Maria Josepha was born inVienna, an Archduchess of Austria, the eldest child and eldest daughter ofJoseph I, Holy Roman Emperor and his wife,Princess Wilhelmina Amalia of Brunswick-Lüneburg. She was named Josepha in honor of her father. During the times of her childhood, theHouse of Habsburg had no male heirs, as her only brother, Archduke Leopold Joseph of Austria (1700-1701) died in infancy. During the reign of her grandfather, Maria Josepha's father and uncle signed theMutual Pact of Succession of 1703, which was issued by her grandfather, EmperorLeopold I, and effectively made Maria Josepha theheiress presumptive to her uncle, EmperorCharles VI.[2] However, Charles VI'sPragmatic Sanction of 1713 annulled the earlier agreement and made his eldest daughterMaria Theresa his successor instead of eldest his niece, Maria Josepha.
A marriage between Maria Josepha andFrederick Augustus II,Elector of Saxony (1696–1763) had been suggested by Frederick's father,August II the Strong, since 1704. The fact that Maria Josepha was not allowed to marry a non-Catholic, however, prevented the marriage. When Augustus converted to Catholicism in 1712, the negotiations became serious.
Emperor Charles VI forbade Maria Josepha and her sister from marrying until they renounced their positions in the line of succession, securing the succession for Charles's future daughter Maria Theresa. Maria Josepha renounced her claim on 10 August 1719. Ten days later, Maria Josepha and Frederick Augustus married. Through this marriage between the Houses ofWettin andHabsburg, Frederick Augustus II's father hoped to placeSaxony in a better position should there arise a war of succession to the Austrian territories.[3] The couple's eldest surviving son,Frederick Christian, eventually succeeded his father asElector of Saxony. In Saxony, the couple lived atDresden Castle. The marriage has been described as a happy one, and Augustus was apparently never unfaithful.
In 1733, Frederick Augustus was elected King and Grand Duke of thePolish–Lithuanian Commonwealth asAugust III the Saxon.[3] Maria Josepha was crowned on 17 January 1734. Queen Maria Josepha was described as ambitious, intelligent and religious. She founded many churches and convents and gave her strong support to the Polish-LithuanianJesuits.
As queen of Poland, grand duchess of Lithuania and electress of Saxony, she divided her time between the two nations. Though Saxony was her main residence, she enjoyed her stays in Poland-Lithuania because it was a Catholic nation where she could exercise her faith openly. Between November 1734 to February 1736, she and Frederick Augustus made their longest visit to Poland-Lithuania, prolonged because of theWar of the Polish Succession. They continued to make frequent trips, lasting between five and eight months each, plus several shorter trips lasting a couple of months less. She learned to speak Polish and was often present during the assemblies of theSejm of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. During her absences from home, she frequently corresponded with her children in French, having a somewhat closer relationship to them than usual for her class. She gave them pet names and encouraged them to write to her in an informal way.[4] She shared an interest in music, art and hunting with her spouse, and they usually spent their autumns at the Palace ofHubertusburg for the hunting season.
She was devoted to Catholicism and especially venerated SaintFrancis Xavier and was actively involved in the building of the CatholicHofkirche in Dresden.[4] Her personal confessor, the Jesuit Fr. Anton Hermann, criticized her for being too religious from what was proper for someone not a Catholic religious order member. She attended mass twice and eventually four times a day and kept more devotions than was normal for a nun or a monk. Fr. Anton Hermann eventually lectured her that she was more fervent than could be regarded as modest for a lay person.[4] Maria Josepha did not persecute non-Catholics, and once stressed to the heir to the throne that he should not persecute them but allow them all freedom while being guided by the Catholic faith. She also gave alms to both Catholic and Protestant poor.[4] Despite her personal strict moral code, she was reportedly not a prude and got along well with her spouse's illegitimate half-siblings.[4]
Queen Maria Josepha was politically active and, though not formally proclaimed regent during the absence of her spouse, she informally acted as his representative.[4] It was known and acknowledged by the court that she participated in the affairs of state, and the ministers and ambassadors duly reported to her.[4] She also managed a large diplomatic correspondence.[4] She was rivalled in her influence over her spouse byHeinrich von Brühl. Maria Josepha was reportedly not on good terms with her eldest son Frederick Christian. She wished for her younger sonFrancis Xavier to be elected king of Poland and grand duke of Lithuania rather than having Frederick Christian succeed his father on both thrones, and she prevented Frederick Christian and his spouse from visiting Poland-Lithuania, thus preventing them from making connections there. She undermined any attempts of Frederick Christian to found a power base of his own before the death of his father, and among other things prevented a meeting between him and his spouse with Empress Maria Theresa of Austria in 1754.[4]
During theWar of the Austrian Succession in 1740, she claimed the throne on behalf of her spouse. She relinquished her claim in favor of her sister, Maria Amalia's spouse, and in 1742, made an alliance with Austria.
Queen Maria Josepha wearing Polishjupeczka fur garment (byPietro Rotari, 1755
During theSeven Years' War, Maria Josepha stayed behind in Dresden with her son, Frederick Christian and his spouse Maria Antonia, after her husband left on 20 October 1756. She remained in Dresden when the city was taken by thePrussian Army.[5] She, as well as Frederick Christian and his spouse Maria Antonia, were all placed under house arrest at the palace of Dresden guarded by a Prussian commandant.[4]
Maria Josepha was banned from writing to her sons, but did engage in correspondence with invisible ink and use her net of correspondents to help her son and daughter-in-law encourage resistance in Saxony against the invading Prussians. Despite several restrictions, she managed to channel secret information about Saxon Field MarshalMaximilian Ulysses Browne, besieged by Frederick the Great atStruppen.[4] On 4 April 1757, her Mistress of the Chamber, Countess Esther Anna Regina vonOgilvy, was arrested. Her last letter of 6 September was sent to the Austrian empress through her exiled son, in which she also states that this would be her last, as she was too heavily guarded.[4]
On 17 November 1757, Maria Josepha died in Dresden of astroke and was buried in theWettin vault of theKatholische Hofkirche ("Catholic Court Church") in Dresden.[6]
^"Under thePactum Mutuae Successionis of 1703 (purely a family agreement) Charles VI had succeeded before his nieces. His son, if he had one, would follow him, but if he died childless, or left only daughters, Joseph's daughters would succeed him." (Potter, p. 393).
^abcdefghijklHelen, Watanabe-O'Kelly (2004). "Religion and the Consort: Two Electresses of Saxony and Queens of Poland (1697–1757)". In Campbell Orr, Clarissa (ed.).Queenship in Europe 1660–1815: The Role of the Consort. Cambridge University Press. pp. 252–275.ISBN0-521-81422-7.
Potter, George R.The New Cambridge Modern History.
Helen, Watanabe-O'Kelly (2004). "Religion and the Consort: Two Electresses of Saxony and Queens of Poland (1697–1757)". In Campbell Orr, Clarissa (ed.).Queenship in Europe 1660–1815: The Role of the Consort. Cambridge University Press. pp. 252–275.ISBN0-521-81422-7.
Generations are numbered by male-line descent fromFrederick III, Holy Roman Emperor. Later generations are included although Austrian titles of nobility were abolished and outlawed in 1919.