Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/states-and-territories-established-in-1741

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Arad County (former)

County of the Kingdom of Hungary

Arad County (former)

Summary

County of the Kingdom of Hungary

FieldValue
native_name
conventional_long_nameArad County
common_nameArad
subdivisionCounty
nationthe Kingdom of Hungary
(~1200-1526)
County of the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom
(1526–1552)
County of the Kingdom of Hungary
(1741–1923)
year_start11th century
event1Ottoman conquest
date_event11552
event2County recreated
date_event21741
event3Treaty of Trianon
date_event34 June 1920
event4Merged into Csanád-Arad-Torontál County
date_event41923
image_coatCoa_Hungary_County_Arad_(history).svg
image_mapArad vármegye in Hungary.svg
capitalArad;
Elek (1920–1923)
coordinates
stat_area16048
stat_pop1414,388
stat_year11910
stat_area2270
stat_pop221,720
stat_year21920

(~1200-1526) County of the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom (1526–1552) County of the Kingdom of Hungary (1741–1923) Elek (1920–1923) Romania (5,778 km2)

Hungary (270 km2) Arad County was an administrative unit in the Kingdom of Hungary, the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom and the Principality of Transylvania. The county was established along the Maros (Mureș) River in the 11th or the , but its first head, or ispán, was only mentioned in 1214. Its territory is now part of Romania, except a small area (the town of Elek and the surrounding villages) which is part of Hungary. The capital of the county was Arad.

Geography

Map of Arad county in the Kingdom of Hungary
Map of Arad, 1891.

The medieval Arad County was situated in the lands along both banks of the Maros (Mureș) River. The existence of arable lands, pastures, vineyards and orchards in the western lowlands in the Middle Ages is well-documented. The hilly eastern regions were sparsely populated. The total territory of the medieval county was around 3800 km2.

In 1744, Arad County absorbed a large part of Zaránd County, including its capital Zaránd/Zărand (the remainder of Zaránd County was then reorganized, with Körösbánya/Baia de Criș as the new capital). In 1876, when the administrative structure of the Kingdom of Hungary was changed, the territory of Arad County was further modified to include the western third of the diminished Zaránd County, namely the Nagyhalmágy/Hălmagiu district (Zaránd County was disbanded altogether on that occasion).

Arad County shared borders with the Hungarian counties of Csanád, Békés, Bihar, Torda-Aranyos, Hunyad, Krassó-Szörény, Temes, and Torontál. The river Mureș formed its southern border. Crișul Alb River flowed through the county. Its area was 6078 km2 around 1910.

History

Origins

The Hungarians dominated the region of the Maros in the middle of the , according to the Byzantine Emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus. Archaeological finds also shows that Hungarians settled in the plains along the river after their arrival in the Carpathian Basin at the end of the . Place names of Slavic origin, including Lipova (Lippa) and Zăbrani (Temeshidegkút), evidence the presence of Slavic speaking communities, especially in the region where the river, coming from the mountains, reached the lowlands.

A powerful chieftain, Ajtony, ruled the territory along the rivers Danube, Maros and Tisza in the early . The Maros formed the northern border of Ajtony's realm, according to the Gesta Hungarorum, but the longer version of the Legend of Saint Gerard wrote that he controlled the lands as far as the Körös River. Ajtony was killed in a battle against the army of Stephen I of Hungary, which was under the command of Csanád. According to a scholarly theory, first proposed by historian György Györffy, Stephen I established Arad County after Ajtony's fall. On the other hand, historian Gyula Kristó writes that Ajtony's whole realm was transformed into the large Csanád County during Stephen I's reign; Arad County only developed into a separate administrative unit in the second half of the or in the .

Middle Ages

Arad County in the 14th century

The remains of an 11th-century stronghold, made of earth and timber, were found at Arad. At an assembly held in Arad in 1131, the wife of King Béla the Blind, Helena of Rascia, ordered the massacre of 68 Hungarian lords. Arad Castle and the estates attached to it were first documented in a royal charter, issued in 1177. The first known ispán, or head, of Arad County, Paul Csanád, was mentioned in a royal diploma, dated to 1214, but its authenticity is suspect. The earliest authentic document that referred to an ispán of Arad was issued in 1240. The western regions of the county were included in the Deanery of Arad of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Csanád; the Archdean of Arad was first mentioned in 1288.

The earliest documents suggest that the kings owned most lands in the plains along the Maros. However, the distribution of royal domains started at the end of the . For instance, Ladislaus I of Hungary and his brother, Lampert, granted five villages to the Titel Chapter before 1095 and Béla the Blind established the Arad Chapter in the 1130s. The Hodos clan was the only local noble kindred in the county; they were the patrons of the Hodoș-Bodrog Monastery. Members of the Csanád, Csák and Dorozsma clans received estates in Arad County in the early .

The effects of the Mongol invasion of Hungary cannot exactly be determined, but at least four monasteries disappeared. Solymos Castle (in present-day Șoimoș in Lipova), the first fortress built by a nobleman in the county, was erected after the withdrawal of the Mongols. Ecclesiastic institutions, prelates and lay lordsincluding the bishop of Csanád, the Arad Chapter and the Garais, Lackfis and Telegdisheld most former royal estates in the first half of the . The existence of four elected "judges of the nobles" was first documented in 1311, proving that Arad County had transformed into a "noble county", an institution of the local noblemen's self-government.

Lippa (present-day Lipova) became the most prosperous settlement in the early : the tax payable by the local priest to the Holy See between 1333 and 1335 (266 dinars) was almost ten times higher than the average tax collected in other parishes. The Slavs of the district of Lipova were converted into Catholicism in the middle of the century, according to John of Küküllő's contemporaneous chronicle. The earliest Romanian place name in the countyCaprewar (now Căprioara)was recorded in a list of the estates of the Telegdis which was completed in 1337.

Modern times

Csanád, Arad and Torontál counties after the Treaty of Trianon. In 1923, the three counties were merged to form Csanád-Arad-Torontál County.

In 1920, the Treaty of Trianon assigned most of the territory of Arad county to Romania, except for a small area south of Békéscsaba, which became part of the newly formed Hungarian county of Csanád-Arad-Torontál in 1923. At the end of World War II, the Hungarian part of Arad county was merged into the recreated Csanád county, but in 1950 that county was split and its territory became part of Békés County.

The rest of the county is now part of the Arad County in Romania. This county also contains parts of the former counties Temes and Krassó-Szörény.

Demographics

Ethnic map of the county with data of the 1910 census (see the key in the description).
CensusTotalRomanianHungarianGermanSlovakOther or unknown1880189019001910
303,964185,241 (63.35%)67,613 (23,12%)30,931 (10.58%)2,938 (1.00%)5,669 (1.94%)
343,597208,957 (60.81%)86,780 (25.26%)37,303 (10.86%)4,157 (1.21%)6,400 (1.86%)
386,100223,806 (57.97%)110,823 (28.70%)40,148 (10.40%)5,600 (1.45%)5,723 (1.48%)
414,388239,755 (57.86%)124,215 (29.98%)38,695 (9.34%)5,451 (1.32%)6,272 (1.51%)
CensusTotalEastern OrthodoxRoman CatholicCalvinistGreek CatholicLutheranJewishOther or unknown1880189019001910
303,964186,758 (61.44%)75,304 (24.77%)17,519 (5.76%)11,079 (3.64%)5,151 (1.69%)8,018 (2.64%)135 (0.04%)
343,597201,984 (58.79%)91,045 (26.50%)20,787 (6.05%)13,140 (3.82%)7,495 (2.18%)8,924 (2.60%)222 (0.06%)
386,100215,904 (55.92%)109,523 (28.37%)24,849 (6.44%)15,134 (3.92%)9,954 (2.58%)10,085 (2.61%)651 (0.17%)
414,388230,907 (55.72%)117,630 (28.39%)26,709 (6.45%)16,318 (3.94%)10,950 (2.64%)10,102 (2.44%)1,772 (0.43%)

Subdivisions

In the early 20th century, the subdivisions of Arad County were:

Districts (járás)DistrictCapitalUrban counties (törvényhatósági jogú város)
AradArad
BorosjenőBorosjenő (now Ineu)
BorossebesBorossebes (now Sebiș)
ElekElek
KisjenőKisjenő (now Chișineu-Criș)
MagyarpécskaMagyarpécska (now Pecica)
MáriaradnaMáriaradna (now Radna)
NagyhalmágyNagyhalmágy (now Hălmagiu)
TornovaTornova (now Târnova)
VilágosVilágos (now Șiria)
Arad

Elek is now in Hungary. All the other towns mentioned are in Romania.

List of ''ispán''s

Middle Ages

TermIncumbentMonarchNotesSource
1214ClementAndrew IIson of Benedict from the kindred Csanád
1238PaulBéla IV
1240SaulBéla IV
c. 1310AlexanderCharles Ifor voivode Ladislaus Kán; castellan of Solymos
1311DominicCharles Ifor voivode Ladislaus Kán; castellan of Solymos
1319–1321Thomas SzéchényiCharles Ialso master of the treasury for the Queen (1320–1321), voivode (1321–1342), castellan of Solymos
*1321–1372*Arad County was administered by voivodes of Transylvania, who appointed deputies.
1351Blaise Pósafi de SzerLouis Ifor duke Stephen, castellan of Hátszeg
1391George BáthorySigismundfrom the Somlyó branch
*1393–1401*Arad County was administered by voivodes of Transylvania, who appointed deputies.
1404–1426Pipo of OzoraSigismundalso ispán of Temes County
c. 1427Emeric PálóciSigismund
c. 1437John Országh de GuthSigismundalso castellan of Világosvár; ispán of Zaránd and Csongrád Counties
1441–1444Ladislaus MarótiVladislaus I
Ladislaus Vtogether with John Hunyadi (1443–1444); also ban of Macsó (1441–1443); ispán of Zaránd and Békés Counties
1443–1456John HunyadiVladislaus I
Ladislaus Vtogether with Ladislaus Maróti (1443–1444), with Nicholas Újlaki (1444–1446); also voivode (1443–1446); regent-governor of the Kingdom of Hungary (1446–1452)
1444–1446Nicholas ÚjlakiLadislaus Vtogether with John Hunyadi; also voivode; ban of Severin (1445–1446)

Habsburg rule

TermIncumbentMonarchNotesSource
1526–1527Gáspár PaksyFerdinand I
John Ifor John I, later Ferdinand I
*1527–1614*Unknown office-holders
1614András DóczyMatthias IIalso ispán of Szatmár County
*1614–1702*Unknown office-holders
1702–1713Ferenc KlobusiczkyLeopold I
Joseph I
also chief justice (1702–1707); later Kuruc senator and ispán for Francis II Rákóczi
1713–1736Pál ConsbruchCharles IIIdied in office
*1737–1743*Unknown office-holder(s)
1743–1744Zsigmond AndrássyMaria Theresaadministrator
1744–1751Antal GrassalkovichMaria Theresaalso chief justice (1744–1748)
1751–1788György FeketeMaria Theresa
Joseph IIalso chief justice (1751–1762); vice-chancellor (1762–1773); master of the stewards (1766–1773); judge royal (1773–1783); director of the royal treasury (1782); died in office
1788–1790VacantJoseph II
1790–1821Pál AlmásyLeopold II
Francisalso master of the horse (1812–1821); poisoned
1822–1830József WenckheimFrancisdied in office
1830–1837Lőrinc OrczyFrancis
Ferdinand V
1837–1845István SzerencsyFerdinand V
1845–1848József Fascho de LucsivnaFerdinand V
1848–1849János Bohus de VilágosFerdinand Vfirst term
1849József TomcsányiFrancis Joseph I
*1849–1860*Military District of Großwardein
1860–1861János Bohus de VilágosFrancis Joseph Isecond term
1861–1867VacantFrancis Joseph I
1867–1869Béla SzendeFrancis Joseph I
1869–1871VacantFrancis Joseph I
1871–1878Péter AtzélFrancis Joseph Iresigned
1879–1886Károly TabajdiFrancis Joseph Idied in office
1886– László FábiánFrancis Joseph I
1899–1905Iván UrbánFrancis Joseph Ifirst term; resigned
1906–1910Gyula KárolyiFrancis Joseph Ilater prime minister (1931–1932)
1910–1915Iván UrbánFrancis Joseph Isecond term; died in office
1915–1917Ferenc BarossFrancis Joseph I
Charles IVdied in office
1917Béla BarabásCharles IV
1918– Lajos Varjassy

Clickable map of the Arad County, 1782–85

Notes

References

Sources

References

  1. "Az 1881. év elején végrehajtott népszámlálás főbb eredményei megyék és községek szerint rendezve, II. kötet (1882)". library.hungaricana.hu.
  2. "A Magyar Korona országainak helységnévtára (1892)". library.hungaricana.hu.
  3. "A MAGYAR KORONA ORSZÁGAINAK 1900". library.hungaricana.hu.
  4. "KlimoTheca :: Könyvtár". Kt.lib.pte.hu.
  5. Zsoldos 2011, p. 125.
  6. Engel 1996, p. 97.
  7. Engel 1996, p. 98.
  8. Engel 1996, p. 30.
  9. Fallenbüchl 1994, p. 60.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Arad County (former) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report