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Albert VI, Archduke of Austria

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Albert VI
Duke of Styria, Carinthia and Carniola
Reign10 June 1424 – 2 December 1463
PredecessorErnest
SuccessorFrederick V
Archduke of Austria
Reign23 November 1457 – 2 December 1463
PredecessorLadislaus
SuccessorFrederick V
Born18 December 1418
Vienna, Austria
Died2 December 1463(1463-12-02) (aged 44)
Vienna, Austria
Burial
SpouseMechthild of the Palatinate
HouseHabsburg
FatherErnest, Duke of Austria
MotherCymburgis of Masovia

Albert VI[1] (German: Albrecht VI.; 18 December 1418 – 2 December 1463), a member of the House of Habsburg, was Duke of Austria from 1424, elevated to Archduke in 1453. As a scion of the Leopoldian line, he ruled over the Inner Austrian duchies of Styria, Carinthia and Carniola from 1424, from 1457 also over the Archduchy of Austria until his death, rivalling with his elder brother Emperor Frederick III. According to tradition, Albert, later known as the Prodigal, was the exact opposite of Frederick: energetic and inclined to thoughtlessness.

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Transcription

As any schoolboy or schoolgirl knows, the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo June 28, 1914 was the match that touched off the conflagration of world war one. This channel, the Great War, follows World War One week by week exactly 100 years later. First, I’d like to talk a little about Franz Ferdinand himself, so here’s a very brief bio, but there are loads of books about him if you want to learn more. first of He was born in 1863, one of Austria’s 70 archdukes- it wasn’t called Austria-Hungary yet. He became very wealthy just before he reached his teens when his cousin died and he was chosen to inherit a vast estate. Another death in 1889 changed his destiny enormously- the suicide of his cousin Crown Prince Rudolf. This left Ferdinand’s father heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary, but he immediately renounced his position, leaving Franz Ferdinand next in line to rule the empire. He was still in this position when he died, by which time emperor Franz Josef was 84 years old and Ferdinand was 50. If you read pretty much any bio, long or short, of Franz Ferdinand, you’ll discover that not a whole lot of people actually liked him. Well, except his wife, the Duchess Sophia. She was a Bohemian aristocrat, but without actual royal blood, so the imperial house made certain that neither Sophia nor any of her children could inherit the throne. This also meant that they weren’t much accepted by the Austrian aristocracy, in spite of his position as the next emperor, and a lot of people went out of their way to treat the Archduke and duchess like crap. One other thing that every bio is sure to mention is Ferdinand’s passion for hunting- he apparently recorded over 250,000 creatures killed in his 50 years on earth. I suppose that’s really neither here nor there, but what IS here AND there are Franz Ferdinand’s beliefs. He was very conservative and... let’s just say “unenlightened” to be polite. He hated the Hungarians, he thought the Slavs were less than humans, and he actually referred to Serbs as “pigs”. He was also very strongly Catholic, which carried with it the anti-Jewish anti-Jesuit baggage of the times. He did love his wife with a great passion, though... and the preservation of the Austrian Empire, and THAT is something we’ll come back to in a few minutes. Before that, let’s meet his assassin; Garvilo Princip. Princip was a member of the Young Bosnians, one of several violent secret societies in the Balkans, and one who decided to kill Franz Ferdinand when he announced his June visit to Bosnia in March 1914. Okay, so in May, Princip and two associates went to Belgrade, Serbia, where they were provided with four pistols and six bombs by the Black Hand, and Princip had some shooting practice in a city park. That’s not especially relevant, I just thought I’d like to point that out. People had shooting practice in city parks back then. So, at the end of May Princip and company took an eight-day journey to Sarajevo, planning to kill the Archduke. It’s important to note that the Austrian authorities and the Archduke himself were aware of the danger of some sort of murder attempt, since these sort of things were pretty commonplace in the empire and especially in the Balkans. Here’s a quote from Ferdinand the day he began his journey to Sarajevo and his car overheated, "Our journey starts with an extremely promising omen. Here our car burns and down there they will throw bombs at us.” So... the evening before they were supposed to arrive in Sarajevo, Franz Ferdinand and Sophia surprised everyone by turning up early, just on impulse, and had a really nice time wandering around the town, which was a pretty exotic place back then, and later that evening came one of the great foreshadowing moments of all time; a member of the Bosnian parliament who had urged Ferdinand and Sophia to cancel the whole trip for reasons of safety, was presented to Sophia, and she said this: female voice over or actor’s voice over image of Sophia: “Things do not always turn out the way you say they will. Wherever we have been, everyone, down to the last Serb, has greeted us with such great friendliness, politeness, and true warmth, that we are very happy with our visit.” So far, so good. Then the guy, who was named Sunaric, answered, “Your Highness, I pray to God that when I have the honor of meeting you again tomorrow night you can repeat those words.” Really. Then they had a big banquet that night, and late the next morning- coincidentally their 14th wedding anniversary- the archducal motorcade left Sarajevo station. No fewer than seven Young Bosnian hitmen were deployed on the town’s bridges, one of which the Archduke had to cross. One of the Young Bosnians threw a bomb at his car, but it bounced off the hood before it exploded, wounding two of the Archduke’s men. The motorcade drove on to the town hall and they listened to a bunch of the usual speeches, and then after that, Franz Ferdinand changed his plans. He decided to visit the men who’d been hurt by the bomb to see if they were okay, so he wanted to go toward the hospital. But there was a lot of confusion over the new route and who’d been told what and who hadn’t, so when the Archduke’s driver turned off the Appel Quay, the general sharing Ferdinand’s car told the driver no, no- back up and continue on Appel Quay... ...so the driver stopped the car, which had no functioning reverse gear, right next to where Gavrilo Princip was standing. So Princip raised his pistol and fired twice from only a few feet away. Sophie died instantly, and Franz Ferdinand’s last words were “Sophie, Sophie, don’t die- stay alive for our children.” He died shortly after. It’s pretty amazing when you think about it that this whole enterprise could have possibly succeeded. It was so incredibly amateurish, and had the Austrian authorities taken any precautions whatsoever... well, I mean, think about it, there are loads of people who think the Black Hand had more to do with it, but you’d think they’d plan a little better, or heck, plan AT ALL. Anyhow, here were the immediate results: word of the assassination spread instantly throughout Europe, and in Bosnia by the end of July more than 5,000 Serbs had been jailed, many of whom were later hanged when the war broke out. Princip was put in prison, being 27 days to young to receive the death penalty under Austrian law. Now, there were one or two European leaders who were seriously worried about the political consequences of the act, but most of Europe reacted by thinking it was more of the same- the usual Balkan business, another Balkan killing. There was very little mourning, even in Vienna, for the unloved Franz Ferdinand, and his funeral service only lasted 15 minutes, but there was one thing that became apparent only years later.... You see, Princip, or the Serbs, or the Black Hand, or whoever you like to say was behind the killing, really really really got the wrong guy. Franz Ferdinand, for all his talk about Serbs being pigs, or Russian autocracy being a good model for the future, for all his backward and outdated beliefs, had strong opinions on two very important things; 1) in contrast to most of the empire, he was absolutely against any war with Russia, and stated repeatedly that he would do anything in his power to prevent it, and 2) since he put the empire above his personal beliefs, and to make the empire work once again, he was sympathetic to the idea of making the bi-partite state of Austria-Hungary into a tri-partite state of Austria, Hungary, and a union of the Slavic peoples as the third part of the empire. So when a Serb killed Franz Ferdinand, it was a killing that was not only against Serbian interests, but since the Austrian Empire used the killing as a justification to invade Serbia, even if it meant war with Russia- Princip killed the one and only person in the empire who was determined and able to prevent that war- Franz Ferdinand. That was number 3 of our Great War Prelude to war Special. Now if you missed the first two episodes you can klick here to watch both episode 1 and episode 2

Biography

Albert was born in Vienna, the son of the Inner Austrian duke Ernest the Iron from his second marriage with the Piast princess Cymburgis of Masovia.[2] Still minors upon the death of their father in 1424, he and his brother remained under the tutelage of their uncle Duke Frederick IV of the Empty Pockets,[2] who ruled over Further Austria and the County of Tyrol.

Coming of age in 1436, Albert, though a junior heir of Inner Austria, received no full rulership anywhere for a long time, which caused friction in his relations with his elder brother Frederick V. When in 1439 both Duke Frederick IV of Further Austria and King Albert II of Germany, Duke of Austria died, Archduke Frederick assumed the guardianship over their minor sons Sigismund and Ladislaus the Posthumous. As Habsburg patriarch, heir of Inner Austria and regent of Further Austria, Tyrol and the Austria proper, he then ruled over all the dynasty's hereditary lands. At that stage, Albert began quarreling with his brother and in 1446 claimed the lands of Further Austria from him.

Albert VI of Austria

The conflict between the brothers escalated when Duke Ladislaus Posthumous of Austria died childless in 1457 and Frederick, Holy Roman Emperor since 1452, came into his inheritance. Albert rose up and in 1458 occupied the western part of the Austrian archduchy "above the Enns" (later known as Upper Austria), which he ruled at Linz as a separate principality (Fürstentum Österreich ob der Enns) and, quite small, his portion of Habsburg patrimony. After laying siege to Frederick in the Vienna Hofburg, he also took over the reign of Austria below the Enns (now Lower Austria) in 1462. Albert however died childless the next year and all his lands fell back to his elder brother.

In 1452 Albert had married Mechthild of the Palatinate, daughter of Count Palatine Louis III.[3] Albert is credited for founding the University of Freiburg in 1457.[4]

Ancestry

Male-line family tree

Notes

  1. ^ Konstantin Moritz A. Langmaier: Erzherzog Albrecht VI. von Österreich (1418–1463). Ein Fürst im Spannungsfeld von Dynastie, Regionen und Reich (= Forschungen zur Kaiser- und Papstgeschichte des Mittelalters. Bd. 38). Böhlau, Köln u.a. 2015, ISBN 978-3-412-50139-6. Cf. http://www.regesta-imperii.de/fileadmin/user_upload/downloads/Regesta_Imperii_Beiheft_38_Druckv.pdf
  2. ^ a b Watanabe 2011, p. 132.
  3. ^ Watanabe 2011, p. 106.
  4. ^ Holtkamp 1998, p. 14.

References

  • Holtkamp, Wolfgang (1998). "Albert Ludwigs University". In Devine, Mary Elizabeth; Summerfield, Carol (eds.). International Dictionary of University Histories. FitzRoy Dearborn Publishers. pp. 14–17.
  • Watanabe, Morimichi (2011). Nicholas of Cusa: A Companion to His Life and His Times. Ashgate Publishing.
  • Langmaier, Konstantin M. Erzherzog Albrecht VI. von Österreich (1418–1463), Ein Fürst im Spannungsfeld von Dynastie, Regionen und Reich (Forschungen zur Kaiser- und Papstgeschichte des Mittelalters, Beihefte zu J. F. Böhmer, Regesta Imperii 38, Köln, Weimar, Wien 2015. Cf. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/337656429_Whaley_Review_Albrecht_VI_701202
Albert VI, Archduke of Austria
Born: 18 December 1418 Died: 2 December 1463
Preceded by:
Ernest
Duke of Inner Austria
(Styria, Carinthia, and Carniola)
1424–1463
with Frederick V
Succeeded by:
Frederick V
Preceded by:
Ladislaus
Archduke of Austria
1457–1463
with Frederick V
This page was last edited on 14 March 2024, at 15:37
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