Once I was a clever boy learning the arts of Oxford... is a quotation from the verses written by Bishop Richard Fleming (c.1385-1431) for his tomb in Lincoln Cathedral. Fleming, the founder of Lincoln College in Oxford, is the subject of my research for a D. Phil., and, like me, a son of the West Riding. I have remarked in the past that I have a deeply meaningful on-going relationship with a dead fifteenth century bishop... it was Fleming who, in effect, enabled me to come to Oxford and to learn its arts, and for that I am immensely grateful.


Showing posts with label Otto of Austria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Otto of Austria. Show all posts

Saturday, 20 June 2015

Recents posts


Two recent posts worth drawing the attention of readers to on the blogs which I try to find time to read are, firstly, from The Mad Monarchist. This looks at the Austrian Imperial family and their fortunes, not least the possibilities of restoration to the throne, in the years before the Second World War and their situation afterwards. An informative and interesting piece it can be read at The House of Hapsburg in World War II

Secondly, the ever trenchant Rorate Coeli has an interview with Alice von Hilderbrand about her late husband's dismay at what happened during Vartican II. Whether you agree with it all or partially or not at all, it is an interesting piece about how one should, or might, understand the pontificate of Pope Paul VI. It can be read at 50 Years Ago: Dietrich von Hildebrand Confronts Pope Paul VI

 

Thursday, 2 February 2012

Coronation of Emperor Otto I in 962


Today, Candlemas, is the 1050th anniversary of the coronation in St Peter's in Rome of the Emperor Otto I (d.973) as Roman Emperor by the apparently spectacularly unsuitable Pope John XII (955-964).

The Imperial dignity had not been held since 924, and, as in 800 with the coronation of Charlemagne, it was a means whereby the Pope secured help from beyond the Alps in return for the bestowal of the Imperial title and status. This came ten days later with the concession of the Diploma Ottonianum which was a guarantee for the Papacy and mutual recognition of rights and claims.

The coronation effected the Translatio imperii to the German monarchs following on from that to the Franks in 800. As such, in all its variant forms, it was to remains in place until 1806, and continued thereafter as part of the cultural and constitutional inheritance of the Austrian Empire, and, after 1871, of the new German empire, as well as inviting the emulation of Peter the Great of Russia from the early eighteenth century. There is an introductory article on the history of what became from 1157 to be known as the Holy Roman Empire here.

One link with the Emperor Otto I is the Imperial Crown, now in Vienna. The crown is generally thought to have been made for him, perhaps at the abbey of Reichenau, and originally to have consisted of the eight linked panels. To this a pectoral cross belonging to the Emperor St Henry II who died in 1024 was added presumably at the same time as the arch which bears the name of the Emperor Conrad II 1027-39 . This separated the horns of the mitre worn under the crown, but not used at coronations from the seventeenth century, although it survived in the crown made for Emperor Rudolph II which later became the Imperial Crown of Austria after 1806. The front panel with its twelve stones derives from the breast plate of the High Priest of the Mosaic dispensation.

There is an illustrated and informative article about the crown here.

http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3624/3487202206_e4f06e4112_z.jpg

The Imperial Crown of the Holy Roman Empire

Image: farm4.staticflickr.com

The last person to wear the crown was the Emperor Francis II at his coronation in 1792 and who died, as the Emperor Francis I of Austria in 1835. His last illness distressed his five year old grandson who himself died as Emperor Francis Joseph in 1916, and who was photographed with and whose funeral was attended by the Archduke Otto who died last year. Thus are the generations linked.

http://www.coinnews.net/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/Austrian-Mint-Gold-Coin-Commemorative-of-Crown-of-Holy-Roman-Empire.jpg

A modern Austrian coin depicting the Imperial Crown and the Emperor Otto from a manuscript of c.1200 seated in front of Old St Peters

Image:coinnews.net


Friday, 30 December 2011

Coronation in Budapest


Today is the 95th anniversary of the coronation of the Bl. Emperor Charles as King Charles IV of Hungary in 1916. The fact that he had received this sacramental was of enormous spiritual significance to the King and his Queen Zita, and why he refused to renounce his rights in 1921.

The ceremony, central to the traditional Hungarian concept of kingship, was both deemed to be a constitutional requirement and also. it seem, as a means of binding the new King, who had succeeded to the throne in late November, to the existing balance of political pwer within the realm by the Prime Minister, Count Tisza.

There is an account of the preparations for the coronation in Miklos Banffy's memoir The Phoenix Land and there is a detailed description of the day, set within the action of a sprawling novel about a Magyar aristocratic family, in Lajos Zilahy's The Dukays.

http://www.emperorcharles.org/images/JPG%20800/cd%202/08--The%20Hungarian%20Coronation/Cat%20No%20139-12--King%20Karl%20Taking%20the%20Coronation%20Oath--Magyar.jpg

The King taking the Coronation oath

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The King on horseback upon the hill composed of soil from every county in Hungary.
This part of the ceremonial involved the King riding up the hill and brandishing his sword to the four points of the compass to symbolise his defence of the frontiers of the kingdom - indeed the oath speaks of extending them.

http://www.emperorcharles.org/images/JPG%20800/cd%202/08--The%20Hungarian%20Coronation/Cat%20No%20140--The%20Hungarian%20Royal%20Family%20Enthroned-Photograph.jpg

King Charles IV, Queen Zita and Crown Prince Otto.
The King died in 1922, Queen Zita in 1989 and Otto in 2011.

http://www.emperorcharles.org/images/JPG%20800/cd%202/08--The%20Hungarian%20Coronation/Cat%20No%20150--King%20Karl%20Wearing%20the%20Crown%20of%20St.%20Stephen--Pos.jpg

King Charles IV wearing the Holy Crown
and mantle of St Stephen and holding the sceptre.

Images: The Emperor Charles League of Prayer

Monday, 18 July 2011

Imperial funeral in Vienna


Last Saturday the funeral of Archduke Otto, the de jure Emperor of Austria and King of Hungary was held in Vienna.

© Sabine Brauer© Thomas Wilhelm Schwarzer, Friedberg in Hessen

Image from Habsburg Monarchy.

There are a set of pictures here, and there is also a video of the funeral procession here.

As the friend who sent me the links wrote:"It all looked rather impressive. I'm glad that he has finally been afforded the dignity and respect he should have been afforded during his lifetime."

There is already along and detailed account of the funeral ceremonies on Wikipedia, which can be studied here. The account in The Daily Telegraph can be read here.

The Daily Mail
has a very handsomely illustrated online feature about the burial in Vienna and in Pannonhalma which can be viewed here, although unlike the author of the article, I would not be so sure that this is the end of the Habsburgs. They have shown themselves remarkably adaptable over many centuries - I am tempted to see them as the most successful family business in European history, as opposed to the dynasties that are tied by history to a particular territory, such as the British and Danish royal houses


http://d.yimg.com/a/p/rids/20110716/i/r2967807063.jpg

The Imperial coffin in St Stephen's Cathedral

http://d.yimg.com/a/p/rids/20110716/i/r216585181.jpg

The procession from the Cathedral to the Capuchin church

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The request for admission at the Capuchin church

Images from Yahoo.news

On Sunday after aservice in Budapest his heart was interred at the Archabbey at Pannonhalma in Hungary. There are two reports with pictures about that ceremony here and here.


Tuesday, 5 July 2011

Otto of Austria 1912-2011


The death yesterday of Otto of Austria at the age of 98 is the breaking of a precious living link to the past.



Otto of Austria in 2004

He was, of course, the rightful Emperor Otto I of Austria and King Otto II of Hungary, and indeed, the de jure Holy Roman Emperor Otto V.

The obituary from the Daily Telegraph can be read here, and the Wikipedia biography is here.

The Mad Monarchist has three posts about him: Archduke Otto von Hapsburg 1912-2011, Archduke Otto, RIP and The Passing of an Archduke.

I once had the privilege of hearing Otto of Austria speak at a lecture he gave in Oxford in 1994. Sitting in the Gladstone Room of the Oxford Union I listened to this elderly distingushed looking man talking about pan-Europeanism and a vision for Europe and reflecting to myself, indeed almost pinching myself to believe the fact, that this was the very same man who, as a little boy clutching his parents hands, had attended the funeral of his great great uncle the Emperor Franz Joseph in 1916:

http://www.emperorcharles.org/images/JPG%20800/cd%202/07--The%20New%20Emperor/Cat%20No%20111--Funeral%20Procession%20for%20Emperor%20Franz%20Josef--Pho.jpg

The Crown Prince Otto at the funeral of the Emperor Franz Joseph in November 1916.

The unnamed figure on the left is the Crown Prince of Sweden, later King Gustav VI Adolf who died in 1973.

Image: Emperor Charles League of Prayer

As someone pointed out to me last night he was also the great great nephew of the Emperor Maximilian I of Mexico.

The obituaries bring out just how many of the major events of twentieth century history impacted upon his life. He lived long enough to see not only the freeing of his peoples from communist rule but to witness the beatification of his father in 2004.

In passing I would add that as one thinks about his life let no one fool you that the peoples of Austria-Hungary have been better off since 1918 without the benefits of Imperial rule. They have n't.

May he rest in peace.

Please pray for the repose of the soul of Otto of Austria and also for the Imperial family