Empress of Austria Elisabeth “Sissi”'s Human Design Chart

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          Empress of Austria Elisabeth “Sissi”'s Biography

          German-Austrian royalty, a duchess by birth as the second daughter of Duke Joseph of Bavaria, she later became Empress of Austria and Queen of Hungary by marriage to Emperor Franz Joseph I. Elisabeth was the longest reigning Empress of Austria at 44 years. Although the pet name of the empress was always spelled “Sisi,” never “Sissi,” this incorrect version of her name persisted in various artistic works made in the Twentieth Century.
          After a happy childhood, raised in a rural family castle, she became the Empress of Austria and Hungary with her marriage to her cousin Franz Josef on 24 April 1854 when she was 17. Coming from an unrestrained background into the ceremonies of the Vienna court, her marriage suffered not only from the necessary adjustments but from the stress of a nagging mother-in-law. The marriage began as a glowing love-match, but gradually turned cold when her husband began to pursue casual infidelities.
          Elizabeth had three children who were raised by Franz Josef’s mother; she was allowed very little contact with them, and the first daughter died in infancy. After their third child was born, Crown Prince Rudolf, she became estranged from her husband. Seeming to suffer from poor health, she sought relief and recuperation in a great deal of travel.
          A striking beauty with a gay spirit, Elisabeth was an accomplished horsewoman. Her ability to speak Magyar fluently endeared her to the Hungarians. Though her judgment was sound, she took little part in public affairs and abhorred publicity, preferring a quiet interest in literature. In 1881 her son, Archduke Rudolf, married Princess Stephanie, but it was not a close union.
          When the country began a disastrous war with Prussia and Italy in 1866, Elisabeth rejoined her husband, helping to bring better relations between Austria and Hungary, halves of the dual monarchy.
          Europe was shocked with the scandal when Archduke Rudolph committed suicide with Baroness Maria Vetsera at Mayerling on 30 January 1889, between 7:00 and 8:00 AM. Family trauma was not unfamiliar to the Empress; her cousin had been a suicide and her sister died in a fire in 1897.
          Elisabeth fell deeply into melancholia. Seeking escape again in travel, as she left the hotel to board a ship, she was stabbed to death by Italian anarchist Luigi Luccheni at 1:15 PM on 10 September 1898 in Geneva, Switzerland.
          In the German-speaking world, Elisabeth’s name is often associated with a trilogy of romantic films about her life directed by Ernst Marischka which starred a teenage Romy Schneider and made her famous worldwide, Sissi (1955), Sissi — die junge Kaiserin (1956) (Sissi — The Young Empress), and Sissi — Schicksalsjahre einer Kaiserin (1957) (Sissi — Fateful Years of an Empress). Forever My Love is a condensed version, with the three films edited down into one feature and dubbed in English. This version was released in North America in 1962. Schneider appeared as a much more realistic and fascinating Elisabeth in Luchino Visconti’s film Ludwig (1972).
          Link to Wikipedia biography

          Empress of Austria Elisabeth “Sissi”'s Chart
          Your Type is like a blueprint for how you best interact with the world. It's determined by the way energy flows through your defined centers and channels in your chart.