Otto, known as the Merry (German: der Fröhliche; 23 July 1301 – 17 February 1339), was Duke of Austria and Styria from 1330, as well as Duke of Carinthia from 1335 until his death. A member of the House of Habsburg, he ruled jointly with his elder brother Duke Albert II.

Otto the Merry
Portrait by Anton Boys, c. 1580
Duke of Austria and Styria (jointly with Albert II)
Reign1330–1339
PredecessorFrederick the Fair
SuccessorAlbert II (alone)
Duke of Carinthia (jointly with Albert II)
Reign1335–1339
PredecessorHenry of Bohemia
SuccessorAlbert II (alone)
Born23 July 1301
Vienna, Austria
Died17 February 1339
Neuberg Abbey, Duchy of Styria
SpousesElizabeth of Bavaria
Anne of Bohemia
IssueFrederick II, Duke of Austria
Leopold II, Duke of Austria
HouseHabsburg
FatherAlbert I of Germany
MotherElisabeth of Carinthia

Biography

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Otto was born in the Austrian capital, Vienna, the youngest son of King Albert I of Germany and Elizabeth of Carinthia, a member of the House of Gorizia-Tyrol (Meinhardiner). His elder brothers were Rudolf III, who became King of Bohemia in 1306, Frederick the Fair, elected King of the Romans in opposition to Louis the Bavarian in 1314, the Austrian dukes Leopold I and Albert II, as well as Henry the Friendly.

After the murder of King Albert I in 1308, the Habsburgs lost out in the struggle for the German throne, when Frederick the Fair was defeated by his Wittelsbach rival Louis in the 1322 Battle of Mühldorf. In the course of a rapprochement of both dynasties, Otto married Elizabeth of Wittelsbach, a daughter of Duke Stephen I of Bavaria. In 1327 he founded Neuberg Abbey in Styria, on the occasion of the birth of his first son Frederick II, and the Chapel of Saint George in the Augustinian Church in Vienna. When his wife Elizabeth died in 1330, she was buried at the Neuberg Abbey church.

From 1329 onwards, Otto administered the original Habsburg possessions in Swabia (Further Austria). In 1330, he and his brother Albert II were enfeoffed with the Austrian duchy. Louis IV, Holy Roman Emperor since 1328, also vested Otto with the title of an Imperial vicar. In February he developed close ties with the mighty House of Luxembourg by secondly marrying Anna of Bohemia, daughter of King John the Blind and sister of future emperor Charles IV, in the Moravian royal city of Znojmo.

Two months later, Otto's maternal uncle, the Meinhardiner duke Henry of Carinthia, died without male heirs, whereupon Emperor Louis IV on 2 May 1335 ceded the Duchy of Carinthia, the adjacent March of Carniola and the southern part of the Tyrol to Otto and Albert as Imperial fiefs in Linz. Otto was enthroned as duke in accordance with the archaic Carantanian rite on the Zollfeld plain, and, from that time onwards, took care of Carinthia rather than of the Austrian duchy. In 1337 he founded the knightly order Societas Templois for the crusade against the pagan Prussian and Lithuanian tribes. His nickname "the Merry" refers to the festive atmosphere at his court.

Otto died at Neuberg Abbey at the age of 37. His sons and titular successors Frederick II and Leopold II died shortly afterwards in 1344 (presumably poisoned), and the line became extinct.

Marriages and children

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Duke Otto and his two sons, Neuberg Abbey

On 15 May 1325, Otto married his first wife Elizabeth of Bavaria. She was a daughter of Stephen I, Duke of Bavaria and Jutta of Schweidnitz. They had two children:

Elizabeth of Bavaria died on 25 March 1330. Otto remained a widower for almost five years. On 16 February 1335, Otto married his second wife Anna of Luxembourg, daughter of King John of Bohemia and his first wife Elizabeth, a member of the Přemyslid dynasty. They had no children. Anna died on 3 September 1338.

Otto also had four illegitimate sons who appear in genealogies. The identities of their mother or mothers and their later fates are unknown:

  • Otto
  • Leopold
  • Johann
  • Leopold

Ancestry

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Male-line family tree

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Otto, Duke of Austria
Born: 23 July 1301 Died: 17 February 1339
Preceded by Duke of Austria and Styria
Count of Habsburg
jointly with Albert II/VI

1330–1339
Succeeded by
Albert II/VI (alone)
Preceded by Duke of Carinthia
jointly with Albert II

1335–1339