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concluded an armistice ; indeed, it had not even opened negotiations to that effect. The
troops of the former ally Austria-Hungary were sent to the rear.
In the Balkans, where practically nothing had been heard about the results of nego-
tiations in the Villa Giusti, the withdrawal had continued. On 1 November, Imperial
and Royal troops detonated the railway bridge near Belgrade, which was thus destroyed
for the third time in this war. The next day, no soldier of Army Group ‘Feldmarshall
Kövess’, which should have long since been Army Group ‘Erzherzog Joseph’, stood any
longer on Serbian soil.2519 Kövess heard on 4 November, or even on the 5th, that he had
been appointed Army Supreme Commander. He travelled on the Danube to Vienna.
In the meantime, Hungary demanded and received new, separate armistice negotia-
tions because it did not feel affected by the treaty signed in the Villa Giusti. In Belgrade,
more far-reaching and worse conditions were then dictated to the Magyars.2520
The armistice naturally also extended to the navy. The Emperor had already trans-
ferred the High Seas Fleet to the new southern Slav state on 31 October, i.e. before
the conclusion of the armistice, and did not intend to deliver the Fleet to Italy. The last
Commander of the Imperial and Royal Fleet, Rear Admiral Miklos von Horthy, de-
parted with an order to the fleet in which he expressed the hope that the southern Slavs
who remained on the ships would exercise a ‘firm protection of the common coast’.
Evidently, Horthy did not want to accept that Hungary and Croatia would no longer
share a common coast. The southern Slav fleet command had other worries, however,
than commenting on this problem.
Italy felt duped by the transfer of the Imperial and Royal Fleet.2521 It could not do
much about it, but at least the joy of the new state of the Slovenes, Serbs and Croats
was to be dulled and the danger of a powerful Yugoslav fleet averted. An Italian com-
mand that had already been sent against the Imperial and Royal naval base was dropped
off in the harbour of Pula (Pola) took advantage of the dwindling vigilance and on 1
November attached two mines to the fleet’s flagship Viribus Unitis, with which the
dreadnought was sunk. Although the crew had been warned, the majority of the men,
as well as the first Yugoslav Commander of the Fleet, Janko Vukovič von Podkapelski,
went down with the battleship.2522 As a result of this, it had become clearly visible that
a conflict had broken out between Italy and Yugoslavia for hegemony in the Adriatic
and for the possession of the Adriatic coastal region, which appeared to confirm all
pessimistic prognoses on the future of the lands of the Habsburg Monarchy.
A member of the task force of the British War Cabinet, Leopold Stennett Amery,
who had gathered abundant experiences in Balkan matters since 1915,2523 described
the scenario in a powerful memorandum for Foreign Secretary Balfour : if sovereign
nation states were to be established in Central Europe, then ‘we transform Central
Europe in the blink of an eye into a new Balkans’. His proposal for a solution aimed at
a Danube confederation that would also by all means be in a position to resist German
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