Engelbert Dollfuss
From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Engelbert Dollfuss (German: Dollfuß) (October 4, 1892 – July 25, 1934) was an Austrian statesman.
He studied law in Vienna, and Economics in Berlin. During World War I, he served in the Alps and briefly became a Prisoner of War in 1918.
He became Chancellor on May 20, 1932 as head of a right-wing coalition government. He wanted to solve the problems caused by the Depression. He had problems finding majorities in parlament. The measures he liked to take to tackle inflation were unpopular, and in March 1933, he suspended the Austrian parlament. He then governed by decree.
With Adolf Hitler being Chancellor in Germany, Dollfuss feared that the influence of the NSDAP would grow. This would then lead to a growth in popularity for its Austrian counterpart. He therefore banned the NSDAP in June 1933, as well as the SDAPÖ in February 1934.
In September 1933 he formed an umbrella grouping to support the regime, the Vaterländische Front (Fatherland Front) and merged the Christian Social Party with the para-military Heimwehr (Home Guard), a Nationalist paramilitary group. The regime which was installed by him and remained in power until 1938 is often called Austrofascism. The form of state he employed was called the Ständestaat.
On July 25, 1934 eight Austrian Nazis entered the Chancellery building and shot and killed Dollfuss in an attempted coup, as a prelude to Anschluss. The Nazis surrendered, were executed, and Kurt Schuschnigg became the new dictator of Austria.
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Preceded by: Karl Buresch |
Chancellor of Austria | Succeeded by: Kurt Schuschnigg |