THE LAND OF QUEEN ELISABETH - Part 1
Káli-Rozmis Barbara 2015.12.06. 13:06
THE LAND OF QUEEN ELISABETH - Part 1
“Nothing distresses me here. It is like living in a village. I can walk, I can go for a ride alone!”
Gödöllő Hills had been a hunting ground since the Middle Ages before Gödöllő became a royal estate. Sisi was particularly fond of the English style hunts, she even had private hounds. On the hunts and greyhound races the top members of the Hungarian aristocracy were also involved. When the weather was bad and cold, the event took place in the riding hall, of course, with the participation of the Queen, who was considered to be one of the greatest riders.
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THE LAND OF QUEEN ELISABETH
“Nothing distresses me here. It is like living in a village. I can walk, I can go for a ride alone!”
The Queen’s court in Gödöllő was much less informal and more intimate than in Vienna. She could host the people she would not have had the opportunity to see in Vienna.
She often invited the equestriennes of the Renz Circus, and asked them to teach her circus stunts. She even had a riding hall built in order to create a place to exercise and practice the stunts. Needless to say that the Viennese court was startled by all these.
Gödöllő Hills had been a hunting ground since the Middle Ages before Gödöllő became a royal estate. Sisi was particularly fond of the English style hunts, she even had private hounds. On the hunts and greyhound races the top members of the Hungarian aristocracy were also involved. When the weather was bad and cold, the event took place in the riding hall, of course, with the participation of the Queen, who was considered to be one of the greatest riders. (See the Queen's slender figure in black in the middle of the painting on the right.)
Sisi was an excellent rider, and she could enjoy this passion in the surrounding forest. She kept 34 riding horses and 36 carriage horses on the estate. She made Gödöllő be the centre of horse shows and English style hunts. In addition to the hunts, agar and horse races were also held here. In 1860s and 1870s Gödöllő became the Hungarian centre of the equestrian sports.
Gödöllő was Elisabeth’s land. Her laws ruled here, which were unrelated to rank and protocol. Guests were not chosen according to their nobility but (also) according to their riding skills. Elisabeth gathered the best riders of Austria-Hungary around herself.
The atmosphere of Gödöllő court resembled to that of Possenhofen one, where Elisabeth spent her rather happy childhood. The atmosphere was very intimate in the Hungarian estate, Franz Joseph, who came from a rigid and ritual-lover family due to his upbringing, was not used to it. In this atmosphere the spouses got closer to each other because they could spend time together freely on their common passions: love of nature, horse riding and hunting.
Sisi wrote her mother that she felt free in Gödöllő because there were no relatives (she must have meant her Imperial family and not the Bavarian one), nobody teased her, however, in Vienna it was on the contrary - and continued: “Nothing distresses me here. It is like living in a village. I can walk, I can go for a ride alone!”
It is well known that Elisabeth could bear the representation better in Budapest than in Vienna. However, Brigitte Hamann notes that the continuous public appearances were demanding to the Queen in Hungary too. She also had Psychosomatic symptoms like crying fit, cough and weakness when she had to represent much. It also happened that she could not leave her own rooms in the Royal Palace of Buda for eight days, so she could not appear at the prom although many Hungarians travelled to the capital from the countryside in order to see their stunningly beautiful Queen. (Hamann, 219)
Coronation and the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867
On the occasion of the coronation in 1867 the Hungarian state bought the formal Grassalkovich Palace of Gödöllő for the royal family. The Hungarians got to know that Elisabeth had seen that earlier and asked her husband to buy that for her. However, the Emperor refused to do so (although he was extremely economical, he usually financed all the things her wife wanted) due to financial reasons - referred to the recent war (Austro-Prussian war): "You can visit the wounded soldiers in Gödöllő if you wish, but do not look at it as if we wanted to buy it, because I do not have any money now. In these hard times we must economise. The Prussians have caused terrible damage to our family estates, too. It will take years to recover. (...) Almost half of the horses must be sold and we will be forced to live very modestly" , he wrote to his wife in the August of 1866.
Learn more about it: Royal Palace of Gödöllő:
So choosing and buying this palace and its estate was a gesture from the Hungarians towards their beloved Queen. The royal couple did not accept this generous gift, they only used the mansion and estate, so formally it was still owned by the Hungarian state.
This is how the complex became the residence of the royal family from 1867. The court stayed here mainly in spring and autumn. The autumn stays often took several month later, until New Year’s Day. Elisabeth often celebrated her ”name day” (19 November), her birthday (24 December), which was at Christmas in Gödöllő. Her “name day” was a celebration for the whole village. The locals saluted to their beloved Queen with serenade and torchlight procession. At Christmas and New Year’s Eve the royal couple supported the poor with donation of money, clothes and toys. (Royal couple with the crown prince on the right.)
Barbara Káli-Rozmis
To be continued - Click here:
Reconstructions and alternations for the comfort of the royal family
To see more pictures of Gödöllő or Sisi on horseback, please, visit:
Sisi on horseback: https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.903256543049514.1073741829.880851231956712&type=3
Royal Palace of Gödöllő: https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.910167595691742.1073741837.880851231956712&type=3
Elisabeth in Hungarian dress: https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.906643799377455.1073741835.880851231956712&type=3
Source:
Brigitte Hamann: Erzsébet királyné. Európa Könyvkiadó, 2012
Kovács Éva Erzsébet királyné Gödöllőn. Erzsébet, a magyarok királynéja. Rubicon, Budapest, 2001
Varga Kálmán: A Gödöllői Kastély évszázadai. Műemlékek Állami Gondoksága, Budapest, 2003
Gödöllői kalauz. Városi Múzeum, Gödöllő, 1999
Gödöllői Királyi Kastély. Tájak-Korok-Múzeumok Kiskönyvtára 510. Szám. 1997
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