Untitled (repercussions of the Austrian-Prussian War) (the Danube countries)
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Untitled (repercussions of the Austrian-Prussian War) (the Danube countries)
Publications & Reports
Bleek writes that colonists not of German descent are anxious to know how the war will affect the rest of continental Europe. The war will soon end if the warring parties remain confined to Germany, Italy, and Austria. Should other states intervene, peace becomes more remote. Besides the German question, which caused the war, Europe is about to undergo considerable changes. He offers suppositions concerning Austria's surrender of Venetia and German hegemony to Prussia. Neighbours in all directions except the south (i.e. the Balkans) will confine a reduced Austria while Prussia shapes the German Federal States. The House of Hapsburg now practice the same poor governance as the Ottomans, and the Turkish question will soon succeed the German question. What happens to parts of the former empire should not incite a European war involving the great powers. He revisits past conflict concerning the Turkish question and the resulting disagreement over the sovereignty of the (tributary) Danubian Principalities. The principalities controversially united as "Rumenians" under Colonel Couza (Cuza) but were transferred amid trilateral opposition to Charles of Hohenzollern's appointment as Hospodar after Couza's malfeasance.
Printed newsprint glued on paper
23/08/1866
Two cut out columns of newsprint text, positioned vertically parallel, pasted onto a plus-sized A4 unlined sheet with visible warping. No title was subsequently handwritten onto the mount/paper backing.
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