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STADLER, PILAR AND THE YUGOSLAV COMMITTEE IN LONDON 1917-1918. (ACCORDING TO THE ACTS OF THE MINISTRY OF THE IMPERIAL AND ROYAL HOUSE AND THE EXTERIOR IN VIENNA)

Ivan PEDERIN


Puni tekst: hrvatski pdf 109 Kb

str. 163-183

preuzimanja: 4.125

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Sažetak

World War drove to the close in 1917. Coat politic was a bustle conjecturing and proposing a new deal of the Hapsbourg commonwealth in the aftermath of the war. As Russia negotiated a peace deal in Brest Litovsk most of the Croat and Southen Slav politician believed Austria/Hungary would be victorious in the exhausting war. So the southern Slavs in the Empire proposed trialism, it means the unification of all southern Slavs, Croat, Serbs and Slovenes under the Hapsbourg Crown. In the political ambiance some proposed this new state would be under the Royal and others into the Imperial Crown. The archbishop of Vrhbosna in Sarajevo Mons. Josip Stadler was initially inclined to this plan proposed by the Declaration in Vienna, on May, 30. 1917. Later he rejected this plan which would be a Yugoslavia in the Austrian frame. He suggested to the Emperor trialism with the unification of all Croats under the Hapsbourg crown. The Hungarians opposed this plan because they considered Bosnia and Dalmatia to be linked to the Hungarian crown since the Middle Ages. The Emperor was also the King of Hungary, he was inclined to the Croats, but was liable to his duties as King of Hungary and was reluctant to the new
deal that would resituate dualism. The trialism was suggested by Stadler and a group of Croat generals in the I. R. Army. Austria-Hungary was a progressive but not democratic Empire, the authoritarian rule of the Emperor, the aristocracy and the generals did not suit a liberal middle class of the Empire. So Croats in the Yugoslav committee in London gained more and more land and followers in Croatia but had to accept Serbian hegemony in Yugoslavia to come also in order to avoid the creation of an enlarged Serbia to the expenses of and the cession of Istria and Dalmatia to Italy. That happened, Croatia united to Serbia with Croats being considered a minority group deprived of minority rights. That was a grim future for Croatia. Italy lost Dalmatia, but gained Istria and Rijeka.

Ključne riječi

Josip Stadler; Ivo Pilar; Yugoslav Committee; Political History

Hrčak ID:

11579

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/11579

Datum izdavanja:

15.6.2005.

Podaci na drugim jezicima: hrvatski

Posjeta: 6.133 *