Elisabeth of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt was the second child and only daughter of
Prince Albert of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt and his wife Princess Augusta of Solms-Braunfels. The princess was raised “very simply and strictly” by a Swiss
governess. On April 17, 1852, she married
Leopold III, Prince of Lippe and moved with him to
Detmold. Elisabeth remained close to her homeland, and even after her marriage she regularly visited
Rudolstadt. The princess was popular with the population, but the couple became increasingly estranged from each other, from which Elisabeth suffered greatly. Elisabeth was known for her charity and care; she used almost all of the resources at her disposal for charitable purposes. She also published various writings (including a booklet with Bible sayings for every day) and artistically designed Bible and baptismal sayings, but also larger art sheets, all of which were printed in large quantities. The proceeds from these works also benefited charity. In 1861 the princess founded a
children's institution in
Blomberg, which was named the
Elisabeth Institution after her She also promoted the founding and maintenance of the
Augustineum Secondary School in
Namibia. Detmold's
Elisabethstrasse also bears this name in her honor. After Leopold's death, the marriage remained childless, Elisabeth moved into her widow's residence in the
Neues Palace. From then on she only rarely took on representative tasks, but continued to follow political and social events as well as her social concerns. In addition, the widowed princess financed, among other things, the new building of the
Hostel to the Homeland with 30,000 marks in 1885. The gymnasium of the Detmold Girls' School also owed its existence to Elisabeth; she was the patron of this school and the patron of the eight Detmold women's clubs. Since the death of her brother
George Albert, to whom she shared a close bond throughout her life, Elisabeth stayed regularly in
Niederkrossen. She managed the manor there, which became her property after Georg Albert's death. At her initiative, a handicraft school was also set up in town. During her last stay in the fall of 1896, the Dowager Princess contracted
pneumonia, as a result of which she died on November 27 at around 11 p.m. In accordance with her wishes, Elisabeth was not buried in
Detmold, but on December 3, 1896, in the princely crypt of the
Rudolstadt town church . ==Ancestry==