When Austria-Hungary broke up at the end of the First World War, the
sacrifice of one million men who had died fighting for the Habsburg
monarchy now seemed to be in vain. This book is the first of its kind to
analyze how the Great War was interpreted, commemorated, or forgotten
across all the ex-Habsburg territories. Each of the book's twelve
chapters focuses on a separate region, studying how the transition to
peacetime was managed either by the state, by war veterans, or by
national minorities. This "splintered war memory," where some posed as
victors and some as losers, does much to explain the fractious character
of interwar Eastern Europe.