Read Danubia: A Personal History of Habsburg Europe Online
Authors: Simon Winder
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Austria & Hungary, #Social History
Simon Winder
Sequim, Wandsworth Town
2009–13
Index
The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.
Aachen
Abdul Pasha,
Abyssinians
Aeneas
Africa
Agilolfing family
Agnes
Ahmed I
Alba Iulia
Albania
Albanian nationalists
Albanians
Albert II of Germany
Albert VII, Archduke of Austria
Albert of Prussia
Albert of Saxony
Albrecht, Duke
alchemy
Aloysius Gonzaga, St
Alpár, Ignác
Alps
Alsace
Alsace-Lorraine
Altdorfer, Albrecht
Altenburg
Am Hof, Vienna
Ambras condition
American bullion
Americas
Spanish
Anatolia
ancestor worship
Andrew Church, Debrecen
Anna, Empress of Russia
Anna, Queen of the Romans
Anna, Queen of Spain
Anna of Tyrol
anti-pagan campaigns
anti-Semitism
Anton Ulrich, Duke
Antwerp
Aosta, Duke of
Appelfeld, Aharon
Aquitaine
Arad
Aragon
Arcimboldo, Giuseppe
Ark, Noah’s
Armenians
Arthur, King
Asiatic Society, Calcutta
Aspern-Essling, battle of
Association for Romanian Literature and the Culture of the Romanian People (ASTRA)
Athabascans
Augsburg
Augustinian church, Vienna
Augustinians
Augustus III
Auschwitz, Duchy of
Austerlitz, battle of
Austria
censorship system
church designs
and the Crimean War and France
and the German Confederation
origins
and Poland
and Tyrol
see also
Further Austria; Lower Austria; Upper Austria
Austria, Republic of
Austria-Hungary
arts of
British views on
Cisleithania (west)
and the First World War
industrialism
Poles of
Transleithania (east)
Austrian army
Austrian government
Austrian Littoral
Austrian Monument, Bukovina
Austrian navy
Austrian Netherlands
Austrian Silesia
Austrian Succession, war of the
Austrians
Austro-Hungarian army
Avars
Aztecs
Babenberg family
Baby Exit Festival
Bach, Johann Sebastian
Baden
Baden, Grand Duke of
Badeni Decrees (1897)
Balázs, Béla
Balkan Wars
second (1913)
Balkans
Bamberg
Banat
Bánffy, Miklós
Banja Luka
battle of
Barcelona
Barit, George
Bartók, Bela
Bartók, Péter
Basel, Peace of (1795)
Batavian Republic
Bauer, Herbert
Bautzen
Bavaria
Bavarians
Bay of Bengal
Bear Pits of Bern
bear-moats
Beethoven, Ludwig van
Belgium
Belgrade
fall of (1521)
and the First World War
siege of (1456)
Benczúr, Gyula
Benedek, Ludwig von
Benedict XVI, Pope
Benedictines
Benešov
Berg, Alban
Berlin
Berlin–Vienna–Budapest axis
Bernardo III Clesio, Prince-Bishop
Bertali, Antonio
Bessarabia
Bethge, Hans
Bethlen Gábor
Bezruč, Petr
Biber
Bible
see also
New Testament; Old Testament
‘Biedermeier period’
Biertan
Bismarck, Otto von
Black Church of Braşov
Black Forest
‘Black Man of Debrecen’
Black Sea
Blenheim, battle of
Bohemia
see also
German Bohemia
Bohemians
Bolko the Small
Bologna
Bolzano
Bon, Bartlmä
Bosch, Hieronymus
Bosnia
Bosnia-Hercegovina
Bosnian War (early, 1990s)
Bosnians
Bosnian Muslims
Boxer Rebellion
Boyneburg, Konrad von
Bragadino, Marko
Brahe, Tycho
Brahms, Johannes
Brandenburg
Braslav, Prince
Braşov
Bratislava
Braun, Werner von
Breda
Bregenz
Bremen
Brenner Pass
Britain
and the ‘balance of power’
and the Crimean War
and the First World War
and Maria Theresa
military borders
views on Austria-Hungary
see also
England
British
British India
Brixen
Brno
Brno crocodile
Bruckner, Anton
Brueghel, Pieter the Elder
Bruges
Brumaire coup
Brusilov, Aleksei
Brussels
Bucharest
Buda
Buda Castle
Buda Hills
Budapest
siege of (1944–45)
Budapest Zoo
Buddhism, Vajrayana
Bukovina
Bulgaria
Bulgarian army
Bulgarian Front
Bulgarians
Bulgars
Buonconsiglio Castle, Trento
Burgkmair
Burgundy
Bursa
Byzantine missionaries
Byzantines
‘cabinet wars’
Cadíz
Cadíz cathedral
Caesar, Julius
Calvinism
Camaldolese
Campo Formio, Treaty of
Canetti, Elias
Canova, Antonio
Caporetto, battle of (1917)
Capuchin church, Vienna
Capuchin monastery, Brno
Carantanians
Carinthia
Carlos II, King of Spain, will of
Carniola
Duchy of
Carpathians
1915–16 defence of the
Casimir the Great, King of Poland
Castel Roncolo (Schloß Runkelstein)
Castile
catacomb saints
Catherine the Great
Catholic religious territories
Catholicism
eighteenth century siege of
iconoclasm
intolerance
Jesuits
and Judaism
popular
Caucasus
Celan, Paul
Central Powers
Cesti, Antonio
Charlemagne, Holy Roman Emperor
Charlemagne’s throne, Aachen
Charles I, of England
Charles II of Spain
Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor (1355–78)
Charles V, Duke of Lorraine
Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor (1519–58)
crowned
depression of
and Hercules
illegitimate son
motto,
Plus Ultra
and Protestantism
and the Reformation
resignation
succession
Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor (1711–40)
building campaign of
death
funerary casket of
naval operations
and the Pragmatic Sanction
succession
Charles VII, Holy Roman Emperor
Charles VIII of France
Charles VIII of Italy
Charles X of France
Charles, Archduke, Duke of Teschen
Charles the Bold
Cheb
Chernivtsi
China
Chopin, Frédéric
Christianity
Orthodox
see also
Catholicism; Protestantism; Puritans
Christians
cultural exchange with the Ottomans
under the Ottomans
‘Christmas Pantomime Syndrome’
Church of the Moon
Cieszyn, Poland
Cincşor
Cistercian abbeys
Cistercian monasteries
Clement, St
Clovis, King of the Franks
Cluj
coinage
Cold War
Cold War Anti-Fascist Protection Barrier
Colonna, Marcantonio
Columbus, Christopher
Colyn, Alexander
Common Ministerial Council, Vienna
Communists
Confederation of the Rhine
Conrad, Joseph
Constantine the Great
Constantinople
coronation regalia
Cossacks
Counter-Reformation
Court Church, Innsbruck
court genealogists
Court Library, Vienna
Crécy, battle of
Crimea
Crimean War
Croat Pandurs
Croatia
Croatia-Slavonia
Croatian nationalists
Croats
Crossen
Crown Lands of St Stephen
Csia, Lajos
Csoma de Kőrös, Sándor
Čapek, Karel