If we had to rank the Habsburgs, Reserl would probably be in my top picks. Here's a strong female who did a lot during her reign. A loving consort, sixteen children, and marriages of state left and right to secure alliances against Prussia.
Also, aside from all that female agency and matchmaking... for backing off from Austrocentrism.
In particular, the Magyars think of Mária Terézia as a role model (her consort, Ferenc István, is lesser known but nevertheless relevant to them). As I have read in a series of Victorian historical tales:
After a march of some
days, they reached Pressburg, our days' Bratislava, then the capital of Hungary, and were welcomed
in person by the Queen, who, alarmed by the danger impending over her
kingdom, hastened to solicit the aid of her Hungarian subjects.
Mrs. Jameson, a distinguished English writer, has
given so fine and graphic a description of Maria Theresa's appearance
before the Hungarian chiefs, that I am tempted to transcribe the whole
passage. She writes thus :—
"Who has not read of the
scene which ensued, which has so often been related, so often described?
and yet we all feel that we cannot hear of it too often. When we first
meet with it on the page of history, we are taken by surprise, as though
it had no business there : it has the glory and the freshness of old
romance. Poetry never invented any thing half so striking, or that so completely fills the imagination.
"The Hungarians had been
oppressed, enslaved, insulted by Maria Theresa's predecessors. In the
beginning of her reign, she had abandoned the usurpations of her
ancestors, and had voluntarily taken the oath to preserve all their
privileges
entire. This was partly from policy, but it was also partly from her own
just and kind nature. The hearts of the Hungarians were already half
won, when she arrived at Pressburg, in June 1741. She was crowned Queen
of Hungary on the 13th, with the peculiar national ceremonies: the iron
crown of St. Stephen was placed on her head, the tattered but sacred
robe thrown over her own rich habit, which was incrusted with gems; his
scimitar girded to her side. Thus attired, and mounted upon a superb
charger, she rode up the Royal Mount, a rising ground near Pressburg, so
called from being consecrated to this ceremony, and, according to the
antique custom, drew her sabre, and defied the four quarters of the
world, in a manner, that showed she had no occasion for that weapon
t& conquer all who saw her. The crown of St. Stephen, which had
never before been placed on so small or so
lovely a head, had been lined with cushions to make it fit; it was also
very heavy, and its weight, added to the heat of the weather,
incommoded her; when she sat down to dinner in the great hall of the
castle, she expressed a wish to lay it aside. On lifting the diadem from
her brow, her hair, loosened from confinement, fell down in luxuriant
ringlets over her neck and shoulders; the glow which the heat and
emotion had diffused over her complexion added to her natural beauty,
and the assembled nobles, struck with admiration, could scarce forbear
from shouting their applause.
"The effect which her youthful grace and loveliness produced on this occasion had not yet subsided, when she called together the Diet, or Senate
of Hungary, in order to lay before them the situation of her affairs.
She entered the hall of the castle, habited in the Hungarian costume,
but still in deep mourning for her father, the late Kaiser Charles; she traversed the apartment
with a slow and majestic step, and ascended the throne, where she stood
for a few minutes silent. The Chancellor of the State first explained
the situation to which she was reduced, and then the Queen, coming
forward, addressed the assembly in Latin, a language which she spoke
fluently, and which is still in common use among the Hungarians.
"' The disastrous state of
our affairs,' said she, 'has moved us to lay before our dear and
faithful states of Hungary, the recent invasion of Austria, the danger
now impending over this kingdom, and propose to them the consideration
of a remedy. The very existence of the kingdom of Hungary, of our own
person, of our crown, is now at stake, and, forsaken by all, we place
our sole hope in the fidelity, arms, and long-tried valor of the
Hungarians.'
"She pronounced these
simple words in a firm, but melancholy tone. Her beauty, her
magnanimity, and her distress, roused the Hungarian chiefs to the
wildest pitch of enthusiasm : they drew their sabres half out of the
scabbard, then flung them back to the hilt, with a martial sound, which
re-echoed through the lofty hall, and exclaimed, with one accord, ' Our
swords and our
blood for your Majesty—we will die for our King, Maria
Theresa!' Overcome by sudden emotion, she burst into a flood of tears.
At this sight, the nobles became almost frantic with enthusiasm. They
retired from her presence, to vote supplies of men and money, which far
exceeded her expectations."
Ulrich was a witness to this glorious scene, and his
valor was so much aroused by the youth and loveliness of his beloved
Queen, that he felt impatient to advance and seal his devotion on the
field of battle.
And I imagine those fierce, moustachioed Magyars saw the Virgin and her Child in the blond, blue-eyed, lilywhite Queen with little Crown Prince Joseph in her arms. At the time, Ferenc István was left in Vienna, heartfully sitting the two elder girls (the couple had so far had but three kids, and she left for Pressburg, and was crowned and they swore allegiance to her, when she was not only mourning her father... but also recovering from having given birth to a male heir!).
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