At the fall of Habsburg monarchy, the
republican government of Austria confiscated the properties of the Habsburgs. The family lost all their fortune. Immaculata's two eldest brothers, Archdukes
Rainer and Leopold, decided to remain in Austria and recognized the new republic. The rest of the family moved to
Spain. In January, 1919 they arrived in
Barcelona where they settled for over a decade. They lived very modestly. Initially they rented a house in which the girls shared a bedroom with their mother and the boys one with their father. The family's economy improved with income coming from revenue from
Archduke Leopold Salvator of Austria's military patents. The political upheaval in Spain, during the
Second Spanish Republic, made the family moved back to Austria. As a condition of their return to
Vienna, they relinquished their royal titles. Their former residence, the
Palais Toskana had been divided into apartments and the family were able to rent three rooms there. Archduchess Immaculata did not remain in Austria for long. On 14 July 1932 in Rome, she married an Italian aristocrat, Nobile Igino Neri-Serneri, Patrician of Siena (22 July 1891 - 1 May 1950). The couple settled in Rome at Number 4 Via di Montoro. As the archduchess and her husband were both over forty, their marriage was childless. During
World War II they stayed in Rome under increasingly difficult circumstances. After eighteen years of marriage, Igino Neri-Serneri died in 1950. In her widowhood, Archduchess Immaculata joined her sisters, Archduchesses
Dolores and Margaretha, in
Tenuta Reale, a villa they had inherited at the death of their mother the previous year. Archduchess Immaculata lived there until her death on 3 September 1971, at age 78. ==Ancestry==