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Fanny von Starhemberg
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Fanny von Starhemberg : ウィキペディア英語版
Fanny von Starhemberg

Princess Franziska von Starhemberg ((ドイツ語:Franziska Fürstin von Starhemberg), also known as Fanny Starhemberg or Princess Fanny Starhemberg; 24 October 1875 - 27 April 1943), was an Austrian politician of the Christian Social Party. She was the mother of Heimwehr leader and Austrian Vice-Chancellor Ernst Rüdiger Starhemberg.
==Life==
She was born in Vienna as Franziska Gräfin (Countess) Larisch von Moennich, the daughter of Eugen ''Graf'' (Count) Larisch von Moennich and his wife Gabriele née Deym Gräfin (Countess) von Střítež. She thereby came from a Silesian ''Uradel'' family which then ranked among the oldest and most prominent noble dynasties of Austria-Hungary. In 1898 she married Prince (''Fürst'') Ernst Rüdiger von Starhemberg (1861-1927), a large-scale landowner and scion of another very famous and prestigious aristocratic family. The couple resided in Eferding, Upper Austria, where their eldest son Ernst Rüdiger Starhemberg was born in 1899.
Her husband was a hereditary member of the Austrian House of Lords and in 1902 became a deputy of the Upper Austrian ''Landtag'' diet in Linz, while she committed herself to the Austrian Red Cross and had several honorary positions, among them the chair of the Upper Austrian Red Cross Women's Association from 1916. Franziska von Starhemberg became interested in politics herself, first as founder and head of the Upper Austrian Catholic Women's Organisation (''Katholische Frauenorganisation''), from 1919 also as a board member of the Christian Social Party (''Christlichsoziale Partei'') under Ignaz Seipel. Upon the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the emergence of the First Austrian Republic, however, her ambitions to become a candidate for the National Council were denied. Instead from 1920-31 she was a member of the Federal Council (''Bundesrat''), the upper house of the Austrian Parliament.
During the rise of Austrofascism in the early 1930s, she alienated from both the Christian Social Party and her son Ernst Rüdiger Starhemberg. Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss provided her with a post at the League of Nations in 1934. Upon the Austrian ''Anschluss'' to Nazi Germany in 1938, Franziska Starhemberg was temporarily arrested and afterwards retired from public life. She died in the Czech Silesian spa town of Bad Darkau (present-day Darkov, part of Karviná).

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