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Pretender
Emperor Otto of Austria
Born 20 November 1912 (1912-11-20) (age 96)
Title(s) Archduke and Crown Prince of Austria, Crown Prince of Hungary, Croatia and Bohemia
Throne(s) claimed Austria, Hungary, Croatia and Bohemia
Pretend from 1 April 1922 - present
Monarchy abolished 1918
Last monarch Charles I
Connection with Eldest son
Royal House Habsburg-Lorraine
Father Charles I of Austria
Mother Zita of Bourbon-Parma
Spouse Princess Regina of Saxe-Meiningen and Hildburghausen
Children Andrea, Monika, Michaela, Gabriela, Walburga, Karl, Georg
Predecessor Charles I

Otto von Habsburg (born 20 November 1912 as Archduke Franz Joseph Otto Robert Maria Anton Karl Max Heinrich Sixtus Xaver Felix Renatus Ludwig Gaetan Pius Ignatius of Austria, later of Austria-Este), was the nominal king of Hungary from 1922 to 1946 and has been the head of the Habsburg family since 1922. He is the eldest son of Charles, the last Emperor of Austria and King of Hungary-Croatia and Bohemia, and his wife, Zita of Bourbon-Parma. He is a former member of the European Parliament for the Christian Social Union (CSU) party and honorary president of the International Paneuropean Union.

Otto lives in Bavaria in Germany, and is a citizen of Germany, Austria, Croatia and Hungary. Although his official name in Germany is Otto von Habsburg, he is referred to as Otto Habsburg-Lothringen by Austrian authorities, since the use of noble titles and prepositions like "von" is forbidden by the Austrian constitution. He is sometimes known as Archduke Otto of Austria, Crown Prince Otto of Austria, and in Hungary simply as Habsburg Ottó.

Contents

Early life

Otto and his great-granduncle Emperor Franz Joseph

Otto was born at Villa Wartholz in Reichenau an der Rax, Lower Austria. He was baptised on 25 November 1912, at Villa Wartholz, by the Prince-Archbishop of Vienna, Cardinal Franz Xavier Nagl. His godfather was the Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria (represented by Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria); his godmother was his grandmother Infanta Maria Antonia of Portugal.[1]

In November 1916, Otto became Crown Prince of Austria, Hungary-Croatia and Bohemia when his father, Archduke Charles, ascended to the throne. However, in 1918, at the end of the First World War, the monarchies were abolished, the Republics of Austria and Hungary founded instead, and the family was forced into exile. Hungary did become a kingdom again, but Charles was never to ascend the throne. Instead, Miklós Horthy ruled as regent until 1944, in a kingdom without a king.

Years in exile

Otto's family spent the subsequent years in Switzerland and on the Portuguese island of Madeira, where Karl died prematurely in 1922, leaving the 10-year-old Otto pretender to the throne. Meanwhile, the Austrian parliament had officially expelled the Habsburg dynasty and confiscated all the official property (Habsburgergesetz of 3 April 1919).

Otto von Habsburg (left) and Count von Degensfeld in 1933.

In 1935 Otto graduated from the Catholic University of Leuven, having studied social and political sciences.

Opposing the Nazi government

Titular Austrian Imperial Family

A fervent Austrian patriot, Otto opposed the Nazi Anschluss in Austria in 1938 (the Nazis codenamed their plan for a military invasion of Austria "Otto" because they planned to invade immediately if he was restored to the throne)[citation needed] and, sentenced to death by Hitler, chose to leave Europe altogether. Otto spent most of the war years in Washington, D.C. (1940 – 1944), after escaping from Belgium to Paris with his mother, former Empress Zita, and other family members. His uncle Max, Duke of Hohenberg, and Prince Ernst of Hohenberg were arrested in Vienna by the Gestapo and sent to a concentration camp until the end of the war.[citation needed] When Paris was in danger, the family left the French capital and moved to Portugal with a visa issued by Aristides de Sousa Mendes, the Portuguese consul in Bordeaux.[citation needed] After the war, Otto lived for some years in both France and Spain.

Political career

Otto von Habsburg giving a speech

In 1961, Otto "for purely practical reasons"[2] renounced all claims to the Austrian throne and was eventually allowed to return to his home country in 1966. (Austria had until the mid 1950s been officially neutral, staunchly republican and ill-disposed to welcome back the heir to a deposed dynasty.)

An early advocate of a unified Europe, Otto was president of the International Paneuropean Union from 1986 to 2004. He served from 1979 till 1999 as a Member of the European Parliament for the conservative CSU party, becoming the Senior Member of the supranational body. He is also a member of the Mont Pelerin Society. He was a major supporter of the expansion of the European Union from the beginning and especially of the acceptance of Hungary. During his time in parliament Otto is alleged to have struck fellow MEP Ian Paisley. When Pope John Paul II gave a speech to the European Parliament in 1988, Paisley shouted at the Pope, "I renounce you as the Antichrist!" and held up a poster reading "Pope John Paul II Antichrist", whereupon he was excluded from the session and expelled from the room by other MEPs.[3][4]

Otto is a patron of the Three Faiths Forum, a group which aims to encourage friendship, goodwill and understanding amongst people of the three monotheistic faiths of Christianity, Judaism and Islam in the United Kingdom and elsewhere.[5]

In December 2006, Otto observed that, "The catastrophe of September 11, 2001 struck the United States more profoundly than any of us, whence a certain mutual incomprehension. Until then, the United States felt itself secure, persuaded of its power to bombard any enemy, without anyone being able to strike back. That sentiment vanished in an instant... Americans understand 'viscerally' for the first time the risks they face."[6]

In January 2007 he relinquished his status as the Head of his House to his eldest son.[7]

On 5 July 2007 Otto received London’s highest honour, the Freedom of the City of London from the hands of Sir Gavyn Arthur, former Lord Mayor of London.[8]

Family life

Coronation photograph of Zita as Queen of Hungary, with her husband, King Charles IV and Crown Prince Otto between them.
Photo: 31 December 1916

Otto has been married since 1951 to Princess Regina of Saxe-Meiningen and Hildburghausen. The couple have seven children and 23 grandchildren:

Otto and his wife reside in retirement at the Villa Austria in Pöcking bei Starnberg, Starnberg, near the lake Starnberger See, Upper Bavaria, Bavaria, Germany.

Ancestry

Patrilineal descent

Otto is a member of the House of Habsburg-Lorraine, descended from the Dukes of Lorraine, of Frankish origin.

Otto's patriline is the line from which he is descended father to son. It follows the Emperors of Austria, the Dukes of Lorraine and before them, the Counts of Norgau. The line can be traced back more than 1,400 years and is the oldest in Europe with the exclusion of the Bagratids of Georgia and the Houses of Ireland such as the Uí Néill.

  1. Amale, c. 550 - 589, Frankish Nobleman, Duke
  2. Amalgaire, c. 580 - 657, 1st Duke of Atuyer in 614
  3. Adalric, c. 605 - bef. 670, 2nd Duke of Atuyer from 657
  4. Adalric or Etichon, c. 630 - bef. 690, 1st Duke of Alsace from 670
  5. Adalric or Haicon, c. 670 - aft. 726, 1st Count of Norgau; his older brother Adalbert, d. 722, 2nd Duke of Alsace, was the patrilineal ancestor of the House of Habsburg
  6. Albéric, c. 710 - c. 760, 2nd Count of Norgau c. 730 - 735
  7. Eberard I, c. 745 - c. 795, 3rd Count of Norgau 765 - 777
  8. Eberard II, c. 790 - c. 864, 4th Count of Norgau in 864
  9. Eberard III, 830 - c. 900, 5th and 1st Hereditary Count of Norgau in 885
  10. Hugues I, bef. 875 - c. 940, 2nd Count of Norgau
  11. Eberard IV, 905 - 18 December 967, 3rd Count of Norgau until 951
  12. Adalbert, c. 955 - aft. 1033, 1st Count of Metz in c. 890, Founder of the Monastery of Bougainville
  13. Gerard de Bouzonville, 2nd Count of Metz, c. 985 - 1045
  14. Gerard, Duke of Lorraine, c. 1028 - 1070; his older brother Adalbert, c. 1016 - 1048, 2nd? Count of Longwy, 1st Duke of Haute Lorraine from 1047 to 1048, was the patrilineal ancestor of the Counts of Burgundy and the Kings of Castile from the 12th century to the 15th century
  15. Theodoric II, Duke of Lorraine, c. 1055 - 1115
  16. Simon I, Duke of Lorraine, c. 1080 - 1138; his younger brother Thierry of Alsace, d. c. 1168, Count of Flanders, was the patrilineal ancestor of the House of Flanders
  17. Matthias I, Duke of Lorraine, c. 1110 - 1176
  18. Frederick I, Duke of Lorraine, c. 1140 - 1207
  19. Frederick II, Duke of Lorraine, c. 1165 - 1213
  20. Matthias II, Duke of Lorraine, c. 1192 - 1251
  21. Frederick III, Duke of Lorraine, c. 1230 - 1303
  22. Theobald II, Duke of Lorraine, c. 1260 - 1312
  23. Frederick IV, Duke of Lorraine, 1282 - 1328
  24. Rudolph, Duke of Lorraine, c. 1310 - 1346
  25. John I, Duke of Lorraine, 1346 - 1390
  26. Frederick of Lorraine, 1346 - 1390
  27. Antoine of Vaudémont, c. 1395 - 1431
  28. Frederick II of Vaudémont, 1417 - 1470
  29. René II, Duke of Lorraine, 1451 - 1508
  30. Antoine, Duke of Lorraine, 1489 - 1544
  31. Francis I, Duke of Lorraine, 1517 - 1545
  32. Charles III, Duke of Lorraine, 1543 - 1608
  33. Francis II, Duke of Lorraine, 1572 - 1632
  34. Nicholas II, Duke of Lorraine, Cardinal, 1609 - 1679
  35. Charles V, Duke of Lorraine, 1643 - 1690
  36. Leopold, Duke of Lorraine, 1679 - 1729
  37. Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor, 1708 - 1765
  38. Leopold II, Holy Roman Emperor, 1747 - 1792
  39. Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor, 1768 - 1835
  40. Archduke Franz Karl of Austria, 1802 - 1878
  41. Archduke Charles Louis of Austria, 1833 - 1896
  42. Archduke Otto Francis of Austria, 1865 - 1906
  43. Blessed Charles I of Austria, 1887 - 1922
  44. Otto von Habsburg, 1922 -

The descent before Gerard de Bouzonville is taken from a work published by Portuguese Genealogist Luís Paulo Manuel de Meneses de Melo Vaz de São Paio.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Wiener Zeitung 26. November, 1912.
  2. ^ Brook-Shepherd, p 181
  3. ^ HEADLINERS; Papal Audience - New York Times
  4. ^ David W. Cloud, "Dr. Ian Paisley's Stand for the Old Bible".
  5. ^ :: Three Faiths Forum ::
  6. ^ Lalanne, Dorothée (2006-12-06). "Otto de Habsbourg: Européen Avant Tout". Point de Vue (No.3046): page 46. 
  7. ^ http://pages.prodigy.net/ptheroff/gotha/austria.html
  8. ^ Last Crown Prince of Austria receives the Freedom of the City of London

Bibliography

  • Gordon Brook-Shepherd Uncrowned Emperor - The Life and Times of Otto von Habsburg, Hambledon Continuum, London 2003. ISBN 1852855495.

External links

Crown Prince Otto of Austria
Born: 20 November 1912
Titles in pretence
Preceded by
Emperor Charles I
— TITULAR —
Emperor of Austria
King of Hungary
King of Bohemia
King of Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia
King of Galicia and Lodomeria
King of Illyria

1 April 1922 – present
Reason for succession failure:
Austro-Hungarian Empire abolished in 1918
Incumbent
Designated heir:
Archduke Karl
— TITULAR —
King of Jerusalem
1 April 1922 – present
Reason for succession failure:
Kingdom conquered in 1291

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