Archduke Sigismund ‘the Rich in Coin’ with his former fiancée and his two wives, lithograph, 1820

Sigismund ‘the Rich in Coin’

Duke, from 1477 Archduke of Austria; from 1439 nominal ruler and from 1446 to 1490 ruler of Tyrol, and ruler of the Forelands from 1463 to 1490

Born in Innsbruck on 26 October 1427
Died in Innsbruck on 4 March 1496

Following the death of his father, Duke Frederick IV, Sigismund (also called Siegmund) became a ward of his cousin, Emperor Frederick III. In 1446 he assumed the regency in Tyrol and the Swabian territories. He promoted the mining industry and grew rich on its profits, but also accumulated large debts. In 1490 he fell into severe difficulties and had to hand Tyrol over to King Maximilian I. The extravagance of his court earned him the epithet ‘Rich in Coin’.

Archduke Sigismund ‘the Rich in Coin’ with his former fiancée and his two wives, lithograph, 1820