Franz Joseph in c. 1905 Emperor of Austria, King of Hungary |
The arbitrary and unyielding Francis Joseph, emperor of
Austria and king of Hungary, who had been reproved in the Kitáb-i-Aqdas, for
having neglected his manifest duty to inquire about Bahá’u’lláh during his
pilgrimage to the Holy Land, was so engulfed by misfortunes and tragedies that
his reign came to be regarded as one unsurpassed by any other reign in the
calamities it inflicted upon the nation. His brother, Maximilian, was put to
death in Mexico; the Crown Prince Rudolph perished in ignominious
circumstances; the Empress was assassinated; Archduke Francis Ferdinand and his
wife were murdered in Serajevo; the “ramshackle empire” itself disintegrated,
was carved up, and a shrunken republic was set up on the ruins of a vanished
Holy Roman Empire—a republic which, after a brief and precarious existence, was
blotted out from the political map of Europe.
- Shoghi Effendi (‘God Passes By’)