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Old Slovene leaders Janez Bleiweis and Lovro Toman in the late 1860s.

Old Slovenes (Slovene: Staroslovenci) is the term used for a national conservative political group in the Slovene Lands from the 1850s to the 1870s, which was opposed to the radical national liberal Young Slovenes. Their main leaders were Janez Bleiweis, Lovro Toman, Luka Svetec, Etbin Henrik Costa, and Andrej Einspieler.

[edit] The origins

In the 1860s, the Slovene National Movement, which had a wide political platform, based on national emancipation of Slovenes in the Austrian Empire, and the recognition of the linguistic rights of the Slovene language, split into different factions. The differences were both ideological and tactical.

After the beginning of the constitutional period in the Austrian Empire, the Slovene nationalists gathered around the moderate conservative and liberal Catholic editor of the newspaper Kmetijske in rokodelske novice, Janez Bleiweis. Bleiweis and his allies led a policy of tactical alliances with different power groups in the Austrian Empire, like the Roman Catholic Church and František Palacký's Czech federalists. Starting from the mid 1860s, a group of young radical activists, gathered around Fran Levstik and Josip Stritar, challenged this pragmatic policy, and demanded a more radical approach, which would fully embrace liberal ideas. After a decade of friction between the two factions, the brake came in 1872, when the Young Slovenes established their own political organization. As a result, the groups which remained loyal to the old policies, became known as Old Slovenes.

Contrary to the Young Slovenes, who were critical towards the Catholic hierarchy, the Old Slovenes promoted traditional values, such as family, religion, and loyality to the Habsburg dinasty, on an Austroslavist background. Their motto was "Everything for Religion, Home, the Emperor!" (Vse za vero, dom, cesarja!).

[edit] The demise of Old Slovene conservativism

By 1876, the two factions forged a strategic alliance against Austrian centralism and German nationalism, and both supported the Taaffe government. This strategic alliance between conservatives and liberals, which also included a substantial group of radicals, known as the "The Concord" (Slovene: Slogaštvo), was sharply criticized by a new generation of Catholic activists, led by the theologian Anton Mahnič. The Old Slovenes opposed this new trend of Political Catholicism, which also included a mass mobilization of the peasantry, and continued to support a more traditional understanding of politics.

With the death of most of the Old Slovene leaders in the 1880s, the Slovene conservative political movement was replaced by a new type of political conservatism, based initially on traditionalist Political Catholicism and later on Christian Social and Christian Socialist ideas. With the establishment of the Catholic National Party in 1892, the policy known as "The Concord", based on an alliance between Old Slovenes and Young Slovenes, came to an end.

[edit] Personalities

The most important exponents of the Old Slovene political current were:




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