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Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar

Crownland of the Austrian Empire between 1849 and 1860

Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar

Crownland of the Austrian Empire between 1849 and 1860

FieldValue
native_nameWoiwodschaft Serbien und Temeser Banat
conventional_long_nameVoivodeship of Serbia and Temes Banate
common_nameSerbia and Banat
subdivisionCrownland
nationthe Austrian Empire
year_start1849
date_start18 November
year_end1861
date_end27 December
government_typeVoivodeship
p1Serbian Vojvodina
flag_p1Flag of the Serbian Vojvodina.svg
p2Kingdom of Hungary (1526–1867)
flag_p2Flag of the Habsburg Monarchy.svg
s1Austrian Empire
flag_s1Flag of the Habsburg Monarchy.svg
image_flagFlag of Serbian Vojvodina.svg
flagFlag of Vojvodina
image_coatCoat of arms of Serbian Vojvodina.svg
symbolCoat of arms of Vojvodina
image_mapWojwodowena und Banat.jpg
today
capitalTemeschwar
Map of the Voivodeship

The Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar, or Voivodeship of Serbia and Temes Banat (, , , ), was a crownland of the Austrian Empire that existed between 1849 and 1861, centered in Temeschwar. It was created by reorganization of administrative structures in regions of Serbian Vojvodina and Banat of Temeschwar. Its former area is now divided between Serbia, Romania and Hungary. In 1860-1861, it was reincorporated into the Kingdom of Hungary. The Voivodeship gave its name to the present Serbian Vojvodina.

Names

In contemporary German, the crown land was officially known as Woiwodschaft Serbien und Temeser Banat ('Voivodeship of Serbia and Temes Banat'; die Woiwodschaft Serbien und das Temeser Banat when definite). The forms die serbische Wojwodschaft und das Temeser Banat ('the Serbian Voivodeship and the Temes Banat') and die serbische Wojwodschaft mit dem Temeser Banate ('the Serbian Voivodeship with the Temes Banat'; the -e on Banat is a now mostly obsolete dative ending) also appeared frequently in official documents. Other variations also appear as a result of grammatical inflection (see German grammar), such as der serbischen Wojwodschaft und des Temeser Banates (genitive case), but these should not be considered distinct. The spellings Woiwodschaft and Wojwodschaft are typographic variations; Woiwodschaft was used officially until 1852, Wojwodschaft from 1853.

In contemporary Serbian it was known as Vojvodina Srbska i Tamiški Banat (Войводина Србска и Тамишки Банат) and Vojvodstvo Srbija i Tamiški Banat (Војводство Србија и Тамишки Банат). In Hungarian it was known as Szerb Vajdaság és Temesi Bánság, and in Romanian as Voivodina Sârbească și Banatul Timișan.

As in German, in Serbian sources there are two somewhat different variants of the name of the voivodeship; one could be translated into English as Voivodeship of Serbia and Temes Banat and another as Serbian Voivodeship and Temes Banat.

Also in modern English use, the term Temes Banat or Banat of Temes is sometimes incorrectly replaced with term Banat of Temeschwar or Temeschwar Banat. In the original name in all native languages, there is no mention of the city of Temeschwar (Timișoara) in the title of Voivodeship. As shown above, the reference to the Temes region is always used, and should be translated into English as Temes Banat or Banat of Temes.

History

The Serbs had previously been granted a number of privileges by the Habsburg emperor, starting in 1691, followed by the 1779 Declaratory Rescript of the Illyrian Nation. During the Revolutions of 1848 in the Austrian Empire, a self-proclaimed autonomous province of Serbian Vojvodina was created in 1848.

In 1849, the Imperial Patent of 4th March, known as the March Constitution, imposed constitutional reorganization of the Austrian Empire, and provided (in article 72) a formal base for the creation of an official administrative unit under the name: Voivodeship of Serbia (), also allowing the possibility for future association of that province with other crown lands.

The Voivodeship was officially formed by a decision of the Austrian emperor in November 1849.

It consisted of the regions of Banat, Bačka and northern Syrmian municipalities of Ilok and Ruma. An Austrian governor seated in Temeschwar ruled the area, and the title of Voivode belonged to the emperor himself. The full title of the emperor was "Grand Voivod of the Voivodeship of Serbia" (). Even after the Voivodeship was abolished, the emperor kept this title until the end of Austro-Hungarian Monarchy in 1918.

Map from 1853

In 1860, the Voivodeship of Serbia and Temes Banat was abolished and most of its territory (Banat and Bačka) was incorporated into the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary, although direct Hungarian rule began only in 1867, after the Austro-Hungarian Compromise.

Unlike Banat and Bačka, Syrmia was incorporated into the Kingdom of Slavonia in 1860, another separate Habsburg crown land. The Kingdom of Slavonia subsequently merged with the Kingdom of Croatia, forming the new Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia, which concluded an agreement with the Kingdom of Hungary in 1868, becoming an autonomous region of the Kingdom of Hungary within Austria-Hungary.

Languages

The two official languages of the Voivodeship were German and "Illyrian" (what would come to be known as Serbian).

Demographics

The Voivodeship was ethnically very mixed, since the southern parts of Syrmia, Banat and Bačka with compact Serbian settlements were not included in it, while eastern Banat, with a Romanian majority was added to it.

1846

According to the 1846 census, the territory that in 1849 formed the voivodeship included:

  • Vlachs (Romanians) = 417,000
  • Serbs = 402,000
  • Germans = 352,000
  • Hungarians = 233,000
  • Slovaks = 27,000
  • Bulgarians = 24,000
  • Jews = 16,000
  • Romani = 12,000
  • Rusyns = 7,000
  • Croats = 3,000
  • Greeks = 3,000

1857

In 1857, population of the voivodeship numbered 1,526,105 inhabitants, including:

  • Latin Catholics = 698,189 (45.75%)
  • Eastern Orthodox Christians = 691,828 (45.33%)
  • Evangelic-Lutherans = 56,871 (3.73%)
  • Evangelic-Reformists = 29,281 (1.92%)
  • Greek Catholics and Armenian Catholics = 26,244 (1.72%)
  • Jews = 23,203 (1.52%)
  • others = 489 (0.03%)

1850/51

According to the 1850/51 census, ethnic composition of the voivodeship was as follows:

  • Romanians = 347,459
  • Germans = 335,080
  • Serbs = 321,110 (*)
  • Hungarians = 221,845
  • Bunjevci and Šokci = 62,936 (*)
  • Rusins = 39,914
  • Slovaks = 25,607
  • Bulgarians = 22,780
  • Jews = 15,507
  • Gypsies = 11,440
  • Czechs = 7,530
  • Croats = 2,860 (*)
  • Greeks and Cincars = 2,820

(*) Total number of "Illyrian Slavs" (Serbs, Bunjevci, Šokci, and Croats) was 386,906.

According to another source, in 1850/1851, the population of the voivodeship numbered 1,426,221 inhabitants, including:

  • 397,459 (27.87%) Romanians
  • 335,080 (23.49%) Germans
  • 321,110 (22.52%) Serbs
  • 221,845 (15.56%) Hungarians
  • others.

By religious makeup:

In 1851, population of the voivodeship numbered 1,426,221 inhabitants, including:

  • Eastern Orthodox Christians = 694,029 (48.66%)
  • Roman Catholics = 624,839 (43.81%)
  • Evangelic-Lutherans = 51,724 (3.63%)
  • Evangelic-Reformists = 26,621 (1.87%)
  • Jews = 16,252 (1.14%)
  • Greek Catholics and Armenian Catholics = 12,756 (0.89%)

1860

In 1860, population of the voivodeship numbered 1,525,523 inhabitants, including:

  • 432,523 Serbs
  • 414,490 Romanians
  • 396,156 Germans
  • 256,164 Hungarians

Administrative divisions

At first, the crown land was divided into two districts:

  1. Batschka-Torontal (Bačka-Torontal)
  2. Temeschwar-Karasch (Timișoara-Caraș)

Later, it was divided into five districts (contemporary , modern spelling Distrikte), which were largely based on the pre-1849 Hungarian counties which made the majority of the crown land. From 1851 they were subdivided into political districts ((politische) Bezirke). In the reforms of 1853, implemented in the crown land in 1854, the Districte became Kreise, which were subdivided into Amtsbezirke (formally Bezirke but of a different type than in 1851). These reforms also separated the capital, the city of Temesvár, from district-administration, placing it under the direct authority of the Statthalterei.

Official nameOther native names (district capital)extentBezirkepopulation (1850)185118541851 (political districts)1854 (office districts)
Temesvárer DistrictKreis Temesvár{{plainlistpre-1849 Temes County316,565, including:
Lugoser DistrictKreis Lugos{{plainlistpre-1849 Krassó County229,363, including:
Groß-Becskereker DistrictKreis Gross-Becskerek{{plainlistpre-1849 Torontál County388,704, including:
Zombórer DistrictKreis Zombor{{plainlistthe northern part of the pre-1849 Bács-Bodrog County376,366, including:
Neusatzer DistrictKreis Neusatz{{plainlistthe southern part of the pre-1849 Bács-Bodrog County and the formerly Syrmian districts of Ruma and Illok236,943, including:

File:Vojvodstvo srbija okruzi 1849 01.png|Districts of the Voivodeship of Serbia and Temes Banat (1849-1850). File:Vojvodstvo srbija okruzi 1850 01.png|Districts of the Voivodeship of Serbia and Temes Banat (1850-1860).

Administration

[[Grosswojwod|Great Voivodes]]

  • Francis Joseph I, (1849–1916)
  • Charles I, (1916–1918)

:Note: the voivodeship was abolished in 1860, but Francis Joseph kept the title of "Great Voivode" until his death in 1916, and the title was also inherited by the last Emperor of Austria, Charles I.

Governors

  • Ferdinand Mayerhofer, (1849–1851)
  • Johann Coronini-Cronberg, (1851–1859)
  • Josip Šokčević, (1859–1860)
  • Karl Bigot de Saint-Quentin, (1860)

References

Sources

References

  1. (1849-11-18). "Kaiserliches Patent vom 18. November 1849, womit das, die Bacska und das Banat, den Rumáer und Illokér Bezirk umfassende Territorium vorläufig zu einem eigenen Verwaltungsgebiete unter der Benennung: "Woiwodschaft von Serbien und Temeser Banat" gebildet, dessen Untertheilung in Kreise und Bezirke angeordnet, und dem kaiserlichen Titel Sr. Majestät der eines "Großwoiwoden der Woiwodschaft von Serbien" beigefügt wird". Reichs-Gesetz-Blatt für das Kaiserthum Österreich.
  2. (1857-06-24). "Kaiserliches Patent vom 24. Juni 1857, wirksam für die Königreiche Ungarn, Kroatien und Slawonien, für das Großfürstenthum Siebenbürgen, für die serbische Wojwodschaft und das Temeser Banat, wodurch für diese Kronländer das Forstgesetz vom 3. December 1852 eingeführt, und vom 1. Jänner 1858 angefangen in Wirksamkeit gesetzt wird". Reichs-Gesetz-Blatt für das Kaiserthum Österreich.
  3. (1854-02-01). "Verordnung der Minister des Inneren, der Justiz und der Finanzen vom 1. Februar 1854, betreffend die politische und gerichtliche Organisirung der serbischen Wojwodschaft und des Temeser Banates". Reichs-Gesetz-Blatt für das Kaiserthum Österreich.
  4. (1861). "Državna pisma o sojedinjenju Vojvodine Srbske i Tamiškog Banata sa Kraljevinom Ungarskom i dezvoljenom, u sljedatvu pomenutog sofedinjenja sa Vsevysoeajěim ruěnym pismom ed 21. febr - 5. marta 1861. izvanrednom Srbskom narodnim Soboru -: Staatsschriften über die Wiedervereinigung der Woiwodschaft Serbien und des Temescher Banates mit dem Konigreich Ungarn". Tip. Mitropolitske-Gimnazialna.
  5. (1861). "Радња Благовештенског Сабора Народа Србског у Сремским Карловцима 1861. Издао Јован. Ђорђевић..".
  6. [http://www.verfassungen.at/at-18/verfassung49-i.htm Kaiserliches Patent vom 4. März 1849, die Reichsverfassung für das Kaiserthum Oesterreich]
  7. [[Lazo M. Kostić]], Srpska Vojvodina i njene manjine, Novi Sad, 1999.{{page needed. (January 2015)
  8. [[Sima M. Ćirković]], Srbi među evropskim narodima, Beograd, 2004.{{page needed. (January 2015)
  9. Dejan Mikavica, Srpska Vojvodina u Habsburškoj Monarhiji 1690-1920, Novi Sad, 2005.{{page needed. (January 2015)
  10. [[Milenko Palić]], Srbi u Mađarskoj - Ugarskoj do 1918, Novi Sad, 1995, page 285.
  11. Drago Njegovan, Prisajedinjenje Vojvodine Srbiji, Novi Sad, 2004.
  12. (1851-08-17). "Verordnung des Ministeriums des Innern, womit die durch Allerhöchste Entschließung sanctionirte Organisation der politischen Verwaltung der Woiwodschaft Serbien und des Temeser Banates kundgemacht wird". Reichs-Gesetz-Blatt für das Kaiserthum Österreich.
  13. [http://www.thomasgraz.net/glass/fj1titel.htm thomasgraz.net]
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