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The Slovenes in the Habsburg Empire or Monarchy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Peter Vodopivec*
Affiliation:
Ljubljana University

Extract

“Let everybody live in his country, at his home, as he would like to live: the Germans in their German way, the Italians in the Italian and the Hungarians in the Hungarian,” maintained, in March 1848, the Slovene priest from Klagenfurt (Carinthia) Matija Majar, “And we the Slavs also demand, firmly and with all our strength, that they let us live at home in our own way: the Slovenes in the Slovene one…”

Type
Part III: The Survival of a Small Nation
Copyright
Copyright © 1992 by the Association for the Study of the Nationalities of the USSR and Eastern Europe, Inc. 

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References

Notes

1 Ferdo Gestrin & Vasilij Melik, Slovenska zgodovina od konca osemnajstega stoletja do 1918 (“Slovene History from the End of the Eighteenth Century to 1918”). Ljubljana, 1966, p. 101.Google Scholar

2 The best survey on Slovenes and the Habsburg Monarchy in English was done by Fran Zwitter in 1964; Austrian History Yearbook 3., Houston, 1967, pp. 159–188.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

3 Fran Zwitter, “Slovenski politični preporod XIX stoletja v okviru evropske nacionalne problematike” ('The Slovene National Awakening and European National Problems in the 19th Century”). Zgodovinski časopis (“Historical Review). Ljubljana, 1964, p. 95.Google Scholar

4 Cyprien Robert, Le Monde Slave, son passé, son état présent et son avenir Tome I. Paris, 1852, p. 356.Google Scholar

5 Zwitter, op. cit., Austrian History Yearbook 3.Google Scholar

6 Gestrin & Melik, op. cit, pp. 157–160.Google Scholar

7 Carole Rogel, “The Slovenes and Yugoslavism, 1890–1914.” New York: East European Quarterly, Boulder Distributed by Columbia University Press, 1977 [East European Monographs], p. 3Google Scholar

8 Zwitter, op. cit., Austrian History Yearbook 3Google Scholar

9 Rado L. Lencek, “A Paradigm of Slavic National Evolution: Bible—Grammar—Poet” Four Hundred Years of the South Slavic Protestant Reformation (1584–1984) Ed. Henry Cooper, 1984, pp. 57–71.Google Scholar

10 Vasilij Melik & Peter Vodopivec, Die slowenische Intelligenz und die österreichischen Hochschulen 1848–1918, Wegennetz des Europäischen Geistes II. Schriftenreihe des Österreichischen Ost und Südosteuropa-Instituts, Band 12, Wien, 1087, pp. 136–137.Google Scholar

11 Gestrin & Melik, op. cit., p. 261.Google Scholar

12 Melik & Vodopivec, op. cit.Google Scholar

13 Zwitter, op. cit., Zgodovinski časopis, p. 105.Google Scholar

14 Zwitter, op. cit., Austrian History Yearbook 3.Google Scholar

15 Rogel, op. cit.Google Scholar

16 Vasilij Melik, “Leto 1918 v slovenski zgodovini” (“The Year 1918 in Slovene History”), Zgodovinski časopis. Ljubljana, 1988, pp. 525–532.Google Scholar