Maria Theresa
Austria, France & Russia

Maria Theresa

Empress of Austria / Architect of the Grand Coalition

Born: May 13, 1717 · Vienna, Austria
Died: November 29, 1780 · Vienna, Austria
Education: Unusually thorough for a woman of her era: Latin, history, law; but no military training — she was not expected to rule
Pre-war: Archduchess of Austria; became empress in 1740 at age 23 upon her father's death, immediately facing Frederick's invasion of Silesia with an empty treasury and a demoralized army
"I will die an empress but not a coward."

Biography

The most formidable opponent Frederick the Great ever faced — not on the battlefield, but in the diplomatic arena. Maria Theresa engineered the Diplomatic Revolution of 1756, inverting Europe's alliance system to unite Austria, France, and Russia against Prussia. She waged war to reclaim Silesia for sixteen years, and though she ultimately failed, her reforms modernized Austria and her determined resistance preserved the Habsburg Empire.

Did you know?

Maria Theresa bore sixteen children while personally directing the war effort — she was pregnant during several of the war's critical campaigns. She reportedly wept openly at the Habsburg defeat at Leuthen but refused to consider peace. She despised her French allies ('I am an Austrian princess, not a French one') and loathed the Marquise de Pompadour, calling her 'Madame Whore' in her correspondence, even while formally addressing her letters to 'My dear Cousin' as diplomatic protocol required.

Key Battles

Battle of Leuthen

Prussia & Great Britain victory

December 5, 1757 · 24,000 total casualties

Considered by Napoleon, Wellington, and military historians to be one of the greatest tactical victories in the history of warfare. Frederick defeated an army nearly twice his size using maneuver so precise it seemed impossible. The battle preserved Prussian control of Silesia and demonstrated that Frederick's army was something categorically different from any other force in Europe. After Leuthen, his troops spontaneously began singing a Lutheran hymn as they marched through the dusk — the 'Leuthen Chorale.'

Battle of Kunersdorf

Austria, France & Russia victory

August 12, 1759 · 43,000 total casualties

The most catastrophic Prussian defeat of the war — and the moment that should have ended it. Only the mutual distrust between Russian General Saltykov and Austrian Field Marshal Daun prevented them from pursuing Frederick and finishing Prussia. They failed to advance on Berlin. Frederick called this delay a miracle and recovered within weeks, but Prussia's manpower reserve was nearly exhausted. The war could only continue because Russia's Empress Elizabeth fell mortally ill and the miracle of the House of Brandenburg awaited.

Battle of Torgau

Prussia & Great Britain victory

November 3, 1760 · 40,000 total casualties

Torgau demonstrated both Prussian resilience and the war's accelerating attrition. Frederick won the field but could not exploit the victory — his army was bleeding out. Prussia had entered the war with one of the finest armies in Europe; by 1760 it was being rebuilt with boys and older men conscripted from conquered Saxony. Frederick knew the war could not be sustained much longer. The salvation he needed came from St. Petersburg, not the battlefield.

Life Journey

Timeline

May 13, 1717

🌅 Birth

Born in Vienna, Habsburg Palace

October 20, 1740

📍 Posting

Becomes empress at 23 upon her father Charles VI's death; Frederick invades immediately

January 1756

📍 Posting

Orchestrates the Diplomatic Revolution — signs Treaty of Versailles with France, reversing 250 years of rivalry

December 5, 1757

⚔️ Battle

Austrian army annihilated at Leuthen; Maria Theresa refuses peace

August 12, 1759

⚔️ Battle

Kunersdorf — Austria and Russia crush Frederick; closest approach to total victory

February 15, 1763

📍 Posting

Treaty of Hubertusburg — Silesia remains Prussian; Maria Theresa accepts bitter peace

November 29, 1780

✝️ Death

Dies in Vienna, aged 63, after 40 years of rule