Nation and Nationality, National Unity in the Central European Region
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http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/111177Identifiers
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- Číslo 1 [7]
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Issue Date
2019Publisher
Univerzita Karlova, Filozofická fakultaPraha
Source document
Dvacáté století - The Twentieth Century (web)ISSN: 2336-6656
Periodical publication year: 2018
Periodical Volume: 10
Periodical Issue: 1
Link to license terms
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/Keywords (English)
Nation, Nationality, National Unity, Central European Region, FederalismAny work that takes a thorough look at the problem of nationality requires a kind of common ground
in the form of a consensus about such basic terms as people and nation. In the Austro-Hungarian
Empire the main problem was the complexity of factors and the lack of unity, which also affected
Austria’s special matter of nationality. Specifically, Austria witnessed the mutual opposition of three
elements. Amidst the conflict of different ethnic groups and the historical kingdoms and provinces
with the central power, ethnic groups made increasingly significant and radical demands as opposed
to the other two groups. While this work also seeks to use consistent terms, it shifts the focus from
the creation of unambiguous definitions to generally recognised historical development processes,
such as the role of the slogans of popular sovereignty and equal rights in the definition of nation, and
to trends in the scholarly interpretation of people and nation in the 19th century.