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  1. People of the Habsburg monarchy by location‎ (5 C) Subdivisions of the Austrian Empire (1804–1867) ‎ (3 C, 8 P) Subdivisions of Austria-Hungary ‎ (18 C, 22 P)

  2. 1780 establishments in the Habsburg monarchy (1 P) Categories: 1780 by country. Years of the 18th century in the Habsburg monarchy. 1780s in the Habsburg monarchy. 1780 in Europe.

  3. The house takes its name from Habsburg Castle, a fortress built in the 1020s in present-day Switzerland by Radbot of Klettgau, who named his fortress Habsburg. His grandson Otto II was the first to take the fortress name as his own, adding "Count of Habsburg" to his title. In 1273, Count Radbot's seventh-generation descendant, Rudolph of ...

  4. Austria-Hungary. Austria-Hungary, often referred to as the Austro-Hungarian Empire or the Dual Monarchy, was a multi-national constitutional monarchy in Central Europe [c] between 1867 and 1918. Austria-Hungary was a military and diplomatic alliance of two sovereign states with a single monarch who was titled both emperor of Austria and King of ...

  5. At the May Assembly in Sremski Karlovci in 1848, prior to the Serb uprising of 1848–49, the Serbs of the Habsburg monarchy proclaimed the creation of the Serbian Vojvodina, a Serb autonomous region within the Monarchy. The metropolitan of Karlovci, Josif Rajačić, was also proclaimed "Serbian Patriarch", thus the Metropolitanate of Karlovci ...

  6. Egyptian–Ottoman War (1839–1841) Eighty Years' War. Eighty Years' War, 1576–1579. Eighty Years' War, 1579–1588. Eighty Years' War, 1599–1609. Eighty Years' War, 1621–1648.

  7. The Military Frontier ( German: Militärgrenze; Serbo-Croatian: Војна крајина, Vojna krajina, Војна граница, Vojna granica; Hungarian: Katonai határőrvidék; Romanian: Graniță militară) was a borderland of the Habsburg monarchy and later the Austrian and Austro-Hungarian Empire. It acted as the cordon sanitaire ...

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