- Leopold Graf Berchtold
Leopold Anton Johann Sigismund Josef Korsinus Ferdinand Graf Berchtold (in English: "Count Leopold Anthony John Sigismund Joseph Corsinus Ferdinand von Berchtold", in Hungarian: "Gróf Berchtold Lipót", in Czech: "Leopold hrabě Berchtold z Uherčic") (
April 18 ,1863 –November 21 ,1942 ) wasAustro-Hungarian foreign minister at the outbreak of theFirst World War .Berchtold was born on
April 18 , 1863. He was reputed to be one ofAustria-Hungary 's richest men, and he owned tracts of land inHungary andMoravia .Berchtold joined the diplomatic corps in 1893, and although he was never credited with any great ability, he impressed others with his courtly manners and aristocratic background. Promotion was consequently rapid. After spending time in
London andParis , Berchtold was appointed ambassador toRussia in 1907, serving in St. Petersburg until he returned toVienna in 1912, whereupon he was appointed Emperor Franz Josef's foreign minister.During the
Balkan Wars of 1912-1913 Berchtold mooted the idea of war withSerbia . Having ruled this out he nonetheless accepted what amounted to a diplomatic defeat at the conclusion of the war. His position against Serbia hardened during this period.With the assassination of
Archduke Franz Ferdinand by Serbian-backed Bosnian nationalists onJune 28 ,1914 , Berchtold saw an opportunity to humiliate Serbia, pushing for an immediate invasion of Serbia without a prior declaration of war, but was over-ruled in this byPrime Minister Istvan Tisza , who favored retribution through diplomatic channels.Berchtold persuaded the reluctant Emperor to issue an unacceptable ultimatum to Serbia (mainly by arguing that Russia would not come to Serbia's aid) on
July 23 , which was effectively the first step towards war. Berchtold disregarded Serbia's largely compliant reply and persuaded Franz-Josef to declare war onJuly 28 .With war underway Berchtold's performance was viewed as somewhat defeatist. Faced with Italian demands for control over certain southern Austrian territories, Berchtold recommended either a declaration of war on
Italy (a course of action favoured by Army Chief of StaffConrad von Hötzendorf and Prime Minister Tisza) or else acceptance of most of with the Italian demands.Forced to resign on
January 13 ,1915 , Berchtold was replaced as foreign minister by the more pugnaciousBaron Istvan Burian . Taking no further part in public life (although he maintained a prominent role at court), Count Leopold von Berchtold died onNovember 21 ,1942 near Csepreg,Hungary . He was buried in the family tomb near theBuchlov Castle ,Czech Republic .He was portrayed by
Sir John Gielgud in the 1969 filmOh! What A Lovely War .Notes
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.