(Redirected from Kleindeutschland):''For a list of German neighborhoods called ''Little Germany'', see
Little Germany.''
The '''Kleindeutsche Lösung''' ("Lesser German Solution") was a
19th century political idea postulating the idea of a unified
Germany led by
Hohenzollern Prussia, excluding the
Austrian Empire which was united with
Hungary and not willing to separate. The inclusion of Hungary would have contradicted the idea of a
national state.
It stands in contrast to the idea of a '''Großdeutsche Lösung''' ("Greater German Solution") ''(
Großdeutschland)'' (Greater Germany). The German parliament which was elected after the early successes of the revolution of 1848 was split between the two options, with the democratic left favouring a
Republican Großdeutschland, where as the liberal centre favoured a Kleindeutschland with a
constitutional monarchy. In the end, the Kleindeutsche Lösung prevailed, but the Prussian King rejected the crown offered to him.
After the Austro-Prussian Dualism had been forcefully decided in favor of Prussia by the
Austro-Prussian War in
1866, Kleindeutschland was realized in
1871 after the
Franco-Prussian War. The "small solution" was also chosen partly in order to prevent the Austrians and fellow Catholics in the south and west from being a predominant force in a Prussian Germany, a view held by Bismarck.
After
World War I, the Habsburg Monarchy was broken up and the German-speaking territories, having lost their industrial and trading areas, decided to join the German Reich. The
Treaty of Versailles and the
Treaty of Saint-Germain however specifically prohibited the union of Austria and Germany. Still, the Greater German sentiment remained strong and in 1938
Adolf Hitler annexed Austria into a new
Grossdeutsches Reich. In contrast to earlier versions of the Greater German idea, Austria was split up into several districts.
After the
Second World War Austria was once again separated from Germany and managed to gain its independence as a neutral state despite the growing
Cold War. Austria also declared itself the "first victim of Nazi Germany", despite its having been a part of Germany throughout the war and despite the involvement of many Austrians - including Hitler himself - with the regime. This need to distance oneself from Germany effectively ended "Greater German" sentiments in Austria.