Austrian
Netherlands (Belgium)
Holy Roman Emperor Franz II of Habsburg (Ruled 1792-1806) 1797 H Silver Kronenthaler 40mm (29.20 grams) 0.873 Silver
Reference: KM# 62.1 – 62.2, KM# 239, N&V# 486,
KM# 246 (1792-1801) | Engraver: Théodore Van
Berckel
FRANC II D G R I S A GER HIE HVN BOH REX ou
FRANCISC, Franz facing right.
ARCH·AVST·DVX·BVRG·LOTH·BRAB·COM·FLAN·,
Burgundian cross with three crowns and the
Golden Fleece below.
Edge Lettering:
LEGE ET FIDE or FIDE ET LEGE
You are bidding on the exact item pictured, provided with a Certificate of Authenticity and Lifetime Guarantee of Authenticity.
Francis III (German: Franz; 12 February 1768 – 2 March 1835) was the last Holy Roman Emperor, ruling from 1792 until 6 August 1806, when he dissolved the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation after the decisive defeat at the hands of the First French Empire led by Napoleon at the Battle of Austerlitz. In 1804, he had founded the Austrian Empire and became Francis I, the first Emperor of Austria, ruling from 1804 to 1835, so later he was named the one and only Doppelkaiser (double emperor) in history.[1] For the two years between 1804 and 1806, Francis used the title and style by the Grace of God elected Roman Emperor, ever Augustus, hereditary Emperor of Austria and he was called the Emperor of both the Holy Roman Empire and Austria. He was also Apostolic King of Hungary and Bohemia as Francis I. He also served as the first president of the German Confederation following its establishment in 1815.
<pfrancis ii="" continued="" his="" leading="" role="" as="" an="" opponent="" of="" napoleonic="" france="" in="" the="" wars,="" and="" suffered="" several="" more="" defeats="" after="" austerlitz.="" proxy="" marriage="" state="" daughter="" marie="" louise="" austria="" to="" napoleon="" on="" 10="" march="" 1810="" was="" arguably="" severest="" personal="" defeat.="" abdication="" following="" war="" sixth="" coalition,="" participated="" a="" member="" holy="" alliance="" at="" congress="" vienna,="" which="" largely="" dominated="" by="" francis's="" chancellor="" klemens="" wenzel,="" prince="" von="" metternich="" culminating="" new="" european="" map="" restoration="" ancient="" dominions="" (except="" roman="" empire="" dissolved).="" due="" establishment="" concert="" europe,="" resisted="" popular="" nationalist="" liberal="" tendencies,="" francis="" became="" viewed="" reactionary="" later="" reign.=""
Francis was a son of Emperor Leopold II (1747-1792) and his wife Maria Luisa of Spain (1745-1792), daughter of Charles III of Spain. Francis was born in Florence, the capital of Tuscany, where his father reigned as Grand Duke from 1765-90. Though he had a happy childhood surrounded by his many siblings, his family knew Francis was likely to be a future Emperor (his uncle Joseph had no surviving issue from either of his two marriages), and so in 1784 the young Archduke was sent to the Imperial Court in Vienna to Emperor Joseph II himself took charge of Francis’s development. His disciplinarian regime was a stark contrast to the indulgent Florentine Court of Leopold. The Emperor wrote that Francis was “stunted in growth”, “backward in bodily dexterity and deportment”, and “neither more nor less than a spoiled mother’s child”. Joseph concluded that “the manner in which he was treated for upwards of sixteen years could not but have confirmed him in the delusion that the preservation of his own person was the only thing of importance”.
Joseph’s martinet method of improving the young Francis were “fear and unpleasantness”. The young Archduke was isolated, the reasoning being that this would make him more self-sufficient as it was felt by Joseph that Francis “failed to lead himself, to do his own thinking”. Nonetheless, Francis greatly admired his uncle, if rather feared him. To complete his training, Francis was sent to join an army regiment in Hungary and he settled easily into the routine of military life.
After the death of Joseph II in 1790, Francis’s father became Emperor. He had an early taste of power while acting as Leopold’s deputy in Vienna while the incoming Emperor traversed the Empire attempting to win back those alienated by his brother’s policies. The strain tolled on Leopold and by the winter of 1791, he became ill. He gradually worsened throughout early 1792; on the afternoon of 1 March Leopold died, at the relatively young age of 44. Francis, just past his 24th birthday, was now Emperor, much sooner than he had expected.
<pas the="" leader="" of="" large="" multi-ethnic="" habsburg="" empire,="" francis="" felt="" threatened="" by="" napoleon's="" social="" and="" political="" reforms,="" which="" were="" being="" exported="" throughout="" europe="" with="" expansion="" first="" french="" empire.="" had="" a="" fraught="" relationship="" france.="" his="" aunt="" marie="" antoinette,="" wife="" louis="" xvi="" queen="" consort="" france,="" was="" guillotined="" revolutionaries="" in="" 1793,="" at="" beginning="" reign.="" francis,="" on="" whole,="" indifferent="" to="" her="" fate="" (she="" not="" close="" father,="" leopold,="" although="" met="" her,="" he="" been="" too="" young="" time="" have="" any="" memory="" aunt).="" georges="" danton="" attempted="" negotiate="" emperor="" for="" antoinette's="" release,="" but="" unwilling="" make="" concessions="" return.=""
Later, he led Austria into the French Revolutionary Wars. He briefly commanded the Allied forces during the Flanders Campaign of 1794 before handing over command to his brother Archduke Charles. He was later defeated by Napoleon. By the Treaty of Campo Formio, he ceded the left bank of the Rhine to France in exchange for Venice and Dalmatia. He again fought against France during the Second and Third Coalition, when after meeting a crushing defeat at Austerlitz, he had to agree to the Treaty of Pressburg, weakening the Austrian Empire and reorganizing Germany under a Napoleonic imprint that would be called the Confederation of the Rhine.
At this point, he believed his position as Holy Roman Emperor to be untenable, so on 6 August 1806, he abdicated the throne, declaring the empire to be already dissolved in the same declaration. This was a political move to impair the legitimacy of the Confederation of the Rhine. He had anticipated losing the Holy Roman crown, however. Two years earlier, as a reaction to Napoleon making himself an emperor, he had raised Austria to the status of an empire. Hence, after 1806, he reigned as Francis I, Emperor of Austria.
In 1809, Francis attacked France again, hoping to take advantage of the Peninsular War embroiling Napoleon in Spain. He was again defeated, and this time forced to ally himself with Napoleon, ceding territory to the Empire, joining the Continental System, and wedding his daughter Marie-Louise to the Emperor. The Napoleonic wars drastically weakened Austria, making it entirely landlocked and threatened its preeminence among the states of Germany, a position that it would eventually cede to the Kingdom of Prussia.
In 1813, for the fourth and final time, Austria turned against France and joined Great Britain, Russia, Prussia and Sweden in their war against Napoleon. Austria played a major role in the final defeat of France-in recognition of this, Francis, represented by Clemens von Metternich, presided over the Congress of Vienna, helping to form the Concert of Europe and the Holy Alliance, ushering in an era of conservatism in Europe. The German Confederation, a loose association of Central European states was created by the Congress of Vienna in 1815 to organize the surviving states of the Holy Roman Empire. The Congress was a personal triumph for Francis, who hosted the assorted dignitaries in comfort, though Francis undermined his allies Tsar Alexander and Frederick William III of Prussia by negotiating a secret treaty with the restored French king Louis XVIII.
The violent events of the French Revolution impressed themselves deeply into the mind of Francis (as well as all other European monarchs), and he came to distrust radicalism in any form. In 1794, a “Jacobin” conspiracy was discovered in the Austrian and Hungarian armies. The leaders were put on trial, but the verdicts only skirted the perimeter of the conspiracy. Francis’s brother Alexander Leopold (at that time Palatine of Hungary) wrote to the Emperor admitting “Although we have caught a lot of the culprits, we have not really got to the bottom of this business yet.” Nonetheless, two officers heavily implicated in the conspiracy were hanged and gibbeted, while numerous others were sentenced to imprisonment (many of whom died from the conditions).
<pfrancis was="" from="" his="" experiences="" suspicious="" and="" set="" up="" an="" extensive="" network="" of="" police="" spies="" censors="" to="" monitor="" dissent="" (in="" this="" he="" following="" father's="" lead,="" as="" the="" grand="" duchy="" tuscany="" had="" most="" effective="" secret="" in="" europe).="" even="" family="" did="" not="" escape="" attention.="" brothers,="" archdukes="" charles="" johann="" their="" meetings="" activities="" spied="" upon.="" censorship="" also="" prevalent.="" author="" franz="" grillparzer,="" a="" habsburg="" patriot,="" one="" play="" suppressed="" solely="" "precautionary"="" measure.="" when="" grillparzer="" met="" censor="" responsible,="" asked="" him="" what="" objectionable="" about="" work.="" replied,="" "oh,="" nothing="" at="" all.="" but="" i="" thought="" myself,="" 'one="" can="" never="" tell'."
In military affairs Francis had allowed his brother, the Archduke Charles, extensive control over the army during the Napoleonic wars. Yet, distrustful of allowing any individual too much power, he otherwise maintained the separation of command functions between the Hofkriegsrat and his field commanders. In the later years of his reign he limited military spending, requiring it not exceed forty million florins per year; because of inflation this resulted in inadequate funding, with the army’s share of the budget shrinking from half in 1817 to only twenty-three percent in 1830.
Francis presented himself as an open and approachable monarch (he regularly set aside two mornings each week to meet his imperial subjects, regardless of status, by appointment in his office, even speaking to them in their own language), but his will was sovereign. In 1804, he had no compunction about announcing that through his authority as Holy Roman Emperor, he declared he was now Emperor of Austria (at the time a geographical term that had little resonance). Two years later, Francis personally wound up the moribund Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation. Both actions were of dubious constitutional legality.
On 2 March 1835, 43 years and a day after his father’s death, Francis died in Vienna of a sudden fever aged 67, in the presence of many of his family and with all the religious comforts. His funeral was magnificent, with his Viennese subjects respectfully filing past his coffin in the chapel of Hofburg Palace for three days. Francis was interred in the traditional resting place of Habsburg monarchs, the Kapuziner Imperial Crypt in Vienna’s Neue Markt Square. He is buried in tomb number 57, surrounded by his four wives.
Francis left a main point in the political testament he left for his son and heir Ferdinand to; “preserve unity in the family and regard it as one of the highest goods.” In many portraits (particularly those painted by Peter Fendi) he was portrayed as the patriarch of a loving family, surrounded by his children and grandchildren.
After 1806 he used the titles: “We, Francis the First, by the Grace of God Emperor of Austria; King of Jerusalem, Hungary, Bohemia, Dalmatia, Croatia, Slavonia, Galicia and Lodomeria; Archduke of Austria; Duke of Lorraine, Salzburg, Würzburg, Franconia, Styria, Carinthia and Carniola; Grand Duke of Cracow; Grand Prince of Transylvania; Margrave of Moravia; Duke of Sandomir, Masovia, Lublin, Upper and Lower Silesia, Auschwitz and Zator, Teschen and Friule; Prince of Berchtesgaden and Mergentheim; Princely Count of Habsburg, Gorizia and Gradisca and of the Tirol; and Margrave of Upper and Lower Lusatia and in Istria”.
The Austrian Netherlands was the larger part of the Southern Netherlands between 1714 and 1797. The period began with the Austrian acquisition of the former Spanish Netherlands under the Treaty of Rastatt in 1714 and lasted until Revolutionary France annexed the territory during the aftermath of the Battle of Sprimont in 1794 and the Peace of Basel in 1795. Austria, however, did not relinquish its claim over the province until 1797 in the Treaty of Campo Formio.
Under the Treaty of Rastatt (1714), following the War of the Spanish Succession, the surviving portions of the Spanish Netherlands were ceded to Austria.
In the 1780s, opposition emerged to the liberal reforms of Emperor Joseph II, which were perceived as an attack on the Catholic Church and the traditional institutions in the Austrian Netherlands. Resistance, focused in the autonomous and wealthy Duchy of Brabant and County of Flanders, grew. In the aftermath of rioting and disruption, known as the Small Revolution, in 1787, many of opponents took refuge in the neighboring Dutch Republic where they formed a rebel army. Soon after the outbreak of the French and Liège revolutions, the émigré army crossed into the Austrian Netherlands and decisively defeated the Austrians at the Battle of Turnhout in October 1789. The rebels, supported by uprisings across the territory, soon took control over much of the territory and proclaimed independence. Despite the tacit support of Prussia, the independent United Belgian States, established in January 1790, received no foreign recognition and soon became divided along ideological lines. The Vonckists, led by Jan Frans Vonck, advocated progressive and liberal government, whereas the Statists, led by Hendrik Van der Noot, were staunchly conservative and supported by the Church. The Statists, who had a wider base of support, soon drove the Vonckists into exile through terror.
By mid-1790, Habsburg Austria ended its war with the Ottoman Empire and prepared to suppress the rebels. The new Holy Roman Emperor, Leopold II, was also a liberal and proposed an amnesty for the rebels. After defeating a Statist army at the Battle of Falmagne, the territory was soon overrun and the revolution was defeated by December. The Austrian reestablishment was short-lived, however, and the territory was soon overrun by the French during the French Revolutionary Wars.
The Councillors of state acted as government, and formed the council by imperial consent:
- The Baron Franz von Reischach, Imperial Diplomat
- Cardinal von Migazzi
- Cardinal von Frankenberg
- the Baron of Gottignies, Imperial Lord Chamberlain
- Philippe von Cobenzl, vice Chancellor of the Imperial Council of State.
- Henri d’Ognies, Prince of Grimberghen, Imperial Lord Chamberlain
- the Count of Neny; president of the Privy Council, member of the Imperial Council of State
- the Count of Woestenraedt, Imperial Lord Chamberlain.
- the Marquess of Chasteler, Lord Chamberlain
- the Count of Gomegnies, President of the Council of Hainaut
- the Viscount of Villers; Imperial Treasurer General
- Franz Joseph, Prince of Gavre: Grand Marshall of the Imperial Court of the Archduchess.
In 1794, the armies of the French Revolution annexed the Austrian Netherlands from the Holy Roman Empire and integrated them into the French Republic.
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