Silver coin, three Kruezers of Ferdinand Charles, dated 1649. The obverse Latin inscription reads, obverse: FERDIN[ANDUS] CAROL[US] D[EI] G[RATIA] ARCHID[UX] AV[STRIAE], reverse: DVX BVRGVND[IAE] COM[ES] TYROLIS. In English: Ferdinand Charles, by the Grace of God Archduke of Austria, Duke of Burgundy and Count of Tyrol.
As the son of Archduke Leopold V and Claudia de' Medici, he took over his mother's governatorial duties when he came of age in 1646. To finance his extravagant living style, he sold goods and entitlements. For example, he wasted the exorbitant sum which France had to pay to the Tyrolean Habsburgs for the cession of their fiefs west of the Rhine (Alsace, Sundgau and Breisach). He also fixed the border to Graubünden in 1652.
Ferdinand Charles was an absolutist ruler, did not call any diet after 1648 and had his chancellorWilhelm Biener executed illegally in 1651 after a secret trial. On the other hand, he was a lover of music: Italian opera was performed in his court.
Ancestors
Archduke Ferdinand Charles of Austria's ancestors in three generations