Abstract
This painting shows Maria Theresa of Austria (r. 1740-80), her
husband, Francis Stephan of Lorraine (Francis I, r. 1745-65), and Crown
Prince Joseph (subsequently, Joseph II, r. 1765-90). Francis Stephan had
relinquished his claim to the Duchy of Lorraine in 1735, eventually
acquiring the Grand Duchy of Tuscany (1737) instead. In 1736, he married
Maria Theresa, Emperor Charles VI’s eldest daughter and female heir. He
thus became entangled in the Habsburgs’ struggle to retain control over
their Austrian hereditary lands as well as
de facto imperial succession, despite
the extinction of the Habsburg male line. Maria Theresa and the Viennese
government presented Francis Stephen as candidate for the emperorship in
1742, but competing claims by the electors of Saxony and Bavaria
prevented him from acquiring the imperial crown at that time. In 1745,
the death of his Bavarian rival, Charles VII, secured him the
emperorship, de jure – and made Maria
Theresa empress, de facto. As
co-regent, Francis exercised little political influence. His marriage
proved a happy one, however.