Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The usurper kingdom had prevailed against the European great powers and would play a vital future role in the "Concert of Europe". [8] Austria and Prussia both would fight France in the Napoleonic Wars; after their conclusion, the German states were reorganized into a more unified 37 separate states of the German Confederation.
Austria: The use of the French Emperor as an intermediary was to avoid ceding the province directly to the Kingdom of Italy, which Austria considered an inferior power, and at the same time to influence Napoleon III in favor of Austria in the crisis with Prussia. [39] Accordingly, Italy obtained Venetia by the Treaty of Vienna (3 October 1866).
Austria-Preisi sõda; Usage on eu.wikipedia.org 1871ko Alemaniaren bateratzea; Usage on fr.wikipedia.org Guillaume Ier (empereur allemand) Guerre austro-prussienne; Georges V de Hanovre; Traité de Prague (1866) Usage on gl.wikipedia.org Reino de Prusia; Usage on hr.wikipedia.org Kraljevina Pruska; Usage on it.wikipedia.org Regno di Prussia
The beginnings of the Concert of Europe, known as the Congress System or the Vienna System after the Congress of Vienna (1814–1815), was dominated by the five great powers of Europe: Austria, France, Prussia, Russia, and the United Kingdom. Initially envisioning regular Congresses among the great powers to resolve potential disputes, in ...
Für die Situation nach Kriegsende siehe Image:Map-AustroPrussianWar-annexed.svg English: Alliances of the member-states of the en:German Confederation in the en:Austro-Prussian War , 1866 Prussia
The scope of this article begins in 1815, after a round of negotiations about European borders and spheres of influence were agreed upon at the Congress of Vienna. [3] The Congress of Vienna was a nine-month, pan-European meeting of statesmen who met to settle the many issues arising from the destabilising impact of the French Revolutionary Wars, the Napoleonic Wars, and the dissolution of the ...
The Italo-Prussian Alliance was a military pact signed by the Kingdom of Italy and the Kingdom of Prussia on 8 April 1866. It established the terms on which the two nations would enter hostilities against Austria and their respective compensations in the event of victory.
The lands of the short-lived Duchy of Salzburg, acquired by Austria as territorial compensation for losses on the Adriatic Coast and the loss of Tyrol in the Peace of Pressburg, were transferred to Bavaria. Russia was ceded the district of Tarnopol. Austria lost over three million subjects, about 20% of the kingdom's total population.