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The future Empress of Austria was born to Duke Max in Bavaria
and his Duchess, Ludovika, Princess of Bavaria in Munich on December
24, 1837 and baptised Elisabeth Amalie Eugenie; her intimates
would call the spritely yet often melancholy and shy young duchess
Sisi. In 1853 the fifteen year old Sisi accompanied her mother
and older sister Helene to the spa at Bad Ischel where the family
hoped Helene would attract the attention of their mother's nephew,
the young Emperor of Austria, Franz Joseph. Franz Joseph was so
immediately taken with the young Sisi that he soon overwhelmed
her and convinced her to marry him. Their ten-month engagement
was filled with lengthy lessons in court protocol and injunctions
to learn quickly and behave by her ambitious mother, but even
these methods did not adequately prepare Sisi for the rigors of
the Hapsburg court. Soon after their marriage in April 1854, the
sixteen-year old Empress faced weighty imperial duties and a stern
mother-in-law, her mother's elder sister, Sophia of Bavaria, Archduchess
of Austria. The imperial couple had three children (Archduchess
Sophie, b.1855 d.1858, Archduchess Gisela b. 1856, and Archduke
Rudolf b. 1857) before the marriage broke down in the early 1860s.
Elisabeth spent the next decades restlessly travelling throughout
Europe with rare stops in Vienna. She and Franz Joseph had a last
daughter, Marie-Valerie, in 1868, but the birth of this favourite
child did not bring the couple any closer together. After the
mid 1870s, Sisi believed that her legendary beauty was fading
and so she stopped having portraits painted and photographs taken
of her. The few images of her from the last decades of the 19th
century were either taken clandestinely by lucky photographers,
or were the products of artistic license. She became even more
of a recluse after her son, Crown Prince Rudolf, committed suicide
with his sixteen year old lover Maria Vetsera in January 1889.
While on vacation in Geneva Switzerland, at midday on September
10, 1898, Elisabeth, Empress Consort of Austria, was stabbed to
death.
Elisabeth Amalie Eugenie von Wittelsbach was born on December
24, 1837 in Munich, second daughter of Duke Max in Bavaria and
his wife Ludovika (whose siblings included King Ludwig I of Bavaria,
Queen Marie of Saxony, Queen Amalie of Saxony, Queen Elise of
Prussia, and Sophie, mother of Emperor Franz Joseph of Austria.)
She grew up in Munich and at Possenhofen, on Starnbergersee (Lake
Starnberg), which she loved. As a child, Sisi was never considered
"special"--not particularly bright or pretty--and was
very shy among strangers. She shared her father's love of the
circus, the "lower classes", long walks, horseback riding,
and the zither. In 1853, her mother Ludovika and aunt Sophie decided
that Sisi's elder sister Helene would marry Emperor Franz Joseph;
Ludovika, Helene, and Sisi joined Sophie and her sons in Bad Ischl
in order for the two cousins to get acquainted. Franz Joseph,
however, fell in love at first sight with fifteen-year-old Sisi
instead, and two days later (on August 18, his 23rd birthday)
had his mother ask if Elisabeth would marry him. Less than a year
afterwards, on 24 April 1854, at the age of sixteen and a quarter,
Elisabeth became Empress of Austria, Queen of Hungary and Bohemia,
etc, etc, etc.
Sophie never cared for Elisabeth, and her attempts to train Sisi to become a proper Empress did not take into account the girl's own wishes and needs. Franz Joseph was deeply devoted to his mother, and only rarely supported his wife against her. The couple's first two children, Sophie (born in 1855, and named by her grandmother without Sisi's being consulted) and Gisela (born in 1856), were installed in a nursery near Sophie's apartments, and raised by attendants chosen by--and loyal to--their grandmother (as were those who had been chosen to attend Elisabeth upon her arrival in Vienna); Sisi had little power over their upbringing, and little contact with the girls at all. She did insist that the children accompany her and Franz Joseph on a state visit to Hungary in 1857, during which they became ill and little Sophie died--a misfortune which became used as proof that the young Empress was unfit to be a mother.
The eagerly-awaited heir to the throne, Crown Prince Rudolf,
was born on 21 August 1858, and, like the first two children,
was given over to the care of Sophie. Over the next few years,
Elisabeth's health began to decline, and she started spending
a great deal of time away from Vienna, "for the sake of her
health".
(The first such trip may have been prompted in part by the discovery
that Franz Joseph was unfaithful to her.) These trips grew longer
and more frequent as time went on, and for the most part reports
indicate that she looked perfectly healthy--until she returned
to Vienna, where she always grew worse, leading to another escape
from the court she detested. In 1865, however, shortly after a
still-tentative reconciliation with Franz Joseph, she was forced
to take action. One of the men responsible for Rudolf's education
came to her begging for her assistance; he feared that the sadistic
military training of the precocious but delicate boy--at the Emperor's
orders--was endangering his life. On August 27, the Empress presented
her husband with a written ultimatum: either she would be in charge
of everything concerning the children until their majority, as
well as anything touching on her own personal life--or she would
leave him. The Emperor gave in.
By this time Elisabeth was widely regarded as one of the most beautiful women in Europe--a distinction which she took great pains to maintain. Much of her time and attention was taken up with preserving and improving her looks; it took three hours each morning just to dress her hair (which fell to somewhere between her knees and her ankles), and she was compulsive about physical exercise. Periodically she would bathe in olive oil, and an entire day was consumed every three weeks for washing her hair (with brandy and raw eggs). In her efforts to keep her waistline as small as possible, she frequently subjected herself to starvation diets, and often would eat nothing more than eggs, milk, and broth. When travelling, she would bring along some of her cows to ensure a supply of "acceptable" milk, and she was constantly buying new ones to be sent back to Vienna. The one aspect of her appearance Elisabeth was unable to control was her teeth, which remained yellow despite the efforts of the best dentists in Europe. To disguise this fact, she took to opening her mouth as little as possible when speaking and holding a handkerchief in front of it; when added to the low speaking voice which was a result of her shyness, these mannerisms made understanding the Empress nearly impossible at times.
Her one real political contribution in 45 years as Empress
occurred in 1867, when she helped pressure Franz Joseph into the
Hungarian Compromise, which re-established the Hungarian Constitution
and turned the Austrian Empire into the Dual Monarchy of Austria-Hungary.
The couple's coronation as King and Queen of Hungary took place
on June 8. As a reward for complying with her wishes in this affair,
Elisabeth's letters to her husband during this time show a marked
increase in tenderness; their third daughter Marie Valerie was
born in Hungary in 1868. Unlike with the first three children,
Elisabeth insisted on raising the fourth herself, and throughout
her life showed considerably more affection for and interest in
Marie Valerie than she ever had for Gisela or Rudolf.
Rudolf, like his mother, was liberal, anti-aristocratic, republican,
and a supporter of Hungary. Despite the startling similarity in
their views on politics, literature, religion, etc, Elisabeth
and Rudolf were far from close; indeed, after the ultimatum insisting
on her being in charge of his upbringing, the Empress showed no
interest whatsoever in her only son. His relationship with his
father was no better. In addition to refusing to allow him to
attend university--the Habsburg heir was to be a soldier, not
a scientist--Franz Joseph continued to deny his heir any responsibilities
in the running of the Empire even as Rudolf approached thirty,
and his forced idleness made the Crown Prince increasingly frustrated.
In time he, like Elisabeth, came to view the future of the Austrian
Empire after Franz Joseph's death as hopeless, and he became more
and more disgusted at the country's growing anti-Semitism. His
health had never been very good, nor was his marriage a happy
one. On 30 January 1889 Rudolf and his 17-year-old mistress Mary
Vetsera committed suicide in his hunting lodge at Mayerling. (It
is still unknown what prompted him to finally do what he had been
contemplating for years.) Elisabeth was the first member of the
Imperial family to be told of the Crown Prince's death, and at
first she bore up well, breaking the news herself to the Emperor,
Mary's mother, and others. After the first few days, however,
her grief exploded in rage at her daughter-in-law (whom she accused
of being responsible for Rudolf's death, because she hadn't loved
him) and a great deal of self-accusation. She blamed herself not
because she had shown her son no more (and perhaps even less)
affection than his wife had, but because Rudolf, as a suicide,
had had to be declared insane in order to be given a church funeral;
the Empress believed that it was the Wittelsbach inclination towards
mental illnesses that Rudolf had inherited from her which was
ultimately at fault, and she began to fear even more than before
the manifestation of such a family history within herself. She
wore mourning for the rest of her life.
Following her youngest daughter's wedding in 1890, Elisabeth's
travels grew even more restless. She rarely stayed long in any
given place and spent no more than a few weeks each year in Vienna.
During an overnight stop in Geneva in 1898, her presence in the
city was revealed in a newspaper, although she had been travelling
under an assumed name for privacy. On September 10, as she was
walking from her hotel to the ship on which she was to leave for
Montreux, Elisabeth was stabbed with a sharpened file by Italian
anarchist Luigi Lucheni. Lucheni had come to Geneva planning to
assassinate the Prince of Orléans; when he failed to arrive,
Lucheni had chosen the Empress of Austria, whose presence in the
city he'd learned about in the newspaper, as the next best victim
available to him, unaware--and uncaring--that in fact she shared
his opinions on aristocracy. The file poked a tiny hole in Elisabeth's
heart; blood leaked out so slowly that at first no one was aware
that she had been injured. She made it to the ship, but shortly
afterwards collapsed. Her companion at first assumed the Empress
had merely fainted, and when loosening her bodice noticed a spot
of blood and a hole in her camisole. She was rushed back to the
hotel, but it was too late for the doctors to do anything. Lucheni,
sentenced to life in prison, hanged himself in 1910.
