Aujourd'hui, l'archiduchesse Hélène d'Autriche (née Toerring-Jettenbach) fête son quatre-vingt-cinquième anniversaire !
Il est intéressant de noter que cette ascendance portugaise relie Hélène à une pléthore de personnages royaux. Parmi les frères et sœurs de Maria José figurent : le duc de Bragance (dont les descendants comprennent l'actuel détenteur du titre, Dom Duarte, ainsi que des descendants des maisons de Liechtenstein et de Thurn und Taxis) ; l'archiduchesse Maria Teresa d'Autriche (dernière épouse de l'archiduc Karl Ludwig [1833-1896], frère de l'empereur François-Joseph ainsi que l'arrière-grand-père de l'archiduc Ferdinand, le défunt mari d'Hélène) ; la grande-duchesse Maria Anna de Luxembourg (qui épousa le grand-duc Guillaume IV et qui fut la mère de six filles, parmi lesquelles les grandes-duchesses Marie-Adélaïde et Charlotte, ainsi que la princesse héritière Antonia de Bavière) ; et la duchesse Maria Antonia de Parme (qui fut la seconde épouse du duc Robert, dont elle eut douze enfants, parmi lesquels : le prince Félix de Luxembourg, l'impératrice Zita d'Autriche et le duc Francesco Xaverio de Parme, pour n'en citer que quelques-uns).
Helen passa les années de guerre en Bavière, où sa famille se sentait protégée des atrocités qui ravageaient l'Europe. L'opposition de son père aux nationaux-socialistes et l'aversion manifeste et intense de sa mère pour Hitler et ses complices rendirent la famille impérativement isolée, tout en vivant tranquillement. Le fait que les sœurs de la princesse Elisabeth (Olga de Yougoslavie et Marina de Kent) aient été mariées à des familles opposées à l'Allemagne nazie pendant la guerre ne rendit la vie des Toerring-Jettenbach que plus fragile.
With peace in 1945 also came an opportunity for the family of Countess Helen to renew long-lost connections to their royal relations outside Germany. Visits to Athens to see Grand Duchess Helen and other members of the Greek royal family were soon arranged, while others traveled to Bavaria to reconnect with the Toerring-Jettenbachs. Luckily, Schloß Winhöring was unscathed by the ravages of war and the bombings that Munich underwent.
Tragedy, however was also around the corner. In 1955 Princess Elisabeth succumbed, quite rapidly, to a malady that she had been fighting against. The previous year the family of Grand Duchess Helen, a widow since 1938, suffered a sad blow when Prince Nicholas of Yugoslavia, second son of Princess Olga and Prince Regent Paul, died in a car crash in England.
However, as life always does, great loss is oftentimes replaced by deep happiness. Such was the case in 1956 when Countess Helen married a longtime family friend, Archduke Ferdinand of Austria (1918-2004), eldest son of Archduke Maximilian (1895-1952) and of his wife Princess Franziska zu Hohelonhe-Schillingsfürst (1897-1989). Ferdinand and Helen were to be married for nearly five decades.
The couple were blessed with three very attractive and delightful children: Elisabeth (1957-1983), Sophie (b. 1959) and Maximilian (b. 1961). They were raised in various European countries as Archduke Ferdinand’s business obligations demanded relocation every so often. However, throughout the family remained much attached to London, Munich and Salzburg, where Ferdinand’s mother lived. They also retained countless links to most of their royal relations across the continent, particularly with King Constantine II of the Hellenes and Queen Sophie of Spain, as well as with Helen’s first cousins of Yugoslavia and Kent.
In October 1982, Helen’s eldest daughter, Elisabeth, married an Australian gentleman by the name of James Litchfield. The couple settled in faraway Australia and hoped for a long life together. Sadly, it was not to be as Archduchess Elisabeth passed away quite suddenly at Myalla, Cooma, Australia, on 18 May 1983.
In the meantime, Archduchess Sophie, who can easily be argued is one of the most strikingly beautiful royals, was making a name for herself as both a top model and an humanitarian devoted to orphaned children. After several attempts at finding a soul mate, Sophie married Fürst Hugo zu Windish-Grätz in 1990. The couple settled in Italy, where Furst Hugo has vast interests as well as playing an important role within the Vatican’s administrative structure. Hugo has also served as Ambassador of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta.
Hugo and Sophie had three children: Hereditary Prince Maximilian (b. 1990), Prince Alexis (1991-2010) and Princess Larissa (b. 1996). The death of their son Alexis was a deeply sad tragedy for the boy’s parents and his grandmother Helen. Christian fortitude and a deep belief in Catholic principles allowed the family to find the strength to overcome this immensely challenging loss.
The family’s benjamin, Archduke Maximilian settled in Madrid, where he works in the medical device field. Maximilian Heinrich Ferdinand of Austria was born in Boulogne-sur-Seine in 1961. In 2005 he married Maya Al-Askari, a lovely lady whose family proudly claims descent from the Prophet Mohammed. Max and Maya have been blessed with three children: Archduke Nikolaus (b. 2005), Archduke Constantin (b. 2007) and Archduchess Katharina (b. 2010). All children were born in Madrid, where Max has lived for the better part of the last quarter century.
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