Revolutions - 7.06- The Kingdom of Hungary
Episode Date: August 23, 20171000 years of Hungarian history in 38 minutes. Pre-Order The Storm Before the Storm! Amazon Powells Barnes & Noble Indiebound Books-a-Million Indigo...
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And welcome to Revolutions.
Episode 7.6, The Kingdom of Hungary.
So, as you no doubt notice, this episode is a bit late, and if you did not read the explanation I posted at Revolutionspodcast.com, it is a simple and pitiful story.
I wrenched my back and spent most of last week in a prone position.
And since the physical act of processing material for the podcast requires me to be hunched over a desk scribbling notes,
It was impossible to get any real work done until Thursday afternoon, and by then there just
wasn't enough time to get it done on time. So, sorry about that. Can't even remember the last time
it happened. Any way I'm better now, and next week we'll be back on track. Today, we tackle a subject
about which I must admit my total ignorance about until I began this series on the revolutions of
1848, the Kingdom of Hungary. Now, I have plenty of natural background in most of European and
American history and have now spent years moving slowly and methodically through this great
age of revolutions that got started at the end of the seven years war. But I realized when I
cracked my first book on Hungary, appropriately a concise history of Hungary, I realized that I knew
none of it. And when I got deeper into the Hungarian reform era that led into the revolution of 1848,
I found myself confronted by Hungarian intellectuals who were very peeved at me. Because one
fact acutely felt by all those Hungarian intellectuals in the 1820s and 1830s is that while they
knew a great deal about the history, culture, trends, and ideas of the rest of Europe, the rest of
Europe knew basically nothing about them. Hungary was merely a strange land on the periphery of the
continent, and more than anything else, simply another vassal state of Austria. So anyone turning
their attention to central Europe would simply run into this wall that was Austria.
and I, too, never look past that wall.
So Hungary was, yes, a subsidiary part of the Austrian Empire, but it was more than that, too.
I mean, there is a reason the Austrians capitulated to a co-equal union with Hungary in 1867.
That is what created the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
So today, I hope to do some measure of justice to the history of Hungary, though due to the specific focus of our show,
that is, I'm trying to set up 1848, I will dwell on the same way.
the political and constitutional developments of Hungary at the expense of other interesting rabbit
holes we might fall into.
So the first thing I have to say is that the Hungarians do not call themselves Hungarians.
They are more properly styled Magyars.
And they do not speak Hungarian.
They speak Magyar.
Hungarian is just the butchered, anglified label we've slapped onto them.
Magyars, Hungarians.
Same thing.
Although not exactly.
A Hungarian today does not have to be ethnically a Magyar.
That is, the state of Hungary was and is pretty multi-ethnic.
There are plenty of Slavs and Poles and Germans.
And in fact, the complicated relationship between the majority Magyar population and the minority ethnic groups will play a big role in the story of 1848.
So a Magyar is always a Hungarian.
But the people living in Hungary are not necessarily Magyars.
You got it?
Okay.
And then, of course, now is a perfect time to remind you that whether you call it Hungarian or Magyar,
I will be mispronouncing the heck out of it.
I mean, I'm doing it right now because I'm not even going to attempt a proper Hungarian pronunciation
of Magyar.
Okay, so to get this started, sometime between AD 500 and 800, the Magyars, the Hungarians,
moved down out of the Ural Mountains, way off in Russia and began a long migration west.
They were not a part of the great barbarian migrations that put so much pressure on the later Roman Empire,
but instead were one of the newer groups that formed a second wave of migration that hit the post-Roman west.
In the late 800s, they were led into the Carpathian basin by their first great ruler, Arpod.
And of critical importance, Arpod was an elected ruler.
That's how the Hungarians did things.
So from the very beginning, the Hungarians have a tradition.
of not accepting mere birth as the means of succession.
The nobility had to come together and elect the next leader,
though for 400 years they simply elected the descendants of Arpod.
For a couple of generations after their arrival in Europe,
the Hungarians were a formidable roaming military force,
mostly causing trouble for the Frankish kingdom
and their newfangled Holy Roman Empire.
This was an era that the Hungarians themselves delightfully call
the Age of Adventures, and they adventured as far west as Spain, but then in 955, they were defeated
by Otto the first Holy Roman Emperor. This was not a catastrophic defeat, but it did put an end to
the Age of Adventures, and the Magyars decided to settle down in the relatively unpopulated
Carpathian basin that surrounds that section of the Danube, where the Great River makes its
abrupt turn south. Settled down by the 900s, the Hungarians occupied ten,
between the Catholic Holy Roman Empire to the West and the Orthodox Byzantine Empire to the
South and East. The official founding of the Kingdom of Hungary was marked by the ascension of
East Fon, who we in the West call Stephen. At some point, either in AD 1000 or 1,000, or 1,
Stephen had himself crowned king as a way to put himself on equal footing with the other
sovereigns of Europe. And when he donned the crown, he made a momentous decision.
After a round of diplomatic negotiations, he accepted his royal crown from the Pope,
converting both himself and his people to Catholicism.
This had the effect of orienting Hungary away from the Orthodox East and towards the Catholic West.
Stephen's coronization and the Romanization of Hungary is considered the founding moment of the Kingdom of Hungary.
He was later canonized for all of this. He's called St. Stephen of Hungary.
Over the next 200 years, the Kingdom of Hungary not only survived, it thrived, and was able to lord it over weaker neighbors.
By the middle of the 12th century, they had gobbled up the Kingdom of Croatia, among other smaller units,
and had pushed their dominions all the way to the Adriatic coast, all the while, carefully dancing in, around, between, for, and against,
both the Holy Roman Empire and the Byzantines, now allies, now opponents, now in the service of one, now in the service of the other.
but always looking out for themselves.
But as I said, for our purposes, I want to focus specifically on the unique constitutional
developments of Hungary.
And for that, our next stop is 1222 and the Golden Bowl of King Androsh II, a golden bowl
being a momentous imperial or royal decree.
The topic of the Golden Bowl was the composition of the nobility and their relationship
with the king.
Unlike in Western Europe, the Hungarians never developed a rigid feudal hierarchy where a lower noble was bound to a higher noble who was bound to a higher noble and on up to the king.
All nobles receive their nobility from the sovereign and pledged themselves directly to the sovereign.
And over the years, the Hungarian kings ennobled a lot of people, from great landowning magnates all the way down to regular old warriors who happened to have performed some signal service.
Because this nobility was hereditary, by the 1200, something like 5 to 8% of the total population was noble.
Middle and lower class Hungarian nobles might be indistinguishable economically from their non-noble neighbors,
but yet they held this special, social, and political status.
Now, as you might expect, the truly rich and powerful magnates threw their weight around and bullied the common nobility,
to the point where the common nobility took their complaints to the king,
who decreed in the Golden Bowl of 1222 that all nobles were equal.
The wealthiest landlord and the lowliest knight had the same legal rights, property rights, and political rights.
Now, this noble leveling, of course, did nothing for the other 95% of the population who were just straight-up subjects,
but it did stamp Hungarian politics early with a tradition of equalitarianism.
But that is not all we have to say about the golden bull. Oh no, sir, it is not. Because the golden
bowl can also be considered something of a Hungarian Magna Carta. Not only did it say all nobles are equal,
it also put specific limits on what the king could compel a noble to do and what rights,
privileges, and powers the nobility held. So for example, nobles were exempt from all taxes.
They could not be compelled to fight outside of Hungary if they did not want to. They could not
be arbitrarily arrested. To prevent their influence from being diluted by the king, say, going outside of
the kingdom for support, the Golden Bull also stipulated that the king was not allowed to give away
Hungarian land to a foreigner. So the effect of the Golden Bowl was to formally organize the
Kingdom of Hungary into a sort of constitutional aristocracy. Real power lay in the hands of this
five percent or so of the noble population, who, despite differences in wealth, were all
equal to each other, and who enjoyed rights and privileges beyond the reach of the monarchs.
Though not specifically established by the Golden Bowl, this trend towards constitutional
aristocracy was reinforced by the entrenchment of local diets, that is, assemblies of the local
nobility in the 50 or so counties that made up the Kingdom of Hungary. A huge amount of local
administration and justice, was handled directly by these local diets, without any interference
at all from the central government. And thanks to the equalitarian decree of the Golden Bull,
these local diets actually skewed in favor of the common nobility, whose voice and vote
counted just as much as the richest landlord. Now, in terms of greater Hungarian history,
the next big moment is the devastating Mongol invasion, which hit Hungary hard in 1241 and 1242.
Now, though the Mongols did not destroy the kingdom outright, and historians still wrestle over how bad it really was, it was really bad.
But the kingdom recovered, and since we've got 600 more years of history to get through, let's just take a moment of silence to honor the memory of the poor souls who had to bear the brunt of the Mongol invasion and move on.
Okay, great.
As they recovered from the Mongol invasion, the constitutional aristocracy continued to entrench itself.
In 1267, the first national diet composed of representatives elected by the local diets was called,
with each noble county sending two delegates to the national diet.
Now, this was not by any means the first national diet of nobles, but it was the first composed
of representatives elected by the local diets.
Now, sidestepping a bit the principle of noble equality, there was an upper and lower house
to the national diet, with the richest magnates designated to sit in an upper and more exclusive
chamber. The national diets were, and then continued to be, a regular feature of Hungarian
politics, and the chambers asserted a claim to nearly every important matter of state.
New laws, new taxes, the raising, equipping, and directing of armies, you know, the big stuff.
All of it needed the approval of the national diet. And it goes without saying that the national diet
was the body who would elect the new king when the old king died.
Now, if we just take a minute here to compare this to the liberal victors of the July
Revolution, recall that after 1830, there were maybe 250,000 men qualified to vote in France,
and that's a kingdom of 30 million, so we're talking not even 1% of the population.
And here we are in the 1200s in Hungary, with more than 5% of the population voting representatives
to go serve in a participatory body that has real say in the weightiest matters of state.
Now, of course, the other 95% of the population are still powerless subjects,
but still, 5% is more than not quite 1%.
So all of this was pretty firmly established by the 1290s,
which was just in time for the original R-Pod dynasty to die off.
The death of the last R-Pod king marked the end of native Hungarian king,
From here on out, with one or two exceptions, foreign kings would rule Hungary.
Having become a player in central European politics, the Hungarians had married their princes
and princesses into neighboring courts. And so when the R-Pods died off, it was these European
cousins who had the strongest claim to the throne. Though they were not necessarily on board
with this whole constitutional aristocracy thing. Now Hungary fairly well flourished for the next
150 years under quote-unquote foreign kings, and they reached their greatest territorial extent
in the late 400s under Louis the Great. But these kings, often born and raised outside of Hungary,
did their best to avoid putting things to the diet and ruled as much by royal decrees as they
could get away with. And in keeping with Western feudal strategy, they smooth potentially ruffled
feathers by sucking up to the great magnates and ignoring the common nobility. So the next big moment
in Hungarian history comes with the rise of the Ottomans and the collapse of the Byzantine Empire in the east.
After the Ottomans took Constantinople, they started pressing up into the Balkans,
but the Hungarians rallied under national hero, Janus Huniotti, who beat the Ottomans at Belgrade in 1456,
earning Huni Plotids as the savior of Christendom, even if he didn't have much time to celebrate his victory.
he died just a couple months later of some unspecified disease.
Now, Juni himself was just a powerful noble.
He was not a king.
But when he died, his lingering influence was enough that his 15-year-old son Matthias was elected king in 1458,
Matthias being the first quote-unquote national king in 150 years.
Raised by the most advanced humanist tutors of the day,
King Matthias quickly established himself as the great Renaissance king of Hungary.
His reign saw flourishing of art and literature and science and architecture, you know, all that good Renaissance stuff.
He was also, as I mentioned, one of the few ethnically Hungarian kings in a sea of foreign monarchs.
He was born and raised in Hungary, and he was sympathetic to the common nobles and tended to favor them over the great magnates, as both his predecessors and successors would tend to do.
But Matthias was not just some passive scholar king.
He led the Hungarian armies west into Bohemia during Bohemia's Hussite period,
the Hussites being one of the great precursors to the Lutherans and the Reformation.
Matthias went to bat on behalf of the Catholics in Bohemia,
and mostly successful he wound up controlling Moravia and Cilesia, among other territories.
Now, when the Bohemians themselves elected a new Catholic king in 1471 named Vladislos,
Matthias was unwilling to give up the land he had conquered,
and after a great deal of wrangling,
the two kings agreed to divvy up Bohemia between them.
Now you might think this is the beginning of a Hungarian takeover of Bohemia,
but it actually went the other way around.
When King Matthias died in 1490,
the aforementioned Vladesloss used a blood tie through his grandmother
to stand for the vacant Hungarian throne,
and he managed to secure election, and this is the moment the bohemian and Hungarian crowns become permanently linked.
So how did Vladesloss manage to secure election?
Well, it was by basically promising the Hungarian nobles, and especially the great magnates,
that they would have free run of the kingdom.
In Hungarian history, King Vladesloss is nicknamed King Very Well, or King Yes, Do It,
because whatever the nobles wanted, he said yes.
After nearly 200 years of foreign kings trying to govern around the national diet,
the constitutional aristocracy was back in a big way.
Once again, it was established that the local diets had huge latitude in local affairs,
and the national diets have the right to approve all taxation,
that they could elect and have the right to remove all high officers of the kingdom.
They also went so far as to claim the right to ratify peace,
treaties. In 1514, the Hungarians produced a massive collection of written laws that compiled and
codified all this, and this collection of laws would still be in active use right down to 1848.
This period also saw the establishment of an abstract legal entity called the Crown of Hungary,
a joint sovereign unit that combined the king, the powers of the national diet, and the territory
claimed by both, which still included, for example, the old kingdom of Croatia,
and now included Bohemia. To all of this, King Vladeslaw said, very well. So King very well
died in 1516 and was succeeded by his young son, Lyos II, who we call Louis II. But I know what
you're thinking. You're thinking, hey, I remember from the episode on the Austrian Empire that
somewhere around in here in the early 1500s, the Habs married their way into the Hungarian royal family,
and that's how they got their hands on the kingdom, right?
And yes, indeed, it is happening right here.
It was actually a double marriage arranged when all the kids were still just kids.
The future king Louis married Mary of Austria, while her brother Ferdinand married Louis's older sister Anne of Hungary.
Does that make sense?
Probably not, but just roll with it.
The thing to take away from all these arrangements is that it was agreed by all the parties
that Ferdinand Habsburg of Austria would become King of Hungary if Louis died,
but since Louis was still just a teenager at this point, that was no big deal, right?
Right?
Well, it turned out to be a very big deal, because just as these marriages were taking place,
the Ottomans came back with a massive vengeance, this time led by Suleiman the Magnificent.
After a generation of being allowed to revel in their own petty privileges,
the Hungarian nobility was inert and unresponsive to this threat, even after the Ottomans
took Belgrade in 1521.
The nobles continued to blow off King Louis II's demand that they mobilized for war,
and it wasn't until July of 1526 with the Ottomans right on their doorstep
that the Hungarian nobility finally got off their collective duffs, and by then it was too late.
Hastily cobbling together an army maybe 25 to 30,000 strong,
they faced off against an Ottoman army that outnumbered them two to one minimum,
and some sources put it as high as four to one.
As I briefly mentioned in episode 7.4, the two sides met at Mohatch and the Hungarians were slaughtered.
Most of the great magnates were killed in the battle, and King Louis II, all of 20 years old, drowned in a river during the chaotic retreat.
The cataclysmic battle of Mohatch marked the beginning of a whole new era of Hungarian history.
The Habsburg era.
But it was not quite that simple.
After the Battle of Mohatch, the Kingdom of Hungary was divided in thirds.
In the south and east, the Ottomans annexed the Great Hungarian Plain and would hold on to it for the next 150 years.
In the west and north, a rump of the old kingdom was held together,
and a diet of nobles followed through on the marriage contract and duly elected the Hapsburg-Ferdinand, King of Hungary.
But in the northeast, a whole separate diet of Hungarian nobles rejected the Habsburg claim.
and instead elected one of their own, a guy named Zapoyah Janos to be the real king of Hungary.
Janos and the Ottomans then allied with each other against Ferdinand,
but the failure of the Ottomans to take Vienna in 1529 led to a stalemate setting in.
Eventually, high international politics led to a settlement between the two kings of Hungary.
Yannos's son renounced his claim to be king of Hungary and agreed instead to make himself
Prince of Transylvania. Transylvania now being defined basically as the territory outside the
control of either the Ottomans or the Habsburgs. Now on paper, this settlement was an admission
that the Principality of Transylvania was a subset of the Crown of Hungary, but in reality,
the princes of Transylvania would continue with their independent rule and alliance with the
Ottomans. Now, this era of the collapse and partition of Hungary,
also happens to coincide with the Reformation, which is not a can of worms I plan to open,
except to say that Lutheranism made pretty good inroads into non-Ottoman Hungary,
but the areas under Hapsburg control were then subject to pretty thorough counter-Reformation tactics
that turned most everyone back into Catholics.
Independent Transylvania, meanwhile, became a haven for Protestants of various dissenting sects.
The upshot being that when Hungary was eventually knit back together,
it was going to have quite a grab bag of religions, and religious toleration is going to become a fiercely defended principle of the Hungarian national character, a principle that had to be most fiercely defended against the fiercely Catholic Habsburgs.
Now fast forward a hundred years, and Hungary is still divided in thirds, though it is about to get put back together, thanks to the Habsburg Holy Roman Empire, waging a war on two fronts.
To the west, they battle the France of King Louis XIV, and to the east, they set their sights on pushing back the infidel Turks.
Hungary would find itself on the front line of both wars.
Plenty of Hungarians were not happy with the Habsburgs, especially in and around the principality of Transylvania.
The most active of these anti-Hapsburg nobles was Imre Tokoli, who believed he was on the road to becoming king of something he was calling Upper Hungary.
basically all non-Ottoman hungry.
Tokoli led an active rebellion from 1678 to 1682 and then continued to harbor royal dreams
until slowly but surely the Habsburg-led Holy League pushed his Ottoman allies backwards
in the late 1880s and early 1690s.
Tokoli's dream of being king of Upper Hungary was destined to remain just a dream.
Because while the Holy League advanced and pushed the Turks out of Hungary,
Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I made all kinds of grand proclamations about respecting the old
constitutional aristocracy once he had reclaimed and reunited the kingdom.
That all sounded pretty good to the Hungarians.
And in 1699, the war with the Turks was over.
Everyone signed the Treaty of Karlowitz and the Kingdom of Hungary was officially liberated and reunited.
But that is not the end of this particular saga, because once they push the Ottomans
out, the Habsburgs decided to treat all the reclaimed territory as essentially virgin land,
and this did not sit well with all the families still holding claims to land that had been lost
after the Battle of Mohatch. Now, if you had meticulously preserved stacks of deeds and provided a
hefty processing fee, you could maybe get your land back. Maybe. But mostly, the Habsburg
plan was to seize all that land and redistribute it to migrants invited.
in to settle, particularly Slavic groups running away from the retreating Ottomans.
This was both to give the Slavs a home, but also to intentionally weaken the power of the Magyars,
power which had been so fiercely resistant to the kind of absolutist rule favored by the Habsburgs.
Now this was also the period when the Habsburgs established those military zones I briefly touched on
during our tour of the Austrian Empire, which were, yes, meant to form a military wall against the Turks,
but they were also meant to set up imperial garrisons on the frontiers of Hungary,
in case, you know, they needed to be turned around to deal with internal affairs.
All of this touched off the last great anti-Hapsburg insurrection prior to the Revolution of 1848.
Now, not to get too deep into this, but a young noble named Ferenz Raqqzzi was dragged into leading what became something of a war for independence.
The stepson of Imre Tolochi, and descendant of multiple princes of Transylvania,
Rakotzi was dragged by the rebellious inhabitants of his own ancestral estates into an anti-Hapsburg
insurrection that found ready backing from the French, because this is all happening right
at the beginning of the War of the Spanish Succession.
At the height of the rebellion, at the end of 1703, Rakotsi controlled half the kingdom,
him. But after that, his fortune slowly reversed, thanks to defeat suffered by his French allies.
But it was a soft landing for him, because Austria's allies, the British and the Dutch,
urged them to cut a deal with the Hungarian rebels so that the Austrians could focus on the real enemy,
France. A bunch of negotiations later, the Habsburg settled and agreed to respect the old
constitutional aristocracy. The conclusion of the Rackozy rebellion, though, opens up, for the first
time ever, mind you, complete Hapsburg hegemony over Hungary. The Ottomans were gone.
The Principality of Transylvania remained an independent administrative unit of the Crown of Hungary,
but it too was now under the Habsburg umbrella. All was finally well with the world,
except that as the war of the Spanish succession was winding down, the Habsburg suddenly faced a
terrible reality. There might not be a male heir to their line. Now, when the territories under
direct Habsburg rule, the fact that there was no mail to inherit all their titles was no big deal.
Holy Roman Emperor Charles VI simply decreed the pragmatic sanction and said a daughter could inherit
Austrian hereditary possessions. But in Hungary, it took negotiations with the national
diet to get them to accept the change, which they finally did in 1723. In return, Charles
the 6th again reconfirmed all the traditions of the constitutional aristocracy and,
that the crown of Hungary would forever remain unified and intact. Thus it was that in 1740, Hungary got
its first queen. When Charles VI died, his 23-year-old daughter, the great Empress Maria Teresa,
was elected Queen of Hungary. Now, though as I've mentioned, she could not become Holy Roman
Emperor, she had to rule with her husband as a front, in Hungary, Maria Teresa was sovereign in her own
right. The reign of Maria Teresa began a love-hate relationship between her family and hungry.
First during her own reign, which ran from 1740 to 1780, then under her sons, Joseph and Leopold,
then her grandson Francis, who would hold the crown until 1835. This brood, remember, was at the
epicenter of the movement towards enlightened absolutism, which was predicated on breaking exactly the kind
of constitutional aristocracy the Hungarians held so dear.
And it's not like that constitutional aristocracy was immediately rebellious.
Maria Teresa's succession in 1740 kicked off the war of the Austrian succession,
which saw Europe and the Hapsburg realms plunged into chaos,
as old enemies and former friends tried to take advantage of the elevation of this 23-year-old
woman.
In this dangerous mess, Hungary proved to be a rock-solidious.
base of support for their new queen. The national diet voted her money, troops, and material that
could honestly be said to have saved her from disaster in the opening days of her reign.
Once truly stable on the throne, though, Maria Teresa did her best to rule without the national
diets. As her medieval predecessors had done, she ruled through royal decrees and cultivated the loyalty
mostly of the wealthy magnates, who she invited to join fully in imperial Viennese society.
After the end of the War of the Austrian Succession in 1748, Maria Teresa only called two national diets.
And on top of that, she was giving the Hungarians plenty to complain about.
She created a free trade zone in the 1750s that included all her hereditary realms, but excluded Hungary.
She said it was because the Hungarians paid so little in 10,000.
taxes. But the tariff line that was erected between them and everyone else would be a complaint
all the way down to 1848. But that said, it's not like Maria Teresa didn't have her complaints,
too. After the end of the seven years war, she called a national diet in 1764 to help restabilize
the empire's finances and could not get the Hungarian nobility to kick in so much as a nickel,
even though it was said that two or three of the great magnates, still legally untaxable, remember,
could have made up the sum she asked from their pocket change.
After the diet of 1764, it would be 25 years before a Habsburg ruler called another one.
If the Hungarians took the good with the bad with Maria Teresa, it all seemed bad under her son Joseph.
Holy Roman emperor since 1765, he became king of Hungary upon his mother's death in 1780.
and came charging in with every aggressively absolutist reform he could think of.
He refused even coronation as King of Hungary,
preferring instead to try to become the single ruler of a single unified empire,
rather than the man with 182 hats.
Seizing administrative and financial control of the kingdom,
Joseph went so far as to make German the official state language.
The response from Hungary was fierce resistance,
and a demand that Joseph respect the old constitutional order.
When he refused, the magnates started quietly raising forces
and talking sediciously with Hungarian officers in the Imperial Army.
They even took meetings with Prussian envoys
about possibly ejecting the Habsburgs in favor of a Prussian monarch.
But Joseph conveniently died in 1790 before all of this got out of hand
and his more sensible brother Leopold took over.
and he came in promising to respect the old constitution and then pretty much undid all of Joseph's programs.
You can bet that the Hungarians are not going to be among those pining for the old Josephist program.
In a diet that met from 1790 to 1791, Leopold's concessions were all written down, codifying once again the constitutional aristocracy and its tradition that dated all the way back to the Golden Bowl of 1222.
But then inconveniently, Leopold died in 1792, and his son Francis took over.
And this is the Francis I, who would be the last Holy Roman emperor.
Francis was as stubbornly absolutist as his uncle Joseph, which was annoying, but by the time of his ascension,
the French Revolution was now blotting out everything else.
With war on, Francis called annual diets, and with the threat of France looming,
the diets gave their new king all the money and men he asked for, though they got very tired of
his habit of demanding that they vote first for whatever he asked for, before he heard
whatever complaints they had, and then dissolving the diet the minute he got what he asked
for. As the French Revolutionary Wars became the Napoleonic Wars, the Hungarians were mostly
opposed to Napoleon, even if they maybe enjoyed just a little bit watching the Habsburgs
get their heads stomped in. The era of the Napoleonic Wars was actually something of a boom time.
Not on the front lines, Hungarian grain and cattle were sought after exports and helped turn the landowners
away from their traditional conservative modes of life towards more commercially oriented arrangements.
Now, Napoleon did his best to remind the Hungarians how much they hated the Habsburgs,
but the Hungarians mostly stayed loyal to the Habsburgs, and they were not at all happy when Napoleon peeled off
the kingdom of Croatia and added it to the Illyrian provinces, breaking the old crown of Hungary.
But all that said, life under the defeated Emperor Francis was becoming intolerable.
In clear violation of the Constitution, he jacked up assault tax without the diet's permission,
and then went in for an anti-deflationary paper currency policy that left many in Hungary
forced to convert paper for much less than they believed it should have been worth.
He also doubled the Hungarian contribution to the state debt without asking their permission.
When Francis finally called a new diet in 1811, the assembly was consumed by angry protests at his conduct,
whereupon Francis dissolved them, and refused to call another diet for the next 13 years.
So the fall of Napoleon and the subsequent Congress of Vienna was a mixed bag for Hungary.
The wartime boom was over, and they were now solidly in this new Austrian empire.
under an emperor who showed little respect for their traditional political constitution and rights
that had supposedly been confirmed over and over again by members of his own family.
This led to what we will end this week's episode on, which is the Reform era,
which properly dates from about 1832, but which started building all through the 18-teens and 1820s.
Just like every other nationality in Europe, the Hungarians, the Magyars, that is,
had been exploring and celebrating their own national heritage, and this really started up when
Joseph tried to impose German as the national language on them. They wanted the Magyar language
to be the official language of justice and administration. They wanted their ancient privileges
restored. Now, very few of these guys spoke of independence from the Habsburgs. Mostly what the
Hungarians wanted was to be elevated to a place of proper dignity inside the Austrian Empire,
which for them meant political equality with Austria itself.
This all would burst out into the open in the mid-1830s,
as reformers and patriotic Hungarian nationalists started challenging the insulting pretensions of the Habsburgs,
and it did not help that Metternich's spies were now in their midst,
reporting it seemed, their every thought.
None of them shed a tear when Emperor Francis died in 1835,
and when he was succeeded by the unfortunate Ferdinand,
More than a few Hungarian patriots spied an opportunity to fully restore Hungarian dignity.
So I'm going to leave it off there for now, because I think that's quite enough to chew on.
But this episode wraps up our long circuit of preliminary background that needed to be in place before we could sit back and watch the volcano explode.
So next week, or I suppose five days from now, we will tie all these threads back together with a look at the
economic and social crisis of the mid-1840s, which included, among other things, the horrifying
results of the potato famine. So, I will see you back here again in a few days, and if you happen
to have been thrown for a loop when the show didn't show up in your podcast feed on time,
that's great. The show is a meaningful part of your life's routine, just as I always hope that
it would be. And if you want to thank me, you can go ahead and pre-order the storm before the storm,
the beginning of the end of the Roman Republic.
