Austro-Slavism
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Austro-Slavism or Austrian Slavism
Program
Austro-Slavism envisioned peaceful cooperation between the smaller Slavic nations of
As a political concept, however, Austro-Slavism persisted until the fall of the Austrian-Hungarian Empire in 1918.
The Archduke's reform plans, which were almost certainly sold to the Governments of Russia and Serbia by Colonel
The 1918 collapse of Austria-Hungary owed a great deal to Emperor Charles' failure to implement Austro-Slavist reforms due to both foreign and domestic politicians and to the ongoing chaos of the
Prominent supporters
- Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria
- Charles I of Austria
- Josip Jelačić
- Janez Bleiweis
- Karel Havlíček Borovský
- Jernej Kopitar
- Anton Tomaž Linhart
- Franz Miklosich
- František Palacký
- Paweł Stalmach
- Josip Juraj Strossmayer
See also
- Austromarxism and national personal autonomy
- Czechoslovakia–Yugoslavia relations
- Euro-Slavism
- Neo-Slavism
- Pan-Slavism
- Olomouc University in the year of revolutions
- Trialism in Austria-Hungary
Note
References
External links
- (in Ukrainian) Austroslavism at the Encyclopedia of History of Ukraine