Crown Prince Rudolf

"Anything is preferable to the truth"

AutorIn: Hannes Etzlstorfer

Verlag: Kral

Erscheinungsjahr: 2021

Auflage: 1. Auflage

Zusatzinformationen: 112 Seiten; inkl. zahlreicher Abbildungen; 21 cm x 15 cm

Sprache: English

ISBN: 978-3-99024-986-4

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Hauptbeschreibung
.Anything is preferable to the truth Emperor Franz Joseph (1830-1916) gives this dire advice to King Leopold II. (1835-1909), the baffled and bewildered father of his daughter-in-law Crown Princess Stephanie (1864-1945) right after the tragedy of Mayerling.

Was it really better, to conceal the course of events, the cause and especially the second body found, and therefore the actual dimensions of this bloody deed? Was it not this policy of secrecy by the Viennese Court concerning this double suicide, which was carried out by Crown Prince Rudolf (1858-1889) and his short-term mistress, Mary Vetsera (1871-1889) on the 30th of January 1889, which led to all other achievements by the very promising emperors son being relegated to triviality?

Rudolfs claim to truth and openness, which he demanded from himself as well as his environment, blatantly contradicts the practices of the Viennese Court, which threatens to submerge in a swamp of intrigues and snobbery. Only few of Rudolfs contemporaries dare to point out this fact on the occasion of his sudden death: Austria saw the germination of a monarch, who did not linger in fearful seclusion, but stood in the centre of society, who did not gain his impressions from speeches and reports but directly from the mouths of the most excellent men; who did not want to be surrounded by dumb implements and submissive servants, but who always demanded openness and truth; who did not look down on the masses with cool sovereignty; but who had true friends across all classes.

Dr. Hannes Etzlstorfer, born in 1959, is an art and culture historian, exhibitions curator and culture journalist in Vienna and Neulengbach. He has devoted his time for decades in research about the Habsburgs, culminating in publications about their residences, travels and culinary enjoyment, as well as a series of exhibitions. He curated the new Crown Prince Rudolf exhibition in Mayerling and the show about "Karl and Zita" in Schloss Eckartsau. Moreover, he was guest of the TV documentary series about the fame and fortunes of the House of Habsburg.