Panslavism and National Identity examines the emergence of Panslavic postulates over the course of three events: the 1848 Slav Congress in Prague, the Ethnographic Exhibition in conjunction with the 1867 Slav Congress in Moscow; and the resurgence of Panslav solidarity during the 1875-78 uprising in Bosnia-Hercegovnia. As an aspect of the Slav national revival, Panslavism evolved as a unifying relational event stressing the historical and cultural continuum; however, the Panslav aspirations were often interpreted as a new threat to the established balance of powers in Europe.
