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Written by George Hall Kirby
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Written by George Hall Kirby
Last Updated

Austria

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Alternate titles: Österreich; Republic of Austria; Republik Österreich
Written by George Hall Kirby
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Social, economic, and cultural trends in the Baroque period

The Thirty Years’ War and the Turkish wars had resulted in the devastation of large parts of the country and in great losses among the population, which suffered further reduction during the plague years of 1679 and 1713. The territories that had been wrested from the Turks had to be resettled systematically by German and other immigrants. The initiative for resettlement projects came from the official bureaucracy, the settlements being concentrated mainly in the south of Hungary. During the period of religious conflicts, many Protestants had been exiled, but, in the 18th century, Protestants often were transported to the various underpopulated parts of the empire.

In the industrial and commercial fields, mercantilist ideas, encouraged by the government, were prominent from the 1660s. The situation of the peasantry was thoroughly unfavourable. Tentative measures in the reigns of Leopold I and Charles VI to protect the peasants had little effect. Certain “model industries” (mostly textile factories) were established but were only partly successful. The economic policy of the absolutist state also resulted in strong interference with trade organizations. The guilds were suppressed or at least debarred from the new manufactures.

Trade was encouraged but yielded only small gains for the state. Industrial and commercial undertakings were managed in part directly by the state but largely through privileged corporations or private persons. Of some importance were the first (1667) and the second (1719) Oriental trading companies and the Ostend Company (1722). Trade in the Mediterranean was also intensified. Promising colonial ventures in India were discontinued for political reasons, however, in the middle of the 18th century. Under Charles VI new roads came to be planned and built on a large scale.

The state was in permanent want of money. This was a period of perpetual war as well as great economic investments, both entailing excessive strain on state finances. At first the government resorted to rich bankers such as Samuel Oppenheimer and his successor Samson Wertheimer for funds. Soon, however, it attempted to establish state-controlled banking firms. The Banco del Giro, founded in Vienna in 1703, quickly failed, but the Vienna Stadtbanco of 1705 managed to survive; the Universalbancalität of 1715 was liquidated after a short period of operation.

After the victory of the Counter-Reformation, education was almost exclusively in the hands of the Roman Catholic Church. The grammar schools of the religious orders, especially of the Jesuits and the Benedictines, set a very high standard for the most part. In 1677 another university was established at Innsbruck, the theological school of which was to acquire some fame. Historical writing flourished, the most outstanding works being those of two Benedictine brothers, Bernard and Hieronymus Pez; Gottfried Bessel, abbot of Göttweig; and Leopold I’s official historiographer, the Jesuit Franz Wagner. The Austrian Jesuits were famous for their scientific and geographic researches, most notably the exploration of China.

Among the achievements of Baroque poetry, mention should be made of Wolf Helmhart of Hohberg, whose works offer interesting insights into the life of the nobility, and of Katharina of Greiffenberg, a Protestant whose intensely spiritual poems reflected the pressures of the Counter-Reformation. The theatre of the Baroque was remarkable for the splendour of its decorations and the ingenuity of its stage machinery. The plays produced ranged from the elaborate Italian opera to the blunt humour of the popular play. Music attained an especially high standard, encouraged by three emperors who were themselves composers (Ferdinand III, Leopold I, and Joseph I). Charles VI was also a skillful musician, and he engaged the services of Johann Joseph Fux, who came from eastern Steiermark and developed into an important composer and teacher.

Austrian Baroque culture is most clearly revealed by the splendours of its architecture. At first the field was dominated by the Italians, but soon native architects stepped forth. Preeminent among them was Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach (whose works included the first plan of the Schloss Schönbrunn in Vienna, Karls Church in Vienna, and Kollegien Church in Salzburg) and his son Josef Emanuel Fischer von Erlach (who designed the Hof Library, in Vienna). They were rivaled by Jakob Prandtauer (whose works included monasteries in Herzogenburg and Melk) and especially by Johann Lucas von Hildebrandt (who designed the Schwarzenberg and Belvedere palaces in Vienna, Peters Church in Vienna, and the monastery of Göttweig). Among native sculptors, Georg Raphael Donner was the first in rank and quality of work. Fresco painting was best represented by Johann Michael Rottmayr from Salzburg, Daniel Gran from Vienna, and Paul Troger from the Tirolean Pustertal valley. (See also Baroque period.)

From the accession of Maria Theresa to the Congress of Vienna

War of the Austrian Succession, 1740–48

In October 1740 the Holy Roman emperor Charles VI, the last male Habsburg ruler, died and was succeeded by his daughter Maria Theresa, the young wife of the grand duke of Tuscany, Francis Stephen of Lorraine. Although no woman had ever served as Habsburg ruler, most assumed at the time that the succession would pose few problems because of Charles VI’s diligent efforts to gain recognition for her. He had established a reasonably unified order of succession for all the lands under Habsburg rule (the Pragmatic Sanction) and, by making broad concessions to foreign powers and to the diets of the crown lands, had secured recognition of this act from most of the important constitutional units inside and outside the Habsburg lands. When he died, he had no reason to expect anything less than a smooth transition for his daughter.

The challenge to that transition came from a surprising source—the kingdom of Prussia. For the previous 40 years, Prussia had been a fairly loyal supporter of the Habsburgs, especially in matters related to the Holy Roman Empire and in matters involving Poland. The Prussian king Frederick William I (reigned 1713–40) had created perhaps the most proficient, if not the largest, army in Europe but had displayed no eagerness to use it except in the service of the empire, and then only reluctantly. But Frederick William had died about five months before Charles VI, and his son and heir, Frederick II (later called the Great), had no reluctance to use his father’s finely honed armed force. In December 1740 Frederick II invaded the Habsburg province of Silesia and thereby threatened not only to conquer the wealthiest of the Habsburg lands but also to challenge Maria Theresa’s right to rule the rest of them, a challenge soon joined by other powers.

As Maria Theresa prepared to meet these threats, she found that the resources left by her father were meagre indeed. The War of the Polish Succession and the war against the Turks from 1737 to 1739 had drained the monarchy’s financial and military resources and spread irresolution and doubt among its senior officials. The army sent forth to meet Frederick suffered defeat in the Battle of Mollwitz in April 1741. This defeat prompted the formation of an alliance of France, Bavaria, and Spain, joined later by Saxony and eventually by Prussia itself, to dismember the Habsburg monarchy. Faced by this serious threat, Maria Theresa called together her father’s experienced advisers and asked them what she should do. Most argued that resistance was hopeless and recommended that she make the necessary sacrifices in order to reach as quick an accommodation with her enemies as possible, a policy endorsed by her husband. This counsel offended Maria Theresa, who regarded it as defeatism; commenting on this period later, she described it as finding herself “without money, without credit, without an army, without experience, and finally without advice.”

Maria Theresa had no intention of surrendering. She resolved to drive off her enemies and then to create a government that would never again suffer the humiliation she experienced at her accession. To begin, she reached a settlement with Frederick, ceding to him Silesia by the treaties of Breslau and Berlin in June and July 1742. She did so only to focus resistance on the French and Bavarians, who in late November 1741 had occupied Upper Austria and Bohemia, including the Bohemian capital, Prague. In the wake of these conquests by anti-Habsburg forces, in January 1742 the electors of the Holy Roman Empire rejected the candidacy of Maria Theresa’s husband and chose as emperor Charles Albert of Bavaria (called Charles VII as emperor), the only non-Habsburg to serve in that capacity from 1438 to the empire’s demise in 1806. Perhaps as a portent of his unhappy reign as emperor, on the day of Charles Albert’s coronation in Frankfurt, Habsburg forces occupied his Bavarian capital of Munich, which they held until shortly before his death three years later.

The War of the Austrian Succession, as this conflict is called, continued until 1748. It rather quickly became a struggle of two alliance systems, with primarily France, Bavaria, Spain, and Prussia on one side and Austria, Great Britain, and the Dutch Republic on the other. Saxony and Sardinia began the war as members of the first alliance and later switched to the second. Russia joined Austria in a defensive accord in 1746, primarily to prevent Prussia from reentering the war after it had concluded the Treaty of Dresden with Austria in 1745.

The Treaty of Dresden and the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1748 brought the various parts of the war to an end. Austria had to return some minor principalities in Italy to the Spanish Bourbons until such time as the Bourbon lines there became extinct and had to agree to a small frontier rectification in favour of Piedmont-Sardinia, but neither of these adjustments was of great consequence. For Austria the most serious loss was Silesia, which Maria Theresa found necessary to cede to Prussia first in 1742 and again in 1745. Losing Silesia opened the way to the rise of Prussia as the most serious rival of the Habsburgs in Germany. It also meant a considerable decrease in the proportion of Germans living within Habsburg lands, with important consequences in the rise of the national problem in the following century. Although as part of the cession Frederick II agreed to recognize the election of Francis Stephen of Lorraine as Holy Roman emperor Francis I in 1745, Maria Theresa never forgave his “rape” of Silesia; at the war’s conclusion she immediately undertook preparations first to deter Frederick from coveting more of her lands and then to take Silesia back. (See also Silesian Wars.)

Perhaps the most important result of the war for Austria, however, was the very fact that the monarchy was not dismembered. Nor did it become a satellite state under the tutelage of other great powers. The outcome of the War of the Austrian Succession, except for the loss of Silesia, was a genuine defensive victory that proved to the world that Austria represented more than an agglomeration of lands under the same rule, acquired by wars and marriage contracts. In the two centuries since Ferdinand I had become king in Bohemia, Hungary, and Croatia, as well as regent in the so-called hereditary lands, a certain cohesion between the major historical units had been clearly established.

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