The Fall of the House of Habsburg

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Penguin Publishing Group, Jan 27, 1983 - History - 480 pages
The downfall of the Habsburg monarchy was more than just the end of a great and powerful dynasty. It meant the destruction of the old European order and marked a turning point in world history.
 
Edward Crankshaw’s distinguished study offers a compelling account of the final decades of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, leading up to WWI. At the center of the dramatic events stands the majestic figure of the Emperor Franz Josef, facing the tragedies of his disastrous marriage and the suicide of his only son, and doggedly resisting the ruin of his inheritance. In a sweeping panorama of Vienna, Imperial Russia, Napoleon’s France, Bismarck’s Prussia, and Cavour’s Italy, Crankshaw examines the ambitions and disillusionment that broke the Empire and forged the destiny of the twentieth century.
 
"A good book...a superb narrative...trenchant and witty." -- The New York Times
 
"Sympathetic...scholarly...humane." -- Sunday Times

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Contents

THE HOUSE OF AUSTRIA
3
PREMARCH
19
PEOPLES IN REVOLT
26
Copyright

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