Sarajevo 1914: Sparking the First World War. Edited by Mark Cornwall

In June 1914, Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated in the Bosnian capital of Sarajevo. This key event in 20th-century history continues to fascinate the public imagination, yet few historians have examined in depth the regional context which allowed this assassination to happen or the murder’s ripples which quickly spread out across the Balkans, Austria-Hungary and Europe as a whole. In this study, Mark Cornwall has gathered an impressive cast of contributors to explore the causes of the Sarajevo assassination and its consequences for the Balkans in the context of the First World War.

The volume assesses from a variety of regional perspectives how the ‘South Slav Question’ destabilized the empire’s southern provinces, provoking violent discontent in Croatia and Bosnia, and exacerbating the empire’s relations with Serbia, regarded by Austria-Hungary as a dangerous state. It then explores the ripples of the Sarajevo event, from its evolution into a European crisis to the creation of a new independent state of Yugoslavia.

Bringing together fresh perspectives by historians from Austria, Croatia, Slovenia and Serbia, as well as leading British historians of Austria-Hungary, this book is essential reading for anyone wanting to understand the Sarajevo violence and how it shaped modern Balkan history.


Table of contents

List of Illustrations
Introduction: The Southern Slav Question, Mark Cornwall (University of Southampton, UK)
Part I – Tinder and Spark
1. Franz Ferdinand: Power and Image, Alma Hannig (University of Bonn, Germany)
2. Great Expectations: The Habsburgh Heir-Apparent and the Southern Slavs, Andrej Rahten (Slovene Academy of Sciences, Slovenia)
3. Mlada Bosna: The Educational and Cultural Context, Robin Okey (University of Warwick, UK)
4. Bosnian, Croatian, Serbian, or Serbo-Croatian?: Frictions over the Language Question in the Habsburg Army, Tamara Scheer (University of Vienna, Austria)
5. The Mentality of the Croatian Aristocracy, Iskra Iveljic (University of Zagreb, Croatia)
Part II – International Blaze
6. Why Did Nobody Control Apis?: Serbian Military Intelligence and the Sarajevo Assassinations, Danilo Šarenac (University of Belgrade, Serbia)
7. Why Fight a Third Balkan War?: The Habsburg Mindset in 1914, Lothar Höbelt (University of Vienna, Austria)
8. ‘Six Powers Appalled by War’: The July Crisis and the Limits of Crisis Management, Thomas Otte (University of East Anglia, UK)
9. The British Elite and the Sarajevo Assassinations, Roy Bridge (University of Leeds, UK)
Part III – Regional Blaze
10. The Outbreak of War in Habsburg Trieste, Borut Klabjan (University of Koper, Slovenia)
11. Defining Traitors and Loyalists in Habsburg Croatia, Mark Cornwall (University of Southampton, UK)
12. The Inner Enemy: The Habsburg State and its Serb Citizens in Herzegovina 1913-1918, Heiner Grunert (Ludwig Maximilian University Munich, Germany)
13. The Sarajevo Assassinations in Czech Memory after the Great War, Dagmar Hajková (Czech Academic of Sciences, Czech Republic)
14. The Combustible Impact of Sarajevo, Cathie Carmichael (University of East Anglia, UK)
Index


Reviews

“An excellent collection of essays that brings original insight to an historical topic that has occupied historians for over a century. Too often, the Sarajevo assassination is treated as the opening act in a war drama whose most important actions took place elsewhere. Not here: Sarajevo 1914 puts Franz Ferdinand and the Southern South question at the centre of its narrative, exploring its causes and consequences from a range of perspective and casting new light onto one of the most consequential events of the twentieth century.” –  John Paul Newman, Associate Professor of Twentieth-Century European History, Maynooth University, Ireland

Sarajevo 1914 is a rigorous and well-researched collection of essays that will be essential reading for any student, scholar or lay reader wishing to understand the impact and implications, both regionally and internationally, of the fateful assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand.” –  Kenneth Morrison, Professor of Modern Southeast History, De Montfort University, UK


Published: 03-09-2020

Format: Hardback

Edition: 1st

Extent: 320

ISBN: 9781350093218

Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic


https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/sarajevo-1914-9781350093218/


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