by Engel Janosi
[Title Page and Publication Details]: Title page and bibliographic information for the academic report on Ludwig von Pastor's diplomatic mission to the Holy See between 1920 and 1928. [The Diplomatic Mission of Ludwig von Pastor at the Holy See, 1920–1928]: Engel-Janosi analyzes the diplomatic tenure of historian Ludwig von Pastor as Austria's representative to the Vatican. The text explores the transition from the Austro-Hungarian Empire to the First Republic, the Vatican's critical view of the post-WWI peace treaties (Versailles and St. Germain), and Pastor's unique status as both a scholar and diplomat. Key topics include the failed restoration of the Habsburgs in Hungary, the rise of Mussolini and the 'Roman Question', the internal Austrian politics under Chancellor Ignaz Seipel, and the Vatican's evolving stance on the 'Anschluss' with Germany. It also details specific diplomatic conflicts such as the administration of the Anima national foundation and the linguistic rights of Germans in South Tyrol. [Appendix: Pope Pius XI on South Tyrol]: An appendix containing primary source documents from March 1928, specifically a letter from Chancellor Ignaz Seipel and a report on his conversation with the French envoy Chambrun. The documents discuss Pope Pius XI's declaration regarding South Tyrol, where the Pope compared his situation as a 'prisoner in the Vatican' to the plight of the German-speaking population in South Tyrol under Italian rule, effectively challenging Mussolini's claims of having resolved the church-state conflict.
Title page and bibliographic information for the academic report on Ludwig von Pastor's diplomatic mission to the Holy See between 1920 and 1928.
Read full textEngel-Janosi analyzes the diplomatic tenure of historian Ludwig von Pastor as Austria's representative to the Vatican. The text explores the transition from the Austro-Hungarian Empire to the First Republic, the Vatican's critical view of the post-WWI peace treaties (Versailles and St. Germain), and Pastor's unique status as both a scholar and diplomat. Key topics include the failed restoration of the Habsburgs in Hungary, the rise of Mussolini and the 'Roman Question', the internal Austrian politics under Chancellor Ignaz Seipel, and the Vatican's evolving stance on the 'Anschluss' with Germany. It also details specific diplomatic conflicts such as the administration of the Anima national foundation and the linguistic rights of Germans in South Tyrol.
Read full textAn appendix containing primary source documents from March 1928, specifically a letter from Chancellor Ignaz Seipel and a report on his conversation with the French envoy Chambrun. The documents discuss Pope Pius XI's declaration regarding South Tyrol, where the Pope compared his situation as a 'prisoner in the Vatican' to the plight of the German-speaking population in South Tyrol under Italian rule, effectively challenging Mussolini's claims of having resolved the church-state conflict.
Read full text