Júlia Hunyady de Kéthely Јулија Хуњади де Кетељ |
|
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Princess consort of Serbia | |
Tenure | 26 September 1860 – 10 June 1868 |
Born |
Vienna, Austrian Empire |
26 August 1831
Died | 19 February 1919 Vienna, German Austria |
(aged 87)
Spouse | Mihailo Obrenović III, Prince of Serbia |
House |
House of Obrenović Hunyady family |
Father | Count Ferenc Hunyady de Kéthely |
Mother | Countess Júlia Zichy de Zich et Vásonkeő |
Religion | Roman Catholic |
Countess Júlia Hunyady de Kéthely (Serbian: Јулија Хуњади де Кетељ; 26 August 1831 – 19 February 1919), was a Hungarian noblewoman and the Princess consort of Serbia as the wife of Mihailo Obrenović III. She remained a widow for seven and a half years after his assassination in 1868, until January 1876 when she married her lover, Duke Karl von Arenberg, Prince von Recklinghausen.
Júlia was born in Vienna into an old, noble Hungarian family, the only daughter of Count Ferenc Hunyady de Kéthely and Countess Júlia Zichy de Zich et Vásonkeő. She had three brothers, László, Kálmán and Vilmos. On 1 August 1853, less than a month before her 22nd birthday, she married her first husband Mihailo Obrenović, the deposed ruler of Serbia.
On 26 September 1860, after the death of his father Miloš Obrenović, he once again assumed power as the ruler of Serbia, making Julia, the Princess consort. She was not popular with the Serbs as they mistrusted her Catholic religion and Hungarian background. Prince Mihailo was not a faithful husband, and he had at least one illegitimate son. His last mistress was Katarina Konstantinović, the young, pretty daughter of his first cousin, Princess Anka Obrenović, both of whom resided at the royal court at Mihailo's request. Katarina had even entertained hopes of eventually becoming Mihailo's wife on account of Julia's inability to bear the Prince a child, and Mihailo was considering a divorce in spite of the national outrage such a move would invariably cause. In 1867, the esteemed Prime Minister Ilija Garasanin was dismissed from his post for having voiced his opposition to Mihailo's proposed divorce and marriage to Katarina. Katarina openly despised Princess Júlia and made her life miserable by flaunting her affair with Mihailo. Júlia retaliated by conducting her own love affair with Duke Karl von Arenberg. Duke Karl von Arenberg was second cousin once removed of the Empress Elisabeth of Austria, known as Sissi.