In:Receptive Multilingualism: Linguistic analyses, language policies and didactic concepts
Edited by Jan D. ten Thije and Ludger Zeevaert
[Hamburg Studies on Multilingualism 6] 2007
► pp. 49–70
2. Linguistic diversity in Habsburg Austria as a model for modern European language policy
Published online: 5 June 2007
https://doi.org/10.1075/hsm.6.05sch
https://doi.org/10.1075/hsm.6.05sch
It is the purpose of this paper to show that the language policy of the nineteenth-century Habsburg Empire can be considered a promising example of multilingual management and planning because, as a model of lived multilingualism, it shows a potential that projects into present-day multilingual Europe. The present paper elaborateson Habsburg language policy, which stood in stark contrast to the dominant nineteenth-century ideology of homogeneous nation-states. As this policy was far from a unified or streamlined model, this paper investigates three specific domains — education, administration and the judiciary — in the different crown-lands of Bohemia, Galicia and Trieste, where the struggle over multilingualism and for power escalated during the nineteenth century.
Keywords: Habsburg Empire, language policy, multilingualism, nation-states
Cited by (19)
Cited by 19 other publications
Lendák-Kabók, Karolina
Decker, Philipp
Mandić, Marija & Krisztina Rácz
Newerkla, Stefan Michael
Newerkla, Stefan Michael
Vervaet, Stijn & Marija Mandić
Iveković Martinis, Anja & Anita Sujoldžić
Mandić, Marija
Holzinger, Clara
Piccardo, Enrica & Brian North
Härmävaara, Hanna-Ilona
May, Stephen
May, Stephen
May, Stephen
Aronin, Larissa & Ulrike Jessner
Bahtina, Daria & Jan D. ten Thije
Rehbein, Jochen, Jan D. ten Thije & Anna Verschik
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 11 december 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
