Academic literature on the topic 'Hapsburg empire'

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Journal articles on the topic "Hapsburg empire"

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Katherine Arens. "Characterology: Hapsburg Empire to Third Reich." Literature and Medicine 8, no. 1 (1989): 128–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/lm.2011.0037.

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Goedeken, Edward, and Alan Sked. "The Decline and Fall of the Hapsburg Empire, 1815-1918." History Teacher 23, no. 4 (August 1990): 466. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/494407.

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Lohr, Eric. "Russian Economic Nationalism during the First World War: Moscow Merchants and Commercial Diasporas." Nationalities Papers 31, no. 4 (December 2003): 471–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0090599032000152924.

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While accounts of the end of the Ottoman and Hapsburg empires have often stressed the rise of Turkish and German nationalisms, narratives of the Romanov collapse have generally not portrayed Russian nationalism as a key factor. In fact, scholars have either stressed the weaknesses of Russian national identity in the populace or the generally pragmatic approach of the government, which, as Hans Rogger classically phrased it, “opposed all autonomous expressions of nationalism, including the Russian.” In essence, many have argued, the regime was too conservative to embrace Russian nationalism, and it most often “subordinated all forms of the concept of nationalism to the categories of dynasty and empire.”
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Warner, Richard H., and Lawrence Sondhaus. "The Hapsburg Empire and the Sea: Austrian Naval Policy, 1797-1866." Journal of Military History 53, no. 4 (October 1989): 441. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1986111.

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Huguet-Termes, Teresa. "Madrid Hospitals and Welfare in the Context of the Hapsburg Empire." Medical History 53, S29 (2009): 64–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0025727300072409.

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Marin, Alessandra. "Le strade di Gorizia: trasformazioni urbane in una cittŕ della provincia asburgica (1850-1906)." STORIA URBANA, no. 120 (July 2009): 229–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/su2008-120011.

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- Like other smallish provincial cities in the Hapsburg Empire, Gorizia went through a period of great innovation in its urban form, social order, and economic life. There were two hypothetical plans - to transform Gorizia into the largest manufacturing center of the Venezia-Giulia and to transform it into a holiday town for the upper bourgeoisie of the empire, an "Austrian Nice". These led to the drafting of numerous plans and projects to develop Gorizia, to modernize its urban facilities, and to build an infrastructure system that would to free it from its status as just a "border town".
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Brady, Thomas A., and M. J. Rodriguez-Salgado. "The Changing Face of Empire: Charles V, Philip II and Hapsburg Authority, 1551-1559." Hispanic American Historical Review 70, no. 4 (November 1990): 688. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2516589.

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Brady, Thomas A. "The Changing Face of Empire: Charles V, Philip II and Hapsburg Authority, 1551-1559." Hispanic American Historical Review 70, no. 4 (November 1, 1990): 688. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00182168-70.4.688.

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Vojinović, Miloš. "1918 and a Hundred Years of Habsburg and Yugoslav Historiography." Slavic Review 78, no. 4 (2019): 921–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/slr.2019.250.

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A century has passed since the demise of the Habsburg Empire and the birth of Yugoslavia, and for the last hundred years, historians have tried to make sense of this change. I strive to answer the question, what are the loudest silences of the two states’ historiographies? I employ a mountain metaphor, and argue that although a mountain looks different from various positions, every mountain still has only one shape. I analyze how the turbulent history of the last hundred years pushed historians toward different “truths” and watchtowers, and demonstrate how both historiographies were shrouded around notions of loss and creation, in the case of both Hapsburg and Yugoslav historiographies, respectively. This essay argues that the loudest silence of both historiographies is the fact that historiography itself constitutes, at least in part, the “mountain” of both Yugoslav and Habsburg history.
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Feola, Vittoria. "Paris, Rome, Venice, and Vienna in Peter Lambeck’s Network." Nuncius 31, no. 1 (2016): 107–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18253911-03101005.

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This article considers, first, the roles of Paris, Rome, Venice, and Vienna in the network of Peter Lambeck, the librarian of the Hapsburg emperor Leopold I, and, secondly, Lambeck’s and Vienna’s own places in the Republic of Letters during the period 1662–1680. It begins with a biographical account, in which I situate Lambeck both geographically and intellectually. The importance of Paris is contrasted with his not so positive experience in Rome. Secondly, I focus on Lambeck’s declaration of intent to link Vienna to the Republic of Letters. Thirdly, I survey the eminently Venetian networks through which Lambeck tried to fulfil his intellectual goals. The tensions between France and the Habsburg Empire crashed against Lambeck’s idealistic aims. This raises the issue of the impact of geo-politics on the production and circulation of knowledge in early modern Europe, and prompts questions about openness and secrecy in the Republic of Letters.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Hapsburg empire"

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NaÌ?daÌ?ban, Alexandru. "A historical analysis of the origin and early development of the Greek-Catholic church in Transylvania (1697-1761) : the influence of the tension between dogma and practice within the rural communities of Transylvania." Thesis, Brunel University, 2003. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.269830.

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Wells, Wayne. "Music for Trombone and Voice from the Hapsburg Empire: An Historical Overview with Tenor Trombone Transcriptions." College Park, Md. : University of Maryland, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/1903/2867.

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Thesis (D.M.A.) -- University of Maryland, College Park, 2005.
Thesis research directed by: Music. Title from t.p. of PDF. Includes bibliographical references. Published by UMI Dissertation Services, Ann Arbor, Mich. Also available in paper.
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Fetté, Mirka Campbell. "Saving political face : the structures of power in Hans von Aachen’s Allegories on the long Turkish war." Thesis, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-3218.

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Hans von Aachen, court artist to the Habsburg Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II in Prague, created a series of small painting called the Allegories on the Long Turkish War. Von Aachen made the Allegories between 1604 and 1606 and Rudolf II kept them bound in a red book in his Kunstkammer. This series selects events and battles from the Long War against the Ottoman Empire, 1593-1606, to create a flattering propagandistic image of the emperor in order to strengthen his support. Rudolf’s brother, Archduke Matthias of Austria, began plotting against the emperor beginning in 1600. By 1606 he was actively usurping Rudolf’s political power. I examine von Aachen’s visual description of imperial power, the alternate history the Allegories present, and the ways they engage with Neo-Platonic theories to convey validity to viewers. In my thesis, I outline the events of the Long War in order to compare them to von Aachen’s portrayals and to understand how he restructures chronological history to convey his message about Rudolf’s rulership. I briefly analyze each painting but I focus primarily on the eighth scene, the Conquest of Székesfehérvár. Sultan Mehmed III sits opposite Rudolf II in dignified defeat in this painting. I investigate the visual treatment of the sultan through the historical interactions between the Ottoman and Holy Roman Empires and propose the political function served by depicting him as a noble enemy. I finally discuss the way von Aachen uses symbols and allegory to convey a potent message and convince the viewer of its validity. Ultimately, these works should be seen as political propaganda used to combat Rudolf’s brother Archduke Matthias’ political takeover and not as Rudolf’s fantastical escapism from his losing battle against his brother.
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Books on the topic "Hapsburg empire"

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Kiste, John Van der. Emperor Francis Joseph: Life, death and the fall of the Hapsburg Empire. Thrupp, Stroud, Gloucestershire: Sutton, 2005.

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A sailor of Austria: In which, without really intending to, Otto Prohanska becomes Official War Hero No. 27 of the Hapsburg Empire. Ithaca, N.Y: McBooks Press, 2005.

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McEwan, Dorothea. A Catholic Sudan dream, mission, reality: A study of the Roman Catholic Mission to Central Africa and its protection by the Hapsburg Empire from 1846 to 1900 (1914) as revealed in the correspondence of the imperial and royal Austro-Hungarian Consulate, Khartoum. Roma: Stabilimento Tipografico Julia, 1988.

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Sked, Alan. Decline and Fall of the Hapsburg Empire, 1815-1918. Longman, 1989.

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P, Taylor A. J. Hapsburg Monarchy, 1809-1918: A History of the Austrian Empire and Austria, Hungary. Ams Pr Inc, 1994.

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Palmer, R. R. Victories of the Counter-Revolution in Eastern Europe. Princeton University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691161280.003.0020.

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The year that saw the survival of the revolution in France saw its extinction in Poland. The same months in which it became clear that structural changes would spread to Belgium and Holland saw the stamping out of “Jacobinism” in Austria and in Hungary. This chapter describes—not the failure of revolution in Eastern Europe, since, except in Poland, no revolution was attempted—but the triumph and strengthening of counter-revolutionary forces in Eastern Europe at this time. These were the forces, agrarian and conservatively aristocratic, which had already largely destroyed the work of Joseph II in the Hapsburg Empire and combined to annihilate the Polish constitution of 1791.
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Palmer, R. R. Clashes with Monarchy. Princeton University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691161280.003.0004.

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This chapter traces the conflicts faced by the aristocratic constituted bodies at the close of the Seven Years' War. Fighting had gone on for a generation interrupted by a few years of truce; governments had accumulated great debts, which they had now to find means to carry or repay. The search by governments for new sources of income met with resistance from magistracies or assemblies in many countries. It therefore produced constitutional crises. “From the need for money, which put into motion the machinery of reforms, arose a great drama: the clash between autonomous entities and the central power, between local governing classes and foreign rule.” The discussions cover the quasi-revolution in France, 1763–1774; the monarchist coup d'etat of 1772 in Sweden; and the Hapsburg Empire.
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Book chapters on the topic "Hapsburg empire"

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Ramírez, Susan Elizabeth. "Institutions of the Spanish American Empire in the Hapsburg Era." In A Companion to Latin American History, 106–23. Oxford, UK: Wiley-Blackwell, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781444391633.ch7.

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Godsey, William D. "The past recaptured: knights in the Hapsburg Empire 1792–1848." In Nobles and Nation in Central Europe, 141–86. Cambridge University Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511496752.007.

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Ng, Su Fang. "English Alexanders and Empire from the Periphery." In Alexander the Great from Britain to Southeast Asia, 211–42. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198777687.003.0008.

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This chapter focuses on Alexander the Great as the monarchical archetype for the medieval heroes of Christopher Marlowe’s Tamburlaine Parts I and II (1587–8) and William Shakespeare’s Henry V (1599). In both plays, Alexander is used to negotiate a place for England on a global stage dominated by the twin poles of the Hapsburg and the Ottoman Empires. Marlowe imagines another northern tribe, Tamburlaine and his Scythians, invading the Ottoman center to build an empire from the periphery. Shakespeare relies on complex pattern of Alexandrian allusions to counterbalance classical history with an English medieval genealogy accompanied by a native heroism imagined capable of defeating the Ottomans. The chapter also shows how Marlowe and Shakespeare utilize Alexander to explore the complexities, ambitions, and limits of England’s imperial identity, and how their protagonists’ campaigns of imperial expansion foregrounded questions of cultural identity and intercultural encounter.
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ÖZGÜVEN, BURCU. "Palanka Forts and Construction Activity in the Late Ottoman Balkans." In The Frontiers of the Ottoman World. British Academy, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197264423.003.0008.

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This chapter examines military building activity in the region in the light of Ottoman sources preserved in the Prime Ministry Ottoman Archive in Istanbul and memoirs written by the senior bureaucrats of the Empire. It aims to assess whether the military building programme of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries continued in later periods in the same spirit as in the earlier time of conquests and expansion, or if the empire only supported repairs of existing strongholds. The issue was noted by numerous Ottoman writers as early as the Koçi Bey Risalesi in the seventeenth century. This chapter examines four frontier areas of the Ottoman Empire: the Hapsburg borderland in Croatia; the frontier between Montenegro and southern Herzegovina; the fortress line on the banks of the Danube in Wallachia; and the Danube Delta region near the Black Sea.
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Stenhouse, William. "Roman Colonies and the Distribution of Land before Sigonio." In The Renaissance of Roman Colonization, 25–47. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198850960.003.0002.

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This chapter examines the work of Renaissance historians of Roman colonization before Carlo Sigonio, from Andrea Fiocchi to Niccolò Machiavelli and Onofrio Panvinio. It shows that these earlier scholars, by thinking about Roman colonialism against the backdrop of Hapsburg power in Europe and in the New World, explored the idea of an empire that could be understood not just in terms of power but also in terms of territory, geographical control, and the practical administration of conquered land. Analysing the gradual rediscovery of the ancient Roman empire and its institutions in the fifteenth and the first half of the sixteenth century, this chapter assesses the most significant advances that Sigonio made in respect to this humanist tradition. Sigonio added a crucial piece of evidence to the discourse on Roman colonial policies and linked historical discussions of agrarian laws and policy to historical accounts of the establishment of colonies.
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Wouk, Edward. "Semini and his progeny: the construction of Antwerp’s antique past1." In Local antiquities, local identities, 209–36. Manchester University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9781526117045.003.0011.

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Semini is one of several names for a small Gallo-Roman sculpture that was installed above the gate of Antwerp’s Vieux-Bourg sometime in the fourteenth century. Little is known of the early history of Semini, although it was rumoured to be the object of a fertility cult. Yet, in 1549, at a crucial moment in the political identity of the city and its relationship to the Hapsburg empire, the statue came to be identified as Priapus, the Greco-Roman god of the fields and of procreation. This essay examines the reappropriation of Semini in the context of counter-reformation Antwerp. It considers the importance of this small antiquity to emerging practices of local antiquarianism, historiography and philology, while also examining some of the everyday street activities which both reinforced and challenged concepts of antiquity in the early modern city.
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BRUMMETT, PALMIRA. "The Fortress: Defining and Mapping the Ottoman Frontier in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries." In The Frontiers of the Ottoman World. British Academy, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197264423.003.0002.

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The frontiers of the Ottoman Empire, like frontiers elsewhere in the early modern world, were not defined and represented in terms of linear boundaries. The fortress was possessed space, occupied by the soldiers or subordinates (long-term or temporary) of a sovereign entity. Control of territory and of trade routes was counted, in terms of the submission of fortresses. It is that counting and mapping which this chapter proposes to consider. Early modern fortress images vary from the architecturally correct, complete with keys to various features, to the highly impressionistic, to the simply iconic. Maps also show the rhetorical fortress — an emblem of possession. To illustrate that characteristic, this chapter presents a set of maps of fortresses on the Ottoman-Hapsburg-Venetian frontier. These images suggest the ways in which the fortress served to define Ottoman frontiers in the early modern imagination and to stamp sovereignty onto contested regional space.
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Peters, B. Guy. "Other Administrative Traditions." In Administrative Traditions, 154–77. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198297253.003.0008.

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The four traditions constituting the bulk of this book are from Western Europe. This chapter expands the analysis to look at four other administrative traditions. One is Central and Eastern Europe. Some countries in this region have been heavily influenced by Western European traditions, especially those of the former Hapsburg Empire, but they also display a number of distinctive features. A second tradition is Islamic administration, which has been influenced both by religion and by national cultures. Third, there is Asian public administration, and the question of the importance of the Confucian model is a central question when dealing with this tradition. Finally, there is administration in Latin America, still influenced by its Iberian past but which has been influenced also by the Napoleonic tradition and to a lesser extent by the United States. The same elements of administrative traditions used in reference to Western European countries are applied to these four traditions.
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"VI. Empire of the Hapsburgs." In The Age of Reason, 86–98. Cornell University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/9781501744273-008.

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ÁGOSTON, GÁBOR. "Where Environmental and Frontier Studies Meet: Rivers, Forests, Marshes and Forts along the Ottoman–Hapsburg Frontier in Hungary." In The Frontiers of the Ottoman World. British Academy, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197264423.003.0003.

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It has been fashionable in the generalist literature to argue that the Ottomans lacked knowledge in European geography and politics. This chapter first offers some comments regarding Istanbul's understanding of geography and environment in the context of Ottoman strategy and frontier warfare. The, it presents a short overview of the importance of rivers, marshlands and mountains with regard to the formation of the opposing Hapsburg and Ottoman defence systems in Hungary. The last part of the chapter deals with the relationship between landscape, climate and fortifications and offers some preliminary results and tentative observations regarding deforestation and marshlands. The discussion also argues, although in somewhat different ways, that the Ottomans and their Hapsburg rivals both had a keen interest in geography and mapped their empires and resources, and possessed adequate information as to the terrain and river systems of their lands and frontiers.
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