#also this is suuuuper simplified - within the nobility there were different ranks and positions and jobs and so on
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archduchessofnowhere · 1 year ago
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How many ladies-in-waiting did Empress Elisabeth have during her tenure as empress/queen?
Hi! I’m really glad I got this ask because lately I’ve been really interested in the people “behind the scenes” of Elisabeth’s life. But before answering this, we need to add some context and terminology, because “lady-in-waiting” is actually a very vague term.
First of all, who could access court?
The Habsburg court was extremely conservative on who could access it. While the courts of France or Prussia allowed the access of the rich bourgeoisie, to enter the Viennese court you needed to have an impecable noble background:
This small group of old nobility made up “court society”. They were the elite who passed all the tests of “ancestral lineage examination” with flying colours, who were permitted unlimited entry to court based on the pristine purity of their ancestral background. This exclusive group did not need to shine through achievement, it already possessed the requisite glamour from their heritage as princes, counts or barons. Whoever could prove eight maternal and paternal ancestors stemming from a noble line of flawless credentials and whose own ancestors had not broken this longstanding chain through marriages with partners beneath their standing could legitimately lay claim to the seal of approval generally dubbed ‘admissable at court’ (hoffĂ€hig). (Winkelhofer, 2012)
The women that were allowed to “wait” on the empress belonged to this exclusive group of nobles made up of about 400 families in the empire. “Rebel/low class woman infiltrates in court and becomes Elisabeth’s lady-in-waiting” is a trope that appeared in both RTL Sisi and Netflix Die Kaiserin, but that would’ve been simply impossible. There was a department in charge of checking everyone’s backgrounds, investigating every paper register and historical family tree. You either had the proper ancestry, or you weren’t allowed entrance.
So what was exactly the role of a “lady-in-waiting” at the Habsburg court?
There were two types of what we usually call “lady-in-waiting”: hofdamen (court ladies) and palastdamen (palaces ladies). Palastdamen were the aforementioned women who had access to court due to their noble status. Having access to court didn’t meant, however, that you just popped up at balls whenever you wanted. Even if you had an illustrious family tree you still needed to obtain official court recognition in order to be able to obtain a place at official occasions (for women, according to Winkelhofer, this was receiving the Order of the Starry Cross). Also Franz Josef was very strict on the nobility, and he demanded that nobles attended regularly at court to fulfill their duties; if someone didn’t appear in a long time they had to answer an inquiry as to why they had been absent, and the emperor could go as far as revoking their right to appear.
The compulsory duties of the nobility were, first, to pay their respects to the Emperor on 1st January at the New Year’s Day Reception, and later to attend to the two official balls that took place weeks later: the “Court Ball” and the “ball at court”. The next mandatory appearances were the holy day festivities; the most important event at court was the Corpus Christi procession:
The traditional procession the court at Corpus Christi - fondly dubbed “God’s Court Ball” by the Viennese - was the most significant festive day on the calendar to the imperial family, since this holiday celebrated and demonstrated the longstanding close ties of the dynasty to the Catholic Church. Everyone had to appear at the procession, including those who were not assigned to march in the parade itself, since the emperor viewed this as his foremost representational duty. (Winkelhofer, 2012)
Meanwhile, being a hofdame was a paid job. Unlike palastdamen, who entered court by their status alone, hofdamen had to be personally appointed to the position. Their main job was to keep company of their mistress all the time, which Elisabeth found annoying (“She says herself that it is not unpleasant to her to see us occasionally, but it is odious to her to have us in waiting” [Corti, 1936]). Being a hofdame, however, wasn’t cheap, since they always had to have new gowns for every official occasion, which their salaries usually couldn’t cover, and needed the support of their families (x). Also, a hofdame always had to be single, so when she married she lost the job.
As Empress, Elisabeth had her own household. The Oberhofmeisterin (a title that is usually translated as “Mistress of the Robes”) was in charge of controlling the household, hiring and firing staff, enforced discipline and etiquette, and replaced the empress at official events in case she couldn’t attend. She was the highest-ranking noble women at court, and unlike the aforementioned hofdamen, she could be married. During her 44 years tenure as empress Elisabeth had four Oberhofmeisterin:
Countess Sophie Esterhåzy (née Princess of Liechtenstein)
Countess Paula Königsegg (née Countess Bellegarde)
Countess Marie Goëss (née Countess Welsersheimb)
Countess Maria Theresia Harrach (née Princess of Thurn und Taxis)
In Elisabeth’s household there was also an special position, created exclusively for one woman: Ida Ferenczy. She is often called a “lady-in-waiting” (even myself on this blog called her that), but this isn’t correct. When Elisabeth was learning Hungarian in 1864, she asked for a lady who could help her practice the language. A list of ladies was created, which included Ida, and she was chosen. However, there was a problem: Ida wasn’t from nobility, but from the gentry, and therefore she couldn’t be made a hofdame. How did she even got on that list without having the right ancestry is a mystery to this day. But Elisabeth liked her and wanted to keep her in her household, so a position for her was created: “vorleserin”, the reader. She became one the empress’ closest confidents and remained in her service until her death.
Now, to finally answer the question: how many ladies-in-waiting Elisabeth had during her 44 years of tenure as empress?
Sadly I can’t give you an exact number. However, we can have an idea of how many and who they were. The Hof- und Staatshandbuch des österreichischen Kaiserthumes (renamed Hof- und Staatshandbuch der Österreichisch-Ungarischen Monarchie after 1873) was the official guide of the Austrian empire, published from 1806 until the fall of the monarchy in 1918. These guides contained, among other things, lists of the complete staff of the imperial family’s households, as well as list of who had access to court. The Austrian National Library has available for free most, although sadly not all, of these guides. And yes, who were Elisabeth’s hofdamen each year is mentioned.
The years missing sadly correspond to Elisabeth’s first years as empress, as well as almost all of 1860s. Since I’m mainly following the official guide, there may be some mistakes; some ladies weren’t in the guide but I found the info about them in biographies (this was the case of Mathilde Windisch-Graetz). Anyway, these were some of Elisabeth’s hofdamen!
Countess Pauline “Paula” Bellegarde (served from 1854 until her marriage in 1857, Oberhofmeisterin from 1862 until 1868)
Countess Caroline Lamberg (served from 1854 until her marriage in 1860)
Countess Josepha Wallis (served since at least 1856 until 1858)
Countess Sophie Coudenhove (served since at least 1856 until ?)
Baroness Ludovica Sturmfeder (served since at least 1856 until 1866/7)
Princess Helene of Thurn und Taxis (served from 1858 until her marriage in 1871)
Countess Louise Bombelles (served from 1860 until ?)
Countess Caroline “Lily” Hunyady (served from 1861 until her marriage in 1871)
Princess Mathilde Windisch-Graetz (served from 1861 until ?)
Countess Mária “Marie” Festetics (served from 1872 until Elisabeth’s death)
Countess Ludovica Hedwig Schaaffgotsche (served since at least 1872 until 1877)
Miss Mary Throckmorton (Valerie’s governess, served from early 1870s until 1874)
Landgravine Therese of FĂŒrstenberg (served from 1877 until 1889)
Countess Sarolta MĂĄilath (served from 1883 until her marriage in 1890)
Countess Janka Mikes (served from 1892 until her marriage in 1896)
Countess Irma Sztáray (served from 1894 until Elisabeth’s death)
Some things about these ladies:
Lily was the niece of Countess Esterházy, the empress’ first Oberhofmeisterin.
Mathilde was a widow; as far as I could find, she was the only widow to ever serve Elisabeth as a hofdame.
Helene was the daughter of Elisabeth’s Oberhofmeister from 1854 until 1857, Prince Friedrich Hannibal of Thurn und Taxis.
Paula and her husband Count Alfred Königsegg were appointed at the same time as Elisabeth’s Oberhofmeisterin and Oberhofmeister respectively. Paula resented the growing Hungarian faction around the empress and openly complained about them, which made her fell from favor. She and her husband were finally dismissed in 1868.
Marie Festetics was first a hofdame of Archduchess Clotilde.
I had literally never heard of Ludovica Hedwig until I went through the guide, and I could find nothing about her outside of it.
Mary Throckmorton was recommended to Elisabeth by her sister Queen Marie of the Two Sicilies; I’m not really sure if she was actually a hofdame since her job was being Valerie’s governess, but she appears as a hofdame in the guide. Go figure.
Therese was first a hofdame of Archduchess Sophie. After she left service (seemly for health issues), all of Elisabeth’s hofdamen were Hungarian.
Sarolta was chosen as a hofdame because she was in a good physical shape that allowed her keep up with Elisabeth’s walking speed.
Irma entered service in 1894 but only appears as a hofdame since 1896. Go figure again.
Sources:
Corti, Egon Conte (1936). Elizabeth, empress of Austria
Das spanische Hofzeremoniell - Hofetikete, on Mythos Kaiserin Elisabeth
Hof- und Staatshandbuch des österreichischen Kaiserthumes (1856-1860, 1866, 1868)
Hof- und Staatshandbuch der Österreichisch-Ungarischen Monarchie (1874, 1876-1898)
Winkelhofer, Martina (2012). The Everyday Life of the Emperor: Francis Joseph and His Imperial Court
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