- CIRCULATED/UNCIRCULATED : Circulated
 - COMPOSITION : Bronze
 - COUNTRY/REGION OF MANUFACTURE : Austria
 - BRAND : MEDAL
 - TYPE : Medal
 
AUSTRIA.
Bronze medal (1923) by R. Placht.
 dr Ignaz Seipel (1876-1932). To the 
Federal Chancellor of the 1st Republic.
Obv: bust to the left.
Rev: Script.
Condition: XF
Weight: 78.33 g.
Diameter: 60 mm.
Ignaz Seipel (19 July 1876, – 2 August 1932) 
was an Austrian prelate and politician of the Christian Social Party (CS), who 
served as Federal Chancellor twice during the 1920s.
Born in Vienna, Seipel studied theology at 
the University of Vienna and was ordained a Catholic priest in 1899. He gained 
his doctorate in theology in 1903, followed by his habilitation at the 
University of Vienna, being one of the first scholars writing on business ethics 
in the context of Catholic social teaching. From 1909 until 1917 he taught moral 
theology at the University of Salzburg.
Seipel was a member of the clerical conservative Christian Social Party 
established by the Vienna mayor Karl Lueger in 1893, and served as cabinet 
secretary in the Austro-Hungarian government during World War I. At that time he 
also wrote and published a number of famous works, including Nation und Staat 
(Nation and State) (1916), which helped cement his later prominent role in the 
party. In these writings, unlike most contemporaries swept up by Wilsonian 
rhetoric, he saw the state as the primary vindication of sovereignty, rather 
than the nation. In October 1918 he was appointed Minister for Labour and Social 
Affairs in the last Cisleithanian cabinet under Minister president Heinrich 
Lammasch.
Seipel preaching at Bingen, 1929
After World War I, Seipel, a member of the constituent assembly of German 
Austria, re-established the formerly monarchist Christian Social Party, now 
operating – the empire having been lost – in the First Austrian Republic. Party 
chairman from 1921 until 1930, he served as chancellor between 1922 and 1924, 
and again from 1926 until 1929, then also as Foreign Minister.
To restore the Austrian economy, Chancellor Seipel and his delegate 
Mensdorff-Pouilly-Dietrichstein on 4 October 1922 signed the Protocol for the 
reconstruction of Austria at the League of Nations: by officially renouncing 
accession to Germany, he obtained an international bond. In order to fight the 
hyperinflation of the Krone currency, the government at the same time re-founded 
Austria's central bank Oesterreichische Nationalbank with the task of securing 
monetary stability. However, these policies let to growing discontent by 
socialist workers' organizations, and in June 1924 an attempt was made on 
Seipel's life by a frustrated worker .
Leading a right-wing coalition government supported by the Greater German 
People's Party and the Landbund, his main policy was the encouragement of 
cooperation between wealthy industrialists and the paramilitary units of the 
nationalist Heimwehren. During this time there was an increase in street 
violence and armed conflicts with the left-wing Republikanischer Schutzbund, 
culminating in the Vienna July Revolt of 1927 claiming numerous casualties. The 
Social Democratic opposition thereafter referred to Seipel as the "Bloody 
Prelate". He finally resigned in 1929 and was succeeded by his party fellow 
Ernst Streeruwitz. In the following year he once again served in a short-time 
term as Foreign Minister in the cabinet of Chancellor Carl Vaugoin.
Seipel died  during a stay at a sanatorium in the Vienna Woods of 
protracted tuberculosis and late effects of an earlier assassination attempt. He 
is buried in an Ehrengrab at the Vienna Zentralfriedhof.
REF 19 788
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