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  1. Herzog-Max-Palais was a neoclassical palace at Ludwigstraße 13 in Munich, Germany. It belonged to the House of Wittelsbach and was built from 1828 to 1830 for Duke Maximilian Joseph in Bavaria, father of Empress Elisabeth of Austria . In 1937, the palace was destroyed by the Nazi Party in order to widen the Ludwigstraße.

  2. Jan 10, 2023 · Elisabeth was born in the Herzog-Max-Palais in Munich. This neoclassical city palace was designed by Leo von Klenze for Duke Max Joseph in Bavaria, the father of Elisabeth and the brother-in-law of King Ludwig I. In 1937, the palace was sadly destroyed by the National Socialists to widen the street.

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  4. Herzog-Max-Palais. Das Herzog-Max-Palais war ein klassizistisches Stadtpalais der Wittelsbacher in der heutigen Ludwigstraße 13 in München. Es wurde in den Jahren 1828–1830 nach einem Entwurf von Leo von Klenze für den bayerischen Herzog Max erbaut. 1937 wurde es von den Nationalsozialisten für eine Straßenverbreiterung abgebrochen.

  5. The Herzog Max Palais was a neoclassical city palace of the Wittelsbach family at today's Ludwigstraße in Munich and the the private residence of its namesake Duke Maximilian Joseph in Bavaria . v. t. e. Royal residences of Dukes in Bavaria. Possenhofen. Herzog Max Palais, Munich. Tegernsee Monastery.

  6. Less than a year after the wedding, the young empress gave birth to her first daughter Sophie. Gisela and Crown Prince Rudolf followed. During a journey, the two girls got fever and diarrhoea. Gisela recovered, but Sophie died. The death of her eldest daughter came as a shock to Sisi. She increasingly distanced herself from Gisela and Rudolf ...

  7. From then on her beauty became the center of her life. With a height of 1.72 m, a weight of less than 50 kg and a waist circumference of 48 cm, Sisi was severely underweight. She made slenderness fashionable at the European royal courts. Dieting, riding and hours of violent marches helped her to maintain her shape.

  8. In Bavaria, Elisabeth’s country of birth, there are far fewer traces of her life: Elisabeth’s family home in Munich, the Herzog-Max-Palais, was demolished in 1937/38 on Hitler’s orders and replaced with a bank. Sisi’s beloved Possenhofen was converted into luxury private apartments in the 1980s following decades of neglect and has not ...