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Chapter 4 ♦ 171
the German Empire were Privatdozenten (less often associate professors);
most were appointed to the Prague and Vienna faculties, and they came from
the universities in Göttingen, Munich, and Freiburg (philosophical faculties)
and Heidelberg, Strasbourg, and Leipzig (medical faculties). Appointments
of full professors from Germany comprised only around 30 percent of the
total transfers. In philosophical faculties, such transfers were, with a few
exceptions, concentrated in Prague and Vienna, and up to a third of these
involved returning scholars who had been born in the Habsburg Empire. In
medical faculties, as many as half of the appointed full professors who had
been working in the German Empire had been born in the Habsburg Empire,
and all of these appointments were to Vienna or Prague. Appointments of
full professors from outside the Habsburg realms were, however, a financial
burden and were seen as an affront to local scholarship; they were thus not
welcomed by the ministry. Only the University of Vienna was privileged,
as the principal university in the empire, whereas Prague was gradually
but steadily losing status. The Prague faculties saw this as an increasing
depreciation of the Charles-Ferdinand University, and the professors of the
German University, in particular after 1882, expressed their discontent with
Vienna’s privileges.69 In 1899, when the ministry did not appoint one of the
two German Empire professors proposed as the faculty’s first and second
choices, but instead a young Privatdozent from Vienna, the Bohemian fac-
ulty protested loudly, seeing it as a vilification of the status of Bohemian
academia.70 But this was to no avail.
The relationship between the two neighboring empires that shared a
language was difficult, however, not only owing to the obvious political
complications, but also because the Habsburg Empire from the beginning
had understood science as a cultural component of its competition with
Prussia. Although higher officials advocated the unity of the two empires
at an academic level on several occasions, it was the concept of competi-
tion that defined academic relations. Especially in the medical sciences,
both scholars and the ministry accentuated the idea that the Vienna Medical
School was appreciated at German universities. Ministerial papers men-
tioned not only the welcome spread of Habsburg traditions but also the fact
that many young Habsburg scholars would not easily gain a satisfactory
position in the Habsburg Empire,71 thus addressing financial issues related
to scientific transfer.
The idea of the “best possible scholars,” which one often finds in
appointment proposals for the University of Vienna, referred only to
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Buch Universities in Imperial Austria, 1848–1918 - A Social History of a Multilingual Space"
Universities in Imperial Austria, 1848–1918
A Social History of a Multilingual Space
- Titel
- Universities in Imperial Austria, 1848–1918
- Untertitel
- A Social History of a Multilingual Space
- Autor
- Jan Surman
- Verlag
- Purdue University Press
- Ort
- West Lafayette
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- ISBN
- 978-1-55753-861-1
- Abmessungen
- 16.5 x 25.0 cm
- Seiten
- 474
- Schlagwörter
- History, Austria, Eduction System, Learning
- Kategorien
- Geschichte Vor 1918
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- List of Illustrations vi
- List of Tables vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Note on Language Use, Terminology, and Geography xi
- Abbreviations xiii
- Introduction A Biography of the Academic Space 1
- Chapter 1 Centralizing Science for the Empire 19
- Chapter 2 The Neoabsolutist Search for a Unified Space 49
- Chapterr 3 Living Out Academic Autonomy 89
- Chapter 4 German-Language Universities between Austrian and German Space 139
- Chapter 5 Habsburg Slavs and Their Spaces 175
- Chapter 6 Imperial Space and Its Identities 217
- Chapter 7 Habsburg Legacies 243
- Conclusion Paradoxes of the Central European Academic Space 267
- Appendix 1 Disciplines of Habilitation at Austrian Universities 281
- Appendix 2 Databases of Scholars at Cisleithanian Universities 285
- Notes 287
- Bibliography 383
- Index 445