First attempts to establish a
Reichsrat advisory committee had been undertaken by the 1860
October Diploma. As Emperor Franz Joseph's position was weakened by the
Second Italian War of Independence and the loss of
Lombardy, the Austrian minister-president
Count Johann Bernhard von Rechberg und Rothenlöwen sought for a close alliance with the haute
bourgeoisie. However, the
liberal-minded citizens demanded a
parliamentary constitution which finally was promulgated by the 1861 February Patent. Elaborated under Count Rechberg's successor
Archduke Rainer and State Minister
Anton von Schmerling, it gave way for the transition of Austria to a
constitutional monarchy. The newly established bicameral legislature of the Imperial Council included the House of Lords, meant as a class-oriented council to counterbalance the lower House of Deputies, which were sent by the provincial assemblies (
Landtage). The Patent was rejected in the Habsburg
Kingdom of Hungary, which demanded its own constitution. This eventually led to the creation of the sovereign
Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen in 1867. The House of Lords met for the first time on 29 April 1861 at the
Palais Niederösterreich in Vienna's
Herrengasse, its venue until the
Austrian Parliament Building on the
Ringstrasse boulevard was completed. The first session at the new location was held on 4 December 1883. The House of Lords chamber of debates was severely damaged in
World War II. Restored in a modern style, it is today the meeting place of the
National Council, the lower house of the Austrian Parliament. The Hungarian
magnates refused to send members to the Austrian House of Lords and insisted on their own parliamentary assembly. Their requests were initially denied by Minister Schmerling ("Austria can wait"), nevertheless, on the eve of the Austro-Hungarian Compromise, the inaugural session of the second legislature took place on 20 May 1867 without Hungarian representatives even being called. Half a year later, the
Diet of Hungary () was re-established by the
December Constitution, including a House of Representatives as well as a House of Magnates (
Főrendiház), while the
Reichsrat legislature was only responsible for the Cisleithanian crown lands. Those common affairs which related to the whole Dual Monarchy, such as foreign policy, national defence and finances, were examined by parliamentary delegations of 60 MPs each; one third of the Austrian delegates were elected by the House of Lords. In December 1906, the members of the House of Lords led by
Archduke Franz Ferdinand bitterly opposed the implementation of
universal male suffrage, initiated by the Austrian government of Minister-president
Baron Max Wladimir von Beck to meet the demands of the
Social Democrats under
Victor Adler. Beck could win the support by Emperor Franz Joseph, who sent his Grand Masters of the Court Prince Rudolf of
Liechtenstein and
Prince Alfred of Montenuovo to plead for the electoral reform in parliament. The proposal was finally approved and applied to the Cisleithanian legislative elections of
1907 and
1911. During the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, the last session of the House of Lords was held on 30 October 1918. The last Austrian Minister-president
Heinrich Lammasch announced that his cabinet, appointed by Emperor
Charles I on 27 October, would make no policy statement, whereupon the meeting was adjourned by Speaker
Prince Alfred III of Windisch-Grätz after only five minutes. At the same time, the Provisional National Assembly of German-Austria met at the
Palais Niederösterreich and implemented the government of State Chancellor
Karl Renner. The House of Lords chamber of the Parliament Building was destroyed by bombing during
World War II. It was rebuilt in a contemporary style, and today serves as the chamber of the Austrian
National Council. ==Membership==