Felix, prince zu Schwarzenberg
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- Born:
- Oct. 2, 1800, Krummau, Bohemia, Austrian Habsburg domain [now Český Krumlov, Czech Republic]
- Title / Office:
- foreign minister (1848-1852), Austria
- prime minister (1848-1852), Austria
- Role In:
- Punctation of Olmütz
- Revolutions of 1848
Felix, prince zu Schwarzenberg (born Oct. 2, 1800, Krummau, Bohemia, Austrian Habsburg domain [now Český Krumlov, Czech Republic]—died April 5, 1852, Vienna, Austria) was an Austrian statesman who restored the Habsburg empire as a great European power after its almost complete collapse during the revolutions of 1848–49.
Entering the Austrian army in 1818, Schwarzenberg transferred to the diplomatic service in 1824 and became a protégé of the chief minister Prince Klemens von Metternich, serving in the Austrian embassies to Portugal, Russia, France, England, Sardinia, and the Two Sicilies.
With the outbreak of the 1848 revolutions in Italy, Schwarzenberg joined the Austrian army of Field Marshal Joseph, Count Radetzky, in northern Italy and was wounded at Goito. When revolution broke out in Vienna on Oct. 6, 1848, Schwarzenberg tried to induce the military commander in that city to make a stand and remained there until October 13—four days after being summoned to join the Austrian imperial court, then in flight to Olmütz. On the advice of his brother-in-law, Alfred, Prince von Windischgrätz (the field marshal on whom the court depended), Schwarzenberg was bidden to form a government in Vienna on October 19. On November 21 he was declared prime minister and foreign minister. He secured the replacement of the feebleminded emperor Ferdinand I by the 18-year-old Francis Joseph I (Dec. 2, 1848) and dissolved the Austrian constitutional convention assembled at Kremsier. The Kremsier assembly had drawn up a constitution that would have granted Austria’s many nationalities far-reaching autonomy. The constitution sponsored by Schwarzenberg and introduced by decree on March 4, 1849, however, transformed the Habsburg empire into a unitary, centralized, absolutist state, with extensive imperial powers and the virtual elimination of special privileges for the empire’s historic lands. The insurgent Hungarians were crushed with large-scale Russian military aid (1849), and Radetzky restored Austrian primacy in northern Italy.
While reestablishing order within Austria, Schwarzenberg pursued a strong foreign policy. At the Frankfurt Parliament (1848–49) he opposed the German nationalists who wished to exclude the non-German Habsburg lands from a new unified German state. Friction with Prussia almost led to war in 1850, but Austria, backed by Russia, forced Prussia to renounce its intentions to form a German state without Austria. Schwarzenberg thus obtained the revival of the former German Confederation in its old form. His efforts to join the German Zollverein (customs union) and to bring the whole Habsburg empire into the German Confederation were, however, rejected by Germany’s princes in 1851. With imperial power securely reestablished, he persuaded Francis Joseph to abolish the 1849 constitution on Dec. 31, 1851, thus introducing a new era of absolutism; but Schwarzenberg’s pivotal role soon ended with his death.