Background
She was born in Vienna as Franziska Gräfinance (Countess) Larisch von Moennich, the daughter of Eugen Graf (Count) Larisch von Moennich and his wife Gabriele née Deym Gräfinance (Countess) von Střítež.
She was born in Vienna as Franziska Gräfinance (Countess) Larisch von Moennich, the daughter of Eugen Graf (Count) Larisch von Moennich and his wife Gabriele née Deym Gräfinance (Countess) von Střítež.
She was the mother of Heimwehr leader and Austrian Vice-Chancellor Ernst Rüdiger Starhemberg. She thereby came from a Silesian Uradel family which then ranked among the oldest and most prominent noble dynasties of Austria-Hungary. Upon the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the emergence of the First Austrian Republic, however, her ambitions to become a candidate for the National Council were denied.
Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss provided her with a post at the League of Nations in 1934.
Upon the Austrian Anschluss to Nazi Germany in 1938, Franziska Starhemberg was temporarily arrested and afterwards retired from public life. She died in the Czechoslovakian Silesian spa town of Bad Darkau (present-day Darkov, part of Karviná).
Franziska von Starhemberg became interested in politics herself, first as founder and head of the Upper Austrian Catholic Women"s Organisation (Katholische Frauenorganisation), from 1919 also as a board member of the Christian Social Party (Christlichsoziale Partei) under Ignaz Seipel. During the rise of Austrofascism in the early 1930s, she alienated from both the Christian Social Party and her son Ernst Rüdiger Starhemberg.
Her husband was a hereditary member of the Austrian House of Lords and in 1902 became a deputy of the Upper Austrian Landtag diet in Linz, while she committed herself to the Austrian Red Cross and had several honorary positions, among them the chair of the Upper Austrian Red Cross Women"s Association from 1916. Instead from 1920-1931 she was a member of the Federal Council (Bundesrat), the upper house of the Austrian Parliament.