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Mutiny 891
The reintroduction of military coercion, the delayed holiday, the prospect of returning
to the front and having to continue the war in the south-west against Italy, but above all
the poor rations, gave rise to an explosive mood among the re-drafted home-comers.2138
When the German Plenipotentiary General attached to the Army High Command,
August von Cramon, then claimed that officers and enlisted men were downright eager
to return to the Italian front, as they had been in 1915,2139 then he confused some-
thing to the extent that the desire to be sent to the Italian front meant for many only
the hope of better rations, booty and, under certain circumstances, the opportunity to
desert. Even if an attempt was made by Austro-Hungarian propaganda intelligence
departments to re-educate the home-comers, the indoctrination of the Russian Revo-
lution was generally enough not only to make the people rebellious but also to put the
actual slogans in their mouths. One did not have to have come into noteworthy contact
with the Bolsheviks to understand slogans such as ‘peace’ and ‘bread’. Revolts flared up
in Żurawica in Galicia on 25 April, then in Sambor on 2 May. A march company of
Infantry Regiment No. 40 had been used as an auxiliary unit in order to collect food-
stuffs. The civilian population had put up a sustained fight and there had been shocking
scenes. Under such circumstances, no trained demagogues were needed in order for the
replacement troop bodies and the re-drafted home-comers to revolt.
It was a similar story in Lublin. Repatriates revolted. During the obligatory four-
week holiday, they had often searched in vain for their relatives. Their houses were de-
stroyed and their families were living in part in indescribable misery in the abandoned
trenches. They were fading fast, and the administrative authorities did hardly anything
to ease the people’s lot. The unsettled future of the Polish Government General delayed
any effective measure for reconstruction. Ruthenian-Polish antagonisms did the rest.
Generally, a ridiculously insignificant incident was then sufficent to break the spell.2140
In garrisons around Litoměřice (Leitmeritz), repatriates rebelled, as they did in Trenčín
(Trentschin). Ruthenians mutinied in the east of Slovakia. In countless places, unrest
flared up simultaneously. Everywhere, however, the unrest was at first relatively small
and limited, even if there were some deaths. But when a series of factors then intensi-
fied, the explosion occurred.
In retrospect, it was observed what elements had to come together : soldiers who
came from the territories with a strongly nationalist movement, whose replacement
troop bodies were moved to industrial territories near to their own homelands, in
which strikes among the workers and food demonstrations repeatedly took place, were
predestined for a military revolt. If some agitation was then added, a spark was nor-
mally enough.2141
The explosion occurred in Styria. In the late evening of 12 May, replacement per-
sonnel from Infantry Regiment No. 17 mutinied in Judenburg. The reduction of the
rations and the distribution of new uniforms, from which an imminent deployment
THE FIRST WORLD WAR
and the End of the Habsburg Monarchy, 1914 – 1918
- Titel
- THE FIRST WORLD WAR
- Untertitel
- and the End of the Habsburg Monarchy, 1914 – 1918
- Autor
- Manfried Rauchensteiner
- Verlag
- Böhlau Verlag
- Ort
- Wien
- Datum
- 2014
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-205-79588-9
- Abmessungen
- 17.0 x 24.0 cm
- Seiten
- 1192
- Kategorien
- Geschichte Vor 1918
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- 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