List of monarchs III

What if Henry V was killed at the Battle of Agincourt?

Kings of England

1415 - 1455: Thomas I (House of Lancaster) [1]
1455 - 1485: John II (House of Lancaster) [2]
1485 - 1486: Henry VI (House of Lancaster) [3]
1486 - 1490: Rupert (House of Lancaster) [4]
1490 - 1539: John III (House of Lancaster) [5]
1539 - 1579: Richard III (House of Lancaster and Clarence) [6]
1579 - 1615: Mary I (House of Lancaster and Clarence) [7]

Kings of England and Scotland

1615 - 1638: Thomas II & I (House of Stuart) [8]
1638 - 1666: James I & VI (House of Stuart) [9]
1666 - 1674: Edric I (House of Stuart) [10]
1674 - 1705: William III (House of Orange) [11]

Kings of the United Kingdom of Great Britain

1705 - 1711: William III (House of Orange)
1711 - 1731: Peter I (House of Orleans-Clarence) [12]
1731 - 1801: Peter II (House of Orleans-Clarence/House of Clarence) [13]

Kings of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland

1801 - 1827: Peter II (House of Clarence)
1827 - 1828: Francis I (House of Clarence) [14]
1828 - 1843: Edward IV (House of Clarence) [15]
1843 - 1873: Peter III (House of Clarence) [16]
1873 - 1874: Deborah I (House of Clarence/House of Somerset) [17]

Kings of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Emperors of India and the South Seas

1874 - 1891: Deborah I (House of Clarence/House of Somerset) [17]
1891 - 1938: William IV (House of Somerset) [18]
1938 - 1967: William V (House of Somerset) [19]


[1] Thomas I, the second son of Henry IV of England and brother to Henry V of England was the Duke of Clarence until his brother was killed by a stray arrow during the Battle of Agincourt during Henry V's failed campaign to secure the French crown for himself. Thomas, Duke of Clarence had been left behind in England to manage the affairs of the realm. The news of Henry V's fall in France came as a great shock but what was even worse was the forced retreat of the few remaining English forces as the French began reclaiming lost ground. Thomas I found himself having to raise a new army just to retain the lands in France that the English still had, but despite his efforts the English found themselves being pushed back further and further into Normandy, by the end of the latest stage of the Hundred Year's War the English were barely hanging onto to a handful of ports and a humiliating peace treaty left the English presence in France negligible.

Due to this perceived weakness the King's grip on the nation became weakened as his ambitious brothers John the Duke of Bedford, Humphrey the Duke of Glouchester, and their cousins in the House of York began plotting and scheming for power, a situation made worse due to the King having a long period of time in which he had no children. Thomas I's first marriage (made before he was King) to Margaret Holland, Countess of Somerset had produced no children, so the King forced her into a convent and married again to Anne of Burgundy, which also produced no children. When Anne of Burgundy died unexpectedly of a fever at age 28 the King married a third time to Jacquetta of Luxembourg which finally produced children and heirs for the English throne, seven in total.

This helped the King stabilize the nation for the remainder of his reign, but the English claims to the French throne remained and the House of Valois had seen two mad Kings sit the French throne, giving Thomas's successors hope of pressing the claim once again.

King Thomas I died of 'complications of gout' at age 67 and passed the crown to, his son, Prince Jack.

[2] Known affectionately as Prince Jack to his family - though christened and eventually reigning under the name of John. He was in his mid twenties when he inherited the throne, married to Margaret of Anjou, the daughter of the King of Naples. With a weaker husband, Margaret would have wielded almost absolute power - but with a moderately educated husband who had been given a strong role model in King Thomas, Margaret and John were a veritable power couple and together they crippled the power base of the disruptive House of York and their allies, culminating with the beheading of Edward, Duke of York for insurgent activity and planning regicide (evidence that Margaret may have actually manufactured). The York's had their titles and lands taken, all absorbed by the crown and a possible power struggle for the throne was halted before it had even really started. To validate their claim to the title they quickly invested their three eldest male children as Prince of Wales, Duke of Lancaster and Duke of York - and when John died of heart failure in his fifties, he left Margaret to survive him by a decade and one of his sons to take the throne.

[3] Henry was the second child and oldest son of King John II and Queen Margaret, born in 1457, he was 28 when he assumed the throne. Henry had always been a sickly child and had primarily been raised by his mother and not his father. His mother was basically ruling during his reign, which was short due to his illness. Although there were rumors that one of his brothers, Lancaster or York, had poisoned him. There had always been contempt between Henry and his brothers, who like their father were vigorous men. On Henry's death there was turmoil as the two Dukes contended for the throne before the Duke of York, Rupert, was confirmed as the new king.

[4] Rupert was a rather sinister man. He once burned down a entire village simply because he could.

One day in 1489 he was out hunting with his right hand man Roddy, when an assassin came out of nowhere and tried to shoot Rupert with an arrow but he missed.

In 1490 Rupert had traveled to Ireland but however when he was returning back to England, his ship sank and he drowned.

[5] Youngest son of John II. As leader of rebelion against king Rupert he was accussed of high treason and had to escape country. He spend remaining years of Rupert's rule in exile in France and Italy. After death of cruel king Rupert, John as last male member of House of Lancaster returned to England to claim the throne. John, during his long reign, was known as patron of Renaissance art, but also strong opponent of Protestant reformation and was given title Fidei defensor by the Pope.

[6] John III had been the last male member of the House of Lancaster - to a fashion. Geoffrey, second son of King Thomas, had been granted his father's pre-regnal title of Duke of Clarence upon his eighteenth birthday and the title had passed down to his son (also) Geoffrey (title held 1500-1520), his grandson William (title held 1520-1538) and eventually to his eighteen year old great grandson Richard (title held 1538 to 1539). Richard was the great great grandson of a great King and endeavoured to settle the discord of the House of Lancaster that predated his rule by formally calling himself the first King of the House of Lancaster and Clarence - and he succeeded, more or less. His first step was to permanently retire the titles of Duke of Lancaster and Duke of York - with London, Clarence, Buckingham and Gloucester being the titles traditionally bestowed upon sons of the monarch when avaliable going forward. Following his distant cousins role within the Roman Catholic church, Richard continued his religious work and sought out a good Catholic bride - and ended up marrying a Habsburg: Margaret, illegitimate daughter of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, a promising wife even in her illegitimacy. Margaret only bore Richard two children, with the second birth being so traumatic that she went out of her way to avoid any sexual activity with him - she devoted herself to religion and he devoted himself to ensuring his children were ready to rule upon his death, and enjoying time with his mistresses and own illegitimate issue and appointing the many FitzRichards to positions of authority in England. The power attained by "Richards Bastards" unnerved some and a handful who had attained the wrong office found themselves accidentally falling down stairways or drowning in puddles. It was clear that despite his best attempts and the protection of the Holy Roman Empire, Richard hadn't managed to eliminate the hunger for power that had marked his three predecessors. Eventually he died at the age of fifty-nine when he was stabbed by Edmund FitzOxford, an illegitimate son of the Earl of Oxford who had married one of his own illegitimate daughters, Amelia FitzRichard. Both Edmund and Amelia were beheaded by Richard's successor, his oldest daughter Mary.

[7] Queen Mary was the first regnant Queen of England as her father had only two legitimate children that were both daughters, her and her younger sister, Princess Eleanor. Queen Mary married James V Stuart, the King of Scotland, a distant cousin through his great-great-great grandfather's marriage to the daughter of Thomas I, Elizabeth. Queen Mary was a strict Catholic and was not kind, to put it mildly, to her Protestant subjects. They labeled her "Terror Mary." Many of them immigrated to North America later in her reign as her terror increased. They began the colony of New England (where OTL Virginia is) in 1588. To counter this a royal colony was created to the north of New England by the crown called New Lancaster and one to the south of the Protestant colony called Maryland. Queen Mary, under the advice of King James, who was as devout a Catholic as she but had a protestant majority population in Scotland and thus had learned the value of tolerance, encouraged her Protestant subjects to move to New England, granting an edict of tolerance for the colony. She survived her husband's death, seeing her child, Thomas, become the monarch of Scotland, who upon her own death a year later became the first king of both Scotland and England.

[8] Also King of Scotland as Thomas I. Oldest surviving son of Mary, after taking throne on London, Thomas rarely even visited Scotland and treated his father's country almost like England's colony. Lords of Scotland, unhappy with his rule, started a rebellion under leadership of Thomas' cousin, Robert of Lennox, who claimed throne for himself. Thomas crushed rebel forces and sentenced his cousin to death, but due to cruel repressions against rebels he was remembered by people of Scotland as bloody tyrant.

[9] James I & VI was the eldest son of Thomas II & I. He was already a young man when the Scottish Rebellion of 1625 occurred. After that he was sent to Edinburgh to represent his father. His time in Scottland before he inherited the throne 13 years later led him to a more benevolent attitude towards the northern kingdom. It also made him more open to Protestants in his realm, like his namesake, his grandfather James V of Scotland. (It was rumored he actually converted to Presbyterianism secretly.) As King in 1646 he issued the edict of tolerance allowing Protestants to freely assemble and worship in England and Catholics in Scotland, as long as each congregation paid a half tithe to the established Church of the Kingdom: Catholic in England and Presbyterian in Scotland. James married Henrietta Maria of France with whom he had numerous children. He died in the fire of London from smoke inhalation when he refused to leave the city or the Whitehall Palace. He was succeeded by his grandson, Edric I.

[10] Edric I, the eldest son of David, Prince of Wales who tragically died during the royal family's flight from the Great Fire of 1666, was the first King to bear the name 'Eadric' since the conquest, his father begin fond of the Anglo-Saxon period of English history had named his children names that hadn't been used since Harold Godwinson's time. Despite this the new King found himself suffering from breathing problems in the aftermath of the fire, modern medical experts believe he inhaled something toxic during the fire and damaged his lungs as a result.

Due to this the King's reign only lasted nine, painful years as he slowly died, however Edric I proved a capable ruler despite this, organizing the reconstruction of London in the aftermath of the fire, resettling the royal family in a small manor known as Castle Hill Lodge outside of the city, a property that was also expanded into a new royal residence that would come to be called Castle Hill Palace.

Edric I never married nor had children and spent the last three years of his reign in bed, slowly dying while his cousin and heir, William of Orange, ruled the realm on his behalf. Edric I died at age 20, reportedly his last words were a request for wine and fresh flowers by the bed.

[11] William of Orange was the cousin of Edric in that James I & VI's daughter, the Mary, Princess Royal, had married William's father, a Dutch prince who was a protestant. This was intended as a good will gesture to James' Protestant subjects. A lot of the royal family had perished in the fire of London and thus Edric's heir was his aunt Mary, who died before Edric, leaving the Dutch and Protestant William his heir. There was a lot of controversy over a Protestant taking the throne of England and William had to swear to protect all his Catholic subjects' rights and privileges and commit to a greater role of Parliament in government before he was approved by them. It was during William's reign that Parliament began having a prime minster who'd form a cabinet to run a government all under the King's authority. In 1705 the Parliaments of England and Scotland chose to unite the kingdoms into one as the United Kingdom of Great Britain with one Parliament in London. William had promised to marry a Catholic princess as part of the agreement for him to take the throne. He chose Mary of Modena and they wed the same year as his coronation. He was 23 and she was 16. Also, although he was only the second of his name to be king of Scotland, he was universally known as William III and after him the numbering system of monarchs ignored the proper number related to Scotland.

[12] William III produced several heirs but they all predeceased him, his aunt Margaret had entered a nunnery after being widowed when her Dutch husband died of pneumonia after six months of marriage and produced no heirs. When it became clear that the House of Orange would be short lived, Parliament passed an Act of Settlement determining that the King of Britain must be Catholic but that the senior most Protestant member of the royal family would be appointed Lord Protector of Scotland under the Kings command. For a suitable heir, Parliament had to backtrack to Queen Mary's sister, Princess Eleanor, who had married into the French royal family - specifically the Duke of Orleans - and her great great great grandson, the brother of the present Duke of Orleans (who had recently converted to Lutheranism himself), the twenty year old Peter d'Orleans. Peter and his French wife arrived in London and before he had been crowned, he faced a stand-off with the Protestant claimant, Henry of Gloucester, grandson of Queen Mary through her younger son, the designated Lord Protector of Scotland, and closer in the line of succession than Peter if it weren't for the Act of Settlement. This launched a period known as The Prince's War which lasts from 1711 to 1716 culminating in the Battle of Culloden and Peter's victory although Peter was almost killed and his coronation held on the battlefield with Henry's heirs disinherited and his Dukedom passed to his younger brother Andrew, who became the first proper Lord Protector of Scotland. After a twenty year rule with several children living to adulthood, Peter died in his sleep from a heart attack.

[13] Peter I and his wife were both French when they came to Britain and already had an infant son, Prince Henri, who'd been born in France. Like his father, Prince Henri married young, but in his case it was deemed proper by Parliament that he marry a British descendant of the royal family and especially not someone from France in that the United Kingdom waged a war with France over colonial possessions with Britain winning and taking possession of the French Maritime colonies north of New Lancaster: New Aquitaine, Algonqueans, and Acadia. The War was called the Eight Year War and ended in 1730.

Prince Henri married a descendant of John of Gaunt, the son of King Edward III, Lady Deborah Beaufort, daughter of Edward Beaufort, the 7th of Duke of Somerset. The Somersets were an old cadet line with a direct male line of 8 generations from John of Gaunt to Edward, the 7th Duke. They were a loyal family to the Lancastrian line from the start and then the Catholic cause. They married on the prince's 18th birthday 1729. Shortly after that the Prince sailed to America to fight in the Eight Year War. He'd been ordered to command from behind the lines but a raid by native allies of the French wounded him and he died shortly there after. But Princess Deborah was with child, and upon his birth in 1730 he became the heir to the throne. He was named after his grandfather- Peter.

When King Peter I died less than a year later, the infant Peter II, became king. His maternal grandfather, Duke Edward, became regent until Peter was of age in 1748 when he was coronated and took over his royal duties. Peter II was raised more as a Beaufort than as an Orleans-Clarence. He was the quintessential 18th Century Englishman. The Wars with France continued and in his coronation year the United Kingdom was again at war with France in the War of the Savoy Succession, which again was a colonial war, called the French and Indian War in America. To show his identity as an Englishman not a Frenchman, Peter had himself crowned as a Clarence, dropping the Orleans part of his family. His first Royal decree was that all members of the United Kingdom were were part of his family were to do the same, which of course they all did.

Peter II lived a long life and since he became King in his first year, his reign of 96 years still remains as the longest know reign of a monarch in History. Peter's Britian saw the Industrial Revolution, the older British American colonies becoming independent with the help of France, the French Revolution and the following wars, and the first elements of the British Empire beyond the Americas in India, the South Seas, and China. In 1801 the status of Ireland changed as it was incorporated into the union and Parliament. The Union Jack flag became the flag it is today and thus the flag that flew around the world.

Peter II had many children, grandchildren, great grandchildren, and even one great great grandson when he died. He was survived by his Queen, Charlotte, who lived four more years, dying at the ripe old age of 101. She thus saw her son, Francis take the throne. She was a cousin on the Beaufort side, being the granddaughter of Duke Edward, 7th Duke of Somerset through his eldest child, Lady Elizabeth who'd married the Duke of Suffolk.

[14]
Francis, oldest son of Peter II, was already old man, when he took the throne, he reigned for just one year before dying at age 76, leaving throne to his oldest son, Edward.

[15] Edward IV succeeded his father, Francis, at the age of 53. He had only one child, Princess Charlotte, who was 25 on his ascension. Her mother, who had died in childbirth, also named Charlotte, was a grand daughter of Old King Peter and Queen Charlotte. Princess Charlotte was made Princess of Wales the day after her father's own coronation, leaving no doubt she was the heir. Edward's reign saw two major changes in the British system. The half tithe on non-established Churches was dissolved and full religious freedom was granted the citizens of the United Kingdom. The other was the extension of the voting franchise to all men who either owned property or rented property in the Reform Act of 1833. The colony of Hong Kong was chartered by Edward IV. Edward was a large man with a big appetite for food and drink. He had many illegitimate children from his many affairs, but he never married again. He died at age 68 due to heart problems.

[16] The best laid plans - as the saying goes - often go wrong. And after Edward IV died of a heart condition, his daughter was the planned heir - except she had died of pneumonia mere weeks before the Kings own death, perhaps precipitating his emotional and physical exhaustion. This left his brother, the Duke of Cumberland to take the throne instead - and given his advanced age, the fact he had children and grandchildren and even a single great grandchild upon his coronation was a clear bonus to the line of succession. As with Charlotte before, his eldest child was officially invested as Princess of Wales, and in a surprising move by monarch and parliament, male primogeniture evolved into absolute primogeniture. A younger brother would no longer outrank an older sister - this was his major contribution to the monarchy. But he also accepted the personal gift of the Congo basin - which had presumed to be getting handed to the Belgian King - and in a surprising move, he halted any colonial expansion further than basic trading posts. This placed him into conflict with his government but as the territory was privately owned, they had to back off on further action though the crown allowance was decreased accordingly. Peter sent his second son to the English Congo as a Lord Protector of the Commonwealth - a sort of governor to oversee the trading posts. This opposition to expansion caused conflict with other European monarchies following his refusal to allow expansion after the Paris Conference to the extent that Peter found it difficult to find suitable matches for his unmarried grandchildren and great grandchildren, so he looked within British nobility for suitable matches and to American sources, with the result that one of his grandsons married the daughter of the American President. When Peter was on his death bed - from old age - the crown was passed onwards, and the conflict with Parliament and Europe continued to brew.

[17] Princess Deborah had grown up close with her cousin. Although Princess Charlotte had never married (those in the know knew she was a Lesbian), Princess Deborah married a distant cousin, the direct descendant of Regent Edward- Richard the 12th Duke of Somerset. Deborah expected her younger brother, Prince Charles, would inherit the throne eventually after Charlotte died, as he was male. But her father changed things and she became the heir instead. Queen Deborah, later Empress Deborah, was already in her sixties when she inherited the throne. She saw great changes including the the extension of the voting to all males, the electrifying of London, and the great exposition of 1890. The tension with the rest of Europe finally turned into war with the War of 1885, which saw Britain victorious along with her one ally, the Russian Empire. This led to the Empire controlling all of eastern Africa from Egypt to South Africa and the construction of the Cairo to Capetown Railroad. Also a cross peninsula railroad was built across India. Canada, New Zealand, and Australia were given "Dominion" status and Deborah remained queen of these nations too even though otherwise they were independent of Britain.

[18] King William IV of the United Kingdom was born in 1885, as the only child of Princes Louis of the United Kingdom and his third wife, the Polish Princess Barbara Oldenburg, who at 42, had been considered as barren as the Prince of Wales' first two wives, Lady Theresa Percy and the Princess Catalina of Florence. At 76, having finally fathered a child of dubious origins (considering his father was 62 at the time, and had only, probably, produced one child in the form of a 1843 miscarriage, which was the cause of death of the Lady Theresa Percy), the crown rested on the shoulders of this one tiny infant. Furthermore, the Empress Deborah was forced to intervene when, three days after his birth, the Prince of Wales finally broke the news that the name they had chosen for the heir to the throne was Rupert Alexander Nicholas Somerset. Rupert, a name associated within England with the infamously cruel King Rupert, was named after Rupert of the Rhine, Count Palatine, who had been the Prince of Wales' best friend until his death the year prior. Alexander, chosen to honour the Russian allies, would have been a fine name, if Louis had not paired it with Nicholas, a name associated with Nicholas of Lorraine, who had married and mistreated the current Tsar's aunt, the Grand Duchess Olga Petrovna. It's said the Prince of Wales picked it because he liked the nickname Nicky. Thus, despite her sons protests, the child was renamed William Alexander Edric, Duke of Kent. Within a year, he was the Prince of Wales, after his father died of heatstroke.

The young King ascended to the throne with his mother as Regent, as per his grandmother's wishes. He was betrothed, against his mother's opinion, to his 5 year older cousin, Maria, Empress of Brazil, the last scion of a brief but powerful Brazilian/Portuguese Empire, who by 1891 relied on English and Russian acknowledgement to continue their Imperial Ambitions, despite the 1880 Mayan Revolution, during which they lost many of their North American holdings. Despite this Imperial setback, the government remained strong, and agreed to a personal union between the inbred, sickly Maria Trastámara, and the relatively healthy, much younger William Somerset. This flew in his mother's wishes, as she pictured a French marriage, with the other grand heiress of the time, Josephine d'Orleans, Queen of Flanders. Pretty, healthy and 2 days younger than the King of the United Kingdom, she might have been a more logical match, but she was Lutheran, and her claim to the Kingdom of Flanders had come via her great-grandmother, Anne-Charlotte d'Orleans, who had managed to place her bastard son, Julius d'Orleans, (son of the famous lover Harold Vasa, the 3rd son of the King of Finland, who fathered 28 children by 26 women over 34 years, before his death by guillotine during the Finnish War for Independence) on the Flemish Throne in 1802, partially by seducing the last King of France, Henri IX of France, who recognised Julius as King over the better claims of the English dynasty. In fact, the last King of Flanders before Julius, George II of Flanders, had only allowed his French niece such power because, until 1800, when Julius was named heir, he had only Anne-Charlotte herself as the logical heir against Peter d'Orleans. With Julius as heir, the United Kingdom had ended trade relations with the Flemish King, who had in 1803 risen to his throne. Since then, Flanders had been part of England's continental ambitions, but without a wish to gain it via marriage.

William IV was raised somewhat ignorant of his own status until his 12th birthday. His Regency was effective, and he thought his mother was Queen of the United Kingdom herself, and that he was the heir. However, her death in 1897 caused him to lose this view, and in 1900, at 15, he received a second, grand coronation at the advice of his cousin, Prince Henry of Kintyre, who hoped to rally the country around their King as they went to war in Australia, against the Danish colony of Ulricksland, who controlled the South-Eastern region of the Continent. 10,000 men of the army were sent to Australia for that war, to lead and train the Australian Armies in Deborah, Petrovna and Clarence. 300 would return, with 7,000 casualties, 1,000 missing and the rest having fates unrecorded.

These horrific losses scared the young King, who in 1903 rejected marriage to the Empress of Brazil in favour of a marriage to the Lady Beatrice Chancellor, the granddaughter of a merchant and the great-granddaughter of a German shoemaker. She was, however, a simple woman, who would become known as "Queenie Bee", for her yellow and black dresses, worn in honour of her father's dynastic colours. Her attractions were, for the fashionable London elite, minimal, and when she refused to dine with the King's cousin, the Lady Henriette Bullen, daughter to the Duke of Ormond, because she had had committed adultery 30 years prior. When it was pointed out to her that there was few of good breeding in London who had not committed adultery even once, she responded by eating privately in her rooms with the King every night she could.

Wiliam's wife had an immediate effect on the royal family's perception by the masses. Previously, under Deborah, the royal family had become a sort of living Greek Gods. The exploits of the royal family, who earned their keep by expanding and winning wars and what not, was less exciting and more scandalous and annoying. Lady Henriette Bullen, for instance, had been a favourite of the public in the 1860's, but in 1909, when she died, the obituaries ran described her in less glamourous terms. Her exploits were reviled, and by the mid-1910's, a magazine writer described the change as being "an era of propriety and cleanliness. Whereas the Elite might take lovers and commit sins without worry before, the Queen demands more of her courtiers. A Duke is held to the same degree as the humble merchant. Mass is heard every morning, and all fasting days are kept..." In a court used to only going to court if they were sleeping with the priest, this was a major development.

Domestically, the Industrial Age was over, and with the 1907 Children's Labour Law being passed, the last of the children's factories closed by 1915. Even more dramatically, the Queen spoke against child labour and unpaid labour, and in 1911, she personally adopted 100 orphans from a Sussex orphanage, pegged for labour work, and paid to have them all placed in various nunneries and religious house, to become priests and nuns. The King responded to this by doing the same in every county, to her delight. With the birth of the 5th of their 11 children this same year, they became known as Parental figures for the country, which turned out to be a majorly important development for the royal family in the years to come.

In 1913, Maria, Empress of Brazil, pregnant for the first time by her husband, the Count Palatine John Frederick, was murdered in her bed by Revolutionaries. Taking the rhetoric of the French Revolutionaries of the 1800's, who had deposed (while not murdering) King Henri IX in 1812, they had begun a zeal that floated across Europe. Whereas the revolutions of the 1800's had been few, non-violent (with exception to the Finnish Revolution) and mostly-noneffective (again, Finland, who in 1840 had been reestablished as a Swedish Possession), the 1910's and 1920's saw many dynasties toppled and replaced with various, Republics. Portugal soon followed Brazil, followed by Spain, Florence, Naples, Lorraine, ect. However, the United Kingdom remained unaffected by the revolutionary zeal. By 1920, over 3,000 aristocrats from across Europe had arrived in England, including the King of Florence, the King of Lithuania and the King of Denmark, all of whom demanded the King of the United Kingdom save them and their countries. However, he could not save them all at once, and by 1930, the majority of aristcrats, who had not been Kings themselves but Dukes, Counts and Barons, had traveled to Paris, where they found a society eager to bring in new blood to the aristocratic circle, who had managed to survive past their own revolution. In 1934, the King of the United Kingdom had to forcibly remove the King of Florence from London, himself, after the man attempted to use his own, meager, Scottish heritage to drum up support for a Scottish Independent Nation.

Revolution proved a disease few English caught, but the Irish took to it in droves. Having been mostly ignored over the United Kingdom’s history, they were seen as a tourism capital, where wealthy Europeans basked in true country air and hoteled in Palaces surrounded by peace and serenity. Thus, when the King of the United Kingdom was shot dead travelling to Dublin for a peace summit in 1938, in front of his wife and eldest child and heir, the world was shocked. But his subjects did not take to the street to riot, nor didn’t they take this as a chance for a Republic. Instead, they rallied around their royal family, and William V enjoyed the most attended coronation in English history.

[19] William V was born in 1903 and brought up in his father's rule as a well adjusted child - his good looks and natural charm made him popular with both sexes and both sexes were popular with him. Even the mild scandal of bisexual liaisons couldn't dull his popularity and when he started a relationship with female pilot - and *gasp* commoner - Amy Johnson, following her pioneering flight from London to Australia in 1930. In 1932, William and Amy married and she became Princess of Wales. By 1938, he had witnessed his father's assasination and become King with Amy becoming Queen and an honorary Marshall of the RAF. Amy riles against restrictions to her flying and continued to provide her services as part of her charity work - helping to deliver food and medication to refugee camps in areas affected by the military actions undertaken by her father in law. This lead to her death in 1945 when she was shot down by Australian rebels delivering supplies to an orphanage in the Outback, leaving four children of her own behind. William went into mourning for a lengthy period - eliciting comparisons to literary widowers such as Maximillian DeWinter and Mr Rochester. Handsome and brooding - and now distant from his own children - the King was not yet forty and was pressures into marrying again but did not wish to, instead spending his evenings with mistresses and male lovers whilst his sister took responsibility for his children. Eventually the Prime Minister took action and a Regency was declared after intervention failed, with responsibility falling to Princess Beatrice, Duchess of Liverpool, the same sister who was bringing up his children whilst he took up permanent residence at Balmoral. It's amazing that his children grew up so well adjusted - and when he died after two decades of drinking himself into oblivion, taking copious amounts of drugs and indulging in sexual misadventures, the crown passes to .......... and his body is handed to the Royal College of Medicine for medical science. From one of the highest attended coronation to one of the lowest attended funerals in three decades.
 
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What if Henry V was killed at the Battle of Agincourt?

Kings of England

1415 - 1455: Thomas I (House of Lancaster) [1]
1455 - 1485: John II (House of Lancaster) [2]
1485 - 1486: Henry VI (House of Lancaster) [3]
1486 - 1490: Rupert (House of Lancaster) [4]
1490 - 1539: John III (House of Lancaster) [5]
1539 - 1579: Richard III (House of Lancaster and Clarence) [6]
1579 - 1615: Mary I (House of Lancaster and Clarence) [7]

Kings of England and Scotland

1615 - 1638: Thomas II & I (House of Stuart) [8]
1638 - 1666: James I & VI (House of Stuart) [9]
1666 - 1674: Edric I (House of Stuart) [10]
1674 - 1705: William III (House of Orange) [11]

Kings of the United Kingdom of Great Britain

1705 - 1711: William III (House of Orange)
1711 - 1731: Peter I (House of Orleans-Clarence) [12]
1731 - 1801: Peter II (House of Orleans-Clarence/House of Clarence) [13]

Kings of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland

1801 - 1827: Peter II (House of Clarence)
1827 - 1828: Francis I (House of Clarence) [14]
1828 - 1843: Edward IV (House of Clarence) [15]
1843 - 1873: Peter III (House of Clarence) [16]
1873 - 1874: Deborah I (House of Clarence/House of Somerset) [17]

Kings of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Emperors of India and the South Seas

1874 - 1891: Deborah I (House of Clarence/House of Somerset) [17]
1891 - 1938: William IV (House of Somerset) [18]
1938 - 1967: William V (House of Somerset) [19]
1967 - present:
John IV (House of Somerset [20]


[1] Thomas I, the second son of Henry IV of England and brother to Henry V of England was the Duke of Clarence until his brother was killed by a stray arrow during the Battle of Agincourt during Henry V's failed campaign to secure the French crown for himself. Thomas, Duke of Clarence had been left behind in England to manage the affairs of the realm. The news of Henry V's fall in France came as a great shock but what was even worse was the forced retreat of the few remaining English forces as the French began reclaiming lost ground. Thomas I found himself having to raise a new army just to retain the lands in France that the English still had, but despite his efforts the English found themselves being pushed back further and further into Normandy, by the end of the latest stage of the Hundred Year's War the English were barely hanging onto to a handful of ports and a humiliating peace treaty left the English presence in France negligible.

Due to this perceived weakness the King's grip on the nation became weakened as his ambitious brothers John the Duke of Bedford, Humphrey the Duke of Glouchester, and their cousins in the House of York began plotting and scheming for power, a situation made worse due to the King having a long period of time in which he had no children. Thomas I's first marriage (made before he was King) to Margaret Holland, Countess of Somerset had produced no children, so the King forced her into a convent and married again to Anne of Burgundy, which also produced no children. When Anne of Burgundy died unexpectedly of a fever at age 28 the King married a third time to Jacquetta of Luxembourg which finally produced children and heirs for the English throne, seven in total.

This helped the King stabilize the nation for the remainder of his reign, but the English claims to the French throne remained and the House of Valois had seen two mad Kings sit the French throne, giving Thomas's successors hope of pressing the claim once again.

King Thomas I died of 'complications of gout' at age 67 and passed the crown to, his son, Prince Jack.

[2] Known affectionately as Prince Jack to his family - though christened and eventually reigning under the name of John. He was in his mid twenties when he inherited the throne, married to Margaret of Anjou, the daughter of the King of Naples. With a weaker husband, Margaret would have wielded almost absolute power - but with a moderately educated husband who had been given a strong role model in King Thomas, Margaret and John were a veritable power couple and together they crippled the power base of the disruptive House of York and their allies, culminating with the beheading of Edward, Duke of York for insurgent activity and planning regicide (evidence that Margaret may have actually manufactured). The York's had their titles and lands taken, all absorbed by the crown and a possible power struggle for the throne was halted before it had even really started. To validate their claim to the title they quickly invested their three eldest male children as Prince of Wales, Duke of Lancaster and Duke of York - and when John died of heart failure in his fifties, he left Margaret to survive him by a decade and one of his sons to take the throne.

[3] Henry was the second child and oldest son of King John II and Queen Margaret, born in 1457, he was 28 when he assumed the throne. Henry had always been a sickly child and had primarily been raised by his mother and not his father. His mother was basically ruling during his reign, which was short due to his illness. Although there were rumors that one of his brothers, Lancaster or York, had poisoned him. There had always been contempt between Henry and his brothers, who like their father were vigorous men. On Henry's death there was turmoil as the two Dukes contended for the throne before the Duke of York, Rupert, was confirmed as the new king.

[4] Rupert was a rather sinister man. He once burned down a entire village simply because he could.

One day in 1489 he was out hunting with his right hand man Roddy, when an assassin came out of nowhere and tried to shoot Rupert with an arrow but he missed.

In 1490 Rupert had traveled to Ireland but however when he was returning back to England, his ship sank and he drowned.

[5] Youngest son of John II. As leader of rebelion against king Rupert he was accussed of high treason and had to escape country. He spend remaining years of Rupert's rule in exile in France and Italy. After death of cruel king Rupert, John as last male member of House of Lancaster returned to England to claim the throne. John, during his long reign, was known as patron of Renaissance art, but also strong opponent of Protestant reformation and was given title Fidei defensor by the Pope.

[6] John III had been the last male member of the House of Lancaster - to a fashion. Geoffrey, second son of King Thomas, had been granted his father's pre-regnal title of Duke of Clarence upon his eighteenth birthday and the title had passed down to his son (also) Geoffrey (title held 1500-1520), his grandson William (title held 1520-1538) and eventually to his eighteen year old great grandson Richard (title held 1538 to 1539). Richard was the great great grandson of a great King and endeavoured to settle the discord of the House of Lancaster that predated his rule by formally calling himself the first King of the House of Lancaster and Clarence - and he succeeded, more or less. His first step was to permanently retire the titles of Duke of Lancaster and Duke of York - with London, Clarence, Buckingham and Gloucester being the titles traditionally bestowed upon sons of the monarch when avaliable going forward. Following his distant cousins role within the Roman Catholic church, Richard continued his religious work and sought out a good Catholic bride - and ended up marrying a Habsburg: Margaret, illegitimate daughter of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, a promising wife even in her illegitimacy. Margaret only bore Richard two children, with the second birth being so traumatic that she went out of her way to avoid any sexual activity with him - she devoted herself to religion and he devoted himself to ensuring his children were ready to rule upon his death, and enjoying time with his mistresses and own illegitimate issue and appointing the many FitzRichards to positions of authority in England. The power attained by "Richards Bastards" unnerved some and a handful who had attained the wrong office found themselves accidentally falling down stairways or drowning in puddles. It was clear that despite his best attempts and the protection of the Holy Roman Empire, Richard hadn't managed to eliminate the hunger for power that had marked his three predecessors. Eventually he died at the age of fifty-nine when he was stabbed by Edmund FitzOxford, an illegitimate son of the Earl of Oxford who had married one of his own illegitimate daughters, Amelia FitzRichard. Both Edmund and Amelia were beheaded by Richard's successor, his oldest daughter Mary.

[7] Queen Mary was the first regnant Queen of England as her father had only two legitimate children that were both daughters, her and her younger sister, Princess Eleanor. Queen Mary married James V Stuart, the King of Scotland, a distant cousin through his great-great-great grandfather's marriage to the daughter of Thomas I, Elizabeth. Queen Mary was a strict Catholic and was not kind, to put it mildly, to her Protestant subjects. They labeled her "Terror Mary." Many of them immigrated to North America later in her reign as her terror increased. They began the colony of New England (where OTL Virginia is) in 1588. To counter this a royal colony was created to the north of New England by the crown called New Lancaster and one to the south of the Protestant colony called Maryland. Queen Mary, under the advice of King James, who was as devout a Catholic as she but had a protestant majority population in Scotland and thus had learned the value of tolerance, encouraged her Protestant subjects to move to New England, granting an edict of tolerance for the colony. She survived her husband's death, seeing her child, Thomas, become the monarch of Scotland, who upon her own death a year later became the first king of both Scotland and England.

[8] Also King of Scotland as Thomas I. Oldest surviving son of Mary, after taking throne on London, Thomas rarely even visited Scotland and treated his father's country almost like England's colony. Lords of Scotland, unhappy with his rule, started a rebellion under leadership of Thomas' cousin, Robert of Lennox, who claimed throne for himself. Thomas crushed rebel forces and sentenced his cousin to death, but due to cruel repressions against rebels he was remembered by people of Scotland as bloody tyrant.

[9] James I & VI was the eldest son of Thomas II & I. He was already a young man when the Scottish Rebellion of 1625 occurred. After that he was sent to Edinburgh to represent his father. His time in Scottland before he inherited the throne 13 years later led him to a more benevolent attitude towards the northern kingdom. It also made him more open to Protestants in his realm, like his namesake, his grandfather James V of Scotland. (It was rumored he actually converted to Presbyterianism secretly.) As King in 1646 he issued the edict of tolerance allowing Protestants to freely assemble and worship in England and Catholics in Scotland, as long as each congregation paid a half tithe to the established Church of the Kingdom: Catholic in England and Presbyterian in Scotland. James married Henrietta Maria of France with whom he had numerous children. He died in the fire of London from smoke inhalation when he refused to leave the city or the Whitehall Palace. He was succeeded by his grandson, Edric I.

[10] Edric I, the eldest son of David, Prince of Wales who tragically died during the royal family's flight from the Great Fire of 1666, was the first King to bear the name 'Eadric' since the conquest, his father begin fond of the Anglo-Saxon period of English history had named his children names that hadn't been used since Harold Godwinson's time. Despite this the new King found himself suffering from breathing problems in the aftermath of the fire, modern medical experts believe he inhaled something toxic during the fire and damaged his lungs as a result.

Due to this the King's reign only lasted nine, painful years as he slowly died, however Edric I proved a capable ruler despite this, organizing the reconstruction of London in the aftermath of the fire, resettling the royal family in a small manor known as Castle Hill Lodge outside of the city, a property that was also expanded into a new royal residence that would come to be called Castle Hill Palace.

Edric I never married nor had children and spent the last three years of his reign in bed, slowly dying while his cousin and heir, William of Orange, ruled the realm on his behalf. Edric I died at age 20, reportedly his last words were a request for wine and fresh flowers by the bed.

[11] William of Orange was the cousin of Edric in that James I & VI's daughter, the Mary, Princess Royal, had married William's father, a Dutch prince who was a protestant. This was intended as a good will gesture to James' Protestant subjects. A lot of the royal family had perished in the fire of London and thus Edric's heir was his aunt Mary, who died before Edric, leaving the Dutch and Protestant William his heir. There was a lot of controversy over a Protestant taking the throne of England and William had to swear to protect all his Catholic subjects' rights and privileges and commit to a greater role of Parliament in government before he was approved by them. It was during William's reign that Parliament began having a prime minster who'd form a cabinet to run a government all under the King's authority. In 1705 the Parliaments of England and Scotland chose to unite the kingdoms into one as the United Kingdom of Great Britain with one Parliament in London. William had promised to marry a Catholic princess as part of the agreement for him to take the throne. He chose Mary of Modena and they wed the same year as his coronation. He was 23 and she was 16. Also, although he was only the second of his name to be king of Scotland, he was universally known as William III and after him the numbering system of monarchs ignored the proper number related to Scotland.

[12] William III produced several heirs but they all predeceased him, his aunt Margaret had entered a nunnery after being widowed when her Dutch husband died of pneumonia after six months of marriage and produced no heirs. When it became clear that the House of Orange would be short lived, Parliament passed an Act of Settlement determining that the King of Britain must be Catholic but that the senior most Protestant member of the royal family would be appointed Lord Protector of Scotland under the Kings command. For a suitable heir, Parliament had to backtrack to Queen Mary's sister, Princess Eleanor, who had married into the French royal family - specifically the Duke of Orleans - and her great great great grandson, the brother of the present Duke of Orleans (who had recently converted to Lutheranism himself), the twenty year old Peter d'Orleans. Peter and his French wife arrived in London and before he had been crowned, he faced a stand-off with the Protestant claimant, Henry of Gloucester, grandson of Queen Mary through her younger son, the designated Lord Protector of Scotland, and closer in the line of succession than Peter if it weren't for the Act of Settlement. This launched a period known as The Prince's War which lasts from 1711 to 1716 culminating in the Battle of Culloden and Peter's victory although Peter was almost killed and his coronation held on the battlefield with Henry's heirs disinherited and his Dukedom passed to his younger brother Andrew, who became the first proper Lord Protector of Scotland. After a twenty year rule with several children living to adulthood, Peter died in his sleep from a heart attack.

[13] Peter I and his wife were both French when they came to Britain and already had an infant son, Prince Henri, who'd been born in France. Like his father, Prince Henri married young, but in his case it was deemed proper by Parliament that he marry a British descendant of the royal family and especially not someone from France in that the United Kingdom waged a war with France over colonial possessions with Britain winning and taking possession of the French Maritime colonies north of New Lancaster: New Aquitaine, Algonqueans, and Acadia. The War was called the Eight Year War and ended in 1730.

Prince Henri married a descendant of John of Gaunt, the son of King Edward III, Lady Deborah Beaufort, daughter of Edward Beaufort, the 7th of Duke of Somerset. The Somersets were an old cadet line with a direct male line of 8 generations from John of Gaunt to Edward, the 7th Duke. They were a loyal family to the Lancastrian line from the start and then the Catholic cause. They married on the prince's 18th birthday 1729. Shortly after that the Prince sailed to America to fight in the Eight Year War. He'd been ordered to command from behind the lines but a raid by native allies of the French wounded him and he died shortly there after. But Princess Deborah was with child, and upon his birth in 1730 he became the heir to the throne. He was named after his grandfather- Peter.

When King Peter I died less than a year later, the infant Peter II, became king. His maternal grandfather, Duke Edward, became regent until Peter was of age in 1748 when he was coronated and took over his royal duties. Peter II was raised more as a Beaufort than as an Orleans-Clarence. He was the quintessential 18th Century Englishman. The Wars with France continued and in his coronation year the United Kingdom was again at war with France in the War of the Savoy Succession, which again was a colonial war, called the French and Indian War in America. To show his identity as an Englishman not a Frenchman, Peter had himself crowned as a Clarence, dropping the Orleans part of his family. His first Royal decree was that all members of the United Kingdom were were part of his family were to do the same, which of course they all did.

Peter II lived a long life and since he became King in his first year, his reign of 96 years still remains as the longest know reign of a monarch in History. Peter's Britian saw the Industrial Revolution, the older British American colonies becoming independent with the help of France, the French Revolution and the following wars, and the first elements of the British Empire beyond the Americas in India, the South Seas, and China. In 1801 the status of Ireland changed as it was incorporated into the union and Parliament. The Union Jack flag became the flag it is today and thus the flag that flew around the world.

Peter II had many children, grandchildren, great grandchildren, and even one great great grandson when he died. He was survived by his Queen, Charlotte, who lived four more years, dying at the ripe old age of 101. She thus saw her son, Francis take the throne. She was a cousin on the Beaufort side, being the granddaughter of Duke Edward, 7th Duke of Somerset through his eldest child, Lady Elizabeth who'd married the Duke of Suffolk.

[14]
Francis, oldest son of Peter II, was already old man, when he took the throne, he reigned for just one year before dying at age 76, leaving throne to his oldest son, Edward.

[15] Edward IV succeeded his father, Francis, at the age of 53. He had only one child, Princess Charlotte, who was 25 on his ascension. Her mother, who had died in childbirth, also named Charlotte, was a grand daughter of Old King Peter and Queen Charlotte. Princess Charlotte was made Princess of Wales the day after her father's own coronation, leaving no doubt she was the heir. Edward's reign saw two major changes in the British system. The half tithe on non-established Churches was dissolved and full religious freedom was granted the citizens of the United Kingdom. The other was the extension of the voting franchise to all men who either owned property or rented property in the Reform Act of 1833. The colony of Hong Kong was chartered by Edward IV. Edward was a large man with a big appetite for food and drink. He had many illegitimate children from his many affairs, but he never married again. He died at age 68 due to heart problems.

[16] The best laid plans - as the saying goes - often go wrong. And after Edward IV died of a heart condition, his daughter was the planned heir - except she had died of pneumonia mere weeks before the Kings own death, perhaps precipitating his emotional and physical exhaustion. This left his brother, the Duke of Cumberland to take the throne instead - and given his advanced age, the fact he had children and grandchildren and even a single great grandchild upon his coronation was a clear bonus to the line of succession. As with Charlotte before, his eldest child was officially invested as Princess of Wales, and in a surprising move by monarch and parliament, male primogeniture evolved into absolute primogeniture. A younger brother would no longer outrank an older sister - this was his major contribution to the monarchy. But he also accepted the personal gift of the Congo basin - which had presumed to be getting handed to the Belgian King - and in a surprising move, he halted any colonial expansion further than basic trading posts. This placed him into conflict with his government but as the territory was privately owned, they had to back off on further action though the crown allowance was decreased accordingly. Peter sent his second son to the English Congo as a Lord Protector of the Commonwealth - a sort of governor to oversee the trading posts. This opposition to expansion caused conflict with other European monarchies following his refusal to allow expansion after the Paris Conference to the extent that Peter found it difficult to find suitable matches for his unmarried grandchildren and great grandchildren, so he looked within British nobility for suitable matches and to American sources, with the result that one of his grandsons married the daughter of the American President. When Peter was on his death bed - from old age - the crown was passed onwards, and the conflict with Parliament and Europe continued to brew.

[17] Princess Deborah had grown up close with her cousin. Although Princess Charlotte had never married (those in the know knew she was a Lesbian), Princess Deborah married a distant cousin, the direct descendant of Regent Edward- Richard the 12th Duke of Somerset. Deborah expected her younger brother, Prince Charles, would inherit the throne eventually after Charlotte died, as he was male. But her father changed things and she became the heir instead. Queen Deborah, later Empress Deborah, was already in her sixties when she inherited the throne. She saw great changes including the the extension of the voting to all males, the electrifying of London, and the great exposition of 1890. The tension with the rest of Europe finally turned into war with the War of 1885, which saw Britain victorious along with her one ally, the Russian Empire. This led to the Empire controlling all of eastern Africa from Egypt to South Africa and the construction of the Cairo to Capetown Railroad. Also a cross peninsula railroad was built across India. Canada, New Zealand, and Australia were given "Dominion" status and Deborah remained queen of these nations too even though otherwise they were independent of Britain.

[18] King William IV of the United Kingdom was born in 1885, as the only child of Princes Louis of the United Kingdom and his third wife, the Polish Princess Barbara Oldenburg, who at 42, had been considered as barren as the Prince of Wales' first two wives, Lady Theresa Percy and the Princess Catalina of Florence. At 76, having finally fathered a child of dubious origins (considering his father was 62 at the time, and had only, probably, produced one child in the form of a 1843 miscarriage, which was the cause of death of the Lady Theresa Percy), the crown rested on the shoulders of this one tiny infant. Furthermore, the Empress Deborah was forced to intervene when, three days after his birth, the Prince of Wales finally broke the news that the name they had chosen for the heir to the throne was Rupert Alexander Nicholas Somerset. Rupert, a name associated within England with the infamously cruel King Rupert, was named after Rupert of the Rhine, Count Palatine, who had been the Prince of Wales' best friend until his death the year prior. Alexander, chosen to honour the Russian allies, would have been a fine name, if Louis had not paired it with Nicholas, a name associated with Nicholas of Lorraine, who had married and mistreated the current Tsar's aunt, the Grand Duchess Olga Petrovna. It's said the Prince of Wales picked it because he liked the nickname Nicky. Thus, despite her sons protests, the child was renamed William Alexander Edric, Duke of Kent. Within a year, he was the Prince of Wales, after his father died of heatstroke.

The young King ascended to the throne with his mother as Regent, as per his grandmother's wishes. He was betrothed, against his mother's opinion, to his 5 year older cousin, Maria, Empress of Brazil, the last scion of a brief but powerful Brazilian/Portuguese Empire, who by 1891 relied on English and Russian acknowledgement to continue their Imperial Ambitions, despite the 1880 Mayan Revolution, during which they lost many of their North American holdings. Despite this Imperial setback, the government remained strong, and agreed to a personal union between the inbred, sickly Maria Trastámara, and the relatively healthy, much younger William Somerset. This flew in his mother's wishes, as she pictured a French marriage, with the other grand heiress of the time, Josephine d'Orleans, Queen of Flanders. Pretty, healthy and 2 days younger than the King of the United Kingdom, she might have been a more logical match, but she was Lutheran, and her claim to the Kingdom of Flanders had come via her great-grandmother, Anne-Charlotte d'Orleans, who had managed to place her bastard son, Julius d'Orleans, (son of the famous lover Harold Vasa, the 3rd son of the King of Finland, who fathered 28 children by 26 women over 34 years, before his death by guillotine during the Finnish War for Independence) on the Flemish Throne in 1802, partially by seducing the last King of France, Henri IX of France, who recognised Julius as King over the better claims of the English dynasty. In fact, the last King of Flanders before Julius, George II of Flanders, had only allowed his French niece such power because, until 1800, when Julius was named heir, he had only Anne-Charlotte herself as the logical heir against Peter d'Orleans. With Julius as heir, the United Kingdom had ended trade relations with the Flemish King, who had in 1803 risen to his throne. Since then, Flanders had been part of England's continental ambitions, but without a wish to gain it via marriage.

William IV was raised somewhat ignorant of his own status until his 12th birthday. His Regency was effective, and he thought his mother was Queen of the United Kingdom herself, and that he was the heir. However, her death in 1897 caused him to lose this view, and in 1900, at 15, he received a second, grand coronation at the advice of his cousin, Prince Henry of Kintyre, who hoped to rally the country around their King as they went to war in Australia, against the Danish colony of Ulricksland, who controlled the South-Eastern region of the Continent. 10,000 men of the army were sent to Australia for that war, to lead and train the Australian Armies in Deborah, Petrovna and Clarence. 300 would return, with 7,000 casualties, 1,000 missing and the rest having fates unrecorded.

These horrific losses scared the young King, who in 1903 rejected marriage to the Empress of Brazil in favour of a marriage to the Lady Beatrice Chancellor, the granddaughter of a merchant and the great-granddaughter of a German shoemaker. She was, however, a simple woman, who would become known as "Queenie Bee", for her yellow and black dresses, worn in honour of her father's dynastic colours. Her attractions were, for the fashionable London elite, minimal, and when she refused to dine with the King's cousin, the Lady Henriette Bullen, daughter to the Duke of Ormond, because she had had committed adultery 30 years prior. When it was pointed out to her that there was few of good breeding in London who had not committed adultery even once, she responded by eating privately in her rooms with the King every night she could.

Wiliam's wife had an immediate effect on the royal family's perception by the masses. Previously, under Deborah, the royal family had become a sort of living Greek Gods. The exploits of the royal family, who earned their keep by expanding and winning wars and what not, was less exciting and more scandalous and annoying. Lady Henriette Bullen, for instance, had been a favourite of the public in the 1860's, but in 1909, when she died, the obituaries ran described her in less glamourous terms. Her exploits were reviled, and by the mid-1910's, a magazine writer described the change as being "an era of propriety and cleanliness. Whereas the Elite might take lovers and commit sins without worry before, the Queen demands more of her courtiers. A Duke is held to the same degree as the humble merchant. Mass is heard every morning, and all fasting days are kept..." In a court used to only going to court if they were sleeping with the priest, this was a major development.

Domestically, the Industrial Age was over, and with the 1907 Children's Labour Law being passed, the last of the children's factories closed by 1915. Even more dramatically, the Queen spoke against child labour and unpaid labour, and in 1911, she personally adopted 100 orphans from a Sussex orphanage, pegged for labour work, and paid to have them all placed in various nunneries and religious house, to become priests and nuns. The King responded to this by doing the same in every county, to her delight. With the birth of the 5th of their 11 children this same year, they became known as Parental figures for the country, which turned out to be a majorly important development for the royal family in the years to come.

In 1913, Maria, Empress of Brazil, pregnant for the first time by her husband, the Count Palatine John Frederick, was murdered in her bed by Revolutionaries. Taking the rhetoric of the French Revolutionaries of the 1800's, who had deposed (while not murdering) King Henri IX in 1812, they had begun a zeal that floated across Europe. Whereas the revolutions of the 1800's had been few, non-violent (with exception to the Finnish Revolution) and mostly-noneffective (again, Finland, who in 1840 had been reestablished as a Swedish Possession), the 1910's and 1920's saw many dynasties toppled and replaced with various, Republics. Portugal soon followed Brazil, followed by Spain, Florence, Naples, Lorraine, ect. However, the United Kingdom remained unaffected by the revolutionary zeal. By 1920, over 3,000 aristocrats from across Europe had arrived in England, including the King of Florence, the King of Lithuania and the King of Denmark, all of whom demanded the King of the United Kingdom save them and their countries. However, he could not save them all at once, and by 1930, the majority of aristcrats, who had not been Kings themselves but Dukes, Counts and Barons, had traveled to Paris, where they found a society eager to bring in new blood to the aristocratic circle, who had managed to survive past their own revolution. In 1934, the King of the United Kingdom had to forcibly remove the King of Florence from London, himself, after the man attempted to use his own, meager, Scottish heritage to drum up support for a Scottish Independent Nation.

Revolution proved a disease few English caught, but the Irish took to it in droves. Having been mostly ignored over the United Kingdom’s history, they were seen as a tourism capital, where wealthy Europeans basked in true country air and hoteled in Palaces surrounded by peace and serenity. Thus, when the King of the United Kingdom was shot dead travelling to Dublin for a peace summit in 1938, in front of his wife and eldest child and heir, the world was shocked. But his subjects did not take to the street to riot, nor didn’t they take this as a chance for a Republic. Instead, they rallied around their royal family, and William V enjoyed the most attended coronation in English history.[/]

[19] William V was born in 1903 and brought up in his father's rule as a well adjusted child - his good looks and natural charm made him popular with both sexes and both sexes were popular with him. Even the mild scandal of bisexual liaisons couldn't dull his popularity and when he started a relationship with female pilot - and *gasp* commoner - Amy Johnson, following her pioneering flight from London to Australia in 1930. In 1932, William and Amy married and she became Princess of Wales. By 1938, he had witnessed his father's assasination and become King with Amy becoming Queen and an honorary Marshall of the RAF. Amy riles against restrictions to her flying and continued to provide her services as part of her charity work - helping to deliver food and medication to refugee camps in areas affected by the military actions undertaken by her father in law. This lead to her death in 1945 when she was shot down by Australian rebels delivering supplies to an orphanage in the Outback, leaving four children of her own behind. William went into mourning for a lengthy period - eliciting comparisons to literary widowers such as Maximillian DeWinter and Mr Rochester. Handsome and brooding - and now distant from his own children - the King was not yet forty and was pressures into marrying again but did not wish to, instead spending his evenings with mistresses and male lovers whilst his sister took responsibility for his children. Eventually the Prime Minister took action and a Regency was declared after intervention failed, with responsibility falling to Princess Beatrice, Duchess of Liverpool, the same sister who was bringing up his children whilst he took up permanent residence at Balmoral. It's amazing that his children grew up so well adjusted - and when he died after two decades of drinking himself into oblivion, taking copious amounts of drugs and indulging in sexual misadventures, the crown passes to his grandson and his body is handed to the Royal College of Medicine for medical science. From one of the highest attended coronation to one of the lowest attended funerals in three decades.
[20] John IV was only son of Edward, Prince of Wales, who predeceased his father dying from cancer just two weeks before him. John IV was unexperienced teenager when he succeeded his grandfather but managed to improve image of monarchy and happened to be one of the most popular kings in centuries, known for his charity and opposition of attempt of fascist military coup prepared by army leadership. Married to Greek princess Helene, with whom he has five children.
 
Christopher, oldest son of Emperor Frederick IV, survives.

Holy Roman Emperors

1493 - 1498: Christoph (House of Habsburg) [1]

Christoph was oldest of three surviving children of Emperor Friedrich III (other were his brother Maximilian and sister Kunigunde). In 1475 Christoph married Katharina of Thuringia, niece of Ladislaus the Posthumous, to strenghten Leopoldine Habsburg line's claim to the throne of Hungary. Christoph regretted this decision, because marriage to Katharina made him unable to marry Mary of Burgundy after death of Charles the Bold, thus Mary married his younger brother Maximilian, who became iure uxoris ruler of wealthly Netherlands, while Christoph never managed to take Hungarian throne-his attempt to get Crown of Saint Stephen ended with disaster. Austrian troops lead personally by Christoph, who was then already King of the Romans and co-ruler of HRE, were beaten by mercenaries of Vladislaus II near Székesfehérvár in 1490-Christoph regarded himself as equally skilled as Alexander the Great, but in fact he was terrible commander. After succeeding his father on Imperial throne, Christoph's health started to quickly deteriorate, thus he was unable to personally take command over Habsburg forces during Italian Wars (which vastly increased chances of League of Venice against France). Christoph, unable to talk and walk during last months of his life, died just one week after his rival, Charles VIII of France. Next Imperial election was won by Christoph's oldest son ____.
 
Holy Roman Emperors

1493 - 1498: Christoph I (House of Hapsburg) [1]
1498 - 1538: Albert I (House of Hapsburg) [2]


[1] Christoph was oldest of three surviving children of Emperor Friedrich III (other were his brother Maximilian and sister Kunigunde). In 1475 Christoph married Katharina of Thuringia, niece of Ladislaus the Posthumous, to strenghten Leopoldine Habsburg line's claim to the throne of Hungary. Christoph regretted this decision, because marriage to Katharina made him unable to marry Mary of Burgundy after death of Charles the Bold, thus Mary married his younger brother Maximilian, who became iure uxoris ruler of wealthly Netherlands, while Christoph never managed to take Hungarian throne-his attempt to get Crown of Saint Stephen ended with disaster. Austrian troops lead personally by Christoph, who was then already King of the Romans and co-ruler of HRE, were beaten by mercenaries of Vladislaus II near Székesfehérvár in 1490-Christoph regarded himself as equally skilled as Alexander the Great, but in fact he was terrible commander. After succeeding his father on Imperial throne, Christoph's health started to quickly deteriorate, thus he was unable to personally take command over Habsburg forces during Italian Wars (which vastly increased chances of League of Venice against France). Christoph, unable to talk and walk during last months of his life, died just one week after his rival, Charles VIII of France. Next Imperial election was won by Christoph's oldest son Albert.

[2] Albert von Hapsburg was born in 1478, the second son of Christoph, then King of the Romans, and Katharina of Thuringia. The favourite grandchild of Friedrich, Holy Roman Emperor, he was set from birth for great things, although not the Imperial Crown. In 1485, when his brother was betrothed to Elisabeth of Brandenburg, he was granted an even more bountiful betrothal, in the form of Anne of Brittany, heiress to the Duchy of Brittany. Obviously, this would fail to come to pass and the Duchess of Brittany later married the King of France, but from the start it was assured that the second son of Christoph would do great things.

Upon the death of his brother in 1594, shortly after the birth of a stillborn daughter, the Archduke Albert became King of the Romans, and in 1497, just 6 months prior to his father's death, he was married to the Princess Catherine of York, youngest unmarried sister of Edward V, King of England. This went against the young man's wishes, as he had fallen in love with his brother's widow's sister, Anastasia of Brandenburg, but the match was not allowed by his father, and Anastasia of Brandenburg was married to Albert's younger brother Maximilian, leaving them in a rivalry that lasted their lifetime.

In 1499, shortly after his accession, Albert I, Holy Roman Emperor treated with the new King of France, Charles IX if France (formerly the Count of Angouleme) for a match between his youngest brother, Friedrich von Hapsburg, Archduke of Austria, and Marie of France, the younger daughter of Charles VIII of France and Anne, Duchess of Brittany, currently languishing in a rich prison, waiting for freedom. This was allowed, due to the elder sister's betrothal to the Dauphin Francis, and Friedrich would travel to France in 1505, attending to his betrothed and, supposedly, flirting with the idea of seducing and marrying the widowed Duchess of Brittany instead, which fell through when she died mysteriously later that year.

With his influence in France assured, the Holy Roman Emperor negotiated a proper peace with Hungary. Tensions having remained high since his father's wars with Vladislaus II, he found in 1506 that he had a daughter aged 2, and his rival had a newborn son. Thus, they negotiated a betrothal between Louis, Prince of Hungary and the Archduchess Margarethe von Hapsburg. When, shortly after these negotiations closed, the Queen of Hungary died herself, Albert saw an opportunity to further create ties with Hungary, and in 1508, Vladislaus II of Hungary married the elder of his two sisters, Agnes von Hapsburg. Age 20 upon their marriage, she would remain childless for the 8 years they were married.

Albert famously did not attend much to his uncle or his ambitions. While his father had intersected himself into the Italian Wars and Burgundy's French conflicts, Albert refused to play into the cadet branch's ambitions to the Spanish throne, with his younger sister Joanne von Hapsburg marrying the King of Aragon in 1508, 6 months after her elder sister, and producing 2 sons, blocking Maximilian, Duke of Burgundy's grandson Charles from becoming King of Spain, and simply King of Castile. Furthermore, he refused to betrothed his daughter to that same young Charles, and out bid for the hand of Edward V of England's only daughter Elizabeth of York, for the wife of his eldest son, Friedrich.

When, in 1514, Albert lost both that son and his wife to smallpox, he was devastated, sending the unmarried, terrified, and scarred Elizabeth of York back to her father to be placed in a convent. With his eldest and favourite son gone, he focused his efforts on the younger of his sons, but furthermore, focused on an even stronger foreign policy. In 1516, his brother Friedrich became Duke of Brittany, after his wife of 3 years, Marie of France, outlived her sister and her sister's newborn daughter, Louise of France, after the two failed to stave off childbirth related illnesses. Thus, France had lost Brittany again, and with the Imperial might behind him, Friedrich managed to hold onto his new possessions.

With the deaths of Anne II, Duchess of Brittany and them 3 weeks later, Ferdinand II of Aragon so close to each other, it seemed obvious to most that the pretty Joanne von Hapsburg would be in the running for the position of Dauphine. At 26, she had a proven fertility, was famously beautiful and was devoted to her father. But, instead, it was Agnes von Hapsburg, Queen Dowager of Hungary, that was the second wife of the Dauphin Francis. 2 years Joanne's elder, she had no children or pregnancies of her own, and had expected to remain in Hungary to act as Regent for her stepson. But Albert had decided, in his wisdom, that the elder of his sisters was too weak a personality to hold out as Regent to Louis II of Hungary, and instead Maximilian von Hapsburg was to act as Regent for the Hungarian King, following a semi-truce between the Emperor and his brother. The two were not close, but Maximilian loved his nieces and nephews, and agreed to the position to prevent the Hungarian King from shifting Margarethe von Hapsburg for, say, Mary of Burgundy, who would in 1517 marry Maximilian's only child, the Archduke Henry.

In 1520, Albert von Hapsburg remarried, to Apollonia of Brunswick-Lüneburg. The marriage produced many further children for the Emperor. The marriage would not be particularly happy, but not particularly unhappy either. It seems he had decided to ally with the Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and had married his second wife for that reason. Of their children, all three of their sons would become priests, and Apollonia famously wished for their daughters to all join convents, only to find her wishes ignored.

In 1533, the Emperor collapsed.

Albert von Hapsburg, Holy Roman Emperor suffered a seizure on the 7th of May, 1533, which severely impacted his health. Aged 45, he struggled through the next 5 years to remain active within his Empire, forced to hand over the reins of power in the end to his son, ________. His death was a shock to Europe, and particularly to his family, who had watched him deteriorate in the last days of his life.
 
Holy Roman Emperors

1493 - 1498: Christoph I (House of Hapsburg) [1]
1498 - 1538: Albrecht III (House of Hapsburg) [2]
1538 - 1565: Christoph II (House of Habsburg) [3]


[1] Christoph was oldest of three surviving children of Emperor Friedrich III (other were his brother Maximilian and sister Kunigunde). In 1475 Christoph married Katharina of Thuringia, niece of Ladislaus the Posthumous, to strenghten Leopoldine Habsburg line's claim to the throne of Hungary. Christoph regretted this decision, because marriage to Katharina made him unable to marry Mary of Burgundy after death of Charles the Bold, thus Mary married his younger brother Maximilian, who became iure uxoris ruler of wealthly Netherlands, while Christoph never managed to take Hungarian throne-his attempt to get Crown of Saint Stephen ended with disaster. Austrian troops lead personally by Christoph, who was then already King of the Romans and co-ruler of HRE, were beaten by mercenaries of Vladislaus II near Székesfehérvár in 1490-Christoph regarded himself as equally skilled as Alexander the Great, but in fact he was terrible commander. After succeeding his father on Imperial throne, Christoph's health started to quickly deteriorate, thus he was unable to personally take command over Habsburg forces during Italian Wars (which vastly increased chances of League of Venice against France). Christoph, unable to talk and walk during last months of his life, died just one week after his rival, Charles VIII of France. Next Imperial election was won by Christoph's oldest son Albert.

[2] Albert von Hapsburg was born in 1478, the second son of Christoph, then King of the Romans, and Katharina of Thuringia. The favourite grandchild of Friedrich, Holy Roman Emperor, he was set from birth for great things, although not the Imperial Crown. In 1485, when his brother was betrothed to Elisabeth of Brandenburg, he was granted an even more bountiful betrothal, in the form of Anne of Brittany, heiress to the Duchy of Brittany. Obviously, this would fail to come to pass and the Duchess of Brittany later married the King of France, but from the start it was assured that the second son of Christoph would do great things.

Upon the death of his brother in 1594, shortly after the birth of a stillborn daughter, the Archduke Albert became King of the Romans, and in 1497, just 6 months prior to his father's death, he was married to the Princess Catherine of York, youngest unmarried sister of Edward V, King of England. This went against the young man's wishes, as he had fallen in love with his brother's widow's sister, Anastasia of Brandenburg, but the match was not allowed by his father, and Anastasia of Brandenburg was married to Albert's younger brother Maximilian, leaving them in a rivalry that lasted their lifetime.

In 1499, shortly after his accession, Albert I, Holy Roman Emperor treated with the new King of France, Charles IX if France (formerly the Count of Angouleme) for a match between his youngest brother, Friedrich von Hapsburg, Archduke of Austria, and Marie of France, the younger daughter of Charles VIII of France and Anne, Duchess of Brittany, currently languishing in a rich prison, waiting for freedom. This was allowed, due to the elder sister's betrothal to the Dauphin Francis, and Friedrich would travel to France in 1505, attending to his betrothed and, supposedly, flirting with the idea of seducing and marrying the widowed Duchess of Brittany instead, which fell through when she died mysteriously later that year.

With his influence in France assured, the Holy Roman Emperor negotiated a proper peace with Hungary. Tensions having remained high since his father's wars with Vladislaus II, he found in 1506 that he had a daughter aged 2, and his rival had a newborn son. Thus, they negotiated a betrothal between Louis, Prince of Hungary and the Archduchess Margarethe von Hapsburg. When, shortly after these negotiations closed, the Queen of Hungary died herself, Albert saw an opportunity to further create ties with Hungary, and in 1508, Vladislaus II of Hungary married the elder of his two sisters, Agnes von Hapsburg. Age 20 upon their marriage, she would remain childless for the 8 years they were married.

Albert famously did not attend much to his uncle or his ambitions. While his father had intersected himself into the Italian Wars and Burgundy's French conflicts, Albert refused to play into the cadet branch's ambitions to the Spanish throne, with his younger sister Joanne von Hapsburg marrying the King of Aragon in 1508, 6 months after her elder sister, and producing 2 sons, blocking Maximilian, Duke of Burgundy's grandson Charles from becoming King of Spain, and simply King of Castile. Furthermore, he refused to betrothed his daughter to that same young Charles, and out bid for the hand of Edward V of England's only daughter Elizabeth of York, for the wife of his eldest son, Friedrich.

When, in 1514, Albert lost both that son and his wife to smallpox, he was devastated, sending the unmarried, terrified, and scarred Elizabeth of York back to her father to be placed in a convent. With his eldest and favourite son gone, he focused his efforts on the younger of his sons, but furthermore, focused on an even stronger foreign policy. In 1516, his brother Friedrich became Duke of Brittany, after his wife of 3 years, Marie of France, outlived her sister and her sister's newborn daughter, Louise of France, after the two failed to stave off childbirth related illnesses. Thus, France had lost Brittany again, and with the Imperial might behind him, Friedrich managed to hold onto his new possessions.

With the deaths of Anne II, Duchess of Brittany and them 3 weeks later, Ferdinand II of Aragon so close to each other, it seemed obvious to most that the pretty Joanne von Hapsburg would be in the running for the position of Dauphine. At 26, she had a proven fertility, was famously beautiful and was devoted to her father. But, instead, it was Agnes von Hapsburg, Queen Dowager of Hungary, that was the second wife of the Dauphin Francis. 2 years Joanne's elder, she had no children or pregnancies of her own, and had expected to remain in Hungary to act as Regent for her stepson. But Albert had decided, in his wisdom, that the elder of his sisters was too weak a personality to hold out as Regent to Louis II of Hungary, and instead Maximilian von Hapsburg was to act as Regent for the Hungarian King, following a semi-truce between the Emperor and his brother. The two were not close, but Maximilian loved his nieces and nephews, and agreed to the position to prevent the Hungarian King from shifting Margarethe von Hapsburg for, say, Mary of Burgundy, who would in 1517 marry Maximilian's only child, the Archduke Henry.

In 1520, Albert von Hapsburg remarried, to Apollonia of Brunswick-Lüneburg. The marriage produced many further children for the Emperor. The marriage would not be particularly happy, but not particularly unhappy either. It seems he had decided to ally with the Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and had married his second wife for that reason. Of their children, all three of their sons would become priests, and Apollonia famously wished for their daughters to all join convents, only to find her wishes ignored.

In 1533, the Emperor collapsed.

Albert von Hapsburg, Holy Roman Emperor suffered a seizure on the 7th of May, 1533, which severely impacted his health. Aged 45, he struggled through the next 5 years to remain active within his Empire, forced to hand over the reins of power in the end to his son, ________. His death was a shock to Europe, and particularly to his family, who had watched him deteriorate in the last days of his life.
[3] Christoph was co-ruler of Empire during last years of his father's reign due to Albrecht's illness. Christoph had to deal with Ottoman expansion against Habsburg ally (gradually turning into Habsburg vassal)-Jagiellon Kingdom of Hungary and Bohemia, which lost its southern and eastern territories to Ottomans and was barely able to defend Buda. Ottoman threat forced Christoph to look for compromise with Protestant dukes of HRE, who, with French support, fought religious war against Catholic Emperor. Unlike his father, Christoph actively supported his Burgundian and Castilian cousins against France and brought Aragon into pro-Habsburg camp. To strenghten alliance with that Iberian Kingdom, Christoph married Maria of Aragon as his second wife after death of his first spouse, Hedwig of Poland, in 1551. After unexpected death of Maria's brothers, Johann, oldest son of Maria and Christoph, inherited Aragonese throne, starting another branch of Habsburg dynasty. Christoph II died as result of injury he suffered after falling from horse during deer hunting. His oldest son from first marriage ____ King of the Romans at the time of father's death, took Imperial throne after him.
 
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Holy Roman Emperors

1493 - 1498: Christoph I (House of Hapsburg) [1]
1498 - 1538: Albrecht III (House of Hapsburg) [2]
1538 - 1565: Christoph II (House of Hapsburg) [3]
1565 - 1575: Friedrich IV (House of Hapsburg) [4]


[1] Christoph was oldest of three surviving children of Emperor Friedrich III (other were his brother Maximilian and sister Kunigunde). In 1475 Christoph married Katharina of Thuringia, niece of Ladislaus the Posthumous, to strenghten Leopoldine Habsburg line's claim to the throne of Hungary. Christoph regretted this decision, because marriage to Katharina made him unable to marry Mary of Burgundy after death of Charles the Bold, thus Mary married his younger brother Maximilian, who became iure uxoris ruler of wealthly Netherlands, while Christoph never managed to take Hungarian throne-his attempt to get Crown of Saint Stephen ended with disaster. Austrian troops lead personally by Christoph, who was then already King of the Romans and co-ruler of HRE, were beaten by mercenaries of Vladislaus II near Székesfehérvár in 1490-Christoph regarded himself as equally skilled as Alexander the Great, but in fact he was terrible commander. After succeeding his father on Imperial throne, Christoph's health started to quickly deteriorate, thus he was unable to personally take command over Habsburg forces during Italian Wars (which vastly increased chances of League of Venice against France). Christoph, unable to talk and walk during last months of his life, died just one week after his rival, Charles VIII of France. Next Imperial election was won by Christoph's oldest son Albert.

[2] Albert von Hapsburg was born in 1478, the second son of Christoph, then King of the Romans, and Katharina of Thuringia. The favourite grandchild of Friedrich, Holy Roman Emperor, he was set from birth for great things, although not the Imperial Crown. In 1485, when his brother was betrothed to Elisabeth of Brandenburg, he was granted an even more bountiful betrothal, in the form of Anne of Brittany, heiress to the Duchy of Brittany. Obviously, this would fail to come to pass and the Duchess of Brittany later married the King of France, but from the start it was assured that the second son of Christoph would do great things.

Upon the death of his brother in 1594, shortly after the birth of a stillborn daughter, the Archduke Albert became King of the Romans, and in 1497, just 6 months prior to his father's death, he was married to the Princess Catherine of York, youngest unmarried sister of Edward V, King of England. This went against the young man's wishes, as he had fallen in love with his brother's widow's sister, Anastasia of Brandenburg, but the match was not allowed by his father, and Anastasia of Brandenburg was married to Albert's younger brother Maximilian, leaving them in a rivalry that lasted their lifetime.

In 1499, shortly after his accession, Albert I, Holy Roman Emperor treated with the new King of France, Charles IX if France (formerly the Count of Angouleme) for a match between his youngest brother, Friedrich von Hapsburg, Archduke of Austria, and Marie of France, the younger daughter of Charles VIII of France and Anne, Duchess of Brittany, currently languishing in a rich prison, waiting for freedom. This was allowed, due to the elder sister's betrothal to the Dauphin Francis, and Friedrich would travel to France in 1505, attending to his betrothed and, supposedly, flirting with the idea of seducing and marrying the widowed Duchess of Brittany instead, which fell through when she died mysteriously later that year.

With his influence in France assured, the Holy Roman Emperor negotiated a proper peace with Hungary. Tensions having remained high since his father's wars with Vladislaus II, he found in 1506 that he had a daughter aged 2, and his rival had a newborn son. Thus, they negotiated a betrothal between Louis, Prince of Hungary and the Archduchess Margarethe von Hapsburg. When, shortly after these negotiations closed, the Queen of Hungary died herself, Albert saw an opportunity to further create ties with Hungary, and in 1508, Vladislaus II of Hungary married the elder of his two sisters, Agnes von Hapsburg. Age 20 upon their marriage, she would remain childless for the 8 years they were married.

Albert famously did not attend much to his uncle or his ambitions. While his father had intersected himself into the Italian Wars and Burgundy's French conflicts, Albert refused to play into the cadet branch's ambitions to the Spanish throne, with his younger sister Joanne von Hapsburg marrying the King of Aragon in 1508, 6 months after her elder sister, and producing 2 sons, blocking Maximilian, Duke of Burgundy's grandson Charles from becoming King of Spain, and simply King of Castile. Furthermore, he refused to betrothed his daughter to that same young Charles, and out bid for the hand of Edward V of England's only daughter Elizabeth of York, for the wife of his eldest son, Friedrich.

When, in 1514, Albert lost both that son and his wife to smallpox, he was devastated, sending the unmarried, terrified, and scarred Elizabeth of York back to her father to be placed in a convent. With his eldest and favourite son gone, he focused his efforts on the younger of his sons, but furthermore, focused on an even stronger foreign policy. In 1516, his brother Friedrich became Duke of Brittany, after his wife of 3 years, Marie of France, outlived her sister and her sister's newborn daughter, Louise of France, after the two failed to stave off childbirth related illnesses. Thus, France had lost Brittany again, and with the Imperial might behind him, Friedrich managed to hold onto his new possessions.

With the deaths of Anne II, Duchess of Brittany and them 3 weeks later, Ferdinand II of Aragon so close to each other, it seemed obvious to most that the pretty Joanne von Hapsburg would be in the running for the position of Dauphine. At 26, she had a proven fertility, was famously beautiful and was devoted to her father. But, instead, it was Agnes von Hapsburg, Queen Dowager of Hungary, that was the second wife of the Dauphin Francis. 2 years Joanne's elder, she had no children or pregnancies of her own, and had expected to remain in Hungary to act as Regent for her stepson. But Albert had decided, in his wisdom, that the elder of his sisters was too weak a personality to hold out as Regent to Louis II of Hungary, and instead Maximilian von Hapsburg was to act as Regent for the Hungarian King, following a semi-truce between the Emperor and his brother. The two were not close, but Maximilian loved his nieces and nephews, and agreed to the position to prevent the Hungarian King from shifting Margarethe von Hapsburg for, say, Mary of Burgundy, who would in 1517 marry Maximilian's only child, the Archduke Henry.

In 1520, Albert von Hapsburg remarried, to Apollonia of Brunswick-Lüneburg. The marriage produced many further children for the Emperor. The marriage would not be particularly happy, but not particularly unhappy either. It seems he had decided to ally with the Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and had married his second wife for that reason. Of their children, all three of their sons would become priests, and Apollonia famously wished for their daughters to all join convents, only to find her wishes ignored.

In 1533, the Emperor collapsed.

Albert von Hapsburg, Holy Roman Emperor suffered a seizure on the 7th of May, 1533, which severely impacted his health. Aged 45, he struggled through the next 5 years to remain active within his Empire, forced to hand over the reins of power in the end to his son, Christoph. His death was a shock to Europe, and particularly to his family, who had watched him deteriorate in the last days of his life.

[3] Christoph was co-ruler of Empire during last years of his father's reign due to Albrecht's illness. Christoph had to deal with Ottoman expansion against Habsburg ally (gradually turning into Habsburg vassal)-Jagiellon Kingdom of Hungary and Bohemia, which lost its southern and eastern territories to Ottomans and was barely able to defend Buda. Ottoman threat forced Christoph to look for compromise with Protestant dukes of HRE, who, with French support, fought religious war against Catholic Emperor. Unlike his father, Christoph actively supported his Burgundian and Castilian cousins against France and brought Aragon into pro-Habsburg camp. To strenghten alliance with that Iberian Kingdom, Christoph married Maria of Aragon as his second wife after death of his first spouse, Hedwig of Poland, in 1551. After unexpected death of Maria's brothers, Johann, oldest son of Maria and Christoph, inherited Aragonese throne, starting another branch of Habsburg dynasty. Christoph II died as result of injury he suffered after falling from horse during deer hunting. His oldest son from first marriage Friedrich, King of the Romans at the time of father's death, took Imperial throne after him.

[4] Friedrich IV, Holy Roman Emperor rose to the throne at the age of 25. Born the third son of Christoph von Hapsburg and Hedwig Jaigellon, his eldest brother, Sigismund von Hapsburg, had died in 1560, at the age of 26, due to syphilis, a disease that later carried away his wife, who was also his aunt, Catherine von Hapsburg. The next eldest Hapsburg heir, Christoph von Hapsburg, had married in 1559, Maria II, Queen of Hungary. The marriage between the, at the time, 22 year old King of the Romans and the 35 year old, widowed, Queen of Hungary, who's previous marriage to the French Duke of Berry had ended in 1555, with no children, probably due to his rumoured homosexuality. They two, thus, produced a single daughter, later Queen Maria III of Hungary, before Christoph von Hapsburg's unfortunate 1563 death, in battle with the Ottomans. Thus, Friedrich von Hapsburg, at this time acting as Regent in Austria, rose to the position of King of the Romans, and for a time it seemed he'd be forced to marry the widowed Queen of Hungary, who at 39 was significantly older than him, strikingly unhealthy and, by her 40th birthday the following year, actually unable to walk unaided. Thus, Friedrich managed to convince his father that, instead, his son might marry the Princess Maria, and in 1564, he instead married Mary of Wales, Princess of England. The daughter of Edward of York, Prince of Wales, the deceased father of the reigning English King, George I of England, she was 22 years old to his 24 at the time of the marriage, a former betrothed of the now dead King James VI of Scotland, who had died at war with her brother. She was the last child between Edward of York and Eleanor of Burgundy, and had been floated around, since the successful invasion of Scotland, as either the wife of the Earl of Lennox, in order to make him a puppet King of Scots, or her cousin the Earl of Salisbury, who would have been made Regent to Scotland. Instead, she now became Queen of the Romans, and a year later, Holy Roman Empress.

Friedrich had not grown up, as his elder brothers had, in the Austrian Court, nor with his three younger siblings in Hungary, alongside the younger sisters of Maria II of Hungary, of which only the youngest, remained both alive and not in a convent as of 1565 (Margaret, the second eldest, had briefly married Ferdinand of Burgundy, younger brother to the King of Castile, before his death in 1556, and now remained in a convent and her twin sister Anna had entered a convent in 1552, age 17, in order to escape a marriage to Christoph II, Holy Roman Emperor following his first wife's death, where she had died in 1562 due to cancer). This youngest Hungarian princess, the Princess Sophia Jaigellon, was at this time 30 years old and unmarried. She would in 1567, by the Emperor's command, find herself the wife of the King of Poland, Sigismund II, who she provided a son to within a year of marriage and promptly died. No, but she was not the companion of Friedrich, for he had been a ward of the King of Naples.

The younger son of Ferdinand II of Aragon and Joanne von Hapsburg had been King of Naples at his father's will, inheriting the throne at 6 years of age. This King, Alfonso III of Napes was a highly effective King and commander, repelling the French back and, in 1543, taking and holding Milan against both the French and, surprisingly, his brother. Aragon and Naples had thus, remained fairly separate entities, with Alfonso choosing to ally himself with Castile and Burgundy, marrying Catherine of Burgundy in 1530, while his brother chose a counter alliance with France, only to ruin that alliance by claiming Milan against them. On the whole, a education under this man and his even more prodigal son, Ferdinand IV of Naples, who in 1558, began a war with Juan (Johann) III, King of Aragon, who at 4 years old was in Girona under his mother's care and Regency, attempting to hold the country against an experienced and ambitious commander in Alfonso III, and then, from 1560, with Alfonso's death, Ferdinand IV of Naples. It was with this handover of power, once it was clear that Friedrich von Hapsburg would hold no power over the Neapolitan King, that he was recalled to Austria, at 20 years old, travelling first through Rome, where his brother, the Cardinal Johann von Hapsburg, was visiting, and then through France, where his eldersister currently reigned as Queen, married to Francis III, King of France. Once at the Imperial Court, he began his training to be an asset to his family, having failed to become an influential presence in Naples and Italy.

He had not, however, learnt nothing, and thus his reign saw the end of Ottoman rule in Hungary, the capture and later execution of the Zápolya King, who at 14 had no wife, no children, and no family to continue his meddling. Indeed, upon the birth of his son and the infant marriage between him and the Princess Maria of Hungary, he was able to fully consolidate Hapsburg rule in the region. He then spent the rest of his reign attempting to peacefully bring the Aragonese/Neapolitan conflict to an end, which was were he died.

In 1575, at age 35, Friedrich von Hapsburg was in Girona, where his stepmother held a formal dinner to celebrate his arrival, where it was hoped that he would personally achieve peace between the two countries. However, it seems his peace would involve large amounts of Aragon being placed under Neapolitan rule, and thus he was poisoned by his stepmother. It wasn't, however, known at the time, and it was suggested that, perhaps, it was the King of Naples who had him murdered. This was not, however, the case, and Maria of Aragon would find that, with her stepson's death and the confusion of who would follow him as Holy Roman Emperor taking so much of the Hapsburg interest away from her own struggles, that Aragon was half held by Ferdinand IV of Naples before a year was out. It was in that time that Friedrich's brother ________ came to be Holy Roman Emperor.
 
Holy Roman Emperors

1493 - 1498: Christoph I (House of Hapsburg) [1]
1498 - 1538: Albrecht III (House of Hapsburg) [2]
1538 - 1565: Christoph II (House of Hapsburg) [3]
1565 - 1575: Friedrich IV (House of Hapsburg) [4]
1575 - 1597: Rudolf II (House of Habsburg) [5]


[1] Christoph was oldest of three surviving children of Emperor Friedrich III (other were his brother Maximilian and sister Kunigunde). In 1475 Christoph married Katharina of Thuringia, niece of Ladislaus the Posthumous, to strenghten Leopoldine Habsburg line's claim to the throne of Hungary. Christoph regretted this decision, because marriage to Katharina made him unable to marry Mary of Burgundy after death of Charles the Bold, thus Mary married his younger brother Maximilian, who became iure uxoris ruler of wealthly Netherlands, while Christoph never managed to take Hungarian throne-his attempt to get Crown of Saint Stephen ended with disaster. Austrian troops lead personally by Christoph, who was then already King of the Romans and co-ruler of HRE, were beaten by mercenaries of Vladislaus II near Székesfehérvár in 1490-Christoph regarded himself as equally skilled as Alexander the Great, but in fact he was terrible commander. After succeeding his father on Imperial throne, Christoph's health started to quickly deteriorate, thus he was unable to personally take command over Habsburg forces during Italian Wars (which vastly increased chances of League of Venice against France). Christoph, unable to talk and walk during last months of his life, died just one week after his rival, Charles VIII of France. Next Imperial election was won by Christoph's oldest son Albert.

[2] Albert von Hapsburg was born in 1478, the second son of Christoph, then King of the Romans, and Katharina of Thuringia. The favourite grandchild of Friedrich, Holy Roman Emperor, he was set from birth for great things, although not the Imperial Crown. In 1485, when his brother was betrothed to Elisabeth of Brandenburg, he was granted an even more bountiful betrothal, in the form of Anne of Brittany, heiress to the Duchy of Brittany. Obviously, this would fail to come to pass and the Duchess of Brittany later married the King of France, but from the start it was assured that the second son of Christoph would do great things.

Upon the death of his brother in 1594, shortly after the birth of a stillborn daughter, the Archduke Albert became King of the Romans, and in 1497, just 6 months prior to his father's death, he was married to the Princess Catherine of York, youngest unmarried sister of Edward V, King of England. This went against the young man's wishes, as he had fallen in love with his brother's widow's sister, Anastasia of Brandenburg, but the match was not allowed by his father, and Anastasia of Brandenburg was married to Albert's younger brother Maximilian, leaving them in a rivalry that lasted their lifetime.

In 1499, shortly after his accession, Albert I, Holy Roman Emperor treated with the new King of France, Charles IX if France (formerly the Count of Angouleme) for a match between his youngest brother, Friedrich von Hapsburg, Archduke of Austria, and Marie of France, the younger daughter of Charles VIII of France and Anne, Duchess of Brittany, currently languishing in a rich prison, waiting for freedom. This was allowed, due to the elder sister's betrothal to the Dauphin Francis, and Friedrich would travel to France in 1505, attending to his betrothed and, supposedly, flirting with the idea of seducing and marrying the widowed Duchess of Brittany instead, which fell through when she died mysteriously later that year.

With his influence in France assured, the Holy Roman Emperor negotiated a proper peace with Hungary. Tensions having remained high since his father's wars with Vladislaus II, he found in 1506 that he had a daughter aged 2, and his rival had a newborn son. Thus, they negotiated a betrothal between Louis, Prince of Hungary and the Archduchess Margarethe von Hapsburg. When, shortly after these negotiations closed, the Queen of Hungary died herself, Albert saw an opportunity to further create ties with Hungary, and in 1508, Vladislaus II of Hungary married the elder of his two sisters, Agnes von Hapsburg. Age 20 upon their marriage, she would remain childless for the 8 years they were married.

Albert famously did not attend much to his uncle or his ambitions. While his father had intersected himself into the Italian Wars and Burgundy's French conflicts, Albert refused to play into the cadet branch's ambitions to the Spanish throne, with his younger sister Joanne von Hapsburg marrying the King of Aragon in 1508, 6 months after her elder sister, and producing 2 sons, blocking Maximilian, Duke of Burgundy's grandson Charles from becoming King of Spain, and simply King of Castile. Furthermore, he refused to betrothed his daughter to that same young Charles, and out bid for the hand of Edward V of England's only daughter Elizabeth of York, for the wife of his eldest son, Friedrich.

When, in 1514, Albert lost both that son and his wife to smallpox, he was devastated, sending the unmarried, terrified, and scarred Elizabeth of York back to her father to be placed in a convent. With his eldest and favourite son gone, he focused his efforts on the younger of his sons, but furthermore, focused on an even stronger foreign policy. In 1516, his brother Friedrich became Duke of Brittany, after his wife of 3 years, Marie of France, outlived her sister and her sister's newborn daughter, Louise of France, after the two failed to stave off childbirth related illnesses. Thus, France had lost Brittany again, and with the Imperial might behind him, Friedrich managed to hold onto his new possessions.

With the deaths of Anne II, Duchess of Brittany and them 3 weeks later, Ferdinand II of Aragon so close to each other, it seemed obvious to most that the pretty Joanne von Hapsburg would be in the running for the position of Dauphine. At 26, she had a proven fertility, was famously beautiful and was devoted to her father. But, instead, it was Agnes von Hapsburg, Queen Dowager of Hungary, that was the second wife of the Dauphin Francis. 2 years Joanne's elder, she had no children or pregnancies of her own, and had expected to remain in Hungary to act as Regent for her stepson. But Albert had decided, in his wisdom, that the elder of his sisters was too weak a personality to hold out as Regent to Louis II of Hungary, and instead Maximilian von Hapsburg was to act as Regent for the Hungarian King, following a semi-truce between the Emperor and his brother. The two were not close, but Maximilian loved his nieces and nephews, and agreed to the position to prevent the Hungarian King from shifting Margarethe von Hapsburg for, say, Mary of Burgundy, who would in 1517 marry Maximilian's only child, the Archduke Henry.

In 1520, Albert von Hapsburg remarried, to Apollonia of Brunswick-Lüneburg. The marriage produced many further children for the Emperor. The marriage would not be particularly happy, but not particularly unhappy either. It seems he had decided to ally with the Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and had married his second wife for that reason. Of their children, all three of their sons would become priests, and Apollonia famously wished for their daughters to all join convents, only to find her wishes ignored.

In 1533, the Emperor collapsed.

Albert von Hapsburg, Holy Roman Emperor suffered a seizure on the 7th of May, 1533, which severely impacted his health. Aged 45, he struggled through the next 5 years to remain active within his Empire, forced to hand over the reins of power in the end to his son, Christoph. His death was a shock to Europe, and particularly to his family, who had watched him deteriorate in the last days of his life.

[3] Christoph was co-ruler of Empire during last years of his father's reign due to Albrecht's illness. Christoph had to deal with Ottoman expansion against Habsburg ally (gradually turning into Habsburg vassal)-Jagiellon Kingdom of Hungary and Bohemia, which lost its southern and eastern territories to Ottomans and was barely able to defend Buda. Ottoman threat forced Christoph to look for compromise with Protestant dukes of HRE, who, with French support, fought religious war against Catholic Emperor. Unlike his father, Christoph actively supported his Burgundian and Castilian cousins against France and brought Aragon into pro-Habsburg camp. To strenghten alliance with that Iberian Kingdom, Christoph married Maria of Aragon as his second wife after death of his first spouse, Hedwig of Poland, in 1551. After unexpected death of Maria's brothers, Johann, oldest son of Maria and Christoph, inherited Aragonese throne, starting another branch of Habsburg dynasty. Christoph II died as result of injury he suffered after falling from horse during deer hunting. His oldest son from first marriage Friedrich, King of the Romans at the time of father's death, took Imperial throne after him.

[4] Friedrich IV, Holy Roman Emperor rose to the throne at the age of 25. Born the third son of Christoph von Hapsburg and Hedwig Jaigellon, his eldest brother, Sigismund von Hapsburg, had died in 1560, at the age of 26, due to syphilis, a disease that later carried away his wife, who was also his aunt, Catherine von Hapsburg. The next eldest Hapsburg heir, Christoph von Hapsburg, had married in 1559, Maria II, Queen of Hungary. The marriage between the, at the time, 22 year old King of the Romans and the 35 year old, widowed, Queen of Hungary, who's previous marriage to the French Duke of Berry had ended in 1555, with no children, probably due to his rumoured homosexuality. They two, thus, produced a single daughter, later Queen Maria III of Hungary, before Christoph von Hapsburg's unfortunate 1563 death, in battle with the Ottomans. Thus, Friedrich von Hapsburg, at this time acting as Regent in Austria, rose to the position of King of the Romans, and for a time it seemed he'd be forced to marry the widowed Queen of Hungary, who at 39 was significantly older than him, strikingly unhealthy and, by her 40th birthday the following year, actually unable to walk unaided. Thus, Friedrich managed to convince his father that, instead, his son might marry the Princess Maria, and in 1564, he instead married Mary of Wales, Princess of England. The daughter of Edward of York, Prince of Wales, the deceased father of the reigning English King, George I of England, she was 22 years old to his 24 at the time of the marriage, a former betrothed of the now dead King James VI of Scotland, who had died at war with her brother. She was the last child between Edward of York and Eleanor of Burgundy, and had been floated around, since the successful invasion of Scotland, as either the wife of the Earl of Lennox, in order to make him a puppet King of Scots, or her cousin the Earl of Salisbury, who would have been made Regent to Scotland. Instead, she now became Queen of the Romans, and a year later, Holy Roman Empress.

Friedrich had not grown up, as his elder brothers had, in the Austrian Court, nor with his three younger siblings in Hungary, alongside the younger sisters of Maria II of Hungary, of which only the youngest, remained both alive and not in a convent as of 1565 (Margaret, the second eldest, had briefly married Ferdinand of Burgundy, younger brother to the King of Castile, before his death in 1556, and now remained in a convent and her twin sister Anna had entered a convent in 1552, age 17, in order to escape a marriage to Christoph II, Holy Roman Emperor following his first wife's death, where she had died in 1562 due to cancer). This youngest Hungarian princess, the Princess Sophia Jaigellon, was at this time 30 years old and unmarried. She would in 1567, by the Emperor's command, find herself the wife of the King of Poland, Sigismund II, who she provided a son to within a year of marriage and promptly died. No, but she was not the companion of Friedrich, for he had been a ward of the King of Naples.

The younger son of Ferdinand II of Aragon and Joanne von Hapsburg had been King of Naples at his father's will, inheriting the throne at 6 years of age. This King, Alfonso III of Napes was a highly effective King and commander, repelling the French back and, in 1543, taking and holding Milan against both the French and, surprisingly, his brother. Aragon and Naples had thus, remained fairly separate entities, with Alfonso choosing to ally himself with Castile and Burgundy, marrying Catherine of Burgundy in 1530, while his brother chose a counter alliance with France, only to ruin that alliance by claiming Milan against them. On the whole, a education under this man and his even more prodigal son, Ferdinand IV of Naples, who in 1558, began a war with Juan (Johann) III, King of Aragon, who at 4 years old was in Girona under his mother's care and Regency, attempting to hold the country against an experienced and ambitious commander in Alfonso III, and then, from 1560, with Alfonso's death, Ferdinand IV of Naples. It was with this handover of power, once it was clear that Friedrich von Hapsburg would hold no power over the Neapolitan King, that he was recalled to Austria, at 20 years old, travelling first through Rome, where his brother, the Cardinal Johann von Hapsburg, was visiting, and then through France, where his eldersister currently reigned as Queen, married to Francis III, King of France. Once at the Imperial Court, he began his training to be an asset to his family, having failed to become an influential presence in Naples and Italy.

He had not, however, learnt nothing, and thus his reign saw the end of Ottoman rule in Hungary, the capture and later execution of the Zápolya King, who at 14 had no wife, no children, and no family to continue his meddling. Indeed, upon the birth of his son and the infant marriage between him and the Princess Maria of Hungary, he was able to fully consolidate Hapsburg rule in the region. He then spent the rest of his reign attempting to peacefully bring the Aragonese/Neapolitan conflict to an end, which was were he died.

In 1575, at age 35, Friedrich von Hapsburg was in Girona, where his stepmother held a formal dinner to celebrate his arrival, where it was hoped that he would personally achieve peace between the two countries. However, it seems his peace would involve large amounts of Aragon being placed under Neapolitan rule, and thus he was poisoned by his stepmother. It wasn't, however, known at the time, and it was suggested that, perhaps, it was the King of Naples who had him murdered. This was not, however, the case, and Maria of Aragon would find that, with her stepson's death and the confusion of who would follow him as Holy Roman Emperor taking so much of the Hapsburg interest away from her own struggles, that Aragon was half held by Ferdinand IV of Naples before a year was out. It was in that time that Friedrich's brother Rudolf came to be Holy Roman Emperor.
[5] Rudolf inherited title of Archduke of Tirol after death of his father. He was known as patron of arts and was himself skilled painter. Rudolf married Sophia of Saxony, who officially converted from Lutheranism to Catholicism upon marriage, but it was rumoured, that Sophia remained secret Protestant and heavy influenced her husband's religious views. As Emperor, Rudolf was known for religious tolerance and his court was full of Protestant advisors. Such fact caused unrest among Habsburg family, ultra-Catholic fraction under leadership of Maximilian Habsburg from Burgundian branch of Dynasty was the main opposition against his reign. If not the death of his charismatic Burgundian cousin, who left only underaged sons, Rudolf II would have serious problems in his attempt to secure election of his only son and successor ____ to the title of the King of the Romans.
 
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Holy Roman Emperors

1493 - 1498: Christoph I (House of Hapsburg) [1]
1498 - 1538: Albrecht III (House of Hapsburg) [2]
1538 - 1565: Christoph II (House of Hapsburg) [3]
1565 - 1575: Friedrich IV (House of Hapsburg) [4]
1575 - 1597: Rudolf II (House of Habsburg-Tirol) [5]
1597 - 1611: Albrecht IV (House of Hapsburg-Tirol) [6]


[1] Christoph was oldest of three surviving children of Emperor Friedrich III (other were his brother Maximilian and sister Kunigunde). In 1475 Christoph married Katharina of Thuringia, niece of Ladislaus the Posthumous, to strenghten Leopoldine Habsburg line's claim to the throne of Hungary. Christoph regretted this decision, because marriage to Katharina made him unable to marry Mary of Burgundy after death of Charles the Bold, thus Mary married his younger brother Maximilian, who became iure uxoris ruler of wealthly Netherlands, while Christoph never managed to take Hungarian throne-his attempt to get Crown of Saint Stephen ended with disaster. Austrian troops lead personally by Christoph, who was then already King of the Romans and co-ruler of HRE, were beaten by mercenaries of Vladislaus II near Székesfehérvár in 1490-Christoph regarded himself as equally skilled as Alexander the Great, but in fact he was terrible commander. After succeeding his father on Imperial throne, Christoph's health started to quickly deteriorate, thus he was unable to personally take command over Habsburg forces during Italian Wars (which vastly increased chances of League of Venice against France). Christoph, unable to talk and walk during last months of his life, died just one week after his rival, Charles VIII of France. Next Imperial election was won by Christoph's oldest son Albert.

[2] Albert von Hapsburg was born in 1478, the second son of Christoph, then King of the Romans, and Katharina of Thuringia. The favourite grandchild of Friedrich, Holy Roman Emperor, he was set from birth for great things, although not the Imperial Crown. In 1485, when his brother was betrothed to Elisabeth of Brandenburg, he was granted an even more bountiful betrothal, in the form of Anne of Brittany, heiress to the Duchy of Brittany. Obviously, this would fail to come to pass and the Duchess of Brittany later married the King of France, but from the start it was assured that the second son of Christoph would do great things.

Upon the death of his brother in 1594, shortly after the birth of a stillborn daughter, the Archduke Albert became King of the Romans, and in 1497, just 6 months prior to his father's death, he was married to the Princess Catherine of York, youngest unmarried sister of Edward V, King of England. This went against the young man's wishes, as he had fallen in love with his brother's widow's sister, Anastasia of Brandenburg, but the match was not allowed by his father, and Anastasia of Brandenburg was married to Albert's younger brother Maximilian, leaving them in a rivalry that lasted their lifetime.

In 1499, shortly after his accession, Albert I, Holy Roman Emperor treated with the new King of France, Charles IX if France (formerly the Count of Angouleme) for a match between his youngest brother, Friedrich von Hapsburg, Archduke of Austria, and Marie of France, the younger daughter of Charles VIII of France and Anne, Duchess of Brittany, currently languishing in a rich prison, waiting for freedom. This was allowed, due to the elder sister's betrothal to the Dauphin Francis, and Friedrich would travel to France in 1505, attending to his betrothed and, supposedly, flirting with the idea of seducing and marrying the widowed Duchess of Brittany instead, which fell through when she died mysteriously later that year.

With his influence in France assured, the Holy Roman Emperor negotiated a proper peace with Hungary. Tensions having remained high since his father's wars with Vladislaus II, he found in 1506 that he had a daughter aged 2, and his rival had a newborn son. Thus, they negotiated a betrothal between Louis, Prince of Hungary and the Archduchess Margarethe von Hapsburg. When, shortly after these negotiations closed, the Queen of Hungary died herself, Albert saw an opportunity to further create ties with Hungary, and in 1508, Vladislaus II of Hungary married the elder of his two sisters, Agnes von Hapsburg. Age 20 upon their marriage, she would remain childless for the 8 years they were married.

Albert famously did not attend much to his uncle or his ambitions. While his father had intersected himself into the Italian Wars and Burgundy's French conflicts, Albert refused to play into the cadet branch's ambitions to the Spanish throne, with his younger sister Joanne von Hapsburg marrying the King of Aragon in 1508, 6 months after her elder sister, and producing 2 sons, blocking Maximilian, Duke of Burgundy's grandson Charles from becoming King of Spain, and simply King of Castile. Furthermore, he refused to betrothed his daughter to that same young Charles, and out bid for the hand of Edward V of England's only daughter Elizabeth of York, for the wife of his eldest son, Friedrich.

When, in 1514, Albert lost both that son and his wife to smallpox, he was devastated, sending the unmarried, terrified, and scarred Elizabeth of York back to her father to be placed in a convent. With his eldest and favourite son gone, he focused his efforts on the younger of his sons, but furthermore, focused on an even stronger foreign policy. In 1516, his brother Friedrich became Duke of Brittany, after his wife of 3 years, Marie of France, outlived her sister and her sister's newborn daughter, Louise of France, after the two failed to stave off childbirth related illnesses. Thus, France had lost Brittany again, and with the Imperial might behind him, Friedrich managed to hold onto his new possessions.

With the deaths of Anne II, Duchess of Brittany and them 3 weeks later, Ferdinand II of Aragon so close to each other, it seemed obvious to most that the pretty Joanne von Hapsburg would be in the running for the position of Dauphine. At 26, she had a proven fertility, was famously beautiful and was devoted to her father. But, instead, it was Agnes von Hapsburg, Queen Dowager of Hungary, that was the second wife of the Dauphin Francis. 2 years Joanne's elder, she had no children or pregnancies of her own, and had expected to remain in Hungary to act as Regent for her stepson. But Albert had decided, in his wisdom, that the elder of his sisters was too weak a personality to hold out as Regent to Louis II of Hungary, and instead Maximilian von Hapsburg was to act as Regent for the Hungarian King, following a semi-truce between the Emperor and his brother. The two were not close, but Maximilian loved his nieces and nephews, and agreed to the position to prevent the Hungarian King from shifting Margarethe von Hapsburg for, say, Mary of Burgundy, who would in 1517 marry Maximilian's only child, the Archduke Henry.

In 1520, Albert von Hapsburg remarried, to Apollonia of Brunswick-Lüneburg. The marriage produced many further children for the Emperor. The marriage would not be particularly happy, but not particularly unhappy either. It seems he had decided to ally with the Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and had married his second wife for that reason. Of their children, all three of their sons would become priests, and Apollonia famously wished for their daughters to all join convents, only to find her wishes ignored.

In 1533, the Emperor collapsed.

Albert von Hapsburg, Holy Roman Emperor suffered a seizure on the 7th of May, 1533, which severely impacted his health. Aged 45, he struggled through the next 5 years to remain active within his Empire, forced to hand over the reins of power in the end to his son, Christoph. His death was a shock to Europe, and particularly to his family, who had watched him deteriorate in the last days of his life.

[3] Christoph was co-ruler of Empire during last years of his father's reign due to Albrecht's illness. Christoph had to deal with Ottoman expansion against Habsburg ally (gradually turning into Habsburg vassal)-Jagiellon Kingdom of Hungary and Bohemia, which lost its southern and eastern territories to Ottomans and was barely able to defend Buda. Ottoman threat forced Christoph to look for compromise with Protestant dukes of HRE, who, with French support, fought religious war against Catholic Emperor. Unlike his father, Christoph actively supported his Burgundian and Castilian cousins against France and brought Aragon into pro-Habsburg camp. To strenghten alliance with that Iberian Kingdom, Christoph married Maria of Aragon as his second wife after death of his first spouse, Hedwig of Poland, in 1551. After unexpected death of Maria's brothers, Johann, oldest son of Maria and Christoph, inherited Aragonese throne, starting another branch of Habsburg dynasty. Christoph II died as result of injury he suffered after falling from horse during deer hunting. His oldest son from first marriage Friedrich, King of the Romans at the time of father's death, took Imperial throne after him.

[4] Friedrich IV, Holy Roman Emperor rose to the throne at the age of 25. Born the third son of Christoph von Hapsburg and Hedwig Jaigellon, his eldest brother, Sigismund von Hapsburg, had died in 1560, at the age of 26, due to syphilis, a disease that later carried away his wife, who was also his aunt, Catherine von Hapsburg. The next eldest Hapsburg heir, Christoph von Hapsburg, had married in 1559, Maria II, Queen of Hungary. The marriage between the, at the time, 22 year old King of the Romans and the 35 year old, widowed, Queen of Hungary, who's previous marriage to the French Duke of Berry had ended in 1555, with no children, probably due to his rumoured homosexuality. They two, thus, produced a single daughter, later Queen Maria III of Hungary, before Christoph von Hapsburg's unfortunate 1563 death, in battle with the Ottomans. Thus, Friedrich von Hapsburg, at this time acting as Regent in Austria, rose to the position of King of the Romans, and for a time it seemed he'd be forced to marry the widowed Queen of Hungary, who at 39 was significantly older than him, strikingly unhealthy and, by her 40th birthday the following year, actually unable to walk unaided. Thus, Friedrich managed to convince his father that, instead, his son might marry the Princess Maria, and in 1564, he instead married Mary of Wales, Princess of England. The daughter of Edward of York, Prince of Wales, the deceased father of the reigning English King, George I of England, she was 22 years old to his 24 at the time of the marriage, a former betrothed of the now dead King James VI of Scotland, who had died at war with her brother. She was the last child between Edward of York and Eleanor of Burgundy, and had been floated around, since the successful invasion of Scotland, as either the wife of the Earl of Lennox, in order to make him a puppet King of Scots, or her cousin the Earl of Salisbury, who would have been made Regent to Scotland. Instead, she now became Queen of the Romans, and a year later, Holy Roman Empress.

Friedrich had not grown up, as his elder brothers had, in the Austrian Court, nor with his three younger siblings in Hungary, alongside the younger sisters of Maria II of Hungary, of which only the youngest, remained both alive and not in a convent as of 1565 (Margaret, the second eldest, had briefly married Ferdinand of Burgundy, younger brother to the King of Castile, before his death in 1556, and now remained in a convent and her twin sister Anna had entered a convent in 1552, age 17, in order to escape a marriage to Christoph II, Holy Roman Emperor following his first wife's death, where she had died in 1562 due to cancer). This youngest Hungarian princess, the Princess Sophia Jaigellon, was at this time 30 years old and unmarried. She would in 1567, by the Emperor's command, find herself the wife of the King of Poland, Sigismund II, who she provided a son to within a year of marriage and promptly died. No, but she was not the companion of Friedrich, for he had been a ward of the King of Naples.

The younger son of Ferdinand II of Aragon and Joanne von Hapsburg had been King of Naples at his father's will, inheriting the throne at 6 years of age. This King, Alfonso III of Napes was a highly effective King and commander, repelling the French back and, in 1543, taking and holding Milan against both the French and, surprisingly, his brother. Aragon and Naples had thus, remained fairly separate entities, with Alfonso choosing to ally himself with Castile and Burgundy, marrying Catherine of Burgundy in 1530, while his brother chose a counter alliance with France, only to ruin that alliance by claiming Milan against them. On the whole, a education under this man and his even more prodigal son, Ferdinand IV of Naples, who in 1558, began a war with Juan (Johann) III, King of Aragon, who at 4 years old was in Girona under his mother's care and Regency, attempting to hold the country against an experienced and ambitious commander in Alfonso III, and then, from 1560, with Alfonso's death, Ferdinand IV of Naples. It was with this handover of power, once it was clear that Friedrich von Hapsburg would hold no power over the Neapolitan King, that he was recalled to Austria, at 20 years old, travelling first through Rome, where his brother, the Cardinal Johann von Hapsburg, was visiting, and then through France, where his eldersister currently reigned as Queen, married to Francis III, King of France. Once at the Imperial Court, he began his training to be an asset to his family, having failed to become an influential presence in Naples and Italy.

He had not, however, learnt nothing, and thus his reign saw the end of Ottoman rule in Hungary, the capture and later execution of the Zápolya King, who at 14 had no wife, no children, and no family to continue his meddling. Indeed, upon the birth of his son and the infant marriage between him and the Princess Maria of Hungary, he was able to fully consolidate Hapsburg rule in the region. He then spent the rest of his reign attempting to peacefully bring the Aragonese/Neapolitan conflict to an end, which was were he died.

In 1575, at age 35, Friedrich von Hapsburg was in Girona, where his stepmother held a formal dinner to celebrate his arrival, where it was hoped that he would personally achieve peace between the two countries. However, it seems his peace would involve large amounts of Aragon being placed under Neapolitan rule, and thus he was poisoned by his stepmother. It wasn't, however, known at the time, and it was suggested that, perhaps, it was the King of Naples who had him murdered. This was not, however, the case, and Maria of Aragon would find that, with her stepson's death and the confusion of who would follow him as Holy Roman Emperor taking so much of the Hapsburg interest away from her own struggles, that Aragon was half held by Ferdinand IV of Naples before a year was out. It was in that time that Friedrich's brother Rudolf came to be Holy Roman Emperor.

[5]
Rudolf inherited title of Archduke of Tirol after death of his father. He was known as patron of arts and was himself skilled painter. Rudolf married Sophia of Saxony, who officially converted from Lutheranism to Catholicism upon marriage, but it was rumoured, that Sophia remained secret Protestant and heavy influenced her husband's religious views. As Emperor, Rudolf was known for religious tolerance and his court was full of Protestant advisors. Such fact caused unrest among Habsburg family, ultra-Catholic fraction under leadership of Maximilian von Hapsburg from Burgundian branch of Dynasty was the main opposition against his reign. If not the death of his charismatic Burgundian cousin, who left only underaged sons, Rudolf II would have serious problems in his attempt to secure election of his only son and successor Albrecht to the title of the King of the Romans.

[6] Albrecht IV, Holy Roman Emperor was 31 years old upon his accession, the result of his father's brief marriage to Eleanora d'Este. A simple man, his education had been thorough, but had not taken in the way it might have. Riddled with anxiety, he had quickly become prey to his older wife's forceful personality. That wife, Joan de Brittany, granddaughter of Friedrich von Hapsburg and Marie, Duchess of Brittany. A minor Breton Princess, she'd managed to marry the only child of the Emperor through sheer luck, and at 37, was now Empress herself, outranking her cousin, Francis IV, Duke of Brittany. She had, by 1597, ruled her husband for 11 years, and had given him 9 children. 3 more would follow during his reign.

Albrecht struggled in his role, preferring to play farmer or, in many cases, act as a caring father to his many children. He also acted as a confidant to his cousin, the King of Hungary, married to Maria III of Hungary. The son of Emperor Friedrich IV, he and Albrecht remained allies against an increasingly hostile Burgundy, an isolated England, a forever ambitious Naples and the religious hotbed that was France. However, when Johann, King (Consort) of Hungary died in 1601, the Hungarian alliance fell apart, with petty infighting between the Queen and her family, and by 1606, it all proved too much for the weakminded Emperor, who fell ill shortly after his friends death.

It's been suggested that the Empress kept the severity of his condition a secret for the years up to his death in 1609. Kept isolated and communicating mostly through letters, it seems likely that his condition might have been a stroke, or even a coma. What is certain is that, with his death at 43, he left an unclear path as to the heir of the Imperial title. Obviously, there was hope for his son, but there was also the Duke of Brittany, the Duke of Burgundy, the King of France, the King of Naples, the King of England, and even the King of Poland to consider. the Imperial throne was not secure for the Hapsburg-Tirol line. Anyone could take it.
 
Holy Roman Emperors

1493 - 1498: Christoph I (House of Habsburg) [1]
1498 - 1538: Albrecht III (House of Habsburg) [2]
1538 - 1565: Christoph II (House of Habsburg) [3]
1565 - 1575: Friedrich IV (House of Habsburg) [4]
1575 - 1597: Rudolf II (House of Habsburg-Tirol) [5]
1597 - 1611: Albrecht IV (House of Hapsburg-Tirol) [6]
1611 - 1639: Johann I (House of Habsburg-Burgundy) [7]


[1] Christoph was oldest of three surviving children of Emperor Friedrich III (other were his brother Maximilian and sister Kunigunde). In 1475 Christoph married Katharina of Thuringia, niece of Ladislaus the Posthumous, to strenghten Leopoldine Habsburg line's claim to the throne of Hungary. Christoph regretted this decision, because marriage to Katharina made him unable to marry Mary of Burgundy after death of Charles the Bold, thus Mary married his younger brother Maximilian, who became iure uxoris ruler of wealthly Netherlands, while Christoph never managed to take Hungarian throne-his attempt to get Crown of Saint Stephen ended with disaster. Austrian troops lead personally by Christoph, who was then already King of the Romans and co-ruler of HRE, were beaten by mercenaries of Vladislaus II near Székesfehérvár in 1490-Christoph regarded himself as equally skilled as Alexander the Great, but in fact he was terrible commander. After succeeding his father on Imperial throne, Christoph's health started to quickly deteriorate, thus he was unable to personally take command over Habsburg forces during Italian Wars (which vastly increased chances of League of Venice against France). Christoph, unable to talk and walk during last months of his life, died just one week after his rival, Charles VIII of France. Next Imperial election was won by Christoph's oldest son Albert.

[2] Albert von Hapsburg was born in 1478, the second son of Christoph, then King of the Romans, and Katharina of Thuringia. The favourite grandchild of Friedrich, Holy Roman Emperor, he was set from birth for great things, although not the Imperial Crown. In 1485, when his brother was betrothed to Elisabeth of Brandenburg, he was granted an even more bountiful betrothal, in the form of Anne of Brittany, heiress to the Duchy of Brittany. Obviously, this would fail to come to pass and the Duchess of Brittany later married the King of France, but from the start it was assured that the second son of Christoph would do great things.

Upon the death of his brother in 1594, shortly after the birth of a stillborn daughter, the Archduke Albert became King of the Romans, and in 1497, just 6 months prior to his father's death, he was married to the Princess Catherine of York, youngest unmarried sister of Edward V, King of England. This went against the young man's wishes, as he had fallen in love with his brother's widow's sister, Anastasia of Brandenburg, but the match was not allowed by his father, and Anastasia of Brandenburg was married to Albert's younger brother Maximilian, leaving them in a rivalry that lasted their lifetime.

In 1499, shortly after his accession, Albert I, Holy Roman Emperor treated with the new King of France, Charles IX if France (formerly the Count of Angouleme) for a match between his youngest brother, Friedrich von Hapsburg, Archduke of Austria, and Marie of France, the younger daughter of Charles VIII of France and Anne, Duchess of Brittany, currently languishing in a rich prison, waiting for freedom. This was allowed, due to the elder sister's betrothal to the Dauphin Francis, and Friedrich would travel to France in 1505, attending to his betrothed and, supposedly, flirting with the idea of seducing and marrying the widowed Duchess of Brittany instead, which fell through when she died mysteriously later that year.

With his influence in France assured, the Holy Roman Emperor negotiated a proper peace with Hungary. Tensions having remained high since his father's wars with Vladislaus II, he found in 1506 that he had a daughter aged 2, and his rival had a newborn son. Thus, they negotiated a betrothal between Louis, Prince of Hungary and the Archduchess Margarethe von Hapsburg. When, shortly after these negotiations closed, the Queen of Hungary died herself, Albert saw an opportunity to further create ties with Hungary, and in 1508, Vladislaus II of Hungary married the elder of his two sisters, Agnes von Hapsburg. Age 20 upon their marriage, she would remain childless for the 8 years they were married.

Albert famously did not attend much to his uncle or his ambitions. While his father had intersected himself into the Italian Wars and Burgundy's French conflicts, Albert refused to play into the cadet branch's ambitions to the Spanish throne, with his younger sister Joanne von Hapsburg marrying the King of Aragon in 1508, 6 months after her elder sister, and producing 2 sons, blocking Maximilian, Duke of Burgundy's grandson Charles from becoming King of Spain, and simply King of Castile. Furthermore, he refused to betrothed his daughter to that same young Charles, and out bid for the hand of Edward V of England's only daughter Elizabeth of York, for the wife of his eldest son, Friedrich.

When, in 1514, Albert lost both that son and his wife to smallpox, he was devastated, sending the unmarried, terrified, and scarred Elizabeth of York back to her father to be placed in a convent. With his eldest and favourite son gone, he focused his efforts on the younger of his sons, but furthermore, focused on an even stronger foreign policy. In 1516, his brother Friedrich became Duke of Brittany, after his wife of 3 years, Marie of France, outlived her sister and her sister's newborn daughter, Louise of France, after the two failed to stave off childbirth related illnesses. Thus, France had lost Brittany again, and with the Imperial might behind him, Friedrich managed to hold onto his new possessions.

With the deaths of Anne II, Duchess of Brittany and them 3 weeks later, Ferdinand II of Aragon so close to each other, it seemed obvious to most that the pretty Joanne von Hapsburg would be in the running for the position of Dauphine. At 26, she had a proven fertility, was famously beautiful and was devoted to her father. But, instead, it was Agnes von Hapsburg, Queen Dowager of Hungary, that was the second wife of the Dauphin Francis. 2 years Joanne's elder, she had no children or pregnancies of her own, and had expected to remain in Hungary to act as Regent for her stepson. But Albert had decided, in his wisdom, that the elder of his sisters was too weak a personality to hold out as Regent to Louis II of Hungary, and instead Maximilian von Hapsburg was to act as Regent for the Hungarian King, following a semi-truce between the Emperor and his brother. The two were not close, but Maximilian loved his nieces and nephews, and agreed to the position to prevent the Hungarian King from shifting Margarethe von Hapsburg for, say, Mary of Burgundy, who would in 1517 marry Maximilian's only child, the Archduke Henry.

In 1520, Albert von Hapsburg remarried, to Apollonia of Brunswick-Lüneburg. The marriage produced many further children for the Emperor. The marriage would not be particularly happy, but not particularly unhappy either. It seems he had decided to ally with the Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and had married his second wife for that reason. Of their children, all three of their sons would become priests, and Apollonia famously wished for their daughters to all join convents, only to find her wishes ignored.

In 1533, the Emperor collapsed.

Albert von Hapsburg, Holy Roman Emperor suffered a seizure on the 7th of May, 1533, which severely impacted his health. Aged 45, he struggled through the next 5 years to remain active within his Empire, forced to hand over the reins of power in the end to his son, Christoph. His death was a shock to Europe, and particularly to his family, who had watched him deteriorate in the last days of his life.

[3] Christoph was co-ruler of Empire during last years of his father's reign due to Albrecht's illness. Christoph had to deal with Ottoman expansion against Habsburg ally (gradually turning into Habsburg vassal)-Jagiellon Kingdom of Hungary and Bohemia, which lost its southern and eastern territories to Ottomans and was barely able to defend Buda. Ottoman threat forced Christoph to look for compromise with Protestant dukes of HRE, who, with French support, fought religious war against Catholic Emperor. Unlike his father, Christoph actively supported his Burgundian and Castilian cousins against France and brought Aragon into pro-Habsburg camp. To strenghten alliance with that Iberian Kingdom, Christoph married Maria of Aragon as his second wife after death of his first spouse, Hedwig of Poland, in 1551. After unexpected death of Maria's brothers, Johann, oldest son of Maria and Christoph, inherited Aragonese throne, starting another branch of Habsburg dynasty. Christoph II died as result of injury he suffered after falling from horse during deer hunting. His oldest son from first marriage Friedrich, King of the Romans at the time of father's death, took Imperial throne after him.

[4] Friedrich IV, Holy Roman Emperor rose to the throne at the age of 25. Born the third son of Christoph von Hapsburg and Hedwig Jaigellon, his eldest brother, Sigismund von Hapsburg, had died in 1560, at the age of 26, due to syphilis, a disease that later carried away his wife, who was also his aunt, Catherine von Hapsburg. The next eldest Hapsburg heir, Christoph von Hapsburg, had married in 1559, Maria II, Queen of Hungary. The marriage between the, at the time, 22 year old King of the Romans and the 35 year old, widowed, Queen of Hungary, who's previous marriage to the French Duke of Berry had ended in 1555, with no children, probably due to his rumoured homosexuality. They two, thus, produced a single daughter, later Queen Maria III of Hungary, before Christoph von Hapsburg's unfortunate 1563 death, in battle with the Ottomans. Thus, Friedrich von Hapsburg, at this time acting as Regent in Austria, rose to the position of King of the Romans, and for a time it seemed he'd be forced to marry the widowed Queen of Hungary, who at 39 was significantly older than him, strikingly unhealthy and, by her 40th birthday the following year, actually unable to walk unaided. Thus, Friedrich managed to convince his father that, instead, his son might marry the Princess Maria, and in 1564, he instead married Mary of Wales, Princess of England. The daughter of Edward of York, Prince of Wales, the deceased father of the reigning English King, George I of England, she was 22 years old to his 24 at the time of the marriage, a former betrothed of the now dead King James VI of Scotland, who had died at war with her brother. She was the last child between Edward of York and Eleanor of Burgundy, and had been floated around, since the successful invasion of Scotland, as either the wife of the Earl of Lennox, in order to make him a puppet King of Scots, or her cousin the Earl of Salisbury, who would have been made Regent to Scotland. Instead, she now became Queen of the Romans, and a year later, Holy Roman Empress.

Friedrich had not grown up, as his elder brothers had, in the Austrian Court, nor with his three younger siblings in Hungary, alongside the younger sisters of Maria II of Hungary, of which only the youngest, remained both alive and not in a convent as of 1565 (Margaret, the second eldest, had briefly married Ferdinand of Burgundy, younger brother to the King of Castile, before his death in 1556, and now remained in a convent and her twin sister Anna had entered a convent in 1552, age 17, in order to escape a marriage to Christoph II, Holy Roman Emperor following his first wife's death, where she had died in 1562 due to cancer). This youngest Hungarian princess, the Princess Sophia Jaigellon, was at this time 30 years old and unmarried. She would in 1567, by the Emperor's command, find herself the wife of the King of Poland, Sigismund II, who she provided a son to within a year of marriage and promptly died. No, but she was not the companion of Friedrich, for he had been a ward of the King of Naples.

The younger son of Ferdinand II of Aragon and Joanne von Hapsburg had been King of Naples at his father's will, inheriting the throne at 6 years of age. This King, Alfonso III of Napes was a highly effective King and commander, repelling the French back and, in 1543, taking and holding Milan against both the French and, surprisingly, his brother. Aragon and Naples had thus, remained fairly separate entities, with Alfonso choosing to ally himself with Castile and Burgundy, marrying Catherine of Burgundy in 1530, while his brother chose a counter alliance with France, only to ruin that alliance by claiming Milan against them. On the whole, a education under this man and his even more prodigal son, Ferdinand IV of Naples, who in 1558, began a war with Juan (Johann) III, King of Aragon, who at 4 years old was in Girona under his mother's care and Regency, attempting to hold the country against an experienced and ambitious commander in Alfonso III, and then, from 1560, with Alfonso's death, Ferdinand IV of Naples. It was with this handover of power, once it was clear that Friedrich von Hapsburg would hold no power over the Neapolitan King, that he was recalled to Austria, at 20 years old, travelling first through Rome, where his brother, the Cardinal Johann von Hapsburg, was visiting, and then through France, where his eldersister currently reigned as Queen, married to Francis III, King of France. Once at the Imperial Court, he began his training to be an asset to his family, having failed to become an influential presence in Naples and Italy.

He had not, however, learnt nothing, and thus his reign saw the end of Ottoman rule in Hungary, the capture and later execution of the Zápolya King, who at 14 had no wife, no children, and no family to continue his meddling. Indeed, upon the birth of his son and the infant marriage between him and the Princess Maria of Hungary, he was able to fully consolidate Hapsburg rule in the region. He then spent the rest of his reign attempting to peacefully bring the Aragonese/Neapolitan conflict to an end, which was were he died.

In 1575, at age 35, Friedrich von Hapsburg was in Girona, where his stepmother held a formal dinner to celebrate his arrival, where it was hoped that he would personally achieve peace between the two countries. However, it seems his peace would involve large amounts of Aragon being placed under Neapolitan rule, and thus he was poisoned by his stepmother. It wasn't, however, known at the time, and it was suggested that, perhaps, it was the King of Naples who had him murdered. This was not, however, the case, and Maria of Aragon would find that, with her stepson's death and the confusion of who would follow him as Holy Roman Emperor taking so much of the Hapsburg interest away from her own struggles, that Aragon was half held by Ferdinand IV of Naples before a year was out. It was in that time that Friedrich's brother Rudolf came to be Holy Roman Emperor.

[5]
Rudolf inherited title of Archduke of Tirol after death of his father. He was known as patron of arts and was himself skilled painter. Rudolf married Sophia of Saxony, who officially converted from Lutheranism to Catholicism upon marriage, but it was rumoured, that Sophia remained secret Protestant and heavy influenced her husband's religious views. As Emperor, Rudolf was known for religious tolerance and his court was full of Protestant advisors. Such fact caused unrest among Habsburg family, ultra-Catholic fraction under leadership of Maximilian von Hapsburg from Burgundian branch of Dynasty was the main opposition against his reign. If not the death of his charismatic Burgundian cousin, who left only underaged sons, Rudolf II would have serious problems in his attempt to secure election of his only son and successor Albrecht to the title of the King of the Romans.

[6] Albrecht IV, Holy Roman Emperor was 31 years old upon his accession, the result of his father's brief marriage to Eleanora d'Este. A simple man, his education had been thorough, but had not taken in the way it might have. Riddled with anxiety, he had quickly become prey to his older wife's forceful personality. That wife, Joan de Brittany, granddaughter of Friedrich von Hapsburg and Marie, Duchess of Brittany. A minor Breton Princess, she'd managed to marry the only child of the Emperor through sheer luck, and at 37, was now Empress herself, outranking her cousin, Francis IV, Duke of Brittany. She had, by 1597, ruled her husband for 11 years, and had given him 9 children. 3 more would follow during his reign.

Albrecht struggled in his role, preferring to play farmer or, in many cases, act as a caring father to his many children. He also acted as a confidant to his cousin, the King of Hungary, married to Maria III of Hungary. The son of Emperor Friedrich IV, he and Albrecht remained allies against an increasingly hostile Burgundy, an isolated England, a forever ambitious Naples and the religious hotbed that was France. However, when Johann, King (Consort) of Hungary died in 1601, the Hungarian alliance fell apart, with petty infighting between the Queen and her family, and by 1606, it all proved too much for the weakminded Emperor, who fell ill shortly after his friends death.

It's been suggested that the Empress kept the severity of his condition a secret for the years up to his death in 1609. Kept isolated and communicating mostly through letters, it seems likely that his condition might have been a stroke, or even a coma. What is certain is that, with his death at 43, he left an unclear path as to the heir of the Imperial title. Obviously, there was hope for his son, but there was also the Duke of Brittany, the Duke of Burgundy, the King of France, the King of Naples, the King of England, and even the King of Poland to consider. the Imperial throne was not secure for the Hapsburg-Tirol line. Anyone could take it.

[7] With son of Emperor Albrecht dying short after his father, rule of of Tirolean line of Habsburgs in HRE ended. Johann, head of Burgundian line, was elected to the Imperial throne. Under his reign Imperial court moved from Vienna to his native Brussels, town, which he wanted to see as capital of united Western Europe. But Johann's dreams about restoring Empire of Charlemagne have not survived confrontation with reality-not only HRE failed to expand, France was still expanding at cost of Empire, claiming Habsburg Franche-Comté and Artois.
 
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Holy Roman Emperors

1493 - 1498: Christoph I (House of Habsburg) [1]
1498 - 1538: Albrecht III (House of Habsburg) [2]
1538 - 1565: Christoph II (House of Habsburg) [3]
1565 - 1575: Friedrich IV (House of Habsburg) [4]
1575 - 1597: Rudolf II (House of Habsburg-Tirol) [5]
1597 - 1611: Albrecht IV (House of Hapsburg-Tirol) [6]
1611 - 1639: Johann I (House of Habsburg-Burgundy) [7]
1639 - 1687:
Rupert I (House of Palatinate-Simmern) [8]


[1] Christoph was oldest of three surviving children of Emperor Friedrich III (other were his brother Maximilian and sister Kunigunde). In 1475 Christoph married Katharina of Thuringia, niece of Ladislaus the Posthumous, to strenghten Leopoldine Habsburg line's claim to the throne of Hungary. Christoph regretted this decision, because marriage to Katharina made him unable to marry Mary of Burgundy after death of Charles the Bold, thus Mary married his younger brother Maximilian, who became iure uxoris ruler of wealthly Netherlands, while Christoph never managed to take Hungarian throne-his attempt to get Crown of Saint Stephen ended with disaster. Austrian troops lead personally by Christoph, who was then already King of the Romans and co-ruler of HRE, were beaten by mercenaries of Vladislaus II near Székesfehérvár in 1490-Christoph regarded himself as equally skilled as Alexander the Great, but in fact he was terrible commander. After succeeding his father on Imperial throne, Christoph's health started to quickly deteriorate, thus he was unable to personally take command over Habsburg forces during Italian Wars (which vastly increased chances of League of Venice against France). Christoph, unable to talk and walk during last months of his life, died just one week after his rival, Charles VIII of France. Next Imperial election was won by Christoph's oldest son Albert.

[2] Albert von Hapsburg was born in 1478, the second son of Christoph, then King of the Romans, and Katharina of Thuringia. The favourite grandchild of Friedrich, Holy Roman Emperor, he was set from birth for great things, although not the Imperial Crown. In 1485, when his brother was betrothed to Elisabeth of Brandenburg, he was granted an even more bountiful betrothal, in the form of Anne of Brittany, heiress to the Duchy of Brittany. Obviously, this would fail to come to pass and the Duchess of Brittany later married the King of France, but from the start it was assured that the second son of Christoph would do great things.

Upon the death of his brother in 1594, shortly after the birth of a stillborn daughter, the Archduke Albert became King of the Romans, and in 1497, just 6 months prior to his father's death, he was married to the Princess Catherine of York, youngest unmarried sister of Edward V, King of England. This went against the young man's wishes, as he had fallen in love with his brother's widow's sister, Anastasia of Brandenburg, but the match was not allowed by his father, and Anastasia of Brandenburg was married to Albert's younger brother Maximilian, leaving them in a rivalry that lasted their lifetime.

In 1499, shortly after his accession, Albert I, Holy Roman Emperor treated with the new King of France, Charles IX if France (formerly the Count of Angouleme) for a match between his youngest brother, Friedrich von Hapsburg, Archduke of Austria, and Marie of France, the younger daughter of Charles VIII of France and Anne, Duchess of Brittany, currently languishing in a rich prison, waiting for freedom. This was allowed, due to the elder sister's betrothal to the Dauphin Francis, and Friedrich would travel to France in 1505, attending to his betrothed and, supposedly, flirting with the idea of seducing and marrying the widowed Duchess of Brittany instead, which fell through when she died mysteriously later that year.

With his influence in France assured, the Holy Roman Emperor negotiated a proper peace with Hungary. Tensions having remained high since his father's wars with Vladislaus II, he found in 1506 that he had a daughter aged 2, and his rival had a newborn son. Thus, they negotiated a betrothal between Louis, Prince of Hungary and the Archduchess Margarethe von Hapsburg. When, shortly after these negotiations closed, the Queen of Hungary died herself, Albert saw an opportunity to further create ties with Hungary, and in 1508, Vladislaus II of Hungary married the elder of his two sisters, Agnes von Hapsburg. Age 20 upon their marriage, she would remain childless for the 8 years they were married.

Albert famously did not attend much to his uncle or his ambitions. While his father had intersected himself into the Italian Wars and Burgundy's French conflicts, Albert refused to play into the cadet branch's ambitions to the Spanish throne, with his younger sister Joanne von Hapsburg marrying the King of Aragon in 1508, 6 months after her elder sister, and producing 2 sons, blocking Maximilian, Duke of Burgundy's grandson Charles from becoming King of Spain, and simply King of Castile. Furthermore, he refused to betrothed his daughter to that same young Charles, and out bid for the hand of Edward V of England's only daughter Elizabeth of York, for the wife of his eldest son, Friedrich.

When, in 1514, Albert lost both that son and his wife to smallpox, he was devastated, sending the unmarried, terrified, and scarred Elizabeth of York back to her father to be placed in a convent. With his eldest and favourite son gone, he focused his efforts on the younger of his sons, but furthermore, focused on an even stronger foreign policy. In 1516, his brother Friedrich became Duke of Brittany, after his wife of 3 years, Marie of France, outlived her sister and her sister's newborn daughter, Louise of France, after the two failed to stave off childbirth related illnesses. Thus, France had lost Brittany again, and with the Imperial might behind him, Friedrich managed to hold onto his new possessions.

With the deaths of Anne II, Duchess of Brittany and them 3 weeks later, Ferdinand II of Aragon so close to each other, it seemed obvious to most that the pretty Joanne von Hapsburg would be in the running for the position of Dauphine. At 26, she had a proven fertility, was famously beautiful and was devoted to her father. But, instead, it was Agnes von Hapsburg, Queen Dowager of Hungary, that was the second wife of the Dauphin Francis. 2 years Joanne's elder, she had no children or pregnancies of her own, and had expected to remain in Hungary to act as Regent for her stepson. But Albert had decided, in his wisdom, that the elder of his sisters was too weak a personality to hold out as Regent to Louis II of Hungary, and instead Maximilian von Hapsburg was to act as Regent for the Hungarian King, following a semi-truce between the Emperor and his brother. The two were not close, but Maximilian loved his nieces and nephews, and agreed to the position to prevent the Hungarian King from shifting Margarethe von Hapsburg for, say, Mary of Burgundy, who would in 1517 marry Maximilian's only child, the Archduke Henry.

In 1520, Albert von Hapsburg remarried, to Apollonia of Brunswick-Lüneburg. The marriage produced many further children for the Emperor. The marriage would not be particularly happy, but not particularly unhappy either. It seems he had decided to ally with the Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and had married his second wife for that reason. Of their children, all three of their sons would become priests, and Apollonia famously wished for their daughters to all join convents, only to find her wishes ignored.

In 1533, the Emperor collapsed.

Albert von Hapsburg, Holy Roman Emperor suffered a seizure on the 7th of May, 1533, which severely impacted his health. Aged 45, he struggled through the next 5 years to remain active within his Empire, forced to hand over the reins of power in the end to his son, Christoph. His death was a shock to Europe, and particularly to his family, who had watched him deteriorate in the last days of his life.

[3] Christoph was co-ruler of Empire during last years of his father's reign due to Albrecht's illness. Christoph had to deal with Ottoman expansion against Habsburg ally (gradually turning into Habsburg vassal)-Jagiellon Kingdom of Hungary and Bohemia, which lost its southern and eastern territories to Ottomans and was barely able to defend Buda. Ottoman threat forced Christoph to look for compromise with Protestant dukes of HRE, who, with French support, fought religious war against Catholic Emperor. Unlike his father, Christoph actively supported his Burgundian and Castilian cousins against France and brought Aragon into pro-Habsburg camp. To strenghten alliance with that Iberian Kingdom, Christoph married Maria of Aragon as his second wife after death of his first spouse, Hedwig of Poland, in 1551. After unexpected death of Maria's brothers, Johann, oldest son of Maria and Christoph, inherited Aragonese throne, starting another branch of Habsburg dynasty. Christoph II died as result of injury he suffered after falling from horse during deer hunting. His oldest son from first marriage Friedrich, King of the Romans at the time of father's death, took Imperial throne after him.

[4] Friedrich IV, Holy Roman Emperor rose to the throne at the age of 25. Born the third son of Christoph von Hapsburg and Hedwig Jaigellon, his eldest brother, Sigismund von Hapsburg, had died in 1560, at the age of 26, due to syphilis, a disease that later carried away his wife, who was also his aunt, Catherine von Hapsburg. The next eldest Hapsburg heir, Christoph von Hapsburg, had married in 1559, Maria II, Queen of Hungary. The marriage between the, at the time, 22 year old King of the Romans and the 35 year old, widowed, Queen of Hungary, who's previous marriage to the French Duke of Berry had ended in 1555, with no children, probably due to his rumoured homosexuality. They two, thus, produced a single daughter, later Queen Maria III of Hungary, before Christoph von Hapsburg's unfortunate 1563 death, in battle with the Ottomans. Thus, Friedrich von Hapsburg, at this time acting as Regent in Austria, rose to the position of King of the Romans, and for a time it seemed he'd be forced to marry the widowed Queen of Hungary, who at 39 was significantly older than him, strikingly unhealthy and, by her 40th birthday the following year, actually unable to walk unaided. Thus, Friedrich managed to convince his father that, instead, his son might marry the Princess Maria, and in 1564, he instead married Mary of Wales, Princess of England. The daughter of Edward of York, Prince of Wales, the deceased father of the reigning English King, George I of England, she was 22 years old to his 24 at the time of the marriage, a former betrothed of the now dead King James VI of Scotland, who had died at war with her brother. She was the last child between Edward of York and Eleanor of Burgundy, and had been floated around, since the successful invasion of Scotland, as either the wife of the Earl of Lennox, in order to make him a puppet King of Scots, or her cousin the Earl of Salisbury, who would have been made Regent to Scotland. Instead, she now became Queen of the Romans, and a year later, Holy Roman Empress.

Friedrich had not grown up, as his elder brothers had, in the Austrian Court, nor with his three younger siblings in Hungary, alongside the younger sisters of Maria II of Hungary, of which only the youngest, remained both alive and not in a convent as of 1565 (Margaret, the second eldest, had briefly married Ferdinand of Burgundy, younger brother to the King of Castile, before his death in 1556, and now remained in a convent and her twin sister Anna had entered a convent in 1552, age 17, in order to escape a marriage to Christoph II, Holy Roman Emperor following his first wife's death, where she had died in 1562 due to cancer). This youngest Hungarian princess, the Princess Sophia Jaigellon, was at this time 30 years old and unmarried. She would in 1567, by the Emperor's command, find herself the wife of the King of Poland, Sigismund II, who she provided a son to within a year of marriage and promptly died. No, but she was not the companion of Friedrich, for he had been a ward of the King of Naples.

The younger son of Ferdinand II of Aragon and Joanne von Hapsburg had been King of Naples at his father's will, inheriting the throne at 6 years of age. This King, Alfonso III of Napes was a highly effective King and commander, repelling the French back and, in 1543, taking and holding Milan against both the French and, surprisingly, his brother. Aragon and Naples had thus, remained fairly separate entities, with Alfonso choosing to ally himself with Castile and Burgundy, marrying Catherine of Burgundy in 1530, while his brother chose a counter alliance with France, only to ruin that alliance by claiming Milan against them. On the whole, a education under this man and his even more prodigal son, Ferdinand IV of Naples, who in 1558, began a war with Juan (Johann) III, King of Aragon, who at 4 years old was in Girona under his mother's care and Regency, attempting to hold the country against an experienced and ambitious commander in Alfonso III, and then, from 1560, with Alfonso's death, Ferdinand IV of Naples. It was with this handover of power, once it was clear that Friedrich von Hapsburg would hold no power over the Neapolitan King, that he was recalled to Austria, at 20 years old, travelling first through Rome, where his brother, the Cardinal Johann von Hapsburg, was visiting, and then through France, where his eldersister currently reigned as Queen, married to Francis III, King of France. Once at the Imperial Court, he began his training to be an asset to his family, having failed to become an influential presence in Naples and Italy.

He had not, however, learnt nothing, and thus his reign saw the end of Ottoman rule in Hungary, the capture and later execution of the Zápolya King, who at 14 had no wife, no children, and no family to continue his meddling. Indeed, upon the birth of his son and the infant marriage between him and the Princess Maria of Hungary, he was able to fully consolidate Hapsburg rule in the region. He then spent the rest of his reign attempting to peacefully bring the Aragonese/Neapolitan conflict to an end, which was were he died.

In 1575, at age 35, Friedrich von Hapsburg was in Girona, where his stepmother held a formal dinner to celebrate his arrival, where it was hoped that he would personally achieve peace between the two countries. However, it seems his peace would involve large amounts of Aragon being placed under Neapolitan rule, and thus he was poisoned by his stepmother. It wasn't, however, known at the time, and it was suggested that, perhaps, it was the King of Naples who had him murdered. This was not, however, the case, and Maria of Aragon would find that, with her stepson's death and the confusion of who would follow him as Holy Roman Emperor taking so much of the Hapsburg interest away from her own struggles, that Aragon was half held by Ferdinand IV of Naples before a year was out. It was in that time that Friedrich's brother Rudolf came to be Holy Roman Emperor.

[5]
Rudolf inherited title of Archduke of Tirol after death of his father. He was known as patron of arts and was himself skilled painter. Rudolf married Sophia of Saxony, who officially converted from Lutheranism to Catholicism upon marriage, but it was rumoured, that Sophia remained secret Protestant and heavy influenced her husband's religious views. As Emperor, Rudolf was known for religious tolerance and his court was full of Protestant advisors. Such fact caused unrest among Habsburg family, ultra-Catholic fraction under leadership of Maximilian von Hapsburg from Burgundian branch of Dynasty was the main opposition against his reign. If not the death of his charismatic Burgundian cousin, who left only underaged sons, Rudolf II would have serious problems in his attempt to secure election of his only son and successor Albrecht to the title of the King of the Romans.

[6] Albrecht IV, Holy Roman Emperor was 31 years old upon his accession, the result of his father's brief marriage to Eleanora d'Este. A simple man, his education had been thorough, but had not taken in the way it might have. Riddled with anxiety, he had quickly become prey to his older wife's forceful personality. That wife, Joan de Brittany, granddaughter of Friedrich von Hapsburg and Marie, Duchess of Brittany. A minor Breton Princess, she'd managed to marry the only child of the Emperor through sheer luck, and at 37, was now Empress herself, outranking her cousin, Francis IV, Duke of Brittany. She had, by 1597, ruled her husband for 11 years, and had given him 9 children. 3 more would follow during his reign.

Albrecht struggled in his role, preferring to play farmer or, in many cases, act as a caring father to his many children. He also acted as a confidant to his cousin, the King of Hungary, married to Maria III of Hungary. The son of Emperor Friedrich IV, he and Albrecht remained allies against an increasingly hostile Burgundy, an isolated England, a forever ambitious Naples and the religious hotbed that was France. However, when Johann, King (Consort) of Hungary died in 1601, the Hungarian alliance fell apart, with petty infighting between the Queen and her family, and by 1606, it all proved too much for the weakminded Emperor, who fell ill shortly after his friends death.

It's been suggested that the Empress kept the severity of his condition a secret for the years up to his death in 1609. Kept isolated and communicating mostly through letters, it seems likely that his condition might have been a stroke, or even a coma. What is certain is that, with his death at 43, he left an unclear path as to the heir of the Imperial title. Obviously, there was hope for his son, but there was also the Duke of Brittany, the Duke of Burgundy, the King of France, the King of Naples, the King of England, and even the King of Poland to consider. the Imperial throne was not secure for the Hapsburg-Tirol line. Anyone could take it.

[7] With son of Emperor Albrecht dying short after his father, rule of of Tirolean line of Habsburgs in HRE ended. Johann, head of Burgundian line, was elected to the Imperial throne. Under his reign Imperial court moved from Vienna to his native Brussels, town, which he wanted to see as capital of united Western Europe. But Johann's dreams about restoring Empire of Charlemagne have not survived confrontation with reality-not only HRE failed to expand, France was still expanding at cost of Empire, claiming Habsburg Franche-Comté and Artois.

[8] With every males heir to the Hapsburg claim dead, the 1639 election was wide open, with all the electorates making deals and forming alliances, in the end the powerful block of England and France, chose to elect one of the sons of elector of the Electoral Palatinate, Prince Rupert of the Rhine, was a noted German soldier, admiral, scientist, sportsman, colonial governor and amateur artist, fighting from a young age, fighting against Spain in the Netherlands during the Eighty Years' War (1568–1648)
To secure his throne, he married a female member of a distant branch, known as the Hapsburg-Temeswar, Princess Maria Anna Josepha of Austria.
As Emperor, he was able to secure the Western front with France, creating a defined borders, while concentrating in attacking the Heretics to the South East and North East, the Ottoman Empire and Russian Empire, bring the Holy Roman Empire more territory.
 
Holy Roman Emperors

1493 - 1498: Christoph I (House of Habsburg) [1]
1498 - 1538: Albrecht III (House of Habsburg) [2]
1538 - 1565: Christoph II (House of Habsburg) [3]
1565 - 1575: Friedrich IV (House of Habsburg) [4]
1575 - 1597: Rudolf II (House of Habsburg-Tirol) [5]
1597 - 1611: Albrecht IV (House of Hapsburg-Tirol) [6]
1611 - 1639: Johann I (House of Habsburg-Burgundy) [7]
1639 - 1687:
Rupert I (House of Palatinate-Simmern) [8]
1687 - 1722:
Friedrich V (House of Habsburg-Burgau) [9]


[1] Christoph was oldest of three surviving children of Emperor Friedrich III (other were his brother Maximilian and sister Kunigunde). In 1475 Christoph married Katharina of Thuringia, niece of Ladislaus the Posthumous, to strenghten Leopoldine Habsburg line's claim to the throne of Hungary. Christoph regretted this decision, because marriage to Katharina made him unable to marry Mary of Burgundy after death of Charles the Bold, thus Mary married his younger brother Maximilian, who became iure uxoris ruler of wealthly Netherlands, while Christoph never managed to take Hungarian throne-his attempt to get Crown of Saint Stephen ended with disaster. Austrian troops lead personally by Christoph, who was then already King of the Romans and co-ruler of HRE, were beaten by mercenaries of Vladislaus II near Székesfehérvár in 1490-Christoph regarded himself as equally skilled as Alexander the Great, but in fact he was terrible commander. After succeeding his father on Imperial throne, Christoph's health started to quickly deteriorate, thus he was unable to personally take command over Habsburg forces during Italian Wars (which vastly increased chances of League of Venice against France). Christoph, unable to talk and walk during last months of his life, died just one week after his rival, Charles VIII of France. Next Imperial election was won by Christoph's oldest son Albert.

[2] Albert von Hapsburg was born in 1478, the second son of Christoph, then King of the Romans, and Katharina of Thuringia. The favourite grandchild of Friedrich, Holy Roman Emperor, he was set from birth for great things, although not the Imperial Crown. In 1485, when his brother was betrothed to Elisabeth of Brandenburg, he was granted an even more bountiful betrothal, in the form of Anne of Brittany, heiress to the Duchy of Brittany. Obviously, this would fail to come to pass and the Duchess of Brittany later married the King of France, but from the start it was assured that the second son of Christoph would do great things.

Upon the death of his brother in 1594, shortly after the birth of a stillborn daughter, the Archduke Albert became King of the Romans, and in 1497, just 6 months prior to his father's death, he was married to the Princess Catherine of York, youngest unmarried sister of Edward V, King of England. This went against the young man's wishes, as he had fallen in love with his brother's widow's sister, Anastasia of Brandenburg, but the match was not allowed by his father, and Anastasia of Brandenburg was married to Albert's younger brother Maximilian, leaving them in a rivalry that lasted their lifetime.

In 1499, shortly after his accession, Albert I, Holy Roman Emperor treated with the new King of France, Charles IX if France (formerly the Count of Angouleme) for a match between his youngest brother, Friedrich von Hapsburg, Archduke of Austria, and Marie of France, the younger daughter of Charles VIII of France and Anne, Duchess of Brittany, currently languishing in a rich prison, waiting for freedom. This was allowed, due to the elder sister's betrothal to the Dauphin Francis, and Friedrich would travel to France in 1505, attending to his betrothed and, supposedly, flirting with the idea of seducing and marrying the widowed Duchess of Brittany instead, which fell through when she died mysteriously later that year.

With his influence in France assured, the Holy Roman Emperor negotiated a proper peace with Hungary. Tensions having remained high since his father's wars with Vladislaus II, he found in 1506 that he had a daughter aged 2, and his rival had a newborn son. Thus, they negotiated a betrothal between Louis, Prince of Hungary and the Archduchess Margarethe von Hapsburg. When, shortly after these negotiations closed, the Queen of Hungary died herself, Albert saw an opportunity to further create ties with Hungary, and in 1508, Vladislaus II of Hungary married the elder of his two sisters, Agnes von Hapsburg. Age 20 upon their marriage, she would remain childless for the 8 years they were married.

Albert famously did not attend much to his uncle or his ambitions. While his father had intersected himself into the Italian Wars and Burgundy's French conflicts, Albert refused to play into the cadet branch's ambitions to the Spanish throne, with his younger sister Joanne von Hapsburg marrying the King of Aragon in 1508, 6 months after her elder sister, and producing 2 sons, blocking Maximilian, Duke of Burgundy's grandson Charles from becoming King of Spain, and simply King of Castile. Furthermore, he refused to betrothed his daughter to that same young Charles, and out bid for the hand of Edward V of England's only daughter Elizabeth of York, for the wife of his eldest son, Friedrich.

When, in 1514, Albert lost both that son and his wife to smallpox, he was devastated, sending the unmarried, terrified, and scarred Elizabeth of York back to her father to be placed in a convent. With his eldest and favourite son gone, he focused his efforts on the younger of his sons, but furthermore, focused on an even stronger foreign policy. In 1516, his brother Friedrich became Duke of Brittany, after his wife of 3 years, Marie of France, outlived her sister and her sister's newborn daughter, Louise of France, after the two failed to stave off childbirth related illnesses. Thus, France had lost Brittany again, and with the Imperial might behind him, Friedrich managed to hold onto his new possessions.

With the deaths of Anne II, Duchess of Brittany and them 3 weeks later, Ferdinand II of Aragon so close to each other, it seemed obvious to most that the pretty Joanne von Hapsburg would be in the running for the position of Dauphine. At 26, she had a proven fertility, was famously beautiful and was devoted to her father. But, instead, it was Agnes von Hapsburg, Queen Dowager of Hungary, that was the second wife of the Dauphin Francis. 2 years Joanne's elder, she had no children or pregnancies of her own, and had expected to remain in Hungary to act as Regent for her stepson. But Albert had decided, in his wisdom, that the elder of his sisters was too weak a personality to hold out as Regent to Louis II of Hungary, and instead Maximilian von Hapsburg was to act as Regent for the Hungarian King, following a semi-truce between the Emperor and his brother. The two were not close, but Maximilian loved his nieces and nephews, and agreed to the position to prevent the Hungarian King from shifting Margarethe von Hapsburg for, say, Mary of Burgundy, who would in 1517 marry Maximilian's only child, the Archduke Henry.

In 1520, Albert von Hapsburg remarried, to Apollonia of Brunswick-Lüneburg. The marriage produced many further children for the Emperor. The marriage would not be particularly happy, but not particularly unhappy either. It seems he had decided to ally with the Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and had married his second wife for that reason. Of their children, all three of their sons would become priests, and Apollonia famously wished for their daughters to all join convents, only to find her wishes ignored.

In 1533, the Emperor collapsed.

Albert von Hapsburg, Holy Roman Emperor suffered a seizure on the 7th of May, 1533, which severely impacted his health. Aged 45, he struggled through the next 5 years to remain active within his Empire, forced to hand over the reins of power in the end to his son, Christoph. His death was a shock to Europe, and particularly to his family, who had watched him deteriorate in the last days of his life.

[3] Christoph was co-ruler of Empire during last years of his father's reign due to Albrecht's illness. Christoph had to deal with Ottoman expansion against Habsburg ally (gradually turning into Habsburg vassal)-Jagiellon Kingdom of Hungary and Bohemia, which lost its southern and eastern territories to Ottomans and was barely able to defend Buda. Ottoman threat forced Christoph to look for compromise with Protestant dukes of HRE, who, with French support, fought religious war against Catholic Emperor. Unlike his father, Christoph actively supported his Burgundian and Castilian cousins against France and brought Aragon into pro-Habsburg camp. To strenghten alliance with that Iberian Kingdom, Christoph married Maria of Aragon as his second wife after death of his first spouse, Hedwig of Poland, in 1551. After unexpected death of Maria's brothers, Johann, oldest son of Maria and Christoph, inherited Aragonese throne, starting another branch of Habsburg dynasty. Christoph II died as result of injury he suffered after falling from horse during deer hunting. His oldest son from first marriage Friedrich, King of the Romans at the time of father's death, took Imperial throne after him.

[4] Friedrich IV, Holy Roman Emperor rose to the throne at the age of 25. Born the third son of Christoph von Hapsburg and Hedwig Jaigellon, his eldest brother, Sigismund von Hapsburg, had died in 1560, at the age of 26, due to syphilis, a disease that later carried away his wife, who was also his aunt, Catherine von Hapsburg. The next eldest Hapsburg heir, Christoph von Hapsburg, had married in 1559, Maria II, Queen of Hungary. The marriage between the, at the time, 22 year old King of the Romans and the 35 year old, widowed, Queen of Hungary, who's previous marriage to the French Duke of Berry had ended in 1555, with no children, probably due to his rumoured homosexuality. They two, thus, produced a single daughter, later Queen Maria III of Hungary, before Christoph von Hapsburg's unfortunate 1563 death, in battle with the Ottomans. Thus, Friedrich von Hapsburg, at this time acting as Regent in Austria, rose to the position of King of the Romans, and for a time it seemed he'd be forced to marry the widowed Queen of Hungary, who at 39 was significantly older than him, strikingly unhealthy and, by her 40th birthday the following year, actually unable to walk unaided. Thus, Friedrich managed to convince his father that, instead, his son might marry the Princess Maria, and in 1564, he instead married Mary of Wales, Princess of England. The daughter of Edward of York, Prince of Wales, the deceased father of the reigning English King, George I of England, she was 22 years old to his 24 at the time of the marriage, a former betrothed of the now dead King James VI of Scotland, who had died at war with her brother. She was the last child between Edward of York and Eleanor of Burgundy, and had been floated around, since the successful invasion of Scotland, as either the wife of the Earl of Lennox, in order to make him a puppet King of Scots, or her cousin the Earl of Salisbury, who would have been made Regent to Scotland. Instead, she now became Queen of the Romans, and a year later, Holy Roman Empress.

Friedrich had not grown up, as his elder brothers had, in the Austrian Court, nor with his three younger siblings in Hungary, alongside the younger sisters of Maria II of Hungary, of which only the youngest, remained both alive and not in a convent as of 1565 (Margaret, the second eldest, had briefly married Ferdinand of Burgundy, younger brother to the King of Castile, before his death in 1556, and now remained in a convent and her twin sister Anna had entered a convent in 1552, age 17, in order to escape a marriage to Christoph II, Holy Roman Emperor following his first wife's death, where she had died in 1562 due to cancer). This youngest Hungarian princess, the Princess Sophia Jaigellon, was at this time 30 years old and unmarried. She would in 1567, by the Emperor's command, find herself the wife of the King of Poland, Sigismund II, who she provided a son to within a year of marriage and promptly died. No, but she was not the companion of Friedrich, for he had been a ward of the King of Naples.

The younger son of Ferdinand II of Aragon and Joanne von Hapsburg had been King of Naples at his father's will, inheriting the throne at 6 years of age. This King, Alfonso III of Napes was a highly effective King and commander, repelling the French back and, in 1543, taking and holding Milan against both the French and, surprisingly, his brother. Aragon and Naples had thus, remained fairly separate entities, with Alfonso choosing to ally himself with Castile and Burgundy, marrying Catherine of Burgundy in 1530, while his brother chose a counter alliance with France, only to ruin that alliance by claiming Milan against them. On the whole, a education under this man and his even more prodigal son, Ferdinand IV of Naples, who in 1558, began a war with Juan (Johann) III, King of Aragon, who at 4 years old was in Girona under his mother's care and Regency, attempting to hold the country against an experienced and ambitious commander in Alfonso III, and then, from 1560, with Alfonso's death, Ferdinand IV of Naples. It was with this handover of power, once it was clear that Friedrich von Hapsburg would hold no power over the Neapolitan King, that he was recalled to Austria, at 20 years old, travelling first through Rome, where his brother, the Cardinal Johann von Hapsburg, was visiting, and then through France, where his eldersister currently reigned as Queen, married to Francis III, King of France. Once at the Imperial Court, he began his training to be an asset to his family, having failed to become an influential presence in Naples and Italy.

He had not, however, learnt nothing, and thus his reign saw the end of Ottoman rule in Hungary, the capture and later execution of the Zápolya King, who at 14 had no wife, no children, and no family to continue his meddling. Indeed, upon the birth of his son and the infant marriage between him and the Princess Maria of Hungary, he was able to fully consolidate Hapsburg rule in the region. He then spent the rest of his reign attempting to peacefully bring the Aragonese/Neapolitan conflict to an end, which was were he died.

In 1575, at age 35, Friedrich von Hapsburg was in Girona, where his stepmother held a formal dinner to celebrate his arrival, where it was hoped that he would personally achieve peace between the two countries. However, it seems his peace would involve large amounts of Aragon being placed under Neapolitan rule, and thus he was poisoned by his stepmother. It wasn't, however, known at the time, and it was suggested that, perhaps, it was the King of Naples who had him murdered. This was not, however, the case, and Maria of Aragon would find that, with her stepson's death and the confusion of who would follow him as Holy Roman Emperor taking so much of the Hapsburg interest away from her own struggles, that Aragon was half held by Ferdinand IV of Naples before a year was out. It was in that time that Friedrich's brother Rudolf came to be Holy Roman Emperor.

[5]
Rudolf inherited title of Archduke of Tirol after death of his father. He was known as patron of arts and was himself skilled painter. Rudolf married Sophia of Saxony, who officially converted from Lutheranism to Catholicism upon marriage, but it was rumoured, that Sophia remained secret Protestant and heavy influenced her husband's religious views. As Emperor, Rudolf was known for religious tolerance and his court was full of Protestant advisors. Such fact caused unrest among Habsburg family, ultra-Catholic fraction under leadership of Maximilian von Hapsburg from Burgundian branch of Dynasty was the main opposition against his reign. If not the death of his charismatic Burgundian cousin, who left only underaged sons, Rudolf II would have serious problems in his attempt to secure election of his only son and successor Albrecht to the title of the King of the Romans.

[6] Albrecht IV, Holy Roman Emperor was 31 years old upon his accession, the result of his father's brief marriage to Eleanora d'Este. A simple man, his education had been thorough, but had not taken in the way it might have. Riddled with anxiety, he had quickly become prey to his older wife's forceful personality. That wife, Joan de Brittany, granddaughter of Friedrich von Hapsburg and Marie, Duchess of Brittany. A minor Breton Princess, she'd managed to marry the only child of the Emperor through sheer luck, and at 37, was now Empress herself, outranking her cousin, Francis IV, Duke of Brittany. She had, by 1597, ruled her husband for 11 years, and had given him 9 children. 3 more would follow during his reign.

Albrecht struggled in his role, preferring to play farmer or, in many cases, act as a caring father to his many children. He also acted as a confidant to his cousin, the King of Hungary, married to Maria III of Hungary. The son of Emperor Friedrich IV, he and Albrecht remained allies against an increasingly hostile Burgundy, an isolated England, a forever ambitious Naples and the religious hotbed that was France. However, when Johann, King (Consort) of Hungary died in 1601, the Hungarian alliance fell apart, with petty infighting between the Queen and her family, and by 1606, it all proved too much for the weakminded Emperor, who fell ill shortly after his friends death.

It's been suggested that the Empress kept the severity of his condition a secret for the years up to his death in 1609. Kept isolated and communicating mostly through letters, it seems likely that his condition might have been a stroke, or even a coma. What is certain is that, with his death at 43, he left an unclear path as to the heir of the Imperial title. Obviously, there was hope for his son, but there was also the Duke of Brittany, the Duke of Burgundy, the King of France, the King of Naples, the King of England, and even the King of Poland to consider. the Imperial throne was not secure for the Hapsburg-Tirol line. Anyone could take it.

[7] With son of Emperor Albrecht dying short after his father, rule of of Tirolean line of Habsburgs in HRE ended. Johann, head of Burgundian line, was elected to the Imperial throne. Under his reign Imperial court moved from Vienna to his native Brussels, town, which he wanted to see as capital of united Western Europe. But Johann's dreams about restoring Empire of Charlemagne have not survived confrontation with reality-not only HRE failed to expand, France was still expanding at cost of Empire, claiming Habsburg Franche-Comté and Artois.

[8] With every males heir to the Hapsburg claim dead, the 1639 election was wide open, with all the electorates making deals and forming alliances, in the end the powerful block of England and France, chose to elect one of the sons of elector of the Electoral Palatinate, Prince Rupert of the Rhine, was a noted German soldier, admiral, scientist, sportsman, colonial governor and amateur artist, fighting from a young age, fighting against Spain in the Netherlands during the Eighty Years' War (1568–1648)
To secure his throne, he married a female member of a distant branch, known as the Hapsburg-Temeswar, Princess Maria Anna Josepha of Austria.
As Emperor, he was able to secure the Western front with France, creating a defined borders, while concentrating in attacking the Heretics to the South East and North East, the Ottoman Empire and Russian Empire, bring the Holy Roman Empire more territory.
[9] Being descendants of Archduke Leopold of Styria from his first morganatic mariage, House of Burgau was obscure cadet branch of Habsburg dynasty, not even titled archdukes but mere margraves. After extinction of main line of dynasty, Duke of Bavaria claimed Austrian lands, but was opposed by other monarchs of HRE, fearing that enlarged Bavaria would dominate Empire. So margrave Ernst, head of the House of Burgau, was given land of his distant ancestors. Ernst managed to elevate his obscure line to position of one of the most important dynasties of HRE, so after childless death of Emperor Rupert, Ernst's oldest son, Friedrich, was able to gather enough support to win Imperial election.
 
Holy Roman Emperors

1493 - 1498: Christoph I (House of Habsburg) [1]
1498 - 1538: Albrecht III (House of Habsburg) [2]
1538 - 1565: Christoph II (House of Habsburg) [3]
1565 - 1575: Friedrich IV (House of Habsburg) [4]
1575 - 1597: Rudolf II (House of Habsburg-Tirol) [5]
1597 - 1611: Albrecht IV (House of Hapsburg-Tirol) [6]
1611 - 1639: Johann I (House of Habsburg-Burgundy) [7]
1639 - 1687: Rupert I (House of Palatinate-Simmern) [8]
1687 - 1722: Friedrich V (House of Habsburg-Burgau) [9]
1722 - 1754: Sigismund II (House of Jaigellon) [10]


[1] Christoph was oldest of three surviving children of Emperor Friedrich III (other were his brother Maximilian and sister Kunigunde). In 1475 Christoph married Katharina of Thuringia, niece of Ladislaus the Posthumous, to strenghten Leopoldine Habsburg line's claim to the throne of Hungary. Christoph regretted this decision, because marriage to Katharina made him unable to marry Mary of Burgundy after death of Charles the Bold, thus Mary married his younger brother Maximilian, who became iure uxoris ruler of wealthly Netherlands, while Christoph never managed to take Hungarian throne-his attempt to get Crown of Saint Stephen ended with disaster. Austrian troops lead personally by Christoph, who was then already King of the Romans and co-ruler of HRE, were beaten by mercenaries of Vladislaus II near Székesfehérvár in 1490-Christoph regarded himself as equally skilled as Alexander the Great, but in fact he was terrible commander. After succeeding his father on Imperial throne, Christoph's health started to quickly deteriorate, thus he was unable to personally take command over Habsburg forces during Italian Wars (which vastly increased chances of League of Venice against France). Christoph, unable to talk and walk during last months of his life, died just one week after his rival, Charles VIII of France. Next Imperial election was won by Christoph's oldest son Albert.

[2] Albert von Hapsburg was born in 1478, the second son of Christoph, then King of the Romans, and Katharina of Thuringia. The favourite grandchild of Friedrich, Holy Roman Emperor, he was set from birth for great things, although not the Imperial Crown. In 1485, when his brother was betrothed to Elisabeth of Brandenburg, he was granted an even more bountiful betrothal, in the form of Anne of Brittany, heiress to the Duchy of Brittany. Obviously, this would fail to come to pass and the Duchess of Brittany later married the King of France, but from the start it was assured that the second son of Christoph would do great things.

Upon the death of his brother in 1594, shortly after the birth of a stillborn daughter, the Archduke Albert became King of the Romans, and in 1497, just 6 months prior to his father's death, he was married to the Princess Catherine of York, youngest unmarried sister of Edward V, King of England. This went against the young man's wishes, as he had fallen in love with his brother's widow's sister, Anastasia of Brandenburg, but the match was not allowed by his father, and Anastasia of Brandenburg was married to Albert's younger brother Maximilian, leaving them in a rivalry that lasted their lifetime.

In 1499, shortly after his accession, Albert I, Holy Roman Emperor treated with the new King of France, Charles IX if France (formerly the Count of Angouleme) for a match between his youngest brother, Friedrich von Hapsburg, Archduke of Austria, and Marie of France, the younger daughter of Charles VIII of France and Anne, Duchess of Brittany, currently languishing in a rich prison, waiting for freedom. This was allowed, due to the elder sister's betrothal to the Dauphin Francis, and Friedrich would travel to France in 1505, attending to his betrothed and, supposedly, flirting with the idea of seducing and marrying the widowed Duchess of Brittany instead, which fell through when she died mysteriously later that year.

With his influence in France assured, the Holy Roman Emperor negotiated a proper peace with Hungary. Tensions having remained high since his father's wars with Vladislaus II, he found in 1506 that he had a daughter aged 2, and his rival had a newborn son. Thus, they negotiated a betrothal between Louis, Prince of Hungary and the Archduchess Margarethe von Hapsburg. When, shortly after these negotiations closed, the Queen of Hungary died herself, Albert saw an opportunity to further create ties with Hungary, and in 1508, Vladislaus II of Hungary married the elder of his two sisters, Agnes von Hapsburg. Age 20 upon their marriage, she would remain childless for the 8 years they were married.

Albert famously did not attend much to his uncle or his ambitions. While his father had intersected himself into the Italian Wars and Burgundy's French conflicts, Albert refused to play into the cadet branch's ambitions to the Spanish throne, with his younger sister Joanne von Hapsburg marrying the King of Aragon in 1508, 6 months after her elder sister, and producing 2 sons, blocking Maximilian, Duke of Burgundy's grandson Charles from becoming King of Spain, and simply King of Castile. Furthermore, he refused to betrothed his daughter to that same young Charles, and out bid for the hand of Edward V of England's only daughter Elizabeth of York, for the wife of his eldest son, Friedrich.

When, in 1514, Albert lost both that son and his wife to smallpox, he was devastated, sending the unmarried, terrified, and scarred Elizabeth of York back to her father to be placed in a convent. With his eldest and favourite son gone, he focused his efforts on the younger of his sons, but furthermore, focused on an even stronger foreign policy. In 1516, his brother Friedrich became Duke of Brittany, after his wife of 3 years, Marie of France, outlived her sister and her sister's newborn daughter, Louise of France, after the two failed to stave off childbirth related illnesses. Thus, France had lost Brittany again, and with the Imperial might behind him, Friedrich managed to hold onto his new possessions.

With the deaths of Anne II, Duchess of Brittany and them 3 weeks later, Ferdinand II of Aragon so close to each other, it seemed obvious to most that the pretty Joanne von Hapsburg would be in the running for the position of Dauphine. At 26, she had a proven fertility, was famously beautiful and was devoted to her father. But, instead, it was Agnes von Hapsburg, Queen Dowager of Hungary, that was the second wife of the Dauphin Francis. 2 years Joanne's elder, she had no children or pregnancies of her own, and had expected to remain in Hungary to act as Regent for her stepson. But Albert had decided, in his wisdom, that the elder of his sisters was too weak a personality to hold out as Regent to Louis II of Hungary, and instead Maximilian von Hapsburg was to act as Regent for the Hungarian King, following a semi-truce between the Emperor and his brother. The two were not close, but Maximilian loved his nieces and nephews, and agreed to the position to prevent the Hungarian King from shifting Margarethe von Hapsburg for, say, Mary of Burgundy, who would in 1517 marry Maximilian's only child, the Archduke Henry.

In 1520, Albert von Hapsburg remarried, to Apollonia of Brunswick-Lüneburg. The marriage produced many further children for the Emperor. The marriage would not be particularly happy, but not particularly unhappy either. It seems he had decided to ally with the Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and had married his second wife for that reason. Of their children, all three of their sons would become priests, and Apollonia famously wished for their daughters to all join convents, only to find her wishes ignored.

In 1533, the Emperor collapsed.

Albert von Hapsburg, Holy Roman Emperor suffered a seizure on the 7th of May, 1533, which severely impacted his health. Aged 45, he struggled through the next 5 years to remain active within his Empire, forced to hand over the reins of power in the end to his son, Christoph. His death was a shock to Europe, and particularly to his family, who had watched him deteriorate in the last days of his life.

[3] Christoph was co-ruler of Empire during last years of his father's reign due to Albrecht's illness. Christoph had to deal with Ottoman expansion against Habsburg ally (gradually turning into Habsburg vassal)-Jagiellon Kingdom of Hungary and Bohemia, which lost its southern and eastern territories to Ottomans and was barely able to defend Buda. Ottoman threat forced Christoph to look for compromise with Protestant dukes of HRE, who, with French support, fought religious war against Catholic Emperor. Unlike his father, Christoph actively supported his Burgundian and Castilian cousins against France and brought Aragon into pro-Habsburg camp. To strenghten alliance with that Iberian Kingdom, Christoph married Maria of Aragon as his second wife after death of his first spouse, Hedwig of Poland, in 1551. After unexpected death of Maria's brothers, Johann, oldest son of Maria and Christoph, inherited Aragonese throne, starting another branch of Habsburg dynasty. Christoph II died as result of injury he suffered after falling from horse during deer hunting. His oldest son from first marriage Friedrich, King of the Romans at the time of father's death, took Imperial throne after him.

[4] Friedrich IV, Holy Roman Emperor rose to the throne at the age of 25. Born the third son of Christoph von Hapsburg and Hedwig Jaigellon, his eldest brother, Sigismund von Hapsburg, had died in 1560, at the age of 26, due to syphilis, a disease that later carried away his wife, who was also his aunt, Catherine von Hapsburg. The next eldest Hapsburg heir, Christoph von Hapsburg, had married in 1559, Maria II, Queen of Hungary. The marriage between the, at the time, 22 year old King of the Romans and the 35 year old, widowed, Queen of Hungary, who's previous marriage to the French Duke of Berry had ended in 1555, with no children, probably due to his rumoured homosexuality. They two, thus, produced a single daughter, later Queen Maria III of Hungary, before Christoph von Hapsburg's unfortunate 1563 death, in battle with the Ottomans. Thus, Friedrich von Hapsburg, at this time acting as Regent in Austria, rose to the position of King of the Romans, and for a time it seemed he'd be forced to marry the widowed Queen of Hungary, who at 39 was significantly older than him, strikingly unhealthy and, by her 40th birthday the following year, actually unable to walk unaided. Thus, Friedrich managed to convince his father that, instead, his son might marry the Princess Maria, and in 1564, he instead married Mary of Wales, Princess of England. The daughter of Edward of York, Prince of Wales, the deceased father of the reigning English King, George I of England, she was 22 years old to his 24 at the time of the marriage, a former betrothed of the now dead King James VI of Scotland, who had died at war with her brother. She was the last child between Edward of York and Eleanor of Burgundy, and had been floated around, since the successful invasion of Scotland, as either the wife of the Earl of Lennox, in order to make him a puppet King of Scots, or her cousin the Earl of Salisbury, who would have been made Regent to Scotland. Instead, she now became Queen of the Romans, and a year later, Holy Roman Empress.

Friedrich had not grown up, as his elder brothers had, in the Austrian Court, nor with his three younger siblings in Hungary, alongside the younger sisters of Maria II of Hungary, of which only the youngest, remained both alive and not in a convent as of 1565 (Margaret, the second eldest, had briefly married Ferdinand of Burgundy, younger brother to the King of Castile, before his death in 1556, and now remained in a convent and her twin sister Anna had entered a convent in 1552, age 17, in order to escape a marriage to Christoph II, Holy Roman Emperor following his first wife's death, where she had died in 1562 due to cancer). This youngest Hungarian princess, the Princess Sophia Jaigellon, was at this time 30 years old and unmarried. She would in 1567, by the Emperor's command, find herself the wife of the King of Poland, Sigismund II, who she provided a son to within a year of marriage and promptly died. No, but she was not the companion of Friedrich, for he had been a ward of the King of Naples.

The younger son of Ferdinand II of Aragon and Joanne von Hapsburg had been King of Naples at his father's will, inheriting the throne at 6 years of age. This King, Alfonso III of Napes was a highly effective King and commander, repelling the French back and, in 1543, taking and holding Milan against both the French and, surprisingly, his brother. Aragon and Naples had thus, remained fairly separate entities, with Alfonso choosing to ally himself with Castile and Burgundy, marrying Catherine of Burgundy in 1530, while his brother chose a counter alliance with France, only to ruin that alliance by claiming Milan against them. On the whole, a education under this man and his even more prodigal son, Ferdinand IV of Naples, who in 1558, began a war with Juan (Johann) III, King of Aragon, who at 4 years old was in Girona under his mother's care and Regency, attempting to hold the country against an experienced and ambitious commander in Alfonso III, and then, from 1560, with Alfonso's death, Ferdinand IV of Naples. It was with this handover of power, once it was clear that Friedrich von Hapsburg would hold no power over the Neapolitan King, that he was recalled to Austria, at 20 years old, travelling first through Rome, where his brother, the Cardinal Johann von Hapsburg, was visiting, and then through France, where his eldersister currently reigned as Queen, married to Francis III, King of France. Once at the Imperial Court, he began his training to be an asset to his family, having failed to become an influential presence in Naples and Italy.

He had not, however, learnt nothing, and thus his reign saw the end of Ottoman rule in Hungary, the capture and later execution of the Zápolya King, who at 14 had no wife, no children, and no family to continue his meddling. Indeed, upon the birth of his son and the infant marriage between him and the Princess Maria of Hungary, he was able to fully consolidate Hapsburg rule in the region. He then spent the rest of his reign attempting to peacefully bring the Aragonese/Neapolitan conflict to an end, which was were he died.

In 1575, at age 35, Friedrich von Hapsburg was in Girona, where his stepmother held a formal dinner to celebrate his arrival, where it was hoped that he would personally achieve peace between the two countries. However, it seems his peace would involve large amounts of Aragon being placed under Neapolitan rule, and thus he was poisoned by his stepmother. It wasn't, however, known at the time, and it was suggested that, perhaps, it was the King of Naples who had him murdered. This was not, however, the case, and Maria of Aragon would find that, with her stepson's death and the confusion of who would follow him as Holy Roman Emperor taking so much of the Hapsburg interest away from her own struggles, that Aragon was half held by Ferdinand IV of Naples before a year was out. It was in that time that Friedrich's brother Rudolf came to be Holy Roman Emperor.

[5]
Rudolf inherited title of Archduke of Tirol after death of his father. He was known as patron of arts and was himself skilled painter. Rudolf married Sophia of Saxony, who officially converted from Lutheranism to Catholicism upon marriage, but it was rumoured, that Sophia remained secret Protestant and heavy influenced her husband's religious views. As Emperor, Rudolf was known for religious tolerance and his court was full of Protestant advisors. Such fact caused unrest among Habsburg family, ultra-Catholic fraction under leadership of Maximilian von Hapsburg from Burgundian branch of Dynasty was the main opposition against his reign. If not the death of his charismatic Burgundian cousin, who left only underaged sons, Rudolf II would have serious problems in his attempt to secure election of his only son and successor Albrecht to the title of the King of the Romans.

[6] Albrecht IV, Holy Roman Emperor was 31 years old upon his accession, the result of his father's brief marriage to Eleanora d'Este. A simple man, his education had been thorough, but had not taken in the way it might have. Riddled with anxiety, he had quickly become prey to his older wife's forceful personality. That wife, Joan de Brittany, granddaughter of Friedrich von Hapsburg and Marie, Duchess of Brittany. A minor Breton Princess, she'd managed to marry the only child of the Emperor through sheer luck, and at 37, was now Empress herself, outranking her cousin, Francis IV, Duke of Brittany. She had, by 1597, ruled her husband for 11 years, and had given him 9 children. 3 more would follow during his reign.

Albrecht struggled in his role, preferring to play farmer or, in many cases, act as a caring father to his many children. He also acted as a confidant to his cousin, the King of Hungary, married to Maria III of Hungary. The son of Emperor Friedrich IV, he and Albrecht remained allies against an increasingly hostile Burgundy, an isolated England, a forever ambitious Naples and the religious hotbed that was France. However, when Johann, King (Consort) of Hungary died in 1601, the Hungarian alliance fell apart, with petty infighting between the Queen and her family, and by 1606, it all proved too much for the weakminded Emperor, who fell ill shortly after his friends death.

It's been suggested that the Empress kept the severity of his condition a secret for the years up to his death in 1609. Kept isolated and communicating mostly through letters, it seems likely that his condition might have been a stroke, or even a coma. What is certain is that, with his death at 43, he left an unclear path as to the heir of the Imperial title. Obviously, there was hope for his son, but there was also the Duke of Brittany, the Duke of Burgundy, the King of France, the King of Naples, the King of England, and even the King of Poland to consider. the Imperial throne was not secure for the Hapsburg-Tirol line. Anyone could take it.

[7] With son of Emperor Albrecht dying short after his father, rule of of Tirolean line of Habsburgs in HRE ended. Johann, head of Burgundian line, was elected to the Imperial throne. Under his reign Imperial court moved from Vienna to his native Brussels, town, which he wanted to see as capital of united Western Europe. But Johann's dreams about restoring Empire of Charlemagne have not survived confrontation with reality-not only HRE failed to expand, France was still expanding at cost of Empire, claiming Habsburg Franche-Comté and Artois.

[8] With every males heir to the Hapsburg claim dead, the 1639 election was wide open, with all the electorates making deals and forming alliances, in the end the powerful block of England and France, chose to elect one of the sons of elector of the Electoral Palatinate, Prince Rupert of the Rhine, was a noted German soldier, admiral, scientist, sportsman, colonial governor and amateur artist, fighting from a young age, fighting against Spain in the Netherlands during the Eighty Years' War (1568–1648)
To secure his throne, he married a female member of a distant branch, known as the Hapsburg-Temeswar, Princess Maria Anna Josepha of Austria.
As Emperor, he was able to secure the Western front with France, creating a defined borders, while concentrating in attacking the Heretics to the South East and North East, the Ottoman Empire and Russian Empire, bring the Holy Roman Empire more territory.

[9] Being descendants of Archduke Leopold of Styria from his first morganatic mariage, House of Burgau was obscure cadet branch of Habsburg dynasty, not even titled archdukes but mere margraves. After extinction of main line of dynasty, Duke of Bavaria claimed Austrian lands, but was opposed by other monarchs of HRE, fearing that enlarged Bavaria would dominate Empire. So margrave Ernst, head of the House of Burgau, was given land of his distant ancestors. Ernst managed to elevate his obscure line to position of one of the most important dynasties of HRE, so after childless death of Emperor Rupert, Ernst's oldest son, Friedrich, was able to gather enough support to win Imperial election.

[10] Sigismund IV, King of Poland, Hungary, Bohemia and Grand Duke of Lithuania became Holy Roman Emperor because no one else wanted the job except the poorer dynasties of the Empire, and Bavaria. Outbidding Louis XI, Duke of Bavaria, Sigismund Maximilian Jaigellon, already almost an Emperor in his own right, took on the task of ruling the Imperial lands. With his wife of 20 years, Maria, Princess of Naples by his side, he set about righting the wrongs of Emperors past, by first marrying his daughter, Anna Maria Jaigellon, to Karl von Hapsburg-Burgau, heir to Austria and a man with few allies now his family had done it's job. He then set about weakening the meddling Bavarian Duke by awarding lands he had claimed to be his to the Duke of Lorraine, and further rewriting history by granting his holdings in France to the Duke of Burgundy.

Was this a massive overstep against his Imperial Powers? Yes. Did the Breten Duke, the only firm ally to the Duke of Bavaria, threaten to ride to Poland itself to chop off his head? Yes. But did this accomplish exactly what he wanted it to? Triple yes.

Starting in 1730, the War of Bavarian Independence began, ending in 1742 with the death of the Duke of Bavaria, and the marriage of his heiress, the Duchess Renata I of Lorraine, to the younger son of the Duke of Austria and Anna Maria of Poland, the Archduke Victor.

Bavarian meddling was not the only thing of note for Sigismund. With the collapse of the Russian monarchy in 1737, he was able to extend his personal holdings up into Russia, holding out against the Duke of Moscow and the various Principalities that had popped up after the Tsars had fallen and Republicanism had failed. Marrying his son and heir, Prince Albert Vladislaus of Poland to the Grand Duchess Olga of Russia, the last scion of the exiled Tsar. With this marriage, he expressly forbid his son from taking on the title of King of Romans, telling Prince Albert "What need of you for those petty states, when I can give you your own empire?".

Thus, upon his death in 1755, Sigismund of Poland left an Empire with no clear Emperor. And after the meddling he had done, there were those that asked: Do we need an Emperor?
 
Holy Roman Emperors

1493 - 1498: Christoph I (House of Habsburg) [1]
1498 - 1538: Albrecht III (House of Habsburg) [2]
1538 - 1565: Christoph II (House of Habsburg) [3]
1565 - 1575: Friedrich IV (House of Habsburg) [4]
1575 - 1597: Rudolf II (House of Habsburg-Tirol) [5]
1597 - 1611: Albrecht IV (House of Hapsburg-Tirol) [6]
1611 - 1639: Johann I (House of Habsburg-Burgundy) [7]
1639 - 1687: Rupert I (House of Palatinate-Simmern) [8]
1687 - 1722: Friedrich V (House of Habsburg-Burgau) [9]
1722 - 1754: Sigismund II (House of Jaigellon) [10]
1754 - 1774: Albrecht V (House of Valois) [11]


[1] Christoph was oldest of three surviving children of Emperor Friedrich III (other were his brother Maximilian and sister Kunigunde). In 1475 Christoph married Katharina of Thuringia, niece of Ladislaus the Posthumous, to strenghten Leopoldine Habsburg line's claim to the throne of Hungary. Christoph regretted this decision, because marriage to Katharina made him unable to marry Mary of Burgundy after death of Charles the Bold, thus Mary married his younger brother Maximilian, who became iure uxoris ruler of wealthly Netherlands, while Christoph never managed to take Hungarian throne-his attempt to get Crown of Saint Stephen ended with disaster. Austrian troops lead personally by Christoph, who was then already King of the Romans and co-ruler of HRE, were beaten by mercenaries of Vladislaus II near Székesfehérvár in 1490-Christoph regarded himself as equally skilled as Alexander the Great, but in fact he was terrible commander. After succeeding his father on Imperial throne, Christoph's health started to quickly deteriorate, thus he was unable to personally take command over Habsburg forces during Italian Wars (which vastly increased chances of League of Venice against France). Christoph, unable to talk and walk during last months of his life, died just one week after his rival, Charles VIII of France. Next Imperial election was won by Christoph's oldest son Albert.

[2] Albert von Hapsburg was born in 1478, the second son of Christoph, then King of the Romans, and Katharina of Thuringia. The favourite grandchild of Friedrich, Holy Roman Emperor, he was set from birth for great things, although not the Imperial Crown. In 1485, when his brother was betrothed to Elisabeth of Brandenburg, he was granted an even more bountiful betrothal, in the form of Anne of Brittany, heiress to the Duchy of Brittany. Obviously, this would fail to come to pass and the Duchess of Brittany later married the King of France, but from the start it was assured that the second son of Christoph would do great things.

Upon the death of his brother in 1594, shortly after the birth of a stillborn daughter, the Archduke Albert became King of the Romans, and in 1497, just 6 months prior to his father's death, he was married to the Princess Catherine of York, youngest unmarried sister of Edward V, King of England. This went against the young man's wishes, as he had fallen in love with his brother's widow's sister, Anastasia of Brandenburg, but the match was not allowed by his father, and Anastasia of Brandenburg was married to Albert's younger brother Maximilian, leaving them in a rivalry that lasted their lifetime.

In 1499, shortly after his accession, Albert I, Holy Roman Emperor treated with the new King of France, Charles IX if France (formerly the Count of Angouleme) for a match between his youngest brother, Friedrich von Hapsburg, Archduke of Austria, and Marie of France, the younger daughter of Charles VIII of France and Anne, Duchess of Brittany, currently languishing in a rich prison, waiting for freedom. This was allowed, due to the elder sister's betrothal to the Dauphin Francis, and Friedrich would travel to France in 1505, attending to his betrothed and, supposedly, flirting with the idea of seducing and marrying the widowed Duchess of Brittany instead, which fell through when she died mysteriously later that year.

With his influence in France assured, the Holy Roman Emperor negotiated a proper peace with Hungary. Tensions having remained high since his father's wars with Vladislaus II, he found in 1506 that he had a daughter aged 2, and his rival had a newborn son. Thus, they negotiated a betrothal between Louis, Prince of Hungary and the Archduchess Margarethe von Hapsburg. When, shortly after these negotiations closed, the Queen of Hungary died herself, Albert saw an opportunity to further create ties with Hungary, and in 1508, Vladislaus II of Hungary married the elder of his two sisters, Agnes von Hapsburg. Age 20 upon their marriage, she would remain childless for the 8 years they were married.

Albert famously did not attend much to his uncle or his ambitions. While his father had intersected himself into the Italian Wars and Burgundy's French conflicts, Albert refused to play into the cadet branch's ambitions to the Spanish throne, with his younger sister Joanne von Hapsburg marrying the King of Aragon in 1508, 6 months after her elder sister, and producing 2 sons, blocking Maximilian, Duke of Burgundy's grandson Charles from becoming King of Spain, and simply King of Castile. Furthermore, he refused to betrothed his daughter to that same young Charles, and out bid for the hand of Edward V of England's only daughter Elizabeth of York, for the wife of his eldest son, Friedrich.

When, in 1514, Albert lost both that son and his wife to smallpox, he was devastated, sending the unmarried, terrified, and scarred Elizabeth of York back to her father to be placed in a convent. With his eldest and favourite son gone, he focused his efforts on the younger of his sons, but furthermore, focused on an even stronger foreign policy. In 1516, his brother Friedrich became Duke of Brittany, after his wife of 3 years, Marie of France, outlived her sister and her sister's newborn daughter, Louise of France, after the two failed to stave off childbirth related illnesses. Thus, France had lost Brittany again, and with the Imperial might behind him, Friedrich managed to hold onto his new possessions.

With the deaths of Anne II, Duchess of Brittany and them 3 weeks later, Ferdinand II of Aragon so close to each other, it seemed obvious to most that the pretty Joanne von Hapsburg would be in the running for the position of Dauphine. At 26, she had a proven fertility, was famously beautiful and was devoted to her father. But, instead, it was Agnes von Hapsburg, Queen Dowager of Hungary, that was the second wife of the Dauphin Francis. 2 years Joanne's elder, she had no children or pregnancies of her own, and had expected to remain in Hungary to act as Regent for her stepson. But Albert had decided, in his wisdom, that the elder of his sisters was too weak a personality to hold out as Regent to Louis II of Hungary, and instead Maximilian von Hapsburg was to act as Regent for the Hungarian King, following a semi-truce between the Emperor and his brother. The two were not close, but Maximilian loved his nieces and nephews, and agreed to the position to prevent the Hungarian King from shifting Margarethe von Hapsburg for, say, Mary of Burgundy, who would in 1517 marry Maximilian's only child, the Archduke Henry.

In 1520, Albert von Hapsburg remarried, to Apollonia of Brunswick-Lüneburg. The marriage produced many further children for the Emperor. The marriage would not be particularly happy, but not particularly unhappy either. It seems he had decided to ally with the Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and had married his second wife for that reason. Of their children, all three of their sons would become priests, and Apollonia famously wished for their daughters to all join convents, only to find her wishes ignored.

In 1533, the Emperor collapsed.

Albert von Hapsburg, Holy Roman Emperor suffered a seizure on the 7th of May, 1533, which severely impacted his health. Aged 45, he struggled through the next 5 years to remain active within his Empire, forced to hand over the reins of power in the end to his son, Christoph. His death was a shock to Europe, and particularly to his family, who had watched him deteriorate in the last days of his life.

[3] Christoph was co-ruler of Empire during last years of his father's reign due to Albrecht's illness. Christoph had to deal with Ottoman expansion against Habsburg ally (gradually turning into Habsburg vassal)-Jagiellon Kingdom of Hungary and Bohemia, which lost its southern and eastern territories to Ottomans and was barely able to defend Buda. Ottoman threat forced Christoph to look for compromise with Protestant dukes of HRE, who, with French support, fought religious war against Catholic Emperor. Unlike his father, Christoph actively supported his Burgundian and Castilian cousins against France and brought Aragon into pro-Habsburg camp. To strenghten alliance with that Iberian Kingdom, Christoph married Maria of Aragon as his second wife after death of his first spouse, Hedwig of Poland, in 1551. After unexpected death of Maria's brothers, Johann, oldest son of Maria and Christoph, inherited Aragonese throne, starting another branch of Habsburg dynasty. Christoph II died as result of injury he suffered after falling from horse during deer hunting. His oldest son from first marriage Friedrich, King of the Romans at the time of father's death, took Imperial throne after him.

[4] Friedrich IV, Holy Roman Emperor rose to the throne at the age of 25. Born the third son of Christoph von Hapsburg and Hedwig Jaigellon, his eldest brother, Sigismund von Hapsburg, had died in 1560, at the age of 26, due to syphilis, a disease that later carried away his wife, who was also his aunt, Catherine von Hapsburg. The next eldest Hapsburg heir, Christoph von Hapsburg, had married in 1559, Maria II, Queen of Hungary. The marriage between the, at the time, 22 year old King of the Romans and the 35 year old, widowed, Queen of Hungary, who's previous marriage to the French Duke of Berry had ended in 1555, with no children, probably due to his rumoured homosexuality. They two, thus, produced a single daughter, later Queen Maria III of Hungary, before Christoph von Hapsburg's unfortunate 1563 death, in battle with the Ottomans. Thus, Friedrich von Hapsburg, at this time acting as Regent in Austria, rose to the position of King of the Romans, and for a time it seemed he'd be forced to marry the widowed Queen of Hungary, who at 39 was significantly older than him, strikingly unhealthy and, by her 40th birthday the following year, actually unable to walk unaided. Thus, Friedrich managed to convince his father that, instead, his son might marry the Princess Maria, and in 1564, he instead married Mary of Wales, Princess of England. The daughter of Edward of York, Prince of Wales, the deceased father of the reigning English King, George I of England, she was 22 years old to his 24 at the time of the marriage, a former betrothed of the now dead King James VI of Scotland, who had died at war with her brother. She was the last child between Edward of York and Eleanor of Burgundy, and had been floated around, since the successful invasion of Scotland, as either the wife of the Earl of Lennox, in order to make him a puppet King of Scots, or her cousin the Earl of Salisbury, who would have been made Regent to Scotland. Instead, she now became Queen of the Romans, and a year later, Holy Roman Empress.

Friedrich had not grown up, as his elder brothers had, in the Austrian Court, nor with his three younger siblings in Hungary, alongside the younger sisters of Maria II of Hungary, of which only the youngest, remained both alive and not in a convent as of 1565 (Margaret, the second eldest, had briefly married Ferdinand of Burgundy, younger brother to the King of Castile, before his death in 1556, and now remained in a convent and her twin sister Anna had entered a convent in 1552, age 17, in order to escape a marriage to Christoph II, Holy Roman Emperor following his first wife's death, where she had died in 1562 due to cancer). This youngest Hungarian princess, the Princess Sophia Jaigellon, was at this time 30 years old and unmarried. She would in 1567, by the Emperor's command, find herself the wife of the King of Poland, Sigismund II, who she provided a son to within a year of marriage and promptly died. No, but she was not the companion of Friedrich, for he had been a ward of the King of Naples.

The younger son of Ferdinand II of Aragon and Joanne von Hapsburg had been King of Naples at his father's will, inheriting the throne at 6 years of age. This King, Alfonso III of Napes was a highly effective King and commander, repelling the French back and, in 1543, taking and holding Milan against both the French and, surprisingly, his brother. Aragon and Naples had thus, remained fairly separate entities, with Alfonso choosing to ally himself with Castile and Burgundy, marrying Catherine of Burgundy in 1530, while his brother chose a counter alliance with France, only to ruin that alliance by claiming Milan against them. On the whole, a education under this man and his even more prodigal son, Ferdinand IV of Naples, who in 1558, began a war with Juan (Johann) III, King of Aragon, who at 4 years old was in Girona under his mother's care and Regency, attempting to hold the country against an experienced and ambitious commander in Alfonso III, and then, from 1560, with Alfonso's death, Ferdinand IV of Naples. It was with this handover of power, once it was clear that Friedrich von Hapsburg would hold no power over the Neapolitan King, that he was recalled to Austria, at 20 years old, travelling first through Rome, where his brother, the Cardinal Johann von Hapsburg, was visiting, and then through France, where his eldersister currently reigned as Queen, married to Francis III, King of France. Once at the Imperial Court, he began his training to be an asset to his family, having failed to become an influential presence in Naples and Italy.

He had not, however, learnt nothing, and thus his reign saw the end of Ottoman rule in Hungary, the capture and later execution of the Zápolya King, who at 14 had no wife, no children, and no family to continue his meddling. Indeed, upon the birth of his son and the infant marriage between him and the Princess Maria of Hungary, he was able to fully consolidate Hapsburg rule in the region. He then spent the rest of his reign attempting to peacefully bring the Aragonese/Neapolitan conflict to an end, which was were he died.

In 1575, at age 35, Friedrich von Hapsburg was in Girona, where his stepmother held a formal dinner to celebrate his arrival, where it was hoped that he would personally achieve peace between the two countries. However, it seems his peace would involve large amounts of Aragon being placed under Neapolitan rule, and thus he was poisoned by his stepmother. It wasn't, however, known at the time, and it was suggested that, perhaps, it was the King of Naples who had him murdered. This was not, however, the case, and Maria of Aragon would find that, with her stepson's death and the confusion of who would follow him as Holy Roman Emperor taking so much of the Hapsburg interest away from her own struggles, that Aragon was half held by Ferdinand IV of Naples before a year was out. It was in that time that Friedrich's brother Rudolf came to be Holy Roman Emperor.

[5]
Rudolf inherited title of Archduke of Tirol after death of his father. He was known as patron of arts and was himself skilled painter. Rudolf married Sophia of Saxony, who officially converted from Lutheranism to Catholicism upon marriage, but it was rumoured, that Sophia remained secret Protestant and heavy influenced her husband's religious views. As Emperor, Rudolf was known for religious tolerance and his court was full of Protestant advisors. Such fact caused unrest among Habsburg family, ultra-Catholic fraction under leadership of Maximilian von Hapsburg from Burgundian branch of Dynasty was the main opposition against his reign. If not the death of his charismatic Burgundian cousin, who left only underaged sons, Rudolf II would have serious problems in his attempt to secure election of his only son and successor Albrecht to the title of the King of the Romans.

[6] Albrecht IV, Holy Roman Emperor was 31 years old upon his accession, the result of his father's brief marriage to Eleanora d'Este. A simple man, his education had been thorough, but had not taken in the way it might have. Riddled with anxiety, he had quickly become prey to his older wife's forceful personality. That wife, Joan de Brittany, granddaughter of Friedrich von Hapsburg and Marie, Duchess of Brittany. A minor Breton Princess, she'd managed to marry the only child of the Emperor through sheer luck, and at 37, was now Empress herself, outranking her cousin, Francis IV, Duke of Brittany. She had, by 1597, ruled her husband for 11 years, and had given him 9 children. 3 more would follow during his reign.

Albrecht struggled in his role, preferring to play farmer or, in many cases, act as a caring father to his many children. He also acted as a confidant to his cousin, the King of Hungary, married to Maria III of Hungary. The son of Emperor Friedrich IV, he and Albrecht remained allies against an increasingly hostile Burgundy, an isolated England, a forever ambitious Naples and the religious hotbed that was France. However, when Johann, King (Consort) of Hungary died in 1601, the Hungarian alliance fell apart, with petty infighting between the Queen and her family, and by 1606, it all proved too much for the weakminded Emperor, who fell ill shortly after his friends death.

It's been suggested that the Empress kept the severity of his condition a secret for the years up to his death in 1609. Kept isolated and communicating mostly through letters, it seems likely that his condition might have been a stroke, or even a coma. What is certain is that, with his death at 43, he left an unclear path as to the heir of the Imperial title. Obviously, there was hope for his son, but there was also the Duke of Brittany, the Duke of Burgundy, the King of France, the King of Naples, the King of England, and even the King of Poland to consider. the Imperial throne was not secure for the Hapsburg-Tirol line. Anyone could take it.

[7] With son of Emperor Albrecht dying short after his father, rule of of Tirolean line of Habsburgs in HRE ended. Johann, head of Burgundian line, was elected to the Imperial throne. Under his reign Imperial court moved from Vienna to his native Brussels, town, which he wanted to see as capital of united Western Europe. But Johann's dreams about restoring Empire of Charlemagne have not survived confrontation with reality-not only HRE failed to expand, France was still expanding at cost of Empire, claiming Habsburg Franche-Comté and Artois.

[8] With every males heir to the Hapsburg claim dead, the 1639 election was wide open, with all the electorates making deals and forming alliances, in the end the powerful block of England and France, chose to elect one of the sons of elector of the Electoral Palatinate, Prince Rupert of the Rhine, was a noted German soldier, admiral, scientist, sportsman, colonial governor and amateur artist, fighting from a young age, fighting against Spain in the Netherlands during the Eighty Years' War (1568–1648)
To secure his throne, he married a female member of a distant branch, known as the Hapsburg-Temeswar, Princess Maria Anna Josepha of Austria.
As Emperor, he was able to secure the Western front with France, creating a defined borders, while concentrating in attacking the Heretics to the South East and North East, the Ottoman Empire and Russian Empire, bring the Holy Roman Empire more territory.

[9] Being descendants of Archduke Leopold of Styria from his first morganatic mariage, House of Burgau was obscure cadet branch of Habsburg dynasty, not even titled archdukes but mere margraves. After extinction of main line of dynasty, Duke of Bavaria claimed Austrian lands, but was opposed by other monarchs of HRE, fearing that enlarged Bavaria would dominate Empire. So margrave Ernst, head of the House of Burgau, was given land of his distant ancestors. Ernst managed to elevate his obscure line to position of one of the most important dynasties of HRE, so after childless death of Emperor Rupert, Ernst's oldest son, Friedrich, was able to gather enough support to win Imperial election.

[10] Sigismund IV, King of Poland, Hungary, Bohemia and Grand Duke of Lithuania became Holy Roman Emperor because no one else wanted the job except the poorer dynasties of the Empire, and Bavaria. Outbidding Louis XI, Duke of Bavaria, Sigismund Maximilian Jaigellon, already almost an Emperor in his own right, took on the task of ruling the Imperial lands. With his wife of 20 years, Maria, Princess of Naples by his side, he set about righting the wrongs of Emperors past, by first marrying his daughter, Anna Maria Jaigellon, to Karl von Hapsburg-Burgau, heir to Austria and a man with few allies now his family had done it's job. He then set about weakening the meddling Bavarian Duke by awarding lands he had claimed to be his to the Duke of Lorraine, and further rewriting history by granting his holdings in France to the Duke of Burgundy.

Was this a massive overstep against his Imperial Powers? Yes. Did the Breten Duke, the only firm ally to the Duke of Bavaria, threaten to ride to Poland itself to chop off his head? Yes. But did this accomplish exactly what he wanted it to? Triple yes.

Starting in 1730, the War of Bavarian Independence began, ending in 1742 with the death of the Duke of Bavaria, and the marriage of his heiress, the Duchess Renata I of Lorraine, to the younger son of the Duke of Austria and Anna Maria of Poland, the Archduke Victor.

Bavarian meddling was not the only thing of note for Sigismund. With the collapse of the Russian monarchy in 1737, he was able to extend his personal holdings up into Russia, holding out against the Duke of Moscow and the various Principalities that had popped up after the Tsars had fallen and Republicanism had failed. Marrying his son and heir, Prince Albert Vladislaus of Poland to the Grand Duchess Olga of Russia, the last scion of the exiled Tsar. With this marriage, he expressly forbid his son from taking on the title of King of Romans, telling Prince Albert "What need of you for those petty states, when I can give you your own empire?".

Thus, upon his death in 1755, Sigismund of Poland left an Empire with no clear Emperor. And after the meddling he had done, there were those that asked: Do we need an Emperor?
[11] The Holy Roman Empire elected Albrecht of Valois Emperor. His reign of 20 years was very turbulent with self governing protests throughout the empire. But it sticked together.
He had 1 son and 1 daughter that survived to adulthood however they were both killed. He was succeeded by his grandchild _____.
 
Holy Roman Emperors

1493 - 1498: Christoph I (House of Habsburg) [1]
1498 - 1538: Albrecht III (House of Habsburg) [2]
1538 - 1565: Christoph II (House of Habsburg) [3]
1565 - 1575: Friedrich IV (House of Habsburg) [4]
1575 - 1597: Rudolf II (House of Habsburg-Tirol) [5]
1597 - 1611: Albrecht IV (House of Hapsburg-Tirol) [6]
1611 - 1639: Johann I (House of Habsburg-Burgundy) [7]
1639 - 1687: Rupert I (House of Palatinate-Simmern) [8]
1687 - 1722: Friedrich V (House of Habsburg-Burgau) [9]
1722 - 1754: Sigismund II (House of Jaigellon) [10]
1754 - 1774: Albrecht V (House of Valois) [11]
1774 - 1790: Francis I (House of Lorraine) [12]


[1] Christoph was oldest of three surviving children of Emperor Friedrich III (other were his brother Maximilian and sister Kunigunde). In 1475 Christoph married Katharina of Thuringia, niece of Ladislaus the Posthumous, to strenghten Leopoldine Habsburg line's claim to the throne of Hungary. Christoph regretted this decision, because marriage to Katharina made him unable to marry Mary of Burgundy after death of Charles the Bold, thus Mary married his younger brother Maximilian, who became iure uxoris ruler of wealthly Netherlands, while Christoph never managed to take Hungarian throne-his attempt to get Crown of Saint Stephen ended with disaster. Austrian troops lead personally by Christoph, who was then already King of the Romans and co-ruler of HRE, were beaten by mercenaries of Vladislaus II near Székesfehérvár in 1490-Christoph regarded himself as equally skilled as Alexander the Great, but in fact he was terrible commander. After succeeding his father on Imperial throne, Christoph's health started to quickly deteriorate, thus he was unable to personally take command over Habsburg forces during Italian Wars (which vastly increased chances of League of Venice against France). Christoph, unable to talk and walk during last months of his life, died just one week after his rival, Charles VIII of France. Next Imperial election was won by Christoph's oldest son Albert.

[2] Albert von Hapsburg was born in 1478, the second son of Christoph, then King of the Romans, and Katharina of Thuringia. The favourite grandchild of Friedrich, Holy Roman Emperor, he was set from birth for great things, although not the Imperial Crown. In 1485, when his brother was betrothed to Elisabeth of Brandenburg, he was granted an even more bountiful betrothal, in the form of Anne of Brittany, heiress to the Duchy of Brittany. Obviously, this would fail to come to pass and the Duchess of Brittany later married the King of France, but from the start it was assured that the second son of Christoph would do great things.

Upon the death of his brother in 1594, shortly after the birth of a stillborn daughter, the Archduke Albert became King of the Romans, and in 1497, just 6 months prior to his father's death, he was married to the Princess Catherine of York, youngest unmarried sister of Edward V, King of England. This went against the young man's wishes, as he had fallen in love with his brother's widow's sister, Anastasia of Brandenburg, but the match was not allowed by his father, and Anastasia of Brandenburg was married to Albert's younger brother Maximilian, leaving them in a rivalry that lasted their lifetime.

In 1499, shortly after his accession, Albert I, Holy Roman Emperor treated with the new King of France, Charles IX if France (formerly the Count of Angouleme) for a match between his youngest brother, Friedrich von Hapsburg, Archduke of Austria, and Marie of France, the younger daughter of Charles VIII of France and Anne, Duchess of Brittany, currently languishing in a rich prison, waiting for freedom. This was allowed, due to the elder sister's betrothal to the Dauphin Francis, and Friedrich would travel to France in 1505, attending to his betrothed and, supposedly, flirting with the idea of seducing and marrying the widowed Duchess of Brittany instead, which fell through when she died mysteriously later that year.

With his influence in France assured, the Holy Roman Emperor negotiated a proper peace with Hungary. Tensions having remained high since his father's wars with Vladislaus II, he found in 1506 that he had a daughter aged 2, and his rival had a newborn son. Thus, they negotiated a betrothal between Louis, Prince of Hungary and the Archduchess Margarethe von Hapsburg. When, shortly after these negotiations closed, the Queen of Hungary died herself, Albert saw an opportunity to further create ties with Hungary, and in 1508, Vladislaus II of Hungary married the elder of his two sisters, Agnes von Hapsburg. Age 20 upon their marriage, she would remain childless for the 8 years they were married.

Albert famously did not attend much to his uncle or his ambitions. While his father had intersected himself into the Italian Wars and Burgundy's French conflicts, Albert refused to play into the cadet branch's ambitions to the Spanish throne, with his younger sister Joanne von Hapsburg marrying the King of Aragon in 1508, 6 months after her elder sister, and producing 2 sons, blocking Maximilian, Duke of Burgundy's grandson Charles from becoming King of Spain, and simply King of Castile. Furthermore, he refused to betrothed his daughter to that same young Charles, and out bid for the hand of Edward V of England's only daughter Elizabeth of York, for the wife of his eldest son, Friedrich.

When, in 1514, Albert lost both that son and his wife to smallpox, he was devastated, sending the unmarried, terrified, and scarred Elizabeth of York back to her father to be placed in a convent. With his eldest and favourite son gone, he focused his efforts on the younger of his sons, but furthermore, focused on an even stronger foreign policy. In 1516, his brother Friedrich became Duke of Brittany, after his wife of 3 years, Marie of France, outlived her sister and her sister's newborn daughter, Louise of France, after the two failed to stave off childbirth related illnesses. Thus, France had lost Brittany again, and with the Imperial might behind him, Friedrich managed to hold onto his new possessions.

With the deaths of Anne II, Duchess of Brittany and them 3 weeks later, Ferdinand II of Aragon so close to each other, it seemed obvious to most that the pretty Joanne von Hapsburg would be in the running for the position of Dauphine. At 26, she had a proven fertility, was famously beautiful and was devoted to her father. But, instead, it was Agnes von Hapsburg, Queen Dowager of Hungary, that was the second wife of the Dauphin Francis. 2 years Joanne's elder, she had no children or pregnancies of her own, and had expected to remain in Hungary to act as Regent for her stepson. But Albert had decided, in his wisdom, that the elder of his sisters was too weak a personality to hold out as Regent to Louis II of Hungary, and instead Maximilian von Hapsburg was to act as Regent for the Hungarian King, following a semi-truce between the Emperor and his brother. The two were not close, but Maximilian loved his nieces and nephews, and agreed to the position to prevent the Hungarian King from shifting Margarethe von Hapsburg for, say, Mary of Burgundy, who would in 1517 marry Maximilian's only child, the Archduke Henry.

In 1520, Albert von Hapsburg remarried, to Apollonia of Brunswick-Lüneburg. The marriage produced many further children for the Emperor. The marriage would not be particularly happy, but not particularly unhappy either. It seems he had decided to ally with the Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and had married his second wife for that reason. Of their children, all three of their sons would become priests, and Apollonia famously wished for their daughters to all join convents, only to find her wishes ignored.

In 1533, the Emperor collapsed.

Albert von Hapsburg, Holy Roman Emperor suffered a seizure on the 7th of May, 1533, which severely impacted his health. Aged 45, he struggled through the next 5 years to remain active within his Empire, forced to hand over the reins of power in the end to his son, Christoph. His death was a shock to Europe, and particularly to his family, who had watched him deteriorate in the last days of his life.

[3] Christoph was co-ruler of Empire during last years of his father's reign due to Albrecht's illness. Christoph had to deal with Ottoman expansion against Habsburg ally (gradually turning into Habsburg vassal)-Jagiellon Kingdom of Hungary and Bohemia, which lost its southern and eastern territories to Ottomans and was barely able to defend Buda. Ottoman threat forced Christoph to look for compromise with Protestant dukes of HRE, who, with French support, fought religious war against Catholic Emperor. Unlike his father, Christoph actively supported his Burgundian and Castilian cousins against France and brought Aragon into pro-Habsburg camp. To strenghten alliance with that Iberian Kingdom, Christoph married Maria of Aragon as his second wife after death of his first spouse, Hedwig of Poland, in 1551. After unexpected death of Maria's brothers, Johann, oldest son of Maria and Christoph, inherited Aragonese throne, starting another branch of Habsburg dynasty. Christoph II died as result of injury he suffered after falling from horse during deer hunting. His oldest son from first marriage Friedrich, King of the Romans at the time of father's death, took Imperial throne after him.

[4] Friedrich IV, Holy Roman Emperor rose to the throne at the age of 25. Born the third son of Christoph von Hapsburg and Hedwig Jaigellon, his eldest brother, Sigismund von Hapsburg, had died in 1560, at the age of 26, due to syphilis, a disease that later carried away his wife, who was also his aunt, Catherine von Hapsburg. The next eldest Hapsburg heir, Christoph von Hapsburg, had married in 1559, Maria II, Queen of Hungary. The marriage between the, at the time, 22 year old King of the Romans and the 35 year old, widowed, Queen of Hungary, who's previous marriage to the French Duke of Berry had ended in 1555, with no children, probably due to his rumoured homosexuality. They two, thus, produced a single daughter, later Queen Maria III of Hungary, before Christoph von Hapsburg's unfortunate 1563 death, in battle with the Ottomans. Thus, Friedrich von Hapsburg, at this time acting as Regent in Austria, rose to the position of King of the Romans, and for a time it seemed he'd be forced to marry the widowed Queen of Hungary, who at 39 was significantly older than him, strikingly unhealthy and, by her 40th birthday the following year, actually unable to walk unaided. Thus, Friedrich managed to convince his father that, instead, his son might marry the Princess Maria, and in 1564, he instead married Mary of Wales, Princess of England. The daughter of Edward of York, Prince of Wales, the deceased father of the reigning English King, George I of England, she was 22 years old to his 24 at the time of the marriage, a former betrothed of the now dead King James VI of Scotland, who had died at war with her brother. She was the last child between Edward of York and Eleanor of Burgundy, and had been floated around, since the successful invasion of Scotland, as either the wife of the Earl of Lennox, in order to make him a puppet King of Scots, or her cousin the Earl of Salisbury, who would have been made Regent to Scotland. Instead, she now became Queen of the Romans, and a year later, Holy Roman Empress.

Friedrich had not grown up, as his elder brothers had, in the Austrian Court, nor with his three younger siblings in Hungary, alongside the younger sisters of Maria II of Hungary, of which only the youngest, remained both alive and not in a convent as of 1565 (Margaret, the second eldest, had briefly married Ferdinand of Burgundy, younger brother to the King of Castile, before his death in 1556, and now remained in a convent and her twin sister Anna had entered a convent in 1552, age 17, in order to escape a marriage to Christoph II, Holy Roman Emperor following his first wife's death, where she had died in 1562 due to cancer). This youngest Hungarian princess, the Princess Sophia Jaigellon, was at this time 30 years old and unmarried. She would in 1567, by the Emperor's command, find herself the wife of the King of Poland, Sigismund II, who she provided a son to within a year of marriage and promptly died. No, but she was not the companion of Friedrich, for he had been a ward of the King of Naples.

The younger son of Ferdinand II of Aragon and Joanne von Hapsburg had been King of Naples at his father's will, inheriting the throne at 6 years of age. This King, Alfonso III of Napes was a highly effective King and commander, repelling the French back and, in 1543, taking and holding Milan against both the French and, surprisingly, his brother. Aragon and Naples had thus, remained fairly separate entities, with Alfonso choosing to ally himself with Castile and Burgundy, marrying Catherine of Burgundy in 1530, while his brother chose a counter alliance with France, only to ruin that alliance by claiming Milan against them. On the whole, a education under this man and his even more prodigal son, Ferdinand IV of Naples, who in 1558, began a war with Juan (Johann) III, King of Aragon, who at 4 years old was in Girona under his mother's care and Regency, attempting to hold the country against an experienced and ambitious commander in Alfonso III, and then, from 1560, with Alfonso's death, Ferdinand IV of Naples. It was with this handover of power, once it was clear that Friedrich von Hapsburg would hold no power over the Neapolitan King, that he was recalled to Austria, at 20 years old, travelling first through Rome, where his brother, the Cardinal Johann von Hapsburg, was visiting, and then through France, where his eldersister currently reigned as Queen, married to Francis III, King of France. Once at the Imperial Court, he began his training to be an asset to his family, having failed to become an influential presence in Naples and Italy.

He had not, however, learnt nothing, and thus his reign saw the end of Ottoman rule in Hungary, the capture and later execution of the Zápolya King, who at 14 had no wife, no children, and no family to continue his meddling. Indeed, upon the birth of his son and the infant marriage between him and the Princess Maria of Hungary, he was able to fully consolidate Hapsburg rule in the region. He then spent the rest of his reign attempting to peacefully bring the Aragonese/Neapolitan conflict to an end, which was were he died.

In 1575, at age 35, Friedrich von Hapsburg was in Girona, where his stepmother held a formal dinner to celebrate his arrival, where it was hoped that he would personally achieve peace between the two countries. However, it seems his peace would involve large amounts of Aragon being placed under Neapolitan rule, and thus he was poisoned by his stepmother. It wasn't, however, known at the time, and it was suggested that, perhaps, it was the King of Naples who had him murdered. This was not, however, the case, and Maria of Aragon would find that, with her stepson's death and the confusion of who would follow him as Holy Roman Emperor taking so much of the Hapsburg interest away from her own struggles, that Aragon was half held by Ferdinand IV of Naples before a year was out. It was in that time that Friedrich's brother Rudolf came to be Holy Roman Emperor.

[5]
Rudolf inherited title of Archduke of Tirol after death of his father. He was known as patron of arts and was himself skilled painter. Rudolf married Sophia of Saxony, who officially converted from Lutheranism to Catholicism upon marriage, but it was rumoured, that Sophia remained secret Protestant and heavy influenced her husband's religious views. As Emperor, Rudolf was known for religious tolerance and his court was full of Protestant advisors. Such fact caused unrest among Habsburg family, ultra-Catholic fraction under leadership of Maximilian von Hapsburg from Burgundian branch of Dynasty was the main opposition against his reign. If not the death of his charismatic Burgundian cousin, who left only underaged sons, Rudolf II would have serious problems in his attempt to secure election of his only son and successor Albrecht to the title of the King of the Romans.

[6] Albrecht IV, Holy Roman Emperor was 31 years old upon his accession, the result of his father's brief marriage to Eleanora d'Este. A simple man, his education had been thorough, but had not taken in the way it might have. Riddled with anxiety, he had quickly become prey to his older wife's forceful personality. That wife, Joan de Brittany, granddaughter of Friedrich von Hapsburg and Marie, Duchess of Brittany. A minor Breton Princess, she'd managed to marry the only child of the Emperor through sheer luck, and at 37, was now Empress herself, outranking her cousin, Francis IV, Duke of Brittany. She had, by 1597, ruled her husband for 11 years, and had given him 9 children. 3 more would follow during his reign.

Albrecht struggled in his role, preferring to play farmer or, in many cases, act as a caring father to his many children. He also acted as a confidant to his cousin, the King of Hungary, married to Maria III of Hungary. The son of Emperor Friedrich IV, he and Albrecht remained allies against an increasingly hostile Burgundy, an isolated England, a forever ambitious Naples and the religious hotbed that was France. However, when Johann, King (Consort) of Hungary died in 1601, the Hungarian alliance fell apart, with petty infighting between the Queen and her family, and by 1606, it all proved too much for the weakminded Emperor, who fell ill shortly after his friends death.

It's been suggested that the Empress kept the severity of his condition a secret for the years up to his death in 1609. Kept isolated and communicating mostly through letters, it seems likely that his condition might have been a stroke, or even a coma. What is certain is that, with his death at 43, he left an unclear path as to the heir of the Imperial title. Obviously, there was hope for his son, but there was also the Duke of Brittany, the Duke of Burgundy, the King of France, the King of Naples, the King of England, and even the King of Poland to consider. the Imperial throne was not secure for the Hapsburg-Tirol line. Anyone could take it.

[7] With son of Emperor Albrecht dying short after his father, rule of of Tirolean line of Habsburgs in HRE ended. Johann, head of Burgundian line, was elected to the Imperial throne. Under his reign Imperial court moved from Vienna to his native Brussels, town, which he wanted to see as capital of united Western Europe. But Johann's dreams about restoring Empire of Charlemagne have not survived confrontation with reality-not only HRE failed to expand, France was still expanding at cost of Empire, claiming Habsburg Franche-Comté and Artois.

[8] With every males heir to the Hapsburg claim dead, the 1639 election was wide open, with all the electorates making deals and forming alliances, in the end the powerful block of England and France, chose to elect one of the sons of elector of the Electoral Palatinate, Prince Rupert of the Rhine, was a noted German soldier, admiral, scientist, sportsman, colonial governor and amateur artist, fighting from a young age, fighting against Spain in the Netherlands during the Eighty Years' War (1568–1648)
To secure his throne, he married a female member of a distant branch, known as the Hapsburg-Temeswar, Princess Maria Anna Josepha of Austria.
As Emperor, he was able to secure the Western front with France, creating a defined borders, while concentrating in attacking the Heretics to the South East and North East, the Ottoman Empire and Russian Empire, bring the Holy Roman Empire more territory.

[9] Being descendants of Archduke Leopold of Styria from his first morganatic mariage, House of Burgau was obscure cadet branch of Habsburg dynasty, not even titled archdukes but mere margraves. After extinction of main line of dynasty, Duke of Bavaria claimed Austrian lands, but was opposed by other monarchs of HRE, fearing that enlarged Bavaria would dominate Empire. So margrave Ernst, head of the House of Burgau, was given land of his distant ancestors. Ernst managed to elevate his obscure line to position of one of the most important dynasties of HRE, so after childless death of Emperor Rupert, Ernst's oldest son, Friedrich, was able to gather enough support to win Imperial election.

[10] Sigismund IV, King of Poland, Hungary, Bohemia and Grand Duke of Lithuania became Holy Roman Emperor because no one else wanted the job except the poorer dynasties of the Empire, and Bavaria. Outbidding Louis XI, Duke of Bavaria, Sigismund Maximilian Jaigellon, already almost an Emperor in his own right, took on the task of ruling the Imperial lands. With his wife of 20 years, Maria, Princess of Naples by his side, he set about righting the wrongs of Emperors past, by first marrying his daughter, Anna Maria Jaigellon, to Karl von Hapsburg-Burgau, heir to Austria and a man with few allies now his family had done it's job. He then set about weakening the meddling Bavarian Duke by awarding lands he had claimed to be his to the Duke of Lorraine, and further rewriting history by granting his holdings in France to the Duke of Burgundy.

Was this a massive overstep against his Imperial Powers? Yes. Did the Breten Duke, the only firm ally to the Duke of Bavaria, threaten to ride to Poland itself to chop off his head? Yes. But did this accomplish exactly what he wanted it to? Triple yes.

Starting in 1730, the War of Bavarian Independence began, ending in 1742 with the death of the Duke of Bavaria, and the marriage of his heiress, the Duchess Renata I of Lorraine, to the younger son of the Duke of Austria and Anna Maria of Poland, the Archduke Victor.

Bavarian meddling was not the only thing of note for Sigismund. With the collapse of the Russian monarchy in 1737, he was able to extend his personal holdings up into Russia, holding out against the Duke of Moscow and the various Principalities that had popped up after the Tsars had fallen and Republicanism had failed. Marrying his son and heir, Prince Albert Vladislaus of Poland to the Grand Duchess Olga of Russia, the last scion of the exiled Tsar. With this marriage, he expressly forbid his son from taking on the title of King of Romans, telling Prince Albert "What need of you for those petty states, when I can give you your own empire?".

Thus, upon his death in 1755, Sigismund of Poland left an Empire with no clear Emperor. And after the meddling he had done, there were those that asked: Do we need an Emperor?

[11] The Holy Roman Empire elected Albrecht of Valois Emperor. His reign of 20 years was very turbulent with self governing protests throughout the empire. But it stuck together.

He had 1 son and 1 daughter that survived to adulthood however they were both killed. He was succeeded by his grandchild Francis, Duke of Lorraine.


[12] The Duke of Lorraine took the title of Emperor only through duty. A title now steeped in memories of bloodshed and religious persecution rather than glamour and prestige, he at 23 had promised his 78 year old grandfather to take it, in order to bring peace to the German states. But, being both a pacifist by nature and a crippled man, having lost a leg at 8 in a medical miracle where he hadn't due during an amputation, he found the task of bring the many different German states into line difficult, particularly with the Austrian Hapsburg-Burgau Dynasty pushing to take it all.

Married in 1770 to the Emperor of Naples' daughter, Yolande Theresa Trastámara, prior to his uncle's death he had expected to potentially take over the Neapolitan Empire, which included the traditional Naples, Italy, Savoy, Aragon and a fair chunk of France and Castile. However, with the death of Louis, Dauphin of France in 1772, his pregnant wife producing the last of 6 daughters the year before, Francis proved to be the only male heir of Albert I, King of France and Holy Roman Emperor to be able to inherit the throne. Albert, who preferred that spelling but used the traditional Albrecht for all Imperial papers, had two other male heirs who he passed over in Francis' favour when deciding his successor. The elder, Thomas, Duke of Albany, was the son of the Princess Adelaide of France and the Duke of Kintyre, a Scottish rebel who, by Albert's recogning, would last approximately 3 seconds as Emperor before using his new resources to invade England and usurp the Throne. The other, Juan V, King of Castile, was out primarily because Albert didn't like his mother, the Princess Francoise of France. That also left out his 14 and 11 year old brothers, the Infantes Enrique and Carlos.

Francis, the only son of the Princess Anne-Marie of France and the elderly George II, Duke of Lorraine, was suddenly the least important Emperor in Europe. Two other Imperial titles, Naples and Jaigellon (Poland), remained both higher regarded, and more powerful. Not even the history of the Holy Roman Emperors held much weight. Thus, Francis stood defeated at the gate, and no one expected he would succeed.

And they were right.

While attempts were made up until 1785 for the Emperor to at least understand the magnitude of his Imperial duties, the Duke of Lorraine hated ruling on such a large scale, particularly for no reward. The Germans hated him for being French, the Austrians convinced everyone to not pay their taxes and, when in 1786, the Pope himself declared he's rather crown a rabbit King of the Vatican then another Holy Roman Emperor, Francis quit.

All Imperial work seemed to come to a standstill, and in his last duty as Emperor, Francis had all rubber stamps, used in his name to keep the Imperial duties going, burnt, crushed and the remains thrown into the sea. He then sent letters to every member of the Empire, explaining he didn't care if they cared, but he was done being Emperor, so they better elect a new one if they wanted one. He then sent his Imperial robe and crown to the Pope himself, with a similarly angry complaint.

It took 5 years for the bureaucracy to fully abdicate him.

For 5 years, whenever he visited his cousins in Paris, he was forced to be introduced as "Imperial German Emperor", to which his cousin, Louis XV of France, delighted in having his title inflated to more and more ridiculous and adjective filled heights. However, when Francis did find himself did allow himself some joy in cutting off what was a 4 page introduction of titles by saying "no, sir, today I am Lorraine, French, and not a German pig". The Duke of Lorraine, safe to say, chose never to return to the Imperial title, despite the abdication document granting him rights to it if it should be wanted, plus a hefty allowance that would never be paid.

The Emperor was done with the Empire. Who would want it now?
 
Monarchs of Scotland:
1488 - 1505: James IV (House of Stewart)
1505 - 1541: John II (House of Stewart) [1]

[1] In the year 1505, a serious bout of the Sweating Sickness hits the Kingdom of Scotland, in a particularly virulent bout known as the Scottish Sweats. Among the many dead would be the King himself, James IV of Scotland.
His sole heir, for the death of his brothers in 1502 and 1504, would be his French-born cousin John, Duke of Albany. The nobility of Scotland would invite the young John to Stirling Castle to be crowned as John II. John's wife would also bring a substantial amount of credence, as she would be the Countess of Auvergne, and would inherit the many estates from her father. The Scottish ownership of many French estates would once again cement the Auld Alliance, and in the meeting between John II and Francis I, it would be a new Auld Alliance.
John and his wife would have five children, three sons and two daughters, from 1516 to 1529.
John II's reign would be long, and would break the Stewart pattern of young royal deaths, followed by weak regencies, as he would pass the throne to his grown eldest son in 1541 at his death.
 
Monarchs of Scotland:
1488 - 1505: James IV (House of Stewart)
1505 - 1541: John II (House of Stewart) [1]
1541 - 1566:
Alexander IV (House of Stewart) [2]

[1] In the year 1505, a serious bout of the Sweating Sickness hits the Kingdom of Scotland, in a particularly virulent bout known as the Scottish Sweats. Among the many dead would be the King himself, James IV of Scotland.
His sole heir, for the death of his brothers in 1502 and 1504, would be his French-born cousin John, Duke of Albany. The nobility of Scotland would invite the young John to Stirling Castle to be crowned as John II. John's wife would also bring a substantial amount of credence, as she would be the Countess of Auvergne, and would inherit the many estates from her father. The Scottish ownership of many French estates would once again cement the Auld Alliance, and in the meeting between John II and Francis I, it would be a new Auld Alliance.
John and his wife would have five children, three sons and two daughters, from 1516 to 1529.
John II's reign would be long, and would break the Stewart pattern of young royal deaths, followed by weak regencies, as he would pass the throne to his grown eldest son in 1541 at his death.

[2] Alexander IV was titled Duke of Rothesay from birth (and later Count of Auvergne upon his mother's death), whilst his brothers Robert and Andrew were appointed as Duke of Albany (Second Creation, First Duke) and Duke of Orkney (First Creation, First Duke) and despite his mother's attempts to marry him to Frances Grey, niece of the English King and Margaret, widow of James IV and the Dowager Queen of Scotland, his father determined that he should marry one of the sons of Francis I in the name of the Nouveau Alliance - and the marriage contract between Alexander and Madelaine of France was soon drawn up with the marriage occurring in 1537. But within months of arriving in Scotland, Madelaine became sick and the King feared the worst- being widowed at 21. At least, thought John II, the Duke of Albany was due to be married to Madelaines sister Margaret and the Duke of Orkney was betrothed to her cousin, Jeanne of Navarre. Madelaine survived and produced a prodigious number of children with many living to adulthood - a raft of new noble titles had to be created for the Alexandrian diaspora. The Alexandrian Age is known for being an era where the status quo was not challenged and the succession crisis faced by the British monarchy was watched from afar, with the exception of the subsequent reign of Bloody Mary and the ensuing refugee crisis as persecuted Protestants fled to Scotland before Mary died and was replaced by Queen Margaret (the Dowager Queen of Scotland's daughter by her second marriage to the Earl of Angus, Elizabeth Tudor having predeceased her elder sister) - with Alexander being afforded the honorific title of Alexander The Steady, he died in his sleep at the age of 52 leaving behind ___________ to take the throne.
 
Monarchs of Scotland:
1488 - 1505: James IV (House of Stewart)
1505 - 1541: John II (House of Stewart) [1]
1541 - 1566:
Alexander IV (House of Stewart) [2]
1566 - 1617:
James V (House of Stewart) [3]

[1] In the year 1505, a serious bout of the Sweating Sickness hits the Kingdom of Scotland, in a particularly virulent bout known as the Scottish Sweats. Among the many dead would be the King himself, James IV of Scotland.
His sole heir, for the death of his brothers in 1502 and 1504, would be his French-born cousin John, Duke of Albany. The nobility of Scotland would invite the young John to Stirling Castle to be crowned as John II. John's wife would also bring a substantial amount of credence, as she would be the Countess of Auvergne, and would inherit the many estates from her father. The Scottish ownership of many French estates would once again cement the Auld Alliance, and in the meeting between John II and Francis I, it would be a new Auld Alliance.
John and his wife would have five children, three sons and two daughters, from 1516 to 1529.
John II's reign would be long, and would break the Stewart pattern of young royal deaths, followed by weak regencies, as he would pass the throne to his grown eldest son in 1541 at his death.

[2] Alexander IV was titled Duke of Rothesay from birth (and later Count of Auvergne upon his mother's death), whilst his brothers Robert and Andrew were appointed as Duke of Albany (Second Creation, First Duke) and Duke of Orkney (First Creation, First Duke) and despite his mother's attempts to marry him to Frances Grey, niece of the English King and Margaret, widow of James IV and the Dowager Queen of Scotland, his father determined that he should marry one of the sons of Francis I in the name of the Nouveau Alliance - and the marriage contract between Alexander and Madelaine of France was soon drawn up with the marriage occurring in 1537. But within months of arriving in Scotland, Madelaine became sick and the King feared the worst- being widowed at 21. At least, thought John II, the Duke of Albany was due to be married to Madelaines sister Margaret and the Duke of Orkney was betrothed to her cousin, Jeanne of Navarre. Madelaine survived and produced a prodigious number of children with many living to adulthood - a raft of new noble titles had to be created for the Alexandrian diaspora. The Alexandrian Age is known for being an era where the status quo was not challenged and the succession crisis faced by the British monarchy was watched from afar, with the exception of the subsequent reign of Bloody Mary and the ensuing refugee crisis as persecuted Protestants fled to Scotland before Mary died and was replaced by Queen Margaret (the Dowager Queen of Scotland's daughter by her second marriage to the Earl of Angus, Elizabeth Tudor having predeceased her elder sister) - with Alexander being afforded the honorific title of Alexander The Steady, he died in his sleep at the age of 52 leaving behind his on, James, to take the throne.

[3] James V was a strong king of Scotland, restoring relations with England to friendly neighbors during the reign of Margaret, whom he considered a cousin even though her mother had her from her second marriage. His relations with his actual cousins in France were not as friendly as several of the French lands of the Scots were lost. He died in his sleep as his father before and was succeeded by ______________.

Monarchs of England
1553 - 1558: Mary I (House of Tudor)
1558 - 1595: Margaret I (House of Angus) [1]
1595 - 1612: Edward VIII (House of Seymour) [2]

[1] Queen Margaret ruled over England in a time of prosperity and expansion as the country recovered from the turmoil of the reign of her cousin before her. During this time England became the major sea power of Europe after defeating the Spanish Armada in 1588. Margaret, however, never married, being called the Virgin Queen. Therefore her heir was Edward Seymour, although he was out of favor due to his mother, Catherine Grey, being the younger sister of Lady Jane Grey, and due to her marriage to his father, Edward Seymour the 1st Earl of Hertford, without royal permission. When Margaret died at age 75, he became king.

[2] Edward VII was the first king of the Seymour house. He was 33 on taking the throne. He was a direct descendant of Henry VII and Elizabeth of York, through their youngest daughter, Mary Tudor, who married Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk, then through Mary's daughter, Frances Brandon, who married Henry Grey, 3rd Marquess of Dorset, who mothered his mother, Catherine Grey and his infamous aunt, Lady Jane Grey. Edward ruled until his death in 1612 when his ___________, ___________ succeeded him.
 
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