Although the
Duchy of Austria was just one of the duchies and lands that
the Habsburgs eventually acquired in the eastern
Alpine-Danubian region, the Habsburgs became known as the
House of Austria after the Swiss peasantry ousted them from
their original family seat in Habichtsburg in the Swiss
canton of Aargau in 1386. The name Austria
subsequently became an informal way to refer to all the
lands possessed by the House of Austria, even though it also
remained the proper, formal name of a specific region. Thus,
through the legacy of common rule by the House of Austria,
the lands that constitute the modern state of Austria
indirectly adopted the name of one region of the country as
the formal national name in the early twentieth
century. Because the
elector-princes of the Holy Roman Empire generally preferred
a weak, dependent emperor, the powerful Habsburg Dynasty
only occasionally held the imperial title in the 150 years
after Rudolf's death in 1291. After the election of
Frederick III in 1452 (r. 1452-93), however, the dynasty
came to enjoy such a dominant position among the German
nobility that only one non-Habsburg was elected emperor in
the remaining 354- year history of the Holy Roman
Empire. The Habsburgs'
near monopoly of the imperial title, however, did not make
the Habsburg Empire and the Holy Roman Empire synonymous.
The Habsburg Empire was a supernational collection of
territories united only through the accident of common rule
by the Habsburgs, and many of the territories were not part
of the Holy Roman Empire. In contrast, the Holy Roman Empire
was a defined political and territorial entity that became
identified with the German nation as the nation-state
assumed greater importance in European politics. Although the
succession of Holy Roman Emperors from the Habsburg line
gave the House of Austria great prestige in Germany and
Europe, the family's real power base was the lands in its
possession, that is, the Habsburg Empire. This was because
the Holy Roman Empire was a loosely organized feudal state
in which the power of the emperor was counterbalanced by the
rights and privileges of the empire's other princes, lords,
and institutions, both secular and
ecclesiastical. Habsburg power
was significantly enhanced in 1453, when Emperor Frederick
III confirmed a set of rights and privileges, dubiously
claimed by the Habsburgs, that paralleled those of the
elector-princes, in whose ranks the family did not yet sit.
In addition, the lands the Habsburgs' possessed in 1453 were
made inheritable through both the male and the female line.
Because feudal holdings usually reverted to the emperor to
dispose of as he wished when the holder of the fief died,
the right of inheritable succession measurably strengthened
the Habsburgs. The lands they held in 1453 became known
collectively as the Hereditary Lands, and--with the
exception of territories possessed by the archbishops of
Salzburg and Brixen--encompassed most of modern Austria and
portions of Germany, France, Italy, Croatia, and
Slovenia.
Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
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