Tumgik
#Marie Louise of Larisch
2t2r · 18 days
Text
Des portraits de la comtesse Marie Louise von Larisch-Wallersee et de l'archiduchesse Marie Valérie, vers 1880
Nouvel article publié sur https://www.2tout2rien.fr/comtesse-marie-louise-von-larisch-wallersee-archiduchesse-marie-valerie/
Des portraits de la comtesse Marie Louise von Larisch-Wallersee et de l'archiduchesse Marie Valérie, vers 1880
Tumblr media
0 notes
archduchessofnowhere · 8 months
Text
I was today years old when I learned that the memoirs of Countess Marie Larisch, Louise of Belgium and Crown Princess Louise of Saxony had the same ghostwriter: Maude Ffoulkes
Tumblr media
She even wrote her own memoirs, My Own Past. I read the chapter about meeting Marie Larisch and working with her to write her memoirs and honestly it was super interesting. For instance, the original manuscript which Larisch wrote was only about Mayerling, it was Ffoulkes who asked her if she could also include stories about Empress Elisabeth (so we know who to blame for the permanent damage to Elisabeth's historiography). Also, when Ffoulkes asked Larisch if she wanted to write the book just to get money, the countess answered that she wanted the truth to be known, and that she wanted revenge on Franz Josef. Once they started to work together, she said to Ffoulkes that they would "write a book which will annoy that stupid old man in Vienna" (lol) which honestly explains a lot the entire tone of the memoirs.
Ffoulkes had every reason to claim she absolutely trusted Larisch was telling the truth, and perhaps she really did believe her. But I find very funny that one of the stories Larisch told her was of visiting Elisabeth's tomb with her aunt the Duchess of Alençon. Who very famously died a year before her older sister.
11 notes · View notes
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Minor Nobles & House of Wittelsbach: Baroness Marie Louise of Wallersee
Marie was born as the bastard daughter of Ludwig in Bavaria and actress Henriette Mendel. She received her mother’s last name at birth and her parents married a year later morganatically. 9 days before the wedding, Henriette had received the title of Baroness of Wallersee which could be inherited by her children. Ludwig had to give up his rights as a first-born son to marry Henriette.
Marie received a liberal education and experienced a relatively free childhood. Like her aunt Elisabeth “Sisi” of Austria, she was a talented rider but also fencer. When Elisabeth visited her brother and his family in 1869, she took a liking in Marie Louise and first invited her to Vienna. In 1876, she spent serveral months with her aunt in Hungary. She became a close companion of The Empress. This was seen as inappropriate since Marie was “only” the daughter of an actress. Among those critical was also Baroness Helene of Vetsera, the mother of the famous Mary Vetsera.
Countess Marie Festetics von Tolna, a lady-in-waiting of Elisabeth, was jealous of Marie as well and arranged a meeting of her with Count Larisch-Moennich. Pressured by her aunt, Marie agreed to marry him on October 20th, 1877. The couple moved to Slesia and had two children, Franz Joseph and Marie Valerie, in 1878 and 1879.
The marriage was not happy and since Marie regarded the marriage as forced upon her she did not feel obligated to be loyal to her husband. She began an affair with Heinrich Baltazzi, the brother of The Baroness of Vetsera, who most likely is also the father of her children Marie Henriette and Georg Heinrich. Although it was an open secret, her husband still aknowledged the children as his. But the birth of Friedrich Karl in 1894, whose father was Ernst von Otto-Kreckwitz, was the last straw. The couple no longer could keep up appearances as Marie lived in Bavaria and her husband in Slesia since 1889. They divorced in 1896.
Even before the divorce, the Count and Marie were not on good terms. He only gave her the bare minimum of financial aid, so she went into huge debts. They were often covered by her lover Baltazzi and her cousin Crown Prince Rudolf. Mary Vetsera, the niece of Balatazzi, had a crush on Rudolf and Marie introduced the young woman to her cousin. She also covered some of their meetings out of friendship to Mary and thankfulness to Rudolf for covering her bills. But after Mary Vetsera caused a scandal in the opera in 1888, Marie no longer arranged meetings. However this did not stop the couple from meeting which ended tragically in the Mayerling incident.
Rudolf had burned his own love letters to Mary but kept those of Mary and his cousin Marie Louise in his desk where they were found after his death. He actually hinted to those in his testament. One letter of Marie Louise was even found in his uniform jacket which was the cause that she became a persona non grata at Viennese court.
She married her second husband opera singer Otto Brucks in 1897. He lost his position at the Bavarian court out of solidarity with the Austrian royal house when he began a relationship with Marie. In every review of his performance, they hinted more to their scandalous relationship then they wrote about his actually singing. This led him to become an alcoholic. In 1899, Marie Louise bore her last child Otto Brucks jr. Since her husband lost his job, the family was having money issues which led Marie Louise to write a book about everything she knew about her royal relatives. Emperor Franz Joseph tried to stop the publishing of it by buying the manuscript and paying her a pension. Nevertheless, she came into contact with publisher again and again because she wanted to regain her reputation and because money was still tight. Her book My Past was ultimately published in Britain in 1913 and became an immediate bestseller. The book also came to Germany a year later as an illegal printing. Her husband died the same year from health issues regarding his drinking.
The following years, Marie Louise lived in poverty and even had to work as a household manager in Berlin. In 1920, she even starred in a silent movie about her aunt Elisabeth in which she played herself. In 1924, she wanted to escape poverty by emigrating to the US. A journalist wrote an article about her and her life which also included the offer that she would marry whoever payed her and her son’s travel expenses to the US. At the age of 66, she arrived and three days later she married William Henry Meyers who had actually hope to gain money and respect through the marriage. He mistreated her until she could flee to New Jersey in 1926 where she worked as a cook and maid.
Her misery would not end here. She told her life story to a German-American writer who wrote two embroidered books about her without sharing the profits. This damaged Marie’s reputation even more and she was seen as money-hungry and evil former countess that wanted to profit from her relatives. She moved back to Augsburg in 1929. She died 11 years later, dirt poor in a retirement home. After her death, a Gestapo member searched her room and found serveral manuscripts.
In her 1936 book My Royal Relatives, she claims to not actually have been the daughter of Ludwig in Bavaria and Henriette Mendel but actually the bastard daughter of her aunt Marie in Bavaria, The Queen of Two Sicilies and Count Armand de Lavaÿss. While Marie indeed had an unnamed illegitimate daughter, it is speculated that the father was an officer of the papal guard. My Royal Relatives is also the only source for this claim, so it should be taken with a grain of salt.
Marie’s last wish to have a tomb stone with her birth name on it was only fulfilled in 2012. She is buried next to her father and son Friedrich Karl in Munich.
// Julia Cencig as Marie Larisch in The Crown Prince (2006)
144 notes · View notes
bechdelexam · 2 years
Text
best books of march 2022:
5. My Past: Reminiscences of the Courts of Austria and Bavaria, Marie Louise von Wallersee-Larisch. Obviously Larisch was writing this with a motive and with an axe to grind. Don’t trust what she says, etc etc. But this is still a very enjoyable memoir. Slander is fun to read!
4. The Golden Ass, Apuleius, trans. Joel C. Relihan. Roman novel about Lucius, who gets turned into a donkey and doesn’t get un-metamorphosed until the goddess Isis intervenes. Still pretty funny, even if it is unfortunately misogynistic at times. 
3. The Emperor’s Tomb, Joseph Roth, trans. Michael Hofmann. I liked The Radetzky March, but didn’t love it, and I expected this to be the same sort of novel. But it really isn’t! It is the story of a man who lives past the end of his world, told sparsely and beautifully. A must-read if you have any kind of warm feelings for Austria-Hungary
2. Right-Wing Women, Andrea Dworkin. There’s nothing like reading Dworkin. She just has a way of articulating things that are right outside the boundaries of what you’ve allowed yourself to think. & what she writes is unfortunately prescient & still very much an issue today. 
1. Água Viva, Clarice Lispector, trans. Stefan Tobler. A very interesting novel- one I’m only calling a novel because it was shelved in fiction. It’s more like poetry than any other novel I’ve ever read- it lacks a plot, characters, dialogue. It is a monologue about moments, and the self, and death- very beautiful. 
Honourable mention to Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre and Adrienne Rich’s The Dream of a Common Language
0 notes
sissiofaustria · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
The niece of Empress Elisabeth(Sissi)
Marie Louise Elizabeth Mendel was born February 24, 1858 at Augsburg, Bavaria.  The illegitimate first daughter of actress Henriette Mendel, a commoner, and Ludwig Wilhelm, Duke in Bavaria,the brother of Empress Sissi.
Countess Larisch became an outcast after the Mayerling affair of 1889.  This involved the deaths of her cousin Crown Prince Rudolf and his mistress, Baroness Mary Vetsera. 
Countess Larisch became persona non grata because she had introduced Mary and Rudolph 
14 notes · View notes
vhrai-blog · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Májusban lesz egy olvasási maraton, melynek középpontjában a történelmi regények, ismeretterjesztő kötetek, és egyéb témához kapcsolódó könyvek állnak. Egyébként @beautiful_dauntless szervezi, és stílusosan a Múltidéző május nevet kapta. . Nos, a képen egy random összedobott TBR listát láthattok, valószínűleg mind nem fog a májusomba beleférni, de aztán ki tudja... . 1. Világkörüli út - Egy történelmi könyv, ami nem Európában, vagy az USA-ban játszódik. - Robert Merle: Moncada 2. Női sorsok - Egy történelmi könyv, aminek középpontjában a nők állnak. - Dénes Zsófia: Zrínyi Ilona 3. 20. század előtt - Egy könyv, aminek a cselekménye a 20. század előtt játszódik. - Elizabeth Chadwick: A legnagyobb lovag 4. Tudj meg többet! - Egy ismeretterjesztő könyv. - John Lukacs: A párviadal 5. Az én történetem - Egy memoár/napló/levelezés. - Marie Louise von Wallersee-Larisch: Sisi udvarában 6. Hallatom a hangom - Egy könyv, melynek középpontjában egy kisebbség áll. - Örkény István - Lágerek népe 7. Ifjúság, bolondság - Egy ifjúsági történelmi könyv. - Ruta Sepetys: árnyalatnyi remény 8. Rejtett kincsek - Egy olynan könyv, ami olyan törrénelmi eseményről, vagy személyről szól, ami/aki kevésbé ismert. - Norbert Fryd: Mexikó császárnéja 9. Történelem képekben - egy történelmi képregény. - Sid Jacobson: Anne Frank 10. Hazafi - Egy magyar szerző könyve - Bán Mór: A Hajnalcsillag fénye . #olvasásimaraton #tbr #könyvesblogger #könyvek #olvasás #múltidézőmájus #történelem #vhrai #libellum https://www.instagram.com/p/CN3IEO0LFuH/?igshid=1gp8km298s5vi
0 notes
minah-delacroix · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
About Minah’s family...
CAROLINE MADELEINE DELACROIX MONTPENSIER, 43 || THE AUNT || CEO of Delacroix Corporations
“Being powerful is like being a lady.
If you have to tell people you are, you aren't.” 
DATE OF BIRTH: May 13
PLACE OF BIRTH: Paris, France
NATIONALITY: French
BLOOD STATUS: Pureblood
FACE CLAIM:  Melanie Laurent
TRADEMARK: Icy blond hair, perfect skin, demure composure, and sophisticated style. Is known for gracing social events wearing either power suits or evening gowns that always flatter her statuesque figure.
FAMILY BACKGROUND The House of  Delacroix is an ancient noble family in France. One of the most powerful dynasties in Europe today, the family dates back to Jeanne Louise de Bourbon, Marquise de Montespan, a legitimized daughter of Louis XIV, le Roi Soleil, who ruled over France between 1642 and 1715. Jeanne Louise was given the title of Duchess of Bourbon and Princess of Condé upon marrying a distant cousin of King Louis I of Spain, who later on founded the House of Delacroix, taking the name from his nobiliary title of Duc de Delacroix. Over several centuries the Delacroixs have maintained complex ties with Spanish and German royalty, but never fond of attention they kept themselves distanced from the spotlight during the post-revolution era. During la Belle Epoque, however, as Paris recovered from the horrors of the Siege and The Commune, the Delacroix settled back in the City of the Lights after a long exile in the Provence.  Along with the ópera, the prose of Marcel Proust and the paintings of Picasso, a new Empire was born under the command of the visionary Jacques Luc du Delacroix who became a pioneer in the modern French textile industry and founded a major clothing and apparel company that managed survived the Nazi occupation. 
Fast forward to the present and according to the New York Ghost, The Delacroix Family is currently the wealthiest wizarding family of France. Besides inheriting large amounts of gold and state from the older generations, the family has amassed a big fortune with a revamped fashion business that has become one of the biggest emporiums of luxury clothing in the world. Likewise, and unlike most wizards, the Delacroix Family has also ventured into the muggle world where they have built a huge conglomerate that runs a business in different fields, ranging from energy suppliers to fashion. The members of the Delacroix family are notorious in their own fields without exception. From politicians to artists, they all have succeeded, becoming recognized names in both worlds. Nevertheless, the Delacroix remain slightly hermetic in regards to keeping a pureblood line and their traditions as wizards. They might appear open-minded and unconventional, but they’re rather conservative and elitist.
FAMILY AFFILIATIONS  The Delacroix are direct descendants of the French, German and Spanish nobility. The patriarch of the family, Louis Pierre Philippe Delacroix has particularly been linked to Le Roi Soleil (Louis XIV) and the House of Bourbon, being a descendant of King Louis XIV of France (ruled 1643-1715) through his daughter Jeanne Louise de Bourbon. In the most recent generations, the family has also been linked to the Spanish nobility through the Infanta María Inés de Galicia, who's Louis great-grandmother, as well as German nobility through Louis’ wife, Madame Laetitia Montpensier, the daughter of the German Countess Marie Louise Larisch von Moennich.
The Delacroix House also maintains strong ties with Beauxbatons Academy of Magic, where Louis Pierre was headmaster for few years and currently serves as one of the 12 members of the Beauxbatons Board of Governors. They're also linked to the French Ministry of Magic, the French Wizarding High Court of Law and Parliament and the Academie Française des Sorciers (French Academy of Wizards), where the family has been appointed important positions throughout the last decades. In the muggle realm, they're related to the French Government as Louis Pierre Philippe’s brother has served as Prime Minister and other important political positions during the Fifth Republic and with other members of the family playing key roles as high profile politicians. 
SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS: Like previously stated, The Delacroix family is a powerhouse in both the Muggle and Wizarding Worlds. The Delacroixs are listed among the richest households in Europe and according to the New York Ghost, they’re the unrivaled richest Wizarding family of France.
QUICK BIO The eldest daughter of  Louis Pierre Philippe Delacroix and Madame Laetitia Montpensier, Caroline was born and raised in the heart of Paris and was educated in both the muggle and the magical world. She grew up in an almost private world of unimaginable splendor and security, always encouraged by her parents to excel and become a role model to her younger siblings.  From a young age, Caroline possessed great confidence, impressing her family and notable members of French high society, who noted her poise and competence when she started to host fancy soirées with only 17 years of age.
Like many other women of her class, Caroline patronised a great number of charities during her twenties. Upon having access to her fortune, one of her first acts was to found an education foundation in honor of her father. However, her main causes have always been connected to the assistance and welfare of women. She was president of the French Young Women Association, a charity which sponsored college education for young women in need. Nowadays Caroline has stepped as CEO of her family’s conglomerate. A passionate and perfectionist woman to the bone, she usually plays the role of the disciplinarian among her siblings, although contradictorily enough she also happens to be the kindest and best natured of them all. She is that one person who always takes the lead during troubling times and fixes problems for every member of her family, for what she is considered to be the future matriarch of the Delacroix House.   LOVE LIFE: Caroline has been romantically involved with a number of prominent men, including Paul-Henri Jeseaux (a Prime Minister of Belgium), film director Marcus Huston, British diplomat Carl Shaughnessy, French-Russian heir Andrei Levesque Pavlovitch and painter James Harris. However, following the Delacroix women tradition, Caroline’s relationships have been short-lived and rather disastrous, which is probably why she’s focus on her family business instead, conducting a strategic restructuring and modernisation of the Group during the last years.
MOST LIKELY TO BE FOUND: When not at work, probably plotting a fashion takeover with a glass of champagne in hand or chilling home and enjoying her favorite wizarding show The High Society, which has been said to be inspired by the European wizarding elite, (herself included).
RELATIONSHIP TO MINAH: As Minah grew up, Caroline was usually the one handling her day-to-day raising. Despite being a busy woman, Aunt Caroline played an important role in Minah’s education and would usually take her to business meetings and around high society parties although MInah was nothing but a child. Nowadays, Caroline is that one aunt who always knows best; offers the best-unsolicited advice at the right moments, and still drags Minah around the fanciest parties of the Wizarding World.   OTHER FACTS - Lives to slay power suits. - is to blame for Minah’s obsession with baths and champagne. - Will probably never marry because she expects perfection from everybody and so far all her past relationships have ended in disaster. - Has been picked as the most influential woman in fashion for three years in a row by Forbes.
1 note · View note
freigeiist-archived · 7 years
Text
The 27th January 1889
Vienna
Without a doubt Rudolf’s decision to commit suicide stood firm at this point. In contrast to the previous day the 27th was spent in great rush. In the morning Rudolf visited the chancery for the last time and granted audiences. He sent a note to his friend and fellow hunter Count Joseph Hoyos, that the hunt planned in Mayerling for the next week was rescheduled to the 29th and 30th January. Around 10 am the Crown Prince met with Marie Larisch again and she precisely describes the following conversation in her memoirs from 1913. As I already implied - I don’t trust this woman and her reports at all, but according to Brigitte Hamann this scene could’ve happened at least similarly. Her cousin appeared upset and afraid and said, that if she wouldn’t help him, he’s lost. He asked her to bring Mary to the Hofburg on the next day and mentioned that he’s in great danger. Marie asked him what exactly happened, but he refused to tell her and only handed over a small box. She wasn’t supposed to tell a single soul about this and hide the box “until he himself or someone else reclaimed it”. Rudolf mentioned that the Emperor could order an examination of his properties at any minute. Furthermore Rudolf told Marie to give the box only the person who used four letters: R.I.U.O. When Marie asked if the danger comes from Stephanie (Rudolf’s wife) he answered that it is more of political nature. Worried Marie begged him to talk to his mother or his father about it, but Rudolf replied: “If I told the Emperor I’d sign my own death sentence.” What we know for sure is, that Rudolf most likely cleared his papers and burned the compromising ones. Most likely the documents in the box he gave Marie were not about a coup d’etat, but worldview questions. In the afternoon Rudolf’s sister-in-law Louise von Coburg saw him and Larisch on the Prater, in a heated conversation. She also confirmed Rudolf’s churning mood. We can assume that Rudolf also met Mary, since it’s proven that they were both there. She returned home in high spirits and cheerful, most likely with the knowledge that Marie would take her to the Hofburg and from there to Mayerling on the next day. Both Rudolf and Mary attended the glamorous birthday celebration for Wilhelm II. in the german embassy that night. Franz Joseph had sent his son a note earlier, asking him to wear prussian uniform for that occasion. Never had the birthday of a german emperor had been celebrated that ostentatiously and surely it was a slap in the face for the francophile Crown Prince and his friends. Conformation for that is the meeting with Moritz Szeps (his friend and journalist) in the same night: “The Emperor has degraded, affronted me infront of the whole world! Now all ties between him and me are ripped. Now I feel free!” (Bertha Zuckerhandl, Szeps’ daughter, after what her father told her about this). What happened afterwards we know from police reports: Rudolf stayed with Mizzi Kaspar until 3 am and when they parted he made the sign of the cross on her forehead, something very unusual for him.
10 notes · View notes
thedelacroix · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
“Fluctuat nec mergitur”
MAISON DELACROIX
GW ELITE FAMILIES: The Delacroix 
FAMILY BACKGROUND: 
The House of  Delacroix is an ancient noble family in France. One of the most powerful dynasties in Europe today, the family dates back to Jeanne Louise de Bourbon, Marquise de Montespan, a legitimized daughter of Louis XIV, le Roi Soleil, who ruled over France between 1642 and 1715. Jeanne Louise was given the title of Duchess of Bourbon and Princess of Condé upon marrying a distant cousin of King Louis I of Spain, who eventually founded the House of Delacroix, taking the name from his nobiliary title of Duc de Delacroix. Over several centuries the Delacroix maintained complex ties with Spanish and German royalty, but never fond of attention they kept themselves distanced from the spotlight during the post-revolution era. During la Belle Epoque, however, as Paris recovered from the horrors of the Siege and The Commune, the Delacroix settled back in the City of the Lights after a long exile in the South of France.  Along with the ópera, the prose of Marcel Proust and the paintings of Picasso, a new Empire was born under the command of the visionary Jacques Luc du Delacroix who became a pioneer in the modern French textile industry and founded a major clothing and apparel company that managed to survive the Nazi occupation.
Fast forward to the present and according to the New York Ghost, The Delacroix Family is currently the unrivaled wealthiest Wizarding family of France. Besides inheriting large amounts of gold and state from the older generations, the family has amassed a big fortune with a revamped fashion business that has become one of the biggest emporiums of luxury clothing in the world. Likewise, and unlike most wizards, the Delacroix Family has also ventured into the muggle business world, where they have built a large conglomerate that runs businesses in different fields, ranging from energy suppliers to fashion. The members of the Delacroix family are notorious in their own fields without exception. From politicians to artists, they all have succeeded, becoming recognized names in both worlds. Nevertheless, the Delacroix remain slightly hermetic in regards to keeping a pureblood line and their traditions as wizards. They might appear open-minded and unconventional, but they’re rather conservative and elitist.
FAMILY AFFILIATIONS:
The Delacroix are direct descendants of the French, German and Spanish nobility. The patriarch of the family, Louis Pierre Philippe Delacroix has been linked to Le Roi Soleil (Louis XIV) and the House of Bourbon, being a descendant of King Louis XIV of France (ruled 1643-1715) through his daughter Jeanne Louise de Bourbon. In the most recent generations, the family has also been linked to the Spanish nobility through Infanta María Inés de Galicia, who’s Louis great-grandmother; as well as German nobility through Louis’ wife, Madame Laetitia Montpensier, the daughter of the German Countess Marie Louise Larisch von Moennich.
The Delacroix House also maintains strong ties with the Beauxbatons Academy of Magic, where Louis Pierre was headmaster for few years and currently serves as one of the 12 members of the Board of Governors. They’re also linked to the French Ministry of Magic, the French Wizarding High Court of Law and Parliament and the Academie Française des Sorciers (French Academy of Wizards), where the family has been appointed important positions throughout the last decades. In the muggle realm, they’re related to the French Government as Louis Pierre Philippe’s brother has served as Prime Minister and other important political positions during the Fifth Republic.
0 notes
Note
Hello . Do you know if there are any books about Empress Sissi and her family on archive org? Thanks.
Hello! Sorry it took me so long, I was busy and then I got sick (not covid but still I was very tired to write anything). Luckily for us, the answers to this question is quite long! There are PLENTY of books about Sisi and her family on the archive!
Non-fiction in the public domain:
Some memoirs and near contemporany biographies that you can download for free!
Aus den letzten Jahren der Kaiserin Elisabeth, by Irma Sztáray. This book was written by the last lady-in-waiting of Sisi (literally, she's the one who accompanied Sisi to the trip in which she was assassinated), and it narrates the years Irma spent with the Empress, up to her death. It is however only in German (there are translations, but those aren't in the public domain). The upcoming movie Sisi und ich is based on this book.
My Past, by Countess Marie Larisch. The memoirs of Elisabeth's infamous niece who went down in history for being the go-between Crown Prince Rudolf and Mary Vetsera. Although all memoirs are written to put its subjects in the best light, Countess Larisch's are known for being heavily unreliable, since she goes above and beyond to paint herself as a victim who did nothing wrong, ever. And on top of that, she also just, straight up made stuff up. Still, she was Sisi's close confidant for many years so there probably are true facts in here also. And more importantly, many books do use this memoirs as well as her other works as sources, sometimes without even citing her or noting that she's not super trustable, so knowing what stories originate from here may worth the read.
I was to be Empress by Stephanie of Belgium. The memoirs of Elisabeth's daughter-in-law, in which she gives her version of her married life with Rudolf, her time as Crown Princess and the Mayerling affair. This book is high in my TBR list, because Stephanie was a much maligned figure on her time and I'm really curious about what she had to say about it. Fun? fact: Archduchess Erzsi, Stephanie and Rudolf's daughter, had this book banned in Austria.
My own affairs by Louise of Belgium. The memoirs of Stephanie's elder sister, whom also married into Austria and had a very scandalous life. There isn't much about Sisi here so it might not be of your interest, but after watching this video about Louise's life I've been dying to read it since it sounds like a legit good read? Also she and her husband were close friends with Rudolf, so she has some stuff to say about Mayerling.
Recollections of a Royal Governess. Written by the governess of Archduchess Erzsi, this book is full of anecdotes and stories about the Imperial family (although once again, there isn't much on the Empress herself). Not sure on how reliable it is, but it can be an interesting reading nontheless.
Maria Sophia, Queen of Naples: A Continuation of "The Empress Elizabeth", by Clara Tschudi. The first biography ever on Sisi's younger sister Marie. Here's my review on it.
BONUS:
Absolutely unreliable books that you may want to check for funsies only:
The secret of an empress, by Countess Zanardi Landi. In case you don't know, there was a woman that claimed for YEARS that she was Elisabeth's illegitimate daughter. No one believed her back then and no one believes her now - but before DNA tests you could claim being the long lost child of anyone and nobody could do anything about it. Said woman wrote a book on this; its contents are probably 95% made up, but in case you're curious about what she had to say, here it is.
Behind the Scenes at the Court of Vienna by Henri de Weindel. I skimmed through it and honestly it sounds fake, but hey who knows - maybe de Weindel was onto something. On the same vein of "hey this sounds kinda fake but maybe it isn't?" Princess Catherine Radziwiłł wrote some books about the Austrian court too (also in the public domain).
Non-fiction not in the public domain:
Books you can borrow and read for free, but not donwload. There are plenty so I'll just recommend the ones I've read.
The Reluctant Empress by Brigitte Hamann. Elisabeth's historiography in English it's kinda outdated, so Hamann's work from the 80s remains the most complete biography available (and it's overall still considered one of Elisabeth's best biographies). She does a really good research and covers many aspects of her life that sometimes don't recieve much attention (like her relationship with her siblings). However, as it is often noted, Hamann is also weirdly hostile towards Sisi, and many of her conclusions about her have a very noticeable negative bias. It's still very informative, just be prepared for this because it can be annoying.
Sissi ou la fatalité by Jean Des Cars. This is a very good a biography on Elisabeth. Des Cars has a more positive view on his subject and reading it after Hamann's gave me a more complete and nuanced picture of Sisi. My main criticism is that Des Cars isn't a historian but a journalist and it shows; his approach to his subject and investigation was very journalist-like. Also his prose is a bit dramatic so be prepared for that too lol. There isn't an English translation and on the Archive only the original in French is available.
Elizabeth, Empress of Austria by Egon Corti. This biography was groundbreaking when first published, Corti went through many primary sources unknown to the general public of the time and interviewed people that actually met Elisabeth. Although now it's considered outdated, to this day it's the backbone of any book on the Empress.
The Emperor and the Actress by Joan Haslip. This book covers the relationship between Franz Josef and actress Katharina Schratt, whose friendship (and maybe much more than that) lasted over twenty years. This book is fairly short and easy to read; personally FJ's relationship with Katharina is like the only thing about him that I find genuinely interesting and I loved learning more about it. Elisabeth was the first shipper of these two so she appears a lot too. For more books about FJ check his tag.
A LOT has been written about Elisabeth's brother and sister-in-law Archduke Maximilian and Princess Charlotte - the short lived Emperor and Empress of the Second Mexican Empire. Currently I'm reading The Crown of Mexico by Joan Haslip (available on the archive) and I'm quite enjoying it - although it does has some outdated language (specially when talking about the indigenous people from Mexico) and one random homophobic comment that's pretty gross. Other than that it's quite informative and easy to read, specially if you don't know much about the subject. I could not list all the works about them on the Archive, there's just a lot of non-fiction and fiction, as well as some memoirs of people that knew them and were in Mexico with them. I recommed going through their tags ([x][x]) or just looking up "Maximilian of Mexico" and "Carlota of Mexico" to see all that's available.
There are a couple of biographies on King Ludwig II of Bavaria, Elisabeth's cousin and friend. I woudn't know which one of these recommend to you, but you could start with Greg King's one, since I've read other works by him and they were good.
Fiction books:
There's plenty too! I can't recommend any of these tho, since the only fictional book about Sisi that I've read isn't here, so I'll just highlight the popular ones:
Elisabeth The Princess Bride by Barry Denenberg. The Royal Diaries seems to be every English speaker royal history nerd formative book series so I'm sure this one is beloved too.
The Accidental Empress and Sisi, Empress On Her Own, by Allison Pataki. This duology was published fairly recently and it's quite popular. The Sisi stans of Goodreads THRASHED these books tho, since apparently Pataki is very historically inaccurate.
The Fortune Hunter by Daisy Goodwin. Apparently it isn't very good either.
A Caged Bird by Maureen Fleming. Not a popular book at all, just highlighting it because this 30s novel it's in the public domain so you can download it (and because the first lines killed me).
These are just some books (and I haven't read many of them); the Archive is an amazing place because you can spend hourse searching and finding books and information. If you go to the tag you'll find even more books on Sisi (I couldn't fit all of them on the post), there are also some on Crown Prince Rudolf here. If there is someone in particular you are interested in and I haven't covered them here tell me and I see if I can find something!
I hope this answer helped you!
30 notes · View notes
Master Post - Members by birth
Disclaimer: Houses that rule(d)/reside(d) in other countries but originally came from German and/or Austrian territories and/or are generally regarded as belonging to this cultural room are listed among the German & Austrian Houses.
German & Austrian Houses
House of Ascania
Princess Sophie of Anhalt-Zerbst aka Catherine the Great
House of Coburg (Cadet branch of the House of Wettin)
Princess Alice of the United Kingdom, The Grand Duchess of Hesse and by Rhine
Princess Antoinette of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, Duchess of Württemberg
Princess Charlotte of Belgium, The Empress of Mexico, Archduchess of Austria
Princess Stéphanie of Belgium, Crown Princess of Austria, Hungary & Bohemia
Princess Victoria of Great Britain and Ireland, Princess Royal, The German Empress
Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, The Princess of Leiningen, The Duchess of Kent
House of Griffin
Elizabeth of Pomerania, Holy Roman Empress
House of Habsburg
Archduchess Johanna of Austria, The Grand Duchess of Tuscany
Archduchess Maria Amalia of Austria, Holy Roman Empress, The Electress of Bavaria
Archduchess Maria Anna of Austria, Princess of Lorraine and Bar
Archduchess Maria Antonia of Austria, The Electress of Bavaria
Archduchess Maria Antonia “Marie Antoinette” of Austria, The Queen of France and Navarre
Archduchess Maria Leopoldine of Austria, The Empress of Brazil, Queen of Portugal & the Algarves
Maria Theresia, The Archduchess of Austria, Holy Roman Empress
Archduchess Sophie of Austria
House of Hanover (Cadet branch of the House of Welf)
Princess Sophia Dorothea of Hanover, The Queen in Prussia
Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom, Empress of India
House of Hesse
Princess Alix of Hesse and by Rhine, Empress Alexandra Feodorovna of Russia
Princess Elisabeth of Hesse and by Rhine, Grand Duchess Elizabeth Feodorovna of Russia
House of Hohenlohe-Langenburg
Princess Adelheid of Hohenlohe-Langenburg, The Duchess of Schleswig-Holstein
Princess Feodora of Hohenlohe-Langenburg, The Duchess of Saxe-Meiningen
House of Hohenstaufen
Elisabeth “Beatrix” of Swabia, The Queen of Castile, León & Galicia
Konstanze “Anna” of Hohenstaufen, The Empress of Nicaea
House of Hohenzollern
Princess Anna Amalia of Prussia
Princess Caroline of Ansbach, The Queen of Great Britain & Ireland, The Electress of Hanover
Princess Elisabeth of Brandenburg, The Duchess of Brunswick-Calenberg-Göttingen
Princess Luise of Prussia, Princess Radziwiłł
Princess Maria Eleonora of Brandenburg, The Queen of Sweden
Princess Marie of Prussia, The Queen of Bavaria
Princess Wilhelmine of Prussia, The Margravine of Brandenburg-Bayreuth
House of La Marck
Amalia of Cleves
Anne of Cleves, The Queen of England
Sybille of Cleves, The Electress of Saxony
House of Leiningen
Princess Feodora of Leiningen, The Princess of Hohenlohe-Langenburg
House of Liechtenstein
Princess Sophie of Liechtenstein, Countess Esterházy de Galantha
House of Mecklenburg
Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, The Queen of Great Britain, Ireland & Hanover
Elisabeth of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Princess of Brunswick-Lüneburg aka Grand Duchess Anna Leopoldovna of Russia
Friederike (Federica) of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, The Queen of Hanover
Louise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, The Queen of Prussia
Therese of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, The Princess of Thurn and Taxis
House of Northeim
Richenza of Northeim, Holy Roman Empress
House of Oldenburg
Augusta Victoria of Schleswig-Holstein, German Empress
Princess Cecilie of Greece & Denmark, The Hereditary Grand Duchess of Hesse and by Rhine
House of Reuß
Princess Hermine Reuß of Greiz, “German Empress”
House of Thurn and Taxis
Princes Marie Auguste of Thurn and Taxis, Duchess of Württemberg
House of Welf
Adelaide of Burgundy, Holy Roman Empress, Queen of Italy
Princess Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, The Queen of the United Kingdom & Hanover
Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, Holy Roman Empress
Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Bevern, The Queen in & of Prussia
Princess Juliane of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Bevern, The Queen of Denmark and Norway
House of Wettin
Adelheid (Adelaide) of Saxe-Meiningen, The Queen of the United Kingdom and Hanover
Princess Augusta of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, German Empress
Princess Christina of Saxony, The Landgravine of Hesse
Princess Luise (Louise) of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg, The Duchess of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, The Countess of Pölzig and Beiersdorf
House of Wied-Neuwied
Princess Elisabeth of Wied, The Queen & Princess of Romania
House of Wittelsbach
Princess Alexandra of Bavaria
Princess Amalie Auguste of Bavaria, The Queen of Saxony
Eleonore Magdalene of Neuburg, Holy Roman Empress
Elisabeth “Sisi” in Bavaria, The Empress of Austria
Elisabeth (Isabeau) of Bavaria, The Queen of France
Princess Elisabeth Ludovika of Bavaria, The Queen of Prussia
Helene “Néné” in Bavaria, The Hereditary Princess of Thurn and Taxis
Princess Ludovika of Bavaria, The Duchess in Bavaria
Princess Maria Anna of Bavaria, The Archduchess of Inner Austria-Styria
Princess Maria Anna of Bavaria, The Queen of Saxony
Marie in Bavaria, The Queen of Two Sicilies
Baroness Marie Louise of Wallersee, Countess of Larisch
Mathilde in Bavaria, The Countess of Trani
Sophie in Bavaria, The Duchess of Alençon
Princess Sophie of Bavaria, Archduchess of Austria
House of Württemberg
Mary of Teck, The Queen of the United Kingdom & British Dominions, Empress of India
Princess Sophie of Württemberg, The Queen of the Netherlands
Minor Nobles
Anna Constantia of Brockdorff, The Imperial Countess of Cosel
Katharina von Bora, Mrs Martin Luther
Baroness Louise Lehzen
Baroness Marie “Mary” of Vetsera
Sophie Botta, The Dark Countess of Hildburghausen
Sophie of Pannwitz, Countess of Voß
Foreign Houses
House of Albret
Jeanne d’Albret, The Queen of Navarre, 1. The Duchess of Jülich-Cleves-Berg and 2. The Duchess of Vendôme
House of Aviz
Infanta Eleonor of Portugal, Holy Roman Empress
House of Bourbon
Princess Louise d’Orléans, Princess Alfons of Bavaria
Byzantine Imperial Family
Princess Eudokia Laskarina of Nicaea, The Hereditary Duchess of Austria
Irene of Byzantium, The Queen of the Germans, The Duchess of Swabia
Princess Theodora Angelina, The Duchess of Austria & Styria
Princess Theodora Komnene of Byzantium, The Duchess of Bavaria & Austria
Theophanu, Holy Roman Empress
House of Chotek
Countess Sophie Chotek of Chotkowa and Wognin, The Duchess of Hohenberg
House of Este
Maria Beatrice d’Este, The Duchess of Massa & Carrara, Archduchess of Austria
House of Jagiellon
Jadwiga (Hedwig) Jagiellon, The Electress of Brandenburg
House of Stuart
Elizabeth Stuart, The Queen of Bohemia & Electress Palatine
House of Trastámara
Queen Joanna “The Mad” of Castile, Léon & Aragon, The Duchess of Burgundy, Archduchess of Austria
House of Valois
Mary, The Duchess of Burgundy, Archduchess of Austria
Commoners
Fatima Kariman aka Maria Aurora (von) Spiegel
Helene Baltazzi, The Baroness of Vetsera
Louise Rump, Mrs Ebert
Margot Großmann, Mrs Sauerbruch
Maria Anna Mozart, The Imperial Baroness Berchthold
Maria “Mizzi” Kaspar
Ottilie Richter, Baroness of Faber
Sophie Scholl
36 notes · View notes
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Minor Nobles: Helene Baltazzi, The Baroness of Vetsera
Helene was born in 1847 in Marseille as the daughter of a Greek banker. Her younger brother is the equestrian Alexander Baltazzi.
In 1864, she married the Austrian diplomat Albin, Knight of Vetsera, who was elevated to the status of Baron 6 years later. At the time of their marriage, it is said that Helena was the richest girl in Constantinople/Istanbul. She and her husband moved to Vienna, the Austrian capital, where Helena would become a woman of the society.
Between 1865 and 1872, Helena bore four children, two boys and two girls. Her oldest daughter Marie, nicknamed Mary, would gain tragic fame by being the victim in the murder suicide of Crown Prince Rudolf of Austria, that is also known as Mayerling Incident.
Helene fell from grace with the Austrian court and the aristocracy. She denied any involvement in encouraging the affair of Mary with Rudolf but instead blamed her former friend Countess Marie Louise of Larisch-Wallersee, who was also a cousin to Rudolf and niece of Empress Elisabeth.
Helene would survive her husband and all of her four children. She died impoverishedly on February 1st, 1925, in Vienna and is burried in Payersbach.
// Alexandra Vandernoot as Helene Vetsera in The Crown Prince (2006)
132 notes · View notes
Master Post of German & Austrian Nobles and Royals
Royal and Noble Houses
House of Coburg (Cadet branch of the House of Wettin)
Princess Alice of Great Britain and Ireland, The Grand Duchess of Hesse and by Rhine
Princess Charlotte of Belgium, The Empress of Mexico
Princess Louise of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg, The Duchess of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, (1st marriage)
Princess Mary of Teck, The Queen of the United Kingdom & British Dominions, The Empress of India
Princess Stéphanie of Belgium, The Crown Princess of Austria, Hungary and Bohemia
Princess Victoria of Great Britain and Ireland, Princess Royal
Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom (wife of Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha)
Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, The Princess of Leiningen, The Duchess of Kent
House of Habsburg
Anna Plochl, Countess of Meran
Princess Charlotte of Belgium, The Empress of Mexico, Archduchess of Austria
Infanta Eleanor of Portugal, Holy Roman Empress, The Archduchess of Austria
Eleonore Magdalene of Neuburg, Holy Roman Empress
Elisabeth in Bavaria, The Empress of Austria
Princess Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, Holy Roman Empress
Queen Joanna of Castile, León and Aragon (Consort of Philip the Handsome, Archduke of Austria and The Duke of Burgundy)
Archduchess Johanna of Austria, The Grand Duchess of Tuscany
Kunigunde of Austria, The Duchess of Bavaria-Munich
Archduchess Maria Amalia of Austria, Electress of Bavaria, Holy Roman Empress
Archduchess Maria Anna of Austria, Princess of Lorraine and Bar
Princess Maria Anna of Bavaria, The Archduchess of Inner Austria-Styria
Archduchess Maria Antonia of Austria, The Electress of Bavaria
Archduchess Maria Antonia “Marie Antoinette” of Austria, The Queen of France
Archduchess Maria Leopoldina, The Empress of Brazil, The Queen of Portugal and the Algarves
The Archduchess Maria Theresa (Maria Theresia) of Austria, Holy Roman Empress
Mary, The Duchess of Burgundy
Princess Sophie of Bavaria, Archduchess of Austria
Countess Sophie Chotek of Chotkowa and Wognin, The Duchess of Hohenberg
Princess Stéphanie of Belgium, The Crown Princess of Austria, Hungary and Bohemia
House of Hanover (cadet branch of the House of Welf)
Princess Adelaide (Adelheid) of Saxe-Meiningen, The Queen of the United Kingdom and Hanover
Princess Caroline of Ansbach, The Queen of Great Britain
Princess Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, The Queen of the United Kingdom and Hanover
Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, The Queen of Great Britain, Ireland and Hanover
Frederica (Friederike) of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, The Queen of Hanover, The Duchess of Cumberland and Teviotdale (3rd marriage)
Princess Sophia Dorothea of Hanover, The Queen in Prussia
Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom
Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, The Duchess of Kent (2nd marriage)
House of Hesse
Princess Alice of Great Britain and Ireland, The Grand Duchess of Hesse and by Rhine
Princess Alix of Hesse and by Rhine aka Empress Alexandra Feodorovna of Russia
Princess Cecilie of Greece and Denmark, The Hereditary Grand Duchess of Hesse and by Rhine
Princess Elisabeth of Hesse and by Rhine, Grand Duchess Elizabeth Feodorovna of Russia
House of Hohenzollern
Princess Anna Amalia of Prussia
Princess Augusta of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, The German Empress
Princess Augusta Victoria (Auguste Viktoria) of Schleswig-Holstein, The German Empress 
Princess Caroline of Ansbach, The Queen of Great Britain
Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Bevern, The Queen of Prussia
Princess Elisabeth Ludovika of Bavaria, The Queen of Prussia
Frederica (Friederike) of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, Princess Louis Charles of Prussia (1st marriage)
Princess Hermine Reuß, “German Empress”
Louise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, The Queen of Prussia
Princess Maria Eleonora of Brandenburg, The Queen of Sweden
Princess Marie of Prussia, The Queen of Bavaria
Princess Sophia Dorothea of Hanover, The Queen in Prussia
Princess Victoria of Great Britain and Ireland, Princess Royal, The German Empress
Princess Wilhelmine of Prussia, The Margravine of Brandenburg-Bayreuth
House of Liechtenstein
Princess Sophie of Liechtenstein, Countess Esterházy
House of Mecklenburg
Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, The Queen of Great Britain, Ireland and Hanover
Elisabeth of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Princess of Brunswick-Lüneburg aka Grand Duchess Anna Leopoldovna of Russia
Frederica (Friederike) of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, The Queen of Hanover
Louise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, The Queen of Prussia
Therese of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, The Princess of Thurn and Taxis
House of Oldenburg
Princess Adelheid of Hohenlohe-Langenburg, The Duchess of Schleswig-Holstein
Princess Augusta Victoria (Auguste Viktoria) of Schleswig-Holstein, The German Empress
Princess Cecilie of Greece and Denmark, The Hereditary Grand Duchess of Hesse and by Rhine
Princess Sophie of Anhalt-Zerbst, The Empress of Russia aka Catherine the Great
House of Romanov (incl. Romanov-Holstein-Gottrop)
Princess Alix of Hesse and by Rhine aka Empress Alexandra Feodorovna of Russia
Princess Elisabeth of Hesse and by Rhine, Grand Duchess Elizabeth Feodorovna of Russia
Princess Sophie of Anhalt-Zerbst, The Empress Regnant of Russia aka Catherine the Great
House of Thurn and Taxis
Helene in Bavaria, The Hereditary Princess of Thurn and Taxis
Princess Marie Auguste of Thurn and Taxis, The Duchess of Württemberg
Therese of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, The Princess of Thurn and Taxis
House of Welf (without the British Hanover branch)
Princess Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
Princess Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Bevern
Elisabeth of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Princess of Brunswick-Lüneburg aka Grand Duchess Anna Leopoldovna of Russia
House of Wettin (without the Coburg branch)
Princess Adelaide (Adelheid) of Saxe-Meiningen, The Queen of the United Kingdom and Hanover
Princess Amalie Auguste of Bavaria, The Queen of Saxony
Princess Feodora of Hohenlohe-Langenburg, The Duchess of Saxe-Meiningen
Princess Maria Anna of Bavaria, The Queen of Saxony
Sibylle of Cleves, The Electress of Saxony
House of Wittelsbach
Princess Amalie Auguste of Bavaria, The Queen of Saxony
Eleonore Magdalene of Neuburg, Holy Roman Empress
Elisabeth in Bavaria, The Empress of Austria
Elisabeth of Bavaria, The Queen of France
Princess Elisabeth Ludovika of Bavaria, The Queen of Prussia
Helene in Bavaria, The Hereditary Princess of Thurn and Taxis
Kunigunde of Austria, The Duchess of Bavaria-Munich
Princess Louise d’Orléans, Princess of Bavaria
Princess Ludovika of Bavaria, The Duchess in Bavaria
Archduchess Maria Amalia of Austria, Electress of Bavaria, Holy Roman Empress
Princess Maria Anna of Bavaria, The Archduchess of Inner Austria-Styria
Princess Maria Anna of Bavaria, The Queen of Saxony
Marie in Bavaria, The Queen of Two Sicilies
Princess Marie of Prussia, The Queen of Bavaria
Baroness Marie Louise of Wallersee, The Countess Larisch
Mathilde in Bavaria, The Countess of Trani
Sophie in Bavaria, The Duchess of Alençon
Princess Sophie of Bavaria, Archduchess of Austria
House of Württemberg
Princess Marie Auguste of Thurn and Taxis, The Duchess of Württemberg
Princess Mary of Teck, The Queen of the United Kingdom & British Dominions, The Empress of India
Princess Sophie of Württemberg, The Queen of the Netherlands
The Ottonians
Adelaide of Burgundy, Holy Roman Empress, Queen of Italy
Theophanu, Holy Roman Empress
Other (Minor) Nobles and Royals
Anna Constantia of Brockdorff, Imperial Countess of Cosel
Anne of Cleves, The Queen of England
Dunkelgräfin [Dark Countess] aka Sophia Botta
Princess Feodora of Leininigen, The Princess of Hohenlohe-Langenburg
Helene Baltazzi, The Baroness of Vetsera
Katharina von Bora, Mrs Luther
Baroness Louise Lehzen
Maria Anna Mozart, Imperial Baroness (of) Berchthold
Baroness Marie “Mary” of Vetsera
Marie Karoline of Mollard, Imperial Countess of Fuchs to Bimbach
Baroness Ottilie of Faber aka Countess Ottilie of Faber-Castell
Ottilie Richter, Baroness of Faber
Richenza of Northeim
Tropes
German Empresses
Princess Augusta of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach
Augusta Victoria (Auguste Viktoria) of Schleswig-Holstein
Princess Hermine Reuß [Claimed titled without right]
Princess Victoria of Great Britain and Ireland, Princess Royal 
Holy Roman Empresses
Adelaide of Burgundy, Queen of Italy
Infanta Eleanor of Portugal, The Archduchess of Austria
Eleonore Magdalene of Neuburg
Princess Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
Elizabeth of Pomerania
The Archduchess Maria Theresa (Maria Theresia) of Austria
Richenza of Northeim
Theophanu
Ladies-in-waiting
Princess Sophie of Liechtenstein, Countess Esterházy
Mistresses
Anna Constantia of Brockdorff, Imperial Countess of Cosel
Fatima Kariman aka Maria Aurora (von) Spiegel
Maria “Mizzi” Kaspar
Baroness Marie “Mary” of Vetsera
Period Drama Fashion
see Master Post: Period Drama Fashion
Queen (Consorts) of England/The United Kingdom/Great Britain
Princess Adelaide (Adelheid) of Saxe-Meiningen
Anne of Cleves
Princess Caroline of Ansbach
Princess Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
Princess Mary of Teck
Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom
Queens of the Iberian Peninsula
Queen Joanna of Castile, León and Aragon
Archduchess Maria Leopoldina, The Empress of Brazil, The Queen of Portugal and the Algarves
Siblings
The Children of Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld 
The Daughters of Caroline of Baden, The Queen of Bavaria 
The Daughters of Princess Ludovika of Bavaria
Significant Non-Nobles
Louise Ebert (née Rump)
Margot Sauerbruch (née Großmann)
Sophie Scholl
65 notes · View notes
New posts
There will soon be new original posts. For some I only need to write the next and others are just ideas in my head so far for which I also have footage for gifs. If you have any wishes, please tell me. I can’t always promise to do them but I will write them down to keep them in the back of my mind if I ever find an ideal fancast, unless you provide me with one of course.
My current works-in-progress:
Baroness Marie Louise of Wallersee, Countess Larisch [niece of Elisabeth “Sisi” of Austria]
Fatima Kariman aka Maria Aurora (von) Spiegel [Ottoman mistress of Augustus the Strong]
Hildegard of Bingen [nun and founder of German scientific natural history]
Mary Vetsera [Mistress of Crown Prince Rudolf of Austria]
Rosa Luxemburg [German politician of the 1910s]
13 notes · View notes