The revolution of 1848 led to the first election of a Constituent Assembly in the Habsburg Monarchy. Women and non-privileged men were excluded. The imperial family had held the supreme autocratic authority until 1848 excluding any participation by the people. The revolutionaries – middle and working classes, as well as students – demanded a constitution with an elected parliament for the first time.
In 1849 the constitutional committee of parliament debated the conditions for obtaining the right to vote, which included payment of tax. These debates rejected political rights for women.
When the revolution ended, the right to vote remained linked to education and a specific tax revenue, but not to gender. Women who owned property foremost in the form of land or had business earnings could vote in many municipalities under the provisional electoral regulations of 1849, and from 1861 on for the diets of the crownlands as well. But female voters were often not allowed to go to the polls themselves, their votes had to be cast by a male representative – the husband in the case of married women. With the exception of a small number of large landowners, women were not eligible to vote for the most important political institution, the parliament.
With the emergence of a women’s suffrage movement towards the end of the 19th century, the women's right to vote without any restrictions was initially only the aim for a few groups within the historic women’s movement. The idea of an individual right to vote regardless of property and education was slow to gain ground. As time passed, more and more men were given the vote and gender as a condition for gaining political rights became even more important.
Due to an event, the State Hall will close at 6 p.m. on Thursday, October, 24, at 4 p.m. on Friday, November 1 and at 6 p.m. on Thursday, November 14.
The reading rooms at Heldenplatz will be closed on Saturday, 2 of November.