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Austria-Hungary. By: Ray Hofmann, Ben Center, and Jimmy Lacey. Different E thnic Groups. The Austro-Hungarian Empire was made up of many different ethnic groups It brought together the Hungarians, Germans, Czechs, Slovaks, Croats, Poles, Serbs, and Italians. Austro-Prussian war.
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Austria-Hungary By: Ray Hofmann, Ben Center, and Jimmy Lacey
Different Ethnic Groups • The Austro-Hungarian Empire was made up of many different ethnic groups • It brought together the Hungarians, Germans, Czechs, Slovaks, Croats, Poles, Serbs, and Italians
Austro-Prussian war • One of the shortest and bloodiest battles of the 19th century • Prussia fought over land owned by the Austro-Hungarians • The Prussians cornered and beat the Austro-Hungarians • Then the Austro-Hungarian leader Franz Joseph compromised and gave them the Northern half and established a dual monarchy with him as emperor
Compromise of 1867 • The Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867 established there Dual monarchy • It was formerly the Habsburg Empire • The agreement was signed by Emperor Franz Joseph of Austria and a congregation of delegates led by FerencDeak
Facts • Their predominant and official Religion was Roman Catholic • Different Languages German, Hungarian, polish, Croatian, Russian, Italian, and many more • Dual Capitals Vienna and Budapest
True or False? • The Austro-Prussian war was one of the bloodiest battles of the 19th century • True
True or False? • The Austrian-Hungarian empire has a diverse culture. • TRUE
Multiple Choice • Which best describes the Austrian-Hungarian Empire? • A. Limited Monarchy • B. Absolute Monarchy • C. Democracy • D. Dual Monarchy • D. Dual Monarchy
Multiple Choice • The dominant and official state religion of the Austrian-Hungarian Empire? • A. Roman Catholic • B. Judaism • C. Muslim • D. eastern orthodoxy • A. Roman Catholic
Multiple Choice • What were the two capitals of monarchy? • A. Philadelphia and New York • B. Vienna and Budapest • C. Komaricza and Turin • D. Prague and Florynka • B. Vienna and Budapest
Work Cited • http://www.hoteljicin.cz/en_history.html • World History Patterns of interaction