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Franz, Prince of Thun and Hohenstein

Durchlaucht
Franz Anton Fürst von Thun und Hohenstein
Franz, Prince of Thun and Hohenstein, 1893.jpg
Franz, Prince of Thun and Hohenstein (1893)
15th Minister-President of Cisleithania
In office
5 March 1898 – 2 October 1899
Monarch Franz Joseph I
Preceded by Paul Gautsch Feirherr von Frankenthurn
Succeeded by Manfred Graf von Clary-und-Aldringen
Personal details
Born (1847-09-02)2 September 1847
Děčín, Kingdom of Bohemia
Austrian Empire
Died 1 November 1916(1916-11-01) (aged 69)
Děčín, Kingdom of Bohemia
Austria-Hungary
Religion Catholic

Prince Franz Anton von Thun und Hohenstein, Czech: kníže František Antonín z Thunu a Hohensteina (2 September 1847, Děčín, Bohemia – 1 November 1916, Děčín, Bohemia) was an Austro-Hungarian noble and statesman.

He served as the Habsburg monarchy's Governor of his native Bohemia from 1889 to 1896 and again from 1911 to 1915. He was also briefly the 15th Minister-President of Austria and Minister of the Interior from 1898 to 1899.

Like most of the rest of the Thun und Hohenstein family, he belonged to the Federalist party, and his appointment in 1889 as governor of Bohemia was the cause of grave dissatisfaction to the German Austrians. He took a leading part in the negotiation of 1890 for the Bohemian settlement, but the elections of 1891, in which the Young Czechs who were opposed to the feudal party gained a decisive victory, made his position a very difficult one. Contrary to expectation, he showed great energy in suppressing disorder; but after the proclamation of a state of siege his position became untenable, and in 1895 he had to resign. On the resignation of Badeni in 1898 he was made minister president, an office which he held for little more than a year. Although he succeeded in bringing to a conclusion the negotiations with Hungary, the support he gave to the Czechs and Slovenians increased the opposition of the Germans to such a degree that parliamentary government became impossible, and at the end of 1899 he was dismissed.

His sympathy towards the Czech people was responsible for a minor diplomatic spat between Austria-Hungary and the German Empire when the Prussian government deported some of its migrant Czech and Polish workers in 1899. The incident was part of an overall cooling of relations between the two empires at the end of the 19th century.


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