STIASSNY, Felix Stiassny-Elzhaim (1867–1938), factory owner, Venezuelan consuclass="underline" 44, 238, 507, 576.
STIASSNY, Rudolf (b. 1880), industrialist, Bulgarian consuclass="underline" 44, 507, 576.
STOCK EXCHANGE (Börse, Plan B2): 191.
STÖGER-STEINER, Baron Rudolf von Steinstetten (1861–1921), lieutenant field marshal (1912), in →Galicia (1914); infantry general (November 1915), commander of XV Corps on →Isonzo (from summer 1915), replaced →Baron Alexander Krobatin as minister of war (1917): 388, 519, 529f.
STORM, Otto (1874–1950), →Hofburgtheater actor and operetta tenor: 30, 32, 58, 322.
STORM OF STEEL →steel bath.
STREFFLEUR, Austrian army manual (1808–14); during the war a Feldblatt read by soldiers: 69.
STROBL, Karl Hans (1877–1946), author of historical and fantasy novels, war correspondent; Der Krieg im Alpenrot (1916): 326.
ST. STEPHEN’S CATHEDRAL (Stephans-Kirche, Plan C3): 105, 194, 218f.
STUKART, Moritz Moses (1856–1919), Viennese police commissioner, cabinet member: 43, 182, 506.
STÜRGKH, Count Karl von (1859–1916), prime minister (1911–16), proponent of war, assassinated by Friedrich Adler as protest against prolongation of war: 35, 44, 80, 81, 497.
SUBMARINE POEM, parody of →Goethe’s “Wanderer’s Night Song”.
SUKFÜLL, Karl (b. 1862), honorary president of Austro-Hungarian Association of Hoteliers: 44, 507.
SYRMIA (Srem), part of autonomous Croatia-Slavonia, north-east of Belgrade (Map F4) between rivers →Save and Danube, contested by Serbs and Austrians in September 1914: 388.
SZEPS, Moritz (1833–1902), founder and editor of liberal →Neues Wiener Tagblatt (1887–1910), father-in-law of →Clemenceau: 124, 485.
SZÖGÝENY-MARÎCH, Count Ladislaus (1841–1916), ambassador in Berlin (1892–1914), friend of →Wilhelm II: 255, 346f.
SZOMORY, Emil (1874–1944), Hungarian war correspondent: 46, 118.
TAAFFE, Countess Maria Magda von (1871–1918), daughter-in-law of former prime minister Count Eduard Taaffe, military hospital matron in Prague, inventor of game “Death to Russians” (“Russentod”): 348.
TABARIN, nightclub in Annagasse (Plan C4): 469.
TAGBLATT, Neues Wiener, influential daily with democratic credentials: 31, 49, 74, 77, 124f, 240, 319.
TANNENBERG (Map F1), Battle of, name given to →Paul von Hindenburg’s decisive victory over the Russian Second Army in East Prussia (August 1914): 172.
TARNOPOL (Map G3), →Galicia, occupied by Russians (August 1914), retaken by Central Powers (July 1917): 357.
TARNÓW, Polish town north of Gorlice. See Battle of →Gorlice-Tarnów: 129.
TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY (Technische Hochschule, Plan C5): 430.
TEGETTHOFF, Baron Wilhelm von (1827–1871), commander of Austrian navy in Mediterranean (1866–71), victor over Italian fleet at Lissa (1866): 43, 104.
TEISINGER, Joseph Teisinger von Tüllenberg (1856–1920), general notorious for ruthless approach to recruitment for front-line service: 315.
TEMES-KUBIN (Kovin/Kevevara), on frontier with Serbia north-east of Belgrade (Map F4). An alleged exchange of fire on 27 July 1914 provided Austria with a pretext for military intervention: 63.
TERSZTSZYÁNSKY, Karl von Nádas (1854–1921), general, commander of Balkan forces (May 1915), commander in Volhynia (June 1916, Map G2): 530.
TESCHEN (Map F3), Silesia, →headquarters of Austro-Hungarian army (November 1914–January 1917), whose commander in chief, →Archduke Friedrich, was Duke of Teschen: 113.
THALLER, Willi (1854–1941), popular actor: 490.
“THAT LOVELY DANCE OF YORE, THEY WON’T PLAY IT ANYMORE” (“Schön war der Tanz, aber spieln tan s’ ’n net”), Viennese song, music by Ludwig Prechtl (1865–1931) and lyrics by Franz Allmeder (1872–1941): 535.
THEATER AN DER WIEN (Plan B5), famous operetta theatre; opened by Mozart’s collaborator Emanuel Schikaneder, home to Beethoven while writing Fidelio, which was premiered there: 54, 489.
THEATER IN DER JOSEFSTADT, to west of Rathaus (Plan A2), Vienna’s second-oldest theatre, opened in 1788; presented drama, folk plays, and operettas during the war: 54, 183.
“THE CALL GOES OUT, A THUND’ROUS ROAR” (“Es braust ein Ruf wie Donnerhall”) →“Watch on the Rhine”.
“THE DEAR OLD GENTLEMAN” →“Draussen im Schönbrunner Park”.
“THE END OF THE WORLD IS NIGH, SO MORE CHAMPAGNE, I’M DRY” (“Nobel geht die Welt zugrunde”), duet (1910) by Franz Allmeder (1872–1941): 535.
“THEY’RE SURELY VILLAINS WHO DON’T CARE” music (probably) by Otto Janowitz (1888–1965) — its nursery rhyme simplicity in sharp contrast to the sentiments expressed (III, 40): 293.
THIS IS NOT WHAT I INTENDED (“Ich habe es nicht gewollt”), utterance attributed to Wilhelm II in 1915 when surveying carnage on the Western Front; transformed by Kraus into an ironic leitmotif: 302, 307, 378, 588.
THURY, Max von Thurybrugg (1841–1919), industrialist: 236, 399.
TIBUR, Ben (1867–1925), proprietor and director of →Apollo variety and operetta theatre; from 1910 also director of Lunapark in →Prater. His employees avoided military service (F 437–42, 1916, 108): 251.
TIRPITZ, Alfred von (1849–1930), German admiral responsible for expansion of the fleet and intensification of →U-boat warfare: 305.
TISZA, István Tisza de Borosjenő et Szeged (1861–1918), Hungarian prime minister (1913–17), initially opposed to the war, subsequently prominent in war party, shot by mutinous soldiers: 38, 431.
TITUS (IV, 37) “Amor et delicatiae humani generis”, from Suetonius, “In Praise of [Emperor] Titus”: 406.
TOLMINO (Tolmein), Austro-Hungarian bridgehead south-east of →Caporetto (Map D4), where poison gas was used during twelfth battle of Isonzo (24 October 1918): 536f.
“TONIGHT I’M FEELIN FUDDLED” (“Heut hab i schon mei Fahn’l/Heut is ma alles ans,/Da habt’s sa’s s’letzte Kranl/und spielt’s ma no paar Tanz”), song, music by Johann Sioly (1843–1911) and lyrics by Josef Hornig (1861–1911): 315, 524.
TO THE LAST BREATH OF MAN AND HORSE, from the Kaiser’s address “To the German People” (6 August 1914): 252, 259, 420, 517, 542.
“TO WANDER IS THE MILLER’S JOY” (“Das Wandern ist des Müllers Lust”, 1817), song, music by Karl Friedrich Zöllner (1800–1860) and text by Wilhelm Müller (1794–1827): 75.
TRAUTMANNSDORFF, “Tutu”, Count Maximilian von Trautmanndorff-Weinsberg (b. 1880), or possibly his father Count Maximilian (1842–1924), chamberlain: 124.
TREBITSCH, Siegfried (1869–1956), prolific writer, translator of George Bernard Shaw: 238.
TREUMANN, Louis (1872–1943), operetta singer, first Count Danilo in →Franz Lehár’s The Merry Widow: 30, 131.
“TRUE AND HONEST EVER BE” (“Üb immer Treu und Redlichkeit”), popular song, music by Mozart, lyrics after Ludwig Christoph Heinrich Hölty: 75.
TRUMPETER OF SÄCKINGEN, The (Der Trompeter von Säckingen, 1854), the Kaiser’s favourite opera, music by Victor Ernst Nessler (1841–1890) and libretto by Rudolf Bunge (1836–1907); based on ever-popular epic verse idyll by →Joseph Victor von Scheffel (1852): 126.
TSAR, Nicholas II (1868–1918), led Russia into the war in support of →Serbia, deposed March 1917, killed by Bolsheviks: xiv, 80, 87, 360, 362.
TURBINE, Italian destroyer sunk in southern →Adriatic on 24 May 1915: 142.
TUTRAKAN, on Danube in Bulgarian Dobrudsha, retaken for Austria (6 September 1916): 270, 360.
TYROLESE CASUALTIES (highlighted in I, 16). These included the Tiroler Landsturm Nr. 2, decimated at the battle of →Lemberg in September 1914 under the command of →Auffenberg. The Landsturm were poorly trained territorials, ill-equipped for modern warfare. Advancing over open ground in their blue-grey uniforms, they were mown down by Russian machine guns. The survivors suffered a second defeat when the fortress of →Przemysl was captured by the Russians in March 1915, after which the regiment was disbanded (see the regimental history by Otto Stolz). Heavy casualties were also suffered by another Tyrolese regiment, the →Imperial Rifles (Kaiserjäger), under the command of →Ludwig von Fabini. His disregard for the lives of those serving under him, first on the Russian and later on the Italian Front, earned him the nickname Kaiserjägertod (IV, 11): 236f, 338f.