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Franz Joseph (in English also Francis Joseph) (August 18, 1830 - November
21, 1916) of the Habsburg Dynasty was
Emperor of Austria from 1848 until 1916 and King of Hungary from 1867 until
1916. He was born in Vienna, Austria.
Archduke Franz was the eldest son of Archduke Franz Karl (and Sophie, Archduchess of Austria and Princess of Bavaria), who was
brother and heir of Austrian Emperor Ferdinand I.
Because his father renounced his claim to the throne, Franz became emperor as Franz Joseph I when Ferdinand abdicated near the
end of the Revolution of 1848.
In 1854 Franz Joseph married Duchess Elisabeth in Bavaria (also Princess of Bavaria
through her mother's side of the family), who became Elisabeth
of Austria ("Sisi" or "Sissi"). Their only son, Crown Prince Rudolf, committed suicide in
1889 in the famous Mayerling episode with
his young mistress Baroness Marie Vetsera. Rudolf's killing of the
Baroness Vetsera was an extremely grim chapter in the long line of outbreaks of mental instability in the Habsburg Dynasty caused
by their long history of inbreeding. The younger brother to Emperor Franz Joseph, the Archduke Viktor Ludwig, spent most of his
life exiled on the island of Capri, following a series of scandals involving dressing up in women's clothes and molesting his
military aides.
Notwithstanding the scandals there were times when Franz Joseph took strong moral stands. When Pope Pius IX kidnapped the six year old Jewish child Edgardo Mortara on account of the claim that a housekeeper had secretly baptized him, Emperor Franz Joseph
sent the Pope a humanitarian plea to return the poor child to his heart-broken parents. The Pope refused his request.
Their three other children were Sophie, Archduchess of Austria (1855 - 1858), Gisela, Archduchess of Austria (1856 - 1932) and Marie-Valerie, Archduchess of Austria (1868 -
1924).
See Otto von Habsburg for a photograph of
Franz Joseph with his great-grandnephew Otto, the current head of the Habsburg family.
The archipelago Franz Josef Land in the Russian high arctic was named in his
honor in 1873.
Names in other languages:German: Franz Josef, Czech: František Josef, Hungarian: I. Ferenc
József, Slovak: František Jozef I, Croatian: Franjo Josip
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