From Habsburg Neo–Absolutism to the Compromise, 1849–1867
Format:Hardback
Publisher:East European Monographs
Published:29th May '09
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

In 1848, Francis Joseph became Emperor of the Hapsburg Monarchy, and the Russian army helped the Austrians take control of Hungary. The Austrian Council of Ministers ordered the arrest of all political and military officers of the Revolution and dissolved the Hungarian Kingdom. A planned constitution promised extensive rights to national minorities, and the October Diploma of 1860 suggested more convocations of the Imperial Parliament. However, in 1861 Francis Joseph suspended all constitutional organizations, introduced military jurisdiction, and appointed a governor as head of state. After he was crowned King of Hungary, though, Francis Joseph approved the Law of Compromise, and Hungary became independent with regard to public law and internal self-government. The Austro-Hungarian Dual Monarchy was then born.
Agnes Deak has written a solid, detailed book on an important but neglected period. -- Jonathan Kwan H-German
ISBN: 9780880336352
Dimensions: 222mm x 147mm x 41mm
Weight: 900g
320 pages