The Christian Social Party had ruled from 1932 and
Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuß had led them from 1932. The Social Democrats were no longer their only threat. The previous chancellor and priest Ignaz Seipel had worked towards an authoritarian state. Seipel based this on the Papal
Encyclicals, (1891) and (1931). Abolition of the
parliamentary system was necessary for this. A crisis in the Austrian parliament on the 4 May 1933 gave Dollfuß the opportunity he wanted. Later in May 1933, the Christian Social Party was converted in to the
Fatherland Front. The Fatherland Front was a political organisation, supposedly above partisan considerations, Roman Catholic and vehemently
anti-Marxist. It purported to represent all Austrians who were true to their native land. Within a week the Austrian Communist Party was banned, and before the end of the month the republican paramilitary organisation and
Freethinkers Organisations were banned along with numerous other groups. Nazis failed to get more than 25% of the votes in local elections in most areas. In
Zwettl and
Innsbruck however they got more than 40%, and they tried to lever this into a basis for agitation against the ruling Fatherland Front. Nazi supporters generated a wave of terrorism which crested in early June with four deaths and 48 people injured. In
Germany, Hitler became
Chancellor early in 1933. The Social Democrats deleted any intention to cooperate with Germany from its party programme. Nazis had fled to
Bavaria after their party was banned in Austria and founded there the
Austrian Legion. The Nazis there had military style camps and military training. Nazi terrorists in Austria received financial, logistic and material support from Germany. The German Government subjected Austria to systematic agitation. After the expulsion of the Bavarian Minister of Justice in May 1933, German citizens were required to pay a thousand marks to the German Government before travelling to Austria. The Austrian Nazi Party was banned in June after a hand grenade attack in
Krems. Nazi terrorism abated after that though five more people were killed and 52 injured by the end of the year. On 12 February 1934, there was a violent confrontation in
Linz with serious consequences. Members of a paramilitary group acting to assist the police wanted to enter a building belonging to the Social Democrats or a party member's home. They wanted to find any weapons belonging to the Social Democrat paramilitary which had by then been banned. Violence spread to the whole country and developed into civil war. The police and their paramilitary supporters together with the army won the confrontation by the 14 February. There were many arrests. Constitutional courts were abolished, trade unions and the Social Democrat Party were banned, and the death penalty was reintroduced. After political opposition had been suppressed the Austrian Republic was transformed into the . The authoritarian (May Constitution) was proclaimed on 1 May.
Attempted Nazi coup and growing German influence From the start of 1934, there was a new wave of Nazi terrorist attacks in Austria. This time, government institutions were targeted far more than individuals. In the first half of 1934, 17 people were killed and 171 injured. On 25 July, the Nazis attempted a
coup under the leadership of the
Austrian SS. About 150 SS personnel forced their way into the Chancellor's office in Vienna. Dollfuß was shot and died a few hours later from his wounds. Another group occupied the building of the Austrian National Radio and forced a statement that the Government of Dollfuß had fallen and
Anton Rintelen was the new head of government. Anton Rintelen belonged to the Christian Social Party but is suspected of Nazi sympathy. This false report was intended to start a Nazi uprising throughout the country but it was only partially successful. There was considerable fighting in parts of
Carinthia,
Styria and
Upper Austria and limited resistance in
Salzburg. In Carinthia and Styria the fighting lasted from the 27 to 30 July. Some members of the
Austrian Legion tried to push out from Bavaria over the , a part of Upper Austria, and towards
Linz. They were forced back to the frontier at Kollerschlag. On 26 July, a German courier was arrested at the
Kollerschlag pass in Upper Austria. He had with him documented instructions for the revolt. This so-called Kollerschlag Document demonstrated the connection of the July revolt to Bavaria clearly. The army, the gendarmerie and the police put down revolt with heavy casualties. On the government side, there were up to 104 deaths and 500 injuries. On the rebel side there were up to 140 deaths and 600 injuries. Thirteen rebels were executed and 4,000 people were imprisoned without trial. Many thousand supporters of the Nazi Party were arrested. Up to 4000 fled over the border to Germany and
Yugoslavia.
Kurt Schuschnigg became the new Chancellor. In Bavaria, many sections of the
Austrian Legion were officially closed. In reality, they were only pushed further north and renamed, “North-West Assistance”. Hitler ordered troops to the Austrian border, prepared for a full-scale military assault into Austria to support the National Socialists. Fascist Italy was more closely tied to the regime in
Vienna and sent troops to the
Austrian border at
Brenner to deter
German troops from a possible invasion of Austria. Hitler was at first torn between going ahead with the invasion, or pulling off the border. Hitler realized that the
German Army was not prepared to take on both the Austrians and the
Italian Army. Hitler ordered the force to be pulled off the Austrian border. The
German government stated that it had nothing to do with the revolt. Germany only admitted that it was trying to subvert the Austrian political system through trusted people. They continued to support the illegal Nazi party but sympathizers who did not belong to the party were more significant. This included among others
Taras Borodajkewycz,
Edmund Glaise-Horstenau,
Franz Langoth, Walther Pembauer and
Arthur Seyß-Inquart. To put Schuschnigg's mind at ease, Hitler declared to the Reichstag in May 1935: "Germany neither intends nor wishes to interfere in the internal affairs of Austria, to annex Austria or to conclude an ". Italy began its conquest of
Abyssinia (the
Second Italo-Abyssinian War) in October 1935, which formed the territory of
Italian East Africa after the
Fall of Addis Ababa in May 1936. After that
Mussolini was internationally isolated and strengthened his relations with Hitler. The ruling
Austrian Fatherland Front lost an important ally. Despite the murder of
Engelbert Dollfuß, his successor Chancellor
Kurt Schuschnigg had to improve
relations with the German government. Like his predecessor, he wanted to maintain the independence of Austria. He saw Austria as the second German state and the better state as it was founded on Roman Catholicism. In July 1936, Schuschnigg accepted the
July Agreement with Germany. Imprisoned Nazis were released and some Nazi newspapers, which had been banned, were allowed into Austria. The Nazi Party remained banned. Schuschnigg undertook further to allow two people whom the Nazis trusted into the Government. Edmund Glaise-Horstenau became Minister for National Affairs and
Guido Schmidt became Secretary of State in the Foreign Ministry. Arthur Seyß-Inquart was taken into the legislative Council of State. Germany rescinded the requirement for a payment of a thousand marks for entry into Austria. The transformation of the Federal State through Nazis was furthered more in 1937 when it became possible for them to join the Fatherland Front. Throughout Austria, the political units were set up and some were led by Nazis. This was a legal disguise for the reorganization. The native
Austrian-born
Hitler wrote in on the first page of the book: "German Austria must return to the great German motherland" and "common blood belongs in a common Reich". From 1937, it was clear to the
Nazis that it would not be long before Austria was going to be incorporated into
Nazi Germany. His strategy, outlined in the
Hossbach Memorandum, included the annexation of Austria and the
Sudetenland part of
Czechoslovakia to gain ("living space"). Hitler told Goebbels in the late summer that Austria would sooner or later be taken "by force". In February 1938,
Franz von Papen, the German ambassador in Vienna arranged a meeting between Hitler and
Schuschnigg at
Obersalzberg in Gaden in Bavaria. Hitler threatened repeatedly to invade Austria and forced Schuschnigg to implement a range of measures favourable to Austrian Nazism. The Agreement of Gaden guaranteed the Austrian Nazi Party political freedom and assisted
Arthur Seyß-Inquart in becoming Home Secretary (). Schuschnigg endeavoured to maintain Austrian national integrity despite steadily increasing German influence. On 9 March 1938, he announced that he wanted to hold a consultative
referendum on the independence of Austria on the following Sunday. Hitler responded by mobilizing the
8th Army for the planned invasion.
Edmund Glaise-Horstenau who was at the time in Berlin brought Hitler's ultimatum from there and
Göring reinforced it with a telephone message to Schuschnigg. The German government demanded the postponement or abandonment of the referendum. Schuschnigg conceded on the afternoon of 11 March. Then Hitler demanded his resignation which happened on the same evening. ==Annexation of Austria into Nazi Germany==