Mitteleuropa
Template:Short description
Template:Lang (Template:IPA), meaning Middle Europe, is one of the German terms for Central Europe.[1] The term has acquired diverse cultural, political and historical connotations.[2][3][4]
The Prussian vision of Template:Lang was a pan-Germanist state-centric imperium, an idea that was later adopted in a modified form by Nazi geopoliticians.[5][6][7]
Basis
The German term "Mitteleuropa" is usually considered to have negative connotations attributed to German imperialism, and has been defined in various ways over time. In Austria, Czechia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Romania, Croatia and northern Italy, especially in Friuli and Trieste, the common understanding of Mitteleuropa is somewhat different from that in Germany: an imperial term primarily equated with the successor states of the former Habsburg monarchy. The Central European Order of St. George has its centers mainly in the area of the former Austrian Empire.[8][9]
Conceptual history
Medieval migrations
By the mid-14th century, when the Black Death brought an end to the 500-year-long Template:Lang process, populations from Western Europe had moved into the "Wendish" Central European areas of Template:Lang far beyond the Elbe and Saale rivers. They had moved along the Baltic coast from Holstein to Farther Pomerania (in the Kingdom of Poland), up the Oder river to the Moravian Gate, down the Danube into the Kingdom of Hungary and into the Slovene lands of Carniola. From the mouth of the Vistula river and the Prussian region, the Teutonic Knights by force continued the migration through the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, up to the Estonian Reval (Tallinn) in the Livonian Confederation (encompassing the areas of present-day Estonia, Latvia and northern Lithuania). They had also settled the mountainous border regions of Bohemia and Moravia and formed a distinct social class of citizens in towns like Prague, Havlíčkův Brod (German Brod), Olomouc (Olmütz) and Brno (Brünn). They had moved into the Polish Kraków Voivodeship, the Western Carpathians and Transylvania (Siebenbürgen), introducing the practice of crop rotation and German town law.
Different visions of Template:Lang
In the first half of the 19th century, ideas of a Central-European federation between the Russian Empire and the West European great powers arose, based on geographical, ethnic and economic considerations.
The term Template:Lang was formally introduced by Karl Ludwig von Bruck and Lorenz von Stein, a first theorization of the term attempted in 1848,[10] with the aim of a series of interlocking economic confederations.[11] However, plans advocated by the Austrian minister-president, Prince Felix of Schwarzenberg, foundered on the resistance of the German states. After the Austro-Prussian War of 1866 and the Prussian-led unification of Germany under Chancellor Otto von Bismarck in 1871, In Austria, the Template:Lang concept evolved as an alternative to the German question, equivalent to an amalgamation of the states of the German Confederation and the multi-ethnic Austrian Empire under the firm leadership of the Habsburg dynasty.
Political and ethnic visions of a Template:Lang began to dominate in Germany. After the Revolutions of 1848 liberal theorists like Friedrich List and Heinrich von Gagern, socialists and then later groups like the German National Liberal Party would adopt the idea. However, a distinct Pan-German notion accompanied by the concept of a renewed settler colonialism would become associated with the idea. In the German Empire, the Template:Lang concentrated on the achievements by ethnic Germans in Central Europe on the basis of ethnocentrism with significant anti-Slavic notions, as propagated by the Pan-German League. By 1914 and the Template:Lang, Template:Lang, meaning central Europe under the control of Germany, had become a part of German hegemonic policy.[12]
The Prussian Template:Lang Plan
The Template:Lang plan was to achieve an economic and cultural hegemony over Central Europe by the German Empire[13][14] and subsequent economic and financial exploitation[15][16] of this region combined with direct annexations,[15] making of puppet states, and the creation of puppet states for a buffer between Germany and Russia. The issue of Central Europe was taken by German politician Friedrich Naumann in 1915 in his work Template:Lang. According to his thought, this part of Europe was to become a politically and economically integrated bloc subjected to German rule. In his program, Naumann also supported programs of Germanization and Hungarization as well.[17] In his book, Naumann used imperialist rhetoric combined with praises to nature, and imperial condescension towards non-German people, while advising politicians to show some "flexibility" towards non-German languages to achieve "harmony".[13] Naumann wrote that it would stabilize the whole Central-European region.[18] Some parts of the planning included designs on creating a new state in Crimea and have the Baltic states to be client states.[19]
The ruling political elites of Germany accepted the Template:Lang plan during World War I while drawing out German war aims and plans for the new order of Europe.[17] Template:Lang was to be created by establishing a series of puppet states whose political, economic and military aspects would be under the control of the German Reich.[20] The entire region was to serve as an economic backyard of Germany, whose exploitation would enable the German sphere of influence to better compete against strategic rivals like Britain, the United States.[20] Political, military and economic organization was to be based on German domination,[21] with commercial treaties imposed on the newly-created states of Poland and Ukraine, working as German protectorates. It was believed that the German working classes could be appeased by German politicians through the economic benefits of territorial annexation, a new economic sphere of influence, and exploitation of conquered countries for the material benefit of Germany.[22] Partial realization of these plans was reflected in the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, where guarantees of economic and military domination over Ukraine by Germany were laid out.[23] The Template:Lang plan was viewed as a threat by the British Empire, which concluded it would destroy British continental trade and diminish its military power.[14]
Other visions of Template:Lang
While Template:Lang describes a geographical location, it also is the word denoting a political concept of a German-dominated and exploited Central European union that was put into motion during the First World War. The historian Jörg Brechtefeld describes Template:Lang as the following: Template:Quote
Mitteleuropean literature of the period between the end of the 19th century and World War II has been the subject of renewed interest, starting in the 1960s. Pioneers in this revival have been Claudio Magris, Roberto Calasso, and the Italian publishing house Adelphi.[24] In the 1920s, French scholar Pierre Renouvin published eleven volumes of documents explaining that Germany decided to bail out Austria which they believed was threatened with economic disintegration by Serbian and other nationalist movements. J Keiger maintained in the debate on the Fischer Controversy that confirmed this opinion rebutting revisionist arguments that Germany was looking for an excuse to occupy Austro-Hungary.[25]
German Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg's plan prepared for a Central European Economic Union. Published in September 1914, the program for interdependent development was designed to include France in a Central European Customs Federation. The German occupation of Belgium was the first phase in this process, which ultimately failed to come to fruition. Plans to create a Duchy of Flanders and a Grand Duchy of Warsaw were discussed as political units of future "localized" administration. The original economic plan was conceived pre-1914 by Walther Rathenau and Alfred von Gwinner, respectively, with the legal support of Hans Delbrück. It was a Customs Union consistent with a history of the Template:Lang and German Confederation of the 19th century, in which German philosophers believed in the wider sustainability of a Greater Europe. There were concerns from Schoenbeck and others that it would make Germany too inward-looking, but Template:Lang gained the support of von Hertling, later a Chancellor and Kurt Kuhlmann, the diplomat. The major sticking point was continued and exclusive German access to Austrian markets, while in the mind of others, like von Falkenhausen, mastery of competition was not possible before military mastery of Europe.[26]
An extension of Template:Lang was the Longwy-Briey basin. Capturing this mining area west of Alsace-Lorraine, already annexed since 1871, was a major part of the [[Schlieffen Plan|Template:Lang Plan]] and Germany's war aims. The high plateau dominated the French interior, giving the German army a wide range of fire. But the area also contained immensely prized deposits of iron. These were essential to both France and German war efforts. The development of heavy industry was a central feature of economic policy "under Imperial Protective Administration." Initially, Roedern, the Template:Lang treasurer, was deeply skeptical that a plan to "incorporate" French assets into a customs union and federation would succeed, but civilian doubts were overcome by January 1915, and by 26 August 1916, it was official German policy.
The first port of Template:Lang was Antwerp: Belgium's occupation in August 1914 was suggestive of partition. Anglophile Albert Ballin, therefore, set up a "German–Belgian trading company" to transfer assets and people from the occupied territories back to the Reich. The Post Office was to become German, and so too the railways, and the banks, all overseen by an Economics Committee, which would be a liaison group between private enterprise and the public sector. Belgian capital markets were absorbed into Karl von Lumm's Report, and all currency issued was backed by the Template:Lang. German obsession with the "Race to the Sea" and right to Belgian seaports continued to be a major policy initiative in the Memorandum of "Attachement" maritime security persisted in the German-Luxembourg Customs Association finally completed on 25 November 1915. Much of the theoretical work would be carried out by Six Economic Associations discussed in memoranda from Spring 1915 designated so as to set Germany free from British tutelage.
Template:Lang also had its opponents inside Germany. Erich Marcks, a historian from Magdeburg and a member of SPD, had referred to "that great European idea" before the war. And then, in March 1916, he urged the Chancellor to renew calls in the Template:Lang for a public debate on the war's aims.
Culture
Mitteleuropa is also used in a cultural sense to denote a fertile region whose thought has brought many fruits, artistic and cultural. It is also sometimes denote with the expression "Habsburg thought and culture."[27] Polish poet Zbigniew Herbert wrote the poem Template:Lang, included in his 1992 book Rovigo (Wrocław).
Among the main writers of the literary Template:Lang are Joseph Roth (1894–1939), Stefan Zweig (1881–1942), Arnold Zweig (1887–1968) and Lion Feuchtwanger (1884–1958).[28] Roth's novel Radetzky March is a study of the decline and fall of the Habsburg Monarchy,[28] via the story of a family’s elevation to the nobility. Outside of fiction, eccentric scholars of Old Austria include Eugen Heinrich Schmitt and Josef Popper-Lynkeus.[27]
See also
- Central Europe
- Template:Lang
- Template:Lang
- Geographical centre of Europe
- Germans of Romania
- Template:Lang for a plan by Polish leaders after World War I to create a similar political structure across the same region, but for the benefit and security of Poland.
- Judeopolonia
- League of East European States
- Template:Lang for the governing authority that actually governed much of this region after Russian surrender in WWI
- Puppet state for a list of nations founded by Germany for the purpose of creating this block
- Ukrainian State for the Ukrainian government Germany supported for this purpose.
- Template:Lang, the closest the Germans came for a plan for Template:Lang.
- Maciej Górny: Concept of Mitteleuropa, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.
References
Bibliography
- JFV Keiger, The Fischer Controversy, the War Origins Debate and France: A non-history of Cambridge, Journal of Contemporary History (London 2010), pp. 363–375
- Fritz Fischer, The War Aims of Germany, 1914–1918, (1967)
- J. Brechtefeld, Mitteleuropa and German politics. 1848 to the present (London 1996)
Template:States of the German Empire
- ↑ Template:Lang
- ↑ Template:Lang University of Warsaw, Template:Lang
- ↑ Johnson, Lonnie (1996) Central Europe: Enemies, Neighbors, Friends pp.6–12 quotation: Template:Quotation
- ↑ Bischof et al. (2000) p.558 quotation: Template:Quotation
- ↑ Hann, C. M. and Magocsi, Paul R. (2005) Galicia: A Multicultured Land, pp.178–9 quotation: Template:Quotation
- ↑ Eder, Klaus and Spohn, Willfried Collective Memory and European Identity pp.90–1, quotation: Template:Quotation
- ↑ Bischof, Günter and Pelinka, Anton and Stiefel, Dieter (2000) The Marshall Plan in Austria p.552 quotation: Template:Quotation
- ↑ Erhard Busek, Emil Brix: Projekt Mitteleuropa. Vienna 1986.
- ↑ Le Rider, Jacques "Mitteleuropa" (1995), pp 7.
- ↑ Libardi, Massimo and Orlandi, Fernando (2011) Template:Lang, p.19
- ↑ Atkinson, David and Dodds, Klaus (editors) Geopolitical Traditions: Critical Histories of a Century of Geopolitical Thought Routledge (2000) p41
- ↑ Atkinson, David and Dodds, Klaus (editors) Geopolitical Traditions: Critical Histories of a Century of Geopolitical Thought Routledge (2000) p43-44
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 A history of eastern Europe: crisis and change Robert Bideleux, Ian Jeffries, page 12, Routledge 1998
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 The Challenge of Hegemony: Grand Strategy, Trade, and Domestic Politics Steven E. Lobell, page 52, University of Michigan Press
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 War and Punishment: The Causes of War Termination and the First World War Hein Erich Goemans, Princeton University, page 116 Press 2000
- ↑ The First World War, 1914–1918 Gerd Hardach, page 235 University of California Press 1981
- ↑ 17.0 17.1 "A History of the Habsburg Empire, 1526–1918." Robert Adolf Kann. University of California Press 1980
- ↑ See^ Naumann, Mitteleuropa. Reimer, Berlin 1915
- ↑ Czesław Madajczyk '"Generalna Gubernia w planach hitlerowskich. Studia"', Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN, Warsaw, 1961, pp. 88–89
- ↑ 20.0 20.1 Imanuel Geiss, 'Tzw. polski pas graniczny 1914–1918'. Warsaw 1964
- ↑ Barry Hayes, Bismarck and Template:Lang, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1994, p.16
- ↑ War and Punishment: The Causes of War Termination and the First World War. Hein Erich Goemans, page 115, Princeton University Press 2000
- ↑ Coalition Warfare: An Uneasy Accord. Roy Arnold Prete, Keith Neilson, 1983, Wilfrid Laurier University Press
- ↑ (1983) Interview with Claudio Magris, in Template:Lang Template:Lang, [1]
- ↑ J.F.V. Keiger, "The Fischer Controversy: the war origins debate and France: A non-history of Cambridge", Journal of Contemporary History, (2010), pp.373
- ↑ Fischer, p.251
- ↑ 27.0 27.1 Johnston, William M. (2006) Template:Lang, p. xxxii
- ↑ 28.0 28.1 Chamberlain, John (1933) "Books of The Times", The New York Times, October 17, 1933, quotation: Template:Quotation
- Pages with ignored display titles
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- Central Europe
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- German involvement in the Russian Civil War
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- Political history of Germany
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