Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. The Last Pandemic. In a September 22, 1918, editorial, the Evening Star in Washington, D.C., took measure of the influenza epidemic then sweeping the country. “The so-called Spanish influenza,” while “not exactly identified,” was “virtually the same disease as that which swept over the country nearly thirty years ago.”.

    • how old was the last hapsburg archduke when he died in 1918 pandemic1
    • how old was the last hapsburg archduke when he died in 1918 pandemic2
    • how old was the last hapsburg archduke when he died in 1918 pandemic3
    • how old was the last hapsburg archduke when he died in 1918 pandemic4
    • how old was the last hapsburg archduke when he died in 1918 pandemic5
  2. Books. The Last Hapsburg. "Charles I ... (17 August 1887 - 1 April 1922) was (among other titles) the last ruler of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. He was the last Emperor of Austria, the last King of Hungary, [1] the last King of Bohemia, Croatia and the last King of Galicia and Lodomeria and the last monarch of the House of Habsburg-Lorraine.

  3. Mar 15, 1989 · By From News Services. March 15, 1989 at 12:00 a.m. EST. ZIZERS, SWITZERLAND -- Zita, 96, the last empress of the vast Hapsburg empire of Austria-Hungary whose role in a plan to end World War I ...

  4. last effort, as it were, of the last Haps-burg Emperor to conciliate the good-will of his own people, over whom his authority was fast waning. On the eve of the proclamation of a republic the Emperor realized that the end of the monarchy had come, and him-self gave orders to prepare his departure for the same day, [Nov. 11, 1918.] He

  5. Mar 14, 1989 · Zita, the last empress of the vast Hapsburg Empire whose role in a plan to end World War I led to exile from her Austrian palace, died today. She was 96. Born in Italy as a princess of Bourbon ...

  6. Apr 2, 1989 · AUSTRIA BURIES THE LAST HAPSBURG EMPRESS. By Robert J. McCartney. April 1, 1989 at 7:00 p.m. EST. Share. Add to your saved stories. Save ...

  7. Brook-Shepherd's Hapsburg connections and leanings, intrinsic to both his biography of Emperor Charles I, The Last Hapsburg (1969) and his history of the winding-down of WW I, November 1918 (1982), issue now in a sympathetic portrayal of Archduke Franz Ferdinand (1863-1914), the heir to the Austrian throne whose assassination by a Serbian nationalist famously touched off the Great War.

  1. People also search for