My Years at the Austrian Court

My Years at the Austrian Court

by Nellie Ryan
My Years at the Austrian Court

My Years at the Austrian Court

by Nellie Ryan

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Overview

Nellie Ryan was the English governess hired in to the household of the Archduke Karl Stefan of the ruling House of Habsburg during the years preceding the First World War. The Archduke was Grand Admiral of the Austro-Hungarian navy, cousin of Emperor Franz Josef I of Austria and candidate for the Polish crown. From this privileged position Ryan provides and interesting sidelight on the workings of the Royal family in its time spent at work, at leisure, in diplomacy and at home.

“IT has been written that the Emperor of Austria is most unlucky in his family circle, because the shadow of madness dogs the footsteps of the Hapsburgs, and there is hardly any branch of the family which does not possess some insane, epileptic or vicious member.

As I spent some delightful years at the Court of Vienna, and personally knew many of these so-called degenerate Hapsburgs, it is my intention to write of those whom I always found extremely clever and interesting, and by no means mad. If at this great European crisis we compare the two Kaisers, around whom the nations of the world are fighting, we find two men of totally different characters: William II, the German Emperor, who forced this terrible war—a madman if ever a ruler lived—and Franz Josef, the Emperor of Austria, peace-loving, sad and weary, on whom this war was forced.”

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781805231912
Publisher: Braunfell Books
Publication date: 03/30/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 144
File size: 11 MB
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Read an Excerpt


CHAPTER II THE EMPRESS ELIZABETH EVERY one knows how the Emperor Franz Josef, when he arrived at Possenhofen to celebrate his engagement to Helene, the eldest daughter of Duke Maximilian and Princess Ludovica of Bavaria, accidentally met the little Elizabeth in one of the avenues of the park, and fell straightway in love, and how he insisted upon her joining in the festivities, much to the annoyance of her parents and sisters. " I shall marry no one but the little Elizabeth," said the young Emperor the next morning, when he demanded the hand of this particular Princess; and he was for the moment starting off for his own estates, when the old Duke reluctantly gave his consent. After a few weeks they were married, and the union of this young and handsome couple would have been completely happy had it not been for the inevitable mother-in-law, who has wrecked the early lives of so many of our reigning sovereigns. Archduchess Sophia cared for nobody, or nothing, as long as she continued to reign supreme ; and she hated, at first sight, the beautiful and saint-like Elizabeth. The whole Court, from the first, followed the example of Archduchess Sophia, and seized every opportunity to vex, humiliate and wound the girl-wife. Only a few moments after their return to the Hofburg from a short trip through Bohemia and Moravia, the Empress wished to speak to Franz Josef in his own apartments. At the entrance, which was guarded by several gentle- men-in-waiting, she was respectfully asked what message could be delivered to His Majesty. " Pray stand aside," said the young Empress haughtily, " I am about to speak to His Majesty myself." " Your Imperial Majesty must pardon my reminding YourImperial Majesty that no one passes into the presence of His Imperial Majesty wit...

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