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A French pacifist, a British Embassy and a “British Schindler”

It is the summer of 1914 and a political assassination has shocked Europe.  Not the one you are thinking of – but one which will lead to a change of name for the street in Vienna on which the British Embassy sits – the Jaurèsgasse.

French politician Jean Jaurès, sometimes described as “one of the first social democrats”, was assassinated in Paris at the outbreak of World War I.  He is perhaps best remembered for his anti-militarism and attempts to avert the outbreak of the First World War. The Wikipedia article at the link includes poignant details including the fact that Jaurès was shot in the back by a French nationalist as he ate his dinner in the Café du Croissant on 31 July 1914.  Austria-Hungary had declared war on Serbia on 28 July; Germany declared war on France on 3 August.

“Never, for forty years, has Europe been in a more threatening and more tragic situation,” Jaurès warned in the spring of 1914.  Subsequent events were to prove him right.

Five years later, the Richardsgasse in Vienna’s third district was renamed the Jaurèsgasse in his honour.  It is one of few streets in Vienna (let me know if you know of others) which has a grave accent; its name is much mispronounced.

The street was built in the 1870s on land belonging to Prince Metternich, whose palace at Rennweg 27 is now the Italian Embassy. The British, Russian, Iranian, Chinese and (recently demolished) German embassies are all nearby, as is the distinctive Russian Orthodox church. The street is also home to a large Gemeindebau (social housing block), built in 1952-53 to ease the post-war housing crisis.

The Anglican Church in the Jaurèsgasse was opened on 8 July 1877, designed by architect Viktor Rumpelmayer.  In a story reminiscent of “Schindler’s List”, up to 1800 Jews were baptised there in the run up to 1939.

The Jaurèsgasse has had various names over the years:

For most Brits, the renaming of streets is a rare occurrence.  The frequency with which it has occurred in parts of central and eastern Europe is a reminder of how turbulent the 20thC has been across much of the region.  I commend Timothy Snyder’s “Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin” (2010) for a study of the most extreme expressions of that turbulence.

We will examine how the building of the British Residence at Metternichgasse 6 survived war-time damage to be repaired and reinstated after 1945 in a future blog.

UPDATE: A reader has responded to our request for accented street names by pointing out Genéegasse in the 13th District. Thanks!

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