Linz Program (1882)

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Issued on 1 September 1882, the Linz Program was a political platform, inspired by Pan-German nationalism, written by Austrians of German descent, encouraging Germanization within the Austrian Empire. [1] The authors, of different political persuasions, but opposed to economic liberalization, were:

  • Victor Adler, founder of the Austrian Social Democratic Party and a Jew, who would become the WWI Foreign Minister of Austria
  • Heinrich Friedjung, a historian who also was Jewis
  • Robert Pattai, a lawyer
  • Engelbert Pernerstorfer, a writer and socialist
  • Georg von Schoenerer, Pan-German representative to the parliament, who would become a strong anti-Semite

Its chief goal was the greater Germanization of Austria.

References

  1. Werner Suppanz, Linz Program (1882), in Richard S. Levy, Antisemitism: a historical encyclopedia of prejudice and persecution, Volume 1, p. 424