Archduchy of Austria explained

Native Name:
Conventional Long Name:Archduchy of Austria
Common Name:Austria
Era:Late Middle Ages to Early modern period
Status:Vassal
Status Text:State of the Holy Roman Empire (1453–1806)
Crown land of the Habsburg monarchy (from 1526)
Government Type:Absolute monarchy
Year Start:1453
Year End:1918
Life Span:1453–1804
1867–1918
Event Pre:Duke Rudolf IV forged Privilegium Maius
Date Pre:1358/59
Event Start:Emperor Frederick III acknowledged archducal title
Date Start:6 January
Event1:Joined Austrian Circle
Date Event1:1512
Event2:Ferdinand I regent according to Worms agreement
Date Event2:28 April 1521
Event3:War of the Austrian Succession
Date Event3:1740–1748
Event4:Austrian Empire proclaimed
Date Event4:11 August 1804
Event5:Holy Roman Empire dissolved
Date Event5:6 August 1806
Event6:Austro-Hungarian Compromise
Date Event6:30 August 1867
Event7:Monarchy abolished
Date Event7:18 November 1918
P1:Duchy of Austria
Flag P1:Flag of Austria (1-1).svg
S1:Republic of German-Austria
Flag S1:Flag of Austria (1230–1934).svg
Flag:Flag of Austria
Flag Type:Flag (1453–1804)
Coa Size:70px
Symbol:Coat of arms of Austria
Other Symbol Type:Full coat of arms with decorations

[1]

Image Map Caption:The Archduchy of Austria, 1477
Capital:Vienna
National Motto:A.E.I.O.U.
(Motto for the House of Habsburg)
"All The World Is Subject To Austria"[2] [3]
Common Languages:Central Bavarian, German, Renaissance Latin
Religion:Roman Catholicism
Currency:
Leader1:Ladislaus the Posthumous
(first formal archduke)
Leader3:Charles I
Year Leader1:1453–1457
Year Leader2:1792–1806
Year Leader3:1916–1918
Title Leader:Archduke
Footnotes: The title "Archduke of Austria" remained part of the official grand title of the rulers of Austria until 1918.
Demonym:Austrian

The Archduchy of Austria (; German: Erzherzogtum Österreich) was a major principality of the Holy Roman Empire and the nucleus of the Habsburg monarchy. With its capital at Vienna, the archduchy was centered at the Empire's southeastern periphery.

Its present name originates from the Frankish term Oustrich – Eastern Kingdom (east of the Frankish kingdom). The archduchy developed out of the Bavarian Margraviate of Austria, elevated to the Duchy of Austria according to the 1156 Privilegium Minus by Emperor Frederick Barbarossa. The House of Habsburg came to the Austrian throne in Vienna in 1282 and in 1453 Emperor Frederick III, also the ruler of Austria, officially adopted the archducal title. From the 15th century onward, all Holy Roman Emperors but one were Austrian archdukes and with the acquisition of the Bohemian and Hungarian crown lands in 1526, the Habsburg hereditary lands became the centre of a major European power.[4]

The archduchy's history as an imperial state ended with the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806. It was replaced with the Lower and Upper Austria crown lands of the Austrian Empire.[5] [6]

Geography

Located in the Danube basin, the ancient Roman province Pannonia Superior, Austria bordered on the Kingdom of Hungary beyond the March and Leitha rivers in the east. In the south it was confined by the Duchy of Styria, with the border at the historic Semmering Pass, while in the north the Bohemian Forest and the Thaya river marked the border with Bohemia and Moravia.[4]

In the west, the Upper Austrian part bordered on the Bavarian stem duchy. The adjacent Innviertel region belonged to the Bavarian dukes, until it was occupied by Austrian forces during the War of the Bavarian Succession in 1778 and incorporated into the archducal lands according to the Peace of Teschen. In the course of the German mediatisation in 1803, the Austrian archdukes also acquired the rule over the Electorate of Salzburg and the Berchtesgaden Provostry.[7]

History

After Austria was detached from the Duchy of Bavaria and established as an Imperial estate in 1156 (thanks to the Privilegium Minus), the Babenberg dukes also acquired the neighbouring Duchy of Styria in 1192. After the extinction of male line in 1246 and the subsequent quarter-century reign by King Ottokar II of Bohemia – a permanent vestige of his rule is the division of Austria proper into Upper and Lower Austria (at the time called "Austria above the Enns" and "below the Enns") – it was seized by Habsburg King Rudolf I of Germany, who defeated Ottokar in the Battle on the Marchfeld (1278)[8] and later (1282) enfeoffed his sons Albert I and Rudolf II with both duchies.

In 1358/59, Habsburg Duke Rudolf IV, in response to the Golden Bull of 1356, already claimed the archducal title by forging the Privilegium Maius. Rudolf aimed to achieve a status comparable to the Empire's seven prince-electors, the holders of the traditional Imperial 'arch'-offices; however, his attempts failed as the elevation was rejected by the Luxembourg emperor Charles IV (Rudolf's father-in-law). Rudolf's younger brothers Albert III and Leopold III divided the Habsburg lands by the 1379 Treaty of Neuberg, whereafter the Austrian duchy itself remained under the rule of the Albertinian line.[9]

From duchy to archduchy

On Epiphany 1453, Emperor Frederick III, regent of Austria for his minor Albertinian cousin Ladislaus the Posthumous, finally acknowledged the archducal title. It was then conferred to all Habsburg emperors and rulers, as well as to the non-ruling princes of the dynasty, however, it still did not carry the right to vote in the Imperial election.

Frederick further promoted the rise of the Habsburg dynasty into European dimensions with the arrangement of the marriage between his son Archduke Maximilian and Mary of Burgundy, heiress of Burgundy in 1477. After Maximilian's son Philip the Handsome in 1496 had married Joanna the Mad, Queen of Castile and Aragon, his son Charles V could come into an inheritance "on which the sun never sets".

Nevertheless, Charles' younger brother Ferdinand I claimed his rights and became Archduke of Austria according to an estate distribution at the 1521 Diet of Worms, whereby he became regent over the Austrian archduchy and the adjacent Inner Austrian lands of Styria, Carinthia, Carniola, and Gorizia (Görz). By marrying Princess Anna of Bohemia and Hungary, Ferdinand inherited both kingdoms in 1526. Also King of the Romans from 1531, he became the progenitor of the Austrian branch of the House of Habsburg (House of Habsburg-Lorraine from 1780 on), which as Archdukes of Austria and Kings of Bohemia ruled as Holy Roman Emperors until the Empire's dissolution in 1806.[7]

Austrian Empire

In 1804, Emperor Francis II, who was also ruler of the lands of the Habsburg monarchy, established the Austrian Empire in reaction to Napoleon's proclamation of the French Empire. His new state comprised both territories within the Holy Roman Empire (the German: [[Erblande]], which included the Archduchy, and the Lands of the Bohemian Crown) and outside it (Hungary including Croatia and Transylvania, Galicia and Lodomeria and his recently acquired former Venetian territory). Two years later Francis formally dissolved the Holy Roman Empire. The Archduchy of Austria continued to exist as a constituent crown land (German: Kronland) within the Empire, although it was divided into Upper and Lower Austria for administrative purposes. (Hungary preserved its earlier status as Latin: Regnum Independens.) The title of archduke continued to be used by members of the imperial family and the archduchy was only formally dissolved in 1918 with the collapse of Austria-Hungary and the creation of the separate federal states of Lower and Upper Austria in the new Republic of German-Austria.[10]

See also

References

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Notes and References

  1. [File:Wappen Erzherzogtum Österreich (Helmkleinod).png|thumb|upright=0.5|left|The [[Hugo Gerard Ströhl|Ströhl's]] depiction in his Wappenrolle Österreich-Ungarns (1890 and 1900)]
  2. Book: Heimann, Heinz-Dieter . Die Habsburger : Dynastie und Kaiserreiche . Munich . Beck . 2010 . 38–45 . 978-3-406-44754-9 .
  3. German: Alles Erdreich ist Österreich untertan (All soil is subject to Austria), Latin: Austriae est imperare orbi universo (Austria is to rule the whole world) Also known as. But in the book of the same author, another page in Latin "En, amor electis, iniustis ordinor ultor; Sic Fridericus ego mea iura rego" (En, the love of the elect, I am ordered to avenge the unjust; Thus, Frederick, I rule my rights) There are also others, but like House of Savoy's FERT, the official interpretation is not set.
  4. Book: Banks, John . A Compendious History of the House of Austria, and the German Empire, etc . 1761 . H. Serjeant . 398–.
  5. Book: Mitchell, A. Wess . The Grand Strategy of the Habsburg Empire . 2018 . Princeton University Press . 307 . 9781400889969.
  6. Web site: The House of Austria – the Habsburgs and the Empire . Habsburger Net . May 17, 2020.
  7. Book: S.G Goodrich. History of all nations, from the earliest periods to the present time; or, Universal History: in which the history of every nation, ancient and modern, is separately given. 1851. 985–.
  8. Book: Tucker, Spencer C. . A Global Chronology of Conflict: From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East [6 volumes]: From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East. 23 December 2009. ABC-CLIO. 978-1-85109-672-5. 287–.
  9. Book: Bérenger, Jean . Jean Bérenger . C. A. . Simpson. A History of the Habsburg Empire 1273-1700 . 22 July 2014. Routledge. 978-1-317-89570-1. 155–.
  10. Book: Judson, Pieter M. . The Habsburg Empire: A New History . 25 April 2016. Harvard University Press . 978-0-674-96932-2.