STÁTNÍ TAJEMNÍK U ŘÍŠSKÉHO PROTEKTORA V ČECHÁCH A NA MORAVĚ, PRAHA, inv. 1805, sig. 109-5/33 (poškozeno) Page 53 · 53 of 85
STATE SECRETARY FOR THE RUSSIAN PROTECTOR IN THINGS AND IN MORAVA, PRAGUE, inv. 1805, sig. 109-5/33 (damaged)
English Translation
34a = 14 = his particular state-constructive thought of the position of Bohemia in the area of the monarchy did not penetrate. However, he has nevertheless remained the decisive political factor in the country until its collapse, although he has no longer been visible as such. His superior position was based on three pastors: One of his powerful positions at the court. The Bohemian nobility set a handsome number among the very limited circle of the high nobility, which formed the immediate imperial society. Position in the House of Lords (the first Austrian Chamber), was so outstanding that his influence was so great in the Bohemian Parliament built on couriers, where the great landowners gave Kurie the decisive influence. VI. If one now raises the question of the national affiliation of the Bohemians nobility, one faces peculiar difficulties. The fact that a decisive turn towards the monarchy took place in the middle of the 19th century has already been mentioned. This happened with all emphasis on the Bohemian nobility and with respect for Czech national interests. And yet there were numerous individual üances in the relationship between unpolitical German cultural consciousness According to this, the attitude of the nobility was also different in the prevailing death agony of the monarchy, where the princes Friedrich Schwarzenberg and Friedrich Lobkowicz had already joined the central point of the Czech deputies more or less in May 1918. And yet it was a descendant of the leader of the state-law movement, Heinrich Clam-Martinitz, who in the manor kept the lamentation of old Austria and mourned its end as the end of "what we have loved with every pulse of our heart from youth onwards". In the first place, with the special efforts of the people, the special structure of the Lndes and then the constitution of the Landtag in the 1 9th century, it is probably due to the fact that the German-minded Bohemian nobility could not as such appear in a corporative manner. The special social position has eased and loosened the exclusivity of the bonds demanded by modern nationalism, Boch 691/38 ephiin and