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Sarajevo

Page 14

by R W Seaton-Watson


  clue was given as to the source, but in Through Thirty Years (i., p. 396) it is

  ascribed

  to

  a

  Polish

  aristocrat

  formerly

  on

  terms

  of

  intimacy

  with

  Francis

  Ferdinand and claiming to have learnt the story from Vatican sources, through

  the Nunciature in Vienna. Mr. Steed is careful to describe it as " an interesting

  hypothesis; it was and could be nothing more."

  99

  by a man already stricken with a mortal disease. It

  may be that the concluding volumes of the German

  diplomatic documents or the forthcoming memoirs of

  the

  Archduke's

  secretary,

  Count

  Polzer-Hoditz,

  will

  throw some light upon the mystery; but in the mean-

  time there is absolutely no evidence which would justify

  our accepting the story as authentic.

  On the very eve of the war I learned from a sure

  source that the day after the murder in Sarajevo the

  Archduke's desks at home were searched for certain

  documents; and if there were any truth in the legend

  of " the Pact of Konopisht," such action would not be

  surprising.

  But

  a

  much

  simpler

  explanation

  is

  the

  desire of the Imperial family to obtain a clue to the Arch-

  duke's plans of political reconstruction, and still more

  the names of his secret advisers and confidants. As a

  matter of fact, nothing compromising was found, and

  it is only now that the essential documents are about to

  be given to the world.

  Other legends also have gathered round the Konopistë

  meeting, and it has been alleged that confidential informa-

  tion as to what passed there reached the Russian General

  Staff, was transmitted by it to Belgrade, and prompted

  the conspirators of the " Black Hand " to instigate the

  Archduke's

  murder.

  This

  is

  obviously

  pure

  fantasy,

  for even if such highly confidential information could

  have leaked through to the Russians, it could hardly

  have reached St. Petersburg more than a week before

  the murder, which allows no time whatever for the

  necessary

  plans.

  Moreover,

  it

  is

  known

  that

  the

  future assassins had already crossed over from Serbia

  to Bosnia at least a fortnight before the Konopistë

  meeting, and were by that time no longer amenable

  to control from the " Black Hand " or from anywhere

  All that can be said, then, is that the journalistic

  Pouring53 about the " Roses of Konopistë " gave wide

  100

  publicity and encouraged wild speculation. The know-

  ledge that the changed situation in Eastern Europe

  must be under discussion led to the assumption that

  Francis Ferdinand had propounded a scheme for Serbia's

  overthrow, and that William II had promised Germany's

  support. Though unsupported by any evidence,1 this

  is at least credible, and it was actually believed in

  many quarters. The fact that the Archduke left for

  Bosnia only a week later seemed to lend colour to the

  view, and the manoeuvres which he conducted there

  were generally regarded as a rehearsal for the coming

  war with Serbia.

  1 For indirect evidence to the contrary, see infra, p. 183.

  CHAPTER V

  THE MURDER OF THE ARCHDUKE

  THE Archduke Francis Ferdinand attended the Bosnian

  manoeuvres as Inspector-General of the Army, and from

  the outset gave to his visit a strictly military character.

  But his headquarters were at the little health resort of

  Ilidze, some four miles from Sarajevo, and here he was

  joined by the Duchess of Hohenberg. Before returning

  home it was decided that they should pay an official

  visit to Sarajevo, and the day selected for this was

  Vidovdan,

  or

  St.

  Vitus's

  Day.

  This

  anniversary

  is

  specially dear to the Serbian race, for it commemorates

  the memorable battle of Kosovo, which in 1389 rang the

  death-knell of the Serbian mediaeval Empire, and round

  which a whole cycle of legend and ballad poetry has

  gathered. After more than five centuries this defeat

  had been wiped out by Serbia's victory at Kumanovo

  in 1912, but in 1913 the acute tension which produced

  the Second Balkan War had prevented any proper

  celebration of the day. Thus in 1914 the Serbs were for

  the first time in a position to celebrate it in peace and

  seeming security, and their kinsmen across the frontier

  needed no prompting in order to share in their rejoicings.

  It was thus peculiarly unfortunate that this day, of all

  days, should have been deliberately selected for the visit

  of one who personified a foreign domination and was not

  unnaturally regarded as the most formidable obstacle

  to Serbian national expansion. It was resented by the

  vast majority of Jugoslavs on both sides of the frontier

  as a provocation and a challenge, and this feeling must

  be taken into account in any estimate of what followed.

  102

  On the morning, then, of Sunday 28 June, the Arch-

  duke and the Duchess were proceeding to the Town Hall

  of Sarajevo, when a bomb was thrown at their car,

  and falling in the roadway behind it, exploded and

  wounded some of the spectators and an officer in the

  car that followed. The Archduke entered the Town

  Hall in a towering passion, and before the Mayor could

  address him, called out, " Mr. Mayor, I come here on a

  visit and I get bombs thrown at me. It is- outrageous.

  Now you may speak." After the speeches and presenta-

  tions the Archduke asked Potiorek whether they should

  continue their drive, or whether there were likely to be

  more bombs. The Governor and the Chief of Police

  expressed the conviction that nothing more could happen,

  and that the only alternatives were to go to the Konak *

  (only a few hundred yards across the river) or to avoid

  the main streets altogether and drive straight to the

  Museum. On this the Archduke declared his intention

  of first visiting the military hospital to enquire after the

  wounded Colonel von Merizii, and then going on to the

  Museum. When Count Harrach tried to dissuade him,

  Potiorek testily exclaimed: " Do you think that Sarajevo

  is full of assassins? " The Duchess having announced

  her intention of accompanying her husband, the pair

  entered a new car, with General Potiorek inside and

  Count Harrach standing on the footboard.

  The front car, containing the Chief of Police, drove

  along the Appel-Qua
i, but at the Latin Bridge diverged

  to the right into a narrow street leading to the main

  thoroughfare of the town. The driver of the second car,

  in which the Archduke was seated, was a military

  chauffeur who did not know Sarajevo, and therefore natur-

  ally followed suit. But Potiorek at once made him pull

  up, and he was slowly backing on to the embankment,

  when shots were fired at very close range by a young

  man on the pavement. This was Gavrilo Princip, one

  1 The Governor's official residence.

  103

  of the seven assassins whom we saw to have been armed

  for an attempt on the Archduke's life. Orders were

  promptly given to drive back to the Konak, which was

  reached within a couple of minutes. But even by that

  time the Duchess was already dead, and the Archduke,

  wounded in the jugular vein, was unconscious when he

  was lifted from the car, and expired within a quarter

  of an hour, before either doctor or priest could be sum-

  moned to his aid. His last murmured words, over-

  heard by Harrach, had been " Sophie, live for our

  children! "

  It appears that Princip fired first at the Archduke

  and then, seeing that his shot had gone home, turned

  his revolver upon Potiorek. At this moment the Duchess,

  realising that something had happened, rose in her seat

  to shelter her husband, while simultaneously someone in

  the crowd tried to seize the assassin's arm, with the

  result that his aim was spoilt and the next shot fatally

  wounded the Duchess in the body.

  Before we turn to discuss the antecedents and motives

  of the assassins and the responsibility of the crime, a

  brief reference must be made to the incidents of the

  funeral — incidents only less sensational and perplexing

  than the tragedy of Sarajevo itself. The bodies were

  transported to the Dalmatian coast and thence by sea

  to Trieste, and reached Vienna at ten o'clock on the

  night of 2 July. The cortège was met at the station by

  the new Heir-Apparent, the Archduke Charles, and the

  whole officers' corps of the Vienna garrison, and solemnly

  escorted to the Chapel of the Hofburg. Already there

  was much comment at the choice of so late an hour and

  the deliberate avoidance of daylight, and it became

  known that the young Archduke by going to the station

  had

  broken

  through

  the

  arrangements

  prescribed

  at

  Court, and that the Chamberlain, Prince Montenuovo,

  had originally intended that the body of the Duchess

  should be sent direct to its last resting-place, while only

  105

  the Archduke's should be admitted to the Hofburg.

  This was too much for the old Emperor, and the two

  coffins, which were of different size and ornamentation,

  were placed together in the chapel, but on different levels;

  and as if this distinction were not enough, the full insignia

  of the Archduke were placed on his coffin, while on that

  of the Duchess were a pair of white gloves and a black

  fan — a pointed reminder of her former inferior position

  as lady-in-waiting. No wreaths were sent either by the

  Emperor or by members of the Imperial family, and until

  the foreign Ambassadors brought tributes from their

  sovereigns, those sent by the Hohenberg children and

  by Countess Lónyay (the former Crown Princess) stood

  quite alone.

  The funeral service was attended by the Emperor and

  conducted by the Cardinal-Archbishop, but the chapel

  was tiny, and no opportunity whatever was offered to

  the general public to pay their last respects to the Heir-

  Apparent. The coffins were left all the afternoon in the

  closed chapel, and not till after dusk did the funeral

  procession again leave the palace. This time, by way

  of protest against such extraordinary procedure, over

  a hundred members of the highest Austrian and Hun-

  garian aristocracy,1 in gala uniform, but on foot, forced

  their way unannounced into the procession at a given

  point on the route, and accompanied it as far as the

  station. The train left at eleven o'clock, reaching the

  little country station of Pöchlarn about one in the morn-

  ing. It was as though every conceivable effort had been

  made to inconvenience those desirous of attending the

  last ceremony, and to keep the public utterly at arms'

  length. Feeling was intense against Prince Montenuovo,

  as master of ceremonies, and it was widely asserted that

  he, as a morganatic offshoot of the House of Habsburg,

  was wreaking a petty vengeance upon the woman who,

  1

  Such

  families

  as

  Liechtenstein,

  Schwarzenberg,

  Lobkowitz,

  Fürstenberg,

  Windischgrätz, Hohenlohe, Thurn und Taxis, Széchényi, Zichy, Hoyos, Kinsky,

  Ledochowski, Sternberg.

  105

  but for the hand of an assassin, might perhaps one day

  have ceased to be morganatic and attained the rank

  of Empress. Yet Francis Joseph, before leaving for

  Ischl on 7 July, went out of his way to address an auto-

  graph letter to Prince Montenuovo, thanking him for

  his faithful services and the care which he had always

  taken

  to

  act

  "in

  accordance

  with

  his

  Majesty's

  intentions."

  To the plain man all this seemed to partake of studied

  insult to the memory of the dead, while military circles

  resented it as "a fanatical attempt to eliminate the dead

  Archduke as speedily as possible from the sphere of his

  former activity, and if this could be attained, from the

  memory

  of

  his

  contemporaries."1

  Added

  force

  was

  given to this view by the marked manner in which foreign

  royalties were discouraged from attending the funeral2 —

  a step which was explained by the fear of further out-

  rages, but was really intended by Berchtold to prevent

  a personal exchange of views between the Emperor and

  other sovereigns, such as would almost certainly have

  made for peace in Europe.

  As though the very elements had conspired o mark

  the unusual tragedy of the occasion, one of the most

  terrific thunderstorms of recent years burst over the

  Danube at the very moment when the cortège was about

  to

  leave

  Pöchlarn. Torrential rain threw everything

  into confusion, the coffins were hastily carried into the

  tiny waiting-room, and everyone crowded pell-mell after

  them. The heavens were giving their warning of the

  wrath to come. At last the storm abated, and in the

  first summer dawn the victims of Sarajevo were borne

  across the Danube and up the hilly road to Artstetten,

  where Francis Ferdina
nd had built his memorial chapel

  1

  These are the

  words of

  the

  former War

  Minister, General

  Auffenberg,

  (Vesterreichs Höhe und Niedergang, p. 255).

  2

  Auffenberg quotes " one of our most tried diplomatists " as describing this

  as a huge blunder or a sign that war was already being planned " {ibid.).

  106

  because the wife of his choice was too low-born to rest

  in the stifling Habsburg vaults of the Capuchine Church

  in Vienna.

  The Archduke's decision to visit Bosnia was taken as

  early as September 1913,1 and was made by him in his

  capacity as Inspector-General of the Army, in consulta-

  tion with the military chiefs.2 It" would seem only

  natural that he should at least have invited the opinion

  of Dr. von Bilinski, the Joint Finance Minister, within

  whose competence the two annexed provinces lay. But

  in point of fact the latter was altogether ignored, and

  first learned of the proposed visit from the Governor,

  General Potiorek, who notified the Archduke's desire

  that it should follow exclusively military lines. Bilinski

  recounts in his memoirs that about this time anonymous

  letters, threatening murder and revolution, were being

  fairly frequently received both by the Ministers and by

  the Archduke, and that he himself, while not taking very

  seriously persons who advertised their intentions before-

  hand, thought it to be none the less advisable to discuss

  precautionary

  measures.

  He

  therefore

  instructed

  Sarajevo to sound the local authorities* as to their views

  on such a visit — with the result that practically all of

  them declined responsibility for the consequences. These

  reports were duly transmitted to Vienna and to the Court,

  but brought down upon Sarajevo a sharp reprimand:

  the responsibility of the civil authorities, they were told,

  was neither desired nor needed.4

  The result was actually to strengthen the Archduke in

  1 Conrad, A us Meiner Dienstzeit, ii., p. 445. Francis Ferdinand told Conrad

  himself on 16 September, and on 29 September Potiorek informed Conrad of

  the Archduke's intention to go as Heir-Apparent and to take his wife with him.

  2

  On

  8

  July,

  1914,

  Count

  Tisza,

  speaking

 

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