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  1. 29 de jun. de 2011 · Source: Map of Austria-Hungary 1900. The Austro-Hungarian Empire in English sources, was a constitutional union of the Austrian Empire (the kingdoms and lands represented in the imperial council, or Cisleithania) and the kingdom of Hungary Corona de San Esteban or Transleithania) that existed from 1867 to 1918 , When it collapsed as a result of ...

  2. Seven Years’ War. Wenzel Anton von Kaunitz (born February 2, 1711, Vienna, Austria—died June 27, 1794, Vienna) was an Austrian state chancellor during the eventful decades from the Seven Years’ War (1756–63) to the beginning of the coalition wars against Revolutionary France (1792). Kaunitz was responsible for the foreign policy of the ...

  3. Is a comprehensive dictionary, encyclopedia, atlas, gazetteer, and directory with indexes of placenames for villages, settlements, towns, communities, and cities in the former Kingdom of Hungary (pre 1918), including those now located in Austria, Croatia, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Ukraine, and Serbia / Yugoslavia.

  4. Towns and villages in Hungary. Hungary has 3,152 municipalities as of July 15, 2013: 346 towns (Hungarian term: város, plural: városok; the terminology does not distinguish between cities and towns – the term town is used in official translations) and 2,806 villages (Hungarian: község, plural: községek) of which 126 are classified as large villages (Hungarian: nagyközség, plural ...

  5. One Million Hungarians. Between 1870 and 1920 an estimated 1,078,974 Hungarians immigrated to the United States. [1] (. This figure does not include the ethnic minorities who came as citizens of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.) Those who made the arduous journey to the North American continent were lured by the prospects of economic opportunities.

  6. 5 de feb. de 2018 · Galicia as a geopolitical entity was created in 1772 with the establishment of the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, the Habsburg Monarchy’s (later the Austrian Empire’s) easternmost crownland. The capital of the province was Lemberg (today Lviv). A century and a half later, in 1918, Galicia was wiped from the world’s maps, with the fall ...

  7. Austria-Hungary before World War I. Austria-Hungary before World War I was an empire, the largest political entity in mainland Europe. It spanned almost 700,000 square kilometres and occupied much of central Europe: from the mountainous Tyrol region north of Italy, to the fertile plains of the Ukraine, to the Transylvanian mountains of eastern ...