Peter Kosler's map of the Slovene Lands, designed during the Spring of Nations in 1848, became the symbol of United Slovenia.

In 1867 the Austrian Empire reorganized with the Austro-Hungarian Compromise[1] into a dual monarchy, in light of this, many Slovenes reverted into their "maximalist" ways, with a demand of a "United Slovenia",[2] they initiated a series of mass political meetings, called "Tabori,[3]" after the Czech model. The movement led to a call for political/cultural union of Slovenes.

Slovenes, Croats, and Serbs followed closely the liberation and unification such as in Italy, Germany, Greece, and Serbia. While Austria lost its northern Italian provinces, it gained in Bosnia, which led to a movement for unification of South Slavic groups, (Yugoslavs), into a third unit within Austria Hungary.

See also

References

  1. Gerrits, André; Wolffram, Dirk Jan (2005). Political Democracy and Ethnic Diversity in Modern European History. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-4976-3.
  2. Juvan, Marko (2019). Worlding a Peripheral Literature. Canon and World Literature. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-981-329-404-2.
  3. Vošnjak, Josip (1869). Slovenski tabori: za prosto slovensko ljudstvo (in Slovenian). Slovensko politično društvo.


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