Dictionary Definition
archduchess n : a wife or widow of an archduke or
a princess of the former ruling house of Austria
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- a daughter or granddaughter of the Emperor of Austria-Hungary, or the wife of a son or grandson of the Emperor of Austria-Hungary
- The male equivalent is archduke.
Translations
daughter or granddaughter of the Emperor of
Austria-Hungary
- Dutch: aartshertogin
- Esperanto: arkidukino
- Finnish: arkkiherttuatar
- German: Erzherzogin
- Spanish: archiduquesa
Related terms
Extensive Definition
The title of Archduke (feminine: Archduchess)
(German:
Erzherzog, feminine -also spousal- form: Erzherzogin) denotes a
rank above Duke and under
King, but is
too rare and yet has uses too diverse to be given a fixed relative
position within the former Holy
Roman Empire to which it was restricted. It has only ever been
continuously borne by princes of the House of Habsburg and later
through the female line into the House of Habsburg-Lorraine.
The first seventy-three people in the line of
succession to the throne of the Imperial and Royal Family of
Austria-Hungary
are all Imperial
and Royal
(HI&RH) Archdukes.
Ruler style
The English word is recorded only since 1530, derived from Middle - via Old French archeduc, from Merovingian Latin archidux, from arch(i)- (see arch- (adj.)) + dux 'duke' . Archduke (Erzherzog) is a title distinct from Grand Duke (Großherzog or Großfürst) used in some other German royal houses and still in sovereign Luxemburg.First use was as a the title of the rulers of
Austrasia
(c.750), one of the Frankish realms resulting from the complex
successions in the house of Clovis, roughly
comprising Germany, Switzerland and
the Low
Countries. In the Carolingian
empire it was awarded as a unique promotion to the duke of Lotharingia
(larger then Lorraine),
which could been seen as successor to the former Carolingian
kingdom of Lothringia which had been at par at least with West Francia
(modern France) in the dynastic divisions under the early heirs of
Charlemagne but
ended up absorbed by East Francia
(Greater Germany).
After the split (959) of the (arch)duchy into
Upper- (German Oberlothringen, including modern Lorraine)
and Lower Lothringia (German Niederlothringen, north of it, with
seat at Cologne and
originally vested in its Archbishop, but
up stretching all the way to Frisia) and the
latter's further fragmentation, two of the 'succeeding' duchies in
the Low Countries, Brabant (mainly in
present Belgium) and Gelre (now in the
Dutch kingdom, gave its name to the province of Gelderland),
claimed the archducal rank but never were officially granted it by
the Holy
Roman Emperor. The Dutch form
is Aartshertog.
The title Archduke of Austria, the only one to
become generally notable, was invented in the Privilegium
Maius, a 14th century
forgery initiated by Duke Rudolf
IV of Austria. Originally, it was meant to denote the ruler of
the (thus 'Arch')duchy of Austria, in an
effort to put that ruler on par with the electorships,
as Austria had been passed over in the Golden
Bull of 1356, where the electorships had been assigned. Holy
Roman Emperor
Charles IV refused to recognize the title.
Duke
Ernest the Iron and his descendants unilaterally assumed the
title "archduke";
This title was only officially recognized in
1453 by
Emperor Frederick III, when the Habsburgs had
(permanently) gained control of the office of the Holy
Roman Emperor.
First it was granted to Frederick's younger
brother, Albert VI of Austria, d. 1463, who used the title at least
from 1458.
In 1477, Frederick III granted the title archduke
also to his first cousin, Sigismund
of Austria, ruler of Further
Austria.
Also Frederick's son and heir, the future
Emperor Maximilian I started to use the title, but obviously
only after the death of his wife Mary of
Burgundy, d. 1482, as the title never appears in documents of
joint Maximilian and Mary rule in the Low Countries (where
Maximilian is still titled Duke of Austria). The title appears
first in documents of joint Maximilian and Philip
(his under-age son) rule in the Low Countries.
Emperor Frederick III himself used just Duke of
Austria, never Archduke, until his death in 1490.
Ladislaus
the Posthumous, Duke of Austria, who died in 1457, was never in
his lifetime authorized to use it, and accordingly, not he nor
anyone in his branch of the dynasty, ever used the title.
Female children of the dynasty were not entitled
to the title yet in the 15th century. It was used only by those
dynasts who reigned a Habsburg territory, i.e only by males and
their consorts.
Other dynastic Habsburg use
Like Grand prince (often imprecisely rendered as Grand Duke, actually a lower rank it should not be confused with; the German equivalent is Großfürst, not Großherzog; the main cases were Lithuania, which in 1386 formed a personal union with Poland, and Moscovia, the nucleus of the later imperial Russia till its ruler assumed the sovereign style Tsar of royal rank, still later Emperor) in imperial Russia, archduke was used for non-(sovereign) rulers as a titular rank for princes of the Austrian ruling house of Habsburg, in chief of an Austrian homeland but without becoming its hereditary ruler (occasionally it might be combined with a separate gubernatorial mandate), as all territories remained vested in the Austrian crown.From the 16th century
onward, Archduke and its female form, Archduchess, came to be used
by all the members of the House of
Habsburg, similar to the title Prince (of the
blood) in many other royal houses. For example, Queen Marie
Antoinette of France was born Maria Antonia, Archduchess of
Austria. This practice was maintained, after the dissolution of the
Holy Roman empire, in the Austrian
Empire (1804-1867) and the Austro-Hungarian
Empire (1867-1918).
With the abolition of the monarchy, noble titles
and the peerage system were also abolished in Austria. Thus, those
members of the extended Habsburg family who are citizens of the
Republic
of Austria, are simply known by their respective first name and
their surname, Habsburg-Lothringen. The use of aristocratic titles
such as archduke is in fact illegal in Austria. However, some
members of the family who are citizens of other countries such as
Germany,
where aristocratic titles have become part of the name, may use the
title.
Fictional Archdukes
- Poggle the Lesser was the Archduke of Geonosis, a planet from the Star Wars universe.
Sources and references
See also
archduchess in Bosnian: Nadvojvoda
archduchess in Bulgarian: Ерцхерцог
archduchess in Czech: Arcivévoda
archduchess in Danish: Ærkehertug
archduchess in German: Erzherzog
archduchess in Estonian: Ertshertsog
archduchess in Spanish: Archiduque
archduchess in French: Archiduc
archduchess in Hungarian: Főherceg
archduchess in Dutch: Aartshertog
archduchess in Norwegian: Erkehertug
archduchess in Polish: Arcyksiążę
archduchess in Portuguese: Arquiduque
archduchess in Russian: Эрцгерцог
archduchess in Simple English: Archduke
archduchess in Slovak: Arcivojvoda
archduchess in Finnish: Arkkiherttua
archduchess in Swedish: Ärkehertig
archduchess in Vietnamese: Đại công tước
Áo
archduchess in Turkish: Arşidük
archduchess in Ukrainian:
Архикнязь