Francis Alexander, Prince of Nassau-Hadamar


Francis Alexander von Nassau-Hadamar was the last prince of Nassau-Hadamar.

Life

Francis Alexander was the son of prince Maurice Henry of Nassau-Hadamar and his second wife Maria Leopoldine of Nassau-Siegen. At the age of 6 years he inherited of Nassau-Hadamar. His guardian and ruler of Nassau-Hadamar during his youth was his uncle Francis Bernard. In 1710, Francis Alexander was appointed Judge of the Reichskammergericht in Wetzlar. He was sworn in on 28 January 1711.
He died as a result of a fall from his horse near the Limburg Gate in Hadamar on 27 May 1711. He was buried in the princely crypt in the Franciscan church at the Mönchsberg in Hadamar, wearing the robe of a Reichskammergericht judge. His heart was placed in the St. Mary chapel on the Herzenberg, like the heart of his uncle Francis Bernard 16 years earlier.
A memorial cross was erected at the site of the fatal accident. It bears the inscription:
VERGES ICH DEIN - VERGIS O GOTT MEIN
F.A.F.Z.N.H. ANNO 1711 D. 26. MAY.
The cross was later moved by about 300 meters and is now located on the southeastern edge of Hadamar, but still on the old road connecting Hadamar and Limburg an der Lahn.

Marriage and issue

On 18 October 1695 in Lovosice, Francis Alexander married Elizabeth Catherine Felicitas, the daughter of William "the Elder" of Hesse-Rheinfels-Rotenburg. The couple had the following children:
  1. Francisca Maria Anna Wilhelmina
  2. Elisabeth, a nun at Thorn and Essen
  3. Joseph Hugo
  4. Charlotte Wilhelmine Amalie Alexandrina, married on 29 September 1721 Jean Philippe Eugène de Mérode. A descendant from this marriage is Prince Albert-Henri de Merode, who was born in Brussels on 8 September 1975 and who married Countess Marie Christine of Soden-Frauenhofen on 20 July 2003 in Alt-Fraunhofen.
The spouses separated in 1705. Ernestine, the sister of the Princess, many have caused increasing tensions between the couple. Even after Ernestine had entered the convent at Altenberg, near Wetzlar, and despite mediations efforts by Archbishop John VIII of Trier and Emperor Joseph I, Francis Alexander and his wife could not reconcile their differences. From 1705, they lived separately: Francis Alexander and the children resided at Hadamar Castle, his wife resided at Mengerskirchen Castle. Another mediation attempt in on 23 October 1708 in Hadamar also failed. Nevertheless, the death of their son, Hereditary Prince Joseph Hugo, brought them closer together.
When Francis Alexander died in 1711, he had no male heir. After lengthy negotiations, Nassau-Hadamar was divided between the rulers of the remaining Ottonian lines: Nassau-Dietz, Nassau-Dillenburg, the Catholic line in Nassau-Siegen and the Calvinist line in Nassau-Siegen. The town of Hadamar was in the part that was given to the Catholic line.
At the front of the princely crypt of the Nassau-Hadamar line under the Franciscan church on Mount St. Giles, there is a painting of the prince, kneeling as he prays with his family to the crucified Jesus. Red crosses are painted above the heads of John Alexander, Joseph Hugo and Francisca Wilhelmina, who were already deceased when the painting was created. Francis Alexander is shown wearing a metal armour and beside him is a gleaming crown, decorated with pearls and a golden cross.
Francis Alexander's widow, Elizabeth Catherine Felicitas, remarried on 6 September 1727 in Nuremberg to Count Anton Ferdinand of Attems, who was also a widower and was almost 14 years younger than her. He had lived at Sterneck Castle with his first wife, Baroness Marie Auguste of Ow-Hirrlingen. Elizabeth Catherine Felicitas died on 15 May 1739, at the age of 62, in Dietz on the Lahn.

Buildings

A number of impressive building projects were undertaken during Francis Alexander's reign. The stucco decoration of Hadamar Castle is noteworthy, as are three chapels: