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  1. Archduke Leopold Salvator, Prince of Tuscany (Leopold Salvator Maria Joseph Ferdinand Franz von Assisi Karl Anton von Padua Johann Baptist Januarius Aloys Gonzaga Rainer Wenzel Galius von Österreich-Toskana) (15 October 1863 – 4 September 1931), was the son of Archduke Karl Salvator of Austria and Princess Maria Immaculata of Bourbon-Two ...

    • Archduke Leopold of Austria
    • Fall of The Austrian Monarchy
    • Film Career
    • Back on The East Coast
    • Hungarian Prince
    • Grand Larceny
    • Two Counts
    • Archduke Leopold Back in Vienna
    • Vienna Again
    • Habsburg Fund

    He was born January 20, 1897 in Zagreb, Croatia, the second son of Archduke Leopold Salvator and Infanta Blanca of Spain. He had nine siblings, but his mother had 80 servants to help with all those kids. Leopold grew up in luxurious surroundings. His parents owned the Palais Toskana in Vienna, Schloss Wilhelminenberg in the Austrian countryside, a ...

    Austria, of course, lost World War I, and the monarchy fell. Leopold and Rainer decided to stay in Vienna and recognize the Republic, relinquishing their titles. But “archduke” made newspaper fodder, and they would always be known as such. The Austrian government seized their Vienna home, the Palais Toskana, and subdivided it into apartments. Raine...

    In January 1927, the New York Timessent one of its correspondents to find Leopold in Vienna. The reporter described the obscurity into which the Habsburgs had fallen. He found Rainer in his Palais Toskana apartment, “a degenerated palace” with corridors filled with old furniture. Leopold had an address in a middle-class flat, but he had sailed for ...

    Shortly after the New Year in 1928, the Times found Leopold in Greenwich, Conn., where his friends, Mr. and Mrs. W.H. Stumpfel, held a fancy costume ball in his honor. He continued to make the social pages at luncheons, parties and the racetrack. In 1928, the Times mentioned him along with Charles Lindberghas attending an international polo match o...

    His fortunes seemed to brighten in 1929, when the Hungarian legation in Washington, D.C., declared him a citizen and a Hungarian royal prince. But the honor didn’t seem to help his finances. The next month his tailor sued him in Vienna for failing to pay him $1,000 for day and evening clothes. Then a few days later he made the papers again. At a di...

    In early 1930, Archduke Leopold lived at a fashionable Sutton Place address in New York City. He shared an office with a real estate agent, Stefan de Pomierski, a Polish count he met at a party. However, as the archduke later told police, he didn’t have an occupation. In March, he received a subpoena in connection with the theft of the Napoleon Dia...

    The district attorney charged Leopold with aiding and abetting the theft, and stealing the proceeds of the sale. Leopold pleaded not guilty on both counts. He wanted a speedy trial, he said, because he had to return to Austria to restore the monarchy. Thinking he might hasten matters by volunteering to go to jail, he didn’t post bail and ended up i...

    By May 1931 he returned to Austria—illegally. He arrived “to seek the help of church dignitaries in obtaining a dispensation from Pope Pius XI, which would enable him to marry Mrs. Alicia Coburn of Canada.” Dispensation or not, he announced he would marry Alicia Condon in Paris. He returned to Vienna in the fall to attend his father’s funeral. He w...

    In June 1937, the Archduke Leopold went back to court, this time in Vienna. The Timesreported that he brought the charges this time. He asked the court to order his mother to increase his monthly allowance to $400 from $150. It was simply impossible for an archduke to live on $150, he said. His mother countered that he was living rent-free in a lux...

    When World War II broke out in Europe, Archduke Leopold left the continent and settled in South Coventry, Conn. In June 1941, he sued his fifth cousin, Archduke Otto, then living in a New York City hotel. Leopold tried to make Otto pay him for what he called his share of the income from the House of Habsburg-Lorraine. Maria-Theresa, the one with th...

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  3. 1905 – Archduke Leopold Salvator of Austria-Tuscany, great-grandfather of SKKH Sandor Habsburg-Lothringen. The great-grandparents of SKKH Sandor Habsburg-Lothringen, Archduke Leopold Salvator of Austria-Tuscany with wife Blanca de Castilla de Borbón, Infanta of Spain, 1891.

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  4. Archduke Leopold Maria of Austria, Prince of Tuscany ( German: Leopold, Erzherzog von Österreich-Toskana, 30 January 1897 – 14 March 1958) was the second son of Archduke Leopold Salvator, Prince of Tuscany and Infanta Blanca of Spain. At the fall of Habsburg monarchy he remained in Austria and recognized the new republic in order to marry ...

  5. Inventory number. P002198. Author. Mengs, Anton Raphael. Title. Archduke Leopold of Austria, Grand Duke of Tuscany. Date. 1770. Technique. Oil. Support. Canvas. Dimension. Height: 98 cm; Width: 78 cm. Series. Familia de los archiduques, grandes duques de Toscana. Provenance.