Archduchess Walburga of Austria
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Archduchess Walburga of Austria | |
Walburga Habsburg Douglas |
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Born | October 05, 1958 (age 48) Schloss Berg, Luxembourg |
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Other names | Walburga Maria Franziska Helene Elisabeth |
Title | Princess Imperial and Archduchess of Austria, Princess Royal of Hungary and Bohemia, Countess Douglas |
Spouse | Count Archibald Douglas |
Children | Count Moritz Douglas |
Parents | Otto, Crown Prince of Austria and Princess Regina of Saxe-Meiningen |
Archduchess Walburga of Austria (Walburga Maria Franziska Helene Elisabeth von Habsburg-Lothringen) Archduchess and Princess Imperial of Austria, Princess Royal of Hungary and Bohemia, Countess Douglas, (5 October 1958 - ) in Schloss Berg, Luxemburg, the daughter of Otto, Crown Prince of Austria and Princess Regina of Saxe-Meiningen. She is a German-Swedish lawyer and politician and a member of the Swedish Parliament since 2006. In Swedish political discourse Walburga is known as Walburga Habsburg Douglas.
Walburga married the Swedish Count Archibald Douglas on 5 December 1992 in Budapest, Hungary. They have one son, Count Moritz Otto Wenzel Douglas (born 30 March 1994)
[edit] Professional career
After her Abitur graduation in 1977 in Tutzing, Bavaria, she went to law school in Salzburg.
From 1979 to 1992 she worked as an assistant at the European Parliament. In 1983 she studied at the National Journalism Centre in Washington, D.C. and worked at the office of Reader's Digest in the same city. She worked for the Ministry of Information of the Sultanate of Oman from 1985-1992, and in 2004 she became a member of the board of the Arab International Media Forum in London.
[edit] Political career
In 1973 she co-founded Paneuropa-Jugend Deutschland, and was its chairman in Bavaria, and vice chairman on the national level. In 1977 she founded Brüsewitz-Zentrum (Christlich-Paneuropäisches Studienwerk). From 1980 to 1988 she was assistant international Secretary General of the international Paneuropean Union, 1988 to 2004 she was its Secretary General and she is its executive vice chairman since 2004.
She was one of the organizers of the Paneuropa-Picknick at the Iron Curtain on the 19 August 1989, on the border between Hungary and Austria. At this occasion, the fence was opened for the first time, letting more than 660 Germans from the GDR escape from the east. This was the largest amount of escapers since the Berlin Wall was built and is seen by many as one of the main symbols of the fall of Eastern European Communism.
Since 2003 she is the chairlady of the local branch of the Swedish Moderate Party in Flen and on the board of the regional organisation of the party in Södermanland. She is a member of the board of the Jarl Hjalmarson Foundation since 2005, a foundation closely linked to the Moderate Party.
In 1999 and 2004 she ran for the European Parliament for the Moderate Party, in 2002 and 2006 she ran for the national parliament (riksdagen). She was elected, September 17, 2006 to the Swedish Parliament, in an election which showed the greatest support for the Moderate Party since 1928. Chairman of the Swedish Parliamentary delegation to the OSCE since 2006.
[edit] External links
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Monarchical Styles of Archduchess Walburga of Austria |
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Reference style | Her Imperial and Royal Highness |
Spoken style | Your Imperial and Royal Highness |
Alternative style | Madam |