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Vaterland explicitly referred toAustria as adynastic entity supposed to infuse
patriotismtoeveryone.8
Consideringthatmostterritorieswerecrownlandswithhistoricalrightsand
representation (diets) the Empire could indeed foster national definition to-
getherwithdynastic loyalty; furthermoreitrecognizedotherpeoplesmakingof
theconceptofnationhoodanelementofidentificationthatwasnotincompatible
withAustrianpatriotism.Moreoverthenewformofconstitutionalimperialrule
found its justification in the ability to promote the development of the con-
stituentnations.9Adialoguewas thus established thatgaveeachof theprotag-
onists theircoherence.
The cities were the places where these activities came to being: schools,
associations, libraries, theatre and press became increasingly multicultural
whichmeansthattheofferwasnomorecenteredonthelanguageofthemajority
and/or dominant group. The identificationwith the territorywas increasingly
challenged by the identification to a nationality thatwent beyond it. Here the
differencebetweenAustriaandHungaryisofaparticularrelevance:Austriawas
conceivedasadynastical statemadeof territories ‘belonging’ to it;Hungaryon
the contrarywas from itsmedieval origins on a centralized state that did not
recognizeprovincialautonomyexceptfortheKingdomofCroatia-Slavoniawith
whichitwasunitedsince1102andforTransylvania thatwasconsideredpartof
theHungariankingdombut composedof threenations representedat thediet
(Hungarians,Sz8kely,Saxons).ThisexplainspartlywhytheHungarianshadless
difficulty defining and imposing theHungarian identity to thewhole country,
thantheAustrianswhose identitywassubsumedinthedynastic loyalty.10Many
cities acquiredanational symbolic signification foroneof its componentsand
this lednaturally tocompetitionandconflict inthepublicspace.Butpolyethnic
cities were more or less spared this identification as shows the example of
Czernowitz.11
MulticulturalismintheHabsburgcitiesisalsoverymuchlinkedtodiscourses
ofidentity.Wewilltry todetermineifthecitizens,perceivingindeedtheircityas
multicultural, identifiedthemselveswithoneormorecultures.Perceptionsand
receptionarethemostdifficultelements tobedefinedbyhistoriansbecausewe
lackenoughsourcestodeterminehowthepeopleperceivedthemessagessendby
8 Sigmund Schneider (ed.), MeinÖsterreich,meinHeimatland. Illustrierte Volks- undVa-
terlandskundedesÖsterreichischenKaiserstaates,Wien1914.
9 Judson,TheHabsburgEmpire (seenote2),p. 270.
10 On themeaning of the allegories of ‘Austria’, see SelmaKrasa-Florian, Die Allegorie der
Austria. Die Entstehung des Gesamtstaatsgedankens in der österreichisch-ungarischen
MonarchieunddiebildendeKunst,Wien2007.
11 HaraldHeppner,Hauptstadt imsüdöstlichenEuropa.EineZusammenfassung in: id. (ed.),
HauptstädtezwischenSave,BosporusundDnjepr,Wien1998,p. 217.
ImperialChallenges inAustro-HungarianMulticulturalCities 277
Österreich-Ungarns imperiale Herausforderungen
Nationalismen und Rivalitäten im Habsburgerreich um 1900
- Titel
- Österreich-Ungarns imperiale Herausforderungen
- Untertitel
- Nationalismen und Rivalitäten im Habsburgerreich um 1900
- Autoren
- Wolfram Dornik
- Bernhard Bachinger
- Stephan Lehnstaedt
- Verlag
- V&R unipress GmbH
- Datum
- 2020
- Sprache
- deutsch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-7370-1060-3
- Abmessungen
- 15.5 x 23.2 cm
- Seiten
- 362
- Schlagwörter
- KUK, K.U.K, Habsburg, Monarchie, Österreich-Ungarn
- Kategorien
- Geschichte Vor 1918