founded the
Collegium Theresianum in 1746
Early history (1614–1746) In 1614, the
Habsburgs purchased Angerfeldhof, a farmstead located just outside Vienna, and renovated it.
Favorita, as the Habsburgs would call the re-modeled farmstead, became their imperial summer residence and a well-known venue for performances in the second half of the 17th century. Although the residence was burned down in the course of the
Battle of Vienna in 1683, a bigger and more glamorous
Neue Favorita was rebuilt over the following decades. Three emperors of the
Holy Roman Empire –
Leopold I,
Joseph I and
Charles VI – resided in the palace. In 1740, when Charles VI died in
Neue Favorita, his eldest daughter
Maria Theresa decided not to enter the building again.
Founding and sustaining Theresianum (1746–1964) In 1746, Empress Maria Theresa sold the palace to the
Jesuits for 30,000 guilders in order to transform it into an educational institution, preparing talented young men for civil service. As stipulated in two founding letters, the newly established “imperial academy” under the auspices of Maria Theresa was based on the principles of strict selection, the highest
pedagogic and
scientific standards, and instruction in “modern” foreign languages. He also completed the building's present-day neo-classical façade and built ancillary facilities, including a swim school. After the
1848 revolutions in different parts of Europe, Francis II's successor,
Franz Joseph I, decided to open admission to “sons of the
bourgeoisie” and to put the school under public regulation. In 1883, the Consular Academy, the world's oldest school of international relations (founded by Maria Theresa as the Oriental Academy in 1754 and later renamed), was relocated to
Neue Favorita. It was housed in a separate wing of the building until 1905, when it was moved to a house in Boltzmanngasse, which houses the
U.S. embassy today.
Recent history (1964–present) adjacent to Theresianum In 1964, the
Diplomatic Academy was re-opened as a successor to the Consular Academy in
Neue Favorita. Its graduates include former
U.N. Secretary General and Austrian president
Kurt Waldheim, as well as European ministers and senior public officials. At Theresianum,
co-education was introduced at the end of the 1980s – the first female instructors started teaching in 1988, while the first female students were admitted one year later, in 1989; in 1993, the first headmistress was appointed. ==Theresianum today==