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  1. After the death of her older sister Maria Elisabeth on 7 June, she became second in the line of succession, preceded only by her older sister Maria Anna. Five months later, on 20 October, her grandfather Emperor Charles VI died and her mother inherited the Austrian and Bohemian lands, and with this began the War of the Austrian Succession .

  2. Weeks after the marriage, the couple was appointed governors of the Austrian Netherlands in succession of their aunt Archduchess Maria Elisabeth of Austria, who had died in 1741. The couple left Vienna on 3 February and arrived in Wuustwezel , a town in the Austrian Netherlands, on 24 March where they were met by Count Karl Ferdinand von Königsegg-Erps .

  3. Archduchess Maria Elisabeth of Austria (1680 1741) : Russell, Jesse, Cohn, Ronald: Amazon.com.mx: Libros

  4. Archduchess of Austria. Ca. 1767. Oil on canvas. Not on display. Maria Josefa (1751-1767) was the daughter of the Emperor Francis I and his wife Maria Teresa. She was first betrothed to Ferdinand IV of Naples but she died young and was consequently replaced in this dynastic union by her sister Maria Carolina. See work in timeline.

  5. 13 de ago. de 2023 · Born Archduchess of Austria, the 13th child of Empress Maria Theresa and Emperor Franz I, Maria Carolina married Ferdinand as part of Austria’s alliance with Spain, of which Ferdinand’s father was king. After the birth of a male heir in 1775, Maria Carolina was admitted to the Privy Council.

  6. Jul 26, 2015 - Archduchess Maria Josepha of Austria (Vienna, 19 March 1751 – 15 October 1767). She was the daughter of Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor (1708–1765) and Maria Theresa of Austria, Holy Roman Empress (1717–1780).

  7. 2 de sept. de 2015 · The only child of Crown Prince Rudolf of Austria and Princess Stéphanie of Belgium, Archduchess Elisabeth Marie of Austria was an incredibly strong-willed – and unpredictable – woman, yet her life plays out like a microcosm for the tides of radical change that washed across Central Europe in the first half of the 20th Century.