By the time our hero Švejk arrived in the Laborec valley in late May 1915, the war itself had been mentioned in the novel many times, mostly in conversations and anecdotes. In Chapter 7, where Švejk is called up to serve in the army, Hašek reports the disasters Austria-Hungary suffered in the first month of the war. Later he lets obrlajtnant Lukáš convey a more positive and less realistic view. This is during the famous conversation with hop-trader Wendler, who was despairing because of the loss of hop markets and also the behaviour of his wayward wife Katy. During Švejk's stay in Királyhida, soldiers who had already been to the front reported on the problems the k.u.k army faced both in Serbia and in the Carpathians. Now as the 11th march company of the 91st regiment moved up the Laborec Valley, the reader gets the firsts descriptions of actual war destruction. Still no Russian was in sight so it is clear that the enemy had been driven out.
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General August "Totenkopf" von Mackensen. |
Austria-Hungary, in which army Švejk served, was in trouble from the outset. Historian Norman Stone comments: The Austrian General Staff took everything into account, except reality. The mobilisation was a mess of indecision, orders and counter-orders. On the other hand, the fast Russian mobilisation took them by surprise. Troops going to Serbia now had to be directed east, resulting in havoc on the railways. At the heart of these dispositions was the powerful Chief of Staff, Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf, the very man who was the most ardent campaigner for "preventive" war-fare against Serbia.
An attack on Serbia on 12 August 1914 was quickly repelled by the experienced Serbian army. In Švejk these events are often referred to in stories from the front told in Királyhida, particularly by the ill-tempered sapper Vodička. Although the k.u.k army briefly captured Belgrade in December 1914, Serbia still held its ground in the early summer of 1915. The attack on Serbia was followed by systematic atrocities, "to teach the Serbs and their sympathizers within the Empire a lesson". This pattern repeated itself also in the east where the Rusyn population was regarded similarly unreliable. These atrocities are regularly woven into the novel by Hašek.
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The k.u.k army hanging Serbian civilians |
On the Eastern front things went even worse. By mid September Galicia had been overrun by Russian troops, who were in November threatening Kraków and had reached the Carpathians. The losses were huge; the Dual Monarchy lost 25 per cent of her officers in the first month of the war. One of the reasons for the scale of the losses was the officer’s fabulous head-gear and splendid uniforms. These were great for pomp and parades but easy targets for Serb and Russian riflemen and machine-gunners. The army soon had to ditch the feathers and equip their officers with less conspicuous headgear. It is estimated that Austria-Hungary lost 1.2 million in killed, wounded and missing up to 1 January 1915.
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Civilians in Galicia 1915 (Tore Mentyjærvi) |
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The offensive in which Jaroslav Hašek took part (richthofen.com). |
Despite Italy's entry in the war against their former allies, 1915 was a black year for the Entente: The Russian army had been badly mauled and their munitions and supply problems were cruelly exposed. The Anglo-French operations against Turkey failed, Bulgaria entered the war and in October Serbia finally succumbed after German and Bulgarian forces came to the aid of the hitherto unsuccessful Austro-Hungarian army. The Serbian resistance still commanded the admiration of the above-mentioned August Mackensen who led the final offensive; he ordered a monument to be erected in honour of the enemy he had just defeated!
Švejk never saw the year out. By the time the novel finished due to Jaroslav Hašek's untimely death, the 11th march company had reached the river Bug and by studying the text and relate it to historical events we can time the arrival to early July 1915. Švejk incidentally never got involved in the fighting and he was meant to survive, to be back at U kalicha at 6 o'clock at night, after the war.
Švejk never saw the year out. By the time the novel finished due to Jaroslav Hašek's untimely death, the 11th march company had reached the river Bug and by studying the text and relate it to historical events we can time the arrival to early July 1915. Švejk incidentally never got involved in the fighting and he was meant to survive, to be back at U kalicha at 6 o'clock at night, after the war.
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