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Austrians (German: Österreicher) are the citizens and nationals of Austria. The English term Austrians was applied to the population of Habsburg Austria from the 17th or 18th century. Subsequently, during the 19th century, it referred to the citizens of the Empire of Austria (1804–1867), and from 1867 until 1918 to the citizens of Cisleithania. In the closest sense, the term Austria originally referred to the historical March of Austria, corresponding roughly to the Vienna Basin in what is today Lower Austria.

Key Information

Historically, Austrians were regarded as Germans and viewed themselves as such.[12][13][14] The Austrian lands (including Bohemia) were part of the Holy Roman Empire and the German Confederation until the Austro-Prussian War in 1866 which resulted in Prussia expelling the Austrian Empire from the Confederation.[13] Thus, when Germany was founded as a nation-state in 1871, Austria was not a part of it.[13] In 1867, Austria was reformed into the Austro-Hungarian Empire. After the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1918 at the end of World War I, Austria was reduced to a rump state and adopted and briefly used the name the Republic of German-Austria (German: Republik Deutschösterreich) in an attempt for union with Germany, but was forbidden due to the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye (1919). The First Austrian Republic was founded in 1919. Nazi Germany annexed Austria with the Anschluss in 1938.

After the defeat of Nazi Germany and the end of World War II in Europe, both the political ideology of pan-Germanism and the union with Germany have become associated with Nazism, resulting in Austrians developing their own separate and distinct national identity. Today, the vast majority of Austrians do not identify as German.[15][16][17]

Name

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The first document containing the word "Ostarrîchi"; the word is marked with a red circle.

The English word Austrian is a derivative of the proper name Austria, which is a Latinization of Österreich, the German name for Austria. This word is derived from Ostarrîchi, which first appears in 996. This, in turn, is probably a translation of the Latin Marcha Orientalis, which means "eastern borderland" (viz. delimiting the eastern border of the Holy Roman Empire). It was a margraviate of the Duchy of Bavaria, ruled by the House of Babenberg from AD 976. During the 12th century, the Marcha Orientalis under the Babenbergs became independent of Bavaria. What is today known as Lower Austria corresponds to the Marcha Orientalis, while Upper Austria corresponds to the eastern half of the core territory of Bavaria (the western half forming part of the German state of Bavaria).

The adjective Austrian entered the English language in the early 17th century, at the time referring to Habsburg Austria in the sense of "members of the Austrian branch of the House of Habsburg" (the junior branch emerging from the dynastic split into Austrian and Spanish Habsburgs in 1521), but from the 18th century also "a native or inhabitant of Austria".[18]

History

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Early history

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Overview of the Hallstatt and La Tène cultures:
  The core Hallstatt territory (HaC, 800 BC) is shown in solid yellow,
The territories of some major Celtic tribes of the late La Tène period are labelled.

The territory of what is today Austria in the Roman era was divided into Raetia, Noricum, and Pannonia. Noricum was a Celtic kingdom, while the Pannonii were of Illyrian stock. The Raetians were an ancient alpine people, probably akin to the Etruscans. During the Migration period (c. 6th century), these territories were settled by the Bavarians and other Germanic groups in the west (Alemanni in Vorarlberg, Lombards in Tyrol), and by Slavic groups (principality Carantania), Huns and Avars in the east. In the 8th century, the former territories of Raetia and Noricum fell under Carolingian rule, and were divided into the duchies of Swabia, Bavaria, and the principality Carantania. Pannonia, until the end of the 8th century, was part of the Avar Khaganate. The "East March" (Ostmark) during the 9th century was the boundary region separating East Francia from the Avars and the Magyars. The site of Vienna had been settled since Celtic times (as Vindobona), but the city only rose to importance in the High Middle Ages as the chief settlement of the March of Austria (the March river just east of Vienna marks the ancient border between Francia and the Avars).[citation needed]

After the defeat of the Magyars at the Battle of Lechfeld in 955, the East March or March of Austria came to be the easternmost portion of the Holy Roman Empire, bordering on Moravia to the north and on the Kingdom of Hungary to the east. As a consequence, the national character of the Austro-Bavarian speaking majority population of Austria throughout their early modern and modern history remained characterized by their neighbourhood to the West Slavs (Czechs, Slovaks) to the north, the South Slavs (Slovenes, Carinthian Slovenes, Burgenland Croats) to the south, and the Hungarians to the east.[citation needed]

The unification of the various territories of Austria outside of the March of Austria proper (i.e., parts of Bavaria, Swabia, and Carinthia) was a gradual process of feudal politics during the High and Late Middle Ages, at first in the Archduchy of Austria under the House of Babenberg during the 12th to 13th centuries, and under the House of Habsburg after 1278 and throughout the 14th and 15th centuries. The various populations of these territories were not unified under the single name of "Austrians" before the early modern period.[citation needed]

Early modern period

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Growth of the Habsburg Monarchy

The Habsburg, who had ruled the territory of Austria since the Late Middle Ages, greatly increased their political prestige and power with the acquisition of the lands of the crowns of Hungary and Bohemia in 1526. The Hungarian aristocracy was more successful at retaining the Magyars' cultural and political preponderance in multi-ethnic Hungary than Bohemia, on three sides surrounded by German neighbours, which underwent a period of intense German colonisation, germanizing the leading classes of the Czech people as well. The common German identity of lands such as Carinthia, Styria, or Tyrol, and the ruling dynasty made it easier for these lands to accept the central government set up in Vienna in the mid-18th century.[citation needed]

The term Austrian in these times was used for identifying subjects of the Domus Austriae, the House of Austria, as the dynasty was called in Europe, regardless of their ethnic ancestry. Although not formally a united state, the lands ruled by the Habsburgs would sometimes be known by the name "Austria". In reality, they remained a disparate range of semi-autonomous states, most of which were part of the complex network of states that was the Holy Roman Empire (the imperial institutions of which were themselves controlled for much of their later existence by the Habsburgs). However, the second half of the 18th century saw an increasingly centralised state begin to develop under the reign of Maria Theresa of Austria and her son Joseph II.

After the French Revolution and the rise of Napoleon, the emperor Franz II formally founded the Austrian Empire in 1804 and became, as Franz I the first Austrian emperor. For the first time, the citizens of the various territories were now subjects of the same state, while most of the German states, Prussia excluded, still cultivated their Kleinstaaterei and did not succeed in forming a homogenous empire. Following Prussia's victory in the Austro-Prussian War in 1866, Otto von Bismarck successfully unified the German Empire in 1871, which was Prussian-dominated, without the inclusion of Austria and the German Austrians.[19]

After Austria was excluded from Germany in 1866, the following year, Austria joined Hungary as a dual empire known as the Austro-Hungarian Empire. A further major change resulted from a reorganisation of the Austrian Empire in 1867 into a dual monarchy, acknowledging the Kingdom of Hungary as an independent state bound to the remaining part of the empire, as well independent, by a personal and real union, the Emperor of Austria being the Apostolic King of Hungary (with both titles on the same level). The Austrian half, a patchwork of crown-lands, broadly coterminous with the modern-day Austria, the Czech Republic, and parts of Slovenia, Poland, Ukraine, Italy, and Croatia, was bound together by the common constitution of 1867, stating that all subjects now would carry "uniform Austrian citizenship" and have the same fundamental rights. These non-Hungarian lands were not officially called the Austrian Empire. Until 1915, they were officially called "the Kingdoms and States Represented in the Imperial Council" and politicians used the technical term Cisleithania (labelling the Hungarian lands as Transleithania). The general public called them Austria, and in 1915, the non-parliamentary Cisleithanian government decreed to use this term officially, too.

19th-century nationalism

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Central Europe (c. 1820) showing the Kingdom of Prussia (blue), the Austrian Empire (yellow), and other independent German states (grey). The red line marks the border of the German Confederation; both Prussia and Austria controlled lands outside the Confederation.

The idea of grouping all Germans into one nation-state gave way to a rapid rise of German nationalism within the German Confederation, especially in the two most powerful German states, Austria and Prussia. The question of how a unified Germany was to be formed was a matter of debate. The German Question was to be solved by either unifying all German-speaking peoples under one state as the "Greater German solution" (Großdeutsche Lösung), which was promoted by the Austrian Empire and its supporters. On the other hand, the "Lesser German solution" (Kleindeutsche Lösung) advocated only to unify the northern German states and exclude Austria; this proposal was favored by the Kingdom of Prussia and its supporters. This debate became known as German dualism.

The lands later called Cisleithania (except Galicia and Dalmatia) were members of the German Confederation since 1815, as they had been part of the Holy Roman Empire until 1806. Until 1848, Austria and its chancellor, Prince Metternich, unanimously dominated the confederation. The developing sense of a German nationality had been accelerated massively as a consequence of the political turmoil and wars that engulfed Central Europe following the French Revolution and the rise to power of Napoleon Bonaparte. Although the years of peace after Napoleon's fall quickly saw German nationalism largely pushed out of the public political arena by reactionary absolutism, the Revolutions of 1848 established it as a significant political issue for a period of nearly a hundred years.

A map of the German Confederation in 1849 showing the 39 independent states

Political debate now centred on the nature of a possible future German state to replace the Confederation, and part of that debate concerned the issue of whether or not the Austrian lands had a place in the German polity. When Emperor Franz Joseph I ordered to build a monument in Vienna in 1860 to Archduke Charles, victor over Napoleon in the Battle of Aspern-Essling in 1809, it carried the dedication "To the persistent fighter for Germany's honour", to underline the Germanic mission of the House of Austria.

The idea of uniting all ethnic Germans into one nation-state began to be challenged in Austria by the rise of Austrian nationalism, especially within the Christian Social Party that identified Austrians based on their predominantly Catholic religious identity as opposed to the predominantly Protestant religious identity of the Prussians.[20]

Habsburg influence over the German Confederation, which was strongest in the southern member states, was rivalled by the increasingly powerful Prussian state. Political manoeuvering by the Prussian chancellor Otto von Bismarck resulted in the military defeat of the Austrians in the Austro-Prussian War of 1866 and the collapse of the Confederation, both effectively ending any future Austrian influence on German political events.

When asked by Edward VII to abandon Austria-Hungary's alliance with Germany for co-operation with England, Franz Joseph replied "I am a German prince."[21][22]

The Franco-Prussian War and the establishment of a German Empire in 1871, headed by Prussia and pointedly excluding any of the Austrian lands, led the state to turn away from Germany and turn its gaze towards the Balkan Peninsula. Thereby, the influence of pan-Germanism was diminished in the Habsburg territories, but as the term "Austrians" still was used supra-national, German-speaking Austrians considered themselves Germans (and were counted as such in the censuses). After Bismarck had excluded Austria from Germany, many Austrians faced a dilemma about their identity, which prompted the Social Democratic Leader Otto Bauer to state that the dilemma was "the conflict between our Austrian and German character."[23] The state as a whole tried to work out a sense of a distinctively Austrian identity.

The Austro-Hungarian Empire created ethnic conflict between the German Austrians and the other ethnic groups of the empire. Many pan-German movements in the empire desired the reinforcement of an ethnic German identity, and that the empire would collapse and allow for a quick annexation of Austria to Germany.[24][25] Although it was precisely because of Bismarck's policies that Austria and the German Austrians were excluded from Germany, many Austrian pan-Germans idolized him.[26]

While the high bureaucracy of Austria and many Austrian army officers considered themselves "black-yellow" (the Habsburg colours), i.e., loyal to the dynasty, the term "German Austria" (Deutschösterreich) was a term used in the press to mean all the Austrian districts with an ethnic German majority among the inhabitants. Austrian pan-Germans such as Georg Ritter von Schönerer and his followers agitated against the "multi-national" Austro-Hungarian Empire and advocated for German Austria to join the German Empire.[27] Although many Austrians shared the same views, a lot of them still showed allegiance to the Habsburg monarchy and hoped for Austria to remain an independent country.[28] Although not as radical as Schönerer and his followers, populists such as Karl Lueger used anti-semitism and pan-Germanism as a form of populism to further their own political purposes.[29]

First Austrian Republic

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Provinces claimed by German Austria, with the subsequent border of the First Austrian Republic outlined in red

The last year of World War I saw the collapse of Habsburg authority throughout an increasingly greater part of its empire. On October 16, 1918, Emperor Karl I invited the nations of Austria to create national councils, to instigate a restructuring of the state under Habsburg rule. The nations followed the invitation (the Czechs had founded their national council already before the invitation), but ignored the will of the emperor to keep them in a restructured Austrian state. Their goal was total independence.[citation needed]

Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg

On October 21, the German members of the Austrian parliament, elected in 1911, met in Vienna to found the Provisional National Assembly of German Austria ("Provisorische Nationalversammlung für Deutschösterreich"). On October 30, 1918, they installed the first German Austrian government, leaving the question "monarchy or republic" open. (German nationalists and social democrats favoured the republic, the Christian Socialists wanted to keep the monarchy.) This government, in the first days of November, took over the duties of the last imperial-royal government in a peaceful way. Initially, the new state adopted the name "German Austria", reflecting the republic being the German part of the old Austria and showing the popular desire to unite with the new German republic. On November 12, 1918, the provisional national assembly voted for the republic and for unification with Germany with a large majority.[citation needed]

Sign of the Austrian resistance movement at the Stephansdom in Vienna

The creation of the Czechoslovak and South Slav states, the dissolution of the real union with Hungary, and the post-war treaties imposed by the victorious Allies combined to see the newly established Austrian republic both with the boundaries it has today, and a largely homogeneous German-speaking population. In the Treaty of Saint-Germain, in September 1919, the union with Germany was prohibited, and the new republic's name "Deutschösterreich" was prohibited by the treaty; instead, the term "Republic of Austria" was used. The westernmost province Vorarlberg's wish to unite with Switzerland was also ignored. On October 21, 1919, the state changed its name accordingly. Many German Austrian communities were left scattered throughout the other new states, especially in Czechoslovakia, where more than 3 million German Bohemians had not been allowed to become part of the new Austrian state, as well as in the southern part of Tyrol, which now found itself part of Italy. In total, more than 3.5 million German-speaking Austrians were forced to remain outside the Austrian state.

Adolf Hitler was an Austrian by birth who was known as the Führer in Germany and annexed his birth country, Austria, to Germany in 1938 during the Anschluss.

The collapse of the empire caused an apparent struggle for some German Austrians between an "Austrian" and a "German" character.[30] The idea of unifying Austria with Germany was motivated both by a sense of a common German national identity, and also by a fear that the new state, stripped of its one-time imperial possessions, and surrounded by potentially hostile nation-states, would not be economically viable. An Austrian identity emerged to some degree during the First Republic, and although Austria was still considered part of the "German nation" by most, Austrian patriotism was encouraged by the anti-Nazi/anti-Socialist clerico-authoritarianist state ideology known as Austrofascism from 1934 to 1938. The Engelbert Dollfuss/Kurt von Schuschnigg government accepted that Austria was a "German state" and believed Austrians were "better Germans", but strongly opposed the annexing of Austria to Nazi Germany.[31]

Under Nazi Germany

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Austrians greeting the Nazis during the Anschluss in Vienna

By March 1938, with Nazi government in control of both Berlin and Vienna, the country was annexed to Germany (Anschluss) as Ostmark. The total number of Jewish Austrian Holocaust victims was 65,000.[32] About 140,000 Jewish Austrians had fled from the country in 1938–39. Thousands of Austrians had taken part in serious Nazi crimes (hundreds of thousands of people died in the Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp alone), a fact which was officially acknowledged by Chancellor Franz Vranitzky in 1992. Some of the most prominent Nazis were native Austrians, including Adolf Hitler, Ernst Kaltenbrunner, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Franz Stangl, Otto Skorzeny, and Odilo Globocnik,[33] as were 40% of the staff at Nazi extermination camps.[34] Romani people were also racially targeted in Austria by the Nazis.[35][36][37]

The total number of Austrian military deaths from 1939 to 1945 was 260,000.[38]

The Austrian resistance to the Nazi rule started with the Anschluss in 1938. Historians estimate that there were about 100,000 members of the resistance facing 700,000 NSDAP members in Austria.[39]

Second Austrian Republic

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Karl Renner and Adolf Schärf (Socialist Party of Austria [Social Democrats and Revolutionary Socialists]), Leopold Kunschak (Austria's People's Party [former Christian Social People's Party]), and Johann Koplenig (Communist Party of Austria) declared Austria's secession from the Third Reich by the Declaration of Independence on 27 April 1945 and set up a provisional government in Vienna under state Chancellor Renner the same day, with the approval of the victorious Red Army and backed by Joseph Stalin.[40] (The date is officially named the birthday of the second republic.) At the end of April, most of western and southern Austria was still under Nazi rule. On 1 May 1945, the Federal Constitutional Law of 1920, which had been terminated by dictator Dollfuss on 1 May 1934, was declared valid again. Though the Allied Powers treated Austria as a belligerent party in the war and maintained occupation of it after the Nazi capitulation, they accepted the Declaration of Independence and made the first national elections possible in the autumn of that year. By the end of 1945, Austria, under the supervision of the Allied Council in Vienna, had a democratic parliament and government again, acknowledged by all four Allied occupation zones.

"Red-White-Red Book" which was published by the Austrian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1946. The book describes the accepted version of the events during the Anschluss (1938-1945) by the founders of the Second Austrian Republic.

Allied occupation ended in 1955, when the Austrian State Treaty between Austria and the Allies was signed.

Immediately after 1945, the majority of Austrians still saw themselves as Germans, as a broader Austrian national identity took time to develop. In a 1956 survey, 46% of Austrians still considered themselves to be Germans.[41] Another survey carried out in 1964 revealed that only 15% of Austrians still considered themselves to be Germans.[41]

In contrast, the Austrian political elite referred to their experiences in concentration camps and in prison, which had brought out a desire for the lost independence of the Austrian state. Kreissler (1993) writes: "It was not until after the (long dark) night of the Third Reich that Austrian identity was brought back to consciousness by resistance and exile".[42] Austrians developed a self-image unambiguously separate from their German neighbour. It was based on cultural achievements of the past, the Moscow Declaration, geopolitical neutrality, language variation, the Habsburg legacy, and the separation of the two empires in the late 19th century. The German Empire was formed without Austria and the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the arrangement known as the Kleindeutsche Lösung or "the Little Germany Solution". It proved favourable for Austrians not to be held guilty for World War II, genocide, and war crimes, since Austria was considered a victim of Nazi Germany, although some historians call this a "big lie" and have challenged this statement.[43]

Unlike earlier in the 20th century, in 1987 only 6% of Austrians identified themselves as "Germans".[44] Today, over 90% of the Austrians see themselves as an independent nation.[45][46] The logic of the existence of an independent Austrian state is no longer questioned as it was in the inter-war period. Proponents who recognize Austrians as a nation claim that Austrians have Celtic heritage, as Austria is the location of the first characteristically Celtic culture to exist.[47] It is said that Celtic Austria became culturally Romanized under Roman rule and later culturally Germanized after Germanic invasions.[47] Contemporary Austrians express pride in having Celtic heritage, and Austria possesses one of the largest collections of Celtic artifacts in Europe.[48]

Austria's multicultural history and geographical location have resulted in post-Soviet era immigration from Slovenia, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia, Romania, and Poland. As with neighbouring Germany, there has also been heavy immigration from Turkey and former Yugoslav states such as Croatia and Serbia.[citation needed]

Language

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Austrians have historically spoken the German language. The sole official language at the federal level of Austria is German, and the standard used is called Austrian German since German is considered a pluricentric language, like English. Austrian German is defined by the Austrian Dictionary (German: Österreichisches Wörterbuch), published under the authority of the Austrian Federal Ministry of Education, Arts and Culture. Thus, all websites, official announcements, and most of the media are carried out in Austrian German. In terms of native language, it is generally not Austrian German that is used, but instead local dialects of the Austro-Bavarian and Allemannic (in Vorarlberg and the Tiroler Außerfern) family. The Austro-Bavarian dialects are considered to belong either to the Central Austro-Bavarian or Southern Austro-Bavarian subgroups, with the latter encompassing the languages of the Tyrol, Carinthia, and Styria and the former including the dialects of Vienna, Burgenland, Upper Austria, and Lower Austria. The vast majority of Austrians are, however, able to speak Austrian Standard German in addition to their native dialect, as it is taught in all modern-day schools.[citation needed]

The minority languages Slovene, Croatian, and Hungarian are spoken and officially recognized by some states of Austria.[49]

Naturalization

[edit]

Like most of Central Europe, Austria has had high levels of immigration since the 1970s. As with Germany, the largest immigrant group is Turks. An estimated total of 350,000 ethnic Turks lived in Austria in 2010, accounting for 3% of the Austrian population.[50]

The rate of naturalization has increased after 1995, since which date Turks in Austria could retain their citizenship in Turkey after naturalization in Austria (dual citizenship). After 2007, the rate of naturalizations has decreased due to a stricter nationality law enacted by the Austrian legislature.[51] During the 2000s, an average of 27,127 foreign nationals per year were naturalized as Austrian citizens, compared to an average of 67,688 children per year born with Austrian nationality.[52]

Today, the largest group of foreign nationals are Germans. As of January 2018, 186,891 Germans lived in Austria.[53]

Culture

[edit]

Music

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Vienna, the capital city of Austria, has long been an important center of musical innovation. Composers of the 18th and 19th centuries were drawn to the city by the patronage of the Habsburgs, and made Vienna the European capital of classical music. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Franz Schubert, and Johann Strauss, Jr., among others, were associated with the city. During the Baroque period, Slavic and Hungarian folk forms influenced Austrian music.

Literature

[edit]

Complementing its status as a land of artists, Austria has always been a country of great poets, writers, and novelists. It was the home of novelists Arthur Schnitzler, Stefan Zweig, Thomas Bernhard, and Robert Musil, and of poets Georg Trakl, Franz Werfel, Franz Grillparzer, Rainer Maria Rilke, and Adalbert Stifter. Famous contemporary Austrian playwrights and novelists include Elfriede Jelinek and Peter Handke. Writers of philosophy include Ernst Mach, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Karl Popper and the members of the Vienna circle.

Cuisine

[edit]

Austrian cuisine, which is often incorrectly equated with Viennese cuisine, is derived from the cuisine of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. In addition to native regional traditions it has been influenced above all by German, Hungarian, Czech, Jewish, Italian and Polish cuisines, from which both dishes and methods of food preparation have often been borrowed. Goulash is one example of this. Austrian cuisine is known primarily in the rest of the world for its pastries and sweets.

Religion

[edit]

The majority of Austrians are traditionally Catholic. Catholicism in Austria has played a significant role both in the culture and in the politics of Austria. It enabled the House of Habsburg to rule Spain and its empire as a Catholic Monarchy from the 16th century, and it determined the role of Habsburg Austria in the Thirty Years' War. The music in the tradition of Viennese classicism is sacral to a significant extent, including works such as Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Great Mass in C minor, Joseph Haydn's masses (1750-1802), Ludwig van Beethoven's Mass in C major (1807), down to Anton Bruckner's Te Deum (1903).

Secularism has been on the rise since the 1980s. An estimated 66% of Austrians adhered to Roman Catholicism in 2009, compared to 78% in 1991 and 89% in 1961. There is a traditional Lutheran minority, accounting for 4% of the population in 2009 (down from 6% in 1961). An estimated 17% are nonreligious (as of 2005).

Islam in Austria has grown rapidly during the 1990s and 2000s, rising from 0.8% in 1971 to an estimated 6% in 2010, overtaking the traditional size of the Lutheran community in Austria.[54] This rapid growth was due to the significant immigration to Austria from Turkey and Yugoslavia during the 1990s to 2000s.

See also

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References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Austrians (German: Österreicher) are a Germanic ethnic group native to the Republic of , where they form the overwhelming majority of the population, numbering approximately 9.1 million as of 2024. Primarily speakers of German dialects such as Austro-Bavarian alongside , Austrians share a rooted in Alpine traditions, Habsburg imperial , and post-World War II nation-building that emphasized a distinct identity separate from pan-. This identity was formalized through the 1955 , which restored full sovereignty after Allied occupation and led to the constitutional declaration of permanent neutrality, shaping Austria's foreign policy amid divisions. Austrians have made outsized contributions to Western civilization, particularly in classical music—with composers like and originating from Austrian soil—and in fields such as (), (), and economic theory through the Austrian School (, , ). Economically, Austria maintains a highly developed social with a GDP exceeding $56,000, low unemployment around 5%, and a reputation for driven by strong social welfare, , and low crime rates, though recent has introduced demographic shifts and integration challenges. Historically, the transition from the multi-ethnic Austro-Hungarian Empire's collapse in 1918 to the brief interwar republic, with in 1938, and postwar reconstruction highlighted tensions between Austrian particularism and broader Germanic affiliations, with full national consolidation emerging only in the late 20th century.

Identity and Terminology

Etymology and Historical Designations

The name Austria derives from Medieval Latin Austria (or Marchia Austriaca), a latinization of Old High German ôstarrîchi, literally "eastern realm" or "eastern march," reflecting the region's position as a frontier territory east of Bavaria. This term first appears in written records in a donation charter issued by Holy Roman Emperor Otto III on November 1, 996, which references land "in Ostarrîchi" near the confluence of the Danube and Fischa rivers, marking the earliest attestation of the name for the area corresponding to modern Lower Austria. The designation originated with the creation of the Eastern March (Marchia Orientalis or Ostmark) around 976, when Emperor Otto II detached the territory from the Duchy of Bavaria and granted it to Leopold I of the Babenberg dynasty as a buffer against Magyar raids; this march encompassed roughly the Vienna Basin and surrounding lands, evolving into a hereditary Babenberg possession by the early 11th century. In 1156, Emperor Frederick I elevated it to the Duchy of Austria via the Privilegium Minus, formalizing Austria as a semi-independent entity within the Holy Roman Empire while retaining its "eastern" connotation. The modern German endonym Österreich preserves this etymology, combining ôstar ("eastern," from Proto-Germanic *austrô) with rîhhi ("realm" or "kingdom," akin to Reich). The "Austrians" (Österreicher in German) emerged as the natural inhabitant-term from Österreich, initially denoting residents of the and later the Habsburg domains centered on it; in English, the and form appears by the early , applied to subjects of the House of . Historically, pre-medieval designations for the region's peoples included Roman-era provincials from (annexed in 16 BC) and later Germanic Bavarian settlers who displaced Slavic groups after Charlemagne's Avars campaigns in 791–796, with locals often simply termed "Bavarians" or "march-dwellers" until the . By the Habsburg era (from 1282), "Austrians" broadly signified German-speaking elites and subjects of the Archduchy, though ethnic self-identification as distinct from other Germans solidified only in the 19th–20th centuries amid nationalist movements.

Distinction from Germans and National Consciousness

The German-speaking population of what is now Austria historically shared ethnic, linguistic, and cultural affinities with other Germans, fostering a sense of belonging to a broader German nation during the 19th-century Vormärz period and the revolutions of 1848, when pan-German nationalism emphasized shared heritage over Habsburg loyalties. This identification persisted into the early 20th century, as evidenced by the 1918 proclamation of the Republic of German-Austria, which explicitly sought union (Anschluss) with the Weimar Republic to address economic viability and demographic concerns in the truncated post-imperial state. The 1938 Anschluss, enacted by on March 12, integrated as a province (Ostmark) with widespread initial popular approval—polls and plebiscites under Nazi control reported over 99% support, reflecting pre-existing German nationalist sentiments among Austrians rather than solely coerced outcomes. During , Austrian participation in the and SS units was substantial, with approximately 1.3 million Austrians serving, often indistinguishably from Germans in military and administrative roles. Post-1945 Allied occupation and the 1943 Declaration's framing of as Nazi Germany's "first victim" facilitated a deliberate pivot toward separate national consciousness, enabling de-Nazification processes that emphasized external aggression over internal complicity—a later critiqued for understating Austrian agency in . The 1955 , signed on May 15 by the Allied powers and , restored sovereignty, mandated neutrality under Article 23 (precluding military alliances or German integration), and reinforced borders, marking a causal in institutional separation. By the , empirical surveys documented a sharp decline in German self-identification, with Austrian consciousness dominant due to state socialization, education emphasizing Habsburg cultural , and economic reconstruction tying identity to independent institutions rather than . This evolution manifested in political discourse, where parties like the (FPÖ) from the onward mobilized distinct against perceived threats like integration, which evoked fears of diluted sovereignty akin to historical absorptions. Dialectal variations in , historical traditions (e.g., Wienerlied and Alpine customs), and a self-perception of cultural refinement inherited from imperial further entrenched distinctions, despite genetic and linguistic continuity with . By the late , self-identification polls reflected near-universal Austrian primacy, with residual German affinity confined to fringe groups, underscoring how exogenous impositions (Allied mandates) and endogenous adaptations (victim narrative) causally supplanted prior affiliations.

History

Prehistoric, Roman, and Early Medieval Periods

The earliest evidence of human presence in the territory of modern Austria dates to the period, with archaeological finds such as the figurine, carved from limestone around 28,000–25,000 BCE, discovered in the Valley of and representing one of the oldest known works of . Additional sites include a 25,000-year-old mammoth bone accumulation in , interpreted as a hunting ground used by early modern humans. Neolithic settlements emerged around 5000 BCE, exemplified by pile-dwelling villages built on lake shores and wetlands in the Alpine foothills, part of a broader cultural complex spanning six countries and recognized for their preserved wooden structures, tools, and evidence of early agriculture and animal husbandry. By the late (c. 1300–800 BCE) and into the (, c. 800–450 BCE), Celtic-speaking tribes migrated into the , establishing the kingdom of around 400 BCE, which controlled resources in the Styrian and Upper Austrian hills and traded with Mediterranean civilizations. was annexed by Rome in 15 BCE through a largely peaceful incorporation under Emperor Augustus, becoming a by 16 BCE administered by equestrian governors rather than senators, reflecting its peripheral status and economic value from mining rather than heavy taxation. Roman infrastructure included roads, forts, and cities such as (modern , established as a legionary camp c. 15 BCE), (near Klagenfurt), and Ovilava (Wels), with the provinces of , , and parts of encompassing most of present-day Austria by the CE. Roman rule persisted until the CE, with the divided under (r. 284–305 CE) into Ripense (along the ) and Noricum Mediterraneum, but weakening amid barbarian incursions. Following the Roman withdrawal around 476 CE, the region saw influxes of Germanic tribes, , and steppe nomads; the Avars, a Turkic-speaking , dominated the from c. 568 CE, subjugating local and raiding Frankish territories. A Slavic revolt against Avar overlords occurred in 624 CE under the merchant , establishing a short-lived that briefly extended into Austrian lands before fragmenting after his death c. 658 CE. Bavarian tribes, speaking an early form of Austro-Bavarian German, expanded eastward from the 7th–8th centuries, settling the former Roman provinces amid Christian missionary efforts led by figures like Saint Rupert of (d. 718 CE). Frankish King incorporated Bavaria as a subkingdom in 788 CE, then launched campaigns against the Avars starting in 791 CE, conquering their central ring forts by 796 CE and annexing the eastern territories by 803 CE, facilitating Bavarian colonization and the establishment of the March of the East (Ostmark) as a district under Carolingian rule. This integration introduced feudal structures, Latin , and Germanic linguistic dominance, laying demographic foundations for later Austrian populations.

Habsburg Era and Multinational Empire

The gained control of the through Rudolf I, elected on October 1, 1273, and who defeated King at the Battle of Marchfeld on August 26, 1278, leading to the formal investiture of Austria and to his sons in 1282 via the Treaty of Rheinfelden. This acquisition established as the dynasty's primary residence and administrative hub, initiating continuous Habsburg rule over Austrian lands that lasted until 1918. Over the subsequent centuries, the Habsburgs consolidated power through strategic marriages, inheritances, and conquests, transforming their Austrian base into the nucleus of a sprawling that included the Holy Roman Empire's German-speaking territories until its dissolution in 1806. The monarchy's expansion—encompassing Bohemia in 1526, Hungary and Croatia following the Battle of Mohács in 1526, and parts of Poland-Lithuania via elective kingships—created a multinational entity with over a dozen major ethnic groups, including Germans, Hungarians, Czechs, Poles, Slovaks, Croats, Serbs, Romanians, Ukrainians, and Italians. German-speakers, concentrated in the core Alpine and Danubian regions of modern Austria, Upper and Lower Austria, parts of Bohemia, and South Tyrol, formed the largest single ethnic bloc and provided the empire's bureaucratic, military, and cultural elite, with German serving as the primary language of administration and higher education despite the diverse populace. Habsburg governance emphasized dynastic loyalty and Catholic universalism over ethnic uniformity, as evidenced by policies under emperors like Leopold I (r. 1658–1705), who prioritized confessional unity against Ottoman and Protestant threats, fostering a supranational imperial identity that subordinated emerging national sentiments. Enlightenment-era reforms under (r. 1740–1780) and Joseph II (r. 1780–1790) centralized authority, promoted economic modernization through measures like the Theresian of 1754–1760 for uniform taxation, and attempted partial Germanization of administration to streamline across linguistic divides, though these provoked backlash from non-German elites, such as Hungarian nobles resisting the 1780 Edict of Toleration's extension to Protestants and . The German-Austrian population, numbering in the millions by the and dominant in (where comprised over 90% of residents by 1800), benefited from these policies as the dynasty's preferred intermediaries, yet faced internal divisions between conservative clerical elements and liberal nationalists influenced by the . Defeat in the of 1866, which excluded from German affairs, prompted the Austro-Hungarian Compromise (Ausgleich) of February 8, 1867, restructuring the empire into a of () and (Transleithania) under common Habsburg rule, with shared foreign policy, military command, and finances but autonomous internal administrations. In , encompassing about 28 million inhabitants by 1910, German-Austrians remained the pivotal group, advocating for centralized "trialist" reforms to balance Slavic and Italian demands while preserving their cultural and economic primacy in urban centers like and . This arrangement temporarily stabilized the dynasty but exacerbated ethnic tensions, as non-German nationalisms—fueled by 1848 revolutions and pan-Slavic movements—challenged Habsburg legitimacy, with German-Austrians increasingly viewing the empire as a bulwark against Prussian dominance and Slavic . Throughout, Austrian identity manifested less as ethnic and more as allegiance to the Catholic Habsburg sovereign, distinct from pan-German aspirations aligned with Protestant .

19th-Century Nationalism and Decline of Empire

The rise of across in the early challenged the multinational structure of the , where comprised only about 24% of the population amid (around 20%), , Poles, Croats, , , , and others. Influenced by Enlightenment ideas and the , ethnic groups increasingly demanded cultural rights, linguistic recognition, and political , viewing Habsburg centralization—such as II's 1780s reforms imposing German as the administrative language—as cultural suppression. This tension manifested in failed unification efforts, like the 1848 Frankfurt Parliament's exclusion of due to its non-German majority, highlighting the empire's incompatibility with emerging nation-state models. The epitomized this nationalist surge, beginning with protests in on March 13, 1848, where crowds numbering in the tens of thousands demanded Klemens von Metternich's resignation, press freedom, and a . Metternich fled, and Emperor Ferdinand I pledged reforms, including the abolition of and a , but parallel uprisings in (led by , proclaiming independence on April 14), ( revolt suppressed June 17), and Italian provinces sought secession. Hungarian forces fielded up to 200,000 troops by 1849, but Austrian General Windischgrätz and Russian intervention—deploying 200,000 soldiers under Tsar Nicholas I—crushed the rebellion by August 1849, resulting in 13 executions, including Prime Minister Batthyány, and neo-absolutist rule under Alexander Bach until 1859, which intensified Germanization but failed to quell resentments. Military defeats accelerated the empire's decline: the 1859 Second Italian War of Independence saw Austrian forces of 140,000 under Emperor Franz Joseph lose at (June 24), ceding it via the Villafranca armistice and Villafranca Treaty, weakening Italian holdings. The decisive blow came in the (June-August 1866), where Prussian armies under Helmuth von Moltke's railroads and rifles defeated 250,000 Austrians at Königgrätz (Sadowa) on July 3, with 44,000 Austrian casualties versus 9,000 Prussian. The Peace of (August 23, 1866) excluded Austria from the , dissolved the , and imposed a 20-million-thaler , isolating diplomatically and economically as Prussia unified Protestant north . Facing internal collapse, Franz Joseph enacted the Ausgleich (Compromise) on February 8, 1867, transforming the empire into the of , granting equal status with a separate , , and internal administration while retaining joint foreign policy, military (peacetime strength 800,000), and finances ( contributing 30% of revenue). This appeased Magyar elites, stabilizing rule over 60 million subjects, but alienated and by entrenching Hungarian dominance in the Transleithanian half and ignoring pan-Slavic aspirations, fostering movements like Czech federalism and Croatian autonomism that persisted into the . The compromise, while averting immediate dissolution, institutionalized ethnic hierarchies, undermining cohesive imperial identity amid ongoing economic disparities—industrial versus agrarian —and rising .

World Wars, Anschluss, and Nazi Integration

Austria-Hungary entered World War I on July 28, 1914, following the on June 28, 1914, issuing an ultimatum to that escalated into broader conflict with Allied powers. The empire mobilized approximately 7.8 million soldiers by war's end, suffering heavy losses on fronts including against , , and , amid internal ethnic tensions and economic strain that undermined cohesion. Collapse accelerated in 1918 with mutinies, strikes, and the dissolution of the ; an was signed on November 3, 1918, at Villa Giusti, leading to the proclamation of the on November 12, 1918, which initially sought union with . The Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye, signed September 10, 1919, formalized Austria's independence, imposed territorial losses (including to and to ), prohibited with , limited the army to 30,000 men, and required reparations, exacerbating economic hardship and fostering resentment toward the Versailles system. The First Austrian Republic (1918–1938) faced chronic instability from hyperinflation, unemployment, and ideological clashes between Social Democrats and the Christian Social Party, culminating in paramilitary violence such as the in , where clashes killed over 80 and injured hundreds. , assuming power in 1932, suspended parliament in March 1933 amid a budget crisis, establishing an authoritarian clerical-fascist regime known as Austrofascism, which banned the Communist and Nazi parties, dissolved the Social Democratic Party after suppressing worker uprisings, and aligned with Mussolini's against Nazi influence. Dollfuss was assassinated in a failed Nazi putsch on July 25, 1934; his successor, , maintained the Ständestaat (corporate state) until attempting a plebiscite on Austrian independence in March 1938, which prompted Hitler to demand his resignation. The occurred on March 12, 1938, when German troops crossed the border unopposed after Schuschnigg's capitulation, greeted by widespread Austrian enthusiasm including mass rallies in where hundreds of thousands cheered Hitler. A Nazi-orchestrated plebiscite on April 10, 1938, reported 99.7% approval for unification, though under coercion and without opposition options; contemporary accounts and reports indicate substantial pre-existing pan-German sentiment, economic desperation, and Nazi sympathy among Austrians, with support estimated at majority levels in many regions despite suppression of dissent. was reorganized as the Ostmark province of the Third Reich, with Austrian Nazis like assuming key roles in administration and persecution, including the immediate arrest of 76,000 and political opponents. During , Austria's integration into saw approximately 800,000 Austrians conscripted into the and 150,000 volunteer for the , an overrepresentation relative to population share (about 8.5% of Greater German Reich's inhabitants), with Austrians comprising up to 14% of SS membership and prominent in units involved in Eastern Front atrocities. While a small existed—estimated at 100,000 participants, leading to thousands executed—overall compliance and collaboration were high, including in where Austrian officials directed deportations from , resulting in over 65,000 Austrian murdered. Postwar narratives emphasizing Austria as Hitler's "first victim" overlooked this agency, as evidenced by incomplete and reintegration of former Nazis into society.

Post-1945 Reconstruction and Modern Republic

Following the defeat of in 1945, Austria was partitioned into four occupation zones administered by the , , , and , with similarly divided into sectors, mirroring the Allied control over but on a smaller scale. The country faced severe economic devastation, including destroyed infrastructure, hyperinflation, and food shortages, necessitating international aid such as UNRRA shipments that provided over 1.5 million tons of supplies by 1947 to avert . efforts were implemented under Allied supervision, prosecuting around 140,000 individuals through people's courts by 1948, though processes were inconsistent, particularly in the Soviet zone, where many former Nazis were reintegrated for political expediency. The Moscow Declaration of 1943, which labeled Austria as the "first victim" of Nazi aggression, facilitated a postwar narrative emphasizing external imposition over domestic enthusiasm for the 1938 , despite evidence that over 99% of Austrians voted in favor in a plebiscite and significant participation in Nazi administration and , with Austrians comprising about 8% of SS membership disproportionate to population. This victim thesis, endorsed by figures like in provisional government formation on April 27, 1945, aided negotiations but obscured Austrian agency, with only partial reckoning until the 1980s Waldheim controversy prompted constitutional acknowledgment of co-responsibility in 1991. Sovereignty was restored via the signed on May 15, 1955, in by the Allied powers and Austria, mandating troop withdrawals completed by October 25, 1955, and prohibiting future unification with while recognizing pre-1938 borders. In response, the National Council enacted a constitutional neutrality on October 26, 1955, barring military alliances and foreign bases, a status that enabled membership and positioned Austria as a mediator in diplomacy, such as hosting talks for the 1975 . Economic reconstruction accelerated post-independence, achieving annual GDP growth averaging 5% from 1955 to 1965 through export-led industrialization, expansion, and hydroelectric investments, transforming Austria from a war-ravaged with 1.5 million refugees to one with by 1960 and per capita income rising from $3,600 in 1955 to $12,000 by 1973 in constant dollars. This "Austrian economic miracle," paralleling West Germany's but aided by remnants and Soviet oil-for-goods deals until 1959, fostered social partnership between labor, business, and government, embedding in policy-making. The Second Republic stabilized under the People's Party-ÖVP and Social Democrats-SPÖ grand coalitions until 1966, with chancellors like overseeing infrastructure booms, including the Westautobahn completion. Neutrality constrained defense spending to 0.7-1% of GDP, emphasizing , while association began with the 1960 European Free Trade Association entry and culminated in full membership on January 1, 1995, alongside integration by 1997, without abandoning perpetual neutrality as interpreted compatible with common . In the modern era, Austria navigated globalization with sustained prosperity, exporting machinery and chemicals to generate a 2019 trade surplus of €11.5 billion, though immigration from EU expansion and the 2015 migrant crisis raised integration debates, with non-EU nationals comprising 10% of the 8.9 million population by 2023. Political shifts included the rise of the Freedom Party-FPÖ in the 1999 coalition under Wolfgang Schüssel, reflecting discontent with consensus politics, and recent ÖVP-Green governments under Sebastian Kurz (2017-2021) emphasizing fiscal conservatism amid eurozone stability. Historical reflection advanced with laws mandating Holocaust education and reparations exceeding €1 billion to survivors, solidifying Austrian identity as distinct from German while confronting imperial and Nazi legacies empirically.

Demographics and Genetics

Austria's population stood at approximately 9.2 million people as of the beginning of 2025, reflecting a growth of 38,500 individuals or 0.4% from the prior year. This modest increase occurred despite a negative natural , with deaths exceeding births; the reached a record low of 1.31 children per woman in 2024, down from 1.32 the previous year and far below the 2.1 replacement level required for generational stability without . Births per 1,000 hovered around 8.5 in recent years, while deaths per 1,000 were approximately 9.8, underscoring an aging demographic structure where over 19% of residents were aged 65 or older by 2024. Net migration has been the sole driver of since the early , contributing nearly all of the 557,500 increase between 2011 and 2021, with inflows from EU states, the Western , and beyond offsetting low native . In 2024, migration accounted for the entirety of the annual gain, amid a of about 3.5 per 1,000 . Historical trends show acceleration post-2015 due to asylum seekers from and , alongside steady labor migration, though growth slowed in 2023-2024 compared to peak years like 2022 when it exceeded 1%. Projections indicate continued reliance on to sustain numbers, with the forecasted to reach 9.3 million by 2030 under baseline scenarios assuming moderate and migration persistence. Ethnic composition remains predominantly Austro-Germanic, with ethnic Austrians—defined as indigenous German-speaking groups of Bavarian and Alemannic descent—estimated at 80.8% of the as of 2018. avoid self-reported , instead tracking and birthplace: foreign citizens comprised 20.2% or 1.855 million people in January 2025, up from 19% a decade prior, with the foreign-born share at 22.7%. The largest non-Austrian groups include (2.6%), Bosnians and Herzegovinians (1.9%), Turks (1.8%), Serbs (1.6%), and (1.3%), reflecting 1960s-1970s guest worker recruitment from and , EU expansions, and post-1990s Balkan conflicts. People with a migration background—defined as those born abroad or with at least one foreign-born parent—rose to 26.7% or 2.4 million by 2023, concentrated in urban areas like where non-Austrians exceed 40% of residents. This shift has diluted the ethnic Austrian majority over decades, driven by family reunifications, asylum policies, and economic pulls, though rates remain selective, with only about 20,000-30,000 annual grants emphasizing integration criteria like . Indigenous minorities, such as (0.3%) and Croats (0.1%) in border regions, have declined proportionally due to assimilation and outmigration.

Genetic Ancestry and Anthropological Traits

The genetic ancestry of Austrians reflects a predominantly Central European profile, characterized by autosomal admixture from three primary prehistoric components: Western Hunter-Gatherers (contributing to northern European affinity), (linked to migrations from ), and Yamnaya steppe pastoralists (associated with Indo-European expansions). This composition aligns closely with neighboring populations in and , with principal component analyses placing Austrians in a cluster intermediate between Western and Eastern European groups, indicating limited but detectable eastern influences from Slavic migrations during the early medieval period. Population genetic structure in the Alpine region, including , has exhibited stability since the (circa 800 BCE), with geographic continuity in ancestry proportions despite documented high individual mobility—evidenced by 7-11% of ancient genomes showing non-local admixtures during Roman imperial and phases (1-700 CE). from sites like reveals occasional outliers, such as one Iron Age-to-medieval individual with partial North African ancestry (approximately 20-30% modeled as Tunisian-like), though such cases represent exceptions rather than population-wide shifts. Modern Austrians share 2-12 genetic common ancestors from the last 1,500 years with individuals from adjacent regions, underscoring recent and limited large-scale replacement. Y-chromosome haplogroup distributions further highlight Germanic and pre-Indo-European substrates: R1b subclades (e.g., R1b-U106 and R1b-P312), linked to steppe influxes, predominate at frequencies of 30-40% in regional samples, while I (I1 and I2) accounts for 15-20%, reflecting European lineages. Eastern subclades like R1a-M458 (Slavic-associated) appear at 5-10%, higher in and due to medieval Slavic settlements. In Tyrol, G2a-P15, tied to farmer expansions, reaches 11.3% among 2,379 males, with subclade G2a-L91 suggesting local persistence from Cardial Pottery culture migrants. E-V13, originating from Balkan dispersals, occurs at 10-15%, consistent with Roman-era . Anthropometric traits among Austrians conform to North-Central European norms, with measured average statures for young adults (born post-1980) at approximately 179 cm for males and 166 cm for females, reflecting secular increases of 8-10 cm over the driven by improved and . Regional variations persist, with rural western cohorts (e.g., Tyrol) averaging 1-2 cm taller than urban eastern groups, attributable to historical stratification and . Body mass indices hover around 25-26 kg/m² for adults, with mesomorphic builds prevalent—moderate ( 80-82), fair pigmentation (high frequencies of SLC24A5-derived alleles), and eye colors skewed toward blue/green (45-55%) per pigmentation genetics studies. These traits correlate with the aforementioned ancestry components, where admixture enhances height and depigmentation genes from WHG/ sources predominate.

Immigration Patterns and Cultural Shifts

In the post-World War II era, Austria initiated large-scale labor recruitment programs, primarily targeting guest workers () from , (including modern-day , Bosnia, and ), and to a lesser extent and , to address labor shortages in industries like and . Between 1962 and 1973, over 250,000 such workers arrived, with Turks forming the largest contingent at approximately 120,000 by the early 1970s, many of whom later brought families under policies despite the official end to recruitment in 1973. This established enduring communities, particularly in urban centers like and , where Turkish-Austrians now number around 120,000 citizens and residents. Subsequent waves included refugees and migrants from the during the of the 1990s, with over 100,000 arrivals from Bosnia, , and by 1995, followed by increased labor mobility after EU enlargements in 2004 and 2007, drawing workers from , , and other Eastern European states. The 2015-2016 European marked a peak, with Austria receiving over 120,000 asylum applications in 2015 alone, predominantly from (about 40,000 approvals), , and , straining reception systems and leading to temporary border controls. More recently, the 2022 prompted an influx of around 80,000 Ukrainian refugees by 2023, granted temporary protection, alongside steady EU intra-migration. In 2024, net stood at approximately 50,000, with total immigrants numbering 178,574 amid a foreign-born of about 2.02 million (22% of total). By 2024, persons with a migration background—defined as those born abroad or with at least one foreign-born parent—comprised 2.51 million individuals, or 27.8% of Austria's 9.1 million , up from 21.4% in 2015, with first-generation migrants at 1.87 million. Foreign nationals totaled 1.94 million (20.2%), dominated by citizens (: ~220,000; : ~100,000) but with significant non-EU groups including Turks (~150,000 residents/citizens), (~50,000), , and Serbs. Urban concentration is pronounced, with hosting 40.9% foreign-born residents in 2025. These patterns have induced measurable cultural shifts, including a rise in religious pluralism: Muslims, largely from Turkish, Bosnian, and recent Middle Eastern cohorts, grew from under 5% of the population in 2001 to an estimated 8-10% by 2023, fostering Islamic institutions and dietary accommodations in public spaces. Integration challenges persist, particularly for non-EU migrants, with empirical data showing higher unemployment rates (e.g., 15-20% for Syrians vs. 5% national average in 2023) and lower educational attainment, correlating with segregated enclaves in Vienna's outer districts where parallel cultural norms—such as conservative gender roles among some Turkish and Afghan communities—contrast with Austria's secular, individualistic values. Longitudinal studies indicate slower acculturation for second-generation non-Western migrants, with persistent gaps in language proficiency and civic participation, contributing to social tensions evidenced by the electoral success of parties advocating stricter immigration controls, such as the Freedom Party (FPÖ), which garnered 26% in 2024 elections amid public concerns over cultural cohesion. Overall, while EU migrants integrate more seamlessly due to shared cultural and linguistic affinities, mass non-EU inflows have accelerated multiculturalism but also strained social trust, with surveys reporting native concerns over value divergence in areas like family structures and secularism.

Language and Dialects

Standard German and Austro-Bavarian Variants

Austrian Standard German, the codified form used in education, administration, and broadcasting, adheres to the norms outlined in the Österreichisches Wörterbuch, which prescribes vocabulary, orthography, and grammar tailored to Austrian usage. This variant diverges from Standard German in Germany through lexical preferences—such as Fisolen for green beans (versus Grüne Bohnen), Topfen for quark (versus Quark), and Kren for horseradish (versus Meerrettich)—along with minor grammatical tendencies like more frequent use of the perfect tense over the preterite in spoken contexts. Phonologically, it features a softer, more melodic intonation with rounded vowels (e.g., /o/ in Haus pronounced closer to [hɔʊs]) and occasional Austro-Bavarian influences in informal registers, though mutual intelligibility with German Standard German remains high at over 95% for speakers. In contrast, Austro-Bavarian dialects, spoken informally by the majority of Austria's population, form a continuum of varieties predominant east of the region, excluding Vorarlberg's Alemannic dialects. These include Northern Bavarian (e.g., in Upper and ), Central Bavarian (e.g., Viennese and Styrian), and (e.g., Tyrolean and Carinthian) subgroups, characterized by shared traits such as periphrastic verb forms (e.g., i hob's g'sogt for "I said it"), extensive diminutives via -l suffixes (e.g., Hundl for "little dog"), and phonological reductions like /pf/ to /b/ (e.g., Pfirsich as [ˈbɪəʃɪç]). Approximately 7 million Austrians use these dialects in daily interactions, particularly in rural areas and family settings, where they outpace by a factor of 2:1 in oral usage. The interplay between variants reflects Austria's under the 1920 Federal Constitution (Article 8), which designates German as the without specifying dialects, leading to : Standard German dominates written and formal spheres, while Austro-Bavarian prevails in social cohesion and cultural expression, such as folk songs and theater. Dialect vitality remains strong, with surveys indicating 60-70% of speakers under 30 actively using regional forms at home, though urbanization and media exposure promote code-switching to Standard German. This bilingual proficiency fosters regional identity, as Austro-Bavarian's syntactic flexibility (e.g., verb-second deviations) and vocabulary enrich informal discourse but pose comprehension challenges for non-speakers from .

Minority Languages and Linguistic Policy

Austria's Federal Constitution designates German as the official language while safeguarding rights for linguistic minorities through federal law. Article 8(1) explicitly states that German prevails "without prejudice to the rights provided by Federal law for linguistic minorities," embedding protections for autochthonous groups in the legal framework. The 1955 Austrian State Treaty, which restored sovereignty post-World War II, further mandates official use of Slovene and Croatian (Burgenland variants) in specified administrative and judicial districts of Carinthia and Burgenland, alongside German. Six ethnic groups are officially recognized as national minorities under the 1976 Ethnic Groups Act (Volksgruppenrechtgesetz): Croats (primarily ), , , , , and Roma, entitling them to cultural , advisory councils, and state funding for preservation efforts. These groups represent a small fraction of the population; the last comprehensive language in recorded approximately 19,400 speakers (concentrated in ), 12,000–18,000 Slovene speakers (mainly in southern and ), and 25,900 Hungarian speakers (with clusters in and ). Czech, Slovak, and Roma communities number in the low thousands each, often lacking contiguous settlement areas, which complicates policy implementation. No subsequent national has queried colloquial languages, reflecting sensitivities over self-identification and potential underreporting due to assimilation pressures. Linguistic policy emphasizes bilingualism in minority-stronghold regions, including mandatory bilingual signage (e.g., toponyms in German and Slovene/Croatian) where minorities exceed 25% of the population in a , as required by the State Treaty and European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages (ratified by in 2001). In , federal and provincial laws provide for bilingual kindergartens, primary schools, and supplementary instruction in minority languages, funded by the state; for instance, operates around 50 Slovene-medium classes serving about 1,000 pupils annually. Administrative proceedings and court documents must accommodate minority languages "on demand" per rulings, though practical uptake remains limited outside core areas due to insufficient demand thresholds and resource constraints. Despite these measures, minority languages face decline from urbanization, intermarriage, and the dominance of in media and , with speaker numbers halving in some groups since the mid-20th century. Advocacy bodies, such as the Consultative Council for Ethnic Groups, monitor compliance, but tensions persist—particularly in , where referenda in the 1970s rejected expanded bilingual signage, citing costs and majority preferences. Austria's approach prioritizes integration via German proficiency while granting symbolic and cultural concessions, aligning with broader European norms but yielding uneven vitality for autochthonous tongues amid immigration-driven linguistic diversity elsewhere.

Religion and Worldview

Historical Christianity and Secularization

reached the territories of modern during the Roman period, with the earliest evidence dating to approximately 174 AD and becoming widespread by the AD. By the , following the of Germanic tribes, Catholicism established dominance under the , where Austrian lands served as a core Catholic stronghold. The Habsburg dynasty, ruling from 1273 to 1918, actively promoted Catholicism as a unifying force, positioning as a defender against Ottoman incursions and internal Protestant challenges. The Protestant Reformation in the initially advanced rapidly in , particularly among the nobility who adopted , leading to widespread conversions by the mid-1500s. However, Habsburg emperors initiated a rigorous from the late 16th century, employing the and state coercion to re-Catholicize the population, resulting in the suppression of and the expulsion or conversion of dissenters by the early . This era solidified Catholicism's institutional control, with the Church influencing , , and social norms until the late 18th century. Enlightenment reforms under Emperor Joseph II (r. 1780–1790) introduced , which curtailed papal authority, dissolved contemplative monasteries, and emphasized state oversight of the Church to align religion with rational governance, marking an early step toward partial while preserving Catholic monopoly. Throughout the , Catholicism remained integral to Austrian identity amid the multi-ethnic Habsburg Empire, but industrialization and liberal movements began eroding clerical influence. In the , intensified, driven by losses, the 1918 republic's , and post-1945 modernization including expanded welfare systems that diminished the Church's social role. Roman Catholic affiliation, which stood at approximately 92% in 1900, declined to 74% by 2001 and further to 55.2% in the 2021 census, with 22.4% of the unaffiliated. stabilized at around 3.8%, while formal exits from the peaked in the 2010s—exceeding 90,000 annually in 2022—before slightly declining to 71,531 in 2024, often linked to opposition to church taxes or scandals. remains low, with weekly Mass participation under 10% nationally and even lower in urban areas like , reflecting a shift toward cultural rather than devout practice. Projections indicate Catholics may fall below 50% by 2051, amid rising unaffiliated and Muslim shares due to . Despite this, residual influence Austrian , though empirical data show causal links between higher education, , and rates.

Role in Austrian Conservatism and Social Values

Austrian conservatism has historically been intertwined with , emphasizing , , and the protection of traditional family structures as bulwarks against liberal and state overreach. Emerging in the late through the led by figures like Karl von Vogelsang and , this ideology prioritized moral order, vocational estates, and opposition to unchecked and , drawing directly from papal encyclicals such as (1891). These principles fostered policies like sex-specific labor protections and family-oriented welfare, reflecting a causal link between religious doctrine and resistance to secularization's erosion of communal bonds. In the , the (ÖVP), successor to the Christian Social Party, institutionalized these values within a democratic framework, advocating for Christian democratic that integrates faith-based into on , , and . The ÖVP's platform has consistently upheld the as society's foundational unit, influencing legislation such as family allowances and restrictions on liberalization until the , grounded in the view that stable households correlate with societal cohesion and low crime rates. Even amid post-1945 —evidenced by dropping from over 50% weekly in the to around 15% by 2020—conservative social attitudes persist, with surveys showing majority opposition to redefining beyond heterosexual unions and support for parental in schooling. Contemporary Austrian social values, shaped by this conservative legacy, exhibit resilience against progressive shifts, particularly in rural and Catholic strongholds like Tyrol and , where empirical indicate higher fertility intentions tied to traditional pronatalist norms despite overall low birth rates of 1.4 children per in 2023. On abortion, while legally permitted up to 16 weeks since 1975 with broad public acceptance (over 70% favoring legality in most cases per 2024 European polls), conservative factions within the ÖVP and allied groups advocate for counseling mandates and alternatives, citing from post-abortion regret studies affecting 10-20% of . This reflects a pragmatic conservatism: adapting to demographic realities like aging populations (median age 44.5 in 2023) while prioritizing empirical family support over ideological purity, as seen in ÖVP-backed expansions of childcare subsidies without endorsing non-traditional models. The persistence of these values amid secular trends underscores a cultural rooted in Austria's Habsburg-era Catholic monopoly, where served as a counterweight to Enlightenment , fostering localized, community-driven over abstract individualism. Unlike more ideologically rigid European counterparts, Austrian pragmatically allies with secular parties on while defending social taboos, as evidenced by ÖVP resistance to expansive policies in negotiations post-2019 elections. This approach, informed by historical , maintains electoral viability—ÖVP securing 26% in 2024—by appealing to voters valuing empirical stability over rapid cultural change.

Culture and Traditions

Arts, Music, and Literature

Austria has profoundly influenced Western , with serving as a preeminent hub from the late 18th to early 20th centuries due to imperial patronage under the Habsburgs, which attracted composers and fostered innovations in form and . (1732–1809), born in Rohrau, developed the and genres, composing 104 symphonies and influencing the Classical style. (1756–1791), born in , produced over 600 works including 41 symphonies, 23 piano concertos, and operas like (1786), blending Italian opera with German symphonic rigor. (1797–1828), a Viennese native, composed over 600 lieder, nine symphonies, and , pioneering Romantic song cycles such as (1823). The 19th century saw the rise of the through ; (1825–1899), born in , created enduring works like (1866), which popularized in concert halls. (1824–1896), from Ansfelden, composed monumental symphonies emphasizing brass and organ-like textures, reflecting Catholic liturgical influences. (1860–1911), raised in Austrian , bridged and with symphonies incorporating folk elements and philosophical depth, such as his Symphony No. 2 (1894). (1874–1951), born in , invented in works like (1912), revolutionizing atonal composition. In , the movement, founded in 1897 by artists rejecting academic conservatism, emphasized ornamental symbolism and psychological introspection. (1862–1918), a Viennese leader, painted gold-leaf portraits like The Kiss (1907–1908), blending Byzantine influences with eroticism. (1890–1918), born in Tulln, produced raw drawings and self-portraits exploring human distortion and mortality, as in Self-Portrait with Physalis (1912). (1886–1980), from Pöchlarn, advanced Austrian with turbulent portraits like Portrait of Hans Tietze and Erica Tietze-Conrat (1909), capturing emotional intensity. Austrian literature often grapples with identity, decay, and bureaucracy, particularly in the fin-de-siècle and post-war eras. (1880–1942), born in Klagenfurt, dissected Habsburg society's fragmentation in (1930–1943), an unfinished modernist novel spanning thousands of pages. (1931–1989), from but raised in , critiqued provincialism and mental illness in prose like Correction (1975), employing repetitive, rant-like structures. (born 1942 in Griffen), awarded the 2019 , explored language's limits in The Goalie's Anxiety at the Penalty Kick (1970), influencing minimalist and experimental forms. (born 1946 in ), Nobel laureate in 2004, addressed patriarchal violence in The Piano Teacher (1983), drawing from feminist critiques amid 's conservative undercurrents.

Cuisine and Folk Customs

Austrian cuisine emphasizes hearty, regionally sourced ingredients shaped by the former Austro-Hungarian Empire's multicultural exchanges, with staples including boiled beef (), a dish favored by Emperor Franz Joseph I in the for its simplicity and tenderness achieved through slow simmering. , a breaded and fried , traces its technique to Italian alla milanese introduced via Habsburg connections, though it became codified in Austrian culinary identity by the . , a paprika-seasoned , derives from Hungarian herdsmen's traditions adapted in during the empire's era. Desserts like Apfelstrudel, layered pastry filled with apples and raisins, evolved from Ottoman influences via Viennese bakers in the 17th century, while —a shredded named after Emperor Franz Joseph—highlights rustic shredding and serving with fruit compote. Preparation methods prioritize boiling, roasting, and stewing to utilize alpine dairy, game, and grains, reflecting pre-industrial agrarian practices. Viennese coffee house culture, designated intangible cultural heritage in 2011, originated post-1683 Ottoman siege with imported beans, evolving into social hubs by the featuring marble tables, newspapers, and extended stays for intellectual discourse. These establishments serve over 20 varieties of , such as Melange ( with steamed milk), alongside pastries, fostering a of unhurried consumption that persists despite modern specialty trends. Folk customs in Austria center on alpine communal rituals, including the , an autumn cattle descent from pastures where animals are decorated with flowers and bells to celebrate successful herding seasons dating to medieval practices. Traditional attire like —leather breeches originally peasant workwear from the for durability in farming—and , a derived from 19th-century rural maids' garments, symbolize regional pride and are worn during festivals to evoke historical agrarian life. Kirtag village church festivals, held annually since the , feature folk dances, brass bands, and markets to honor patron saints and reinforce community ties. bonfires, rooted in pre-Christian pagan rites adapted to , involve communal pyres lit to ward off winter and signify renewal, with over 10,000 such fires documented in rural areas each spring. Christmas markets, originating in the 18th century, display handmade crafts and Glühwein, drawing millions annually to preserve Advent customs amid secularization. These practices underscore Austrians' attachment to localized, seasonal observances that blend with pre-industrial folk elements.

Festivals and Social Norms

Austrians observe a range of traditional festivals rooted in Catholic heritage and Alpine folk customs, often emphasizing community participation and seasonal cycles. Fasching, the pre-Lenten carnival season culminating on (typically February or early March), involves elaborate parades, masked balls, and satirical performances, with regional variations such as the in featuring wooden masks and devil figures dating back to medieval pagan influences adapted into . The , established in 1920 and held annually from late July to August, showcases opera, theater, and performances in historic venues, attracting over 250,000 visitors in 2023 and underscoring 's enduring tradition. Autumn cattle drives in Tyrol and regions, occurring from September to October, mark the return of livestock from mountain pastures with decorated animals, brass bands, and communal feasts, preserving practices central to rural economies since the . markets, or Advent markets, open in major cities like and from late November through December 24, featuring , handicrafts, and nativity scenes, with 's Christkindlmarkt drawing approximately 3 million visitors annually as of 2022 data. Social norms in Austria prioritize formality, punctuality, and interpersonal , reflecting a cultural emphasis on order and . is strictly observed, with lateness to social or professional engagements viewed as disrespectful; arrivals more than five minutes late without prior notice can strain relations. Greetings involve a firm while maintaining , addressing others by title and (e.g., Herr Doktor) until invited to use first names, and men typically wait for women to extend hands first in mixed groups. Conversations remain polite and indirect to avoid confrontation, with Austrians initially reserved toward strangers but warming through shared interests like regional traditions or outdoor pursuits. and ties influence norms, as seen in the custom of — a sense of cozy belonging—manifested in local wine taverns where hosts offer hospitality, though excessive drinking is tempered by moderation. Public behavior stresses discretion, with loudness or overt displays of affection discouraged, aligning with a broader valuation of and in social interactions.

Intellectual and Economic Contributions

Austrian School of Economics and Philosophy

The emerged in the late 19th century as a distinct approach emphasizing individual action, subjective valuation, and market processes over aggregate modeling or . , born in 1840 and died in 1921, is recognized as its founder through his 1871 publication Principles of Economics, which introduced the theory independently of contemporaneous works by and , rejecting the prevalent in . Menger's framework posited that economic value derives subjectively from individual preferences and marginal increments of satisfaction, rather than intrinsic properties or costs of production, laying the groundwork for a praxeological method focused on purposeful . This school contrasted sharply with the German Historical School's , prioritizing from axiomatic truths about over empirical aggregation. Central to the Austrian methodology is methodological individualism, the principle that social phenomena arise from individual choices and cannot be reduced to collective entities without tracing back to personal valuations and plans. Ludwig von Mises, born in 1881 and died in 1973, formalized this in his development of praxeology—the study of human action as an a priori science—arguing that economic laws are derived logically from the self-evident fact of purposeful behavior, rendering positivist empiricism inadequate for deriving universal principles. Mises critiqued logical positivism and behaviorism for conflating verifiable predictions with the apodictic certainty of deductive categories, insisting that economics deals with means-ends frameworks immune to falsification by historical data alone. Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk extended these ideas with capital theory, emphasizing time preference in production structures, while Friedrich Hayek, who received the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences in 1974, elaborated on spontaneous order, wherein complex institutions like money and law evolve through decentralized trial-and-error rather than deliberate design. Hayek warned that central planning disrupts this order by concentrating knowledge that is inherently dispersed among individuals. A hallmark contribution is the Austrian Business Cycle Theory (ABCT), which attributes booms and busts to central bank-induced credit expansion that lowers interest rates below natural levels, distorting intertemporal coordination and leading to malinvestment in longer production processes unsustainable without genuine savings. Originating with Mises and refined by Hayek, ABCT posits that recessions serve as corrective mechanisms to liquidate errors, challenging Keynesian stabilization policies as prolonging distortions. The school's philosophical underpinnings also fueled its economic calculation argument, advanced by Mises in 1920, which demonstrated socialism's impossibility due to the absence of market prices for rational resource allocation, influencing critiques of planned economies and bolstering classical liberal and libertarian thought. Despite mainstream economics' frequent dismissal of its anti-empiricist stance as unscientific, Austrian insights have informed analyses of financial crises, such as the 2008 downturn, where artificially low rates preceded asset bubbles.

Scientific and Cultural Achievements

Austrians have contributed prominently to quantum physics, with developing the in 1926, providing a foundational framework for wave mechanics and quantum theory, earning him the 1933 . Wolfgang formulated the exclusion principle in 1925, explaining atomic structure and electron behavior, which garnered the 1945 . Victor Franz Hess discovered cosmic rays in 1912 through balloon experiments, contributing to understanding high-energy particles and receiving the 1936 . In chemistry, Fritz Pregl pioneered microanalysis techniques in the 1910s, enabling precise determination of structures with minimal samples, for which he was awarded the 1923 . Richard Kuhn elucidated the structure of and vitamins in the 1930s, earning the 1938 despite Nazi-era restrictions on acceptance. More recently, Anton Zeilinger advanced and teleportation experiments from the 1990s onward, contributing to and receiving the 2022 . Medical breakthroughs include Karl Landsteiner's identification of ABO blood groups in 1900–1901, revolutionizing transfusions and immunology, leading to the 1930 in Physiology or Medicine. Otto Loewi demonstrated chemical in 1921 via frog heart experiments, establishing acetylcholine's role and sharing the 1936 in Physiology or Medicine. Lise Meitner, though not a Nobel recipient, co-theorized in 1938–1939, explaining atom splitting and enabling applications, despite initial credit attribution biases. Culturally, fostered the era, with composing over 600 works, including and operas like (1791), influencing global musical forms through structural innovation and emotional depth. , active 1750s–1800s, developed the and genres, composing 104 that standardized orchestral writing. produced over 1,500 compositions by age 31 in 1828, pioneering Romantic lieder and , bridging Classical and Romantic styles. The Strauss family, particularly Johann Strauss II (1825–1899), popularized the waltz with pieces like The Blue Danube (1866), embedding Viennese dance music in international culture and performing for global audiences. In visual arts, Gustav Klimt's The Kiss (1907–1908) exemplified Secessionist symbolism, challenging academic norms and impacting modernist aesthetics. Literature saw explore psychological realism in novellas like Frau Berta Garlan (1900), influencing 20th-century drama on human motivations. These outputs, concentrated in Vienna's imperial patronage era (18th–19th centuries), underscore Austria's role in elevating music and arts as vehicles for formal over ideological conformity.

Politics and Governance

Historical Conservatism and Authoritarianism

Austrian conservatism during the Habsburg era emphasized monarchical authority, Catholic social doctrine, and to manage the empire's multi-ethnic composition, resisting liberal demands for centralized and . Conservatives, often aligned with the and clergy, supported policies that preserved traditional hierarchies and agrarian interests against urban industrialization and nationalist fragmentation. This stance contributed to the empire's stability until the 1848 revolutions, after which conservative forces under figures like Felix zu Schwarzenberg restored absolutist rule until the 1860s compromises. The dissolution of the in 1918 left as a fragile amid economic turmoil and ideological polarization between socialists, pan-German nationalists, and clerical conservatives. Political violence escalated, including paramilitary clashes, prompting conservative leaders to view parliamentary democracy as untenable for national survival. By 1932, Chancellor , representing the Christian Social Party, exploited a parliamentary failure on to govern by emergency decree, suspending democratic institutions to counter both Nazi infiltration and socialist militancy. Dollfuss's regime culminated in the February 1934 civil war, where government forces crushed socialist uprisings in and other industrial areas, resulting in over 1,000 deaths and the banning of the Social Democratic Party on February 12. On May 1, 1934, a new constitution established the as a corporatist authoritarian system, organizing society into guilds under state oversight, drawing from Catholic encyclicals like (1931) and Italian corporatism but rejecting totalitarian racial ideology or mass mobilization. This "Austrofascism," as termed by contemporaries and historians, prioritized clerical conservatism and independence from , with Dollfuss declaring Austria a "better " rooted in . Following Dollfuss's by Austrian Nazis on July 25, 1934, assumed the chancellorship, maintaining the authoritarian framework through the single-party Fatherland Front, which enforced loyalty oaths and suppressed opposition while promoting conservative patriotism. Schuschnigg's July 1936 with the Vatican reinforced Catholic influence in education and family policy, countering . The regime's resistance to persisted until March 1938, when German pressure and internal Nazi subversion forced capitulation, ending this phase of conservative authoritarianism.

Post-War Democracy and Party System

Following the Allied liberation of Austria in April 1945, the major political parties— (SPÖ), (ÖVP, successor to the Christian Socialists), and (KPÖ)—established a under , marking the inception of the Second Republic's democratic framework. This structure emphasized in the National Council (Nationalrat), fostering a while enabling grand coalitions to ensure governance stability amid post-war reconstruction and occupation by the four Allied powers. The inaugural parliamentary elections on 25 November 1945 resulted in the SPÖ securing 44.6% of the vote and the ÖVP 49.8%, with the KPÖ at 5.4%, underscoring the immediate dominance of the two largest camps and their commitment to consensual politics over the interwar era's polarization. The , signed on 15 May 1955 by Austria, the , , , and , terminated the occupation and restored full sovereignty, constitutionally entrenching democratic institutions and perpetual neutrality via a federal adopted on 26 October 1955. This paved the way for uninterrupted parliamentary , characterized by the Proporz system—a consociational where SPÖ and ÖVP allocated positions, subsidies, and policy influence proportionally to their electoral strength, minimizing conflict but entrenching party patronage. Grand coalitions between SPÖ and ÖVP governed continuously from 1945 to 1966, achieving economic "social partnership" through tripartite negotiations involving labor, business, and government, which sustained high party membership rates—peaking at around 30% of the adult population in the —and low electoral volatility. Post-1966, the party system saw brief single-party minorities supported by the smaller Liberal Party (later evolving into the , FPÖ, founded in 1956 as a successor to the 1949 ), with ÖVP-led governments from 1966 to 1970 and SPÖ-led ones from 1970 to 1983, often reliant on proportional alliances. The FPÖ, initially liberal-nationalist, gained traction in the 1980s under Norbert Steger and later , capitalizing on voter disillusionment with the SPÖ-ÖVP duopoly's corporatist inertia and rising issues like , entering in 1983 with 5.0% of the vote. This period reflected the system's resilience in maintaining democratic continuity—evidenced by 13 National Council elections between 1945 and 1986 without major breakdowns—but also its vulnerabilities to fragmentation, as smaller parties challenged the established order without upending the proportional, consensus-oriented core. By prioritizing elite cooperation over adversarial competition, the framework averted the interwar republic's collapse into , though critics noted it stifled broader pluralism and accountability.

Recent Developments and Right-Wing Resurgence

In the September 29, 2024, legislative elections, the (FPÖ) secured 28.9% of the vote, winning 57 seats in the 183-seat National Council and achieving its strongest performance since its founding in , surpassing the (ÖVP) at 26.3% and the Social Democratic Party (SPÖ) at 20.8%. This outcome marked the first time a party outside the traditional ÖVP-SPÖ duopoly led national polls, driven by public frustration over record inflows—exceeding 100,000 asylum applications annually in recent years—rising energy costs, and stagnant wages amid 7-8% peaks in 2022-2023. The FPÖ's campaign emphasized border controls, repatriation of rejected asylum seekers, and opposition to EU-mandated migrant quotas, resonating in regions like and where non-EU migrant populations have grown to over 15% in some districts. Government formation proved contentious, with President initially tasking FPÖ leader on January 6, 2025, to explore coalitions after exploratory talks collapsed. However, the ÖVP, SPÖ, Greens, and NEOS pledged a "cordon sanitaire" against the FPÖ, citing its , past corruption scandals (including the 2019 involving former leader ), and historical origins tracing to pan-German nationalists post-World War II. By late February 2025, the ÖVP-SPÖ-NEOS triad finalized a coalition with 99 seats, adopting a platform incorporating FPÖ-like measures such as tightened asylum rules and fiscal , yet excluding the party from power. This exclusion, while defended as safeguarding institutional stability, has been lambasted by FPÖ adherents as a subversion of voter will, exacerbating perceptions of elite disconnect in a where trust in mainstream parties has eroded to below 30% in successive surveys. The FPÖ's momentum persisted into 2025, with a Market Institut poll in registering 38% support—its highest ever—amid ongoing economic stagnation (GDP growth at 0.7% for the year) and renewed migration pressures from conflicts in the and . Kickl's rhetoric, framing Austria's challenges as stemming from "uncontrolled " and Brussels overreach, has drawn international parallels to similar right-wing gains in and , though domestic critics, often from academia and legacy media, highlight risks of despite empirical links between high asylum grants and localized increases (e.g., Vienna's non-citizen conviction rates at 2.5 times the national average per 2023 interior ministry data). This polarization underscores a broader European trend where empirical voter priorities on and demographics challenge post-war consensus models, with Austria's proportional system amplifying protest votes absent majoritarian filters.

Controversies and Debates

WWII Complicity and Victimhood Narrative

The , the annexation of Austria by on March 12, 1938, was met with widespread enthusiasm among the Austrian population, evidenced by mass celebrations in and a subsequent plebiscite on April 10, 1938, where 99.75% of voters officially approved the union under Nazi-orchestrated conditions. This support reflected longstanding pan-German sentiments and economic grievances under the interwar Austrian regime, with Nazi sympathizers already comprising a significant underground movement; Austrian-born himself spearheaded the policy as a core ideological goal of unifying German-speaking peoples. Immediately following the annexation, Austrian faced pogroms incited by local Nazi activists, including the destruction of synagogues and the arrest of thousands, signaling active complicity rather than passive occupation. During , approximately 950,000 Austrians served in the and , a figure disproportionate to Austria's population share of about 8% within the post-Anschluss. Austrians were overrepresented in the Nazi apparatus, providing around 40% of concentration camp staff and 50% of personnel despite their minority demographic, as noted by Holocaust survivor and Nazi hunter ; prominent examples include SS leaders like and , both Austrian, who oversaw mass killings in camps such as Treblinka and Sobibor. Of Austria's pre-Anschluss Jewish population of roughly 200,000, over 65,000 were murdered in the , with local authorities and civilians facilitating deportations from starting in October 1941, often through denunciations and property seizures. These patterns indicate Austria functioned not as an occupied but as an integral, enthusiastic component of the Nazi war machine, contributing personnel and resources to the Eastern Front and genocide operations. Postwar, Austria cultivated a narrative portraying itself as the "first victim" of Nazi aggression, rooted in the Allied Moscow Declaration of November 1, 1943, which declared Austria the initial target of Hitler's expansionism and pledged its restoration as a sovereign state. This framing, expedient for Allied diplomacy to undermine German morale, enabled Austria to evade the collective guilt imposed on Germany; by 1945, Austrian leaders like Karl Renner invoked victimhood to justify reintegration of former Nazis into society via the Proporz system of proportional power-sharing between Social Democrats and People's Party, which sidelined denazification efforts and amnestied many perpetrators. The narrative persisted in official rhetoric, education, and memorials into the late 20th century, obscuring empirical evidence of voluntary participation and fostering a national identity detached from responsibility, unlike West Germany's Vergangenheitsbewältigung (coming to terms with the past). Challenges to this victimhood myth intensified in the , particularly during the Waldheim affair, when revelations of UN Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim's undisclosed service in the —linked to war crimes—exposed systemic Austrian reticence to confront Nazi legacies, prompting international scrutiny and domestic debates. Subsequent shifts included Chancellor Franz Vranitzky's 1991 Bundestag speech acknowledging Austrian "co-responsibility" for Nazi crimes, restitution laws for , and exhibitions like the 2001-2005 display highlighting Austrian soldiers' roles in atrocities. Nonetheless, surveys as recent as 2019 reveal persistent gaps, with only 55% of Austrians recognizing active collaboration in and significant underestimation of Nazi-era , underscoring how the victim narrative's inertial effects continue to complicate full historical reckoning. This duality—evident complicity juxtaposed against a strategically adopted victimhood—remains a core controversy in Austrian , with academic and efforts advocating empirical reevaluation over mythic exoneration.

Identity Conflicts: Pan-Germanism vs. Austrian Particularism

Pan-Germanism, advocating the cultural and political unification of all German-speaking peoples, emerged among Austrian Germans in the 19th century, fueled by the of liberation (1813–1815) and intensified after Austria's defeat in the of 1866, which excluded it from Otto von Bismarck's . Radical figures like promoted this ideology from the 1880s, blending it with and opposition to Habsburg multinationalism, viewing Austria as inherently German rather than a distinct entity. Following the collapse of in 1918, the provisional declared on November 12 its intention to unite with , reflecting widespread pan-German aspirations amid economic distress and territorial losses. However, Article 88 of the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye, signed September 10, 1919, explicitly forbade any political or economic union between Austria and to preserve the post-World War I balance of power. These sentiments persisted into the , contributing to the appeal of National Socialism and culminating in the of March 12, 1938, when annexed Austria in violation of the treaty; contemporary accounts and later analyses indicate substantial initial Austrian support for the move, driven by economic promises and shared ethnic identification. World War II shifted the dynamic toward Austrian particularism. The Allied Moscow Declaration of November 1, 1943, designated Austria as the "first free country to fall a victim to Hitlerite aggression," enabling postwar narratives that emphasized separation from German guilt and identity to legitimize . This victim thesis, while contested for downplaying Austrian complicity in , facilitated psychological and political demarcation from . The , signed May 15, 1955, by the Allied powers and Austria, restored sovereignty, prohibited any future union with , and mandated perpetual neutrality, constitutionally embedding particularist three months later via the Neutrality Act of October 26, 1955. Since 1945, empirical studies document a marked decline in pan-German self-identification and the ascendancy of a distinct Austrian national , shaped by Habsburg cultural legacies, Catholicism, and efforts distinct from Prussian-influenced German identity. By the late , had marginalized to fringe groups, with mainstream Austrians prioritizing national sovereignty amid ; residual tensions occasionally surface in debates over shared and history but lack broad political traction.

Immigration, Multiculturalism, and Sovereignty Challenges

Austria's immigration patterns began with the recruitment of guest workers in the post-World War II era to address labor shortages during economic reconstruction. Recruitment agreements were signed with in 1964 and in 1966, leading to inflows primarily from regions now encompassing , Bosnia-Herzegovina, and . By 1973, these groups constituted the majority of foreign workers, with 78.5% from Yugoslavia and 11.8% from , initially intended as temporary labor but resulting in permanent settlement and after the halted official recruitment. Subsequent waves included intra-EU migration following enlargements in 2004 and 2013, alongside asylum inflows peaking during the , when Austria received 88,000 asylum applications, the third-highest per capita in Europe, predominantly from , , and . This influx strained reception systems, with initial open-border policies under Chancellor giving way to tightened controls by late 2015. By 2024, Austria's population with a foreign background reached 2.509 million, or approximately 27% of the total, including 1.875 million first-generation migrants, up 2.5% from 2023; foreign-born residents comprised 22% nationally, rising to 40.9% in . Integration challenges have persisted, with migrants facing higher and rates compared to natives, exacerbated by barriers and skill mismatches. indicate immigrants are disproportionately represented as both perpetrators and victims of , with police data showing sustained overrepresentation in offenses like and ; for instance, foreign nationals were involved in a notable share of rising criminal incidents linked to recent migration cohorts. Cultural tensions have arisen from non-Western immigrant communities, particularly Muslim-majority groups, manifesting in issues like honor-based violence, parallel societal structures, and resistance to secular norms, prompting debates over failed and a shift toward mandatory integration courses emphasizing , values, and since the 2017 Integration Act. Sovereignty concerns stem from EU-wide migration policies, including mandatory relocation quotas and the 2024 Migration Pact, which Austria has opposed, arguing they undermine national and overburden welfare systems. The country's constitutional neutrality and federal structure amplify resistance to supranational impositions, as seen in unilateral border checks reintroduced in 2015 and expanded in 2025 via "Operation Fox," which accelerated deportations of rejected asylum seekers and irregular entrants. Political backlash fueled the (FPÖ)'s victory in the September 29, 2024, legislative elections, securing 28.8% of votes on a platform advocating asylum suspension, mass , and EU treaty renegotiation to prioritize . Despite remaining in opposition as of October 2025, FPÖ influence has hardened coalition policies, including welfare cuts for non-integrating migrants and rejection of EU resettlement until external borders are fortified. These developments reflect empirical pressures from demographic shifts and security costs, challenging 's post-war consensus on openness while highlighting causal links between unchecked inflows and eroded public trust in multicultural ideals.

References

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