Inclusion and Exclusion of Migrants in the Multicultural Realm of the Habsburg "State of Many Peoples"
Authors
Sylvia Hahn
Abstract
Immigration by foreign workers, entrepreneurs, master craftsmen and tradesmen,
journeymen and merchants, as well as seasonal regional labour migration within
individual states and across national borders, has been a tradition that goes far
back into the Early Modern Era. Artisans, journeymen, and apprentices, a particularly
mobile group, formed the major part of the foreigners in Vienna in the preindustrial
era. Aside from this artisanal migration during the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries, the Habsburg Monarchy recruited labourers from other areas of
the empire or from abroad, particularly those skilled in luxury crafts and textile production.
Over the course of the nineteenth century, these were followed by industrial
pioneers and workers. Migration was not only concentrated on Vienna, but extended
to smaller towns and villages of the newly developed industrial regions of the Habsburg
Monarchy. Integration into the “new” society was no easy matter, for labourers
or entrepreneurs. Immigrant women and men were kept under close scrutiny by
municipal authorities and faced discrimination from local laws and native-born residents.
A change of residence clearly led to one’s sense of being a foreigner, both in
one’s own perception and that of the “others”, but evidence shows that the concept
of “foreignness” is a variable construct that changes according to the political, economic,
and social situation.