The July Putsch () was a failed coup d'état in Austria against the Fatherland Front government of Engelbert Dollfuss by Austrian Nazis from 25 to 30 July 1934.
The Austrian Legion and Austrian Schutzstaffel soldiers with support from Nazi Germany attempted to depose Dollfuss's Austrofascist regime in favor of a pro-Nazi government under Anton Rintelen of the Christian Social Party. The Nazis attacked the Federal Chancellery and assassinated Dollfuss, but the majority of the Austrian population and the Austrian Army remained loyal to the government. The July Putsch ultimately failed when Adolf Hitler withdrew his support for the coup after Fascist Italy guaranteed to diplomatically support Austria against a German invasion.
The Austrian government eventually suppressed the coup, with over 200 people being killed in six days of fighting. A number of Austrian Nazis and collaborators were charged with treason and executed or imprisoned. Kurt Schuschnigg succeeded Dollfuss as Chancellor of Austria and the Fatherland Front remained in power under the Federal State of Austria until the Anschluss in 1938.
On 4 March 1933, the Austrian chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss was able to exploit a situation in the National Council to obstruct further sessions, effectively causing the self-elimination of the Austrian Parliament and establishing himself as a dictator. Dollfuss was a conservative Catholic Austrian nationalist who opposed to Hitler and Nazism, portraying himself as the defender of an independent Catholic Austria from Nazi infiltration. The Austrian Nazis responded with demands for a new election, massive propaganda, and a bombing campaign, to which Dollfuss responded with Authoritarianism measures such as house searches and arrests.
On 8 March, the situation was exacerbated by Hans Frank, the Nazi Minister of Justice of Bavaria, who in a public speech threatened the Austrian government with an armed intervention by Nazi forces. Nevertheless, the Austrian government initially concentrated on the ban of the Communist Party of Austria and the Republikanischer Schutzbund of the Social Democratic Workers' Party of Austria. On 15 May, Frank traveled to Vienna, where he spoke out against the Dollfuss regime and Jews, and addressed Austrians to encourage civil disobedience. In response, Dollfuss ordered the deportation of Frank and another 100 German Nazis from the country. He had nearly 2,400 Austrian Nazis arrested for pelting the Heimwehr with eggs, rocks, and vegetables. On 19 June, in response to a bombing campaign by Austrian Nazis that had left several people dead and dozens wounded, the Austrian Nazi Party was banned. Hitler's government reacted with harsh economic sanctions aimed at Austrian tourism, known as the Thousand-mark ban.
After the Nazi Party was banned in Austria, many Austrian Nazis fled to Germany and joined the Austrian Legion under the command of Hermann Reschny, while others remained in Austria and continued their actions illegally.
In February 1934, Dollfuss and his Fatherland Front emerged victorious in the four-day Austrian Civil War against the Social Democrats. He established Austria as a one-party state that was staunchly opposed to the Nazis and unification with Germany.
In Carinthia, the centres of the coup were in Lower Carinthia and Sankt Paul im Lavanttal. In Upper Austria, in addition to individual actions in the Salzkammergut, the fighting was concentrated in the Pyhrn Pass and in the Mühlviertel, where on the night of 26 July, in the Kollerschlag area on the German-Austrian border, a division of the Austrian Legion invaded Austrian territory from Bavaria and attacked the customs guard and a police station.Anna Rosmus (2015) Hitlers Nibelungen. Grafenau: Samples, pp. 101f Many of the Austrian Nazis were not armed since they had believed that the Austrian military and police would join them once the coup began, but most forces stayed loyal to the Fatherland Front government. On 26 July, a German courier was arrested at the border crossing in Kollerschlag who was carrying precise instructions for the putsch known as the "Kollerschlag Document", which testified to a clear connection between Bavaria and the July Putsch.
The death of Dollfuss enraged Benito Mussolini, the Fascist Italy leader of Italy, whose wife Rachele was entertaining the rest of Dollfuss's family. Mussolini moved troops to the Italian-Austrian border and told Hitler that he was not to invade Austria. This made Hitler proclaim that he did not support the coup, which ultimately led to its failure.
On 26 July 1934, military tribunals and Court-martial were convened to prosecute the rebels. Dozens of death sentences were imposed, of which 13 were carried out. Of those executed, four of them were on-duty police officers who had collaborated with the rebels during the seizure of the Federal Chancellery. Vienna police officers Josef Hackl, Erich Wohlrab, Franz Leeb, and Ludwig Maitzen were defendants in a mass trial of nine police officers for collaboration. Hackl, Wohlrab, Leeb, and Maitzen were found guilty of treason, sentenced to death, and executed by hanging on 13 August 1934. The other officers received sentences ranging from 10 years to life in prison. One other collaborator, on-duty soldier Ernst Feike, was executed on 7 August 1934. Another 4,000 rebels received prison sentences or were detained. In Vienna alone, at least 260 police officers were arrested after officials found a list of Nazi Party members while searching a police officer's home.
Many rebels fled to Yugoslavia or to Germany. Kurt von Schuschnigg became the new Chancellor of Austria and Ernst Rüdiger Starhemberg remained as Vice-Chancellor. After the failed putsch, Hitler closed down the Munich office of the Austrian Nazi Party.
In September 1934, Mussolini announced a "Pax Romana" alliance with France against Germany in response to the July Putsch, and Italy's opposition to Anschluss. Mussolini said that Italy would no longer support Germany's intentions to revise the Versailles Treaty and German rearmament.
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