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  • Elisabeth Married Her First Cousin, Emperor Franz Josef on Random Tragic Life Of Elisabeth Of Austria

    (#1) Elisabeth Married Her First Cousin, Emperor Franz Josef

    Elisabeth of Austria's mother and aunt decided her future from an early age. Princess Ludovika and Princess Sophie were ambitious, aristocratic sisters from Bavaria's ruling Wittelsbach family. They wanted their children to marry influential men in the ruling class.

    Princess Ludovika had two daughters, Elisabeth and Helene. Princess Sophie had a son, Austrian Emperor Franz Josef. Sophie arranged for Franz Josef, Elisabeth, and Helene to meet. Both women intended for 23-year-old Franz Josef to court and marry Helene, Princess Ludovika's eldest daughter. But Franz Josef was more interested in the 15-year-old Elisabeth. He married Elisabeth only eight months after their first meeting, on April 24, 1854.

  • Her Mother-In-Law Took Control Of Her Children And Mercilessly Taunted Elisabeth on Random Tragic Life Of Elisabeth Of Austria

    (#2) Her Mother-In-Law Took Control Of Her Children And Mercilessly Taunted Elisabeth

    Elisabeth's mother-in-law, Princess Sophie, was domineering and manipulative. Sophie took charge of Elisabeth's children's upbringing. She supervised their day-to-day and didn't allow them much contact with Elisabeth.

    Elisabeth and Franz Josef named their first child Sophie. She was christened at the behest of her grandmother without Elisabeth's input. In 1857, during a visit to Hungary, two-year-old Sophie and her infant sister Gisela, became ill, and the older child ultimately died from what was probably typhus. Elisabeth's mother-in-law used the incident to further strengthen her control of Gisela's upbringing, which estranged Gisela from her mother. Princess Sophie also routinely and savagely upbraided her daughter-in-law because she produced only female children. She wanted a son and heir to the Austrian throne. Eventually, Elisabeth gave birth to Crown Prince Rudolf.

  • Elisabeth Used To Sleep With Meat On Her Face on Random Tragic Life Of Elisabeth Of Austria

    (#3) Elisabeth Used To Sleep With Meat On Her Face

    Elisabeth was obsessed with her appearance, and she implemented some bizarre beauty techniques. She seldom ate meat, living mostly on dairy and eggs. Her regimen included daily workouts with gym equipment as well as equestrian and fencing exercises. Even a slight weight gain brought on days of fasting—her weight got as low as 96 pounds, which is very thin for a woman who was 5'8".

    Elisabeth placed high value on her remarkably long hair and spent nearly three hours per day caring for it. She wore no makeup, opting instead for creams made of whale oil, wax, and rosewater. She slept with raw meat and crushed strawberries on her face and soaked her nightclothes in vinegar in an attempt to preserve her tiny waist. Elisabeth had a secret staircase installed in one palace so that she could secretly binge in the royal kitchen without anyone's knowledge.

  • Elisabeth's Son Committed Suicide on Random Tragic Life Of Elisabeth Of Austria

    (#4) Elisabeth's Son Committed Suicide

    Elisabeth's son, Crown Prince Rudolf, was a progressive thinker with an outlook similar to that of his mother. Initially, he embarked on the life of a traditional crown prince—he got married in his early twenties to a member of the Belgian royal family and fathered a daughter in 1883. But Rudolf grew tired of marriage and the constraints imposed by the royal Austrian lifestyle. He attempted and failed to have his marriage officially annulled.

    He began numerous adulterous affairs and drank heavily. In 1888, Rudolf allegedly took up with a seventeen year old noblewoman named Mary Vetsera. The pair were found dead on January 30, 1889 at the Crown Prince's hunting lodge at Mayerling. Historians are unsure whether Rudolf committed suicide because was ordered by Franz Josef to terminate the affair or if he was depressed and unstable. Their cause of death remains murky. Rudolf received a special dispensation from the Vatican and was deemed "mentally unbalanced."

    He was ultimately allowed to be buried in the Hapsburgs' Imperial Crypt in Vienna.

  • Rudolph's Suicide Set The Stage For World War I on Random Tragic Life Of Elisabeth Of Austria

    (#5) Rudolph's Suicide Set The Stage For World War I

    The death of their son put a massive strain on Elisabeth and Franz Josef's marriage. Elisabeth spent the rest of her life traveling, largely absent from the imperial court. Had Rudolf assumed the throne after his father's abdication, the progressive prince would have likely ended Austria's alliance with Germany as well as Kaiser Wilhelm II. The move would have precluded the possibility of full-scale war in Europe.

    As a result of Rudolf's death, Franz Josef's nephew Franz Ferdinand eventually became the heir apparent to the Austrian throne. Franz Ferdinand's assassination in 1914 set off the events that triggered World War I. 

  • Her Husband, Franz Josef, Might Have Given Her A Venereal Disease on Random Tragic Life Of Elisabeth Of Austria

    (#6) Her Husband, Franz Josef, Might Have Given Her A Venereal Disease

    Franz Josef had a roving eye for other women and engaged in several affairs during his time as Emperor. Scholars believe that Franz Josef transmitted a venereal disease to Elisabeth. It explains Elisabeth's mysterious illnesses, prolonged absences from the Viennese court, and refusal to have any more children.

    Elisabeth eventually gave birth to another daughter in exchange for a guarantee from her husband that he would crown her Queen of Hungary in June of 1867.

  • She Was Close Friends With King Ludwig of Bavaria, Who Was Likely Gay on Random Tragic Life Of Elisabeth Of Austria

    (#7) She Was Close Friends With King Ludwig of Bavaria, Who Was Likely Gay

    Elisabeth and her cousin Ludwig, the eventual king of Bavaria, were quite close. Both achieved royal prominence early in life: Elisabeth was the Empress of Austria at 17, and Ludwig II became the King of Bavaria at 19. Under pressure to marry, Ludwig proposed to Elisabeth's sister, Sophie Charlotte, in January of 1867. But Ludwig ultimately called off the engagement in October of 1867.

    Ludwig never became engaged again and was very likely gay. After bankrupting the state of Bavaria with his grandiose castles, Ludwig was deposed by a government-led coup d'etat. He died three days later, on June 13, 1886, after drowning in a Bavarian lake. Elisabeth was deeply distraught over the death of her cousin—it was one of many tragedies that befell her later in life.

  • Elisabeth Was Assassinated By An Italian Anarchist On the Streets Of Geneva on Random Tragic Life Of Elisabeth Of Austria

    (#8) Elisabeth Was Assassinated By An Italian Anarchist On the Streets Of Geneva

    By 1898, the Empress Elisabeth only spent a few weeks out of the year in Vienna, opting instead to travel around Europe. In September of that year, Elisabeth planned to take a steamboat across Lake Geneva to Montreux. Elisabeth left her hotel for the short walk along the lake to the ship's boarding area. 

    Italian anarchist and fanatic Luigi Lucheni stalked Elisabeth and discovered she was staying at the hotel Beau Rivage. He approached the unprotected empress, appeared to stumble, and braced himself by leaning on Elisabeth. He stabbed her with an industrial file attached to a wooden handle, penetrating her heart and lungs. Because of Elisabeth's extremely tight corset, however, she didn't feel pain from the wound and successfully made her way to the ship. Only a few minutes after the craft's departure, Elisabeth collapsed and died. Authorities immediately arrested Lucheni, placed him on trial, and gave him a life sentence. He hanged himself in 1910.

  • Elisabeth Would Not Allow Photographs on Random Tragic Life Of Elisabeth Of Austria

    (#9) Elisabeth Would Not Allow Photographs

    Despite her renowned beauty and dedication to maintaining her looks, Elisabeth refused to sit for portraits or allow formal photographs beginning at the age of 32. She was famous for riding on horseback or walking in public with a fan or parasol covering her face to prevent people from photographing her.

  • Elisabeth Was Extremely Popular In Hungary on Random Tragic Life Of Elisabeth Of Austria

    (#10) Elisabeth Was Extremely Popular In Hungary

    Hungary was historically oppressed in the Austria-Hungary empire. In 1848, after popular uprisings in Hungary threatened Austrian rule, Franz Josef instituted harsh reprisals against the Hungarian people, which further damaged relations between the two regions.

    Elisabeth was sympathetic to Hungary, likely encouraged by her—possibly romantic—relationship with Count Gyula Andrassy, a Hungarian populist leader. Elisabeth eventually convinced her husband, after Austria's defeat at the hands of Prussia in 1867, that improved relations with Hungary and expansion into the Baltic states could reestablish Austria as a European power. Franz Josef and Elisabeth were officially crowned King and Queen of Hungary in 1867. Andrassy was named as the prime minister of the Hungarian part of the dual state. The union set off a period of stability and economic prosperity in the region. Elisabeth became extremely popular, and even today, she's revered in Hungary—numerous Hungarian memorials and statues are dedicated to her memory.

  • Elisabeth Was An Iconoclast Who Spent Great Lengths Of Time Away From Home on Random Tragic Life Of Elisabeth Of Austria

    (#11) Elisabeth Was An Iconoclast Who Spent Great Lengths Of Time Away From Home

    Elisabeth was not suited for a submissive, polite lifestyle. Many royals focused on their lineage, appearances, and producing as many male heirs as possible. Elisabeth, one the other hand, chafed at the egregiously formal, protocol-driven atmosphere of the Austrian court. After she gave birth to Crown Prince Rudolf she suffered a physical collapse that indicated that she might have tuberculosis. Her doctors recommended that she travel to a more tropical climate.

    She stayed on the Portuguese island of Madeira without her children or husband for six months. She so enjoyed the hiatus that she began traveling on a frequent basis. As she aged, her involvement in politics grew, and she influenced her husband on matters of state, especially in Hungary. By the end of her life, she spent virtually no time in Vienna. She believed Vienna caused her to become ill, displaying what many believe were psychosomatic symptoms.

  • Elisabeth's Father Likely Influenced Her Rebellious Attitude on Random Tragic Life Of Elisabeth Of Austria

    (#12) Elisabeth's Father Likely Influenced Her Rebellious Attitude

    Elisabeth's father, Duke Maximilian Joseph of Bavaria, was informally known as "Max" among his peers. A free spirit, he had a deep interest in music, especially Bavarian folk music. He traveled extensively around the world, including to the Middle East, Asia, and Africa. He even constructed a temporary circus behind his palace residence in Munich.

    He encouraged his daughter's adventurous personality. Elisabeth rejected rigorous academics in favor of equestrian pursuits and long hikes into the Bavarian countryside. Elisabeth's unorthodox upbringing seemed to limit her ability to adhere to a conventional royal lifestyle.

  • Elisabeth Is A Fashion Influence Even Today on Random Tragic Life Of Elisabeth Of Austria

    (#13) Elisabeth Is A Fashion Influence Even Today

    Because of her stunning looks and fashion sense, the Empress is an inspiration for modern designers. In December of 2014, Karl Lagerfeld introduced a line for Chanel inspired by Elisabeth's late 19th centuryaesthetic.

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