Archduchess Marie Anne of Austria explained

Marie Anne of Austria
Full Name:German: Maria Anna Franziska Theresia Josepha Medarde
House:Habsburg-Lorraine
Father:Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor
Mother:Maria Theresa of Naples and Sicily
Birth Date:8 June 1804
Birth Place:Hofburg Palace, Vienna, Archduchy of Austria, Holy Roman Empire
Death Place:Hetzendorf Palace, Vienna, Austrian Empire
Burial Place:Imperial Crypt, Vienna, Austria

Marie Anne of Austria (Maria Anna Franziska Theresia Josepha Medarde; 8 June 1804 – 28 December 1858) was an Archduchess of Austria as the daughter of Franz II, Holy Roman Emperor and his second wife, Maria Theresa of Naples and Sicily. She never married or had any children due to her being intellectually disabled with a severe facial deformity and having to spend the rest of her life in Hetzendorf Palace.

Biography

Marie Anne was born on 8 June 1804 at the Hofburg palace in Vienna. She was the tenth child born to her parents, the Holy Roman Emperor Francis II and Holy Roman Empress Maria Theresa. Her mother died after giving birth to her only younger sister Archduchess Amalie Theresa, who died with their mother in 1807.

She is said to have been intellectually disabled (like her eldest brother, Emperor Ferdinand I) and to have a severe facial deformity.[1] probably linked to the genetic inbreeding within her family; her parents were double first cousins.

After living in the Schönbrunn Palace, she was moved in 1835 to Hetzendorf Palace,[2] where she spent the rest of her life, and where she died on 28 December 1858 at the age of 54.[3]

Marie Anne was buried at the Capuchin Church in Vienna, more specifically in the Imperial Crypt, the burial place of her siblings Marie Louise, Duchess of Parma, Ferdinand I of Austria, Archduchess Marie Caroline, Archduchess Caroline Ludovika of Austria, Archduke Johann Nepomuk of Austria, Archduchess Amalie Theresa of Austria, and Archduke Franz Karl of Austria. Her parents, Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor and Maria Theresa of Naples and Sicily, and her great-grandmother, Maria Theresa of Austria, are also buried there.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Palmer, Alan. Twilight of the Habsburgs. 1997. Atlantic Monthly Press. 978-0871136657. 4.
  2. Book: Ottillinger, Eva. Kaiserliche Interieurs: die Wohnkultur des Wiener Hofes im 19. Jahrhundert und die Wiener Kunstgewerbereform. 1997. Böhlau. 3205986806. 219.
  3. Book: Hawlik-Van de Water, Magdalena. Das kaiserliche Lustchloss Hetzendorf : die Modeschule der Stadt Wien. 1996. Böhlau. 3205986016. 61.