Abstract

Between the revolutions of 1848 and the outbreak of the Great War in 1914, imperial Austria experienced an extraordinary expansion of nationalism and of national conflict. German, Czech, Polish, Ukrainian, Italian, Slovene and other national movements became major players and rivals, in the process transforming public life. This chapter examines that process through a municipal lens. What was particular about the intersection of the national with the municipal in imperial Austria? How did municipal and national politics affect one another, and what can we understand, through their dynamics, about Austrian politics more generally?

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