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  1. The Austrian Hungarian Empire was a unique empire that had a dual monarchy between the Austrian Empire and the Kingdom of Hungary. It controlled a broad territory in Central and Southern Europe during the early modern period until the end of World War I.

  2. Look at the map showing the Austria-Hungarian Empire in about 1900. What information does the map provide about the Austria-Hungarian Empire? A. The empire was made up mainly of Austrians and Hungarians. B. Austria-Hungary was the strongest of the European empires at this time. C. Austria-Hungary was home to many different ethnic groups. D.

  3. The Austro-Hungarian Compromise in 1867 transformed the Habsburg Monarchy into an alliance of two sovereign states. Austria-Hungary was a dual system in which each half of the empire had its own constitution, government and parliament. The citizens on each half were also treated as foreigners in the other half.

  4. Introduction. The assassination of the Habsburg heir in Sarajevo on 28 June 1914 set in motion events that led to a global war. Arguably it was eighty-three-year-old Francis Joseph I, Emperor of Austria (1830-1916) , pressured by military advisers, government ministers, and his German ally, who unleashed the war.

  5. Introduction. After centuries as one of the most powerful nations of Europe, proud Austria was forced to divide its empire with Hungary in 1867. The two nations formed a dual monarchy—Austria-Hungary. In Europe, only Russia surpassed Austria-Hungary in size, population, and variety of nationalities.

  6. Abstract. This chapter analyses the military mobilization and expansion, as well as the social and political disintegration of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the era of the Great War (1912–1920, thus including the formation of the Successor States). The chapter will open with a discussion of the Balkan Wars and their psychological effects on ...

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  8. The family's traditional hereditary lands included the provinces of Lower and Upper Austria, Carinthia, Carniola, Styria, Salzburg, and Tirol—essentially today's Austria and Slovenia. To the east, the Habsburgs ruled as elective, and later hereditary, kings of Hungary, a kingdom that in 1789 included the semiautonomous regions of Transylvania ...

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