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Kurt Schuschnigg

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Kurt Schuschnigg

In office
July 29, 1934 – March 11, 1938
President Wilhelm Miklas
Deputy Ernst Rüdiger Starhemberg, Eduard Baar-Baarenfels, Ludwig Hülgerth, Edmund Glaise-Horstenau
Preceded by Ernst Rüdiger Starhemberg (acting)
Succeeded by Arthur Seyss-Inquart

In office
July 25 – July 26, 1934
President Wilhelm Miklas
Preceded by Engelbert Dollfuß
Succeeded by Ernst Rüdiger Starhemberg (acting)

Born 14 December 1897(1897-12-14)
Riva del Garda, then Austro-Hungary, now Italy
Died 18 November 1977 (aged 79)
Mutters, Tyrol, Austria
Political party Patriotic Front
Profession Lawyer, Professor

Kurt Alois Josef Johann Schuschnigg (December 14, 1897 – November 18, 1977) was an Austrian politician who in 1934 succeeded the assassinated Engelbert Dollfuss as chancellor of Austria and dictator, as leader of the regime often called Austrofascism. In 1938, he was imprisoned in the Dachau concentration camp, as a political prisoner, by Nazi Germany following the Anschluss.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Name

Schuschnigg came into a Tyrolean family of Carinthian Slovenian descent. The family name was originally transcribed from Slovenian Šušnik. One of his ancestors was invested with a hereditary title similar to a Baronet in 1898, so he became Kurt Alois Josef Johann Edler von Schuschnigg. In 1919, after the downfall of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, nobility was abolished by law in the Republic of Austria, and it was no longer permitted to bear the titles, so he became Kurt Alois Josef Johann Schuschnigg, known always as Kurt Schuschnigg.

[edit] Early life

Schuschnigg was born in Riva del Garda (current province of Trento, Italy, then part of Austria-Hungary). He received his education at the Stella Matutina (Jesuit School) in Feldkirch. Schuschnigg fought in the Austro-Hungarian Army during the First World War. After the war, he became a lawyer in Innsbruck.

[edit] Political career

Schuschnigg joined the Christian Social Party and was elected to the Nationalrat in 1927. As he did not trust the Heimwehr, which was a national paramilitary defence force, he founded the Ostmärkische Sturmscharen in 1930. In 1932 Dollfuss appointed Schuschnigg as his minister of justice, then in 1933 Schuschnigg became Austria's minister of education. When Dollfuss was assassinated in 1934, Schuschnigg became Austria's new federal chancellor. At the age of 36, he is the youngest person to have ever held this position. He disbanded the Heimwehr in October, 1936.

[edit] The Anschluss

On February 12, 1938 at the Berghof at Berchtesgaden, Adolf Hitler coerced the Austrian Chancellor, under what Schuschnigg later described as duress, to appoint the Austrian Nazi Party leader Arthur Seyss-Inquart to his cabinet. On Sunday, February 20, Hitler gave a speech to the German Reichstag in which he warned that Germany knew how to protect the ten million Germans living on its borders--seven million in Austria and three million in Czechoslovakia. Four days later, Schuschnigg responded to Hitler's Reichstag speech with a speech of his own in the Austrian Nationalrat. Schuschnigg declared that Austria had reached its limits of concessions "where we must call a halt and say: This far and no further."

Schuschnigg attempted to thwart the pending Anschluss by calling for a plebiscite to be held on 13 March. However, this move was preempted when the German Wehrmacht invaded on March 11th. Schuschnigg resigned and was imprisoned by the Nazis for seventeen months while the SS tormented him both mentally and physically. After losing 85 pounds, he spent the remainder of the war in two different concentration camps, Dachau and Sachsenhausen, as he recalled in his book Austrian Requiem. In late April 1945 Schuschnigg was, together with other prominent concentration camp inmates, transferred to Tyrol where the SS left the prisoners behind. He was liberated by American troops on May 5, 1945.

[edit] Later life

After World War II, Schuschnigg emigrated to the United States, where he worked as a professor of political science at Saint Louis University from 1948 to 1967.

He died at Mutters, near Innsbruck, in 1977.

[edit] Works

  • My Austria (1937)
  • Austrian Requiem (1946)
  • International Law (1959)
  • The Brutal Takeover (1969)
  • Im Kampf gegen Hitler. Die Überwindung der Anschlussidee (1969)

[edit] Further reading

Preceded by
Engelbert Dollfuss
Federal Chancellor of Austria
1934–1938
Succeeded by
Arthur Seyss-Inquart
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