no.
Francis Joseph
No they shared the same parliament andpussy
Austria-Hungary was not a part of Germany; it was a monarchy ruled by Franz Josef the first, that split into pieces after the First World War. During the same period, Germany was run by Kaiser Wilhelm the first and the second. ___ Until 1866 Austria was part of the German Confederation and in fact officially the 'top dog' in Germany. In 1866 Prussia expelled Austria by force (in a war, that is) and dissolved the German Confederation. The following year Austria agreed to share power with Hungary, and Austria-Hungary was formed. So the answer above is technically correct but it is useful to have more background.
The Slavic people were the same ethnic group as the Russians, so they wanted to support them against Austria-Hungary, whom Russia was fighting land for.
No. Hungary in below Austria. Prussia is now part of Germany, Poland, the baltic states, Russia, Et cetera. Prussia, was never part of Hungary either.
They were never defeated at the same time, although they were defeated at one point. One time Czechoslovakia was defeated by the Soviets in 1989, and Austria.... Probably WW1, but that country was Austria-Hungary.
The Austro-Hungarian Empire broke up into Austria, Hungary, and Czech Republic
The Slavic people were the same ethnic group as the Russians, so they wanted to support them against Austria-Hungary, whom Russia was fighting land for.
Germany and Austria share a frontier. They are both German-speaking countries, of course, and also members of the EU. At the same time, both are independent, sovereign states.
62
Austria-Hungary- or the Austro-Hungarian Empire is a defunct political scheme akin to Confederate States or U.S.S.R it no longer exists- a fallen flag- the Empire was broken up. Austria AND Hungary are still extant but are independent countries. there were some territories like the Podcarpathian Rus ( pronounced (Ruse) that was claimed to be a Russian territory.
Its the same thing that is in your mom right a bout now.