![]() Cabrinovic sprawled out in shallow water and vomited. Two passengers in that car were wounded.Īs Franz Ferdinand and Sophia’s car sped off to City Hall, Cabrinovic downed his suicide vial and jumped into the river to drown. The grenade bounced innocuously off the convertible cover and landed on the street, exploding under the next car in the procession. But the assassin had failed to take into account the ten-second fuse. It was a direct hit, striking the car’s folded back convertible cover right next to Archduke. The motorcade approached the third assassin, Nedjelko Cabrinovic, who hurled his hand grenade at the Archduke’s car. He would later claim he felt people were watching him. The Archduke’s car approached the first assassin, who got cold feet and didn’t fire. Spread out along the road were six assassins of the Black Hand, each armed with a pistol, a grenade, and a vial of cyanide. ![]() The parade route was advertised in the paper, and crowds lined the sidewalks to see the imperial couple. Six cars processed toward City Hall along the Appel Quay, a riverside road through the center of town. The morning troop review itself went smoothly. He disliked bodyguards and tight security. But Franz Ferdinand waved off the danger. “There are assassins lying in wait for you,” the Archduke was told. Sarajevo seethed with Serbian nationalist resentment against the empire. The trip hundreds of miles from the imperial capital of Vienna would be an anniversary gift to Sophia.īut June 28 also held forebodings. June 28 was, in fact, the couple’s wedding anniversary. Because he would review the troops as an imperial Army officer, not the Crown Prince, Franz-Ferdinand believed his beloved Sophia could accompany him and share the public spotlight with him. Franz-Ferdinand saw in the invitation an opportunity to defy his uncle. ![]() In 1914, the governor of Bosnia invited the Archduke to review Army troops in Sarajevo on June 28. ![]()
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