Imperial Requiem: Four Royal Women and the Fall of the Age of Empires (43 page)

BOOK: Imperial Requiem: Four Royal Women and the Fall of the Age of Empires
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11
“We Must Help Each Other Get to Heaven”
 

(1910–11)

 

A
s Zita of Bourbon-Parma reached her late teen years, she had grown into a pretty young woman. Though not a classical beauty like Tsarina Alexandra, Zita inherited many fine features from both her parents. Like the Duchess of Parma, she possessed dark hair and deep-set chestnut eyes. From her father, she received the defined chin and jawline of her French Bourbon ancestors. With this type of exotic beauty and distinguished pedigree, it came as no surprise that as Zita stood upon the brink of womanhood, her admirers multiplied. The leading candidate for her hand was the pretender to both the French and Spanish thrones, her highly eligible yet overage cousin Jaime, Duke of Madrid, who was twenty-two years older than Zita. This Spanish prince’s infatuation with the teenage Zita grew from time he spent with his Parma cousins at Frohsdorf while he was on leave from his position in the Russian army.

Always a welcome guest at the Austrian home of his aunt the Duchess of Parma, Jaime spent many hours in Zita’s company. A mutual attraction took hold, though it was always stronger on Jaime’s part. Jaime, then in his early forties, was smitten with the young princess, who was still only nineteen. Though a frequent companion to Zita and all her sisters, Jaime did not hide his preference for the elegant, vivacious younger sister. It was not long before Zita sensed her much older cousin’s feelings.

Far from growing weaker, as time and distance might normally have been expected to do, Jaime’s infatuation grew as Zita reached an age when she could start to think about marriage. His commission with the Russian army took him to the front lines on more than one occasion during the Russo-Japanese War. Jaime saw combat in one of the war’s most decisive campaigns—the Battle of Liaoyang—which foreshadowed the fall of Port Arthur to the Japanese. When the duke returned from the front, it was always to Frohsdorf and to Zita, but because of his position as a pretender to the French throne, he was away in Paris for months, forcing him to settle for writing letters to his dear Zita.

This union was very much to the liking of Jaime’s stepmother, the Duchess of Madrid, as well as the Carlist community in Spain who hoped to one day see him sit on the throne as King Jaime III. His hopes of marrying his Italian cousin, however, were dashed. His outspoken criticism of King Alfonso XIII and Queen Victoria Eugenie did not earn him any points with the Bourbon-Parmas, who were sympathetic to the couple. He was further hampered in his pursuit by other major obstacles, including his advanced age and the implacable opposition of Zita’s mother, who protested on the grounds that Jaime and Zita were too closely related. He eventually discovered he could not make Zita his wife. As Jaime’s visits increased, the Duchess of Parma watched her daughter carefully. Her tempered opposition to the match doomed any plans for marriage between her daughter and the duke.

Like the late Duke of Parma, who could not bear the thought of any of his daughters being forced into a loveless marriage, Maria Antonia prevented her daughter from being roped into an arranged union. This decision may have had something to do with the disastrous outcome of the marriage of Robert I’s eldest daughter from his first marriage, Maria Louisa. Robert personally arranged her marriage to Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria (later king of the Bulgarians); the couple did not meet until their wedding at Pianore in 1893. Unfortunately, Maria Louisa and Ferdinand were deeply unhappy together, largely because Ferdinand found his wife unattractive, paid her little attention, and was bisexual. It cannot be said for certain whether or not Maria Louisa’s failed marriage was the Duchess of Parma’s only impetus for not forcing Zita into an arranged union, but it did play a part. Thankfully, the duchess’s decision destroyed any plans Don Jaime may have had for marriage, thus ending any chance of her daughter being locked in a marriage with a man who was old enough to be her father.

This episode spurred the Duchess of Parma into action. Maria Antonia knew that she had to act quickly to obviate an unsuitable romance. Although she hoped Zita would marry for love, Maria Antonia wanted a glittering future for her beautiful daughter. Though the political furor surrounding the Spanish and defunct French thrones was not to her liking, the Austrian throne was another matter entirely. Fortunately for this caring mother, Emperor Franz Joseph of Austria was also on the prowl for an ideal wife for his great-nephew and heir presumptive Archduke Charles. A pious, gentle young man with aspirations of being a career soldier, Charles was the son of the playboy Archduke Otto and the stocky, conservative Princess Maria Josepha of Saxony. Charles’s remarkable character was almost shocking in light of his father’s disreputable lifestyle. He came into his position as second in line for the throne after his father’s death in 1906. Before Zita realized it, and while Charles was on leave from his dragoon regiment, the machinations of Emperor Franz Joseph and the Duchess of Parma would work to unite the destinies of these two young people.

The head of the Imperial and Royal House of Habsburg, Franz Joseph was an extremely conservative man who detested change. After the invention of telephones and elevators, he refused to use either. When he was sick, he would not let his doctor see him unless the physician was dressed in formal court attire. The emperor was a paradigm from a different era of royalty that was becoming extinct. He came to the throne in 1848 when he was only eighteen after his uncle Emperor Ferdinand—a hydrocephalic epileptic whose neurological problems were legion—was forced to abdicate.

From that day forward, Franz Joseph’s reign was crippled by one calamity after another. In 1854, he married the stunningly beautiful Elizabeth, Duchess in Bavaria. Six years later, the nonconformist Elizabeth separated from her husband. She spent the next four decades wandering Europe, living on yachts and at resorts, trying to escape the pain of her life in Vienna. Franz Joseph’s brother, the emperor of Mexico, was executed. His only son, Rudolf, killed himself. When it appeared that the emperor and his wife were on the verge of reconciliation in 1898, Elizabeth was killed in Switzerland when a lunatic stabbed her with a nail file. Two years later came Franz Ferdinand’s historic decision to marry Sophie. In the hopes of conceding some ground to his heir, the emperor elevated Sophie to the rank of princess and, later, to Duchess of Hohenberg. These courtesy titles were the minimum requirements for Sophie to appear at court. Despite this token, the “marriage was awkward for Sophie. Even as the consort of the heir to the throne, her rank was lower than that of all the archdukes and archduchesses, including the children. She entered the halls of the Hofburg after little boys and little girls. The Hofburg was drafty in the best of times, but Sophie felt a special chill.”
618
For the rest of his life, Franz Joseph reminded his nephew and his wife of the eternal shame that their marriage brought upon the dynasty. But undaunted by his tragedies and misfortunes, Franz Joseph threw himself wholeheartedly into his role as Austria’s leader for more than sixty years.

This determination was all the more poignant because of Austria’s waning influence as a Great Power. The decline and fall of the Holy Roman Empire, the rise of Prussian hegemony, and the embryonic ethnic groups gestating within Austria significantly weakened its imperial integrity.

 

Austria-Hungary … was territorially the dominant force in central Europe … But in power terms it was regarded as an empire on the way down. Within its borders a dozen nascent nationalist movements were threatening to pull it apart. Respect for the inscrutable, irreproachably correct, dutiful and patient emperor Franz Joseph … was increasingly cited as the only thing holding the different groups—among them Croats, Czechs, Poles, Hungarians and Ukrainians—together. Though he presented himself as an autocratic monarch with one of the most stiffly hierarchical courts in Europe, Franz Joseph had kept the empire together through a series of peaceful compromises which had turned him into a constitutional one. The empire had been further weakened by the loss of Italy after 1848, and Bismarck himself had sent it into eclipse by kicking it out of Germany in the Austro-Prussian War of 1866.
619

 

The Habsburgs had ruled Austria for some sixteen generations. Their monarchy truly embodied the word
empire
. Centuries of conquest, royal marriages, and hereditary possessions meant that the Habsburgs, in addition to already being emperors and archdukes of Austria, were also the kings, grand dukes, margraves, princes, and counts of more than fifty territories that had been added to their monarchy since the 1400s. In the sixteenth century, Hungary, Poland, and Bohemia were added to their possessions through a marriage pact between the Habsburgs and the Jagiellonians, eastern Europe’s most powerful ruling family at the time. Around the same time, the Habsburgs were called upon to rule Spain until their line died out almost two centuries later. By the beginning of the twentieth century, their empire was made up of present-day Austria, Hungary, Bosnia, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Croatia, Slovenia, Liechtenstein, and parts of Italy, Switzerland, Romania, Poland, and Ukraine. Aside from Russia, Austria-Hungary was the largest power on continental Europe. “Within our Empire, the small nations of central Europe find a refuge,” Franz Joseph said in 1868. “Without this common house their fate would be a miserable one. They would become the plaything of every powerful neighbour
.

620
The emperor’s statement, though somewhat disconnected from the true reality of central Europe, does reveal the mantle of responsibility that many of the Habsburgs felt was their duty to carry.

Throughout its long and volatile history, Austria (or more specifically, the Habsburgs) had learned to compromise to survive. In 1713, Emperor Charles VI essentially bribed Europe’s other rulers to allow his daughter Maria Theresa to inherit his thrones. At the time, it seemed promising, but as soon as the emperor died, the heavily pregnant Maria Theresa was forced to rally her subjects to her side to defend against the Prussian-led invasion of the Habsburg crown lands. In 1810, Maria Theresa’s grandson Emperor Francis I married his daughter off to Napoleon to cement the Franco-Austrian Alliance that was put in place after France’s victory in the War of the Fifth Coalition. After the Austro-Prussian War, the Habsburgs were forced to create the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, granting the empire’s Hungarian Magyars equality with its German citizens. The dual monarchy of Austria-Hungary was born.
621
Fifty-years later, it would be this compromise that would help unravel the Habsburgs’ monarchy.

The Compromise of 1867 was not the only significant matter of policy that affected the course of Austria’s future. By the late 1870s, the transgressions of the Austro-Prussian War were slowly being forgotten. The elimination of France as an imperial power in 1871 seemed to have eased tensions between Germany and Austria, paving the way for a level of rapprochement. By the end of that decade, Bismarck—the man who had been the single-greatest proponent of the 1866 war—had negotiated a mutual defense treaty between the two Germanic empires, known as the Dual Alliance. Upon his accession to the throne in 1888, Wilhelm II made it a priority mission to mend fences with Austria even further. He held deep respect and admiration for the aging Franz Joseph, whom he viewed as an archetype of his own venerated grandfather Wilhelm I.

The closer Germany and Austria became in the Wilhelmine era, the more apparent were the differences between the two empires. Where Germany was a homogenous state driven by a single nationalist agenda, Austria was quite the opposite. It was a true example of a vast empire made up of more than a dozen divergent, often volatile, ethnic groups; Zita once said that the Austrian Empire “incarnated the spirit of European civilisation as did no other state.”
622
And unlike the homogenous, nationalistic Germany, where hundreds of dispossessed, mediatised royals searched to find their place in the monarchical hierarchy centered on the Hohenzollerns, Austria was the personification and embodiment of the Habsburg dynasty itself. It comes as no surprise, then, that their family motto was “Let others fight wars! Thou Happy Austria marry. What Mars gives to others, Venus bestows on thee.”
623
Centuries-old tradition reigned supreme in Austria, where the dynasty “was always superior to the state. Family laws in old Austria-Hungary had precedence over state laws, and the provisions of the Family Charter, drawn up in 1839, are still unpublished and secret.”
624

Archduke Charles (who was known in German as “Karl”) became heir presumptive at the age of nineteen when his father died. Charles’s life from that point forward took on a decidedly different tone. His education now included political matters, whereas before it had revolved mostly around the military. For most of his teen years, he had his own household that moved from one palace to another. When he finished school, he took up the traditional Habsburg occupation of being a career soldier. Unlike many of his relatives, Charles remained free from scandals, but in 1910, he embroiled himself with the wrong crowd of friends from his dragoon regiment. A minor incident they caused with a young woman was the catalyst that launched the emperor on the search for a wife for Charles. For a brief period, his name was romantically linked with a number of princesses, including the emperor’s granddaughter Ella and Princess Hohenlohe, an Austrian courtesan. Charles and Ella were already twice related, so a marriage between the two was stretching it. It also became noticeable that he had no interest in Princess Hohenlohe. Eventually, the emperor caught wind of the duchess’s efforts to find a husband for Zita, so the two matchmakers arranged for the couple to meet in Lucca.

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