Pan-Slavism
The 19th century movement
Pan-Slavism was an aspect of
romantic nationalism. The political legitimacy of the state was seen as a natural ("organic") consequence of race; in the spirit of
Romanticism and opposed to
Enlightenment rationalism. The actual political movement arose in the
Austro-Hungarian and
Ottoman Empires. The first Pan-Slav convention was held in
Prague in
1848 and was specifically anti-Russian. The relationship of the Russians and the
Russian Empire to the movement was always troubled.
Like other romantic nationalist movements, scholars in the developing fields of history, philology, and folklore actively encouraged feelings of shared identity.
- the Balkan Wars
- WWI
- the creation of Yugoslavia after WWI
see
- Slavic Peoples
- Slavic languages