Z6-0712 — Final report
1.
"Panslavism, Panslavism, Everybody Would Yell!" On the History of Slavism, Slovenianism and the German Fear of Panslavism 1788-1861

The use of wider, Slavic notion to surpass provincial and regional borders was present since the very beginning of the Slovenian nationalism which was closely connected with the neighbouring German element. At the end of Napoleon's Wars a general fear of Russia overcame Europe. The Slovenian national movement also operated in this context and had to struggle against being accused of Panslavism and Pro-Russianism from the beginning of its political action.

COBISS.SI-ID: 2649204
2.
Where the Slovene ends and the Croat Begins – The Slovene-Croat Border in the Nineteenth and at the Beginning of Twentieth Century

The book depicts the development of ideological borders between Slovenians and Croatians since the beginning of the 19th century until the end of World War I. Notable emphasis is placed on the role of the Yugoslav ideology, which was not uniform – the Slovenian notion of Yugoslavism was different from the Croatian viewpoint. Establishing boundaries with the nationalism of allies was harder than setting oneself apart from one's national opponents, so Slovenians as well as Croatians avoided fixing the borders. In this way uncertainties were postponed to the future.

COBISS.SI-ID: 2557044
3.
Yugoslavism and Slovenians in the 19th Century in the Context of the Neighbouring "Unification" Ideologies

According to the author, (Yugo)slavism in various versions from the pre March period to 1918 was an integral part of different kinds of Slovenian national ideology. Most ideologists of the Slovenian nationalism could not imagine Slovenianism without the Yugoslav background. From the pre March period until the decline of the Monarchy, Slovenians, in various contexts, often referred to Germans and Italians as an ideal example of linguistic and national unification, which the South Slavs should look up to.

COBISS.SI-ID: 2514548
4.
The Greater Slovenia within the Panslavist Connection (Slovenians and South Slavs in the concepts of Bresnitz von Sydačoff)

Philipp-Franz Bresnitz von Sydačoff was a conservatively oriented publicist, who, before World War I, saw the last hope for the Habsburg Monarchy in the Crown Prince Franz Ferdinand.The propagators of the Austrian idea in the Balkans were supposedly the Catholic Croatians, while he ascribed the Serbians with anti Habsburg tendencies, which they wanted to accomplish with the Russian assistance. In this system Slovenians had a negative role.

COBISS.SI-ID: 2698356
5.
Kazina through Time

Social history of the building in Ljubljana which had an important role in ideological and political disputes between Germans and Slovenes.

COBISS.SI-ID: 2677364