An early victory leads to tension played a key role in toppling Metternich's government and precipitating his retirement on 13 March 1848. After news broke of the February victories in Paris, uprisings occurred throughout Europe, including in
Vienna, where the
Diet (parliament) of
Lower Austria at
Niederösterreichisches Landeshaus (Estates House of Lower Austria) in March demanded the resignation of
Prince Metternich, the conservative State Chancellor and Foreign Minister. With no forces rallying to Metternich's defense, nor word from
Ferdinand I of Austria to the contrary, he resigned on 13 March. Metternich fled to London, and Ferdinand appointed new, nominally liberal, ministers. By November, the Austrian Empire saw several short-lived liberal governments under five successive
minister-presidents of Austria:
Count Kolowrat (17 March–4 April),
Count Ficquelmont (4 April–3 May),
Baron Pillersdorf (3 May–8 July),
Baron Doblhoff-Dier (8 July–18 July) and
Baron Wessenberg (19 July–20 November). The established order collapsed rapidly because of the weakness of the Austrian armies.
Field Marshal Joseph Radetzky was unable to keep his soldiers fighting
Venetian and
Milanese insurgents in
Lombardy-Venetia, and instead had to order the remaining troops to evacuate. Social and political conflict as well as inter and intra confessional hostility momentarily subsided as much of the continent rejoiced in the liberal victories. Mass political organizations and public participation in government became widespread. However, liberal ministers were unable to establish central authority. Provisional governments in
Venice and
Milan quickly expressed a desire to be part of an Italian confederacy of states; for the Venetian government this lasted only five days, after the 1848 armistice between Austria and
Piedmont. A new Hungarian government in
Pest announced its intentions to break away from the Empire and elect Ferdinand its King, and a Polish National Committee announced the same for the
Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria.
Social and political tensions after the "Springtime of Peoples" The victory of the party of movement was looked at as an opportunity for lower classes to renew old conflicts with greater anger and energy. Several tax boycotts and attempted murders of tax collectors occurred in
Vienna. Assaults against soldiers were common, including against Radetzky's troops retreating from
Milan. The archbishop of Vienna was forced to flee, and in Graz, the convent of the Jesuits was destroyed. The demands of nationalism and its contradictions became apparent as new national governments began declaring power and unity.
Charles Albert of Sardinia, King of Piedmont-Savoy, initiated a nationalist war on March 23 in the Austrian held northern Italian provinces that would consume the attention of the entire peninsula. The German nationalist movement faced the question of whether or not Austria should be included in the united German state, a quandary that divided the
Frankfurt National Assembly. The liberal ministers in Vienna were willing to allow elections for the German National Assembly in some of the
Habsburg lands, but it was undetermined by which Habsburg territories would participate. Hungary and Galicia were clearly not German; German nationalists (who dominated the Bohemian Diet) felt the
old crown lands rightfully belonged to a united German state, despite the fact that the majority of the people of
Bohemia and
Moravia spoke
Czech — a
Slavic language. Czech nationalists viewed the language as far more significant, calling for a boycott of the
Frankfurt Parliament elections in Bohemia, Moravia, and neighboring
Austrian Silesia (also partly Czech-speaking). Tensions in
Prague between German and Czech nationalists grew quickly between April and May. After the abolition of serfdom on April 17,
Supreme Ruthenian Council was established in
Galicia to promote the unification of
ethnic Ukrainian lands of Eastern Galicia,
Transcarpathia and
Bukovina in one province.
Ukrainian language department was opened in
Lviv University, and the first Ukrainian newspaper
Zoria Halytska started publishing in Lviv on May 15, 1848. On July 1, serfdom was also abolished in Bukovina. By early summer, conservative regimes had been overthrown, new freedoms (including freedom of the press and freedom of association) had been introduced, and multiple nationalist claims had been exerted. New parliaments quickly held elections with broad franchise to create constituent assemblies, which would write new constitutions. The elections that were held produced unexpected results. The new voters, naïve and confused by their new political power, typically elected conservative or moderately liberal representatives. The radicals, the ones who supported the broadest franchise, lost under the system they advocated because they were not the locally influential and affluent men. The mixed results led to confrontations similar to the
"June Days" uprising in Paris. Additionally, these constituent assemblies were charged with the impossible task of managing both the needs of the people of the state and determining what that state physically is at the same time.
The Austrian Constituent Assembly was divided into a Czech faction, a German faction, and a Polish faction, and within each faction was the political left-right spectrum. Outside the Assembly, petitions, newspapers, mass demonstrations, and political clubs put pressure on their new governments and often expressed violently many of the debates that were occurring within the assembly itself. The Czechs held a
Pan-Slavic congress in
Prague between June 2 and June 12, 1848. It was primarily composed of
Austroslavs who wanted greater freedom within the Empire, but their status as peasants and
proletarians surrounded by a German middle class doomed their autonomy . They also disliked the prospect of annexation of Bohemia to a German Empire.
Counterrevolution Insurgents quickly lost in street fighting to King Ferdinand's troops led by
General Radetzky, prompting several liberal government ministers to resign in protest. Ferdinand, now restored to power in
Vienna, appointed conservatives in their places. These actions were a considerable blow to the revolutionaries, and by August most of northern Italy was under Radetzky's control. In
Bohemia, the leaders of both the German and Czech nationalist movements were both constitutional monarchists, loyal to the Habsburg Emperor. Only a few days after the Emperor reconquered northern Italy,
Alfred I, Prince of Windisch-Grätz took provocative measures in
Prague to prompt
street fighting. Once the barricades went up, he led Habsburg troops to crush the insurgents. After having taken back the city, he imposed martial law, ordered the Prague National Committee dissolved, and sent delegates to the
"Pan-Slavic" Congress home. These events were applauded by German nationalists, who failed to understand that the Habsburg military would crush their own national movement as well. Attention then turned to Hungary. War in Hungary again threatened imperial rule and prompted Emperor Ferdinand and his court to once more flee Vienna. Viennese radicals welcomed the arrival of Hungarian troops as the only force able to stand up against the court and ministry. The radicals took control of the city for only a short period of time. Windisch-Grätz led soldiers from
Prussia to quickly defeat the insurgents. Windisch-Grätz restored imperial authority to the city. The reconquering of Vienna was seen as a defeat over German nationalism. At this point, Ferdinand I named the noble
Prince Felix of Schwarzenberg head of government. Schwarzenberg, a consummate statesman, persuaded the feeble-minded Ferdinand to abdicate the throne to his 18-year-old nephew,
Franz Joseph. Parliamentarians continued to debate, but had no authority on state policy. Both the Czech and Italian revolutions were defeated by the Habsburgs. Prague was the first victory of counter-revolution in the Austrian Empire.
Lombardy-Venetia was quickly brought back under Austrian rule in the mainland, even because popular support for the revolution vanished: revolutionary ideals were often limited to part of middle and upper classes, which failed both to gain "hearts and minds" of lower classes and to convince the population about
Italian nationalism. Most part of lower classes indeed were quite indifferent, and actually most part of Lombard and Venetian troops remained loyal. The only widespread support to the revolution was in the cities of
Milan and
Venice, with
the Republic of San Marco lasting under siege until 28th of August, 1849. ==Revolution in the Kingdom of Hungary==