The Habsburg Monarchy, 1809-1918: A History of the Austrian Empire and Austria-HungaryFirst published in 1941, The Habsburg Monarchy has become indispensable to students of nineteenth-century European history. Not only a chronological report of actions and changes, Taylor's work is a provocative exploration into the historical process of the most eventful hundred years of the Habsburg monarchy. |
Contents
Perface | 1 |
I The Dynasty | 9 |
II The Peoples | 22 |
the Austria of Metternich 180935 | 33 |
IV PreMarch | 47 |
the Revolutions of 1848 | 57 |
the Constituent Assembly July 1848March 1849 | 71 |
the System of Schwarzenberg and Bach 184959 | 83 |
German Ascendancy in Austria 186779 | 141 |
the Era of Taaffe 187993 | 156 |
from Taaffe to Badeni 189397 | 169 |
Koloman Tisza and the Magyar Gentry | 185 |
the Indian Summer of the Habsburg Monarchy 18971908 | 196 |
XVII Solution by Violence 190814 | 214 |
the End of the Habsburgs 191418 | 233 |
The Peoples without the Dynasty | 252 |
October Diploma and February Patent 186061 | 95 |
the System of Schmerling 186165 | 109 |
X The End of Old Austria 186566 | 123 |
XI The Making of Dualism 186667 | 130 |
The Political and Ethnographical Structure of the Habsburg Monarchy | 262 |
270 | |
273 | |
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Common terms and phrases
administration Aehrenthal affairs alliance allies Andrássy aristocratic army Austria Austria-Hungary Austrian Empire Bach Badeni Balkans became Belcredi Bismarck Bohemia Budapest bureaucrats capitalists cent centralised century claims compromise concessions conflict conservative constitutional crisis Croat Croatia culture Czech and German Czechs Dalmatia Deák defeat demanded democratic Diet Dualism dynasty Emperor existence favour February Patent foreign policy Francis Joseph Galicia garian gentry German liberals German nationalism Habsburg Empire Habsburg Monarchy historic Hungarian Hungary idea Imperial independent intellectuals Italian Italy Joseph II Károlyi Kossuth landowners lands leaders Little Russians magnates Magyar Magyar nationalism majority Maria Theresa Masaryk ment Metternich middle class ministry Moravia Napoleon nationalist nobility October Diploma once parliament party peasants Poles political Prague Prime Minister privileges programme Pronounced provinces radical Reichsrat revived revolution revolutionary Roumanians Schmerling Schwarzenberg Serbia Serbs Slovaks Slovenes Socialist South Slav success Taaffe tion Tisza towns traditional Turkish unitary unity universal suffrage victory Vienna