'Leopold II' (born ''Peter Leopold Joseph'') (
May 5,
1747 –
March 1,
1792) was the penultimate
Holy Roman Emperor from
1790 to
1792 and
Grand Duke of
Tuscany. He was a son of Emperor
Francis I and his wife, Queen
Maria Theresa. Leopold was a moderate proponent of ''
enlightened absolutism''.
Youth
Leopold was born in
Vienna, a third son, and was at first educated for the priesthood, but the theological studies to which he was forced to apply himself are believed to have influenced his mind in a way unfavourable to the Church. On the death of his elder brother Charles in
1761, it was decided that he should succeed to his father's
grand duchy of Tuscany, which was erected into a "secundogeniture" or
apanage for a second son. This settlement was the condition of his marriage on
August 5,
1764 with
Maria Louisa, daughter of
Charles III of Spain and
Maria Amalia of Saxony. On the death of his father Francis I (
August 18,
1765), he succeeded to the grand duchy.
Grand Duke of Tuscany
For five years, he exercised little more than nominal authority, under the supervision of counsellors appointed by his mother. In
1770, he made a journey to Vienna to secure the removal of this vexatious guardianship and returned to Florence with a free hand. During the twenty years which elapsed between his return to Florence and the death of his eldest brother
Joseph II in
1790, he was employed in reforming the administration of his small state. The reformation was carried out by the removal of the ruinous restrictions on industry and personal freedom imposed by his predecessors of the house of
Medici and left untouched during his father's life, by the introduction of a rational system of taxation, and by the execution of profitable public works, such as the drainage of the Val di Chiana.
As he had no army to maintain, and as he suppressed the small naval force kept up by the Medici, the whole of his revenue was left free for the improvement of his state. Leopold was never popular with his Italian subjects. His disposition was cold and retiring. His habits were simple to the verge of sordidness, though he could display splendour on occasion, and he could not help offending those of his subjects who had profited by the abuses of the Medicean régime.
But his steady, consistent, and intelligent administration, which advanced step by step, brought the grand duchy to a high level of material prosperity. His ecclesiastical policy, which disturbed the deeply rooted convictions of his people and brought him into collision with the pope, was not successful. He was unable to secularize the property of the religious houses or to put the clergy entirely under the control of the lay power. However, his abolition of
Capital Punishment was the first permanent abolition in modern times. On 30 November 1786, after having de facto blocked capital executions (the last was in 1769), Leopold promulgated the reform of the penal code that abolished the death penalty and ordered the destruction of all the instruments for capital execution in his land. In 2000 Tuscany's regional authorities instituted an annual holiday on 30 November to commemorate the event. The event is also commemorated on this day by 300 cities around the world celebrating the Cities for Life Day.
During the last few years of his rule in Tuscany, Leopold had begun to be frightened by the increasing disorders in the German and Hungarian dominions of his family, which were the direct result of his brother's headlong methods. He and Joseph II were tenderly attached to one another and met frequently both before and after the death of their mother. The portrait by
Pompeo Batoni in which they appear together shows that they bore a strong personal resemblance to one another. But it may be said of Leopold, as of
Fontenelle, that his heart was made of brains. He knew that he must succeed his childless eldest brother in Austria, and he was unwilling to inherit his unpopularity. When, therefore, in
1789 Joseph, who knew himself to be dying, asked him to come to Vienna and become co-regent, Leopold coldly evaded the request.
He was still in Florence when Joseph II died at Vienna on
February 20 1790, and he did not leave his Italian capital until
March 3.
Holy Roman Emperor

memorial of coronation 1790
Leopold, during his government in Tuscany, had shown a speculative tendency to grant his subjects a constitution. When he succeeded to the Austrian lands, he began by making large concessions to the interests offended by his brother's innovations. He recognized the Estates of his different dominions as "the pillars of the monarchy," pacified the Hungarians, and divided the Belgian insurgents by concessions. When these failed to restore order, he marched troops into the country and re-established his own authority, and at the same time the historic franchises of the Flemings. Yet he did not surrender any part that could be retained of what Maria Theresa and Joseph had done to strengthen the hands of the state. He continued, for instance, to insist that no
papal bull could be published in his dominions without his consent (placetum regium).
If Leopold's reign as emperor and king of
Hungary and
Bohemia had been prolonged during years of peace, it is probable that he would have repeated his successes as a reforming ruler in Tuscany on a far larger scale. But he lived for barely two years, and during that period he was hard pressed by peril from west and east alike. The growing revolutionary disorders in
France endangered the life of his sister
Marie Antoinette of Austria, the queen of
Louis XVI, and also threatened his own dominions with the spread of a subversive agitation. His sister sent him passionate appeals for help, and he was pestered by the royalist emigrants, who were intriguing to bring about armed intervention in France.
From the east he was threatened by the aggressive ambition of
Catherine II of Russia and by the unscrupulous policy of
Prussia. Catherine would have been delighted to see Austria and Prussia embark on a crusade in the cause of kings against the
French Revolution. While they were busy beyond the
Rhine, she would have annexed what remained of
Poland and made conquests against the
Ottoman Empire. Leopold II had no difficulty in seeing through the rather transparent cunning of the Russian empress, and he refused to be misled.
To his sister, he gave good advice and promises of help if she and her husband could escape from
Paris. The emigrants who followed him pertinaciously were refused audience, or when they forced themselves on him, were peremptorily denied all help. Leopold was too purely a politician not to be secretly pleased at the destruction of the power of France and of her influence in Europe by her internal disorders. Within six weeks of his accession, he displayed his contempt for her weakness by practically tearing up the treaty of alliance made by Maria Theresa in
1756 and opening negotiations with
England to impose a check on Russia and Prussia.
He was able to put pressure on England by threatening to cede his part of the Low Countries to France. Then, when sure of English support, he was in a position to baffle the intrigues of Prussia. A personal appeal to
Frederick William II led to a conference between them at Reichenbach in July
1790, and to an arrangement which was in fact a defeat for Prussia: Leopold's coronation as king of Hungary on
November 11, 1790, preceded by a settlement with the diet in which he recognized the dominant position of the
Magyars. He had already made an eight months' truce with the Turks in September, which prepared the way for the termination of the war begun by Joseph II, the peace of
Sistova being signed in August
1791. The pacification of his eastern dominions left Leopold free to re-establish order in
Belgium and to confirm friendly relations with England and
Holland.
During 1791, the emperor continued to be increasingly preoccupied with the affairs of France. In January, he had to dismiss the Count of Artois, afterwards
Charles X, king of France, in a very peremptory way. His good sense was revolted by the folly of the French emigrants, and he did his utmost to avoid being entangled in the affairs of that country. The insults inflicted on Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, however, at the time of their attempted flight to
Varennes in June, stirred his indignation, and he made a general appeal to the sovereigns of Europe to take common measures in view of events which "immediately compromised the honour of all sovereigns, and the security of all governments." Yet he was most directly interested in the conference at Sistova, which in June led to a final peace with Turkey.
On August 25, he met the king of Prussia at
Pillnitz, near
Dresden, and they drew up a declaration of their readiness to intervene in France if and when their assistance was called for by the other powers. The declaration was a mere formality, for, as Leopold knew, neither Russia nor England was prepared to act, and he endeavoured to guard against the use which he foresaw the emigrants would endeavour to make of it. In face of the agitation caused by the Pillnitz declaration in France, the intrigues of the emigrants, and the attacks made by the French revolutionists on the rights of the German princes in
Alsace, Leopold continued to hope that intervention might not be required.

inscription of memorial
When Louis XVI swore to observe the constitution of September 1791, the emperor professed to think that a settlement had been reached in France. The attacks on the rights of the German princes on the left bank of the Rhine, and the increasing violence of the parties in Paris which were agitating to bring about war, soon showed, however, that this hope was vain. Leopold met the threatening language of the revolutionists with dignity and temper.
He died suddenly in Vienna, in March 1792.
Like his parents before him, Leopold had sixteen children, the eldest of his eight sons being his successor, the Emperor
Francis II. Some of his other sons were prominent personages in their day. Among them were:
Ferdinand III, Grand Duke of Tuscany; the
Archduke Charles of Austria, a celebrated soldier; the
Archduke Johann of Austria, also a soldier; the Archduke Joseph, Palatine of Hungary; and the Archduke Rainer, Viceroy of Lombardy-Venetia.
Ancestors
Issue
Children with his wife
Infanta Maria Luisa of Spain (also known as ''Maria Ludovica of Spain''):
★
Archduchess Maria Theresia of Austria, born
January 14,
1767, died
November 7,
1827 m:
1787,
Anton I of Saxony; had issue
★
Franz II, Holy Roman Emperor born,
February 12,
1768, died
March 2,
1835, m:
1788,
Duchess Elisabeth von Württemberg; had issue
m:
1790,
Maria Teresa, Princess of Bourbon; had issue
m:
1808,
Archduchess Marie Ludovika of Austria-Este; no issue
m:
1816,
Princess Charlotte of Bavaria; no issue
★
Ferdinand III, Grand Duke of Tuscany, born
May 6,
1769, died
Jun 18,
1824, m:
1790, Luisa Maria Amelia Teresa (1773-1802); had issue
m:
1821,
Princess Marie Ferdinanda von Sachsen; no issue
★ Archduchess Maria Anna of Austria born
Apr 22,
1770, died
Oct 1,
1809, Abbess in Theresian Convent, Prague, Czech Republic
★
Archduke Charles of Austria born
September 5,
1771, died
April 30,
1847, m:
1815,
Henrietta of Nassau-Weilburg; had issue
★
Archduke Alexander Leopold Johann Joseph of Austria born
Aug 14 1772, died
Jul 12 1795 (accidentally burned to death), unmarried
★
Archduke Albrecht Johann Joseph of Austria, born
Sep 19,
1773, died
Jul 22,
1774 (died at the age of 8 months)
★ Archduke Maximilian of Austria, born
Dec 23,
1774, died
Mar 10,
1778 (died at the age of 3)
★
Archduke Joseph of Austria, born
Mar 9,
1776, died
Jan 13,
1847, m:
1799, Grand Duchess
Alexandra Pavlovna of Russia; had issue
m:
1815,
Hermine Prinzessin von Anhalt-Bernburg-Schaumburg-Hoym; had issue
m:
1819,
Duchess Maria Dorothea von Württemberg; had issue
★
Archduchess Maria Clementina of Austria, born
1777, died
1801, m:
1797 the
Duke of Calabria, the later king
Francis I of the Two Sicilies; her only surviving issue daughter Caroline became
Duchess of Berry and mother of the pretender
Henri, comte de Chambord as well as Louise, mother of
Robert, Duke of Parma
★
Archduke Anton of Austria, born
1779, died
1835, unmarried, Grand Master of Teutonic Knights
★
Archduke Johann of Austria, born
1782, died
1859, m: morganatically. The counts of Meran descend from him
★
Archduke Rainer of Austria, born
September 30,
1783, died
January 16,
1853, m:
1820,
Princess Elisabeth of Savoy-Carignan, sister of king
Charles Albert of Sardinia; had issue
★
Archduke Louis of Austria, born
December 13,
1784, died
December 21,
1864, m: morganatically in France to
Adelaide Gueroust
★
Archduke Rudolph of Austria, born
Jan 8,
1788, died
Jul 24,
1831, unmarried, Archbishop of
Olmütz
References
★
External links
Names in other languages: German/Czech/Slovak/Croatian: ''Leopold II.'', Hungarian: ''II. Lipót''