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  1. The realm's official name was in German: Österreichisch-Ungarische Monarchie and in Hungarian: OsztrákMagyar Monarchia (English: Austro-Hungarian Monarchy), though in international relations AustriaHungary was used (German: Österreich-Ungarn; Hungarian: Ausztria-Magyarország).

  2. According to the census, 54.4% of the inhabitants of Hungary were recorded to speak Hungarian as their native language. This number included the Jewish ethnic group (around 5% of the population [11] ) who were overwhelmingly Hungarian-speaking (the Jews tending to declare German as mother tongue due to the immigration of Jews of ...

  3. 22 de jul. de 2019 · After the Compromise of 1867, the Austrian legal framework guaranteed equality to these nations, while in Hungary, which defined itself as a nation-state, laws protected the linguistic rights of non-Hungarian nationalities.

  4. Austria. Hungary. Austria-Hungary, the Habsburg empire from the constitutional Compromise (Ausgleich) of 1867 between Austria and Hungary until the empire’s collapse in 1918. A brief treatment of the history of Austria-Hungary follows.

  5. General Austrian citizenship (allgemeines österreichisches Staatsbürgerrecht) for all Cisleithanian Crown lands represented in the Imperial Council was introduced in 1867, with a separate Hungarian citizenship recognized for the lands of the Hungarian Crown.

  6. the Austrian part of the Empire while the Slovaks, Ruthenians, Ru. manians of Transylvania and a majority of the Croats found themselves in the Hungarian part where the Magyars ruled. The more culturally developed nationalities were found in the Austrian part and were well treated.

  7. In Hungary the Magyars were the dominant nation, although, as in the Austrian half of the empire, Hungary was a multi-ethnic structure in which the Magyars were only in a small majority (1910: 54.5 per cent) compared with the other language groups. In spite of this fact, the non‑Magyar ethnic groups had the status of minorities.