. The seats are marked by nationality. Upon establishment of the Imperial Council by the
February Patent, elections to the House of Deputies were conducted through a system of "
curiae". In this system, there were 343 deputies elected by the diets of the crown lands. The diets themselves were elected by four curiae. The curiae were essentially assemblies of certain social classes. There was one curia for the landowning class, one curia for the
chambers of commerce, one curia for the towns and cities, and one curia for rural communities. Each curia would elect a select number of deputies to the diets, which would in turn elect deputies to the Imperial Council. Instead, the Empire was reorganised into two equal parts:
Cisleithania and
Transleithania. Cisleithania consisted of the Austrian part of the Empire, officially "The Kingdoms and Lands Represented in the Imperial Council". Transleithania consisted of the
Kingdom of Hungary and its subordinate, the
Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia. Instead of a subordinate regional diet, Hungary was granted its own parliament, and essentially attained the status of "sovereign state". The curia system, however, remained in place. At this point, the Council had extensive legislative powers in all Cisleithanian matters. Appointment and dismissal of the government of the Cisleithania and the Minister-President remained the right of the emperor. The number of deputies each diet sent to the Imperial Council was set by the Compromise. There were 203 deputies in total: • 54 from the
Kingdom of Bohemia • 5 from the
Kingdom of Dalmatia • 38 from the
Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, • 18 from the
Archduchy of
Lower Austria • 10 from the
Archduchy of
Upper Austria • 3 from the
Duchy of Salzburg • 13 from the
Duchy of Styria • 5 from the
Duchy of Carinthia • 6 from the
Duchy of Carniola • 5 from the
Duchy of Bukovina • 22 from the
Margraviate of Moravia • 6 from the
Duchy of Upper and Lower Silesia • 10 from the
Princely County of Tyrol • 2 from
Vorarlberg • 2 from the
Margraviate of Istria • 2 from the
Princely County of Gorizia and Gradisca • 2 from
Imperial Free City of Trieste The next great change to the Imperial Council came in 1873. The number of deputies was increased from 203 to 353. Deputies would no longer be elected by the diets of the crown lands. Instead, they would be directly elected through the curia system for six year terms. The curia of the landowners elected 85 deputies, that of the chambers of commerce 21, that of cities 118, and that of the rural communities 128. Overall, only 6% of the population of the Empire could vote in these elections. Tax requirements for entry into the curiae remained the same, but was lowered to five guilders in 1883. On October 10, 1893,
minister-president Eduard Taaffe, 11th Viscount Taaffe submitted a bill in the House of Deputies that intended to abolish the fourth curia, and introduce universal suffrage in the third curia for those men below the five guilder threshold. This curia elected 72 deputies, shifting the balance of power away from the nobility. Minister-president
Paul Gautsch von Frankenthurn introduced the final electoral reform in the history of the House of Deputies in 1906, after mass demonstrations by the rising
Social Democratic Party, and despite fierce opposition in the House of Lords. Universal suffrage for men was introduced, and the curia system was abolished. The number of deputies was raised to 516, and seats were allotted once again based on the crown lands. Universal suffrage allowed greater representation for members of the working class, and diminished the power of the German-speaking bourgeoisie. Whilst this was an advance for democracy, it resulted in the splintering of the House of Deputies into numerous factions based on nationality and ideology, which made it dysfunctional. Throughout its existence, the effectiveness of the Imperial Council suffered heavily from conflicts between and within the numerous constituent nationalities of the Empire. Governments of Cisleithania had to rely on loose
ad hoc alliances, often with the support of the Polish representatives (
Polenklub), and there were as many as 29 Minister-Presidents between 1867 and 1918. ==Dissolution==