In 1897, the Language decrees issued by Prime Minister
Count Badeni were enacted. The decrees required civil servants wishing to be assigned to the
Czech lands to be fully
bilingual in
Austrian German and
Czech. The decrees were vehemently opposed by a group of Austro-German ultra-nationalists (
Deutschnationale), while being largely supported by the
Austrian Catholic People's Party (
Katholische Volkspartei) as well as by the Czech Roman Catholic clergy. In reaction, the ultra-Nationalists promoted an oppositional movement that called for secession from Catholicism and resistance to its allegedly "alien" influence. Schönerer's slogan () ("Without either Jewry or Rome, shall
Germania's cathedral be built!") demonstrates a typical conflation of
anti-Catholicism with
xenophobia.) In a congregation of German nationalists in Vienna, the so-called "German National Congress" (
Deutscher Volkstag), the Austro-German nationalists called upon their followers to leave the Catholic Church en masse, and Schönerer coined the additional slogan () ("Away from Rome!") The conversion movement was supported by Protestant organizations from Germany, especially by the "
Gustavus Adolphus Association" (
Gustav-Adolf-Verein) and the Protestant Federation (
Evangelischer Bund) until 1905. Between January 1898 and March 1900 10,000 Austrians defected from the Catholic Church. More than 65,000 people joining the Lutheran Church and more than 20,000 people joining the Old Catholic Church before the outbreak of World War I in 1914 were registered. As a result, many new Protestant churches and rectories had to be built. Nevertheless, not all conversions can be seen as a result of the "Away from Rome" movement. Many of them were due to a general dissatisfaction with the Roman Catholic Church, which was largely viewed as monarchist and anti-progressive. The Catholic Church was at first hesitant to react, but from 1902 onward, large press campaigns were undertaken, and administrative measures were enacted to slow down the conversion movement. As a result from the "Away from Rome" movement, the Protestant churches in Austria fell to an extent under the influence of Pan-German nationalists and anti-Semites. Many Austrian Protestants, however, were already influenced and affected by the
Prussian-dominated
German Empire and its combination of
German Protestantism and
German nationalism (as opposed to the religiously and
culturally pluralistic policy of the Catholic Habsburg monarchy). Schönerer's influence tended to make these tendencies much stronger. == See also ==