Archduke Franz Ferdinand(1863-1914)
Born on December 18, 1863, the eldest son of Archduke Karl-Ludwig von
Habsburg and his wife, Princess Annunziata di Borbone, Franz Ferdinand
was third in line to the thrown of the Austro-Hungarian Empire upon his
birth. After his cousin Crown Prince Rudolf committed suicide in 1889
and his father died in 1896, Franz Ferdinand became the heir of his
aging uncle Emperor Franz Josef. He eloped with Countess Sophie Chotek in 1900, but
this marriage was considered unequal and they were forced to renounce
rights of rank and succession for their three children. A radical
reformist, Franz Ferdinand had a number of new ideas he planned to
implement when he became Emperor, one of them giving Slavs an equal
voice in the empire. After the annexation of Bosnia by Austria, he
decided to go on a tour of his new province in 1914 in hopes of
fostering good will with his new subjects. A Serbian terrorist group
called The Black Hand sent three of its members to murder Franz
Ferdinand and his wife as they visited Sarajevo. Their first
assassination attempt, throwing a bomb at the Archduke's car, failed,
though a number of bystanders were wounded. The assassins almost gave
up their plans, and one of them, Gavrilo Princip, wandered off down the street.
Meanwhile, the Archduke and Archduchess decided to visit the wounded in
the hospital, but their driver took a wrong turn and they ended up on
the same street as Princip. Seizing his chance, Princip stepped forward
and fired several times into the car, fatally wounding both Franz
Ferdinand and Sophie. They were raced to the governor's mansion where
they were pronounced dead. Not only did this act of violence orphan
their three young children, it also set off a series of events that led
directly to World War I.