Now it was time for the Thomases to fly to the other capital of the old Hapsburg Empire:
Budapest in Hungary. They seem to have still been going east in some sort of SPAD, but probably would have been more comfortable, like us, back in the F13:
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After the final defeat of Napoleon in 1815, Austria-Hungary was one of the victorious Allies, along with Britain, Russia and Prussia. The brilliant, ruthless foreign minister Metternich did a lot to re-establish his Emperor's power and was hated by Liberals and Revolutionaries throughout Europe, especially in Italy.
The Junkers' Loyd Loom interior, basketwork seating being nice and light:
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It took until 1860 for the Italians to finally unite their country and remove the last Austrian troops, though Austria held onto the important port of Trieste until after WW1.
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By about 1900 Vienna was the cultural capital of Europe with superb art, architecture, music and science flourishing there.
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In the First World War the Germans rather rudely referred to their Austro-Hungarian Central Powers ally as 'the Corpse Empire', though the Austrians fought bravely on several difficult fronts, including holding off the French, British
and Italian navies in the Adriatic (remember von Trapp in his U-boats?).
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But they finally lost and this time the Hapsburg Empire really was doomed, with several of the Balkan territories uniting into the new nation of Yugoslavia (=
Land of the South Slavs), Hungary becoming an independent republic, the Slavonic north (Bohemia, Moravia, Slovakia) breaking away into 'Czecho-slovakia', and only the small German part of the Empire being left around Vienna and west, into the Tyrol, as another new republic, 'Austria'.
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Bismarck had defeated the Austro-Hungarians in 1866, but never wanted to incorporate Austria into his Prussian-dominated German Empire.
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Hitler, although himself an Austrian, had hated the eclectic, easy-going, multicultural Hapsburg Empire. In 1914 he dodged the draft in Austria, but being a Germanic nationalist, happily volunteered for the Imperial German army.
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We are still following the Danube: Vienna, Budapest and Belgrade all stand on that great river.
And, of course, when in power in Germany after 1933, Hitler was able to achieve
Anschluss (= literally
connection/politically
union) with Austria, just by marching in; but if
The Sound of Music taught us anything it was that not all Austrians approved of that - the
Kaisertreu von Trapp, for example!