Until 1848, the
Austrian Empire was an
absolute monarchy with no written constitution and no modern concept of the
rule of law. In 1848, a
wave of revolutions swept Austria; the revolutionaries demanded, among other things,
constitutionalism and
freedom of the press. By 15 March, Emperor
Ferdinand I had been forced to promise to meet these demands. On 25 April, pursuant to this promise, Ferdinand proclaimed the
Pillersdorf Constitution, named after its principal framer, Minister of the Interior
Baron Franz von Pillersdorf. The Pillersdorf Constitution, written essentially by the cabinet with no consultation of any kind of elected council, was widely seen as inadequate and did nothing to stem the tide of revolutionary unrest. In December, Ferdinand was forced to abdicate. Among other desperate measures, he had already declared the constitution "provisional" in May and completely scrapped it in July. Ferdinand's successor,
Franz Joseph, was determined to reassert absolute monarchy. By March 1849, he had taken back the streets and mostly neutralized the intellectuals. He still needed to sideline the revolutionaries' unauthorised constitutional assembly, the
Kremsier Parliament, which had promulgated its own draft constitution, the
Kremsier Constitution. Between 4 and 7 March, to preempt the Kremsier Parliament, he proclaimed his
March Constitution, seemingly giving in to most of the Kremsier demands. The Kremsier Parliament dealt with, he revoked his own constitution with the 31 December 1851
New Year's Eve Patent. No written constitution left in force, Austria lurched back towards a centralized monarchy. The empire, and with it the personal authority of the Emperor, was severely weakened by a series of diplomatic setbacks, the rise of
civic nationalism, and the growing disaffection of the empire's
Hungarian and
Slavic subjects with the Habsburgs' rule. By 1860, Franz Joseph was forced to formally share power again. A new constitution, the 1860
October Diploma, granted more autonomy to the provinces and strengthened regional nobility; regional legislative and administrative authority would partially lie with each region's respective aristocracy. The October diploma proved to be too little, too late: it neither satisfied the nobles nor, in particular, the people of the
Kingdom of Hungary. The 1861
February Patent made further concessions, again failing to pacify Hungary. Hungary had come close to independence during the 1848 revolutions, had been beaten into submission only with the help of the
Russian Empire, and had lived under what effectively was a
military dictatorship ever since. In 1866, Austria was defeated in the
Austro-Prussian War and lost its claim to being the leading
German state, plunging the Habsburg dynasty and their German-speaking realms into an unprecedented identity crisis. The monarch's moral authority gravely damaged once more, unrest in Hungary threatened to erupt again. As a result,
Franz Joseph granted Hungary all but full independence in the
Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867. To prevent the empire's non-Hungarian ethnicities from demanding similar levels of autonomy, Franz Joseph then had to return to constitutionalism and vest the empire's peoples with participation rights in the legislative and administrative process. ==Abrogation==