House of Habsburg

Austrian imperial house

The House of Habsburg was a family of dukes, kings, and monarchs that was very important in European history. It first ruled parts of Switzerland in the 13th century and then ruled Austria, later Austria-Hungary, for more than 600 years. It ruled owned Spain and the Netherlands for a while, the Holy Roman Empire from about 1280 to 1806 and the Kingdom of Sardinia until the mid-19th century.

House of Habsburg
Haus Habsburg
Imperial, Royal, and Ducal dynasty
This is the "left" image described in the overall caption
This is the "right" image described in the overall caption
Left: Habsburg "ancient", coat of arms of the Counts of Habsburg: Or, a lion rampant gules crowned azure ("Lion of Habsburg"); right: Habsburg "modern"/Austria, arms of the House of Habsburg, Archdukes of Austria: Gules, a fess argent ("Bindenschild"); originally the arms of the House of Babenburg, Dukes of Austria and Styria
Parent houseHouse of Eticho (disputed)
Country
List
EtymologyHabsburg Castle
Founded11th century
FounderRadbot of Klettgau
Current headKarl von Habsburg (cognatic line)
Final rulerCharles I of Austria (cognatic line)
Titles
List
  • Holy Roman Emperor
  • Emperor of Austria
  • Emperor of Mexico
  • Emperor of Brazil
  • King of the Romans
  • King of Germany
  • King of Spain
  • King of Italy
  • King of Castile
  • King of Aragon
  • King of Valencia
  • King of Mallorca
  • King of León
  • King of Bulgaria
  • King of Sicily
  • King of Naples
  • King of Navarre
  • King of Hungary
  • King of Jerusalem[note 2]
  • King of Bohemia
  • King of Croatia
  • King of Dalmatia
  • King of Slavonia
  • King of Illyria
  • King of Poland[note 3]
  • King of Portugal
  • King of Galicia and Lodomeria
  • King of Jaén
  • King of England[note 1]
  • King of Ireland[note 1]
  • King of New Mexico[1][2]
  • King of the Indies
  • King of Serbia
  • King of the East and West Indies
  • King of Chile[note 4]
  • King of France[note 2]
  • Archduke of Austria
  • Royal Prince of Belgium[note 5]
  • Grand Duke of Lithuania[note 3]
  • Grand Prince of Transylvania
  • Prince of Swabia
  • Duke of Austria
  • Duke of Burgundy
  • Duke of Guelders
  • Duke of Luxembourg
  • Duke of Parma and Piacenza
  • Duke of Modena and Reggio
  • Duke of Milan
  • Duke of Lothier
  • Duke of Brabant
  • Duke of Limburg
  • Duke of Gelderland
  • Duke of Styria
  • Duke of Carniola
  • Duke of Württemberg
  • Duke of Carinthia
  • Duke of Anjou
  • Duke of Alençon
  • Duke of Angoulème
  • Duke of Aquitaine
  • Duke of Berry
  • Duke of Bourbon
  • Duke of Brittany
  • Duke of Braganza
  • Duke of Bukovina
  • Duke of Calabria
  • Duke of Châtellerault
  • Duke of Durazzo
  • Duke of Enghien
  • Duke of Lorraine
  • Duke of Lucca
  • Duke of Montpensier
  • Duke of Nemours
  • Duke of Normandy
  • Duke of Orléans
  • Duke of Parma
  • Duke of Slavonia
  • Duke of Touraine
  • Duke of Vendôme
  • Margrave of Namur
  • Margrave of Moravia
  • Marquis of Oristano
  • Marquis of Goceano
  • Margrave of Antwerp
  • Landgrave of Alsace
  • Count of Artois
  • Count of Holland
  • Count of Flanders
  • Count of Klettgau
  • Count of Thurgau
  • Count of Onertau
  • Count of Altemburg
  • Count of Hainaut
  • Count of Charolais
  • Count of Zeeland
  • Count of Zutphen
  • Count of Barcelona
  • Count of Roussillon
  • Count of Cerdanya
  • Count of Kyburg
  • Count of Haut-Rhin
  • Count of Goriza
  • Count of Namur
  • Count of Covadonga
  • Count of Girona
  • Count of Osona
  • Count of Besalú
  • Count of Anjou
  • Count of Champagne
  • Count of Chartres
  • Count of Clermont
  • Count of Dreux
  • Count of Étampes
  • Count of Eu
  • Count of Évreux
  • Count of Gravina
  • Count of La Marche
  • Count of Longueville
  • Count of Montpensier
  • Count of Mortain
  • Count of Nevers
  • Count of Perche
  • Count of Poitiers
  • Count of Provence
  • Count of Soissons
  • Count of Toulouse
  • Count of Valois
  • Count of Vendôme
  • Count of Vermandois
  • Count of Vertus
  • Count of Habsburg
  • Count Palatine of Burgundy
  • Lord of Biscay
  • Lord of Mechelen
  • Lord of Molina
  • Various Habsburg European titles
MottoA.E.I.O.U. and Viribus Unitis
Estate(s)
  • Hofburg (formal seat)
  • Prague Castle (formal seat)
  • Habsburg Castle (ancestral)
Cadet branchesAgnatic: (all are extinct)

Cognatic:

A treaty was made in Vienna in 1515 between the king of Poland and duke of Lithuania from the Jagiellon dynasty and Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor, the duke of Austria from the Habsburg family. It stated that if the Jagiellon kings of Bohemia and Hungary died without a male heir, Maximilian and his heirs would take over the territory.

Charles II of Spain had disabilities probably caused by inbreeding in the House of Habsburg

The senior branch of the House of Habsburg became extinct in the 18th century, when Charles II of Spain died in 1700 and was replaced by the House of Bourbon. Charles had mental and physical handicaps, which were probably caused by inbreeding between relatives in the royal houses of Continental Europe. Marriages of close relatives had occurred for the five generations before him. He was the son of Philip IV, who married his sister's daughter.

The remaining branch went extinct in the male line in 1740 with the death of Holy Roman Emperor Charles VI and completely in 1780 with the death of his eldest daughter, Maria Theresa of Austria. It was succeeded by the Vaudemont branch of the House of Lorraine, which styled itself formally as House of Habsburg-Lorraine (German: Habsburg-Lothringen), but it was often referred to as simply the House of Habsburg.

The last empress was Zita of Bourbon-Parma, who died in Switzerland in 1989. She had ruled with her husband, Charles I of Austria, from 1916 to 1918.

The current head is Karl Habsburg-Lothringen.

Notes

References