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Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867

The Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867 (German: Ausgleich, Hungarian: Kiegyezés) established the dual monarchy of Austria-Hungary, which was a military and diplomatic alliance of two sovereign states.[1] The Compromise only partially re-established[2] the former pre-1848 sovereignty and status of the Kingdom of Hungary, being separate from, but no longer subject to, the Austrian Empire. The compromise put an end to the 18-year-long military dictatorship and absolutist rule over Hungary which Emperor Franz Joseph had instituted after the Hungarian Revolution of 1848. The territorial integrity of the Kingdom of Hungary was restored. The agreement also restored the old historic constitution of the Kingdom of Hungary.[3]

The division between lands to be administered from Vienna (deep pink) and lands to be administered from Budapest (green) under the 1867 dual monarchy Ausgleich agreement. From 1878, Bosnia-Herzegovina (yellow) was jointly administered.
Photo of the coronation oath in Pest in front of the Inner City Parish Church (Budapest)

Hungarian political leaders had two main goals during the negotiations. One was to regain the traditional status (both legal and political) of the Hungarian state, which had been lost after the Hungarian Revolution of 1848. The other was to restore the series of reform laws (the so-called April Laws) of the revolutionary parliament of 1848, which were based on the 12 points that established modern civil and political rights, economic and societal reforms in Hungary.[4] The April Laws of the Hungarian revolutionary parliament (with the exception of the laws based on the 9th and 10th points) were restored by Franz Joseph.

Under the Compromise, the lands of the House of Habsburg were reorganized as a real union between the Austrian Empire and the Kingdom of Hungary, headed by a single monarch who reigned as Emperor of Austria in the Austrian half of the empire, and as King of Hungary in the Kingdom of Hungary. The Cisleithanian (Austrian) and Transleithanian (Hungarian) states were governed by separate parliaments and prime ministers. The two countries conducted unified diplomatic and defence policies. For these purposes, "common" ministries of foreign affairs and defence were maintained under the monarch's direct authority, as was a third finance ministry responsible only for financing the two "common" portfolios.

The relationship of Hungary to Austria before the 1848 revolution had been personal union, whereas after the compromise of 1867 her status was reduced to partnership in a real union.[5] Thus Hungarian society widely considered the compromise as a betrayal of the vital Hungarian interests and the achievements of the reforms of 1848. The compromise remained bitterly unpopular among ethnic Hungarian voters:[6] ethnic Hungarians did not generally support the ruling Liberal party in Hungarian parliamentary elections. Therefore, the political maintenance of the Austro-Hungarian Compromise, and thus Austria-Hungary itself, was mostly a result of the popularity of the pro-compromise ruling Liberal Party among ethnic minority voters in the Kingdom of Hungary.

According to Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria, "There were three of us who made the agreement: Deák, Andrássy and myself."[7]

Historical background

1526–1848

In the Middle Ages, the Duchy of Austria was an autonomous state within the Holy Roman Empire, ruled by the House of Habsburg, and the Kingdom of Hungary was a sovereign state outside the empire. In 1526, Hungary was defeated and partially conquered by the Ottoman Empire. King Louis II of Hungary and Bohemia had no legitimate heir and died young in the Battle of Mohács. Louis II's brother-in-law, Ferdinand I of Habsburg, was elected King of Hungary by a rump Parliament in Pozsony in December 1526.[8][9] The Ottomans were subsequently driven out of Hungary by international Western Christian forces led by Prince Eugene of Savoy between 1686 and 1699. From 1526 to 1804, Hungary was ruled by the Habsburg dynasty as kings of Hungary, but remained nominally and legally separate from the other lands of the Habsburg monarchy. Unlike other Habsburg-ruled areas, the Kingdom of Hungary had an old historic constitution,[10] which limited the power of the Crown and had greatly increased the authority of the parliament since the 13th century.

In 1804, Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor, who was also ruler of the lands of the Habsburg monarchy, founded the Empire of Austria in which all his lands were included. In doing so he created a formal overarching structure for the Habsburg Monarchy, which had functioned as a composite monarchy for about 300 years. (Composite states/monarchies were the most common / dominant form of states in early modern era Europe.[11]) Until the 1848 revolution, the workings of the overarching structure and the status of Hungary stayed much the same as they had been before 1804. The Kingdom of Hungary had always been considered a separate realm, the country's status was affirmed by Article X, which was added to Hungary's constitution in 1790 during the phase of the composite monarchy; it described the state as a Regnum Independens. Hungary's affairs continued to be administered by its own institutions (King and Diet) as they had been previously. Thus, under the new arrangements, no Austrian imperial institutions were involved in its internal government.[12] From the perspective of the Court since 1723, regnum Hungariae had been a hereditary province of the dynasty's three main branches on both lines. From the perspective of the ország (the country), Hungary was regnum independens, a separate Land as Article X of 1790 stipulated. In 1804 Emperor Francis II assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands, including Hungary. Thus Hungary formally became part of the Empire of Austria. The Holy Roman Empire was abolished in 1806. However the involvement of Kingdom of Hungary in a different state was legally impossible, due to the old Hungarian constitution and Hungarian public law.[13] The Court reassured the diet, however, that the assumption of the monarch's newly adopted title (Emperor of Austria) did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution on the territory of Kingdom of Hungary.[14][15] The Hungarian legal system and judicial system remained separated and independent from the unified legal and judicial systems of the other Habsburg ruled areas.

The administration and the structures of central government of Kingdom of Hungary remained separate from the Austrian administration and Austrian government until the 1848 revolution. Hungary was governed to a greater degree by the Council of Lieutenancy of Hungary (the Gubernium) in Pressburg (Pozsony) and, to a lesser extent, by the Hungarian Royal Court Chancellery in Vienna, independent of the Imperial Chancellery of Austria.[16]

"At any time in the past, Hungary might have made peace with a power with which Austria was at war, if the kings had not falsified their oath by not assembling the Hungarian Parliament: for the Diet always had the lawful right of [declaring] War and Peace."[17]

From 1526 to 1851, the Kingdom of Hungary maintained its own customs borders, which separated Hungary from the united customs system of other Habsburg-ruled territories.

While in most Western European countries (like France and the United Kingdom) the king's reign began immediately upon the death of his predecessor, in Hungary the coronation was absolutely indispensable as if it were not properly executed, the Kingdom stayed "orphaned". Even during the long personal union between the Kingdom of Hungary and other Habsburg-ruled areas, the Habsburg monarchs had to be crowned as King of Hungary in order to promulgate laws there or exercise his royal prerogatives in the territory of Hungary.[18][19][20][self-published source] Since the Golden Bull of 1222, all Hungarian monarchs had to take a coronation oath during the coronation procedure, where the new monarchs had to agree to uphold the constitutional arrangement of the country, to preserve the liberties of his subjects and the territorial integrity of the realm.[21]

1849–1867 (military dictatorship)

On 7 March 1849 an imperial proclamation was issued in the name of the emperor Franz Joseph establishing a united constitution for the whole empire, according to the new proclamation, the traditional territorial integrity of Kingdom of Hungary would be terminated and carved up, and it would be administered by five separated military districts, while Principality of Transylvania would be reestablished.[22] Austrian Prime Minister Prince Felix of Schwarzenberg and his government, operating from November 1848, pursued a radically new imperial policy. It wanted to develop a uniform empire in the spirit of the imperial constitution issued by Franz Joseph I in Olmütz on 4 March 1849, and as a result, Hungary's constitution and territorial integrity would be abolished. The centralist March Constitution of Austria introduced neo-absolutism in Habsburg ruled territories, and it provided absolute power for the monarch.[23] The Austrian constitution was accepted by the Imperial Diet of Austria, in which Hungary had no representation and traditionally had no legislative power in the territory of Kingdom of Hungary; still, it also tried to abolish the Diet of Hungary, which existed as the supreme legislative power in Hungary since the late 12th century.[24] The new Austrian constitution also went against the historical constitution of Hungary and tried to nullify it.[25]

In the failed Hungarian Revolution of 1848, the Magyars came close to ending ties with the Habsburg Dynasty, but were defeated by the Austrian Empire only by the military intervention of the Russian Empire. After the restoration of Habsburg power, Hungary was placed under martial law.[26] A military dictatorship was created in Hungary.

Every aspect of Hungarian life would be put under close scrutiny and governmental control.[27]

German became the official language of public administration. An edict issued on 9 October 1849[28] placed education under state control, the curriculum was prescribed and controlled by the state, the teaching of national history was restricted and history was taught from a Habsburg viewpoint.[29] Even the bastion of Hungarian culture, The academy, was kept under control: the institution was staffed with foreigners, mostly Germans, and the institution was practically defunct until[clarification needed] the end of 1858.[30][31][32] Hungarians responded with passive resistance. Anti-Habsburg and anti-German sentiments were strong. In the following years, the empire instituted several reforms but failed to resolve problems.[33]

After the Hungarian Revolution of 1848–49, the independent customs system of Hungary was abolished. Hungary became part of the unified imperial customs system on 1 October 1851.[34][35]

Austrian military and economic crisis and adoption

The suppressing of the 1848 revolutions and the Russian intervention had a very high price. In 1858 already 40 percent of the government's expenditures went to service the state debt. An expensive mobilization during the Crimean War (1853–1856) and a disastrous campaign against Piedmont-Sardinia in 1859 brought the state to the verge of bankruptcy. The threat of fiscal insolvency and the demands of his creditors for an open and credible budgetary process forced the unwilling Franz Joseph to authorize political reform.[36]

In 1866, Austria was completely defeated in the Austro-Prussian War. Its position as the leading state of Germany ended, and the remaining German minor states were soon absorbed into the German Empire, created by Prussia's Bismarck. Austria also lost much of its remaining claims and influence in Italy, which had been its chief foreign policy interest.

After a period of Greater German ambitions, when Austria tried to establish itself as the leading German power, Austria again needed to redefine itself to maintain unity in the face of nationalism.[37]

As a consequence of the Second Italian War of Independence and the Austro-Prussian War, the Habsburg Empire was on the verge of collapse in 1866, as these wars caused monumental state debt and a financial crisis.[38] The Habsburgs were forced to reconcile with Hungary, to save their empire and dynasty. The Habsburgs and part of the Hungarian political elite arranged the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867. The Compromise was arranged and legitimated by a very small part of the Hungarian society (suffrage was very limited: less than 8% of the population had voting rights), and was seen by a very large part of the population as betrayal of the Hungarian cause and the heritage of the 1848–49 War of Independence. This caused deep and lasting cracks in Hungarian society.[39]

Hungarian statesman Ferenc Deák is considered the intellectual force behind the Compromise. Deák initially wanted independence for Hungary and supported the 1848 Revolution, but he broke with hardline nationalists and advocated a modified union under the Habsburgs. Deák believed that while Hungary had the right to full internal independence, the terms of the Pragmatic Sanction of 1723 made questions of defence and foreign affairs "common" to both Austria and Hungary. He also felt that Hungary benefited from continued union with wealthier, more industrialized Austria and that the Compromise would end the continual pressures on Austria to choose between the Magyars and the Slavs of the Kingdom of Hungary.[40] Imperial Chancellor Beust quickly negotiated the Compromise with the Hungarian leaders.[41] Beust was particularly eager to renew the conflict with Prussia and thought a quick settlement with Hungary would make that possible.[42] Franz Joseph and Deák signed the Compromise, and it was ratified by the restored Diet of Hungary on 29 May 1867.[43]

Beust's revenge against Prussia did not materialize. When, in 1870, Beust wanted Austria–Hungary to support France against Prussia, Hungarian Prime Minister Gyula Andrássy was "vigorously opposed" and effectively vetoed Austrian intervention.[44]

The settlement with Hungary consisted then of three parts: the political settlement, which was to be permanent and would remain part of the fundamental constitution of the monarchy; the periodical financial settlement, determining the partition of the common expenses as arranged by the Quota-Deputations and ratified by the parliaments; and the Customs Union and the agreement on currency, a voluntary, reversible arrangement between the two governments and parliaments.[45]

Terms

Under the Compromise:

  • The old historic constitution of Hungary was restored.
  • The Hungarian parliament was re-established (which had been the supreme legislative power in Hungary since the 12th century), as it was before 1849. Each part of the Monarchy had its own government, headed by its own prime minister. The "dual monarchy" consisted of the Emperor-King, and the common ministers of foreign affairs, defence, and a finance ministry only for expenditures of the Common Army, navy and diplomatic service.
  • The Hungarian legal system and Hungarian laws were restored in the territory of the Kingdom of Hungary.[46] During the negotiations of the compromise, even the April Laws of the Hungarian revolutionary parliament (with the exception of the laws based on the 9th and 10th points) were also accepted by the monarch.
  • The traditionally independent and separate judicial system of Hungary was restored.
  • Austria–Hungary, as a common entity, had no jurisdiction and legislative power, which was shaped by the fact that there was no common parliament. The common diplomatic and military affairs were managed by delegations from the Imperial Council and the Hungarian parliament. The delegations had 60 members from the Imperial Council, and 60 members from the Hungarian parliament, and the ratios of various political fractions exactly and proportionally mirrored their own political parties of their parliaments. The members of the delegations from the two parliaments had no right to give speeches, to debate, or introduce new ideas during the meetings; thus they were nothing more than the extended arms of their own parliaments. The only function of the delegates was to cast their votes according to the previously made decisions of their political factions in the Austrian and the Hungarian parliaments. All common decisions had to be ratified by the Austrian parliament to be valid on Austrian territory, and by the Hungarian parliament to be valid on the territory of Kingdom of Hungary.[47] The Austrian and Hungarian delegations hold their joint meeting in Vienna in every odd year, and in Pest in every even year.
  • With the exception of the territory of Bosnian Condominium, Austria and Hungary did not form a common sovereign territory in international law. (Ie. Kingdom of Hungary and Empire of Austria were different countries) Thus regarding to territorial changes during peace treaties, the Empire of Austria and Kingdom of Hungary had to act independently as independent countries: A delegate from the Austrian parliament had right to sign peace treaties related to territorial changes of the Austrian Empire, and respectively, a delegate from the Hungarian parliament had right to sign peace treaties regarding to territorial changes of the Kingdom of Hungary.[48] See: Treaty of Saint-Germain and Treaty of Trianon
  • A common Ministry of Foreign Affairs was created, responsible for diplomacy and foreign policy. Further information: Foreign Ministry of Austria-Hungary
  • There was no common citizenship in Austria–Hungary: one was either an Austrian citizen or a Hungarian citizen, never both.[49] Austria–Hungary used two separate passports: the Austrian passport and the Hungarian one. There was no common passport.[50]
  • A common finance ministry was founded, only for the expenditures of the Common Army, the navy and the diplomatic service and for the issue of banknotes. It was headed by the Common Finance Minister. All other expenditures belonged to the Austrian Finance Ministry in the Austrian Empire and the Hungarian Finance Ministry in the Kingdom of Hungary. The Austrian finance minister was subordinated only to the Minister-President of Austria in the Austrian Empire, and the Hungarian Finance Minister was subordinated only to the Prime Minister of Hungary.
  • The monetary and economic terms of the Compromise and the customs union had to be renegotiated every ten years.
  • Despite Austria and Hungary sharing a common currency, they were fiscally sovereign and independent entities.[51]
  • The international commercial treaties and trade agreements were conducted independently by Austria and Hungary, as independent nations.[52] The Common Finance Ministry had no competence in the international commercial treaties and trade agreements of the Austrian state or the Hungarian state.
  • The Royal Hungarian Honvéd was restored, and the Imperial-Royal Landwehr was created, but both states had to continue to finance the Austro-Hungarian Common Army, much larger than both. A common Austro-Hungarian War Ministry was formed immediately for the large Common Army, but it had no right to command directly the smaller Austrian Landwehr and the Hungarian Honvéd armies, which were respectively placed under the direct control of the separate Austrian and Hungarian Ministries of Defence. The Austrian and Hungarian Ministers of Defence were not placed under the command and jurisdiction of the Common War Ministry; they were subordinated only to their own prime ministers and the respective parliaments in Vienna and Budapest.[53] The Hungarian Honvéd army could join the imperial army only with the explicit authorization of the Hungarian government.[54] Further information: Imperial and Royal Ministry of War
  • Hungary took on a large part of the towering Austrian state debt.[55]
  • The Emperor-King held all authority over the structure, organization, and administration of the three armies. He appointed the senior officials, had the right to declare war, and was the commander-in-chief of the army.
  • The Emperor-King had the right to declare a state of emergency.
  • The Emperor-King had the right of preliminary royal assent to every bill the Cabinet Council wanted to report to the National Assembly. He had the right to veto any law passed by the National Assemblies.
  • The Emperor-King had the right to dissolve the National Assemblies and of the declaration of new parliamentary elections.
  • The Emperor-King had the right to appoint and dismiss the members of the Cabinet Councils.

The power of the monarch significantly increased in a comparison with the pre-1848 status of Hungary. This meant a great reduction in Hungarian sovereignty and autonomy, even in comparison with the pre-1848 status quo.

Continuing pressures

The dominance of ethnic minority elected Liberal Party in the Hungarian Parliament

The Austro-Hungarian compromise and its supporting liberal parliamentary parties remained bitterly unpopular among the ethnic Hungarian voters, and the continuous successes of these pro-compromise Liberal Party in the Hungarian parliamentary elections caused long lasting frustration for Hungarians. The ethnic minorities had the key role in the political maintenance of the compromise in Hungary, because they were able to vote the pro-compromise liberal parties into the position of the majority/ruling parties of the Hungarian parliament. The pro-compromise liberal parties were the most popular among ethnic minority voters, however i.e. the Slovak, Serb and Romanian minority parties remained unpopular among their own ethnic minority voters. The coalitions of Hungarian nationalist parties – which were supported by the overwhelming majority of ethnic Hungarian voters – always remained in the opposition, with the exception of the 1906–1910 period, where the Hungarian-supported nationalist parties were able to form a government.[56]

Ethnic minorities

Before the World War I, only three European countries declared ethnic minority rights, and enacted minority-protecting laws: the first was Hungary (1849 and 1868), the second was Austria (1867), and the third was Belgium (1898). In contrast, the legal systems of other pre-WW1 era European countries did not allow the use of European minority languages in primary schools, in cultural institutions, in offices of public administration and at the legal courts.[57]

The resulting system was maintained until the dissolution of the dual monarchy after World War I. The favoritism shown to the Magyars, the second largest ethnic group in the dual monarchy after the Germans, caused discontent on the part of other ethnic groups like the Slovaks and Romanians.[58] Although a "Nationalities Law" was enacted to preserve the rights of ethnic minorities, the two parliaments took very different approaches to this issue.[citation needed]

The basic problem in the later years was that the Compromise with Hungary only encouraged the appetites of non-Hungarian minorities in Hungary that were historically within the boundaries of the Hungarian Kingdom. The majority of Hungarians felt they had accepted the Compromise only under coercion.[citation needed] The Hungarian monarchs were always crowned as King of Hungary, due to the Hungarian coronation oath they had to agree to uphold the old constitutional arrangements of the country and preserve the territorial integrity of the Hungarian realm. This coronation oath was obligatory for the Hungarian monarchs during the coronation process since the Golden Bull of 1222.[59] The Hungarians, who were regarded as equal after the Compromise, only partially acquiesced to granting "their" minorities recognition and local autonomy.[citation needed]

In the Kingdom of Hungary, several ethnic minorities faced increased pressures of Magyarization.[60] Further, the renegotiation that occurred every ten years often led to constitutional crises. Ultimately, although the Compromise hoped to fix the problems faced by a multi-national state while maintaining the benefits of a large state, the new system still faced the same internal pressures as the old. To what extent the dual monarchy stabilized the country in the face of national awakenings and to what extent it alleviated or aggravated the situation is still debated today.[citation needed]

In a letter on 1 February 1913, to Foreign Minister Berchtold, Archduke Franz Ferdinand said that "irredentism in our country ... will cease immediately if our Slavs are given a comfortable, fair and good life" instead of being trampled on (as they were being trampled on by the Hungarians).[61]

Influence in Ireland

As early as the mid-1880s, Lord Salisbury, leader of the British Conservative Party, had contemplated using the 1867 Austro-Hungarian example as a model for a reformed relationship between Britain and Ireland.[62] In 1904 Arthur Griffith published the highly influential book The Resurrection of Hungary: A Parallel for Ireland, setting out a detailed proposal for an Anglo-Irish dual monarchy similar to the Austro-Hungarian one.[63] This dual monarchy model was advocated by Griffith's Sinn Féin party in its early years of existence and had a considerable influence on the development of Irish Nationalism - though after the Easter Rising and subsequent October 1917 Ardfheis, it was dropped in favor of Irish Republicanism.

See also

References

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  53. ^ Eric Roman (2003)
  54. ^ Roszkowski, Wojciech (2015). East Central Europe: A Concise History. Instytut Studiów Politycznych Polskiej Akademii Nauk, Instytut Jagielloński. p. 116. ISBN 978-8-36597-220-0.
  55. ^ . Archived from the original on 16 November 2007. Retrieved 1 January 2017.
  56. ^ András Gerő (2014) Nationalities and the Hungarian Parliament (1867-1918) .
  57. ^ Józsa Hévizi (2004): Autonomies in Hungary and Europe, A COMPARATIVE STUDY, The Regional and Ecclesiastic Autonomy of the Minorities and Nationality Groups
  58. ^ Cornwall, Mark. Last Years of Austria-Hungary: A Multi-National Experiment in Early Twentieth-Century Europe, 2nd ed. Exeter: University of Exeter Press, 2002.
  59. ^ András A. Gergely; Gábor Máthé (2000). The Hungarian state: thousand years in Europe : [1000-2000]. Korona. p. 66. ISBN 9789639191792.
  60. ^ Seton-Watson, R. W. (1925). "Transylvania since 1867". The Slavonic Review. 4 (10): 101–23.
  61. ^ Valiani, Leo, The End of Austria-Hungary, Alfred A. Knopf, New York (1973) pp. 9-10 [translation of: La Dissoluzione dell'Austria-Ungheria, Casa Editrice Il Saggiatore, Milano (1966) pp. 19-20]
  62. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 December 2005. Retrieved 14 February 2020.
  63. ^ Griffith's book quoted by Taoiseach Bertie Ahern in 2005.

Sources

  • Cornwall, Mark (2002), Last Years of Austria-Hungary: A Multi-National Experiment in Early Twentieth-Century Europe (2nd ed.), University of Exeter Press.
  • Seton-Watson, R. W. (1925), "Transylvania since 1867", The Slavonic Review, Modern Humanities Research Association, vol. 4, no. 10, pp. 101–23, JSTOR 4201928.
  • Seton-Watson, R. W. (1939), "The Austro-Hungarian Ausgleich of 1867", The Slavonic and East European Review, Modern Humanities Research Association, vol. 19, no. 19.53/54, pp. 123–40, JSTOR 4203588.
  • Sowards, Steven W. (23 April 2004), Nationalism in Hungary, 1848–1867. Twenty Five Lectures on Modern Balkan History, Michigan State University, retrieved 19 March 2009.
  • Taylor, A. J. P. (1952), The Habsburg Monarchy, 1815 – 1918: A history of the Austrian Empire and Austria-Hungary., New York: Macmillan.
  • Tihany, Leslie C. (1969), "The Austro-Hungarian Compromise, 1867–1918: A Half Century of Diagnosis; Fifty Years of Post-Mortem", Central European History, Cambridge University Press, Central European History Society, vol. 2, no. 2, pp. 114–38, doi:10.1017/s0008938900000169, JSTOR 4545523, S2CID 145522363.

External links

  • Chronology of the Compromise
  • The Dual Monarchy in Hungary
  • Nationalism in Hungary

austro, hungarian, compromise, 1867, german, ausgleich, hungarian, kiegyezés, established, dual, monarchy, austria, hungary, which, military, diplomatic, alliance, sovereign, states, compromise, only, partially, established, former, 1848, sovereignty, status, . The Austro Hungarian Compromise of 1867 German Ausgleich Hungarian Kiegyezes established the dual monarchy of Austria Hungary which was a military and diplomatic alliance of two sovereign states 1 The Compromise only partially re established 2 the former pre 1848 sovereignty and status of the Kingdom of Hungary being separate from but no longer subject to the Austrian Empire The compromise put an end to the 18 year long military dictatorship and absolutist rule over Hungary which Emperor Franz Joseph had instituted after the Hungarian Revolution of 1848 The territorial integrity of the Kingdom of Hungary was restored The agreement also restored the old historic constitution of the Kingdom of Hungary 3 The division between lands to be administered from Vienna deep pink and lands to be administered from Budapest green under the 1867 dual monarchy Ausgleich agreement From 1878 Bosnia Herzegovina yellow was jointly administered Photo of the coronation oath in Pest in front of the Inner City Parish Church Budapest Coronation of Francis Joseph I and Elisabeth Amalie at Matthias Church Buda 8 June 1867 Hungarian political leaders had two main goals during the negotiations One was to regain the traditional status both legal and political of the Hungarian state which had been lost after the Hungarian Revolution of 1848 The other was to restore the series of reform laws the so called April Laws of the revolutionary parliament of 1848 which were based on the 12 points that established modern civil and political rights economic and societal reforms in Hungary 4 The April Laws of the Hungarian revolutionary parliament with the exception of the laws based on the 9th and 10th points were restored by Franz Joseph Under the Compromise the lands of the House of Habsburg were reorganized as a real union between the Austrian Empire and the Kingdom of Hungary headed by a single monarch who reigned as Emperor of Austria in the Austrian half of the empire and as King of Hungary in the Kingdom of Hungary The Cisleithanian Austrian and Transleithanian Hungarian states were governed by separate parliaments and prime ministers The two countries conducted unified diplomatic and defence policies For these purposes common ministries of foreign affairs and defence were maintained under the monarch s direct authority as was a third finance ministry responsible only for financing the two common portfolios The relationship of Hungary to Austria before the 1848 revolution had been personal union whereas after the compromise of 1867 her status was reduced to partnership in a real union 5 Thus Hungarian society widely considered the compromise as a betrayal of the vital Hungarian interests and the achievements of the reforms of 1848 The compromise remained bitterly unpopular among ethnic Hungarian voters 6 ethnic Hungarians did not generally support the ruling Liberal party in Hungarian parliamentary elections Therefore the political maintenance of the Austro Hungarian Compromise and thus Austria Hungary itself was mostly a result of the popularity of the pro compromise ruling Liberal Party among ethnic minority voters in the Kingdom of Hungary According to Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria There were three of us who made the agreement Deak Andrassy and myself 7 Contents 1 Historical background 1 1 1526 1848 1 2 1849 1867 military dictatorship 2 Austrian military and economic crisis and adoption 3 Terms 4 Continuing pressures 4 1 The dominance of ethnic minority elected Liberal Party in the Hungarian Parliament 4 2 Ethnic minorities 5 Influence in Ireland 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksHistorical background Edit1526 1848 Edit Further information Battle of Mohacs Diet of Hungary and Coronation of the Hungarian monarch In the Middle Ages the Duchy of Austria was an autonomous state within the Holy Roman Empire ruled by the House of Habsburg and the Kingdom of Hungary was a sovereign state outside the empire In 1526 Hungary was defeated and partially conquered by the Ottoman Empire King Louis II of Hungary and Bohemia had no legitimate heir and died young in the Battle of Mohacs Louis II s brother in law Ferdinand I of Habsburg was elected King of Hungary by a rump Parliament in Pozsony in December 1526 8 9 The Ottomans were subsequently driven out of Hungary by international Western Christian forces led by Prince Eugene of Savoy between 1686 and 1699 From 1526 to 1804 Hungary was ruled by the Habsburg dynasty as kings of Hungary but remained nominally and legally separate from the other lands of the Habsburg monarchy Unlike other Habsburg ruled areas the Kingdom of Hungary had an old historic constitution 10 which limited the power of the Crown and had greatly increased the authority of the parliament since the 13th century In 1804 Francis II Holy Roman Emperor who was also ruler of the lands of the Habsburg monarchy founded the Empire of Austria in which all his lands were included In doing so he created a formal overarching structure for the Habsburg Monarchy which had functioned as a composite monarchy for about 300 years Composite states monarchies were the most common dominant form of states in early modern era Europe 11 Until the 1848 revolution the workings of the overarching structure and the status of Hungary stayed much the same as they had been before 1804 The Kingdom of Hungary had always been considered a separate realm the country s status was affirmed by Article X which was added to Hungary s constitution in 1790 during the phase of the composite monarchy it described the state as a Regnum Independens Hungary s affairs continued to be administered by its own institutions King and Diet as they had been previously Thus under the new arrangements no Austrian imperial institutions were involved in its internal government 12 From the perspective of the Court since 1723 regnum Hungariae had been a hereditary province of the dynasty s three main branches on both lines From the perspective of the orszag the country Hungary was regnum independens a separate Land as Article X of 1790 stipulated In 1804 Emperor Francis II assumed the title of Emperor of Austria for all the Erblande of the dynasty and for the other Lands including Hungary Thus Hungary formally became part of the Empire of Austria The Holy Roman Empire was abolished in 1806 However the involvement of Kingdom of Hungary in a different state was legally impossible due to the old Hungarian constitution and Hungarian public law 13 The Court reassured the diet however that the assumption of the monarch s newly adopted title Emperor of Austria did not in any sense affect the laws and the constitution on the territory of Kingdom of Hungary 14 15 The Hungarian legal system and judicial system remained separated and independent from the unified legal and judicial systems of the other Habsburg ruled areas The administration and the structures of central government of Kingdom of Hungary remained separate from the Austrian administration and Austrian government until the 1848 revolution Hungary was governed to a greater degree by the Council of Lieutenancy of Hungary the Gubernium in Pressburg Pozsony and to a lesser extent by the Hungarian Royal Court Chancellery in Vienna independent of the Imperial Chancellery of Austria 16 At any time in the past Hungary might have made peace with a power with which Austria was at war if the kings had not falsified their oath by not assembling the Hungarian Parliament for the Diet always had the lawful right of declaring War and Peace 17 From 1526 to 1851 the Kingdom of Hungary maintained its own customs borders which separated Hungary from the united customs system of other Habsburg ruled territories While in most Western European countries like France and the United Kingdom the king s reign began immediately upon the death of his predecessor in Hungary the coronation was absolutely indispensable as if it were not properly executed the Kingdom stayed orphaned Even during the long personal union between the Kingdom of Hungary and other Habsburg ruled areas the Habsburg monarchs had to be crowned as King of Hungary in order to promulgate laws there or exercise his royal prerogatives in the territory of Hungary 18 19 20 self published source Since the Golden Bull of 1222 all Hungarian monarchs had to take a coronation oath during the coronation procedure where the new monarchs had to agree to uphold the constitutional arrangement of the country to preserve the liberties of his subjects and the territorial integrity of the realm 21 1849 1867 military dictatorship Edit Further information Hungarian Revolution of 1848 March Constitution of Austria and Passive Resistance Hungary On 7 March 1849 an imperial proclamation was issued in the name of the emperor Franz Joseph establishing a united constitution for the whole empire according to the new proclamation the traditional territorial integrity of Kingdom of Hungary would be terminated and carved up and it would be administered by five separated military districts while Principality of Transylvania would be reestablished 22 Austrian Prime Minister Prince Felix of Schwarzenberg and his government operating from November 1848 pursued a radically new imperial policy It wanted to develop a uniform empire in the spirit of the imperial constitution issued by Franz Joseph I in Olmutz on 4 March 1849 and as a result Hungary s constitution and territorial integrity would be abolished The centralist March Constitution of Austria introduced neo absolutism in Habsburg ruled territories and it provided absolute power for the monarch 23 The Austrian constitution was accepted by the Imperial Diet of Austria in which Hungary had no representation and traditionally had no legislative power in the territory of Kingdom of Hungary still it also tried to abolish the Diet of Hungary which existed as the supreme legislative power in Hungary since the late 12th century 24 The new Austrian constitution also went against the historical constitution of Hungary and tried to nullify it 25 In the failed Hungarian Revolution of 1848 the Magyars came close to ending ties with the Habsburg Dynasty but were defeated by the Austrian Empire only by the military intervention of the Russian Empire After the restoration of Habsburg power Hungary was placed under martial law 26 A military dictatorship was created in Hungary Every aspect of Hungarian life would be put under close scrutiny and governmental control 27 German became the official language of public administration An edict issued on 9 October 1849 28 placed education under state control the curriculum was prescribed and controlled by the state the teaching of national history was restricted and history was taught from a Habsburg viewpoint 29 Even the bastion of Hungarian culture The academy was kept under control the institution was staffed with foreigners mostly Germans and the institution was practically defunct until clarification needed the end of 1858 30 31 32 Hungarians responded with passive resistance Anti Habsburg and anti German sentiments were strong In the following years the empire instituted several reforms but failed to resolve problems 33 After the Hungarian Revolution of 1848 49 the independent customs system of Hungary was abolished Hungary became part of the unified imperial customs system on 1 October 1851 34 35 Austrian military and economic crisis and adoption EditThe suppressing of the 1848 revolutions and the Russian intervention had a very high price In 1858 already 40 percent of the government s expenditures went to service the state debt An expensive mobilization during the Crimean War 1853 1856 and a disastrous campaign against Piedmont Sardinia in 1859 brought the state to the verge of bankruptcy The threat of fiscal insolvency and the demands of his creditors for an open and credible budgetary process forced the unwilling Franz Joseph to authorize political reform 36 In 1866 Austria was completely defeated in the Austro Prussian War Its position as the leading state of Germany ended and the remaining German minor states were soon absorbed into the German Empire created by Prussia s Bismarck Austria also lost much of its remaining claims and influence in Italy which had been its chief foreign policy interest After a period of Greater German ambitions when Austria tried to establish itself as the leading German power Austria again needed to redefine itself to maintain unity in the face of nationalism 37 As a consequence of the Second Italian War of Independence and the Austro Prussian War the Habsburg Empire was on the verge of collapse in 1866 as these wars caused monumental state debt and a financial crisis 38 The Habsburgs were forced to reconcile with Hungary to save their empire and dynasty The Habsburgs and part of the Hungarian political elite arranged the Austro Hungarian Compromise of 1867 The Compromise was arranged and legitimated by a very small part of the Hungarian society suffrage was very limited less than 8 of the population had voting rights and was seen by a very large part of the population as betrayal of the Hungarian cause and the heritage of the 1848 49 War of Independence This caused deep and lasting cracks in Hungarian society 39 Hungarian statesman Ferenc Deak is considered the intellectual force behind the Compromise Deak initially wanted independence for Hungary and supported the 1848 Revolution but he broke with hardline nationalists and advocated a modified union under the Habsburgs Deak believed that while Hungary had the right to full internal independence the terms of the Pragmatic Sanction of 1723 made questions of defence and foreign affairs common to both Austria and Hungary He also felt that Hungary benefited from continued union with wealthier more industrialized Austria and that the Compromise would end the continual pressures on Austria to choose between the Magyars and the Slavs of the Kingdom of Hungary 40 Imperial Chancellor Beust quickly negotiated the Compromise with the Hungarian leaders 41 Beust was particularly eager to renew the conflict with Prussia and thought a quick settlement with Hungary would make that possible 42 Franz Joseph and Deak signed the Compromise and it was ratified by the restored Diet of Hungary on 29 May 1867 43 Beust s revenge against Prussia did not materialize When in 1870 Beust wanted Austria Hungary to support France against Prussia Hungarian Prime Minister Gyula Andrassy was vigorously opposed and effectively vetoed Austrian intervention 44 The settlement with Hungary consisted then of three parts the political settlement which was to be permanent and would remain part of the fundamental constitution of the monarchy the periodical financial settlement determining the partition of the common expenses as arranged by the Quota Deputations and ratified by the parliaments and the Customs Union and the agreement on currency a voluntary reversible arrangement between the two governments and parliaments 45 Terms EditUnder the Compromise The old historic constitution of Hungary was restored The Hungarian parliament was re established which had been the supreme legislative power in Hungary since the 12th century as it was before 1849 Each part of the Monarchy had its own government headed by its own prime minister The dual monarchy consisted of the Emperor King and the common ministers of foreign affairs defence and a finance ministry only for expenditures of the Common Army navy and diplomatic service The Hungarian legal system and Hungarian laws were restored in the territory of the Kingdom of Hungary 46 During the negotiations of the compromise even the April Laws of the Hungarian revolutionary parliament with the exception of the laws based on the 9th and 10th points were also accepted by the monarch The traditionally independent and separate judicial system of Hungary was restored Austria Hungary as a common entity had no jurisdiction and legislative power which was shaped by the fact that there was no common parliament The common diplomatic and military affairs were managed by delegations from the Imperial Council and the Hungarian parliament The delegations had 60 members from the Imperial Council and 60 members from the Hungarian parliament and the ratios of various political fractions exactly and proportionally mirrored their own political parties of their parliaments The members of the delegations from the two parliaments had no right to give speeches to debate or introduce new ideas during the meetings thus they were nothing more than the extended arms of their own parliaments The only function of the delegates was to cast their votes according to the previously made decisions of their political factions in the Austrian and the Hungarian parliaments All common decisions had to be ratified by the Austrian parliament to be valid on Austrian territory and by the Hungarian parliament to be valid on the territory of Kingdom of Hungary 47 The Austrian and Hungarian delegations hold their joint meeting in Vienna in every odd year and in Pest in every even year With the exception of the territory of Bosnian Condominium Austria and Hungary did not form a common sovereign territory in international law Ie Kingdom of Hungary and Empire of Austria were different countries Thus regarding to territorial changes during peace treaties the Empire of Austria and Kingdom of Hungary had to act independently as independent countries A delegate from the Austrian parliament had right to sign peace treaties related to territorial changes of the Austrian Empire and respectively a delegate from the Hungarian parliament had right to sign peace treaties regarding to territorial changes of the Kingdom of Hungary 48 See Treaty of Saint Germain and Treaty of Trianon A common Ministry of Foreign Affairs was created responsible for diplomacy and foreign policy Further information Foreign Ministry of Austria Hungary There was no common citizenship in Austria Hungary one was either an Austrian citizen or a Hungarian citizen never both 49 Austria Hungary used two separate passports the Austrian passport and the Hungarian one There was no common passport 50 A common finance ministry was founded only for the expenditures of the Common Army the navy and the diplomatic service and for the issue of banknotes It was headed by the Common Finance Minister All other expenditures belonged to the Austrian Finance Ministry in the Austrian Empire and the Hungarian Finance Ministry in the Kingdom of Hungary The Austrian finance minister was subordinated only to the Minister President of Austria in the Austrian Empire and the Hungarian Finance Minister was subordinated only to the Prime Minister of Hungary The monetary and economic terms of the Compromise and the customs union had to be renegotiated every ten years Despite Austria and Hungary sharing a common currency they were fiscally sovereign and independent entities 51 The international commercial treaties and trade agreements were conducted independently by Austria and Hungary as independent nations 52 The Common Finance Ministry had no competence in the international commercial treaties and trade agreements of the Austrian state or the Hungarian state The Royal Hungarian Honved was restored and the Imperial Royal Landwehr was created but both states had to continue to finance the Austro Hungarian Common Army much larger than both A common Austro Hungarian War Ministry was formed immediately for the large Common Army but it had no right to command directly the smaller Austrian Landwehr and the Hungarian Honved armies which were respectively placed under the direct control of the separate Austrian and Hungarian Ministries of Defence The Austrian and Hungarian Ministers of Defence were not placed under the command and jurisdiction of the Common War Ministry they were subordinated only to their own prime ministers and the respective parliaments in Vienna and Budapest 53 The Hungarian Honved army could join the imperial army only with the explicit authorization of the Hungarian government 54 Further information Imperial and Royal Ministry of War Hungary took on a large part of the towering Austrian state debt 55 The Emperor King held all authority over the structure organization and administration of the three armies He appointed the senior officials had the right to declare war and was the commander in chief of the army The Emperor King had the right to declare a state of emergency The Emperor King had the right of preliminary royal assent to every bill the Cabinet Council wanted to report to the National Assembly He had the right to veto any law passed by the National Assemblies The Emperor King had the right to dissolve the National Assemblies and of the declaration of new parliamentary elections The Emperor King had the right to appoint and dismiss the members of the Cabinet Councils The power of the monarch significantly increased in a comparison with the pre 1848 status of Hungary This meant a great reduction in Hungarian sovereignty and autonomy even in comparison with the pre 1848 status quo Continuing pressures EditThe dominance of ethnic minority elected Liberal Party in the Hungarian Parliament Edit The Austro Hungarian compromise and its supporting liberal parliamentary parties remained bitterly unpopular among the ethnic Hungarian voters and the continuous successes of these pro compromise Liberal Party in the Hungarian parliamentary elections caused long lasting frustration for Hungarians The ethnic minorities had the key role in the political maintenance of the compromise in Hungary because they were able to vote the pro compromise liberal parties into the position of the majority ruling parties of the Hungarian parliament The pro compromise liberal parties were the most popular among ethnic minority voters however i e the Slovak Serb and Romanian minority parties remained unpopular among their own ethnic minority voters The coalitions of Hungarian nationalist parties which were supported by the overwhelming majority of ethnic Hungarian voters always remained in the opposition with the exception of the 1906 1910 period where the Hungarian supported nationalist parties were able to form a government 56 Ethnic minorities Edit Before the World War I only three European countries declared ethnic minority rights and enacted minority protecting laws the first was Hungary 1849 and 1868 the second was Austria 1867 and the third was Belgium 1898 In contrast the legal systems of other pre WW1 era European countries did not allow the use of European minority languages in primary schools in cultural institutions in offices of public administration and at the legal courts 57 The resulting system was maintained until the dissolution of the dual monarchy after World War I The favoritism shown to the Magyars the second largest ethnic group in the dual monarchy after the Germans caused discontent on the part of other ethnic groups like the Slovaks and Romanians 58 Although a Nationalities Law was enacted to preserve the rights of ethnic minorities the two parliaments took very different approaches to this issue citation needed The basic problem in the later years was that the Compromise with Hungary only encouraged the appetites of non Hungarian minorities in Hungary that were historically within the boundaries of the Hungarian Kingdom The majority of Hungarians felt they had accepted the Compromise only under coercion citation needed The Hungarian monarchs were always crowned as King of Hungary due to the Hungarian coronation oath they had to agree to uphold the old constitutional arrangements of the country and preserve the territorial integrity of the Hungarian realm This coronation oath was obligatory for the Hungarian monarchs during the coronation process since the Golden Bull of 1222 59 The Hungarians who were regarded as equal after the Compromise only partially acquiesced to granting their minorities recognition and local autonomy citation needed In the Kingdom of Hungary several ethnic minorities faced increased pressures of Magyarization 60 Further the renegotiation that occurred every ten years often led to constitutional crises Ultimately although the Compromise hoped to fix the problems faced by a multi national state while maintaining the benefits of a large state the new system still faced the same internal pressures as the old To what extent the dual monarchy stabilized the country in the face of national awakenings and to what extent it alleviated or aggravated the situation is still debated today citation needed In a letter on 1 February 1913 to Foreign Minister Berchtold Archduke Franz Ferdinand said that irredentism in our country will cease immediately if our Slavs are given a comfortable fair and good life instead of being trampled on as they were being trampled on by the Hungarians 61 Influence in Ireland EditAs early as the mid 1880s Lord Salisbury leader of the British Conservative Party had contemplated using the 1867 Austro Hungarian example as a model for a reformed relationship between Britain and Ireland 62 In 1904 Arthur Griffith published the highly influential book The Resurrection of Hungary A Parallel for Ireland setting out a detailed proposal for an Anglo Irish dual monarchy similar to the Austro Hungarian one 63 This dual monarchy model was advocated by Griffith s Sinn Fein party in its early years of existence and had a considerable influence on the development of Irish Nationalism though after the Easter Rising and subsequent October 1917 Ardfheis it was dropped in favor of Irish Republicanism See also EditFundamental Articles of 1871References Edit Martin Mutschlechner The Dual Monarchy two states in a single empire Andre Gerrits Dirk Jan Wolffram 2005 Political Democracy and Ethnic Diversity in Modern European History Stanford University Press p 42 ISBN 9780804749763 Robert Young 1995 Secession of Quebec and the Future of Canada McGill Queen s Press p 138 ISBN 9780773565470 the Hungarian constitution was restored Ferenc Szakaly 1980 Hungary and Eastern Europe Research Report Volume 182 of Studia historica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae Akademiai Kiado p 178 ISBN 9789630525954 Adam Kolozsi in Hungarian Deadly threats and treason 150 years ago front lines and marketing around Austro Hungarian compromise LINK 1 Cieger Andras Kormany a merlegen a mult szazadban in Hungarian Kozuchowski Adam The Afterlife of Austria Hungary The Image of the Habsburg Monarchy in Interwar Europe Pitt Series in Russian and East European Studies University of Pittsburgh Press 2013 ISBN 9780822979173 p 83 Robert A Kann 1980 A History of the Habsburg Empire 1526 1918 University of California Press p 611 ISBN 9780520042063 Miklos Molnar 2001 A Concise History of Hungary Cambridge University Press p 88 ISBN 9780521667364 mohacs ferdinand I elected Robert Young 1995 Secession of Quebec and the Future of Canada McGill Queen s Press p 138 ISBN 9780773565470 the Hungarian constitution was restored Robert I Frost 2018 The Oxford History of Poland Lithuania Oxford History of Early Modern Europe Vol I The Making of the Polish Lithuanian Union 1385 1569 Oxford University Press p 40 ISBN 9780192568144 Laszlo Peter 2011 Hungary s Long Nineteenth Century Constitutional and Democratic Traditions Leiden Netherlands Koninklijke Brill NV p 6 Joshua Toulmin Smith 1861 Illustrations of the political and diplomatic relations of the independent Kingdom of Hungary and of the interest that Europe has in the Austrian Alliance W Jeffs pp 19 23 Vor dem Jahr 1848 is t das Kaisertum Osterreich verfassungsrechtlich als ein monarchischer Einheitsstaat auf differenziert foderalistischer Grundlage zu sehen wobei die besondere Stel l ung Ungarns im Rahmen dieses Gesamtstaates stets offenkundig war Eine weitere Differenzierung der foderalistischen Grundlage erfolgte ab 1815 durch die Zugehorigkeit eines teiles des Kaisertums zum Deutschen Bund Before 1848 the Austrian Empire can be regarded in constitutional law as a unitary monarchy on a differentiated federalistic basis whereby the special position of Hungary within the framework of this united state was always evident A further differentiation of the federalistic position followed from 1815 through the affiliation of a part of the empire to the German federation Zeilner Franz 2008 Verfassung Verfassungsrecht und Lehre des Offentlichen Rechts in Osterreich bis 1848 Eine Darstellung der materiellen und formellen Verfassungssituation und der Lehre des offentlichen Rechts Frankfurt am Main Lang p 45 Jozsef Zachar Austerlitz 1805 december 2 A harom csaszar csataja magyar szemmel permanent dead link In Eszmek forradalmak haboruk Vadasz Sandor 80 eves ELTE Budapest 2010 p 557 Balazs Eva H Hungary and the Habsburgs 1765 1800 An Experiment in Enlightened Absolutism p 320 Francis William Newman Select Speeches of Kossuth Yonge Charlotte 1867 The Crown of St Stephen A Book of Golden Deeds of all Times and all Lands London Glasgow and Bombay Blackie and Son Retrieved 21 August 2008 Nemes Paul 10 January 2000 Hungary The Holy Crown Central Europe Review Archived from the original on 11 May 2015 Retrieved 26 September 2008 An account of this service written by Count Miklos Banffy a witness may be read at The Last Habsburg Coronation Budapest 1916 From Theodore s Royalty and Monarchy Website Andras A Gergely Gabor Mathe 2000 The Hungarian state thousand years in Europe 1000 2000 Korona p 66 ISBN 9789639191792 Phillips Walter Alison 1911 Hungary In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 13 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 918 Walther Killy 2005 Schmidt Theyer Volume 9 of Dictionary of German biography Walter de Gruyter p 237 ISBN 9783110966299 Julius Bartl 2002 Slovak History Chronology amp Lexicon G Reference Information and Interdisciplinary Subjects Series Bolchazy Carducci Publishers p 222 ISBN 9780865164444 Hungarian statesmen of destiny 1860 1960 Volume 58 of Atlantic Studies on Society Change Volume 262 of East European Monographs Social Sciences Monograph 1989 p 23 ISBN 9780880331593 Hunt Lynn The Making of the West Volume C pp 683 684 Csohany Janos Leo Thun egyhazpolitikaja In Egyhaztorteneti Szemle 11 2 2010 Grundsatze fur die provisorische Organisation des Unterrichtswesens in dem Kronlande Ungarn Az Entwurf hatasa a tortenelemtanitasra Bolvari Takacs Gabor Teleki Jozsef Sarospatak es az Akademia Vekerdi Laszlo Egy konyvtar otthonai eredmenyei es gondjai Vasarnapi Ujsag 1858 XII 19 Sowards Steven W 23 April 2004 Nationalism in Hungary 1848 1867 Twenty Five Lectures on Modern Balkan History retrieved 19 March 2009 Julius Bartl 2002 Slovak History Chronology amp Lexicon Bolchazy Carducci Publishers p 102 ISBN 9780865164444 Andreas Komlosy 2015 Imperial Cohesion Nation Building and Regional Integration in the Habsburg Monarchy 1804 1918 In Stefan Berger Alexei Miller ed Nationalizing Empires Historical studies in Eastern Europe and Eurasia Vol 3 Central European University Press p 398 ISBN 9789633860168 John Merriman Europe 1789 to 1914 Encyclopedia of the Age of Industry and Empire Page 143 Seton Watson R W The Austro Hungarian Ausgleich of 1867 The Slavonic and East European Review 19 53 54 1939 123 140 Good David F The Economic Rise of the Habsburg Empire 1750 1914 1984 p 82 CIEGER Andras Kormany a merlegen a mult szazadban Tihany Leslie C 1969 The Austro Hungarian Compromise 1867 1918 A Half Century of Diagnosis Fifty Years of Post Mortem Central European History 2 2 114 38 doi 10 1017 s0008938900000169 S2CID 145522363 Albertini Luigi 1952 The Origins of the War of 1914 Volume I Oxford University Press p 4 Impatient to take his revenge on Bismarck for Sadowa he persuaded Franz Joseph to accept the Magyar demands that he had until then rejected Beust deluded himself that he could rebuild both the German Federation and the Holy Roman Empire and negotiated the Ausgleich as a necessary preliminary for the revanche on Prussia As a compromise with Hungary for the purposes of revenge on Prussia the Ausgleich could not be otherwise than a surrender to the Magyar oligarchy Albertini Luigi 1952 The Origins of the War of 1914 vol I Oxford University Press p 4 Lackey Scott 1995 The Rebirth of the Habsburg Army Friedrich Beck and the Rise of the General Staff ABC CLIO p 22 ISBN 9780313031311 Albertini Luigi 1952 The Origins of the War of 1914 vol I Oxford University Press p 6 Austria Hungary Encyclopedia Britannica 1911 Sabino Cassese Armin von Bogdandy Peter Huber 2017 The Max Planck Handbooks in European Public Law Vol I The Administrative State Oxford University Press p 294 ISBN 9780191039829 Istvan Bibo 2015 The Art of Peacemaking Political Essays by Istvan Bibo Yale University Press p 208 ISBN 9780300210262 Gyula Andrassy 1896 Az 1867 iki i e ezernyolcszazhatvanhetediki kiegyezesrol Franklin Tarsulat p 321 Eric Roman 2003 Austria Hungary amp the Successor States A Reference Guide from the Renaissance to the Present European nations Facts on File library of world history Infobase Publishing p 401 ISBN 9780816074693 Szavai Ferenc Tibor Konyvszemle Book review Kozari Monika A dualista rendszer 1867 1918 Modern magyar politikai rendszerek Magyar Tudomany in Hungarian p 1542 Retrieved 20 July 2012 Flandreau Marc April 2006 European Review of Economic History Vol 10 Cambridge University Press pp 3 33 ASIN B00440PZZC doi 10 1017 S1361491605001607 S2CID 153255836 1361 4916 Austria Hungary in the Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 Eric Roman 2003 Roszkowski Wojciech 2015 East Central Europe A Concise History Instytut Studiow Politycznych Polskiej Akademii Nauk Instytut Jagiellonski p 116 ISBN 978 8 36597 220 0 evi XV Torvenycikk az allamadossagok utan a magyar korona orszagai altal vallalando evi jarulekrol Archived from the original on 16 November 2007 Retrieved 1 January 2017 Andras Gero 2014 Nationalities and the Hungarian Parliament 1867 1918 2 Jozsa Hevizi 2004 Autonomies in Hungary and Europe A COMPARATIVE STUDY The Regional and Ecclesiastic Autonomy of the Minorities and Nationality Groups 3 Cornwall Mark Last Years of Austria Hungary A Multi National Experiment in Early Twentieth Century Europe 2nd ed Exeter University of Exeter Press 2002 Andras A Gergely Gabor Mathe 2000 The Hungarian state thousand years in Europe 1000 2000 Korona p 66 ISBN 9789639191792 Seton Watson R W 1925 Transylvania since 1867 The Slavonic Review 4 10 101 23 Valiani Leo The End of Austria Hungary Alfred A Knopf New York 1973 pp 9 10 translation of La Dissoluzione dell Austria Ungheria Casa Editrice Il Saggiatore Milano 1966 pp 19 20 Peter Berresford Ellis in The Irish Democrat in 2003 Archived from the original on 27 December 2005 Retrieved 14 February 2020 Griffith s book quoted by Taoiseach Bertie Ahern in 2005 Sources EditCornwall Mark 2002 Last Years of Austria Hungary A Multi National Experiment in Early Twentieth Century Europe 2nd ed University of Exeter Press Seton Watson R W 1925 Transylvania since 1867 The Slavonic Review Modern Humanities Research Association vol 4 no 10 pp 101 23 JSTOR 4201928 Seton Watson R W 1939 The Austro Hungarian Ausgleich of 1867 The Slavonic and East European Review Modern Humanities Research Association vol 19 no 19 53 54 pp 123 40 JSTOR 4203588 Sowards Steven W 23 April 2004 Nationalism in Hungary 1848 1867 Twenty Five Lectures on Modern Balkan History Michigan State University retrieved 19 March 2009 Taylor A J P 1952 The Habsburg Monarchy 1815 1918 A history of the Austrian Empire and Austria Hungary New York Macmillan Tihany Leslie C 1969 The Austro Hungarian Compromise 1867 1918 A Half Century of Diagnosis Fifty Years of Post Mortem Central European History Cambridge University Press Central European History Society vol 2 no 2 pp 114 38 doi 10 1017 s0008938900000169 JSTOR 4545523 S2CID 145522363 External links EditChronology of the Compromise The Dual Monarchy in Hungary Nationalism in Hungary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Austro Hungarian Compromise of 1867 amp oldid 1136321332, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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