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Elisabeth Of Austria (1554-1592)




, 1571]]
Elisabeth of Austria ( 5 June , 1554 - 22 January , 1592 ) An Austrian Archduchess who became the wife of Charles IX Of France . She was Queen Consort of France from 1570 until 1574 , when she became a widow.

She was born in Vienna to Maximilian II, Holy Roman Emperor and his wife, Maria of Austria. Her maternal grandparents were Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor and Isabella Of Portugal .

Elisabeth enjoyed a privilieged and secluded childhood in Vienna , where she was raised as a devout Roman Catholic . Elisabeth was considered one of the great beauties of the era, with her flawless white skin, long blonde hair and perfect physique. She was demure, pious and warm-hearted, but because of her sheltered upbringing she was also naïve and intensely innocent. At the age of sixteen, she was married to King Charles IX Of France to help cement an alliance between the Habsburg emperors and the French Crown. Her wedding was celebrated with immense pomp and extravagance in Paris , despite the dire state of French finances. Her wedding gown was of silver and her tiara was studded with pearls, emeralds, diamonds and rubies.

Her husband, who already had a long-term mistress, was devoted to his teenage bride. Although they never fell in love, the couple had a warm and supportive relationship. Charles realised that the scandalous ways of the French Court might shock Elisabeth and, along with his mother - Catherine De Medici - he made an effort to shield her from its excesses. She continued to hear Mass twice a day, despite being horrified at how little respect was shown for religion by the supposedly Catholic courtiers. Her one controversial act was to make a point of rejecting the attentions of Protestant courtiers and politicians by refusing them permission to kiss her hand when they paid homage to the royal family.

Charles suffered periodic bouts of madness, which had to be hidden from the public as best as possible. Despite these hindrances, Elisabeth quickly fell pregnant and left Paris to enjoy the country air at Fontainebleau . It was during this seclusion that she received news of the Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre in August 1572 , when thousands of French Protestants were slaughtered on the streets of Paris. Although she loathed Protestantism, Elisabeth never publically rejoiced at so many deaths - like other prominent Catholics did. Her daughter, Marie-Elisabeth, was born soon after.

Two years later, when France was devastated by another religious civil war, Charles IX died, with Elisabeth at his bedside - weeping ''"tears so tender, and so secret,"'' according to one eyewitness. She retired to the countryside, rejecting her father's proposition that she attempt to marry her dead husband's brother - now King Henry III Of France . She made half her fortune available to her sister-in-law - Marguerite De Valois - who was ostracised from the rest of the royal family. Her last great tragedy came in 1578 , when her six year-old daughter died of an unknown infantile infection.

Elisabeth died in 1592 , by which time the House of Valois had been destroyed and a new royal family ruled France .