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Acknowledgements and Dedication
This book is the result of decades of work. While completely revising my first major
work on Austria-Hungary and the First World War, which appeared under the title :
Der Tod des Doppeladlers (‘The Death of the Double-Headed Eagle’), it was first neces-
sary to take into account the fact that a work that had initially been written over twenty
years previously needed to be re-examined. Questions have changed, and readers of any
kind of work have changed. Errors needed to be rectified. Some elements needed to be
formulated more precisely, more sharply. New information was added. And, naturally,
such a comprehensive work is also to some degree a response to others and other works,
to criticism as well as to praise and concurrence. In the interim, much good work and
some less good work has been written on the subject. Sometimes, the certain level of
humility is lacking that is also needed when approaching a period of time that one
did not experience oneself. Above all, what was of importance, and continues to be so,
was to comb through the archives and to search for answers to questions that are now
pressing. Many works and many people have helped me to alter my own view of the
subject and to enrich the way in which it is portrayed. To them, I express my thanks.
I would like to turn first to the person of Emperor Franz Joseph, whose role in
unleashing the war is far greater than had been assumed until now. Franz Joseph te-
naciously and obstinately insisted that he alone was to make the decisions. However,
he caused an enormous vacuum to be created at the summit of his empire. Since he
spent hours every day concerning himself with the military events, while accordingly
paying little attention to political developments, he was no longer able or willing to
make major changes, the power was initially conferred to the Austro-Hungarian Army
High Command and, finally, to the German Empire. With the creation of the Joint
Supreme War Command in September 1916, the Austrian Emperor forfeited impor-
tant elements of his sovereignty and, ultimately, was no longer even in a position to
decide whether to wage war or pursue peace. Peace was anyway very far from the dying
Emperor’s thoughts.
I also wished to provide a further and comprehensive description of the peoples of
the Empire, whose behaviour during the war ultimately decided whether the Empire
would continue to exist or whether it would disintegrate. Here, it was not so much the
THE FIRST WORLD WAR
and the End of the Habsburg Monarchy, 1914 – 1918
- Title
- THE FIRST WORLD WAR
- Subtitle
- and the End of the Habsburg Monarchy, 1914 – 1918
- Author
- Manfried Rauchensteiner
- Publisher
- Böhlau Verlag
- Location
- Wien
- Date
- 2014
- Language
- English
- License
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-205-79588-9
- Size
- 17.0 x 24.0 cm
- Pages
- 1192
- Categories
- Geschichte Vor 1918
Table of contents
- 1 On the Eve 11
- 2 Two Million Men for the War 49
- 3 Bloody Sundays 81
- 4 Unleashing the War 117
- 5 ‘Thank God, this is the Great War!’ 157
- 6 Adjusting to a Longer War 197
- 7 The End of the Euphoria 239
- 8 The First Winter of the War 283
- 9 Under Surveillance 317
- 10 ‘The King of Italy has declared war on Me’ 355
- 11 The Third Front 383
- 12 Factory War and Domestic Front, 1915 413
- 13 Summer Battle and ‘Autumn Swine’ 441
- 14 War Aims and Central Europe 469
- 15 South Tyrol : The End of an Illusion (I) 497
- 16 Lutsk :The End of an Illusion (II) 521
- 17 How is a War Financed ? 555
- 18 The Nameless 583
- 19 The Death of the Old Emperor 607
- 20 Emperor Karl 641
- 21 The Writing on the Wall 657
- 22 The Consequences of the Russian February Revolution 691
- 23 Summer 1917 713
- 24 Kerensky Offensive and Peace Efforts 743
- 25 The Pyrrhic Victory : The Breakthrough Battle of Flitsch-Tolmein 769
- 26 Camps 803
- 27 Peace Feelers in the Shadow of Brest-Litovsk 845
- 28 The Inner Front 869
- 29 The June Battle in Veneto 895
- 30 An Empire Resigns 927
- 31 The Twilight Empire 955
- 32 The War becomes History 983
- Epilogue 1011
- Afterword 1013
- Acknowledgements and Dedication 1019
- Notes 1023
- Selected Printed Sources and Literature 1115
- Index of People and Places 1155