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| - The State of Carinthia [Slov: Koroška; Ger: Kärnten] is one of the constituent states of the Danubian Federation [Ger: Die Donauföderation], and the state with a population majority Slovene. The March of Carniola entered into the House of Habsburg in 1335, being granted to Albert II, Duke of Austria. His son, Duke Rudolph IV of Austria, proclaimed Carniola a Duchy in 1364. Following the Treaty of Neuberg, 1379, Carniola became part of Inner Austria, and was only reunited with the Archduchy in 1457 under Frederick III, Holy Roman Emperor. In 1564 Inner Austria again broke off, with Carniola going with it. In 1619, Carniola was once again united with the rest of the Habsburg lands under Ferdinand II.
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abstract
| - The State of Carinthia [Slov: Koroška; Ger: Kärnten] is one of the constituent states of the Danubian Federation [Ger: Die Donauföderation], and the state with a population majority Slovene. The March of Carniola entered into the House of Habsburg in 1335, being granted to Albert II, Duke of Austria. His son, Duke Rudolph IV of Austria, proclaimed Carniola a Duchy in 1364. Following the Treaty of Neuberg, 1379, Carniola became part of Inner Austria, and was only reunited with the Archduchy in 1457 under Frederick III, Holy Roman Emperor. In 1564 Inner Austria again broke off, with Carniola going with it. In 1619, Carniola was once again united with the rest of the Habsburg lands under Ferdinand II. Almost two centuries later, in 1809, Carniola formed part of the Illyrian Provinces under Napoleon, only to form a part of the Kingdom of Illyria from 1815 once again under the Habsburg Monarchy. This is the form Carniola was in until the unrest of 1848, causing the dissolution of the Kingdom as an administrative region and a reformation within the Federation. Out of this early chaos formed the first incarnation of the state of Slovenia, known as the State of Carniola, uniting Slovenians under one banner for the first time in centuries. The then-state of Carniola, in 1864, united together with the state of Croatia into the state of Illyria and 5 years later, in 1869, left Illyria and was re-admitted as a state, under the new name of Slovenia. Later, the state was renamed Carinthia.
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