Albert was born at
Regensburg, Germany, the youngest of four children of
Maximilian Anton Lamoral, Hereditary Prince of Thurn and Taxis (1831–1867) and
Duchess Helene in Bavaria (1834–1890). His father died when he was less than two months old, so on the death of his grandfather,
Maximilian Karl, 6th Prince of Thurn and Taxis, his older brother
Maximilian Maria, 7th Prince of Thurn and Taxis became Prince, under the guardianship of his mother who was regent until he should come of age. Prince Albert spent his childhood with his mother and three siblings in
Prüfening Abbey, in Bismarckplatz, Regensburg. As was then typical for the aristocracy, he received a non-specific education, attending lectures in law, national economics and art history in Würzburg, Freiburg and Leipzig. On his brother's untimely death, aged 22, Prince Albert, then aged 18, inherited his brother's title, also under the guardianship of his mother as regent. At the time, his full title was Prince of Thurn and Taxis, Prince of Buchau und Prince of Krotoszyn, royal Count of Friedberg-Scheer, Count of Valle-Sassina, and of Marchtal, Neresheim etc., Hereditary general postmaster. In 1899 he acquired the additional Bavarian royal titles of Duke of Wörth und Donaustauf. He came of age on 8 May 1888 as full prince, head of the family of Thurn and Taxis. On 30 November 1889 he was made a knight of the Austrian
Order of the Golden Fleece, along with ten other members of the European royal families, including the later father-in-law of his daughter,
Frederick Augustus III of Saxony. Albert was the ninth member of the house of Thurn and Taxis to be honoured with this knighthood. At the time of his succession, Prince Albert had not yet married. On 15 July 1890 in
Budapest, Hungary, Albert married
Archduchess Margarethe Klementine of Austria (6 July 1870 – 2 May 1955), daughter of
Archduke Joseph Karl of Austria. Albert purchased the 'Empress Eugenie Tiara' as a wedding present for Margarethe; the tiara, designed by Gabriel Lemmonier in 1853, was part of the French crown jewels and is now in the Louvre in Paris. They were married by the
archbishop of Esztergom–Budapest, the Roman Catholic primate of Hungary, Cardinal
János Simor in the chapel of
Buda Castle. His marriage to Archduchess Margarethe lasted over 60 years, producing seven sons and a daughter. ==Two world wars, and thereafter==