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Count Karl Hatzfeld and the Bohemian Famine of 1771

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 February 2009

Joseph R. Goldman
Affiliation:
Augsburg College

Extract

In 1771, for the second year, famine wracked the once-fair Czech crownlands, and death continued to reap its sombre crop of souls among urban dwellers and peasants alike, victims of starvation, disease and violence. Maria Theresa and Joseph II acted with all the resources of their Gesamtmonarchie to end the human misery in Bohemia; in doing so, these co-rulers taxed almost to the limit the ingenuity and strength of their bureaucratic state. Among the state officials upon whom the empress and the emperor depended were Prince Wenzel von Kaunitz, Counts Philipp Blümegen, Ludwig and Karl von Zinzendorf, Leopold von Kollowrat, and Karl von Hatzfeld. While Hatzfeld's career began during an earlier period of crisis, when the empire was at war for its very existence, it was the Bohemian Famine of 1770–1772 which brought Hatzfeld real power in the Beamtenstaat for a brief term as supreme chancellor of the United Bohemian-Austrian Court Chancellery. Unfortunately, after only six months (June–December 1771), Hatzfeld was dismissed from that office because he was unable to reverse the course of the catastrophe by bureaucratic initiatives alone. Until now most historians of Theresian and Josephinian Austria have overlooked the contributions of this Bohemian aristocrat and servant to the House of Habsburg.

Type
The Habsburg Empire: Its People, Administration, and Art
Copyright
Copyright © Center for Austrian Studies, University of Minnesota 1984

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References

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2 For example Maria Theresa conferred upon Hatzfeld the medal and sash of the Order of St. Stephan on May 6, 1764. Although this honor was designed to recognize members of the Magyar nobility whose service to the Crown earned it, the empress immediately changed the rules by naming a Czech nobleman as its first recipient. See Király, Béla K., Hungary in the Late Eighteenth Century: The Decline of Enlightened Despotism (New York: Columbia University Press, 1969), p. 29.Google Scholar

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5 Weinzierl-Fischer, “Die Bekämpfung der Hungersnot,” p. 479.

6 Ibid., p. 485.

7 Ibid., p. 492.

8 Wright, Serf, Seigneur, and Sovereign, p. 45; and Goldman, “Land, Labor, and Lord,” p. 144.

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18 HHSA: StRP 1768, XXIX, pt. 3, Resolutio (ex 24 Augusti 1768).

19 Von Arneth, Geschichte Maria Theresias, IX, 301; Wright, Serf, Seigneur, and Sovereign, p. 45; and Goldman, “Land, Labor, and Lord,” p. 144.

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22 HHSA: StRP 1771, XL, pt. 3,Resolutio (ex 26 Julii 1771); and HHSA:StRP 1771, XL, pt. 3,Resolutio (ex 1 Augusti 1771).

23 Von Arneth, Geschichte Maria Theresias, IX, 440.

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26 Wright, Serf, Seigneur, and Sovereign, pp. 44–45.