翻訳と辞書
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・ Austro-German Postal Union
・ Austro-Hungarian Army
・ Austro-Hungarian campaign in Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1878
・ Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867
・ Austro-Hungarian Foreign Service
・ Austro-Hungarian gulden
・ Austro-Hungarian krone
・ Austro-Hungarian military mission in Persia
・ Austro-Hungarian Navy
・ Austro-Hungarian North Pole Expedition
・ Austro-Hungarian rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina
・ Austro-Hungarian U-boat classes
・ Austro-Prussian War
・ Austro-Russian alliance (1781)
・ Austro-Russian–Turkish War (1735–39)
Austro-Slavism
・ Austro-Slovene conflict in Carinthia
・ Austro-Tai languages
・ Austro-Tatra
・ Austro-Turkish War (1663–64)
・ Austro-Turkish War (1787–91)
・ Austro-Turkish War of 1716–18
・ Austroaeschna
・ Austroagrion cyane
・ Austroalpine nappes
・ Austroargiolestes
・ Austroascia
・ Austroasiatic languages
・ Austroassiminea
・ Austroassiminea letha


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Austro-Slavism : ウィキペディア英語版
Austro-Slavism

Austro-Slavism was a political concept and program aimed to solve problems of Slavic peoples in the Austrian Empire.
It was most influential among Czech liberals around the middle of the 19th century. First proposed by Karel Havlíček Borovský in 1846, as an opposition to the concept of pan-Slavism, it was further developed into a complete political program by Czech politician František Palacký. Austroslavism also found some support in other Slavic nations in the Austrian Empire, especially the Slovenes and Croats.
==The program==

Austroslavism envisioned peaceful cooperation of the smaller Slavic nations of Central Europe within the Habsburg Monarchy not dominated by German-speaking elites. Palacký proposed a federation of 8 national regions, with significant self-governance. After the suppression of the Czech revolution in Prague in June 1848, the program became irrelevant.〔 The Austrian Empire transformed into Austria-Hungary (1867), honouring Hungarian, but not Slavic demands as part of the ''Ausgleich''. This further weakened the position of Austroslavism.
As a political concept, Austroslavism persisted until the fall of the Austrian-Hungarian Empire in 1918. The collapse of Austria-Hungary owed a great deal to that nation's failure to recognise Slavic demands. Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, later to become the first President of Czechoslovakia, convinced US President Woodrow Wilson during the First World War that the Slavic peoples of Austria need to be liberated, leading to the promulgation of the Fourteen Points, and ultimate dissolution of the former Austrian Empire. Autroslavism appeared in its last iteration around this time, in the form of several proposals, lacking in influence, to federalise Austria-Hungary (such as the abortive United States of Greater Austria plan).

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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