It is unlikely that Maria Theresa had …

Years: 1780 - 1780
November
It is unlikely that Maria Theresa had ever completely recovered from the smallpox attack in 1767, as contemporary writers assert.

She has suffered from shortness of breath, fatigue, cough, distress, necrophobia, and insomnia.

She had later developed edema.

The empress had fallen ill on November 24, 1780, ostensibly of a chill.

Her physician Dr. Störk thought her condition serious.

By November 28, she asked for the last rites, and the next day, at about nine o'clock in the evening, she dies surrounded by her remaining children.

With her, the House of Habsburg dies out and is replaced by the House of Habsburg-Lorraine.

Her eldest son, already co-sovereign of the Habsburg dominions, succeeds her as Joseph II.

Her longtime rival Frederick II of Prussia, on hearing of her death, will say that she had honored her throne and her sex, and though he had fought against her in three wars, he never considered her his enemy.

The empress is buried in the Imperial Crypt in Vienna next to her husband in a coffin she had inscribed during her lifetime.
Maria Theresa and her husband are interred in the double tomb which she had inscribed as a widow. (Photo taken 28 February 2008  by Oliver Bruchez.)

Maria Theresa and her husband are interred in the double tomb which she had inscribed as a widow. (Photo taken 28 February 2008 by Oliver Bruchez.)

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