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  1. 21 de dez. de 2015 · Börries Kuzmany. In the early twentieth century, three provinces of the Austrian half of the Habsburg Empire enacted national compromises in their legislation that had elements of non-territorial autonomy provisions. Czech and German politicians in Moravia reached an agreement in 1905. In the heavily mixed Bukovina, Romanian, Ukrainian, German ...

  2. 21 de mai. de 2023 · Eventually, the late Habsburg Empire experimented with elements of non-territorial autonomy in several provinces: Moravia (1905), Bukovina (1910), Bosnia-Herzegovina (1910), and Galicia (1914) implemented new provincial constitutions that empowered their respective inhabitants to exercise their political rights according to their ethno-confessional belonging.

  3. Germany - Habsburgs, Imperial Office, Unification: In the absence of a male heir, Sigismund had named his son-in-law Albert of Habsburg, duke of Austria, as his successor. Albert was able and vigorous, and the union of the territories of the two dynasties enabled him to exert considerable leverage in German politics. Albert declared his neutrality in the current dispute between Pope Eugenius ...

  4. At the time of submitting this paper, processing of map sheets of two Habsburg provinces (Low-er and Upper Austria) have been finished and published, another one (Bohemia) is ready, while processing of roatia and Galicia have been started. For all of these provinces, a ‘province image mosaic’ was made, using the scanned images of the map ...

  5. Discussing the alleged diametrical opposition between the old Habsburg Empire and the new Czechoslovakia, Morelon cites Ivan Šedivý’s critique of the popular use of the word “resistance” to describe Czech political activity during the First World War. Šedivý, Češi, české země a Velká válka, 1914–1918 (Prague, 2001).

  6. The grand duchy of Tuscany came into the Habsburg sphere of influence in 1737 when Franz Stephan of Lorraine, Maria Theresa’s husband, was forced by the Great Powers to give up his ancestral lands, the Duchy of Lorraine, receiving the Grand Duchy of Tuscany in recompense. The Medici family that had made Florence a leading cultural centre during the Renaissance had come as it