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  1. Apr 13, 2017 · There had not been a single royal child born in Hungary for several centuries. If she had been a boy, she would have been named after the first king of Hungary, Stephan I. Maria Valeria, as she was called in Hungary, was the clear favourite of her mother.

  2. Another of Valerie's nicknames was "the Hungarian child", as her birth had been a concession by Elisabeth, who disliked physical intimacy and pregnancy, in exchange for Franz Joseph's reconciliation with Hungary, her most favored part of the Empire.

  3. May 30, 2022 · Sisi took care of Marie Valerie’s upbringing at Gödöllö Castle and spoke only Hungarian to her. Their laws, which had little to do with questions of rank and protocol, ruled at the country estate not far from Budapest. Sisi adored her youngest child and called it “the only one”.

  4. Feb 27, 2011 · So she departed Vienna for Budapest on February 7th of 1868, already 7 month pregnant. Her entourage included a court for the unborn child among them an English nanny, because the empress wanted the newborn child to be raised three-lingual, in German, Hungarian and English.

  5. Born in Budapest, Marie Valerie was brought up by the empress as her ‘Hungarian child’. Elisabeth spoke only Hungarian with her youngest daughter, intending it to be her mother tongue. Elisabeth also took care that Marie Valerie was brought up to share her pro-Hungarian sympathies.

  6. Oct 13, 2022 · The youngest daughter, Marie Valerie (1868-1924), was born at a considerable distance from her siblings as a “latecomer.”. Marie Valerie, was born in Budapest, and was therefore considered a “Hungarian child”. Sisi spoke only Hungarian with her youngest daughter and raised her accordingly.

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  8. Born by a Bavarian mother and an Austrian father Marie Valerie was brought up as a Hungarian princess. Although her mother tongue was German, her first language was Hungarian and it was the one she used while talking to her mother, Queen Elisabeth and her father, King Franz Joseph.

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