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If we could ask Mozart himself if he was German, he would definitely answer “YES”. If we could ask him if he was born in Austria, he would definitely answer “NO”. So, for his time, Mozart was most certainly German, and not Austrian.
Things get messier later on, because history changes territories, definitions, and perceptions, and things get difficult if you try to adapt historical facts to modern concepts.
The very nature of your question is quite modern. Up to the late 19th Century, the idea of “Austrian” and “German” being mutually exclusive terms would be perceived as the most preposterous absurd. Saying Austrians were not Germans would be exactly the same as saying Bavarian people were not German. This is because, before 1871, there was no unified Germany and, thus, “German” was not a word to refer to a specific country, but to a broad ethno-linguistic group, of which Mozart (as well as the Austrians) was part of.
Reason?and say he was indeed an Austrian.
May I ask again: What makes you think that Mozart was Austrian?Lol. I'm gonna go against the grain and say he was indeed an Austrian.
In Mozart's time Austria was an intergral part of Germany.The difference between Germans and Austrians is like finding the difference between Canadians and Americans. Lol.
“At first the plan was to install Hitler as head of government for two countries. But then the jubilation of the crowds created a new dynamic, so that they said 'we will drop the provisional solution',” Rathkolb explains.
Hitler didn’t hesitate for long. On March 13th, he issued a decree of union, stating that “Austria is a part of the German Reich.”
The “Anschluss” between the two countries was to be total - it even meant that Austrians had to switch from driving on the left to driving on the right like the Germans.
For 20 years, half of Austria drove on the right-hand side, while the other half drove on the left. The story of Austria's shift from left to right is one of politics, the death and birth of empires, Napoleon and Hitler. Here's what you need to know.
27 January 1756 Getreidegasse 9, Salzburg |
Yes, Mozart was a citizen of the Holy Roman Empire.He was born
27 January 1756
Getreidegasse 9, Salzburg
At the time, it was part of the Holy Roman Empire. Map it and you find this:
View attachment 332358
Right in the middle of Austria. His Nationality at time of Birth? Part of the Holy Roman Empire for the last several hundred years - Austrian.
He was born
27 January 1756
Getreidegasse 9, Salzburg
At the time, it was part of the Holy Roman Empire. Map it and you find this:
View attachment 332358
It is just a question of interest!What possible difference does it make?