Countess Marie Larisch von Moennich


Countess Marie Louise Larisch von Moennich was
the niece and confidante of Empress Elisabeth of Austria. She was a go-between for her married cousin Crown Prince Rudolf and his mistress Baroness Mary Vetsera, a
friend of hers. A scandal known as the Mayerling Incident broke in 1889 upon the discovery of the bodies of the two lovers at Rudolf's hunting lodge at Mayerling, Austria.
With the revelation of her role in this the Countess was shunned in particular by the Empress and the rest of the Imperial Family. As a consequence she was also snubbed by society. Later in life she was nominally the author of a series of ghostwritten books about the Imperial household.

Biography

The Countess was born Marie Louise Elizabeth Mendel on 24 February 1858 in Augsburg, Bavaria, the illegitimate daughter of actress Henriette Mendel, Baroness von Wallersee. Her father, Ludwig Wilhelm, Duke in Bavaria was the eldest son of Duke Maximilian Joseph in Bavaria and Princess Ludovika of Bavaria and had the title of Duke in Bavaria. He was properly addressed as "His Royal Highness," as a member of the cadet branch of the House of Wittelsbach in Bavaria. Ludwig Wilhelm was the first cousin of King Maximilian II of Bavaria and also of Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria whose mother, Princess Sophie of Bavaria, was a daughter of Maximilian I. One of Ludwig Wilhelm's younger sisters, Elisabeth, married Emperor Franz Joseph and another, Maria Sophie, married Francis II of the Two Sicilies just before he became king. Yet her father renounced, on 9 March 1859, his rights as firstborn son, and Henriette Mendel was created Baroness of Wallersee on 19 May 1859 in preparation for their morganatic marriage on 28 May 1859 in Augsburg. From 28 May 1859, Marie was thus a Baroness of Wallersee.
Marie became the confidante of her aunt, the Empress Elisabeth of Austria, being selected at least partly because of her skills on horseback. On 20 October 1877 at Jagdschloß Gödöllő in Hungary she married Count Georg Larisch of Moennich, Baron of Ellgoth and Karwin. The marriage had been arranged by the Empress. Marie had five children during this marriage, though only the first two were indisputably fathered by her husband: their first-born was oceanographer Franz-Joseph Ludwig Georg Maria, Count Larisch of Moennich, Baron of Ellgoth and Karwin, followed by Marie Valerie, Marie Henriette, Georg, and Friedrich Karl.
As the countess always needed more money than Georg Larisch gave her, her cousin Crown Prince Rudolf paid bills for her - so she depended on his wishes. Her relationship with the imperial family was shattered when Crown Prince Rudolf shot his mistress Baroness Mary Vetsera and committed suicide on 30 January 1889 - a scandal known as the Mayerling Incident. It was subsequently revealed that Marie Larisch had acted as go-between for Rudolph and Marie Vetsera. Her aunt, Empress Elisabeth, gave her no chance for explanation or rehabilitation. Following the imperial court's lead, the nobility wanted no further contact with Marie, and she moved to Bavaria.
After divorcing Count Larisch on 3 December 1896 she married the musician Otto Brucks in Munich on 15 May 1897. They had one child, Otto. But her new husband, previously a famous opera singer, was no longer offered engagements because of his association with "that Countess Larisch" and he became dependent on alcohol. From 1898 Marie began to write about her time with the Empress and other Imperial and Royal relatives. The Imperial house paid her a great deal of "hush money" not to publish her memoirs. In 1906 her husband became director of the theatre of Metz. Marie Louise always wanted to publish her rehabilitation, but was betrayed by journalists and editors. In 1913 she published her memoirs, My Past, despite her contract with the Imperial house. She later published a series of other ghost-written works which are factually undependable.
During World War I she worked at the front as a nurse. In 1921 she portrayed herself in a silent film about the Empress Elisabeth. In 1924 in New York an article was published claiming that she would marry anybody who would pay her and her son the fare to America. On 2 September 1924 in Elizabeth, New Jersey, she married naturopath William H. Meyers. They lived in Florida; he mistreated her and in 1926 she fled to New Jersey, to work as a housemaid. She returned to Germany in 1929.
Marie died very poor in 1940 in a nursing home at Augsburg and was buried in the Ostfriedhof in Munich.
Marie met and conversed with the poet T. S. Eliot, and part of their conversation found its way into his epochal poem The Waste Land.

Issue

Works