Philipp-Franz Bresnitz von Sydacoff (1868-f) was a conservatively oriented publicist,
who, before World War I, saw the last hope for the Habsburg Monarchy in the Crown Prince
Franz Ferdinand. In the foreign political context, Sydacoff believed that the Monarchy had a
great role to play in the East and in the Balkans. In 1899 he wrote a book on the Panslavist
agitation and the South Slavic movement in Austro-Hungary. Sydacoff emphasised the
"Habsburg burden" with regard to cultivating the European Southeast, similarly as in the
colonial forces the opinion of the "burden of the white man", who had to "help" the primitive
peoples, was established. He saw the Yugoslav movement as another manifestation of the
Panslavist Russia. The propagators of the Austrian idea in the Balkans were supposedly the
Catholic Croatians, while he ascribed the Serbians with anti-Habsburg tendencies, which
they wanted to accomplish with the Russian assistance. In this system Slovenians had a
negative role. Supposedly The Young Czech movement, with the aid of Serbians, would assist
the Slovenian national movement in order to set up a bridge between South and North Slavs
and break apart the Monarchy.