The ailing Leopold Johann died in Vienna on 4 November 1716 aged seven months. The hope that the child would remain healthy, since there was no close relationship between his mother Elisabeth Christine and the imperial family (which was not a matter of course in the
marriage policy of the House of Habsburg), was not fulfilled. Charles VI was deeply affected by the death of his son, as evidenced by the lack of entries in his diaries from the death of Leopold Johann until the end of 1716. The burial was based on the 1668 burial ceremony of Archduke Ferdinand Wenzel (28 September 1667 – 13 January 1668), the first-born son of
Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor. On the morning of 5 November 1716, the body was buried in the presence of the
Oberhofmeister Anton Florian, Prince of Liechtenstein, the
Lady-in-waiting Sabine Christina, Countess of
Starhemberg, three imperial physicians and the body surgeon Heinrich Cöster, who opened the corpse for conservation. The internal organs and the heart were removed and the corpse was embalmed. The child's body was then placed on a
catafalque in the Antecamera, the Virtue Hall (
Tugendsaal) of the Hofburg, and blessed by the court and Imperial Court and Castle priest (
K.u.k. Hof- und Burgpfarre). He wore a crown of flowers and around his neck the small chain of the Order of the Golden Fleece. The large fleece necklace and the
Archducal hat lay on a silver cushion. The silver urn containing the heart and the copper urn with the entrails were taken to
St. Stephen's Cathedral in Vienna on the same day and placed in the
Ducal Crypt. In the evening at 11:00 p.m. the body was consecrated again and led with a large entourage to the
Capuchin Church. The coffin was blessed for the last time and opened in the presence of the
Oberhofmeister and the
Oberkammerer to show the body. Six Capuchin priests then brought the coffin into the
Imperial Crypt. Today's
sarcophagus of Leopold Johann in the Imperial Crypt was built in 1740 according to the instructions of Charles VI. Made as an overcoffin for the original coffin, it was intended to be reminiscent of ancient models. A fold of ermine mantle covers the ornamented lid and on top of it, on a cushion, is the Archducal hat. The coffin was made of
tin. The long sides are decorated with angels' heads with spread wings, the coffin itself rests on four bear paws. It was probably created by the Salzburg tin master Hans Georg Lehrl. At the base under a crucifix is a rolled up tablet. The inscription, written in Latin, reads in translation: After the death of their son, the imperial couple donated, as a sign of their piety, a baby Jesus in silver to the Mother of God of
Mariazell at the place of grace, which corresponded to the weight of the deceased child. ==Notes==