The enlightened rule of Maria-Theresa and Joseph …

Years: 1684 - 1827

The enlightened rule of Maria-Theresa and Joseph II plays a leading role in the development of a modern Czech nation, but one that is full of contradictions.

On the one hand, the policy of centralization whittles down further any vestiges of a separate Bohemian Kingdom and results in the Germanization of the imperial administration and nobility.

On the other hand, by removing the worst features of the Counter-Reformation and by introducing social and educational reforms, these rulers provide the basis for economic progress and the opportunity for social mobility.

The consequences for Bohemia are of widespread significance.

The nobility turns its attention to industrial enterprise.

Many of the nobles sublet their lands and invest their profits in the development of textile, coal, and glass manufacture.

Czech peasants, free to leave the land, move to cities and manufacturing centers.

Urban areas, formerly populated by Germans, become increasingly Czech in character.

The sons of Czech peasants are sent to school; some attend the university, and a new Czech intellectual elite emerges.

During this same period the population of Bohemia nearly quadruples, and a similar increase occurs in Moravia, but in response to pressures from the nobility, Joseph's successor, Leopold II (1790-92), abrogates many of Joseph's edicts and restores certain feudal obligations. (Serfdom will not be completely abolished until 1848.)

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