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  1. The third son, Ferdinand Karl (1868–1915), caused a stir in 1911 when he was forced to leave the House of Habsburg-Lorraine by Emperor Franz Joseph, having admitted to secretly marrying the commoner Berta Czuber (1879–1979). He subsequently assumed the name Ferdinand Burg.

  2. Secret marriage in Switzerland. In spite of the Emperor declining to give his permission for him to wed a commoner, Archduke Ferdinand Karl married his partner – and had to leave the Habsburg family. In 1902, Archduke Ferdinand Karl, a brother of the heir to the throne Franz Ferdinand, made the acquaintance of Bertha Czuber, the daughter of a ...

  3. Marrying royals/nobility was just a question of political alliance: marrying a commoner wouldn't give you troops helpful to defend the Kingdom. But, in our days and ages, where alliances aren't contracted through marriage, I don't see why a Royal shouldn't marry a commoner, because they're also commoners too (if you see it through the French ...

  4. Shy and delicate, Karl was just another child among the massed ranks of his brothers and sisters. A turning point came in the young archduke’s life when his aunt, Marie Christine, began to take an interest in him. A daughter of Maria Theresa, she was married to Albert of Saxony-Teschen, but the marriage had remained childless.

  5. karlvonhabsburg .at. Karl Habsburg (given names: Karl Thomas Robert Maria Franziskus Georg Bahnam; born 11 January 1961) is an Austrian politician and the head of the House of Habsburg-Lorraine, the former royal house of the defunct Austro-Hungarian thrones. As a citizen of the Republic of Austria, his legal name is Karl Habsburg-Lothringen.

  6. Oct 13, 2022 · Ferdinand was finally the lucky one who was allowed to marry Anna. Her brother Louis died childless in the battle against the Turks and so Hungary and Bohemia fell to the Habsburgs. “Bella gerant alii, tu felix Austria nube – Wars may others wage, you happy Austria, marry”. This famous saying characterizes the marriage policy of the….

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  8. The first major growth in Habsburg holdings was a result of Maximilian’s arranged marriage to Mary of Burgundy (top right) which, through Mary’s lack of brothers, resulted in Maximilian's heirs inheriting Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and Burgundy (Skjelver and Wiesflecker).

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