Hungarians
austria/ hungarians
Hungarians
Prussia was a very centralized state with a fairly homogeneous, Protestant population that all felt part of a 'German" identity. Austria was a conglomerate of nations. Those that felt German, were Catholic. Half of the Austrian empire felt and actually was Magyar Hungarians; others were Orthodox Slavs.
They fought the Germans and the Austria-Hungarians(Austria-Hungary)
Prussia was a very centralized state with a fairly homogeneous, Protestant population that all felt part of a 'German" identity. Austria was a conglomerate of nations. Those that felt German, were Catholic. Half of the Austrian empire felt and actually was Magyar Hungarians; others were Orthodox Slavs.
The Czechs and the Hungarians
There was a mixed reaction to the annexation of Bosnia by the Austria-Hungary Empire. Most people knew it was only a ploy to show the Germans and Ottomans that the Austrians and Hungarians were powerful as well. The communist sympathizers in the region, however, vowed to oust the invaders from Bosnian and Slavic land.
During the Roman Empire, Noricum (most of Austria and Slovenia) was the Roman province of Noricum and Pannonia (eastern Austria and western Hungary) was the Roman province of Pannonia. Later Austria was part of the Carolingian Empire, the Holy Roman Empire, the Habsburg Monarchy, the Austrian Empire and the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Pretty much every group in the Austro-Hungarian Empire other than Austrian Germans or Hungarians wanted to break away including: Czechs, Slovaks, Poles, Rusyns/Ruthenians, Romanians, Ukrainians, Croats, Slovenes, Bosniaks, and Italians.
Germans and Magyars
They both were not in an empire together. Rather Austria was part of the Habsburg empire. Prussia was a growing nation of its own.