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  1. Franz Joseph I. Kaiser von Österreich, König von Ungarn (Regentschaftszeit: 1848–1916) Geb. am 18. August 1830 in Schloss Schönbrunn (Wien) Gest. am 21. November 1916 in Schloss Schönbrunn (Wien)

  2. 4. März 2024 · Franz Joseph (born August 18, 1830, Schloss Schönbrunn, near Vienna, Austria—died November 21, 1916, Schloss Schönbrunn) was the emperor of Austria (1848–1916) and king of Hungary (1867–1916), who divided his empire into the Dual Monarchy, in which Austria and Hungary coexisted as equal partners.

  3. Emperor Franz Joseph reigned for 68 years, the longest of all the Habsburg rulers. He was a symbol of integration, and when he died the Habsburg Monarchy lost one of its most important pillars. Franz Joseph looms large in the historical consciousness of posterity. Towards the end of his life he became a semi-mythical figure, a symbol of the ...

  4. Franz Joseph - Emperor, Austria-Hungary, Reformer: Although he had been raised to be a soldier and wore a uniform all his life, Franz Joseph was no more a strategist than he was a statesman. He made up for this deficiency by the careful study of documents, by an extraordinarily retentive memory, and by being a shrewd judge of character ...

  5. Franz Joseph I or Francis Joseph I was Emperor of Austria, King of Hungary, and the ruler of the other states of the Habsburg monarchy from 2 December 1848 until his death in 1916. In the early part of his reign, his realms and territories were referred to as the Austrian Empire, but were reconstituted as the dual monarchy of the Austro ...

  6. Franz Joseph war dank seiner langen Regentschaft von 68 Jahren eine prägende Gestalt der Habsburgermonarchie in den letzten Jahrzehnten ihres Bestehens. Er unterzeichnete 1914 die Kriegserklärung an Serbien, die den Ersten Weltkrieg auslöste – ein Krieg, dessen Ende er nicht mehr erleben sollte.

  7. 2. Dezember: Nach der Abdankung seines Onkels Kaiser Ferdinand I. (1793-1875) wird er als Franz Joseph I. Kaiser von Österreich. Der Thronwechsel soll im Revolutionsjahr die Monarchie stabilisieren. Beraten von seinem Ministerpräsidenten Felix Fürst zu Schwarzenberg (1800-1852) revidiert Franz Joseph liberale Reformen seines Vorgängers.