AUSTRO-HUNGARIAN MONARCHY

or Dual Monarchy, the Hapsburg empire from 1867 until its fall in 1918.

The Nature of Austria-Hungary

The reorganization of Austria and Hungary was made possible by the Ausgleich [compromise] of 1867, a constitutional compromise between Hungarian aspirations for independence and Emperor Francis Joseph's desire for a strong, centralized empire as a source of power after Austria's defeat in the Austro-Prussian War of 1866. The Hungarians gained control of their internal affairs in return for agreeing to a centralized foreign policy and continued union of the Austrian and Hungarian crowns in the Hapsburg ruler.

The agreement to establish the Dual Monarchy, which was worked out primarily by the Austrian foreign minister, Count Beust, and two Hungarians, the elder Count Andrássy and Francis Deak, divided the Hapsburg empire into two states. Cisleithania [Lat.,=the land on this side of the Leitha River] comprised Austria proper, Bohemia, Moravia, Austrian Silesia, Slovenia, and Austrian Poland; it was to be ruled by the Hapsburg monarchs in their capacity as emperors of Austria. Transleithania [Lat.,=the land on the other side of the Leitha River] included Hungary, Transylvania, Croatia, and part of the Dalmatian coast; it was to be ruled by the Hapsburg monarchs in their capacity as kings of Hungary. Croatia was given a special status and allowed some autonomy but was subordinated to Transleithania, which also nominated the Croatian governor.

Austria-Hungary was the greatest recent example of a multinational state in Europe; however, of the four chief ethnic groups (Germans, Hungarians, Slavs, and Italians) only the first two received full partnership. The Hapsburg-held crown of Bohemia was conspicuously omitted in the reorganization. Both Cisleithania and Transleithania elected independent parliaments to deliberate on internal affairs and had independent ministries. A common cabinet, composed of three ministers, dealt with foreign relations, common defense, and common finances. It was responsible to the emperor-king and to the delegations of 60 members each (chosen by the two parliaments), which met to discuss common affairs. The regular armed forces were under unified command and currency was uniform throughout the empire, but there were separate customs regimes.

Domestic Policy: Divide and Rule

The strength of the Dual Monarchy lay in its vastness, its virtual economic self-sufficiency, and its opportunities for commercial intercourse from the Swiss border to the Carpathians. Its weakness was less in its ethnic diversity than in the unequal treatment accorded to its minorities in the spirit of the maxim "Divide and rule." Of the Slavic elements the Czechs and Serbs were the most disaffected. The efforts of the Taaffe ministry to satisfy Czech demands failed. The Italian minority was won to the Italian nationalist cause (see irredentism). The Romanians of Transylvania had bitter grievances against their Hungarian masters.

As nationalist movements gained within the empire, they enlarged their demands from cultural autonomy to full independence and ultimately broke up the monarchy. These movements existed not only in the oppressed provinces, but also among Hungarian extremists, who desired total independence, and among Austrian Pan-Germans, who advocated the union of German-speaking Austria with Germany.

The greatest danger to the monarchy probably was Pan-Slavism, spreading from Serbia and encouraged by Russia among the South Slavs. Archduke Francis Ferdinand, heir to the throne, apparently had a project by which Croatia was to become the nucleus of a third, South Slavic, partner in the monarchy; his assassination (1914) at Sarajevo cut short this hope and precipitated World War I.

Foreign Policy

Austria-Hungary early became reconciled with Germany and joined the Three Emperors' League. At the Congress of Berlin (1878; see Berlin, Congress of) Count Andrássy, the foreign minister, secured a mandate over Bosnia and Hercegovina. In 1879 he entered an alliance with Germany, joined also by Italy in 1882 (see Triple Alliance and Triple Entente). The formation of the Triple Entente (France, England, Russia) to oppose this alliance led to the tense diplomatic situation that preceded World War I. The foreign policy of Graf von Aehrenthal led to the Bosnian crisis of 1908–9, and the reckless demands that his successor, Graf von Berchtold, made on Serbia after the assassination of Francis Ferdinand helped to precipitate the cataclysm.

Destruction of the Monarchy

The internal weakness of the empire became immediately obvious. Czech regiments deserted wholesale from the beginning; Italy and Romania, eying their respective minorities in Austria and Hungary, joined the Allies; Croats and Slovenes, won by Serbian propaganda, joined (1917) in agreement with the Serbs to found a South Slavic state (see Yugoslavia). Abroad, the Czechs under Thomas Masaryk were the best known of several legions fighting on the Allied side, and in Oct., 1918, Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Hungary proclaimed their independence.

The Austrian defeat at Vittorio Veneto was followed by unconditional surrender; on Nov. 11, Emperor Charles I abdicated; on Nov. 12, German Austria was proclaimed a republic. The treaties of Versailles, Trianon, and Saint-Germain fixed the boundaries of the successor states. The breakup of the Dual Monarchy fulfilled the 19th-century liberal ideal of national self-determination. At the same time, the creation of small, strongly nationalist states, cut off from each other by tariff walls, has been criticized as representing a "Balkanization of Europe."

Bibliography

See H. Kohn, The Hapsburg Empire: 1804–1918 (1961); A. J. May, The Passing of the Hapsburg Monarchy, 1914–1918 (2 vol., 1966) and The Hapsburg Monarchy, 1867–1914 (1951, repr. 1968); Z. A. B. Zeman, The Twilight of the Hapsburgs (1970); E. Crankshaw, The Fall of the House of Hapsburg (1971, repr. 1983); L. Valiani, The End of Austria-Hungary (1973); R. J. Evans, The Making of the Hapsburg Monarchy: 1550–1700 (1979).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...History. 2. Austro-Hungarian Monarchy. Heer-- History...development of the Austro-Hungarian armed forces...militarily inept monarchy of mid-century...threatened the monarchy with war in...restrained the Austro-Hungarian military response...
...von, i88o-i947. 2. Austro-Hungarian Monarchy. Kriegsmarine...submarine captain in the Austro-Hungarian navy, but he was...southernmost harbor of the monarchy, is the obvious exit of the Austro-Hungarian ships toward the...
THE MONARCHY AND THE CONSTITUTION The Monarchy and the Constitution VERNON BOGDANOR CLARENDON PRESS...Lynn For Judy, Paul, and Adam, with thanks PREFACE The Monarchy and the Constitution seeks to answer the question: How does...
...of constitutional monarchy, the theoretical...Rzeczpospolita or the Hungarian Holy Crown. We need...larger composite monarchy of the Habsburgs. Or was it? The Hungarian corona had always...strict limits in the Hungarian lands, where voluntary...magnates to sustain the monarchy on their own terms...
Frederick William IV and the Prussian Monarchy Frederick William IV and the Prussian Monarchy 1840-1861 David E. Barclay CLARENDON...he sought to create a sacral tradition of monarchy, sustained by organic, corporative political...
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journal articles on: Austro Hungarian Monarchy  - 83 results

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...Council," of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, no less than...harvest to the Monarchy, the most that...deterioration of Austro-Hungarian rail transport...POWs in the Monarchy were maintained...provided by the Austro-Hungarian authorities...
...Austrian half of the monarchy under the Ausgleich...advances made by the Austro-Hungarian general staff during...assumed office in 1881, Austro-Hungarian mobilization and deployment...forces enabled the monarchy for the first time...
...border, knew a good deal of Hungarian, and produced at least four books on the history of Transylvania and the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy. (70) In linking his nemesis to the educational establishment filled with students keen on accelerating the...
...of the former Austro-Hungarian Empire. The American...former Habsburg Monarchy--Austria, Hungary...outright the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of...of the former Austro-Hungarian Empire, and hoped...new Danubian Monarchy under the leadership...
...political status within the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy resulted in rapid modernization...into mortal enemies of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy and Hungary. In the territory...the establishment of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy. 2 According...
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magazine articles on: Austro Hungarian Monarchy  - 44 results

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...Budapest as soon as Serbia had rejected the Austro-Hungarian ultimatum, thus making it inevitable that the Dual Monarchy would go to war to avenge the murder...long last allowed to be tree-blooded Hungarian patriots. The doors onto the balcony...
...From this vantage point, the Austro- Hungarian armys high command watched Napoleon...against the Hapsburg absolute monarchy. When this revolution ended in...disadvantaged children. In 1997, a Hungarian consortium completely restored...
...The traditional solution to such a problem was a monarchy, an institution that quite specifically transcended...language and religion among diverse peoples. Think of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Conventional contemporary wisdom presumes...
...achievements in governance--the Habsburgs. The jigsaw Austro-Hungarian Empire presided over by Emperor-King Franz Josef I...Italians and Romanians. It was a pseudo-democratic monarchy that kept the peace for half a century, and it worked...
...the history of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy. He was in many...Kaiser depicted the Austro-Hungarian monarchy as enfeebled and...last emperor of the Austro-Hungarian Empire who abdicated...destabilize the Dual Monarchy with the murders...
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...more earth-shattering. The decline and fall of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, the subject of arguably his greatest novel, "The...the Emperor," a man who refuses to accept the Dual Monarchys collapse and clings obstinately to symbols of the...
...particularly those living in the Austro-Hungarian monarchy. That it was later abused by...of the continuously decimated Hungarian minority, I am deeply grateful...compared to the much worse lot of Hungarians and others in the neighboring...
...annexed the country. Thus, the Austro-Hungarian monarchy became a euphemism for Hapsburg imperial rule. Hungarians struggle for independence led...revolution of 1848-49. The great Hungarian poet Sandor Petofi expressed...
...oldest son of Karl I, the last Austro-Hungarian emperor, Archduke Otto was exiled...after the collapse of the dual monarchy in 1918. He was one of the original...Maximillian Teleki, president of the Hungarian American. 2 Photos by James R...
...as an archduke of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. He became crown...exile at age 9. Had the monarchy survived World War I...his son George, the Hungarian ambassador to the European...sponsored his trip, Hungarian American Coalition and...
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encyclopedia articles on: Austro Hungarian Monarchy  - 38 results

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AUSTRO-HUNGARIAN MONARCHY or Dual Monarchy, the...after Austrias defeat in the Austro-Prussian War of 1866. The Hungarians gained control of their internal...agreement to establish the Dual Monarchy, which was worked out primarily...
...reorientation of Austria (reorganized in 1867 as the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy) toward the east. The moderate peace terms facilitated the Austro-German alliance of 1879. See H. Friedjung, The...
...then rose to prominence in the negotiations leading to the Ausgleich compromise of 1867, which created the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy . Andrassy was (1867 71) the first constitutional premier of Hungary. He opposed Austrian interference, attained...
DUAL MONARCHY see Austro-Hungarian Monarchy . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
AUSGLEICH see Austro-Hungarian Monarchy . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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