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https://dspace.ncfu.ru/handle/123456789/33285| Title: | Emigration of Austria-Hungarian Citizens in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries: Causes, Directions, and Consequences |
| Other Titles: | Эмиграция подданных Австро-Венгрии в последней трети XIX – начале ХХ века: причины, основные направления и последствия |
| Authors: | Kryuchkov, I. V. Крючков, И. В. Virt, N. F. Вирт, Н. Ф. |
| Keywords: | Adaptation;Emigration;Agrarian overpopulation;Austria-Hungary;Economic crisis;United States |
| Issue Date: | 2026 |
| Publisher: | Russian Academy of Sciences |
| Citation: | Kryuchkov I. V., Virt N. F. Emigration of Austria-Hungarian Citizens in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries: Causes, Directions, and Consequences // Novaya i Novejshaya Istoriya. - 2026. - 70 (3). - pp. 81 - 96. - DOI: 10.7868/S3034600226030064 |
| Series/Report no.: | Novaya i Novejshaya Istoriya |
| Abstract: | In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, emigration from Austria-Hungary to North and South America and to Western Europe became a mass phenomenon of major demographic and social significance. This large-scale outflow from the Habsburg Empire continues to occupy an important place in the historical memory of the peoples of Central and Eastern Europe. This article examines the causes, principal destinations, and consequences of this migration movement. Drawing on diplomatic sources, particularly reports from Russian consulates and diplomatic missions in Austria-Hungary and Germany, the study reconstructs a contemporary external perspective on the migration processes unfolding within the Habsburg Empire. The analysis situates emigration within broader processes of economic modernisation, agrarian crisis, and national mobilisation. It argues that the disintegration of the traditional peasant economy, compounded by agrarian overpopulation, constituted one of the principal drivers of mass emigration. At the same time, the article traces the gradual transformation of official and public attitudes towards emigration. While initially treated with relative indifference, by the end of the nineteenth century emigration had come to be regarded as a significant demographic and economic threat to the stability of the dual monarchy. The study further demonstrates that depopulation was perceived by political and intellectual elites as a serious challenge in the context of nation-building and struggles for political rights in Central and Eastern Europe. It concludes that emigration from Austria-Hungary formed a substantial component of broader European migration flows and significantly affected both the development of the emigrant-sending regions and the receiving societies, particularly the United States. |
| URI: | https://dspace.ncfu.ru/handle/123456789/33285 |
| Appears in Collections: | Статьи, проиндексированные в SCOPUS, WOS |
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|---|---|---|---|
| scopusresults 4050.pdf Restricted Access | 129.94 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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