Louisa Treniotis: Difference between revisions

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The public announcement of her birth was received with joy throughout the country: despite still suffering from the consequences of the [[Great Collapse]], Adalbert XX remained a popular figure thanks of his steadfast support of the [[Sunrosian Monarchy|Constitutional Charter]]. In liberal and social circles, the news also brought relief as it meant that the former heir presumptive [[Prince Johann Friedrich of Sunrosia|Prince Johann Friedrich]], Adalbert XX's uncle known for his {{wp|reactionary}} tendencies, was pushed one step back on the {{wp|order of succession}}.
The public announcement of her birth was received with joy throughout the country: despite still suffering from the consequences of the [[Great Collapse]], Adalbert XX remained a popular figure thanks of his steadfast support of the [[Sunrosian Monarchy|Constitutional Charter]]. In liberal and social circles, the news also brought relief as it meant that the former heir presumptive [[Prince Johann Friedrich of Sunrosia|Prince Johann Friedrich]], Adalbert XX's uncle known for his {{wp|reactionary}} tendencies, was pushed one step back on the {{wp|order of succession}}.


Louisa's early life was marked by a fragile health and recurring episodes of illnesses caused constant torment to her parents. At the age of 15 months, she contracted a throat infection that caused further medical complications, and by the following month her health had worsened to the point doctors considered her chances of survival to be "critically low". While she eventually recovered from the illness with no long-term sequelae, the ordeal led doctors to discover the absence of {{wp|vocal cords}} in her {{wp|larynx}}, a condition believed to be a rare congenital anomaly. Louisa was confirmed to be {{wp|muteness|mute}} and that she would {{wp|Aphonia|never be able to produce any voice}}.
Louisa's early life was marked by a fragile health and recurring episodes of illnesses caused constant torment to her parents. At the age of 13 months, she contracted a throat infection that caused further medical complications and almost left her dead. While she eventually recovered with no long-term sequelae, the ordeal prompted doctors to discover the absence of {{wp|vocal cords}} in her {{wp|larynx}}, a condition believed to be a rare congenital anomaly. Louisa was then confirmed to be {{wp|muteness|mute}} and that she would {{wp|Aphonia|never be able to produce any voice}}.
===Education===
===Education===
''Discovery of muteness and education nonetheless''
===Exile===
===Exile===
''Escape from Swetania''
 
==Years in exile==
==Years in exile==
===Education===
===Education===

Revision as of 18:43, 9 February 2020

Louisa Treniotis
Photograph of Louisa Treniotis, circa 1940
Empress of Sunrosia
and her constituent realms
Reign25 December 1921 – 8 January 1922
PredecessorAdalbert XX
SuccessorMonarchy abolished
ChancellorKaspar von Stenhofen
BornLouisa Johanna Georgiana Theresa Elisabeth
(1914-11-30)30 November 1914
Coerz, Grand Duchy of Sunrosia, Sunrosian Monarchy
Died5 July 2010(2010-07-05) (aged 95)
Spálgleann, Caldia
HouseWindenheim-Treniotis
FatherAdalbert XX
MotherSylviane of Gaullica
ReligionSolarian Catholic
OccupationLinguist, author
Louisa Treniotis's signature

Louisa Treniotis (born Louisa Johanna Georgiana Theresa Elisabeth; 30 November 1914 – 5 July 2010) was the second female and final ruler of the Sunrosian Monarchy and and all of its constituent states for fifteeen days as Louisa. She took the name of Louisa Treniotis after her abdication, by which she become known for her linguistic work on sign languages, particularly on the Swetanian general sign language, and her disability rights activism. Louisa achieved popular recognition as "the Fortnight Queen" following the publication of her eponymous first autobiography in 1955.

Born with congenital muteness, Louisa was the only child of Adalbert XX and Sylviane of Gaullica and was merely seven when she succeeded her father following his death on 25 December 1921. Ascending to the throne in the midst of the Swetanian Revolution at a time by which most cities have already been lost to revolutionary forces, Louisa reigned only nominally as Empress for before the proclamation of the Panswetanian Council Republic brought an end to monarchical rule. She fled the country with her mother and close family members, first to neighbouring Werania and then to Caldia.

In exile in Caldia, Louisa continued her education and earned a Master of Arts degree from the University of Spálgleann. From 1930, she also attended Saint Agathe's School for the Deaf where she learned Caldish sign language and later met Deirdre Ní Síoda, who became her interpreter and lifelong companion. Having no interest in her restoration to the Sunrosian throne, she formally abdicated and renounced her claims on 9 January 1936 and remained in Caldia to continue her research on sign languages, eventually getting awarded with a PhD in linguistics in 1946. Louisa married Ní Síoda on 24 August 1941.

Louisa returned to her homeland (now Swetania) in 1957 after relinquishing her last noble titles, the first member of the former House of Windenheim to be allowed to come back. Continuing her linguistic work here, she was a member of the Committee for a Common Sign Language responsible for the standardisation of the Swetanian general sign language in the 60s. Louisa also became a prominent voice for the rights of people with disabilities in Swetania and internationally, as well as an advocate for Caldish-Swetanian friendship and cooperation. She moved back to Caldia in 1995, where she died fifteen years later.

Early life

Princess Louisa Johanna in November 1921, a month before her reign

Louisa was born in the night of the 30 November 1914 in the Palace of the Grand Dukes in Coerz, then the capital of the Sunrosian Monarchy. She was the daughter of the ruling Sunriosan monarch Adalbert XX and Sylviane of Gaullica, a daughter of Albert III of Gaullica. She was baptised Louisa Johanna Georgiana Theresa Elisabeth on December 6 by the Archbishop of Coerz Johann de Weilbourg at the Coerz Cathedral. Her godfather was her maternal grandfather Albert III of Gaullica; her godmother was her paternal grandmother Georgiana of Estmere.

Being the first and only child of Adalbert XX, she became heir presumptive at birth according to the 1856 Edict of Succession. She held the title and style of "Her Imperial Highness the Crown Princess of Sunrosia and Her constituent realms". Her second name of Johanna was chosen to promote the choice of the regnal name Johanna VIII in continuation of the previous and only female Sunrosian monarch, Johanna VII Josepha, if she ever ascended to the throne. She was officially referred to as Princess Louisa Johanna for the same reason.

The public announcement of her birth was received with joy throughout the country: despite still suffering from the consequences of the Great Collapse, Adalbert XX remained a popular figure thanks of his steadfast support of the Constitutional Charter. In liberal and social circles, the news also brought relief as it meant that the former heir presumptive Prince Johann Friedrich, Adalbert XX's uncle known for his reactionary tendencies, was pushed one step back on the order of succession.

Louisa's early life was marked by a fragile health and recurring episodes of illnesses caused constant torment to her parents. At the age of 13 months, she contracted a throat infection that caused further medical complications and almost left her dead. While she eventually recovered with no long-term sequelae, the ordeal prompted doctors to discover the absence of vocal cords in her larynx, a condition believed to be a rare congenital anomaly. Louisa was then confirmed to be mute and that she would never be able to produce any voice.

Education

Exile

Years in exile

Education

Academic work

Return to Swetania

Committee for a Common Sign Language

Advocacy

Death

Personal life

Ancestry