3.8 Article

Colonial lessons to learn from Habsburg: Bosnia-Herzegovina, 1878-1918

Journal

PHILOSOPHY & SOCIAL CRITICISM
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/01914537231219912

Keywords

Habsburg Monarchy; Bosnia-Hercegovina; colonialism; imperialism; postcolonial studies

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This article examines the background, colonial nature, and impact of Austria-Hungary's occupation of Bosnia and Hercegovina from 1878 to 1908.
In 1878, as a consequence of an international Balkan summit in Berlin, Austria-Hungary was given permission to occupy the troubled Ottoman provinces Bosnia and Hercegovina. A gory invasion campaign ensued, followed by four decades of civil administration. Finally, the territories were annexated by the Habsburg Monarchy in 1908 as an appendix of sorts, which almost caused the premature outbreak of a great war in Europe. This article will sketch the background for this last - and lethal - expansion of the empire and pursue the research questions of (a) whether this constitutes a case of colonialism within Europe and (b) what its repercussions were, critically challenging the alleged 'civilising mission' that would legitimise the whole undertaking.

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