Read Danubia: A Personal History of Habsburg Europe Online
Authors: Simon Winder
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Austria & Hungary, #Social History
Český Krumlov
Cymburgis
Cyprus
Cyril
Czech nationalists
Czech Republic
Czechoslovakia
Czechs
Czernowitz
da Ponte, Lorenzo
Dacia
Dalmatia
Danish navy
d’Annunzio, Gabriele
Danube River
Dark Ages
Darwin, Charles
de Tolly, Barclay
de Vries, Adriaen
Deák, Ferenc
Debrecen
Dee, John
del Vaga, Perino
Delacroix, Eugène
dell’Acqua, Cesare
Dettingen, battle of
Deutschwißkirch (Viscri)
Dinaric Alps
Dniepr, River
Dohány Street Synagogue, Budapest
Don John of Austria
Donatus, St
Dossi, Dosso
Dovbush, Oleksa
Dózsa, György
Dresden
Dreux
Drohobych
Dubrovnik
Dunkirk
Dürer, Albrecht
The Arch of Honour
Dutch Republic
Prussian invasion (1787)
Dutch troops
Dvořák, Antonín
Eastern Europe, creation of
Eastern Front
Edict of Restitution (1629)
Edirne
Edward VI of England
Edward VII of England
Eichendorff, Joseph von
Eisenstadt
Ekielski, Władysław
Elba
Eleanor of Portugal
Electors, Seven
Electors of Saxony
Elisabeth, Empress of Austria
Elisabeth Christine of Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel
Elizabeth I of England
Elizabeth, Tsaritsa
Elizabeth Farnese
Elizabeth of Thuringia, St
emigration
Eminescu, Mihai
England
heredity
military borders
and the Reformation
English nationalists
Erlach, Fischer von
Ernest ‘the Man of Iron’, tomb of
Ernst, Archduke of Austria
Ernst, Prince of Hohenberg
Ernst August, Elector
Esperanto
Essen
Esterházy, Prince Paul
Esterházy family
Esztergom
Eugene, Prince of Savoy
European Union (EU)
falconry
Faludy, György
family trees, Habsburg
famine
Felipe, Duke of Parma
female inheritance, Habsburg
Ferdinand (cousin of Ferdinand III)
Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor (1558–64)
death
and the Reformation
Ferdinand I, King of the Two Sicilies
Ferdinand I of Aragon
Ferdinand I of Austria (1835–48)
Ferdinand I of Portugal
Ferdinand II, Archduke of Austria (1564–95)
Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor (1619–37)
acts to take the title of Emperor
anti-Protestant policies
and the arts
burial
crowned Holy Roman Emperor
death
and Jews
and music
quells Bohemian rebellion
and von Wallenstein
Ferdinand II, King of the Two Sicilies
Ferdinand III, Holy Roman Emperor (1637–57)
and the arts
election as King of the Romans
inbreeding
and music
Ferdinand IV of Hungary
Ferdinand Karl, Archduke of Austria
Ferdinand Maria, Elector of Bavaria
Ferenc II Rákóczi
Ficino
Fifth Coalition, war of the (1809)
Filiberti, Baron
First World War
Fiume (Rijeka)
Flak Tower, Vienna
Flanders
Fleurus, battle of
floating mills, wooden Danubian
Florence
folklore
Fontana, Felice
Fornovo, battle of
France
British attempts to conquer
and the Crimean War
and the First World War
Habsburg rivalry
heredity
military borders
Napoleonic
post-revolutionary
and the Reformation
and Russia
and the Second World War
see also
French
Franche-Comté
Francio
Francis I of France
Francis II Rákóczi
Francis Xavier, St
Franco-Bavarian troops
Frankfurt
Frankish Empire
Franks
Franz I, Holy Roman Emperor (1745–65)
Franz II (later Franz I(II)), Holy Roman Emperor (1792–1835)
Franz Ferdinand, Archduke of Austria
assassination
family
hunting
and the July Crisis
plans for the Empire
riches
Franz Joseph I (1848–1916)
and Castel Roncolo
death
and the First World War
and Franz Ferdinand
Franz Joseph Land
Franz Karl, Archduke of Austria
Frederick, St
Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor
Frederick II (the Great), King of Prussia
Frederick II (the Quarrelsome), Duke of Austria
Frederick III, Holy Roman Emperor (1452–1493)
Frederick V, Elector Palatine
Frederick William of Prussia
Freemasonry
French
French Revolution
French troops
Freud, Sigmund
Friedrich Wilhelm I, the Elector of Brandenburg
Friedrich Wilhelm III of Prussia
Friedrich Wilhelm IV of Prussia
Friuli, Giovanni
Fugger family
Further Austria
Galicia
Galicia and Lodomeria, Kingdom of
Garibaldi, Giuseppe
Gemenc Forest, Hungary
Genoa
Georg I Ludwig, Elector of Hannover (George I of Great Britain)
George II of Great Britain
George V of Hannover
George Frederick, Prince of Waldeck
Germaine de Foix
German army
German Bohemia
German Confederation
German language
German mercenaries
German nationalism
German nationality, defining of the
German parliament
German Reich
see also
Third Reich
German–Habsburg–Russian alliance
Germanic tribes
Germanization
Germans
Germany
and the First World War
military-industrial complex
and Poland
and Prussia
Triple Alliance
unification
urbanization
see also
Federal Republic of Germany
Géza (Magyar prince)
Gibraltar
Glagolitic script
Gleiwitz (Gliwice)
gods, classical
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von
Golden Bull (1356)
Golden Rose Synagogue, Lviv
Gonzalez, Petrus
Gorále people
Gorchakov, Alexander
Görgey, General
Gorizia
Görz (Gorizia)
Görz, County of
‘Gothic’ (Fraktur) typeface
Göttweig
Gran
Graz
anti-Protestant measures
Armoury
Plague column
war council
Great Church, Debrecen
Great Moravia
Great Synagogue, Plzeň
Great Turkish War
Greece
Greek army
Greeks
Grocka, battle of
Groll, Joseph
Guelders
Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden
Győr fortress
György I Rákóczi
Gypsies
Habsburg navy
Habsburg-Lorraine, House of
Hajduks
Hall
Hamburg
Händel, George Frideric
Handke, Peter
Hannover
Harsány
Hašek, Jaroslav
Hasidism
Hatam Sofer of Bratislava
Haydn, Joseph
Hebrew Bible
Hector
Heidelberg
Heligoland, battle of
Henri V
Henry I, Emperor
Henry II Jasomirgott
Henry IV, Emperor
Henry VI of England
Henry VIII of England
Henry the Fowler
Heraldic Wall of Frederick III
Herat
Hercules
Heroes’ Square, Vienna
Herzl, Theodor
Hesse-Kassel
Hildebrandt, Johann Lukas von
Hindenburg, Paul von
Hitler, Adolf
Hlávka, Josef
Hoefnagel, Joris
Hofburg, Vienna
Hoffmann, Josef
Hofkirche
Hofmannsthal, von
Hohenlinden, battle of
Hohenstaufen dynasty
Holland
Holstein
Holy Grail
‘Holy League’ armies
Holy Roman Emperor
election
power-base
see also
specific emperors
Holy Roman Empire
decentralizing tendency
end of the
legal disputes of
territories and extent
Homorod
Honterus, Johannes
Horea, Cloşca and Crişan, Revolt of (1784)
Horthy, Admiral
Horthy regency
Hötzendorf, Conrad von
Hrabal, Bohumil
Hun raiders
Hundred Years War
Hungarian army