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9781557536839 Academic Inspection Copy

Apple of Discord

The "Hungarian Factor" in Austro-Serbian Relations, 1867-1881
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When seeking the origins of World War I, the chain of events in the late nineteenth century that led to the breakdown of relations between Austria-Hungary and Serbia and facilitated the rise of an aggressive Serbian nationalism needs to be understood. This book focuses on the hitherto unexplored Hungarian influence on the Habsburg Monarchy's policy toward Serbia after the 1867 Ausgleich, and it argues that this early period was critical in shaping policy after 1871, down to the imposition on Serbia in 1881 of a system of economic and political control.The Ausgleich, the Austro-Hungarian compromise that reconstituted the Empire as a dual monarchy, gave Hungary a limited voice in foreign affairs; and it was at the request of the Hungarian premier, Count Gyula Andrassy, that the young politician Benjamin Kallay was appointed representative at Belgrade in 1868. Both men were obsessed with the threat posed by Russia and particularly concerned that Serbia might be used as a stalking horse for Russian influence among the Monarchy's South Slavs. They pursued a shadow policy designed to draw Serbia firmly into the Monarchy's sphere of influence, which contradicted that of the foreign minister, Count Beust, and resulted in a serious deterioration in relations with Serbia by 1871. After 1871 Andrassy, as foreign minister, laid the foundations for a more explicit control of Serbia; Kallay, as a senior diplomat, negotiated the treaties that, by 1881, locked Serbia into satellite status for a generation.Through detailed archival research in multiple languages and a painstaking reconstruction of diplomatic events, Armour illuminates a crucial period in Central European history, showing how the origins of a war that claimed millions of lives can be traced to political maneuverings almost fifty years before.
Ian D. Armour has been teaching history at Grant MacEwan University since 2006, and previously taught at Staffordshire University and the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University College London, where he completed his PhD in 1994. His specialty is the history of the Habsburg Monarchy's relationship with Serbia in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, but he has a strong side-interest in German history. He is the author (with Ian Porter) of Imperial Germany 1890-1918 (Longman, 1991) and sole author of A History of Eastern Europe 1740-1918: Empires, Nations, and Modernisation, 2nd edition (Bloomsbury, 2012), as well as numerous articles in peer-reviewed journals. He is currently working on a companion volume to the present study, taking the story down to 1903, and is writing A History of Eastern Europe, 1918 to the Present for Bloomsbury.
"This book is a significant contribution to scholarship, very easy to read, and easy to understand. It will be of much interest to scholars of Habsburg history, nationalism, and historians who study nineteenth-century European history and how it led to the outbreak of World War I. The archival and secondary sources in the multiple languages found in the footnotes take one's breath away." --Karl A. Roider, Jr., Louisiana State University "This book is a significant contribution to scholarship, very easy to read, and easy to understand. It will be of much interest to scholars of Habsburg history, nationalism, and historians who study nineteenth-century European history and how it led to the outbreak of World War I. The archival and secondary sources in the multiple languages found in the footnotes take one's breath away." Karl A. Roider, Jr., Louisiana State University
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