Side Effects (of living and being me)

March 16, 2006

FAMILY VON TRAPP

Filed under: True Stories - Bellatryx @ 3:39 pm

Who did not fall in love with “THE SOUND OF MUSIC”?
I was watching the Classic Channel yesterday and had the pleasure to watch it again. It is an ageless story about love, loyalty, faith,courage…and many other admirable things.
Few people know that the story is real, and the von Trapp really existed. The descendents of Georg and Maria von Trapp live in United States, in a huge farm in Vermont, which Georg and Maria bought because it reminded them of their beloved Austrian alps.
Here is the true story…The movie was enchanting, but reality was very though for this remarkable family.
(Bellatryx)

This is the real Maria von Trapp


And this is the real Baron Georg von Trapp


Deep in the Adriatic, a small U-5 boat maneuvered through the dark, cold sea. It was one of earliest submarines, still in the experimental stages, unwieldy and unsafe. Exhaust gasses swept through the boat causing the crew to get sick. The periscope could not be raised or lowered, so the boat had to move up and down in order to use it.
In command of this submarine was Linienschiffsleutnant (Lieutenant Commander) George Ritter von Trapp with his international crew of Slovaks, Poles, Magyars, Austrians, Croats, Czechs, and Italians. He patrolled the Mediterranean waters. Then, someone spotted the menacing French cruiser Leon Gambetta. Von Trapp gave the order to load the torpedo bays as the crew scrambled in the tiny boat. All was silent.

“Fire one,” bellowed von Trapp.

A direct hit. The majestic ship was crippled. The 12,500 ton vessel foundered, then sank under the blue-black waves with its entire crew of 680 men. This was a victory for the Austro-Hungarian empire.

Lieutenant Commander von Trapp used his courage and quick wit to command the submarine and gained great honor defending his country.

Captain von Trapp had been born and brought up on the seashore, hearing stories of his father’s days in the Navy, and it was one of his passions to be near the ocean. Later on, he earned his first decoration fighting in China during the Boxer Rebellion. He always showed much courage and cunning when he fought.

Captain von Trapp was always interested in submarine warfare because of his love of the sea. Later on, he successfully applied to be transferred to Fiume where most of the newly invented torpedoes were being manufactured, a move that would affect the course of his life.

While he was in Fiume, he was offered command of one of the first submarines that the Austrian Navy put into service. The submarine was christened before it was officially put into service and the woman who christened it was Agathe Whitehead, granddaughter of Robert Whitehead, inventor of the torpedo and owner of the torpedo factory. When the submarine was christened, Captain von Trapp’s heart was captured by Agathe. Before long, they were married.

When The Great War broke out, Captain von Trapp went into action. He patrolled the Adriatic Sea and crippled many enemy ships. After sinking the Leon Gambetta, he sank the Italian troop transport ship Principe Umberto, drowning 2,000 soldiers. Later on, he switched to a U-14 submarine that was captured from the French in 1915. With this submarine he sank the largest enemy merchant ship, Milazzo, a 11,480 ton Italian transporter ship.

Many times, Captain von Trapp took initiative at the risk of his own life, sometimes even against orders. He soon earned the rarest decoration Austria can give, the cross of Empress Maria Theresia. It is the highest award an Austrian officer can receive in a time of war. He was also granted the title of Baron.

Soon, the Great War was over, and Austria had been defeated. It was stripped of its entire sea coast and the Imperial Navy was no more. Captain von Trapp was without his beloved ship.

The only other thing he loved as much as his ship was his wife Agathe, but a sudden epidemic of scarlet fever in 1922 killed her. This was a very sad time for Captain von Trapp, of whom his second wife, Maria, later wrote that “half his life had died with the Navy. Of the other half, most seemed to be buried with Agathe”(von Trapp, 1957). Yet, he continued to be a good father to his children.
When in 1918, he returned from the war, his children were overjoyed to see him. One of the memories is of Captain von Trapp playing Indians with the children in the garden. “I remember he tied my oldest brother to a tree…He was really a father. And he was always with us. He took us on trips to the woods and showed us how to make fire without matches. He made us beads for our dolls. We were in his study all day long playing house, turning the whole thing upside down.” Captain von Trapp took on the difficult task of raising a family alone, and did so with courage and patience. He raised his children to be musically inclined. When one of his daughters fell ill, he hired a nun from a local convent to nurse her. Maria Kutscher continued the children’s musical education and taught the children to sing as a chorus. She and Georg von Trapp fell in love and married in 1927.

When the banks in Europe crashed, in 1932, the von Trapps lost most of their money. The children needed to take on jobs in order to contribute to the family income. They did not mind having to work, but it put the family in a bad position when, in 1938, Hitler’s storm troopers marched across the Austrian border and claimed the land as Nazi territory. For many of the upper-class militaristic Austrians, Hitler’s coming was welcomed, but for Captain von Trapp it was a nightmare. One family member writes: “We were very much aware of Hitler and what he was doing in Germany. And my father was horrified. Hitler was full of promises, but in Germany he already had killed Jews and Christians and anybody who challenged his word. He played God” (von Trapp, 1999).

Three times, Captain von Trapp refused to adhere to the orders and invitations of the Nazis. The Gestapo ordered Captain von Trapp to hang a swastika flag from their window for Hitler’s visit to Salzburg. The Captain responded by saying, “I can do a better job with one of my Persian carpets”(von Trapp, 1999). And when Captain von Trapp refused an invitation to join the Nazis and establish a submarine base on the Adriatic, the anti-Nazi sentiments of the Trapp family became clear. Refusing the command of the submarine base and possibly Captain von Trapp’s own submarine again was truly a heroic act. Submarine life and the ocean were what Captain von Trapp grew up on; they were his passion, but he put aside his love of commandeering ships in order to resist the evil of Hitler; a truly heroic act.

The trouble in Austria escalated, and the family was unable to leave because of the lack of money. They found that they could earn money by performing songs and eagerly accepted an invitation from the Chancellor in Vienna. This performance brought them fame, and soon they were receiving invitations to sing all over Europe. Even Adolph Hitler asked the family to sing at his birthday party, but Captain von Trapp turned down the offer. Soon, an offer to give a series of concerts in America arrived, and von Trapp saw this as an opportunity to escape the troubles in Austria.

George von Trapp gathered his family together and told them that they would have to decide whether to stay in Austria, or go to America for good. They chose to go to America. The only thing left was to devise a plan for sneaking past the Nazi border guards.

Dressed as if for a one-day hiking trip, with only small backpacks, Captain von Trapp, his new wife, Maria, and the children went to the local train station and boarded the train to Salzburg. In the Salzburg station, they passed through a forest of red, white and black Nazi swastika banners. Then they boarded a train to Italy (they had joint citizenship of Austria and Italy thanks to alliances of the former Austro-Hungarian empire). As soon as they arrived in Italy, Captain von Trapp wired the Charles L. Wagner concert agency in New York for ship passage.

I believe Captain von Trapp to be a true hero. He displayed courage and cunning as a submarine captain in the Great War. He showed courage as a father and as a pioneer leading them into a new land, leaving everything he ever worked for and knew behind. He showed compassion to his children by being a father who loved and nurtured them. He showed extreme courage again when he refused the power of the Nazis. Captain von Trapp proved to be virtuous in seeing the evil in Hitler. He wasn’t tempted to seek power and glory with whatever political regime was in power at the time: he searched for the glory of a nobler and more permanent kind.

Written by Gardiner from Waitsfield

From
http://myhero.com/myhero/hero.asp?hero=Von_Trapp

RELATED LINKS

World War I Document Archive This is the home page containing the two pages mentioned above.

Österreichs Bundesheer This one’s mainly in German with a little bit of English. This is an excellent reason to get acquainted with the translator function on your browser…

Federation of East European Family History Societies This is an excellent starting point if you are of Eastern European descent and would like to know how your family fared during the two World Wars.

EMPRESS SISSI

Filed under: History - Bellatryx @ 2:49 pm

I was a very little child when the movie series about Sissi were presented in the cinemas of my hometown.

Sissi was impersonated by the lovely actress Romy Schneider, and each minute was of sheer enchantment.

Elizabeth, or Sissi, was like a breath of fresh air in the austere court. The expurgated story of Sissi and Franz Joseph was one of the gorgeous things I remember from my childhood.

Recently I looked for the films in videoshops and watched all over again, with the same wonder.

Here is Sissi’s history, which was so very different from the fairy tale …

(Bellatryx)

Empress Sissi

Elisabeth Amalie Eugenie, Duchess in Bavaria and Princess of Bavaria (December 24, 1837 – September 10, 1898), of the House of Wittelsbach, was the Empress consort of Austria and Queen consort of Hungary due to her marriage to Emperor Franz Joseph. Her father was Maximilian, Duke in Bavaria, and her mother was Ludovika, Royal Princess of Bavaria; her family home was Castle Possenhofen. From an early age, she was called Sisi (or Sissi in films and novels) by family and friends.

Her life
She was born in Munich, Bavaria. In the summer of 1853, Elisabeth, aged 15, accompanied her mother and her older sister, Helene, on a trip to the resort of Bad Ischl, Upper Austria [1], where they hoped Helene would attract the attention of their cousin, 23-year-old Franz Joseph, then Emperor of Austria. Instead, Franz Joseph chose Elisabeth, and the couple were married in Vienna on the 24th of April 1854.

Rightly called “the Diana of her day,” Elisabeth had difficulty adapting to the strict etiquette practiced at the Habsburg court. Nevertheless she bore the Emperor three children in quick succession: Archduchess Sophie of Austria (1855–1857), Archduchess Gisela of Austria (1856–1932), and the hoped-for crown prince, Rudolf (1858–1889). A decade later, Archduchess Marie Valerie of Austria (1868–1924) followed. Elisabeth was denied any major influence on her own children’s upbringing, however — they were raised by her mother-in-law Sophie, and soon after Rudolf’s birth the marriage started to deteriorate, undone by Franz Josef’s infidelities and Elisabeth’s increasingly erratic behavior (her family, the Wittelsbachs, had a history of mental instability).

She embarked on a life of travel, seeing very little of her offspring, visiting places such as Madeira, Hungary, England, and Corfu, where she commissioned the building of a castle which she called Achilleion — after her death the building was sold to the German Emperor Wilhelm II). She also became famed for her influential fashion sense and her beauty, diet, and exercise regimens, which reduced her to near-emaciation; her feverish passion for sports, particularly riding, and a series of reputed lovers, including George “Bay” Middleton, a dashing Anglo–Scot who was probably the father of Clementine Ogilvy Hozier (Mrs. Winston Churchill).

Kaiserin Elisabeth, by Franz Xaver Winterhalter
National unrest within the Habsburg monarchy caused by the rebellious Hungarians led, in 1867, to the foundation of the Austro–Hungarian double monarchy, making Elisabeth Empress of Austria and Queen of Hungary. Elisabeth had always sympathized with the Hungarian cause and, reconciled and reunited with her alienated husband, she joined Franz Joseph in Budapest, where their coronation took place. In due course, their fourth child, Archduchess Marie Valerie was born (1868–1924). Afterwards, however, she again took up her former life of restlessly travelling through Europe, decades of what basically became a walking trance.

In 1889, Elisabeth’s life was shattered by the death of her only son: 31 year-old Crown Prince Rudolf and his young lover Baroness Mary Vetsera were found dead, apparently suicide. The scandal is known by the name Mayerling, after the name Rudolf’s hunting lodge in Lower Austria.

On September 10, 1898, in Geneva, Switzerland, Elisabeth, aged 60, was stabbed to death with a file in a pointless act. Reportedly, her assassin, a young man called Luigi Lucheni, had hoped to kill a prince from the House of Orléans and, failing to find him, turned on Elisabeth instead as she was walking along the promenade of Lake Geneva about to board a steamship for Montreux. As Lucheni afterward said, “I wanted to kill a royalty. It did not matter which one.” Bleeding to death from a puncture wound to the heart, Elisabeth’s last words were “What happened to me?”

The empress was buried in the Imperial Crypt in Vienna’s city centre which for centuries served as the imperial burial place.

The myth
While Elisabeth’s role and influence on Austro-Hungarian politics should not be overestimated (she is only marginally mentioned in scholarly books on Austrian history), she has undoubtedly become a 20th century icon, often compared to Diana, Princess of Wales. A free yet tragic spirit who abhorred conventional court protocol, she has inspired filmmakers and theatre people alike.

In the 1980s, Brigitte Hamann, a historian renowned for her book on Hitler’s early years in Vienna (see bibliography), wrote a biography of Elisabeth, again fuelling interest in Franz Joseph’s consort.

Tourism has profited enormously from the renewed interest in Elisabeth and vice versa, both in Austria and abroad. Apart from the usual souvenirs such as T-shirts and coffee mugs, visitors are eager to see the various residences frequented by Elisabeth at different points in her life. These include her apartments in Schönbrunn Palace in Vienna, the imperial villa in Ischl, the Achilleon in Corfu, Greece, and her summer residence in Gödöllő, Hungary.

In film

In the German-speaking world, her name will forever be associated with a trilogy of romantic films about her life directed by Ernst Marischka starring a young and still unknown Romy Schneider in the title role:

Sissi (1955)
Sissi — die junge Kaiserin (1956) (Sissi — The Young Empress)
Sissi — Schicksalsjahre einer Kaiserin (1957) (Sissi — Fateful Years of an Empress)
The three films, now newly restored, are shown every few years on Austrian and German TV and have done much to create the myth surrounding Elisabeth. It may be assumed that for the average Austrian these films are the only source of knowledge as far as Elisabeth’s life is concerned. A condensed version dubbed in English was published under the title Forever My Love.

There is also a 1991 movie entitled Sisi/Last Minute.

In music
main article: see Elisabeth (Musical)

In 1992, the musical Elisabeth premièred at the Theater an der Wien in Vienna. Written by Michael Kunze (libretto, lyrics) and Sylvester Levay (music) it has also been produced successfuly in other parts of Europe.

Literature
Brigitte Hamann: The Reluctant Empress: A Biography of Empress Elisabeth of Austria (Knopf: 1986) (ISBN 0394537173) (410pp.).
Brigitte Hamann: Sissi, Elisabeth, Empress of Austria (Taschen America: 1997) (ISBN 3822878650) (short, illustrated).
Barry Denenburg: The Royal Diaries Elisabeth, The Princess Bride
Matt Pavelich: Our Savage (Shoemaker & Hoard: 2004) (ISBN 159376023X) (270pp.).

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Empress Elisabeth

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
Empress Elisabeth

Wikisource has original text related to this article:
Empress Elisabeth
http://www.kaiserin-elisabeth.net/english/
Sissi movies at IMDb:
1932 animation movie
Sissi, 1955 movie
Sissi - Die junge Kaiserin, 1956 movie
Sissi - Schicksalsjahre einer Kaiserin, 1957 movie
“Princess Sissi”, 1997 animation TV series
Sissi, l’impératrice rebelle, 2004 TV film
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)

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