Ferdinand Maria | |||||
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Ferdinand Maria by Paul Mignard
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Elector of Bavaria | |||||
Reign | 27 September 1651 – 26 May 1679 | ||||
Predecessor | Maximilian I | ||||
Successor | Maximilian II Emanuel | ||||
Born |
Schleissheim Palace, Bavaria |
31 October 1636||||
Died | 26 May 1679 Schleissheim Palace, Bavaria |
(aged 42)||||
Burial | June 1679 Theatiner Church, Bavaria |
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Spouse | Henriette Adelaide of Savoy | ||||
Issue |
Maria Anna Victoria, Dauphine of France Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria Joseph Clemens, Archbishop of Cologne Violante Beatrice, Grand Princess of Tuscany |
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House | House of Wittelsbach | ||||
Father | Maximilian I, Elector of Bavaria | ||||
Mother | Maria Anna of Austria |
Full name | |
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Ferdinand Maria |
Ferdinand Maria, Elector of Bavaria (31 October 1636 – 26 May 1679) was a Wittelsbach ruler of Bavaria and an elector (Kurfürst) of the Holy Roman Empire from 1651 to 1679.
He was born in Munich. He was the eldest son of Maximilian I, Elector of Bavaria - whom he succeeded, and his second wife Maria Anna of Austria, daughter of the emperor Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor. Born during the reign of his father, he was known as the Electoral Prince from birth. Through his mother, he was a first cousin of Queen Mariana of Spain as well as the Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor.
On 8 December 1650 he married Henriette Adelaide of Savoy, daughter of Victor Amadeus I of Savoy and Christine Marie of France. The couple had seven children, two of which would have progeny.
Still a minor he succeeded his father in 1651, his mother and his uncle Albert VI of Bavaria served as regents of Bavaria for three years.
Ferdinand Maria was crowned on 31 October 1654. His absolutistic style of leadership became a benchmark for the rest of Germany. Though Ferdinand Maria allied with France he abstained the imperial crown in 1657 after the death of his uncle Ferdinand III, Holy Roman Emperor to avoid a conflict with the House of Habsburg. Ferdinand Maria supported the wars of the Habsburg against the Ottoman Empire with Bavarian auxiliary forces (1662–1664). During the Franco-Dutch War since 1672 Bavaria was officially neutral. The marriage of his eldest daughter Maria Anna Victoria and her cousin le Grand Dauphin in 1680 was the outcome of the Bavarian alliance with France.