imperial administration and services; and the spread
of education, even under the Hapsburg regime, began
to tell in time. Simultaneously with the agitation
which emanated from Serbia and was directed towards
the advancement, by means of schools and religious
and literary propaganda, of Serbian influence in Bosnia
and Hercegovina, a movement started in Dalmatia and
Croatia for the closer union of those two provinces.
About 1906 the two movements found expression in the
formation of the Serbo-Croat or Croato-Serb coalition
party, composed of those elements in Dalmatia, Croatia,
and Slavonia which favoured closer union between the
various groups of the Serb race scattered throughout
those provinces, as well as in Serbia, Montenegro,
Bosnia, Hercegovina, and Turkey. Owing to the
circumstances already described, it was impossible
for the representatives of the Serb race to voice their
aspirations unanimously in any one parliament, and
the work of the coalition, except in the provincial
diet at Agram, consisted mostly of conducting press
campaigns and spreading propaganda throughout those
provinces. The most important thing about the
coalition was that it buried religious antagonism
and put unity of race above difference of belief.
In this way it came into conflict with the ultramontane
Croat party at Agram, which wished to incorporate
Bosnia, Hercegovina, and Dalmatia with Croatia and
create a third purely Roman Catholic Slav state in
the empire, on a level with Austria and Hungary; also
to a lesser extent with the intransigent Serbs of
Belgrade, who affected to ignore Croatia and Roman
Catholicism, and only dreamed of bringing Bosnia,
Hercegovina, and as much of Dalmatia as they could
under their own rule; and finally it had to overcome
the hostility of the Mohammedan Serbs of Bosnia, who
disliked all Christians equally, could only with the
greatest difficulty be persuaded that they were really
Serbs and not Turks, and honestly cared for nothing
but Islam and Turkish coffee, thus considerably facilitating
the germanization of the two provinces. The coalition
was wisely inclined to postpone the programme of final
political settlement, and aimed immediately at the
removal of the material and moral barriers placed between
the Serbs of the various provinces of Austria-Hungary,
including Bosnia and Hercegovina. If they had
been sure of adequate guarantees they would probably
have agreed to the inclusion of all Serbs and
Croats within the monarchy, because the constitution
of all Serbs and Croats in an independent state (not
necessarily a kingdom) without it implied the then
problematic contingencies of a European war and the
disruption of Austria-Hungary. Considering the
manifold handicaps under which Serbia and its cause
suffered, the considerable success which its propaganda
met with in Bosnia and Hercegovina and other parts
of Austria-Hungary, from 1903 till 1908, is a proof,
not only of the energy and earnestness of its promoters
and of the vitality of the Serbian people, but also,