Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-ndw9j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-09T09:46:18.605Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Inter-Ethnic Relations in the Hungarian Half of the Austro-Hungarian Empire

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Zoltán Szász*
Affiliation:
Institute of History, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest

Extract

The collapse of the three great multi-national and multi-ethnic empires—the Czarist Russian, the Ottoman Turkish and the Austro-Hungarian—was an immediate consequence of World War I and the ensuing revolutions. Of these three, only the empire of the Habsburgs was really considered to be an integral part of nineteenth-century European developments. Although historians and contemporaries may have questioned its modernity and viability, few would have challenged its credentials as part of Europe. Yet its demise was rooted—as for the other empires—in the unresolved nationality questions which still bedevil the region in our own time.

Type
I The Historical Background
Copyright
Copyright © 1996 Association for the Study of Nationalities of Eastern Europe and ex-USSR, Inc. 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Notes

1. For the evolution of the Habsburg Empire see particularly: Macartney, C. A., The Habsburg Empire, 1790-1918 (New York, 1968); Kann, R. A., A History of the Habsburg Empire (Berkeley, 1974). For the “nationality question,” Kann's Das Nationalitätenproblem der Habsburgermonarchie Vols. I—II (Graz-Köln, 1964); E. Lemberg, Nationalismus Vols. I—II (Reinbeck bei Hamburg, 1964); J. Szekfü, Der Staat Ungarn (Berlin, 1917); Pach, Zs. P. and Várkonyi, A. R., eds., Magyarország története 1526-1686 [History of Hungary] Vol. III (Budapest, 1985); J. Miskolczy, Ungarn in der Habsburgermonarchie (Vienna, 1959); E. Pamlényi, ed., History of Hungary (London, 1975). Also see A. Wandruszka and P. Urbanitsch, eds., Die Völker des Reiches (Vienna, 1980) and a more recent Hungarian assessment about the Habsburg Empire in E. Niederhauser, Die Habsburger: Ein europaisches Phänomen (Budapest, 1983).Google Scholar

2. Niederhauser, E., The Rise of Nationality in Eastern Europe (Budapest, 1982); Sundhausen, H., Der Einfluss der Herderschen Ideen auf die Nationsbildung bei den Völkern der Habsburgermonarchie (München, 1973); [S. Hojö], Sollen wir Magyaren werden? (Karlsstadt, 1833); Hroch, M., Die Vorkämpfer der nationalen Bewegung bei den kleinen Völkern Europas (Praha, 1968); Mérei, Gy. and Vörös, K., Magyarország története, 1790-1848, Vol. V (Budapest, 1980); Barany, G., Stephen Széchenyi and the Awakening of Hungarian Nationalism (Princeton, 1968). For the text of laws see Ed., Corpus Juris HungariciMagyar törvénytár 1740-1835. [Annual Laws] (Budapest, 1901), 1836-1868, évi törvényczikkek [Annual Laws] (Budapest, 1896).Google Scholar

3. E. Kovacs and L. Katus, eds., Magyarország története [History of Hungary] 1848-1867 , Vol. VI (Budapest, 1978); Steier, L., A tót nemzetiségi kérdés 1848-49-ben [The Slovak National Minority Question in 1848-49] (Budapest, 1937); Deak, I., The Lawful Revolution (New York, 1979); Gy. Spira, The Nationality Issue in Hungary in 1848-49 (Budapest, 1992); B. Köpeczi, ed., Kurze Geschichte Siebenbürgens (Budapest, 1990).Google Scholar

4. Redlich, J., Das österreichische Staats- und Reichsproblem, Vols. I—II (Wien, 1920, 1926); K. G. Hugelmann, ed., Das Nationalitätenrecht des alten Österreichs (Wien-Leipzig, 1934); Stourzh, G., Die Gleichberechtigung der Nationalitäten und die österreichische Dezember-Verfassung von 1867 in Der österreichisch-ungarische Ausgleich von 1867 (ed.) Berger, P. (Wien-München, 1967); Haselsteiner, H., Das Nationalitätenkonzept des Reichstages von Kremsier und der österreichischen Verfassungen bis 1867 in Friedenssicherung in Südosteuropa (eds) M. Bernath u. K. Nehring (Neuried, 1985). For a thorough summary of Austrian nationality policies see G. Stourzh in Habsburgermonarchie III/2. 975-1206.Google Scholar

5. Kemény, Zs., Még egy szó a Forradalom után [One More Word About the Revolution in Retrospect] (Pest, 1851); N. N. [J. Eötvös] Über die Gleichberechtigung der Nationalitäten in Österreich (Pest, 1850); J. Eötvös, Die Sonderstellung Ungarns von Standpunkte Deutschlands (Leipzig, 1861); Eötvös, J., A nemzetiségi kérdésröl [About the Nationality Question] (Pest, 1865); Kastner, E., Mazzini e Kossuth (Florence, 1929); Kossuth, L., La Question des Nationalités (Bruxelles, 1859); Wierer, R., Der Föderalismus im Donauraum (Graz-Köln, 1960); Gy. Szabad, Forradalom és Kiegyezés Válaszútján [At the Crossroad Between Revolution and Compromise] (Budapest, 1967); Weber, J., Eötvös und die Nationalitätenfrage (München, 1966); Bödy, P., Joseph Eötvös and the Modernization of Hungary 1840-1870 (Notre Dame, 1972); Konyi, M., ed., Deák Ferenc beszédei [The Speeches of Ferenc Deák] III-IV (Budapest, 1903); Király, B. K., Ferenc Deak (Boston, 1975); Szücs, J., Nation und Geschichte (Budapest, 1981).Google Scholar

6. Kovács and Katus, Magyarorszag története, Vol. VI. For the text of the law see Dezsö Markus, ed., Corpus Juris Hungarici—Magyar törvénytár 1836-1868 (Budapest, 1896). The parliamentary debates and the position of the nationality representatives is discussed in detail by Imre Mikó, Nemzetisegi jog es nemzetisegi politika [Nationality Rights and Nationality Policies] (Kolozsvár [Cluj], 1944). A new methodical survey is presented in the yet unpublished manuscript of László Katus, Az 1868 évi nemzetiségi törvény [The Nationality Law of 1868].Google Scholar

7. In addition to the general sources consulted above, see Jaszi, O., Dissolution of the Habsburg Monarchy (Chicago, 1961); Hanak, P., Hungary in the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy: Preponderancy or Dependency? Austrian History Yearbook, Vol. III, No. 1 (1967); Imre Mikó, Nemzetiségi jog és nemzetiségi politika [Nationality Rights and Nationality Policies] (Kolozsvar, 1944); L. Mocsáry, Some Observations Concerning the Nationality Question (Budapest, 1874); Béla Grünwald, The Hungarian Nationality and Public Administration (Budapest, 1874); Béla Grünwald, A Felvidék: Politikai tanulmány [The Northern Region: A Political Study] (Budapest, 1878); Gróf Apponyi Albert emlékiratai [The Memoirs of Count Albert Apponyi] Vol. 2 (Budapest, 1934); P. Hanak, ed., Die nationale Frage in der österreichischungarischen Monarchie 1900-1918 (Budapest, 1966); L. Holotik and A. Vantuch, eds., Der österreichisch-ungarische Ausgleich 1867 (Bratislava, 1971); Erdély története [History of Transylvania] (Budapest, 1986); B. Köpeczi, ed., Histoire de la Transylvanie (Budapest, 1992).Google Scholar