Want this question answered?
No, it was totally uninvolved. He was murdered by a member of a group of Serbian activists, Gavrilo Princip.
Franz Ferdinand never reigned. His father's brother, Franz Joseph, was the Emperor for sixty-eight years. The Emperor's only son, the cousin of Franz Ferdinand, committed suicide when the Emperor refused him permission to marry the girl he loved (see the movie "Mayerling"). With that suicide the old Emperor had no heir, and tried to make his brother, Franz Ferdinand's father, the heir to the throne, but the brother did not want it. So that left Franz Ferdinand to be the heir to the throne when his old uncle might die, but he just lived on and on and on. Franz Ferdinand was heir for more than fifteen years, but when he was murdered his uncle was still alive. The old Emperor outlived Franz Ferdinand by two years, dying in 1916.
Archduke Franz Ferdinand's birth name is Franz Ferdinand Karl Ludwig Joseph von Habsburg-Lothringen.
Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria died on 1914-06-28.
Franz Ferdinand is famous because of the fact that his assassination triggered the beginning of the First World War. Franz Ferdinand was a heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary and he was assassinated in Sarajevo in the year 1914.
Sarajevo, Bosnia.
Franz Joesphes Street
he wa murdered because they wanted him dead
On June 28 1914 Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife, Sophie, were murdered by thugs from the Black Hand.
Franz Ferdinand
Franz-Ferdinand was assassinated by the Black Hand, a Serbo-Bosnian terrorist group that wanted Bosnia to be given to Serbia from Austria-Hungary.Specifically, Gavrilo Princip shot Franz-Ferdinand and his wife.
Franz Ferdinand
this is truth- i asked my history teacher and had to write a report on it, Franz Ferdinand was killed at Sarajevo, on June 28th in 1914
Archduke Franz Ferdinand was murdered on June 28 1914
Fraz Ferdinand was murdered by a Serbian secret society known as the Black Hand
Franz Joesph Street
No, it was totally uninvolved. He was murdered by a member of a group of Serbian activists, Gavrilo Princip.