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         Austrian History:     more books (100)
  1. A Brief Survey of Austrian History by Richard Rickett, 1994
  2. Austrian History Yearbook 1999 (vol 30) by Charles W. Ingrao, 1999-07-01
  3. Guide to the materials for American history in Swiss and Austrian Archives by Albert Bernhardt Faust, 2010-08-19
  4. A Journey Through the Austrian Netherlands: Containing the Modern History and Description of All the Provinces, Towns, Castles, Palaces, Etc. of That Fruitful, Populous Country [...] by John Macky, 2010-04-01
  5. Austrian History Yearbook 1996 (vol 27) by Solomon Wank, Barbara Lawatsch-Boomgaarden, 1996-03-01
  6. Austrian History Yearbook, 1994 (vol. 025) by Solomon Wank, 1994-03-01
  7. Austrian History Yearbook, 1981-82 (Volumes 17 and 18 Combined) by William E. Wright, 1984-10
  8. From World War to Waldheim: Culture and Politics in Austria and the United States (Austrian History, Culture and Society)
  9. A History of the Austrian Migration to Canada
  10. Carl Menger and the Origins of Austrian Economics (Studies in the History, Methods and Boundaries of Economics) by Max Alter, 1990-07
  11. The Austrian Anschluss in History and Literature (Literature As Testimony) by Eoin Bourke, 2007-01-30
  12. Austrian Academy of Sciences: The Building and Its History by Herbert Karner, Artur Rosenauer, et all 2007-12-30
  13. Exclusive Revolutionaries: Liberal Politics, Social Experience, and National Identity in the Austrian Empire, 1848-1914 (Social History, Popular Culture, and Politics in Germany) by Pieter M. Judson, 1997-02-01
  14. Austrian History Yearbook 1965

41. Egesch
austrian history. Institut für Geschichte Abteilung ÖsterreichischeGeschichte Universität Graz Heinrichstraße 26/II, 8010 Graz
http://www-gewi.kfunigraz.ac.at/moderne/egesch.htm
Austrian History
Tel.: ++43 (0) 316/ 380 - 2376
Fax.: ++43 (0) 316/ 380 - 9721
Project director (Graz/Wien)
Research Projects
The Hermann-Bahr-Diary-Edition.
Kurt Ifkovits
Lukas Mayerhofer Helene Zand
Scientific edition of hitherto unpublished diaries, sketchbooks and notebooks from Hermann Bahr (1863-1934) during the years 1885-1908 (5 Vols. plus one commentary volume). Hermann Bahr counts as one of the essential mediators of modernity in Vienna around 1900. Knowledge of the diaries allows inferences to the complex correlations of overall European and regional cultural developments. Analysis of ethnic-cultural plurality in Central Europe and the mediation of corresponding traditions in the education system of the Habsburg monarchy.
The multilingualism of the cultural text in the Viennese Modernity.

Johannes Feichtinger
pluralistic one, expressing itself in the diversity of peoples, languages, the constitutional structure and a variety of cultural symbols: It was concentrated in urban milieus and was a deliberately reflected phenomenon that led to particular reactions. One the one hand the diversified awareness (based on the variety of cultural codes) was as an essential source of innovation

42. "Austrian History Yearbook"
AustrianHistory Yearbook, Zitat Center for Austrian Studies, Minneapolis,
http://uni-online.sbg.ac.at/pls/fodok_public/uso_navigate.publication?pvPublID=4

43. Guide To The Manuscript Of R. John Rath's The Provisional Austrian Regime In Lom
He also founded and edited the austrian history Yearbook. The papers were receivedfrom Dr. Fred Zuber of the austrian history Yearbook office, April 25, 1980.
http://www.rice.edu/fondren/woodson/mss/ms310.html

Woodson manuscripts home
List of manuscript collections
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Collection Summary Biography of R. John Rath Scope and Contents of the Papers Arrangement of the Papers ... Box 2
Guide to the Manuscript of R. John Rath's The Provisional Austrian Regime in Lombardy-Venetia, 1814-1815
Collection Summary Creator: Rath, Reuben John Title: Manuscript of Reuben John Rath's The Provisional Austrian Regime in Lombardy-Venetia, 1814-1815 Dates: Quantity: Two boxes containing two typed drafts and one folder containing correspondence, maps, typographical and proofreading instructions. Identification: MS 310
Biography of R. John Rath
R. John Rath, born December 12, 1910, in St. Francis, Kansas, received a Bachelor of Arts in 1932 from the University of Kansas, a Masters of Arts in 1934 from the University of California at Berkeley, and Ph.D. in 1941 from Columbia University. Following army service in 1945, he was named Chief, Division of Documentary Evidence, United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, U.S. Zone in Germany, and later, chief of the same division, Austrian mission. He was granted a Social Science Research Council Fellowship in 1937-1938 for research in Austria and Italy and a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1956-1957 for research in Italy. Dr. Rath held teaching assignments at the University of Arkansas, Mississippi State College for Women, University of Georgia, the University of Colorado and the University of Texas as Professor of History before joining the Rice University faculty in 1963. At Rice University he was Chairman of the Department of History and Political Science from 1963 to 1968 and Mary Gibbs Jones Professor of History from 1969 to 1979.

44. Austromir's AUSTRIAN HISTORY PAGE
April 15th 1995. The following short summary of austrian history ofthe 20th century intends only to give an overview of the subject.
http://www.s.shuttle.de/anekin/histnew.html
April 15th 1995 The following short summary of Austrian history of the 20th century intends only to give an overview of the subject. The intention is by no means to provide a complete and comprehensive description. For all further information the reader is referred to the list of literature given below. Email: anekin@anekin.s.shuttle.de In the following the history will be partitioned into several parts. The end of each of these parts being an event that gave a new direction to the development of the country. The author is well aware of that one may argue about the relevance of events in history since they are only a manifestation of previous developments that show up in a single moment. However, for a historical review they may serve as milestones that provide a formal help for the reader. Although it's difficult to talk about contemporary history and especially about the last years excluding personal preferences and emotions (sine ira et studio), I will cover in short also the developments of recent years until today. The periods described are as follows.

45. British Academy PORTAL - Eurodocs: History Of Austria, Austro-Hungarian Empire:
This site is a collection of links to primary documents (facsimiles,transcriptions and translations) in austrian history. Although
http://www.britac.ac.uk/portal/h10/euroaust.html
Modern History (from c Areas Home ... Feedback
Eurodocs: History of Austria, Austro-Hungarian Empire: Primary Documents
http://library.byu.edu/~rdh/eurodocs/austria.html
Keywords
Description
This site is a collection of links to primary documents (facsimiles, transcriptions and translations) in Austrian history. Although some documents from the Medieval period are included, most of the links relate to late eighteenth, nineteenth and twentieth century materials. If this resource is not what you are looking for, please go to the PORTAL search screen and try another search Date visited for this service : 18 October 2002
Main resource type : Primary resource
Searchable : No
Date resource created
Hosted by
: Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University
Language : Interface is in English, links to documents in other languages
This page last edited: 26 February 2003

46. Information On The Study Of History At The University Of Vienna
methods and basics of historical research, lecture courses in the five compulsory,subjects (ancient, medieval modern, contemporary and austrian history).
http://www.univie.ac.at/Geschichte-Meta/studium/s_info_e.html
Information on the study of history
at the University of Vienna With more than 69.000 students the University of Vienna (divided into 8 faculties) is Austria's largest university. The departments composing the Faculty of Humanities comprise nearly 17.000 or 22% of all students enrolled at the University of Vienna. Nearly 20% of these students choose history as their main subject (3200). There are five departments offering courses in history: In addition, there is an Institute for Austrian Historical Research
The academic staff teaching history includes lecturers from outside the university as well and exceeds 200. Each term between 150 and 200 introductory courses, lectures, seminars, and tutorials are offered. The academic year starts in October and lasts until June (winter term: October - January; summerterm: March - June. Holidays for students are February, July -September, additional 3 weeks at Christmas and 2 weeks at-Easter).
The curriculum for students of history is divided into two parts. During the first part which lasts for four terms each student is required to pass 32 credit hours. These mainly include introductory courses on historical methods and basics of historical research, lecture courses in the five compulsory, subjects (ancient, medieval modern, contemporary and Austrian history). During the second part,depending on the student's choice, future teachers are required to choose 32 credit hours in five terms, others have to pass 22 credit hours within four to terms.

47. Scholars Bookstore
austrian history of Ideas. The Beethoven Encyclopedia by Paul Nettl. From Prejudiceto Persecution A History of Austrian AntiSemitism by Bruce Pauley.
http://www.hayekcenter.org/bookstore/history/austria history books.html
Laissez Faire
Books
Scholar's Bookstore Amazon
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Vienna Books Vienna History ... Hayek-L Edited Books Browse Books by Subject Audiobooks Bestsellers Bargains Biographies Business Children's Christian Computers Cooking Entertainment Fantasy Fiction Health/Mind/Body History Horror Mysteries Nonfiction Parenting Reference Religion Romance Sheet Music Sports Travel Teens Recent books on Austria History Hitler: 1937-1945: Nemesis by Ian Kershaw Diaries: Robert Musil 1899-1942 by Robert Musil Hitler's Vienna: A Dictator's Apprenticeship by Brigitte Hamann Austria: Out of the Shadow of the Past by Anton Pelinka Hitler's Austria: Popular Sentiment in the Nazi Era, 1938-1945 by Evan Bukey The Authoritarian State : An Essay on the Problem of the Austrian State by Eric Voegelin Austria in the First Cold War, 1945-55: The Leverage of the Weak by Gunter Bischof Hitler: 1889-1936: Hubris by Ian Kershaw From World War to Waldheim: Culture and Politics in Austria and the United States Wittgenstein in Vienna : A Biographical Excursion Through the City and Its History Austria-Hungary and the Origins of the First World War by Samuel Williamson, Jr.

48. Austria Weekly Digest In English And News Archive
University of Minnesota) Society for Austrian and Habsburg History.austrian history by homepages Look up our German archive! Tag
http://www.wienerzeitung.at/frameless/english.htm?ID=M23

49. Guardian Unlimited | Special Reports | Special Report: Austria
Officials on trial for Austrian ski train fire June 19 One of the biggest criminaltrials in austrian history began yesterday when 16 officials were charged
http://www.guardian.co.uk/austria/0,2759,184722,00.html
Go to: Guardian Unlimited home UK news World news Archive search Arts Books Business EducationGuardian.co.uk Film Football Jobs MediaGuardian.co.uk Money The Observer Online Politics Shopping SocietyGuardian.co.uk Sport Talk Travel Audio Email services Special reports The Guardian The weblog The informer The northerner The wrap Advertising guide Crossword Dating Headline service Syndication services Events / offers Help / contacts Information Newsroom Style guide Travel offers TV listings Weather Web guides Guardian Weekly Money Observer Home UK Business Online ... Quiz
Search this site
Go to...
Austria archived articles
Cartoon 03.01.2000: Steve Bell on Haider
The EU row Statement from Portugese presidency of the EU
Austrian politics The Freedom party
The Peoples' party

Republic of Austria

World News Guide Austria
Austrian media Kleine Zeitung
Der Standard
Die Presse Kurier online Monitoring Haider Jewish.net network Latest Haider's party 'back in cabinet' February 28: 17.02.03: Austria's right fails to woo greens into power Gender First woman takes a bow at Vienna Philharmonic January 10: The Vienna Philharmonic orchestra has appointed its first female musician, signalling the fall of another of Europe's all-male bastions.

50. History
In the humanities the Academy started with researching and publishing important historicalsources of Austria (eg the Archive of austrian history , the source
http://www.oeaw.ac.at/english/about/fakten/geschichte.html
People Budget History Activities Report ... Research Gallery From the "learned society" to a scientific organisation supporting modern research institutions
History
In 1713, G. W. von Leibniz suggested to establish an Academy of Sciences in Vienna, taking as examples the Royal Society in England and the Académie des Sciences in France. Under Maria Theresia several further attempts were made to establish an Academy (inter alia by J. C. Gottsched in 1750), but it was not until twelve scholars filed a petition in 1837 that the long negotiations were initiated which finally led to the foundation of the "Kaiserliche Akademie der Wissenschaften in Wien" by Imperial Patent on May 14, 1847. In 1857, the Academy, which as the "learned society" represented a stronghold of scientific freedom, was granted the use of the old University in the centre of Vienna , built between 1753 and 1755 by the French architect Jean Nicolas Jadot, as its permanent headquarters.
Initial Achievements in the Humanities and Natural Sciences
The Academy soon began extensive research. In the humanities the Academy started with researching and publishing important historical sources of Austria (e. g. the

51. Recommended Reading: Austria, Germany, Switzerland
Also see The Xenophobe's Guide to the Germans below. austrian history. The AustriansA ThousandYear Odyssey By Gordon Brook-Shepherd. Carroll Graf, 1997.
http://www.german-way.com/german/recbooks.html
Recommended Reading
Last updated: June 2002
An online supplement to The German Way by Hyde Flippo
Passport Books (a division of NTC/Contemporary Publishing)
ISBN 0-8442-2513-4
Books and Maps
for Germany

In association with Amazon.com and Rand McNally , we offer the following recommended books related to the German-speaking world. These titles can be purchased directly from our bookstore by using the title links. (Amazon.com and Rand McNally are solely responsible for fulfillment of all orders.)
Jump to:
Travel Books and Maps by Country:
Travel Shop: Austria

Books, guides, maps and travel items for Austria. Travel Shop: Germany
Books, guides, maps and travel items for Germany. Travel Shop: Switzerland
Books, guides, maps and travel items for Switzerland. Germanic Connection Travel Shop Books, guides, maps and travel items for Europe. Other Books by Country: Austria ... Fiction set in Germany See our Travel page for related links! (from Amazon.de) Books on the German Past and German History FILM Books and the German-Hollywood Connection Video Shop from the German-Hollywood Connection NEWS MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS Select a news magazine of your choice...

52. German History On The Web
A link collection, mainly of other overview sites.Category Society History By Region Europe Germany...... Museum and special exhibits Bobst Library Links to German History Resources on theInternet, New York University Library NYU austrian history Links NYU Swiss
http://web.uccs.edu/~history/index/germany.html
General History Sources
Primary Sources

East/West German Era

Sources by Time Period
...
ARCHIVES AND LIBRARIES
G erman H istory
Research on the Web European, Asian/African
U.S. History Pages
Click here for H-Net Reviews
On- line reviews of books and other multi-
media sources. See especially H-German,
H-Habsburg, H-World and H-Anti-Semitism.
General History Sources Michigan State University sponsors an excellent e-mail discussion group on German History (H-German) and also on Habsburg History (H-Habsburg) studies.
American Institute for Contemporary German Studies.
German History Sites on the Web H-German provides an excellent page of links. University of Heideleberg' Histroy of Germany Website. It is filled with links and information about German history from the beginning of time. Bobst Library An excellent site which can be searched for an extensive archive of German history information. This site contains an excellent links page The Richard Koebner Center for German History German Historical Institute German Information Center ... American Institute for Contemporary German Studies Primary Sources GTEXT to Primary Source Archives Another page of German history documents from H-German. (Generally not translated into English.)

53. History
austrian history. Celts Foundation of Austria - Habsburg Dynasty- Peasent´s War - Maria Theresa - Joseph II - Congress of Vienna
http://www.schladming.org/austrianhistory.htm
AUSTRIAN HISTORY Celts - Foundation of Austria - Habsburg Dynasty Peasent´s War - Maria Theresa - Joseph II - Congress of Vienna - Revolutions of 1848 World War I - Treaty of Saint-Germain - "Red" Vienna - Dollfuss - March 1938 - After World War II - Austria is located at the crossroads of Europe; Vienna is at the gate of the Danubian plain, and the Brenner Pass in W Austria links Germany and Italy. From earliest times Austrian territory has been a thoroughfare, a battleground, and a border area. It was occupied by Celts and Suebi when the Romans conquered (15 B.C. A.D. 10) and divided it among the provinces of Rhaetia, Noricum, and Upper Pannonia. After the 5th cent. A.D. , Huns, Ostrogoths, Lombards, and Bavarians overran and devastated the provinces. By c.600, Slavs from the east had occupied all of modern Styria, Lower Austria, and Carinthia. In 788, Charlemagne conquered the area and set up the first Austrian (i.e., Eastern) March in the present Upper and Lower Austria, to halt the inroads of the Avars. After Charlemagne's death (814) the march soon fell to the Moravians and later to the Magyars, from whom it was taken (955) by Emperor Otto I. Otto reconstituted the march and attached it to Bavaria, but, in 976, Otto II bestowed it as a separate fief on Leopold of Babenberg, founder of the first Austrian dynasty. Emperor Frederick I raised (1156) Austria to a duchy, and, in 1192, Styria also passed under Babenberg rule.

54. German History Links
Library; NYU austrian history Links; NYU Swiss and Western EuropeanHistory Links; Contemporary European History (Cambridge journal);
http://www2.h-net.msu.edu/~german/research/links.html
Other Links of Interest to Historians of Germany
(no guarantee of accuracy offered)
Updated: 24 March 2003 INSTITUTES, SOCIETIES, AND PROGRAMS
RESOURCES, LINKS, AND MEDIA

TOPICAL SITES

ARCHIVES AND LIBRARIES

INSTITUTES AND PROGRAMS

55. GENERAL INFORMATION
Austrian Press and Information Service very useful web site withinformation ranging from austrian history to tourist information;
http://www.usembassy.at/en/austria/general.htm

Consular and

Visa Information

Study in the U.S.

Doing Business
...
Contact Us
GENERAL INFORMATION
"Austria is located in southern Central Europe. Geographically, its territory encompasses both the Eastern Alps (which cover some two thirds of its surface area) and the Danube Region. Austria has a land surface of 83,858 square kilometres (32,369 square miles). Austria has common borders with eight other countries: Germany, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Slovenia, Italy, Switzerland and Liechtenstein. Austria is a federal state consisting of nine independent federal states: Burgenland, Carinthia, Lower Austria, Salzburg, Styria, Tyrol, Upper Austria, Vienna and Vorarlberg.
The Austrian population totals slightly more than eight million, some 98% of whom are German-speaking. The six ethnic groups officially recognised in Austria are concentrated on the east and south of the country. In 1999 the population was made up of 4.1 million (51,5%)female and 3.9 million (48,5%) male Austrians. "
(Source: The Federal Austrian Ministry for Foreign Affairs)

56. German Cultural History
German, austrian, Swiss Cultural history Materials by Dr. Paul A. Schons, University of St. Thomas Chronology (2 000 years)
http://webcampus3.stthomas.edu/paschons/language_http/German/culthist.html
German, Austrian, Swiss Cultural History
Materials by Dr. Paul A. Schons, University of St. Thomas
Chronology (2,000 years) Biographies (over 900 biographies) Historic Calendar (Over 3,000 items) Important Women Philosophy and Religion GAI Essays Starting in September, 2002: An Internet course on German Cultural History. Return to Home Page Search St. Thomas server
Chronology of History
200B.C.-1499 2000-present
Alphabetical Index of German, Austrian, Swiss, Liechtenstein Biography A B C D ... Return to Schons Home Page
Calendar of Significant Events in Austria, Germany, Liechtenstein and Switzerland,
Return to Cultural History Index Return to Schons Home Page
January
February ... December
The work goes on on these cultural history pages.
I request you to bring errors to my attention for repair. Thank you! PAS paschons@stthomas.edu
Return to Home Page of P. A. Schons

Last updated on May 23, 2002

57. Heeresgeschichtliches Museum
Introduction to Vienna's oldest museum, including contact info, the floor plan and a list of events. austrian Armed. Forces. Other Museums in Vienna. The Museum of Military history is Vienna's oldest museum.
http://www.bmlv.gv.at/hgm/english

Deutsch

Museum of Military History Map
Expositions and Events

Austrian Armed

Forces
... Museums in Vienna
The Museum of Military History is Vienna's oldest museum. The collections of this most important history museum in Europe reach from the 16th to the 20th centuries. In five major sections the history of the Habsburg empire from the end of the 16th century until 1918 and Austria's fate after the dissolution of the monarchy up to the year 1945 are shown. Major events in history form the basis of the exhibition. In the so called Artillery Halls in front of the Museum the world's biggest collection of historical pieces of artillery from seven centuries is presented. Tour
of the Museum's treasures

© BMLV

58. Austria , Austro-Hungarian Empire-- Primary Documents
Sources in German, austrian and Swiss Legal history of the 19th Century
http://www.lib.byu.edu/~rdh/eurodocs/austria.html
History of Austria,
Austro-Hungarian Empire:
Primary Documents
The Early Germanic Kingdoms
Texts and Archives
(transcriptions) Quellen zur mittelalterlichen Reichsgeschichte
Sources for the History of the Medieval [Germanic] Empire Early, High and Late Middle Ages.
Includes the Hanseatic League.
(800 - 1503; Latin and contemporary German transcriptions with critical apparatus) Handschriftenabbildungen:
Deutschsprachige Handschriften des Mittelalters im Internet
Facsimiles of German-language medieval manuscripts.
Organized by locations of manuscripts. Traditional Austrian Sagas and Legends
(Transcriptions) Establishment of the Duchy of Austria
(17 September 1156; English translation) Verdun altar at Klosterneuburg
Perhaps the earliest text form of Biblia pauperum
(1181; transcription) Kaiser Rudolf I von Habsburg:
Mandate on property of fleeing Jews
(6 December 1286; modern German translation) Kaiser Rudolf I von Habsburg:
Establishment of feudal relationship of the Jews of Limburg to Gerlach von Limburg
(6 May 1287; modern German translation) Codex Manesse
Complete facsimile of the Codex Palatinus Germanicus 848 in the Heidelberg university library

59. History Of Austria
history of Austria, AustroHungarian Empire Primary Documents reproduces textsin collections, reading rooms, and catalogs of the austrian National Library
http://www.nyu.edu/library/bobst/research/hum/history/austhist.htm
HISTORY OF AUSTRIA General Resources
  • H-Net Habsburg Home Page : Information about and from the discussion list devoted to the history of the Habsburg monarchy.
Primary Sources Libraries, Archives, and Research Institutions
  • : Information about services, collections, reading rooms, and catalogs of the Austrian National Library. : A web interface to major Austrian research library catalogs. : A basic directory, with contact information. Center for Austrian Studies : Information about programs and publications, as well as additional news and links, from a scholarly center at the University of Minnesota. : Ongoing projects of this leading research institute include documentation of written sources and material culture for the medieval and early modern period in Austria.
Last Updated : December, 2002

60. The Habsburg Dynasty - History
austrian forces under General Prince Eugene subsequently swept the Turks to of theHabsburgs were themselves gifted musicians and would, history allowing, have
http://www.geocities.com/Vienna/1605/habsburg.htm
The Habsburg Dynasty - History
In its early years, the land that became Austria was invaded by a succession of tribes and armies using the Danube Valley as a conduit - the Celts, Romans, Vandals, Visigoths, Huns, Avars, Slavs. Therefore the Babenberger Dynasty was sent to established a territory in the Danube Valley known as the Ostarrichi in 803, to prevent these invasions; and the area became Christianised and predominantly Germanic. The Babenbergers, who moved their residence to Vienna, controlled Austria for nearly 300 years until Duke Friedrich died childless in 1246 leaving his lands once again open to warring tribes. By 1278 the Habsburgs had gained control and this mighty dynasty managed to rule Austria right up until WW I. Although the Habsburgs were not averse to using a bit of muscle, they preferred less barbaric ways of extending their territory and so Austria gradually expanded thanks to judicious real estate purchases and many politically-motivated marriages.
New territories were acquired, which resulted in the Habsburgs, now also the Holy Roman Emperors, ruling much of central Europe including Hungary and Bohemia and Croatia, parts of Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, Italy, as well as the Netherlands and Spain and its vast overseas possessions. (The Empire was divided into a Spanish and Austrian half in 1556.) The Gothic style was popular between the 14th and 16th centuries, as evidenced by the number of imposing buildings with flying buttresses, pointed arches, ribbed ceiling vaults and pigeon toes. St Stephen's Cathedral in Vienna is considered to be Austria's Gothic masterpiece. The next major stylistic influence was Baroque. Learning from the Italian model, Fischer von Erlach developed a national style called Austrian Baroque, typified in the National Library and the Church of St Charles in Vienna. Empress Maria Theresa had a fling with Rococo.

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