. Review of reviews and world's work. cabinets at Vienna and Rome,the Innsbruck affair, as it is called, may yetconstitute a danger of grave proportions. Dis-orderly sessions of the Reichsrath at Aienuahad also added to the troubles of the discussing the Innsbruck riots, several Social-ist members had made personal attacks uponthe ruling dynasty, one of them declaring thatthe Hapsburgs had always regarded the countryas an object of exploitation, and had been a bur-den on the people for six hundred years. A ustria Even Austrians themselves no longerirsus deny that it is Hungary which
. Review of reviews and world's work. cabinets at Vienna and Rome,the Innsbruck affair, as it is called, may yetconstitute a danger of grave proportions. Dis-orderly sessions of the Reichsrath at Aienuahad also added to the troubles of the discussing the Innsbruck riots, several Social-ist members had made personal attacks uponthe ruling dynasty, one of them declaring thatthe Hapsburgs had always regarded the countryas an object of exploitation, and had been a bur-den on the people for six hundred years. A ustria Even Austrians themselves no longerirsus deny that it is Hungary which isHungary. ^^^ ^y-yQ dominant partner in thedual monarchy. The commercial and economicprogress of the Hungarian people during thepast quarter of a century has greatly over-shadowed that of Austria proper ; and the agedKaiser, Franz Joseph, sees in the increasing un-ruliness of the Hungarian Diet a revival oi theideas of the famous Kossuth, with almost a cer-tainty of their realization, when, at his own THE PROGRESS OF THE 14^ORLD. 23. 1 i; VM i> Ui>»l 111.(lA-adiT of tlif Uuiliiiil party in tlic IlunL;iiri;iii Diet.) iluatli, till! (laiigtf ol disruption of tin- tliipirebecomes acuto. Iho Katlical parly. I«m1 by thryouiif^or Kossutli to-ilay, with its clamor for•merely personal rule, — tliat is, entire sepa-ration from Austria, except that the Kiiiperorshoulil lie also the Kin;.; of lluii;;ary.—is increasiii«; in stren^rtli every year. Two years a^^o, anincrease in the imperial army maile it necessaryto ask Hungary for a lar;;er ipiota of the Diet at Uudapest had not heeii willinj; toj^rant. unless ttu Imperial (iovernnieiit concededllunj^arys right to an entirely s«parate armywith Hungarian officers, and the Hungarian Ianguage. Last year, and the present year, hadseen increases in the demand made upon Hungarv for the imperial army. ()tlier i| the reform of the electoral system,liad aroused the country, ami had linally unitedthe
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1890