You are here: Home Modules More people – Population growth in the Monarchy
Personal tools

ONLINE TICKETS

 

More people – Population growth in the Monarchy


Modulinformation
(obligatorisch)
9437
True
1
save
More people – Population growth in the Monarchy
(übernommen)
Angabe des Autors nach dem Muster: Martin Müller
1930
True
1
save
Christina Linsboth
(obligatorisch)
Kurzangabe der wichtigsten Daten / Anrisstext
9438
True
1
save
Improved medical and hygienic conditions and more food made it possible: from the eighteenth century on there was a steady increase in Europe’s population.
Textangaben
9436
True
1
save

In comparison with other European states population growth in the Habsburg Monarchy was rather low and began late, not until the end of the eighteenth century. While at the beginning of the eighteenth century some two million people lived on the territory of present-day Austria, at the end of the century there were already three million. From the middle of the nineteenth century the whole of Europe experienced nothing less than an explosion in the size of the population, which was above all the result of increasing birth rates and falling death rates.

In the Habsburg Monarchy the growth was concentrated above all on Vienna, with more and more people moving to the city, especially in the nineteenth century.

Even if the number of critical periods in the food supply dropped in the course of the eighteenth century, there were nevertheless recurrent famines; those in 1709-10 and between 1770 and 1772 were particularly serious. These were caused by food shortages as a result of poor harvests or crop failures due to pests, wet and cool summers or severe winters. Moreover, the growing population meant that more food was needed. In addition to climatic and demographic causes there was also an economic factor: the price of grain, which was in any case high, rose still further and thus aggravated the supply crises. It was the poorest sections of the population who were particularly affected, and in their need they resorted to using all kinds of health-endangering substances to make bread. During the famine of 1772 Maria Theresa and Joseph II tried to alleviate the situation by buying grain from Hungary.

Medien
(übernommen)
221
True
1
ignore
(übernommen)
Dem Inhalt zugeordnete Bildergalerie
49
True
1
ignore
(übernommen)
Ein Video
50
True
1
ignore
(übernommen)
Abbildung eines historischen Quellendokuments
51
True
1
ignore
Zitate
(übernommen)
Legen Sie hier ein Textzitat ab
222
True
1
ignore
Weitere Informationen
(übernommen)
1932
True
1
save
Bolognese-Leuchtenmüller, Birgit: Bevölkerungsentwicklung und Berufsstruktur, Gesundheits- und Fürsorgewesen in Österreich 1750-1918 [Materialien zur Wirtschafts- und Sozialgeschichte. Wirtschafts- und Sozialstatistik Österreich-Ungarns 1], Wien 1978, 3-4. John, Michael/Lichtblau, Albert: Schmelztiegel Wien einst und jetzt. Zur Geschichte und Gegenwart von Zuwanderung und Minderheiten, Wien/Köln 1990, 12. Vocelka, Karl: Glanz und Untergang der höfischen Welt. Repräsentation, Reform und Reaktion im habsburgischen Vielvölkerstaat [Österreichische Geschichte], Wien 2001, 295-297, 329-330.
Attributszuweisungen
(übernommen)
Weise Attribute zu
Zeitliche Einordnung
(übernommen)
Linken Sie hier bitte zu einem Zeitraum.
-1
True
1
save
Beschlagwortung
(übernommen)
Ordnen Sie der Story themtische Schlagwörter zu
-1
True
1
save
Bild Population growth in Vienna during the 19th century
 
Document Actions
Navigation