Prague Slavic Congress, 1848

With the advent of Pan-Slavism of the revolutions were held in 1848 called Panslavic, Pan-Slavic, or Allslawische General Slavonic congresses in different cities of Central Europe and Eastern Europe since the night before.

The numbering of these conferences is divergent (in most cases: first in Prague, 2 in Moscow) - each depending on what political direction had called to them.

In many forms, to virtually all these meetings the unity of the Slavic peoples was debated, always without real results, but in some cases influenced by the rival ideas of the followers of Austroslavism, Trialism, Panrussismus, etc. Neo-Slavism and displaced by the conflict over the process, agenda and voting procedures.

The Slavs Congresses are not to be confused with the scientific Slawistenkongressen.

List of Slavs Congresses

  • April 1848 in Vienna ( 1 ) - Official Chair: Ľudovít Stur ( Austroslawisten )
  • May 1848 in Breslau - (especially Poland)
  • June 1848 in Prague ( 1 ) - Chair: František Palacký ( single Russian Michael Bakunin ). This congress led by the rejection of the demand for the federal conversion of Austria into a covenant of equal peoples in the Prague uprising of Pentecost.

Regional Conferences in the U.S.

In the U.S., found further congresses of Slavic immigrants in North America concluded: the merger, for example, the Serbs and Croats in 1915 was promised in Chicago, the Czechs and Slovaks in 1918, then 1944, the common struggle of all Slavs against Nazi Germany.

However, numerous smaller Slav Congresses this or later times can not (any longer ) be referred to as pan-Slavists, allslawisch or general.

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