary Vetsera began an   affair with Rudolph which resembled something  out of a cheap novel. Tragedy struck at the Mayerling Hunting Lodge just outside Vienna.  The heir to the throne was then quite sure that   he wanted to die and that he wanted to do it in  the company of the minor Mary Vetsera. He shot her When the bearer of hope of this ancient  dynasty killed himself six hours later   it was a tragedy that shook the  Empire and the family to the core. (Katrin Unterreiner, Art Historian) "The Imperial physician came to deliver his report  and said: 'Your majesty here's the bullet.' And Franz Josef asked 'Which bullet? What are you talking about?' And the personal physician replied 'The bullet with which he shot himself.'" (Walter Hoff, psychoanalyst) "The fact that his own child, his, a Catholic Monarch   voluntarily ends his life. And not only that, but  also killed someone else. That was quite a hammer blow. Somehow, Rudolph's end was also symptomatic of  the failure of the father-son relationship and, if you like, also of the failure of parenthood.  They must have been very aware of that." "Dear Stephanie, you are freed from my presence and  plague be happy in your own weight   be good for the poor little one  who is all that remains of me." Rudolph had transferred custody of his  daughter Elizabeth Marie to his father   probably out of fear that his pious  wife might put her in a Belgian convent. The mother would soon disappear from the Viennese Court. Erzsi, however, advanced to become the favorite   granddaughter of the Emperor who could not  refuse any of her wishes. Erzsi grew up pretty much alone at the Viennese Court. Her grandfather kept stories about her father away from her. She lived as if under a bell jar. All memories of Rudolph had to be erased as far as possible. (Michaela Lindinger, Curator) "She was certainly much lonelier    than the children of Elizabeth for example because they really didn't allow her to do anything.  They always made sure that she didn't meet any   staff who might tell her anything. You mustn't  forget that the farm was buzzing with rumors." (Michaela Lindinger, Curator) "Well, I can see a big difference between the upbringing of Gisela and Valerie and this new   girl now. I have the feeling that he wanted to  exert much more influence on the daughter of   Crown Prince Rudolph than on the previous  girls. And I can only explain that by the   fact, that he envisaged a much greater future for  her than being a piano playing wife or something." Soon the lonely teenager became  a rebel at the Viennese Court. The turning point came on a trip to  Trieste with her mother while the   widow was out looking for a new husband  in the city's cafes, Erzsi befriended a   girl of her own age and in her parents house  made a discovery that would change her life. Her friend's family had been pleasantly  surprised by the unconventional Crown   Prince and his ideas on politics, society  and science the astonished Erzsi learned   for the first time what kind of future  her father had had in mind for the empire. Driven by curiosity to learn more about the things  that had been kept from her at the Viennese Court   Erzsi rummaged through the huge library and came  across the writings of her late father Rudolph. (Martin Mutschlechner, curator) "We have here some very fine examples of the journalistic and literary work of Crown Prince   Rudolph. The two extremes can also be seen very  clearly: on the one hand there is the official   Crown Prince who for example actively contributed  to the Encyclopedia of the Habsburg Empire: 'The   austro-hungarian Monarchy in words and pictures'  significantly this work is still anchored in the   general historical consciousness as the work  of the Crown Prince. In addition, there is also   the secret anonymous journalistic activity of  Crown Prince Rudolph writings that were not   attributed to the Crown Prince during his  lifetime because they were so scandalous." (Michaela Lindinger, Curator) "And that's when her eyes must have been opened for first time. Private teachers also told her other things. Namely,   what was written in those articles, that there  were groups of people who had no say in their   lives whatsoever that was the first time she  had been confronted with something like that." Rudolph suicide plunged her  grandmother Sisi into a   severe crisis from which she was unable to  extricate herself for the rest of her life. She fell into a severe depression wearing  only black and longing for her own death.   She had not allowed herself to be photographed for  a long time. The rest of the family had long since   written Sisi off for her daughter Marie-Valerie  her mother was only a shadow of her former self. "When you don't always live with mum it's  even more striking how she makes life so   strangely difficult and sad for herself how  she sees misfortune in everything and has no   inner comfort at all my latest pregnancy makes her  unhappy and she has decided not to come this time." On the 10th of September 1898, Sisi fell victim   to the assassination attempt of the  anarchist Luigi lucani in Geneva. The daughters rushed to the  Vienna, to comfort their grieving father. (Michaela Lindinger, Curator) "He was the only one who suffered but he had  also predicted it would happen. He had written   to her again and again urging her not to  go to Switzerland, that it was dangerous, that there were social revolutionaries there, and that so many people had already fallen   victim to assassination attempts. She went  to Switzerland regardless. As if on purpose." (Martin Mutschlechner, curator) "The news of the death is of course a shock for the family. But on the other hand, I think, that   for many who knew Elizabeth more closely  and also for the members of the family, it   was definitely something positive. Because one  knew that Elizabeth was already very tired of   her life. Marie Valerie in particular who knew her mother very  well, actually realized very soon that this   was probably the best solution. To reach a  ripe old age, with the possibility of being   made infirm by illness would have been  pure horror for a person like Elizabeth." (Katrin Unterreiner, Art Historian) "And many people who knew Elizabeth very well, who are close  to her, actually understood that   things had turned out exactly  as Elizabeth had always wished." When the will was opened the family  was astonished the Emperor himself. Most of all at how immensely large  the fortune of his beloved Sisi was. Excluding their real estate, it was more  than 10 million Gilders, all invested   in solid securities, corresponding  today to around 145 million Euros. (Katrin Unterreiner, Art Historian) "She had her very exalted expensive and luxurious  lifestyle paid for 100 % privately by her husband. While he paid for everything she invested   the money that was actually at her  disposal very wisely and cleverly." The empress bequeathed two-fifths of  her wealth to each of her daughters   and one-fifth to her granddaughter  Erzsi. The favorite daughter Marie-Valerie was left best off inheriting an  additional legacy of one million Gilders. On the 17th of September, Sis's funeral took  place in the Cappuccine Crypt in Vienna.   The morning period for the people was to last  only a short time, that was the Emperor's wish. The new century began. Modernity took hold in Vienna. The 20th century was to  be marked by the new Bourgeoisie.   People experienced modest prosperity. New values and ideals. People now married for love, that was new. At the Viennese court on the other hand, people held  on to old traditions and rituals that   had governed courtly coexistence for centuries the   court was increasingly becoming a  bubble a relic of times long past. Although her grandfather took good care of  her, Erzsi reacted with rebellion and refusal. (Michael Wohlfahrt, curator) "She was an elegant figure no question, but   she was by all accounts an enfant terrible of the court." When she fell in love for the first time at  16, she sensed her chance to escape. But when   her beloved did not return her love  the Emperor was expected to force him. (Michaela Lindinger, Curator) "And then she might have really stomped on the table screamed, literally banged  her head on the table, and even threatened  to commit suicide like her father and that   was the limit for Franz Joseph. Someone from  the family committing suicide – again? I think   he would have given into anything just to  avoid having a teenage suicide in the family." Otto von Windisch Graetz finally married the young Archduchess  as she had no way of knowing at the   time that this marriage would later  become a heavy burden in her life. On the 28th of June 1914, the new  heir to the throne Franz Ferdinand   and his wife were shot by an assassin in Sarajevo. The news spread across Europe in a Flash and  became the trigger for the first World War. 17 million people would die. In the midst of the turmoil of War, on the  21st of November 1916, Franz Joseph died. The   eternal Emperor had reigned for almost 68 years. His Empire survived him for only two years. After the war, the victorious powers divided up   the Habsburg Empire in Versailles. A  republic was proclaimed in Austria.    The nobility either going into exile or  signing a declaration of renunciation. (Katrin Unterreiner, Art Historian) "Marie-Valerie, Gisela and Erzsi were, at least on paper, extremely wealthy women. But all that they inherited, a large part of which   was in the form of bonds, was worth nothing to  them in the 1920s and so they lost everything." (Michaela Lindinger, Curator) "If for example you were just an Archduke  and hadn't learned any profession then you  just had to see how you could get on in  life. There were all kinds of careers from   sausage friars, to actors, so of course people  tried all kinds of things to keep their heads   above water somehow. And they also tried  to marry rich like Erzsi's husband, Prince   Windisch-Graetz, who could basically do nothing  except ride a horse and drive a carriage fast." Crown Prince Rudolph had once described nobles  like Otto von Windisch-Graetz as a 'rotten pustule   on the state apparatus'. With his marriage  to Erzsi on the brink of collapse, his life   resembled a shambles. If he divorced Erzsi, his only  source of income would be extinguished. A bitter   war of the roses broke out. Both spouses were  not afraid to wash their dirty linen in public. "Even one of my relatives my cousin, who  was visiting my wife and staying with   her, she invited over supper to come to  her bedroom at two o'clock in the morning." (Michaela Lindinger, Curator) "Of course, things had now also been rolled out in the German language newspapers. So  in other words, everything that somehow affected   the private life of the Imperial Family. Actually  nothing was more avidly read. To think there was   actually a real Ex-Archduchess who was living  as a divorcee, was seen as a big catastrophe." The media showdown took place in the spring of 1921.  When Otto drove up under police escort to take the   children from Erzsi, he encountered numerous workers  at the gates of the castle who blocked his way. (Michaela Lindinger, Curator) "And they raised their axes so to speak and the peasants from the countryside also came   brandishing spades and sickles and saying  that the mother had done so much good for   them and that they, the people, were in  charge now and would protect the Lady.   Otto von Windisch-Graetz must  have seen and heard all of that." Otto was forced to leave having achieved  nothing the children stayed with Erzsi. In the following years, Erzsi became an emancipated  woman who enjoyed the wild twenties to the full. During the divorce, she was assisted by a  man who came from a completely different   world. The committed socialdemocrat Leopold Petznek who had grown up in the poorest of   circumstances. She, a woman from the top, and  he, a man from the bottom. Over the following   decades the couple represented the dream  come true of overcoming social barriers. The princess herself was an ardent member  of the Social Democratic Party but she   nevertheless clung to a princely lifestyle  all her life. A contradiction which provided   a feast for the press. The scandals didn't  stop: she allegedly drove to the MayDay   demonstration in a Rolls-Royce and was known  to treat her employees with condescension. Behind closed doors, people criticized the fact  that the elite of the workers movement threw   decadent parties in the Villa of Windisch-Graetz among the  finest furnishings of the Viennese Imperial Court. From now on, she was called the 'red archduchess'. Erzsi tried to come to terms with her past. She had  a workers housing estate built in her garden. She   disinherited her children, her grandmother's  inheritance was handed over to the state. Such a fate did not befall everyone in  the widely distributed Habsburg family. Even today some members are still among Austria's  most prominent large landowners but that is   only part of the legacy of the eternally young,  eternally beautiful, eternally eccentric Empress. (Katrin Unterreiner, Art Historian) "It's a great misunderstanding to think that the world was open to an imperial child actually quite the opposite was true. (Walter Hoff, psychoanalyst) "I think living in a world of make-believe was the reality of Court life at that time and even more so for the Austrian  monarchy which was in fact already breaking up." (Michael Wohlfahrt, curator) "All three, granddaughter included, were anti-aristocratic and they  got that from their mother."
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Channel: DW History and Culture
Views: 784,930
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: DW, Deutsche Welle
Id: L6LeyYMa9_o
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 52min 30sec (3150 seconds)
Published: Sun Aug 06 2023
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