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Archduke Rainer of Austria (ドイツ語:Rainer, Erzherzog von Österreich-Toskana); (21 November 1895 – 25 May 1930) was a member of the House of Habsburg-Lorraine, a member of the Tuscan branch of the Imperial House of Habsburg-Lorraine, an Archduke of Austria and Prince of Bohemia, Hungary, and Tuscany by birth. He was the eldest son Archduke Leopold Salvator of Austria, Prince of Tuscany. He served as officer in the Austrian army during World War I.〔McIntosh, ''The Unknown Habsburgs'', p. 51〕 At the fall of the Habsburg dynasty, he remained in Vienna and worked for a time as taxi driver. He died unmarried at the age of 34 from blood-poisoning.〔McIntosh, ''The Unknown Habsburgs'', p. 51〕 ==Life== Archduke Rainer was born in Agram (the historic Austrian-German name for what is now the city of Zagreb in Croatia), the fourth child and eldest son of Archduke Leopold Salvator of Austria, Prince of Tuscany and Infanta Blanca of Spain (daughter of Carlos, Duke of Madrid).〔Harding, ''Lost Waltz'', p. 20〕 He received the names Rainer Karl Leopold Blanka Anton Margarete Beatrix Peter Joseph Raphael Michael Ignaz Stephan. During World War I Rainer served as a lieutenant of artillery in the Austro-Hungarian Army.〔"Austrian Archduke Jailed", ''New York Times'' (24 August 1921): 4.〕 After the fall of the Habsburg Monarchy and the establishment of the First Austrian Republic, he renounced his rights to the Austrian throne in order that he could remain in Austria.〔〔 Henceforward he used the name ''Rainer Habsburg''.〔"Habsburgs Not Wanted", ''The Times'' (17 May 1921): 8.〕 He lived in an apartment in the Palais Toskana,〔"Vienna Knows Not Archduke Leopold", ''New York Times'' (12 January 1927):6 .〕 but also retained properties in Zagreb,〔 and in Galicia,〔 and at Schloss Hernstein.〔 In Vienna, Rainer operated a garage.〔 He also organized a system for film reels to be transported by motorcycle from one theater to another enabling more than one theater to share the same film.〔"Archduke Rainer of Austria Dead", ''New York Times'' (26 May 1930): 15.〕 In May 1921 it was reported that there had been protests against Rainer at Schloss Hernstein.〔 In August 1921 he was arrested in Ljubljana (then in Yugoslavia, now in Slovenia) on a charge of forging a passport.〔 On 6 April 1922, Rainer and his father were present at the requiem mass celebrated in St. Stephen's Cathedral in Vienna for the soul of the Emperor Charles I of Austria.〔"The Habsburg Funeral", ''The Times'' (7 April 1922): 11.〕 They reportedly led a demonstration with cries of "Down with the Republic", and marched to the Austrian Parliament Building demanding that the flag be lowered to half-mast in honour of Austria's former sovereign. In 1930 Rainer died in the Wiedner Hospital in Vienna from the effects of blood poisoning; he was 35.〔〔"Todesfall", ''Wiener Zeitung'' (27. Mai 1930): 3.〕 His remains were buried in the Imperial Crypt of the Capuchin Church in Vienna.〔"To Be Buried as Habsburg", ''New York Times'' (29 May 1930): 31.〕 He was the first member of the Habsburg family to be buried in the crypt since the Emperor Franz Joseph I in 1916.〔"Austrian Archduke Buried", ''New York Times'' (3 June 1930): 35.〕 Among those present for the funeral were his parents, Archduke Leopold Salvator and Archduchess Blanca, his father's brother Archduke Franz Salvator of Austria with his sons Hubert and Klemens, his mother's uncle Infante Alfonso Carlos of Spain and his wife Infanta Maria das Neves of Portugal, and Dr. Ignaz Seipel (former Chancellor of Austria).〔"Das Begräbnis des ehemaligen Erzherzogs Rainer Karl Salvator", ''Wiener Zeitung'' (3. Juni 1930): 7.〕 In 1962 Rainer's sarcophagus was moved to the Neue Gruft (New Crypt) where it lies next to the sarcophagus of his father. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Archduke Rainer of Austria (1895–1930)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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