The Austro-Hungarian Question (1914-1918)

PATREON: / samaronow
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Maps by Omniatlas:
omniatlas.com/
Sources:
Peter C. Appelbaum
Habsburg Sons: Jews in the Austro-Hungarian Army 1788-1918
amzn.to/49ikSJC
[1] p. 28
[2] p. 30-31
[3] p. 36
[4] p. 40-41
[5] p. 43-44
[6] p. 56
[7] p. 12-13
[8] p. 17-18
[9] p. 8
[17] p. 58-59
[18] p. 51
Ewa Czerwińska-Schupp
Otto Bauer (1881-1938): Thinker and Politician
amzn.to/4ahk7Sb
[19] p. 17-18
[20] p. 13
[22] p. 19-20
András Gerő
“Nationalities and the Hungarian Parliament (1867-1918)”
www.geroandras.hu/en/national...
[11]
The Great War (KZread)
• THIS WEEK 100 YEARS AG...
[23] Week 185
[24] Week 186
[25] Week 190
Norbert Leser
“Austro-Marxism: A Reappraisal”
Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 1, No. 2
www.jstor.org/stable/259926
[21] p. 122
Robert S. Wistrich
Laboratory for World Destruction: Germans and Jews in Central Europe
amzn.to/49eIVZS
[10] p. 82
[12] p. 92
[13] p. 84
[14] p. 88
[15] p. 90
[16] p. 85
0:00 The Austro-Hungarian Exception
6:47 “Avenging Kishinev”
8:03 The Imperial Question and the Austromarxists
14:41 The Beginning of the End
17:39 Bauer’s Crossing
19:34 The Fall of Austria-Hungary

Пікірлер: 149

  • @AncientAmericas
    @AncientAmericasАй бұрын

    It's not a video about Austria-Hungary in World War I if Conrad von Hötzendorf doesn't get mentioned at least once.

  • @garethsmith3036

    @garethsmith3036

    Ай бұрын

    Hey! It’s Ancient Americas

  • @ffreeze9924

    @ffreeze9924

    Ай бұрын

    @@garethsmith3036yeah cause Sam is your favorite history youtuber’s favorite history KZreadr

  • @patrickkelmer6290
    @patrickkelmer6290Ай бұрын

    Finally, it´s Aronow time again.

  • @SawdEndymon

    @SawdEndymon

    Ай бұрын

    I’m learning not just Jewish but European history far more than I ever did in my honors classes.

  • @rapasvi

    @rapasvi

    Ай бұрын

    It's funny how we all thought this same thing when the notification showed up

  • @J-Bahn

    @J-Bahn

    Ай бұрын

    @@SawdEndymonthat’s my favorite thing about this channel

  • @thedemongodvlogs7671
    @thedemongodvlogs7671Ай бұрын

    I did not have Sam making a case for the reintroduction of duelling on my 2024 bingo card.

  • @travissutherland8502
    @travissutherland8502Ай бұрын

    The way you looked at me when you mentioned Von Hotzendorf felt personal.

  • @jacey320

    @jacey320

    Ай бұрын

    whats the story with people bugging him to mention him?

  • @jimfromdiscord.8904
    @jimfromdiscord.8904Ай бұрын

    When I heard the name Karl Renner, my mind went, "wait, the Karl Renner from AFTER World War 2?" Turns out he lived that long - he lived long enough to see Austria be broken apart, annexed, broken apart temporarily, and died before it could be put back together again in 1955

  • @ironchancellor1
    @ironchancellor1Ай бұрын

    @21:08 It wasn't that they thought Germany might win that the negotiations were broken off, but rather that France (and Austria's foreign minister, Count Czernin) exposed the secret negotiations that were taking place in a massive public scandal, which resulted in Karl having to break them off because Germany was threatening to invade them over it. Karl never believed that Germany would/could win the war, which is why he pursued the secret negotiations (he also had a number of moral objections to the war itself, and Germany's aims as he was more sympathetic to France). The whole scandal was known as the Sixtus Affair (after Karl's brother-in-law, Prince Sixtus Bourbon, who he was communicating with in the Belgian army).

  • @forthrightgambitia1032
    @forthrightgambitia1032Ай бұрын

    Funnily enough I have been reading Joyce's Ulysses recently where much of the book makes many implicit comparisons of the Irish and Jewish circumstances. And having watched this it makes me realise that Leopold Bloom's sympathies for Arthur Griffith's pre-1916 Sinn Fein that explicitly proposed Irish Home Rule in the context of a Austro-Hungarian Dual Monarchy, but for Britain, suggests to me that Bloom himself was probably more on the Bundist side of things. Because as you point out here the Bundists were quite explicitly anti-nationalist and anti-national state in a monolithic sense. Which in itself adds an interesting flavour to his skepticism about the adverts for Zionist colonies (the Agendath Netaim, explicitly connected to Moses Montefiore) as well, suggesting on both the Irish question and the Jewish question the character is seeking a post-nationalist solution, associating the more radical demands of both the Fenians and Zionists for separate nation states as forms of the same violent machismo that parallels what Joyce saw as the subjugating empires of the time such as Britain or Russia. It makes sense also that these ideas would have been rattling in Joyce's head given the time he had spent before WW2 in Trieste.

  • @ekmalsukarno2302
    @ekmalsukarno2302Ай бұрын

    Sam Aronow, can you please make videos on these following topics: - History of Iraqi Jews (that way you can talk about the Kadoorie, Sassoon and Saatchi families) - History of Jewish communities in Southeast Asia (in places such as Penang and Manado) - History of Yemeni Jews - History of Sephardic Jews in Suriname and the Caribbean - History of Jewish communities in Latin America (that way you can talk about Jewish gauchos) - History of South Africa's Jewish community (that way you can talk about Helen Suzman and Harry Schwarz) Thank you very much and please accept my requests.

  • @patrickkelmer6290

    @patrickkelmer6290

    Ай бұрын

    Commenting on this for the algorithm.

  • @dushmanmardom

    @dushmanmardom

    Ай бұрын

    @@patrickkelmer6290replying on that comment for the algorithm

  • @rezajafari6395

    @rezajafari6395

    Ай бұрын

    Tbf most of these aren't big enough for videos of their own. But he could make vid discussing several communities

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    Ай бұрын

    Iraq will almost certainly be covered in the 1920s. Most of the others are on the list of potential specials and two of them are on the short list.

  • @thedemongodvlogs7671

    @thedemongodvlogs7671

    Ай бұрын

    Many South African Jews have also risen to pretty high ranks in sports, particularly Cricket!

  • @Great_Olaf5
    @Great_Olaf5Ай бұрын

    I knew banning dueling was a mistake!

  • @johannschiestl2772

    @johannschiestl2772

    Ай бұрын

    that was the final straw !

  • @thedemongodvlogs7671
    @thedemongodvlogs7671Ай бұрын

    I think you really nailed it with the 'Mendelssohn Line', I'm sure my Yekkish grandparents would have put the divide about there too! (Although I think that most of the Silesian Jews were Ost) I can't say I know much about the various Ostjudisch communities (Litvak, Galitz, Poylish, Russian etc.), but you can divide the Westjuden further into our own communities: - Yekkes = Western(Rheinland)/Southern Germany, Alsace, Switzerland, Netherlands and German/Dutch-speaking/Jüdischdeutsch slang - Ostelbisch Jews = Germany East of the Elbe to the Mendelssohn line and German-speaking/Yiddish slang - Viennese Jews = Vienna area of Austria and German-speaking/Yiddish slang - Czech Jews (also sometimes included as Ostelbisch) = Bohemia and German-speaking/not sure what slang - Hungarian Jews = Hungary (especially Budapest) and Hungarian-speaking/Yiddish slang Broadly speaking all of these would be considered Westjuden. Sadly there was often a prejudice between east and west, but in the last 40/50 years that has basically completely vanished.

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    Ай бұрын

    And here I thought "Yekke" referred to all Western Ashkenazim.

  • @thedemongodvlogs7671

    @thedemongodvlogs7671

    Ай бұрын

    ​@SamAronow You might just get away with calling some of them Yekkes, but the Hungarian Jews would definitely take offence!

  • @madizo9056
    @madizo9056Ай бұрын

    Hello Sam! I’m an Algerian that has been watching your videos and I love them. Keep going!

  • @jonyprepperisrael60
    @jonyprepperisrael60Ай бұрын

    4:31 I am not sure if it's right because of Henri Rottembourg, who apparently became General of Brigade in 1811 and General of Division in 1813. He served from the first coalition war right until the hundred days war.

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    Ай бұрын

    You are correct! I wish I'd known about him when I covered the Napoleonic Wars. Thank you.

  • @jonyprepperisrael60

    @jonyprepperisrael60

    Ай бұрын

    @@SamAronow come to think of it, I wonder when did some countries like Britain got their first, if ever, Jewish Generals

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    Ай бұрын

    Maj. Gen. Frederic John Goldsmid, 1870.

  • @jjganza
    @jjganzaАй бұрын

    A small correction. The Croats, alongside Slovens and Serbs first declared State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs. It was only after the unification withKingdom of Serbia and Montenegro, about month and a half later,, that it was named Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. Also you are missing the part of the territory of the State - Dalmatia, which in your maps remains orange as part of Cisleithanian Austria.

  • @Damian0358_
    @Damian0358_Ай бұрын

    Another great video! The discussion on the Austromarxists' relationship with Jews reminds me of their relationship with Slavic 'Völkerabfälle', a topic that I wrote my Bachelor thesis on, and one that touches on that discussion on the idea of dividing Europe between East and West. Beyond the educational aspect, all this affirms in my eyes, just as it had for Bauer, my attitude towards the Austromarxists. For anyone reading that's interested in seeing arguments which argue against such a divide being a relic of the Cold War, and in fact predating it significantly, I highly recommend checking out Larry Wolff's Inventing Eastern Europe and Maria Todorova's Imagining the Balkans

  • @wehosrmthink7510
    @wehosrmthink7510Ай бұрын

    I so love your work, Sam ! I’m sending this video ASAP to my dear Czech-American friend who was raised (and carries his last name) by his grandfather, a Jewish Austro Hungarian army officer who survived being wounded in action in WWI AND Theresienstadt concentration camp in the Holocaust! Then he lived under communism and was not compensated at all. I think he must have been a great guy.

  • @lordMartiya
    @lordMartiyaАй бұрын

    Need to point out that at Vittorio Veneto there was also the largest part of the Czekoslovac Legion.

  • @spicyshiba508
    @spicyshiba508Ай бұрын

    My favorite Shabbos treat. Thank you for making these videos

  • @Beardman770
    @Beardman770Ай бұрын

    It was interesting as an young Jewish kid to read a chabad-published children's novel (written from the prospective of a Jewish boy in Galicia during ww1) where the German soldiers were the GOOD GUYS.

  • @amithalevi9350
    @amithalevi9350Ай бұрын

    as usual a great video, thank you sam! what a way to start the week!

  • @CatarigMaTt
    @CatarigMaTtАй бұрын

    Yess!! new video!!

  • @robLV
    @robLV17 күн бұрын

    Thank you for a brilliant video! Such high production values take a lot of skill and dedication. Bravo!

  • @soosetch
    @soosetchАй бұрын

    Thank you very much for this great video! Where I've moved to, I live opposite to the Karl-Renner-Platz, so this one hits especially close to home.

  • @m.j.vazquez4720
    @m.j.vazquez4720Ай бұрын

    anyone else wish Hungary was able to keep the borders of Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen ? it just looks so much more aesthetically pleasing

  • @jakubegermajer9841
    @jakubegermajer9841Ай бұрын

    Thank you for another great video! Though I am sorry that you didn't mention the Hilsner Affair and the role of future Czechoslovak President Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk in it

  • @umbertocabbagepatch4816
    @umbertocabbagepatch4816Ай бұрын

    What is the territory labeled 'K' at 3:48? Southern Poland is where the shtetl is located that my mom's dad's side is from, so I have a general interest in the area. They weren't there anymore during the time period this video covers. They escaped to the US in the 1880s.

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    Ай бұрын

    The Free State of Krakow.

  • @umbertocabbagepatch4816

    @umbertocabbagepatch4816

    Ай бұрын

    @@SamAronow tysm!

  • @Artur_M.

    @Artur_M.

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@umbertocabbagepatch4816 Sir Manatee made a great video about it.

  • @Artur_M.
    @Artur_M.Ай бұрын

    I spoted an elusive general John Monash appearing at 21:36.

  • @Brian-----
    @Brian-----Ай бұрын

    Another grand slam. At 11:00 by the way the division remains real. Eastern and western Germany are dissimilar now, and people have forgotten that that dissimilarity is not a postwar event but long predates World War 2.

  • @jeffreyschweitzer8289
    @jeffreyschweitzer8289Ай бұрын

    Thanks for noting Uncle Eduard 😊 Despite having family from many of the places you mentioned and who lived through much of this history, all I heard from them as a child were confused stories from limited perspectives. You’ve put a lot of it into context and suddenly the stories make more sense…!

  • @SomasAcademy
    @SomasAcademyАй бұрын

    The ethnically German part of my family came from Austria-Hungary, specifically one of those little blobs of German-speakers all the way over in what is now Romania. It's interesting hearing this bit of Austria-Hungary's history.

  • @sheev2829
    @sheev2829Ай бұрын

    Best youtube channel

  • @alejandrovillamor4406
    @alejandrovillamor440629 күн бұрын

    I love listening to these videos while walking. You can enjoy them by just listening.

  • @nicholasshaler7442
    @nicholasshaler7442Ай бұрын

    Blessed Karl mentioned. I’m happy.

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    Ай бұрын

    All I see is Adam Chase.

  • @DiamondKingStudios

    @DiamondKingStudios

    Ай бұрын

    That’s right… he _is_ beatified in the Catholic Church by my knowledge.

  • @nicholasshaler7442

    @nicholasshaler7442

    Ай бұрын

    @@DiamondKingStudios Yes, he is.

  • @welcometonebalia
    @welcometonebaliaАй бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @michaelbettinger3486
    @michaelbettinger3486Ай бұрын

    Thanks for this video. Three of my grandparents left the Austrian province of Galicia when they immigrated to America about 1900.

  • @user-oe9lv3of1c
    @user-oe9lv3of1c13 күн бұрын

    Great video! Will there be another video on Hungarian Jewry? I've always been interested about the schism (Neologs, Traditionalists, etc.) and would love to have it covered here!

  • @golgarisoul
    @golgarisoulАй бұрын

    Wtf, I love dueling now?

  • @anton2192
    @anton2192Ай бұрын

    I feel like I learn more about general world history on a channel specifically focused on Jewish history than on other channels..

  • @marklamoreaux6932
    @marklamoreaux693222 күн бұрын

    On a similar subject, you should read Joseph Roth's "The Radetzky March," which is by a Jewish author about the end of the Habsburg Empire. A review of it from your prospective would be fascinating.

  • @TheMacJew
    @TheMacJewАй бұрын

    It sounds weird, but these videos are so relaxing.

  • @up426
    @up426Ай бұрын

    Great vidéo ! Will you make another vidéo on judaism in France ? :)

  • @Duiker36

    @Duiker36

    Ай бұрын

    I mean. WW2 isn't _that_ far away, at this point.

  • @up426

    @up426

    Ай бұрын

    @@Duiker36 Maybe we can talk of some things a bit less dark before ? (Léon Blum !) ^^

  • @johngreally9599
    @johngreally959927 күн бұрын

    Monash, Jewish, won WW1. Did you flash his image for

  • @attilatasciko4817
    @attilatasciko481714 күн бұрын

    Thanks .

  • @syrupysorcerer908
    @syrupysorcerer908Ай бұрын

    Since you covering WW1 I’m curious if your gonna cover John Monash the Australian General

  • @Madasahatter3456
    @Madasahatter3456Ай бұрын

    This is very weird and specific and has nothing to do with the content of the video or jewish history but at 20:20 did anyone else notice the cigarette burn in the top right corner? (for those who don't know a cigarette burn is a small oval in the top of the screen for old films to tell the projectionist it was time to change reels/ projectors) Idk if I'm seeing things but as a film nerd I found it interesting.

  • @sircatangry5864
    @sircatangry5864Ай бұрын

    Sam Aronow, I wanted to ask, would you do a video about Khmelnytsky uprising and cossacks topic? Because I often hear that he (Bohdan Khmelnytsky) is depicted as near absolute evil in jewish communities, and that cossack state was highly Antisemitic (despite jews becoming colonels, highest rank in administration of Hetmanate).

  • @iddomargalit-friedman3897

    @iddomargalit-friedman3897

    Ай бұрын

    He mentioned in one of his episodes at least 100,000 jews died in the uprising. As a jew he's definitely remembered as one of the most horrible persecutors in our history, but I would love to know more. His account of patliora was interesting, as he too is remembered very badly, but he seemed to disagree.

  • @sircatangry5864

    @sircatangry5864

    Ай бұрын

    @@iddomargalit-friedman3897 The curious theory I heard is that Jews who were baptized, were considered "dead" to their judaist relatives. Because in cossack registers we find many Jewish names, like, a lot, and as I said in comment, there was Jewish colonels, that were jews but christian.

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    Ай бұрын

    According to Henry Abramson, Khmelntsky‘s uprising targeted Jews, but not for religious or ethnic reasons. The uprising specifically targeted Jewish managers of frontier land owned by absentee Polish landlords as part of his economic grievances. Jews were disproportionately affected, but it was a consequence of their placement in the rural Polish socioeconomic order. For this reason (and extortion) he spared the Jews of Brody.

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    Ай бұрын

    @@iddomargalit-friedman3897I specifically avoided saying 100,000 Jews died in the uprising, as that number seems to just be Sabbatean propaganda. Demographically that would have been impossible as nothing close to that number lived in Ukraine at the time. In reality it was closed to 2,000.

  • @jonyprepperisrael60
    @jonyprepperisrael60Ай бұрын

    I guess I understand a bit more why my grandfather sometimes say he is from Austro-Hungary (he's Galician jew) dispite being born in 48'. He never said he was Hungarian or Ukranian, but always either Galician or from Austro Hungary

  • @Dan-mw1le
    @Dan-mw1leАй бұрын

    Is that an instrumental cover of “Hope for the best, Expect the worst” from Mel Brook’s The Twelve Chairs at the beginning?

  • @pairodox1255

    @pairodox1255

    Ай бұрын

    "Hope for the Best, Expect the Worst" is based off of a Johannes Brahms composition, Hungarian Dances Number 4 in B Minor, which was in turn based on the csárdás "Bártfai emlék", composed by Béla Kéler. (according to Wikipedia) It is probably Brahms, which is more fitting to the topic of the video. Huh, didn't know there were so many adaptations of The Twelve Chairs outside of USSR/Russia.

  • @Dan-mw1le

    @Dan-mw1le

    Ай бұрын

    @@pairodox1255 Makes sense, thank you. Showing my ignorance of classical music here. I was thinking parts of the melody were a little different.

  • @roniberahaquartet477
    @roniberahaquartet477Ай бұрын

    What about Jews against Jews in rival armies Serbian ,Italian to Austria-Hungary army. Do you know story of David Albala?

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    Ай бұрын

    I'll keep his name in mind when we get to the Paris Peace Conference.

  • @proledad3802
    @proledad3802Ай бұрын

    Are we going to get videos of this length and depth covering the history of Jews in middle eastern and north African countries?

  • @Cotswolds1913
    @Cotswolds191322 күн бұрын

    Germany are the ones who declared war on France and Russia, not Austria-Hungary. Germany in every technical sense began the war, unless your idea of a “Great War” is Austria vs Serbia.

  • @Oscararon
    @Oscararon28 күн бұрын

    Around 11:45 you talk about the west-east divide among European Jews and coin the term Mendelssohn Line. My very cursory knowledge about the Haskalah gave me the impression that it was a phenomenon in Eastern Europe, but you suggest that this line indicates where the Jewish Enlightenment spread beyond small intellectual circles into the broader culture and I got the impression that you meant that it was a Western thing. Do you have any more info about this? Not meant as a critique, I love your videos and am just curious to learn more!

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    28 күн бұрын

    I meant that it was a mainstream phenomenon west of the line and a niche phenomenon east of it.

  • @vauiarex4877
    @vauiarex4877Ай бұрын

    Will you do a video on the Hungarian soviet republic and the following white terror in 1919?

  • @Anybol
    @AnybolАй бұрын

    Who's the person that flashes onscreen at 21:36?

  • @Artur_M.

    @Artur_M.

    Ай бұрын

    It's John Monash.

  • @npgibson69
    @npgibson69Ай бұрын

    Very timely as I am reading Radetzky March; it's pretty compelling once you get into it. The Jewish doctor is killed in a duel in Chapter 7. Ow. Please do a video on the hundredth anniversary of the assassination of Jacob Israel deHaan.

  • @Brian-----
    @Brian-----Ай бұрын

    Is that Gen. Monash at 21:36? 🙂

  • @manuelalonso1029
    @manuelalonso1029Ай бұрын

    ‘Hope for the best, expect the worst’ perfectly encompasses this

  • @antonifortis1084
    @antonifortis1084Ай бұрын

    6:27 based response to antisemitism

  • @AshleyGravesreal
    @AshleyGravesrealАй бұрын

    3:24 it's off topic but where did you find this flag of Milan? Out of curiosity since mostly during the spanish empire and today it was the crucifix of saint george

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    Ай бұрын

    "Flag of Austrian Habsburg Milan 1714-1796"

  • @AshleyGravesreal

    @AshleyGravesreal

    18 күн бұрын

    @@SamAronow Thank you Sam, I love your content :)

  • @jamontiqueq8763
    @jamontiqueq8763Ай бұрын

    I am from the usa & not jewish. (love these videos) I was taught this history in school w/ the jewish history holistically absent. If the jewish aspect of the historical narrative was mentioned it was really in passing. Except for the holocaust obv. Do you have any theories as to why this might be?

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    Ай бұрын

    It’s hard to teach because it’s not very self-contained, and there’s a broad cultural assumption that people won’t be interested unless it’s their primary focus.

  • @jamontiqueq8763

    @jamontiqueq8763

    Ай бұрын

    @@SamAronow True American historiography is in itself a bit self-obsessed, so that doesnt surprise me. Do you think European schools highlight more jewish history than usa?

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    Ай бұрын

    Not in the slightest, from what I hear.

  • @_oaktree_
    @_oaktree_Ай бұрын

    It’s interesting, because in my family, one side comes from the east (Ostjuden) in the Russian Empire and the other from the west (Westjuden) in Austria-Hungary, but the eastern half of my family was far wealthier than the western half.

  • @LaurynasSedvydis
    @LaurynasSedvydisАй бұрын

    5:35 Lithuanian was definately not among recognised languages in Austria-Hungary, this is most probably some sot of mistake by the quoted author.

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    Ай бұрын

    I did find it strange, considering that Lithuanian was never even an official language even in Lithuania.

  • @davidells6760
    @davidells6760Ай бұрын

    21:36

  • @jonyprepperisrael60
    @jonyprepperisrael60Ай бұрын

    Last time I was this early the sandwich was still in the making

  • @anthonyruby2668
    @anthonyruby266813 күн бұрын

    I like the argument that A-H was like a proto-EU. Crazy how the actual EU was formed out of France's obsession to get resources from the Rheinland

  • @wordart_guian
    @wordart_guianАй бұрын

    wait why was Lithuanian official in AH?

  • @Romanian_Legionary
    @Romanian_LegionaryАй бұрын

    Could you make a video about the immigration of Marrano Jews to the northeast of Brazil during Portuguese America? Although it is little discussed, most of the Portuguese settlers in this region had Jewish origins, with some patriarchs being Jews, and many maintained crypto-Jewish practices that ended up becoming part of interior traditions.

  • @Romanian_Legionary

    @Romanian_Legionary

    Ай бұрын

    In fact, one of the most notorious matriarchs, from whom the overwhelming majority of the population is descended, known as Branca Dias, was a notorious Jew and ended up suffering a tragedy for this reason.

  • @ethanpf449
    @ethanpf449Ай бұрын

    Is Luxemburg next?

  • @milobem4458
    @milobem4458Ай бұрын

    5:33 Lithuanian??

  • @goodandfren3926
    @goodandfren3926Ай бұрын

    23:50 "That one didn´t age well"

  • @mirzadzomba9852
    @mirzadzomba9852Ай бұрын

    Great video as always. But talking of a 'partition' of Austria and Hungary in 1867 is very misleading. Hungary was always a separate political entity in the Empire. There were attempts (including one between 1849 and 1867) to change that, but they always failed. So, in 1867, it is not partition that took place. The Imperial Government accepted that Hungary would need to become a constitutional monarchy on the basis of the April 1848 constitutional acts of the 1848 revolution. And the deal was to transform Austria into a constitutional monarchy, too. Which they never managed. (The Austrian Parliament was suspended for most of its history in the decades before WWI.) In political terms, the Empire was fatally undermined by two main factors: (1) the Austrian government's inability to implement the principles of constitutionalism and (2) the Hungarian Government's self-defeating embrace of ethno-nationalism and Hungarian exceptionalism (that prevented the much-needed further federalisation of the Empire for fear of the autonomism of other ethnic groups). The tipping point was that the Czechs (in the industrial heartland of the Empire) turned against the very idea of the Empire in droves. They did not get constitutional government from Vienna, and they were prevented by Budapest from gaining appropriate territorial autonomy.

  • @anthonyruby2668
    @anthonyruby266813 күн бұрын

    What causes WWI? Austria was Hungry for Turkey (Well, old turkish territory in the balkans)

  • @zacharykleiman8995
    @zacharykleiman8995Ай бұрын

    What's with the black hole at 20:19 in the top right?

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    Ай бұрын

    Reel change. It should have been at 20:00.

  • @cv990a4
    @cv990a4Ай бұрын

    Germany was one nation, A-H was many, and the essential contradiction was that once you gave one nationality (Hungarians) their own country, everyone wanted one. And why not? Why Hungary and not, say, Slovakia? Probably there was no maintaining A-H in the age of the nation-state, but once the Hungarians started down the chauvinist path, A-H was on borrowed time.

  • @dmman33
    @dmman33Ай бұрын

    “Hey, what’s this big blob in the middle of Europe?”

  • @dylanf3108
    @dylanf3108Ай бұрын

    One of the most interesting nation states.

  • @Lawarch
    @LawarchАй бұрын

    17:27 KKKKKAAAAAAARRRRRRRRLLLLLLL..... That doesn't kill people!

  • @SuperTommox
    @SuperTommox16 күн бұрын

    I can't find information on the Brody girls massacre.

  • @michaelsnyder3871
    @michaelsnyder387113 күн бұрын

    Without Germany's "blank check", the Austro-Hungarians do not deliver an ultimatum to the Serbians the Serbians could not accept. Austria-Hungary has to tone down her ultimatum, the Serbians find a way to make them happy and Russia doesn't intervene.

  • @aapfnch
    @aapfnchАй бұрын

    Why did jews joined the cause for independence in Hungary, if this country did not recognized their civil rights as the empire did?

  • @calvincoolidge5943
    @calvincoolidge5943Ай бұрын

    20:48, It should be "PSL-P" and "PSL-L"

  • @SawdEndymon
    @SawdEndymonАй бұрын

    17:07 every video on Austria Hungary has to mention Big FCvH at least once😂

  • @Viewer163
    @Viewer163Ай бұрын

    More about history of central and eastern Europe, than about jewish history, but intersting and less known topic.

  • @fandemusique4693
    @fandemusique4693Ай бұрын

    I already knew about Franz Joseph's care for the Jewish population thanks to indy neidell's videos, and had a knowledge of the antisemitism present thanks to your videos mentioning the Dual monarchy before, but I'm somehow glad that yes, overall the Empire's good reputation regarding jews seem to be deserved (though again, there were flaws and cynical reasons for some such as undermining Russia). And honestly, I've seen people talk of how Franz Joseph's death was key to the dissolution, and I think it was even more prevalent for the Jewish population, because with the loss of the monarch, who if I guess was kinda like Elizabeth II in regard of being seen positively by the public, all while in a time of war, the devotion to the crown and thus the existence of this empire who's sole unifying factor was the Habsburg monarchy would have been weaker. Honestly, Franz Joseph's relationship with the Jewish population of his domains throughout his life is an interesting topic I would really want to know more about. Thanks for the video!

  • @mlovecraftr
    @mlovecraftrАй бұрын

    BRING! BACK! THE! MOTHERFLIPPING! DUEL! In the German-Language Netflix series FREUD, you can actually see a pistol duel between two former military officers in pre-WWI Vienna. The series is more like alternative history but it is still interesting. It also touches antisemitism and ethnic tensions in the Austrian Empire.

  • @hunguy3280
    @hunguy328020 күн бұрын

    According to the official findings of the Paris Peace conference, principally controlled and administered by the US, UK, and French representatives, Germany was solely declared as being individually responsible for starting World War 1, which in any ones language and according to this video, this was not true. So, the question arises who was guilty for starting World War 1? In terms of the level of punishment accorded against the Kingdom of Hungary, it would appear that Hungary was solely responsible for starting the War. The Kingdom lost 2/3 of its territory, and for this reason alone she qualifies of being guilty of everything, including the responsibility for starting the War, by consenting in the final phase of Austria - Hungary's declaration of war against the Kingdom of Serbia, due to the murder of the Archduke, by Serb nationalists. In essence, nothing has changed, as Hungary remains under severe criticism from the same powers.

  • @zoranbeader6441

    @zoranbeader6441

    14 күн бұрын

    You are right, nothing has changed, Hungary still continues to side with losers. Learn something from your own history, you'll have a much happier future.

  • @hunguy3280

    @hunguy3280

    14 күн бұрын

    @@zoranbeader6441 I am pleased, that we can agree that Hungary has been solely made responsible for everything concerning World War 1, which is naturally and completely wrong and totally false. We also agreed that Germany was not at fault either, which only leaves the Victors, who were solely responsible for the outbreak of this outrages and cruel war. They certainly planned this War, and eventually they got what they wanted all along. My only additional comment is that Hungary reluctantly agreed to declare war against Serbia and not the World. This conflict was a local conflict that should have been kept local, just like the Balkan wars, all of which have nothing to do with World Wars. Serbia was important enough for the Anglo-Saxon powers and Russia to use Serbia and to make this conflict a World War, but to date this country is not important enough to be accepted into even the EU let alone to NATO. Unfortunately the majority of people are not aware of these important facts of past and current history. Ignorance rules, and the West uses this tool to their advantage.

  • @hunguy3280

    @hunguy3280

    13 күн бұрын

    @@zoranbeader6441 You did make an interesting contribution, would you like to disclose your nationality? I presume at this stage your roots are in the Balkans.

  • @ronmaximilian6953
    @ronmaximilian6953Ай бұрын

    Poland would become a power in central Europe although certainly eclipsed by Germany. My paternal grandfather was an officer in the Austro-Hungarian army . Despite being a Revisionist Zionist, he would stay in Galicia and fight for Poland during its war against Ukraine and later against the Bolshevik invasion. He was not alone in this. My grandfather was also a good shot with a pistol as was my father when he was an officer and the Israeli Navy. I think I should brush up on my target practice. We live in increasingly unsettled times.

  • @johannschiestl2772
    @johannschiestl2772Ай бұрын

    In a way the precursor of the EU; hopefully the latter will not share the same destiny .

  • @calvincoolidge5943
    @calvincoolidge5943Ай бұрын

    12:18 not every german is yiddish

  • @RobertPaskulovich-fz1th
    @RobertPaskulovich-fz1th9 күн бұрын

    Gavrilo Princip was a subject of Austria!!!!!!!!!!

  • @avishaiedenburg1102
    @avishaiedenburg1102Ай бұрын

    You put the demarcation line at the eastern border of the Kingdom of Hungary. I disagree. I would argue that the Jews of east Hungary (including Transylvania) are Ostjuden. Or, at the very least, closer to Ostjuden than they were to the prototypical Westjuden.

  • @k089er
    @k089erАй бұрын

    He's still alive, boys!

  • @historysuit9418
    @historysuit9418Ай бұрын

    I won’t do anything for every like this comment gets.

  • @stephenfisher3721
    @stephenfisher3721Ай бұрын

    I was confused by this video. Is this the right channel? How is this Jewish history?

  • @borkerman
    @borkermanАй бұрын

    45 minutes and nine comments, bro feel off.

  • @yoavlavi8368
    @yoavlavi8368Ай бұрын

    This isn't strictly video related but I noticed that you tend to use /ɐː/ instead of /æ/ (which is what I'm used to hearing in a Californian accent) in words like "Vast". (2:01) This exists in other English accents ( en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trap-bath_split ) but was wondering if this is common in a certain part of California or if the origin is elsewhere. Thanks!