It was on a Sarajevo street corner on June 28, 1914, that the 19-year-old Bosnian Serb nationalist shot dead the archduke and his wife with a Browning revolver, setting off a chain of events that sucked Europe's great powers into four years of unprecedented violence that redrew the world map.
Many of those competing powers commemorated the centenary on the sidelines of an EU summit on Thursday with a low-key ceremony at Belgium's Ypres, where German forces used mustard gas for the first time in 1915.
"It would have been impossible to bring everyone together on June 28 in Sarajevo," said Bosnian Serb historian and diplomat Slobodan Soja.
There are wildly differing interpretations of 20th century history in the region where the scars of sectarian wars in the 1990s are still fresh.
The assassin, Gavrilo Princip, is among the most divisive figures in that history -- either a fervent Serb nationalist who sought to liberate Slavs from the Austro-Hungarian occupier, or a terrorist who unleashed horrific bloodshed on the world, depending on who you ask.
"We hope to have finally found a way to live together in Europe, which promises us a peaceful future," said the president of the Vienna Philharmonic Clemens Hellsber.
The EU-funded performance was held in the neo-Moorish building of the National Library, which was the City Hall 100 years ago and was the last place visited by the archduke just minutes before he and his wife were assassinated in their open-top car.
The Serb community had instead unveiled a two-metre-high bronze statue of Princip in eastern Sarajevo on Friday and held its own ceremonies on Saturday in eastern Bosnia.
Top leaders, including Serbian Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic and Bosnian Serb president Milorad Dodik joined the commemorations in the eastern town of Visegrad.
