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The Slovaks in the Habsburg Empire: A Struggle for Existence
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 February 2009
Extract
The example of the Slovaks, next to the Ruthenians the weakest and least privileged people of the Danubian monarchy, is eminently fitted to the examination of Austria's ability to deal with the main problem of its modern political life, namely, that of the coexistence and possible reconciliation of its nationalities. One of the first to point out this fundamental issue for the continued existence of Austria with unusual clarity was František Palacký in his 1848 letter to the Vorparlament of the Frankfurt National Assembly. Far from being an expression of unreserved faith in the future of the monarchy, his memorable words on the necessity of the Habsburg state1 were dictated by political realism and foresight. Emphasizing the dangers of German nationalism and Russian imperialism, which he perhaps intentionally exaggerated,2 the Czech leader was fully aware of the political weakness of the small Slav nations who were only gradually establishing their national identity. It was for their sake that he gave a final expression to the policy of Austro-Slavism, seeking the salvation of the Austrian Slavs in the preservation of the monarchy. He endeavored, however, to give it a new raison d'être based on the creation of a common defensive system for its individual nationalities in which all were to be given “complete equality of rights and respect.” While sincere, Palacký's support of Austria was neither unconditional nor devoid of a strong element of doubt. The nationalist policies of the Austrian Germans and the rebellious Magyars, whose chauvinism was only thinly covered by a veneer of liberalism, caused him to moderate his opinion in regard to the ability of the Austrian rulers to change the empire into a federal and democratic state. Thus, at the end of his Frankfurt message Palacký expressed only the hope that the Habsburg monarchy would not miss the opportunity to change into a state based on principles of justice, which alone could save it from disintegration.
- Type
- The Slovaks, Ukrainians (Ruthenians), Rumanians, and Italians
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- Copyright
- Copyright © Center for Austrian Studies, University of Minnesota 1967
References
1 See Palacký, František, Radhošt (3 vols., Prague: F. Tempský, 1871–1973), Vol. III, p. 14.Google Scholar
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22 The idea of a petition was considered by the Bratislava Slovaks as early as 1840. The petition was to be submitted to the Hungarian diet. Later Kollár prepared an appeal to be sent to the emperor. Both petitions, while marked by radicalism and integral Slovak nationalism, were never presented. See Rapant, , Slovenský prestolný prosbopis z roku 1842, Vol. I, pp. 23–27Google Scholar; and Bokeš, František (ed.), Karol Goláň. Štúrovské pokolenie (Bratislava: Vydavatel'stvo Slovenskej akadémie vied, 1964), pp. 62–63.Google Scholar
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42 Of the early proposals, those of the members of the government (Count Francis Stadion and Alexander Bach), as well as the more detailed plans of Karl Rosenfeld and Count Janos Mailáth, were relatively favorable to the Slovaks. Of special interest were the proposals of the government-appointed trustees of the Slovak nation, Ján Kollár, František Hanrich, and Ján Hlaváč. As was to be expected, Kollár's memorandum favored the Slovak point of view; those of his more conservative colleagues supported at least the most important Slovak demands. Bokeš, , Slovenská vlastiveda. Dejiny Slovákov a Slovenska, pp. 185–191 and 198–205.Google Scholar
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