| |
| |
Solomon Wank, Center for Austrian Studies (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24) |
 | | A second argument maintains that, with the exception of some small radical groups, the leaders and programs of all the nationalities counted on the continued existence of the Habsburg monarchy as the foundation of their political activity. |
 | | Counting on the continued existence of the Habsburg empire, therefore, could be seen as adaptation to political and diplomatic realities rather than as acceptance of the empire as such. |
 | | Count Heinrich Clam-Martinic, the prominent Bohemian political figure and Austrian cabinet minister, admitted to Joseph Redlich that the Prague demonstrations of August 7/8, 1914, in which both Germans and Czechs took part, were organized by the authorities and cannot be taken as conclusive evidence of Czech loyalty. |
| www.cas.umn.edu /wp933.htm (7662 words) |
|