Yeah, same as what happened in most other european states in the bloody interwar period. The various authoritarian regimes and the many wars they waged between each other in those few years are too often forgotten. A reminder on how important international organisations such as the european union are for maintaining peace and democratic values.
Probably because people are more grabbed by the democratic regimes that were taken over by nazi germany. A fascist regime replaced by a nazi regime doesnt have the same spark I guess?
I really need to binge your entire channel soon. Every video of yours seems to be an absolute banger. Good job breaking it all down for a foreign audience!
So you should read the Brazilian "Constitution" it literally says "we representatives of the Brazilian people, in the presence of *GOD* " and articles later it says the Brazilian state is secular
@@matheuspinho4987 Although not in the Constitution, America is very similar. It is the same with Ireland although that is more explicit with the Trinitarian references.
@@TheGrenadier97 most countries that westernised are secular these days even if long standing traditions and laws based on those still have some minor effect on the country. For example: The Establishment Clause of the US Bill of Rights says that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.” and they don't. However, since most US Citizens don't actually care about the fact that the US by law is a country without the recognition of *any* religion, Congress still mandated to change the country motto from "E Pluribus Unum" (From many united to one) to "In God we trust" purely because of the Red Scare of the atheistic Politburo that governed the USSR. The "under God" was added to the Pledge of Allegiance at the same time and they started the force indoctrination of US school children that to this day have to say the pledge like in a weird cult of personality state. This all to say secular by law means nothing if they people making the laws are allowed to act like it means nothing
It's very refreshing to see such a well researched video about an often overlooked topic! I just have to add one detail: Dollfuß was able to dissolve the parliament "legally" because all three presidents resigned. No more parliamentary presidents ("Nationalratspräsidenten") meant no one was able to offically close the last session and then reconviene the other one, which gave the legal justification for Dollfuß to stop members od parliament from entering. The reason why the three presidents resigned is also interesting - there was a political vote about whether the afforementioned head of the railway union should be prosecuted or pardoned. This vote was incredibly close with "pardon" camp being one vote shy of a majority. Realising this, the first president of parliament, a social democrat, resigned from his role, which demoted him back to a regular member of parliament and made him elligible to vote, securing the majority. As a response, however, the second and third president did the same, creating an unforseen legal situation that was then exploited by Dollfuß.
@@schurlbirkenbach1995 You make it sound like the presidents of parliament were at fault... In reality there was no judicial way to stop Dollfuss because his path of destroying the democracy began (as seen in the video) many years before this event. According to Heinz Fischer (former president of Austria in the 2000s and attorney that specialized in constitutional law) the dispute could have been resolved within the legal system but Dollfuß just took the chance to dissolve the republic. But it has to be said that the whole situation was extremely unlucky for the republic. It would have been 81(opposition):80(ruling coalition) but one member of the social democratic party accidentally took a ballot paper with the name of his seat neighbour which led to the situation that two ballot papers had the same name on them leading to the ruling coalition to say that one is invalid. This led to the count to be put to 80:80 and that is why Karl Renner (primary president of the austrian parliament) stepped down to be able to cast a vote himself. Karl Renner himself was staggered by the consequences of his action. While being in his car on the way home he told his granchild: "Well, that's not what I expected". Source: "Karl Seitz" by Alexander Spritzendorfer Pages 25-28 (Very good and recent book btw)
Look it up karl renner delibratly did this little trick „He even admited his mistake“ So after he tried to fuck with democracy Dolfuss desolved the parlament
tbh as a Swede I had no idea about what happened in Austria before the Anschluss so this was hugely informative, what really stood out to me too was just how openly and brazenly the fascists took power and destroyed democracy seemingly even without tons of popular support.
Many austrians after the breakup of the monarchy thought of austria as a failed state, there was a widespread belief that an "Anschluss" was inevitable. The vast majority were still rural farmers that were used to a distant emperor ruling over them, they cared little for a new democracy. Under the monarchy, there was a growing liberal movement in the large cities (most notably krakow, vienna, prague, budapest and lviv), but as you can see all these cities were now in different states, the movements were broken up, and now former allies stood in opposition towards each other. With such a small base these democracies stood on very weak feet, and only Czechoslovakia would stay democratic until the German annexation.
@@telcharthegreatsmithofthef7585 Interesting, that makes a lot of sense, so even when the social democrats were by far the biggest party I imagine that was only in the major cities they had big support
Finally a good video about the Ständestaat dictatorship! For me as an austrian it is allways shocking and fear inducing to see how many people, expecially austrians like to forget about this dark part of our past. Thanks for the Video!
@@tritonewt3344 it was a fascist dictatorship with death penalty, a dangerous amount nationalism and workcamps for everyone who disagrees with the ruling party
Same here. Given everything that is going on, the rhetoric used, the economic crisis, the war in Ukraine etc. I am really worried about where we're heading. It's nice to realize I'm not necessarily alone with that.
@@skullslace2426 yeah im xompletely with you bro, but i still got faith, thanks to the eu austria is too integrated in the democratic world to get lost again. In addition the truly democratic parties of the greens, the neos and the spö are a bullwark that protects us from possible threats from the extreme right
@Domsenic I'd like to hope so. However, given the amount of infighting in the SPÖ and the performance of the green party over the last years, together with the significant drop in their popularity (I know to only trust polls so far, however...) I'm still worried. Though if I look at the statistics for younger voters, who are fighting very hard for our future, I won't give up all hope.
Interwar Austrian history fascinates me. Especially the Ständestaat, such an interesting state. I even have a book by Schuschnigg on my shelf. Danke dafür Herr Manatee.
As an Austrian I sometimes wonder, what would've had happened if our great great grand fathers would've let Austria be a (symbolic) monarchy but with the legal system of a liberal democracy (like in Great Britain). Would the Ständestaat or the Anschluss happen like in our timeline? Would WWII be different? Or would've had that encouraged the people at the time to grab for even more power?
I'm amazed this never came up in school when I studied the lead up to WW2. The fact that the Austrians had their own fascist government and a de facto alliance with Mussolini, and the assassination of Dolfuss and its consequences, for example, would have been good to know when asked to discuss the lead up to to the Anschluss.
The Austrians themselves love to act like the victims in all of this. After WWII, they began to cultivate the idea of the loveable little country of Mozart and Sisi, that was tragically the first victim of Germany's conquest. The truth is of course more complex and less flattering for Austria.
@@Charon.1 thats Not true. There was never a majority for the Nazis. 1/3 democrats, 1/3 Christ socialist and 1/3 Nazis. We had the Jansa Plan but No ressources.
@@generalfeldmarschall3781 They should not only have beeng abolished but thoroughly purged and executed. At least in Germany that way the Hohenzollern couldn't have meddled in the Weimar Republic. Monarchs and Monarchists sided with Fascists and Nazis.
Well this was completely different from how I learned it in school, where it was presented as 'both sides bad'. Like this way more though since it is an actual acurate summary
When the ÖVP, a party that came from Dollfuss's christian democratic party, writes the curriculum, no doubt they'll whitewash as much of it as possible.
@@hex2637 lmao all textbooks literally portray the reds as total victims when they were in fact the instigators for their own demise. Fuck them, hopefully they continue to tear themselves apart like they are doing right now with their embarrassing internal power struggle
@@johnnotrealname8168 Because nowadays they are a bunch of corrupt greedy twats who use populistic formulas to fool voters and are not opposed to cooperating with the far right. That's why.
I remember playing Austria in Kaiserredux with Dolfuss. You basically "federalise" Austria-Hungary into an one-party state where you are more Catholic than the Pope and where you hate Germany and can create Grossdeutschland. Or how Wikipedia would have put it: "Federal Constitutional Monarchy under an One-Party Totalitarian Regime".
I actually had the privilege of having a guide tour through Linz about the Februarkämpfe. It was quite fascinating, especially since most buildings that were used for the fighting still exist today.
It vwas interesting that you explained how the Dollfuss government came to power. I guess in the next video you'll explain why Dollfuss was assassinated .
You should give Fascism in the Working Class by Jill Lewis a read. It is about Styria and the actions of the Oesterreichisch-Alpine Montangesellschaft. I think you’d get a lot out of it.
As an Austrian, who is hobby historian: Very well done. Even heard something new - didnt know of the weapons train. Austria, the only country I know whch has two parties in parliament, who founded different fascist dictatorships.
The electoral poster on the right at 3:08 is actually not from the interwar years but from 1945. The Austrian people’s party wasn’t a thing until that year, as it was founded out of the remnants of the Fatherland Front
I am from Portugal, I have an academic background and my thesis was actually related to fascism and corporatism, and I was made aware of the Dolfuss Austro-Fascist regime due to the fact that it had a lot of similarities with the Salazar regime, due to the influence of Catholic Social Teaching and Catholicism in general in both regimes (they also arose around the same time, 1932-1934). There were also similar in the sense that they tried to impose a veneer of legality and tried to appease the middle-classes by building Constitutions that - in theory - put limits on state power; and that unlike other fascist regimes, such Constitutions were built as to codify a "societal project" to mold society through corporatist organization, based on the teachings of the previous mentioned Catholic Social Teaching. In Portugal there were also many aborted or stopped coup attempts to overthrow it (it lasted longer than the Austrian regime, ofc) because liberals and leftists just didn´t had the means and the popular support - even though we had an older liberal-democratic tradition compared to Austria (that dated back to the 1820´s), large swathes of the population were iliterate masses living in mostly rural areas, and were thus extremely depoliticized and suspectible to manipulation from reactionary forces (Catholic Church and land-owners).
And than you think that leftists would be better than those so called right wing fascist. Nope tuey wouldnt, because they are all criminals no matter what. And Left and right like to spit on eachother but at the end they dont see that they are the same. There wasnt any system good for the people especially not liberalism. They are all shamefull from ideologies to systems.
And you probably think, that todays system is better nope liberalism is Just shameful like anyother thing or so called "democracy" its a lie. Thats why people still got trapped by that propaganda.
A very interesting history of Austria. Never realised that Austria was a dictatorship before Herr Hitler incorporated Austria into the 3rd Ricth. A great informative presentation.
I'm glad someone made a video on one of the more forgotten countries that lost WWI and the fascinating interwar period for these losing nations. I imagine history would have went quite different if the communists were able to take power in Austria in the interwar period.
Austrians for the most part are happy enough to completely ignore the inter=war period. As far as they are concerned, the Habsburg monarchy ended in 1914 (before all the unpleasantness of the war years) and history didn't start again until 1955 with the signing of the Staatsvertrag. There is no dealing with the pre-war past like there is in Germany. The only history Austrians recognize is Mozart and Strauss.
@@masonharvath-gerrans832 No, it's a phrase from the interwar Austrian workers' song “Die Arbeiter von Wien”. And unfortunately, I can't really read German.
Austrofascism was so weird. There seems to be an inherent dissonance between dissolving the austrian state into germany and creating a powerful austria.
Mit "Corporate Basis" ist eine "ständische Grundlage" gemeint, nichts mit Konzernen oder dergleichen. Das Ständeprinzip gibt es in Österreich teilweise noch heute, unser Wirtschaftssystem hat neokorporatistische Ansätze
Who's that man on the Christian Socialist party poster? I found one place that just said a man. I don't know the political parties involved or the history, but from the name I assume it's God in a tuxedo being all benevolent as he that's his shtick or whatever.
Weird that our school never taught us about the background of Austria and the politics, even tho we were in Austria. I knew it already but most people in the school generally did not know about it. Politics never get taught which is such a dangerous move, espesically with right wing extremism becoming a risk again. We should never forgot what Ring Wing politics did to us, the world and humans.
Right-Wing extremism being hyped aside, these so called "fascists" opposed the nazis, the leader was assassinated by them (By the way a democratic victory by the nazis was not impossible, as happened in Germany.) and the communists, who were in league with the soviets. How many left-wing bodies are you not mourning? Of course they are just bodies.
back then it was ean by the Russian RSFSR and later given to Ukraine thoigh still mostly ran by russia, though given it was the ussr it’s like who runs rhe island North Carolina or South
The moment a leftist realises the communists really were in league with the soviet union (The communist party in the U.S. opposed perestroika and glasnost for @#£%'s sake!).
Unfortunately, they have practically all the institutions, and a machine that churns out students who believe in a Marxist ideological dogma. It'll be extremely hard to break out of something like that.
in the early years the Socialst Party (as it was than called) was considered one single party in Austria and Czechoslovakia. They acted as it were only the two local branches of the same supranational party. So the Austrian socialists just fled to their comrades of the same party. Most of them went to Brünn/Brno, which is just a few kilometers north of the border. They even continued to publish the party newspaper from there.
@@ekesandras1481 And yet the Germans living there were still forcibly deported in a death march after the war for supposedly being sympathetic to Nazism. RIP
It never ceases to amaze me that Dollfuß, someone who strived to maintain the country's independence, is viewed nowadays as someone as bad as the Austrias Painter himself, meanwhile the socialdemocrats who have been aiming to unite Austria with Germany (again, sth viewed as sth negative nowadays by Austrians) are being praised as defenders of democracy and saviours
Bernaschek, the commander of the Schutzbund in Linz, who pulled the trigger in 1934, escaped from prison with the help of a Nazi prison director and enigrated to Nazi Germany where he was welcomed. And he was not the only social democrat, who fled to the national socialist Germany. That are the little details, which are forgotten by left wing historians.
That's propably because the Sozialists wanted a Democracy and unification with Germany wouldn't have been a bad thing if it would have been under a decent government considering the bad situation Austria found itself after WW1. While Dollfuss killed our fellow Austrian workers and even shelled our own cities with Artillery. In short he was a fascist dickhead.
@@niknitro8751 Your argument would be ok if germany was a democracy. But it wasn't at that point and they still wanted to join germany after the NSDAP came to power.
Im glad someone is talking about this, but your biases show in weird ways. Equating the CS who were largely reconstructionkst first and later fasicst, with parties like the landbund, liberal parties and the ever growing German nationalist parties just on the basis that they all were "bourgeois" is wrong and overlooks how Austria was captured by both the clerical fasicm and the Nazis. Ignoring minority parties and the communist party are also big omissions to the story
The shooters from Schattendorf - some local farmers - got acquitted for self defense. They felt threatened by the large crowd of socialist demonstrators who had come to this small village for their protest. The verdict was based on a law that the socialists themselves had passed, when they were shortly in power after 1918. The jury couldn't find a majority for a conviction so the result was a not-proven verdict. Only the socialist newspapers said that there was political influence on the jury, but there was non. P.S.: the shooters of Schattendorf were not really sympathizers of the Christian Social Party, they were more monarchists and since this village is (until today) directly on the border with Hungary, they adhered more to the idea to join Hungary, to where this region belonged until 1921. Yes, there were German speaking village dwellers, who wanted to transfer there village to Hungary. Why? Because they liked the right wing Horthy govenment more than the government in Vienna. Those facts got forgotten and it was presented as a conspiracy from the conservative CSP party, but those had nothing to do with it. It was more a situation like those Orange marches in Northern Ireland, which got out of control.
Interesting how none of what you learn reqlly is the truth, depending on who you ask. One of my biggest turnoffs when it comes to politics and history, no matter how much you read someone can always say that youre wrong.
@@hex2637 Maybe that disabled man should have taken an alternate course to going to a random town to preach his ideology. Reminds me a lot of Redditors, actually
his dictatorship was also very short: in 1933 he took power, a few months later he fought the Socialists in February 1934 and in July 1934 he was shot by Nazis who attempted a coup d'etat (that failed, albeit killing the Chancelor in his office)
To give you an idea of the attitude of the SPÖ at the time. Hier is a quote "Mit am Haufen Bauernschädel kannst keine Socialistische Revolutions machen." With a bunch of stubborn presents you can't do a socialist revolution.
because the small family farmers in Austria were owners of their land since many generations not dependent tenants of some aristocratic Lord, unlike in Hungary, and they had no motivation to any kind of land reform or redistribution of land. The idea of any form of collective farming sounded even worse to them. Actually the farmers profited very much during the years of hyperinflation. Formerly rich city dwellers came to the country side and traded fur coats or expensive carpets for a bag of potatoes and some cheese or bacon. The farmers simply had no motivation for any form of socialism. And the rural population was also much more catholic and disliked the atheist propaganda of the socialists.
Jesus. You know it’s bad when the imperial parliament during the empire was more effective at protecting its own prerogative then the legislature during the First Republic was
Maybe, depends on your definition of fascism. I think even from a Marxist perspective these regimes would be qualified reactionary, not fascist. In my opinion, Hitlerism or Italian Fascism distinguish themselves by putting the State or the Party above everything. While in Austria or Portugal or Tiso's Slovakia God was the ultimate authority These regimes also never pretended to represent the working class and the economy was never regulated or planned in the way Germany was. Austrian Nationalsocialists were terribly hostile to the Dollfuss state to the point that they preferred the Socialists over him ("Rather Red than Black"). How do you explain this antagonism?
@@tufikum2633in most academic writing Dollfuß' regime is described as a form of fascism, as are Franco's and Salazar's the reason the nazis were so hostile to the austrofascist regime was due to it being a rival, and the nazis' plans to annex austria furthermore the nazis were generally hostile to the catholics due to their claim to absolute authority, and conflicting opinions (like their racism against eastern europeans)
@@tufikum2633I'd describe that part about the party being above everything more as being a feature of totalitarianism, rather than fascism. Explains why it wasn't there in the other regimes, they were authoritarian
Dollfuss was right in what he did, since the socialists were a Marxist threat that planned to turn Austria into a socialist dictatorship. They planned a coup from day one but were unable to gain the support of the rural population in Austria, with their centers of support being Vienna and some industrial cities such as Steyr and parts of Styria. Due to infighting and lack of cohesion (an infamous and recurring trait of the Austrian socialists to this day). They screwed up their biggest opportunity in 1933 and in February 1934 some rogue members of their paramilitary wing took it upon themselves to instigate their „civil war” by shooting at Austrian gendarmerie at the Hotel Schiff. The socialist leadership was so petty that some prominent members even collaborated with the Nazis in order to snub the Ständestaat, with their leader Karl Renner openly endorsing the Anschluss and never speaking ill of the Nazi regime and even denying holocaust survivors their possessions immediately after ww2 (he was a rampant antisemite). Meanwhile Leopold Figl, prominent fatherland front leader and later chancellor, was tormented in a concentration camp alongside most of his fellow party members. It isn’t all black and white as many historians like you to believe.
Why do you refer to many of Austria's political parties as "bourgeois"? Are you a Marxist sympathiser or something? The corporatist regime in Austria was anything but "bourgeois" also.
@@Cmokshofra You do not understand what corporatism is, you assume it is companies running the government, through proxies, however in the Austrian case it is preventing any strife through bringing both parties together. It is the fallacy of equivocation.
@@Cmokshofra And to add onto what the other guy said, a corporatist regime is one where the government basically runs the corporations and controls them.
He was a traitor, a murderer and the and the lowest form of human life. He laid the groundwork for the Nazis to take over and all just because he only was only 1,50m (4'11) tall.
people loved dollfuss he was a small guy but nice and friendly which was good. Hes also chilling with Mussolini in heaven right now which is good and yeah
There is no agreement among historians that the regime was fascist. That‘s a political argument. Socialists, who wanted the „Anschluss“, say it was, to demonize their political opposition, while the broader consensus is that it was an authoritarian regime that succeeded in building the foundation for an Austrian identity in a country of citizens who previously thought of themselves as German people. It also tried to uphold Austrian independence, but failed at that in the end under the weak leadership from Schuschnigg.
Mussolini protected them, the price was them making the country fascist: having the (after 1930) fascist Heimwehren as members of Parliament; banning social-democrat party and its subgroups; eliminating democracy The Dollfuss-Schuschnigg-Regime was an authoritarian, fascist regime
You are talking about a piece of paper or the blood that runs through my viens - hitler, rise of evil ( movie) All Germans are part of same family and anschluss is more legal than england and scotland living together.
It's shocking how few people even know that there was an Austrian civil war and Fascist Ständestaat before the Anschluss
Yeah, same as what happened in most other european states in the bloody interwar period. The various authoritarian regimes and the many wars they waged between each other in those few years are too often forgotten.
A reminder on how important international organisations such as the european union are for maintaining peace and democratic values.
Probably because people are more grabbed by the democratic regimes that were taken over by nazi germany. A fascist regime replaced by a nazi regime doesnt have the same spark I guess?
Dolfuß is still the hero we needed.
@@lokidoki525 Bruder hast du gerade einen Faschisten einen Held genannt ?
That explains a lot actually. I was wondering why Austria voted overwhelmingly in favor of the anschluss.
I really need to binge your entire channel soon. Every video of yours seems to be an absolute banger. Good job breaking it all down for a foreign audience!
Thanks! :)
Idk why but “in the name of god, the almighty, from whom all law proceeds” followed by “basis of corporative principles” is so funny to me
Its so sekf rigthes and petty
So you should read the Brazilian "Constitution" it literally says "we representatives of the Brazilian people, in the presence of *GOD* " and articles later it says the Brazilian state is secular
@@matheuspinho4987 Although not in the Constitution, America is very similar. It is the same with Ireland although that is more explicit with the Trinitarian references.
@@TheGrenadier97 most countries that westernised are secular these days even if long standing traditions and laws based on those still have some minor effect on the country.
For example:
The Establishment Clause of the US Bill of Rights says that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.” and they don't. However, since most US Citizens don't actually care about the fact that the US by law is a country without the recognition of *any* religion, Congress still mandated to change the country motto from "E Pluribus Unum" (From many united to one) to "In God we trust" purely because of the Red Scare of the atheistic Politburo that governed the USSR. The "under God" was added to the Pledge of Allegiance at the same time and they started the force indoctrination of US school children that to this day have to say the pledge like in a weird cult of personality state.
This all to say secular by law means nothing if they people making the laws are allowed to act like it means nothing
@@heylolp9 My God accusing the U.S. of being non-secular. What a world we live in.
It's very refreshing to see such a well researched video about an often overlooked topic! I just have to add one detail: Dollfuß was able to dissolve the parliament "legally" because all three presidents resigned. No more parliamentary presidents ("Nationalratspräsidenten") meant no one was able to offically close the last session and then reconviene the other one, which gave the legal justification for Dollfuß to stop members od parliament from entering. The reason why the three presidents resigned is also interesting - there was a political vote about whether the afforementioned head of the railway union should be prosecuted or pardoned. This vote was incredibly close with "pardon" camp being one vote shy of a majority. Realising this, the first president of parliament, a social democrat, resigned from his role, which demoted him back to a regular member of parliament and made him elligible to vote, securing the majority. As a response, however, the second and third president did the same, creating an unforseen legal situation that was then exploited by Dollfuß.
Ridiculous. Because they wanted to gain some little coins in an insignificant quarrel, they gave Dollfuss the possibility, to dissolve the parliament.
@@schurlbirkenbach1995 You make it sound like the presidents of parliament were at fault... In reality there was no judicial way to stop Dollfuss because his path of destroying the democracy began (as seen in the video) many years before this event. According to Heinz Fischer (former president of Austria in the 2000s and attorney that specialized in constitutional law) the dispute could have been resolved within the legal system but Dollfuß just took the chance to dissolve the republic.
But it has to be said that the whole situation was extremely unlucky for the republic. It would have been 81(opposition):80(ruling coalition) but one member of the social democratic party accidentally took a ballot paper with the name of his seat neighbour which led to the situation that two ballot papers had the same name on them leading to the ruling coalition to say that one is invalid. This led to the count to be put to 80:80 and that is why Karl Renner (primary president of the austrian parliament) stepped down to be able to cast a vote himself. Karl Renner himself was staggered by the consequences of his action. While being in his car on the way home he told his granchild: "Well, that's not what I expected".
Source: "Karl Seitz" by Alexander Spritzendorfer Pages 25-28 (Very good and recent book btw)
Look it up karl renner delibratly did this little trick „He even admited his mistake“ So after he tried to fuck with democracy Dolfuss desolved the parlament
-Austria- history in the 1930s can probably be described with "And then it got worse"
tbh as a Swede I had no idea about what happened in Austria before the Anschluss so this was hugely informative, what really stood out to me too was just how openly and brazenly the fascists took power and destroyed democracy seemingly even without tons of popular support.
Many austrians after the breakup of the monarchy thought of austria as a failed state, there was a widespread belief that an "Anschluss" was inevitable. The vast majority were still rural farmers that were used to a distant emperor ruling over them, they cared little for a new democracy.
Under the monarchy, there was a growing liberal movement in the large cities (most notably krakow, vienna, prague, budapest and lviv), but as you can see all these cities were now in different states, the movements were broken up, and now former allies stood in opposition towards each other. With such a small base these democracies stood on very weak feet, and only Czechoslovakia would stay democratic until the German annexation.
@@telcharthegreatsmithofthef7585 Interesting, that makes a lot of sense, so even when the social democrats were by far the biggest party I imagine that was only in the major cities they had big support
As opposed to those who wanted to join nazi Germany?
Same
I'm so glad you continue making videos despite limited successes. You really deserve much more attention than you get.
Finally a good video about the Ständestaat dictatorship! For me as an austrian it is allways shocking and fear inducing to see how many people, expecially austrians like to forget about this dark part of our past. Thanks for the Video!
What makes it so dark?
@@tritonewt3344 it was a fascist dictatorship with death penalty, a dangerous amount nationalism and workcamps for everyone who disagrees with the ruling party
Same here. Given everything that is going on, the rhetoric used, the economic crisis, the war in Ukraine etc. I am really worried about where we're heading. It's nice to realize I'm not necessarily alone with that.
@@skullslace2426 yeah im xompletely with you bro, but i still got faith, thanks to the eu austria is too integrated in the democratic world to get lost again. In addition the truly democratic parties of the greens, the neos and the spö are a bullwark that protects us from possible threats from the extreme right
@Domsenic I'd like to hope so. However, given the amount of infighting in the SPÖ and the performance of the green party over the last years, together with the significant drop in their popularity (I know to only trust polls so far, however...) I'm still worried.
Though if I look at the statistics for younger voters, who are fighting very hard for our future, I won't give up all hope.
Thanks for doing such wonderful videos about topics no one or almost no one talks about.
A lot of stuff I didnt know and I really felt like I should have. Thanks for the great video mate!
Glad you liked it :D
Always love it when this channel uploads a new video.
I can’t believe how your still unknown, your videos are awesome!
Enjoyed the video a lot! Really well made and your German pronunciation is astounding.
Interwar Austrian history fascinates me. Especially the Ständestaat, such an interesting state. I even have a book by Schuschnigg on my shelf. Danke dafür Herr Manatee.
Interesting... why
@@maximiliankoch2593 It was effective
As an Austrian I sometimes wonder, what would've had happened if our great great grand fathers would've let Austria be a (symbolic) monarchy but with the legal system of a liberal democracy (like in Great Britain). Would the Ständestaat or the Anschluss happen like in our timeline? Would WWII be different? Or would've had that encouraged the people at the time to grab for even more power?
The same thing that happened in Italy: dictatorship tolerated by a monarch.
Wouldn't the Nazis have taken Austria anyway?
@@heisenbachofficial9437 it was more the other way around
@@generalfeldmarschall3781 Either way, the monarch wouldn't play a big role.
@@heisenbachofficial9437 the monarch deposed Mussolini in 1943 (ok, a bit late, but still)
Thank you for filling up a huge gap in my understanding of the world
You're welcome :*
I'm amazed this never came up in school when I studied the lead up to WW2. The fact that the Austrians had their own fascist government and a de facto alliance with Mussolini, and the assassination of Dolfuss and its consequences, for example, would have been good to know when asked to discuss the lead up to to the Anschluss.
The Austrians themselves love to act like the victims in all of this. After WWII, they began to cultivate the idea of the loveable little country of Mozart and Sisi, that was tragically the first victim of Germany's conquest.
The truth is of course more complex and less flattering for Austria.
@@Charon.1 thats Not true. There was never a majority for the Nazis. 1/3 democrats, 1/3 Christ socialist and 1/3 Nazis. We had the Jansa Plan but No ressources.
Funfact poland was also a dictatorship before ww2
And so were all the Baltic States, Greece, and Yugoslavia. Only Czechoslovakia did not slide into authoritarianism prior to 1938.
@@tylerbozinovski427 yes
It Was stupid to abolish the monachy everywere
@@tylerbozinovski427 yes
It Was stupid to abolish the monachy everywere
@@generalfeldmarschall3781
They should not only have beeng abolished but thoroughly purged and executed. At least in Germany that way the Hohenzollern couldn't have meddled in the Weimar Republic. Monarchs and Monarchists sided with Fascists and Nazis.
@@pinotpinotpinot no
Well this was completely different from how I learned it in school, where it was presented as 'both sides bad'. Like this way more though since it is an actual acurate summary
When the ÖVP, a party that came from Dollfuss's christian democratic party, writes the curriculum, no doubt they'll whitewash as much of it as possible.
@@hex2637 lmao all textbooks literally portray the reds as total victims when they were in fact the instigators for their own demise. Fuck them, hopefully they continue to tear themselves apart like they are doing right now with their embarrassing internal power struggle
That‘s because Dollfuß party is still printing the school books in AT 😉
The party that stood up to nazism and communism? I do not get it why are they not given laurels or something?
@@johnnotrealname8168 Because nowadays they are a bunch of corrupt greedy twats who use populistic formulas to fool voters and are not opposed to cooperating with the far right. That's why.
So when are the next parts to this series being released?
Jeesh, Those guys made a return to Monarchy look palatable ...
I remember playing Austria in Kaiserredux with Dolfuss. You basically "federalise" Austria-Hungary into an one-party state where you are more Catholic than the Pope and where you hate Germany and can create Grossdeutschland. Or how Wikipedia would have put it: "Federal Constitutional Monarchy under an One-Party Totalitarian Regime".
I actually had the privilege of having a guide tour through Linz about the Februarkämpfe. It was quite fascinating, especially since most buildings that were used for the fighting still exist today.
It vwas interesting that you explained how the Dollfuss government came to power. I guess in the next video you'll explain why Dollfuss was assassinated .
There will be more on the topic, yes ;)
Honestly I wish the Republic of German-Austria survived because, imo, despite its *interesting* borders, it’s such a cool idea for a state.
It was a fascist dictatorship with multiple human rights violations.
how is it different from the modern republic?
@ it included all the German lands in Czechoslovakia
Would have prefered a core state Austria with Triest and Slovenia
It's sad to see that because of this, the annexation later by germany was practically just giving your shoes away to someone who had the same size.
The nazis were way worse what the @#£%?
You should give Fascism in the Working Class by Jill Lewis a read. It is about Styria and the actions of the Oesterreichisch-Alpine Montangesellschaft. I think you’d get a lot out of it.
Tolles Video
Damn really have to say Schattendorf is an absolute metal name. Just imagine how it would feel to say you are from "Shadow Village" lmao
As an Austrian, who is hobby historian: Very well done. Even heard something new - didnt know of the weapons train. Austria, the only country I know whch has two parties in parliament, who founded different fascist dictatorships.
Cool Video about a rare topic
The electoral poster on the right at 3:08 is actually not from the interwar years but from 1945. The Austrian people’s party wasn’t a thing until that year, as it was founded out of the remnants of the Fatherland Front
11:18 aah, scary looking German words. Imagine English words being fused like that.
Wartimepowerdecree Emergencywartimedictatorshippowers
Donaudampfschifffahrtselektrizitätenhauptbetriebswerkbauunterbeamtengesellschaft
Honestly with all that plotting and corruption it's just like modern Austrian politics 🫠
Why don’t you have more subs?! Seriously, algorithm, get on this.
they’re left-wing, media does not like left-wingers
3:01 you forgot that the socialsts were the first to create a party army and the Heimwehr was an reaction to that
I am from Portugal, I have an academic background and my thesis was actually related to fascism and corporatism, and I was made aware of the Dolfuss Austro-Fascist regime due to the fact that it had a lot of similarities with the Salazar regime, due to the influence of Catholic Social Teaching and Catholicism in general in both regimes (they also arose around the same time, 1932-1934). There were also similar in the sense that they tried to impose a veneer of legality and tried to appease the middle-classes by building Constitutions that - in theory - put limits on state power; and that unlike other fascist regimes, such Constitutions were built as to codify a "societal project" to mold society through corporatist organization, based on the teachings of the previous mentioned Catholic Social Teaching.
In Portugal there were also many aborted or stopped coup attempts to overthrow it (it lasted longer than the Austrian regime, ofc) because liberals and leftists just didn´t had the means and the popular support - even though we had an older liberal-democratic tradition compared to Austria (that dated back to the 1820´s), large swathes of the population were iliterate masses living in mostly rural areas, and were thus extremely depoliticized and suspectible to manipulation from reactionary forces (Catholic Church and land-owners).
And than you think that leftists would be better than those so called right wing fascist. Nope tuey wouldnt, because they are all criminals no matter what. And Left and right like to spit on eachother but at the end they dont see that they are the same. There wasnt any system good for the people especially not liberalism. They are all shamefull from ideologies to systems.
And you probably think, that todays system is better nope liberalism is Just shameful like anyother thing or so called "democracy" its a lie. Thats why people still got trapped by that propaganda.
Liberals and leftists arent anything better but people still support all those 😂 left or right lol. Doesnt matter.
I find it disgusting, that the currrent ruling party in Austria has a lot of politicians that are fond of dollfuß and those times...
A very interesting history of Austria. Never realised that Austria was a dictatorship before Herr Hitler incorporated Austria into the 3rd Ricth. A great informative presentation.
I'm glad someone made a video on one of the more forgotten countries that lost WWI and the fascinating interwar period for these losing nations. I imagine history would have went quite different if the communists were able to take power in Austria in the interwar period.
Hubiera sido mucho peor para Austria porque los nazis lo habrían conquistado igualmente
And less than 100 years later it’s happening again, people never learn from the past.
Austromarxism, austrofascism, Austria was and is very interesting
Yes please more 1920s and 19030s videos
Austrians for the most part are happy enough to completely ignore the inter=war period. As far as they are concerned, the Habsburg monarchy ended in 1914 (before all the unpleasantness of the war years) and history didn't start again until 1955 with the signing of the Staatsvertrag.
There is no dealing with the pre-war past like there is in Germany. The only history Austrians recognize is Mozart and Strauss.
Good video
You should do an video on why the first portuguese republic failed
Best political video essays for the germanspeaking world
Wir sind die Arbeiter von Wien!
Wirtlich?
@@masonharvath-gerrans832 No, it's a phrase from the interwar Austrian workers' song “Die Arbeiter von Wien”. And unfortunately, I can't really read German.
Austrofascism was so weird. There seems to be an inherent dissonance between dissolving the austrian state into germany and creating a powerful austria.
There was no wanting to be in Germany, as long the nazis were around at least. Beyond the stupidity of that term, what did they do wrong?
Holy, I'm Austrian aswell and the "corporate basis" is so haunting
Mit "Corporate Basis" ist eine "ständische Grundlage" gemeint, nichts mit Konzernen oder dergleichen. Das Ständeprinzip gibt es in Österreich teilweise noch heute, unser Wirtschaftssystem hat neokorporatistische Ansätze
@@AEIOU05 hi, ist ja wohl in eine Besserstellung der Konzerne in Ö gemündet?
Corporate has a different meaning in this context, it refers to state guilds rather than private companies
Who's that man on the Christian Socialist party poster? I found one place that just said a man. I don't know the political parties involved or the history, but from the name I assume it's God in a tuxedo being all benevolent as he that's his shtick or whatever.
That's Dr. Karl Lueger, the mayor of Vienna between 1897 and 1910.
your german pronounciation is sooo fcking good holy shit
He is german. Very, very few foreigners can pronounce these words correctly.
It's sad I was never taught this in school
It's very interesting
Weird that our school never taught us about the background of Austria and the politics, even tho we were in Austria. I knew it already but most people in the school generally did not know about it. Politics never get taught which is such a dangerous move, espesically with right wing extremism becoming a risk again. We should never forgot what Ring Wing politics did to us, the world and humans.
Right-Wing extremism being hyped aside, these so called "fascists" opposed the nazis, the leader was assassinated by them (By the way a democratic victory by the nazis was not impossible, as happened in Germany.) and the communists, who were in league with the soviets. How many left-wing bodies are you not mourning? Of course they are just bodies.
Anschluss reverse would have been based af
Thanks for this glorious history for austria
0:18 Crimea is Ukraine
De facto no
back then it was ean by the Russian RSFSR and later given to Ukraine thoigh still mostly ran by russia, though given it was the ussr it’s like who runs rhe island North Carolina or South
15:58 is this photo staged?
Can u make second republic including kpö.
I feel like you genuinely could have mentioned them as well, social democracy is not socialism.
Back then it pretty much was. The end goal of social democrats used to be socialism.
@@hex2637 social democracy are traitors and a mix of capitalism and socialism.
The moment a leftist realises the communists really were in league with the soviet union (The communist party in the U.S. opposed perestroika and glasnost for @#£%'s sake!).
@hex2637
Not really, the Social Democrats goal is pragmatism by limiting capitalism and stop socialism.
there is also a left and right side of soc dem@@lettuceman9439
Great Video! Unfortunately, history could repeat itself here in the US. Let's hope this does not happen. We are at the crossroad of history.
Unfortunately, they have practically all the institutions, and a machine that churns out students who believe in a Marxist ideological dogma. It'll be extremely hard to break out of something like that.
I wonder what the Social Democrat Party members fared in Czechoslovakia. Do you know if they got help emigrating by the so-called Šaldův komitet?
in the early years the Socialst Party (as it was than called) was considered one single party in Austria and Czechoslovakia. They acted as it were only the two local branches of the same supranational party. So the Austrian socialists just fled to their comrades of the same party. Most of them went to Brünn/Brno, which is just a few kilometers north of the border. They even continued to publish the party newspaper from there.
@@ekesandras1481 And yet the Germans living there were still forcibly deported in a death march after the war for supposedly being sympathetic to Nazism. RIP
It never ceases to amaze me that Dollfuß, someone who strived to maintain the country's independence, is viewed nowadays as someone as bad as the Austrias Painter himself, meanwhile the socialdemocrats who have been aiming to unite Austria with Germany (again, sth viewed as sth negative nowadays by Austrians) are being praised as defenders of democracy and saviours
Bernaschek, the commander of the Schutzbund in Linz, who pulled the trigger in 1934, escaped from prison with the help of a Nazi prison director and enigrated to Nazi Germany where he was welcomed. And he was not the only social democrat, who fled to the national socialist Germany. That are the little details, which are forgotten by left wing historians.
That's propably because the Sozialists wanted a Democracy and unification with Germany wouldn't have been a bad thing if it would have been under a decent government considering the bad situation Austria found itself after WW1. While Dollfuss killed our fellow Austrian workers and even shelled our own cities with Artillery.
In short he was a fascist dickhead.
@@niknitro8751 Your argument would be ok if germany was a democracy. But it wasn't at that point and they still wanted to join germany after the NSDAP came to power.
@@heinzelmann6502they didn't, wanting to unite with Germany was erased in 1933, when Hitler came to power
Im glad someone is talking about this, but your biases show in weird ways. Equating the CS who were largely reconstructionkst first and later fasicst, with parties like the landbund, liberal parties and the ever growing German nationalist parties just on the basis that they all were "bourgeois" is wrong and overlooks how Austria was captured by both the clerical fasicm and the Nazis. Ignoring minority parties and the communist party are also big omissions to the story
Sounds like the USA today
The downfall of the second republic you can watch right now
The Krim belongs to Ukraine. Why did you not show that on the map?
Lore of How The First Austrian Republic was Dissolved momentum 100
The shooters from Schattendorf - some local farmers - got acquitted for self defense. They felt threatened by the large crowd of socialist demonstrators who had come to this small village for their protest. The verdict was based on a law that the socialists themselves had passed, when they were shortly in power after 1918. The jury couldn't find a majority for a conviction so the result was a not-proven verdict. Only the socialist newspapers said that there was political influence on the jury, but there was non.
P.S.: the shooters of Schattendorf were not really sympathizers of the Christian Social Party, they were more monarchists and since this village is (until today) directly on the border with Hungary, they adhered more to the idea to join Hungary, to where this region belonged until 1921. Yes, there were German speaking village dwellers, who wanted to transfer there village to Hungary. Why? Because they liked the right wing Horthy govenment more than the government in Vienna. Those facts got forgotten and it was presented as a conspiracy from the conservative CSP party, but those had nothing to do with it. It was more a situation like those Orange marches in Northern Ireland, which got out of control.
Interesting how none of what you learn reqlly is the truth, depending on who you ask. One of my biggest turnoffs when it comes to politics and history, no matter how much you read someone can always say that youre wrong.
They felt threatened by a 6 year old boy and a disabled man? What are you saying? Why are you defending them?
@@hex2637 Maybe that disabled man should have taken an alternate course to going to a random town to preach his ideology.
Reminds me a lot of Redditors, actually
You're a revisionist with no clue what you're talking about.
@@bruh-gs2eo 13 year old moment ☕
Cool
And Wean has been red ever since
Englebert was 4ft 7
his dictatorship was also very short: in 1933 he took power, a few months later he fought the Socialists in February 1934 and in July 1934 he was shot by Nazis who attempted a coup d'etat (that failed, albeit killing the Chancelor in his office)
@@ekesandras1481 Welcome to Austria, a place where 4 different socialist factions were fighting each other lmao.
@@tylerbozinovski427 Calling the Vaterländische Front and the Austrian Nazi party "socialist" is fucking retarded
Little guy, big brain
does the preamble to the May constitution mean that heaven
is corporate in nature?....
god as a ceo. interesting.
Not the proudest part of ym countries history but by far not the worst
To give you an idea of the attitude of the SPÖ at the time. Hier is a quote "Mit am Haufen Bauernschädel kannst keine Socialistische Revolutions machen." With a bunch of stubborn presents you can't do a socialist revolution.
Well it seems like they knew their fellow Austrians very well this holds true to this day. At least Graz and Vienna are a bit wiser.
because the small family farmers in Austria were owners of their land since many generations not dependent tenants of some aristocratic Lord, unlike in Hungary, and they had no motivation to any kind of land reform or redistribution of land. The idea of any form of collective farming sounded even worse to them. Actually the farmers profited very much during the years of hyperinflation. Formerly rich city dwellers came to the country side and traded fur coats or expensive carpets for a bag of potatoes and some cheese or bacon. The farmers simply had no motivation for any form of socialism. And the rural population was also much more catholic and disliked the atheist propaganda of the socialists.
@@niknitro8751 Vienna is a shithole and Stalin-Graz is going bankrupt, Dafq you talking about?
I would love a video on the short lived austira-german repblic that lasted around 1918-1919
Yeah the american plan of democratization work really good in central and eastern euroope.
Jesus. You know it’s bad when the imperial parliament during the empire was more effective at protecting its own prerogative then the legislature during the First Republic was
Dollfuss wanted an authoritarian, German, Catholic and socially appeased Austria.
He wasn't really fascist, he was more like Salazar or Franco.
Sound like fascism to me. And yes, I considered Franco and Salazar regime fascist too.
Maybe, depends on your definition of fascism. I think even from a Marxist perspective these regimes would be qualified reactionary, not fascist.
In my opinion, Hitlerism or Italian Fascism distinguish themselves by putting the State or the Party above everything. While in Austria or Portugal or Tiso's Slovakia God was the ultimate authority
These regimes also never pretended to represent the working class and the economy was never regulated or planned in the way Germany was.
Austrian Nationalsocialists were terribly hostile to the Dollfuss state to the point that they preferred the Socialists over him ("Rather Red than Black"). How do you explain this antagonism?
@@tufikum2633in most academic writing Dollfuß' regime is described as a form of fascism, as are Franco's and Salazar's
the reason the nazis were so hostile to the austrofascist regime was due to it being a rival, and the nazis' plans to annex austria
furthermore the nazis were generally hostile to the catholics due to their claim to absolute authority, and conflicting opinions (like their racism against eastern europeans)
@@tufikum2633I'd describe that part about the party being above everything more as being a feature of totalitarianism, rather than fascism. Explains why it wasn't there in the other regimes, they were authoritarian
Dollfuß 👏👍
Dollfuss was right in what he did, since the socialists were a Marxist threat that planned to turn Austria into a socialist dictatorship. They planned a coup from day one but were unable to gain the support of the rural population in Austria, with their centers of support being Vienna and some industrial cities such as Steyr and parts of Styria. Due to infighting and lack of cohesion (an infamous and recurring trait of the Austrian socialists to this day). They screwed up their biggest opportunity in 1933 and in February 1934 some rogue members of their paramilitary wing took it upon themselves to instigate their „civil war” by shooting at Austrian gendarmerie at the Hotel Schiff. The socialist leadership was so petty that some prominent members even collaborated with the Nazis in order to snub the Ständestaat, with their leader Karl Renner openly endorsing the Anschluss and never speaking ill of the Nazi regime and even denying holocaust survivors their possessions immediately after ww2 (he was a rampant antisemite). Meanwhile Leopold Figl, prominent fatherland front leader and later chancellor, was tormented in a concentration camp alongside most of his fellow party members. It isn’t all black and white as many historians like you to believe.
No digas eso que los vas a asustar😂
El canciller Steidle fue asesinado en un campo de exterminio nazi, por ejemplo
Dollfuß was a hero
6:20
Hehe this is just proof that the first and second republic of Austria isn't the same AT ALL
Why do you refer to many of Austria's political parties as "bourgeois"? Are you a Marxist sympathiser or something? The corporatist regime in Austria was anything but "bourgeois" also.
How can a corporatist regime be anything but bourgeois lmao
@@hex2637 The leader was a Peasant who took part in unions and welfare schemes. It was nowhere near that nonsense.
Corporism is the definition of bourgeois lol
@@Cmokshofra You do not understand what corporatism is, you assume it is companies running the government, through proxies, however in the Austrian case it is preventing any strife through bringing both parties together. It is the fallacy of equivocation.
@@Cmokshofra And to add onto what the other guy said, a corporatist regime is one where the government basically runs the corporations and controls them.
Dolfuss my beloved
The -Germans- Chadli.
Ch 🇨🇭
a 🇦🇹
d 🇩🇪
li 🇱🇮
Luxembourg too.
Long live Dolfuss
? I don’t understand
@@Mr.barba97 He was a hero against the Nazis as well as the Bolsheviks
RIP Bozo. Won't be missed.
0:19 using map where Ukraine is without Crimia is gay
Dolfuss, great man, may he rest in peace
He was a traitor, a murderer and the and the lowest form of human life. He laid the groundwork for the Nazis to take over and all just because he only was only 1,50m (4'11) tall.
you misspelled piss
Amen!
Is he not the bad guy lol? U like Mussolini too?
@@hex2637 found the Nazi
bruh
in my history class they made austria look like a victim but in reality they deserved it
How they victimise Austria specifically? They played a pretty agressive role in both world wars
Victim of whom?
@@kieferkarpfen6897 germany
@@LuKing2 just in ww2 they said that germany invaded austria and they mentioned austria once in my history class for ww1 american education is shit
@@LuKing2 Both? I mean sure the first one but the second?
people loved dollfuss he was a small guy but nice and friendly which was good. Hes also chilling with Mussolini in heaven right now which is good and yeah
That's not were fascist go silly.
@@MouldMadeMindSaint Padre Pio would disagree
awful pronounciation of Korneuburg 😭
awful pronunciation of korenburg
There is no agreement among historians that the regime was fascist. That‘s a political argument. Socialists, who wanted the „Anschluss“, say it was, to demonize their political opposition, while the broader consensus is that it was an authoritarian regime that succeeded in building the foundation for an Austrian identity in a country of citizens who previously thought of themselves as German people. It also tried to uphold Austrian independence, but failed at that in the end under the weak leadership from Schuschnigg.
Mussolini protected them, the price was them making the country fascist: having the (after 1930) fascist Heimwehren as members of Parliament; banning social-democrat party and its subgroups; eliminating democracy
The Dollfuss-Schuschnigg-Regime was an authoritarian, fascist regime
POLE
Explain
You are talking about a piece of paper or the blood that runs through my viens
- hitler, rise of evil ( movie)
All Germans are part of same family and anschluss is more legal than england and scotland living together.
Check out the ghost of Roland Freisler