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Backa, Srbija



 


Tree: Nederlandse voorouders

Notes:
Bács-Bodrog (Hungarian: Bács-Bodrog, Serbian: Bačka-Bodrog or Бачка-Бодрог) is the name of administrative county (comitatus) of the historic Kingdom of Hungary. Its territory is presently in southern Hungary and northern Serbia (western Vojvodina). The capital of the county was Sombor (Hungarian: Zombor).



Name



The county was named after a town of Bač (Bács) and Abodrites (Bodrog in Hungarian, Bodrići in Slavic), an old Slavic tribe that inhabited the region in medieval times.



Geography



Bács-Bodrog county shared borders with the Hungarian counties Baranya, Pest-Pilis-Solt-Kiskun, Csongrád, Torontál, Szerém, and Verőce (the latter two counties were part of Croatia-Slavonia). The river Danube formed its western and southern border. The river Tisza formed its eastern border, down to its confluence with the Danube. Its area was 10,362 km² around 1910.



History



Bács county arose as one of the first comitatus of the Kingdom of Hungary, in the 11th century. The county was taken by the Ottoman Empire in the 16th century. During the Ottoman rule, the area of the county was part of the sanjak of Segedin. The Bács county was established again after the Bačka region was captured by the Habsburg Monarchy in 1699. The eastern parts of Bačka were incorporated into Tisa-Moriš section of Military Frontier. After this part of Military Frontier was abolished in 1751, the eastern parts of Bačka were also included into Bács county. The only part of Bačka, which remained within Military Frontier was Šajkaška, but it also came under the civil administration in 1873.



n 1848/1849 the area of the county was part of Serbian Voivodship, while between 1849 and 1860 it was part of Voivodship of Serbia and Tamiš Banat, a separate Habsburg province. The county Bács-Bodrog was created in the 1860s, when the area was incorporated into the Kingdom of Hungary.



In 1918 county became part of the newly formed Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (renamed to Yugoslavia in 1929). By the Treaty of Trianon of 1920, territory of the county was divided between the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes and Hungary. Most of the county (including Sombor, Subotica, and Novi Sad) was assigned to the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, while the northernmost approximately 15% of the county was assigned to Hungary.



Between 1918 and 1922, the southern part of the former Bács-Bodrog county was a county of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes with seat in Novi Sad. The northern part of the former county was a county within Hungary since 1921. The capital of this smaller Hungarian county Bács-Bodrog was Baja. After World War II Bács-Bodrog was united with the southern part of former Pest-Pilis-Solt-Kiskun county to form Bács-Kiskun county.



The Yugoslav part of the pre-1918 Bács-Bodrog county (the Bačka region) is presently part of Serbia, autonomous region of Vojvodina.



Bačka (Serbian: Бачка or Bačka, Hungarian: Bácska, Croatian: Bačka, Slovak: Báčka, Rusyn: Бачка, German: Batschka) is an area of the Pannonian plain lying between the rivers Danube and Tisa. It is divided between Serbia and Hungary, with small uninhabited pockets of land on the left bank of Danube which belong to Croatia, but it`s under Serbian control from 1991 (see disputes of Croatia and Serbia).



Most of this area currently forms part of the Vojvodina region of Serbia. Novi Sad, the capital city of Vojvodina, stands on the border between Bačka and Syrmia. The smaller northern part of Bačka is now located in Bács-Kiskun County in Hungary.



History



Through history Bačka has been a part of Dacia, the Hun Empire, the Avar Khanate, the Gepid Kingdom, the First Bulgarian Empire, the Kingdom of Hungary, the Ottoman Empire, the Habsburg Monarchy, the Austrian Empire, Austria-Hungary, the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, Serbia and Montenegro, and since 2006, it is part of an independent Serbia. The smaller northern part of the region is part of the independent Hungary since 1920.



People have inhabited the region of Bačka for over 4,000 years, since Neolithic times. The earliest historical inhabitants of the region were probably Illyrian tribes.



Slavs (including Serbs) settled today's Bačka in the 6th and 7th centuries. In the 9th century the territory of Bačka was part of Bulgarian Empire. Salan, a Bulgarian voivod (duke), was a ruler in this territory and his capital city was Titel. In the early 10th century, Hungarians defeated Salan, and his duchy came under Hungarian rule.



In the 11th century, Bacsensis (Bač, Bács) County was formed, with city of Bač as its administrative centre. First known prefect of Bacsensis County was recorded in 1074 and his name was Vid, which is a Slavic name by origin.



During the rule of the Hungarian king Coloman (1095-1116), the local Serb nobles in Bačka were Uroš, Vukan and Pavle. An record from 1309 speak about "Schismatics" (Orthodox Christians), who lived in Bačka.



In 1526 and 1527, Bačka was the central region of an ephemeral independent Serbian state, which existed in the territory of present-day Vojvodina. The ruler of this state was the so-called "Emperor" Jovan Nenad and his capital city was Subotica.



During the Ottoman rule (16th-17th centuries), Bačka was part of the Sanjak of Segedin (Szeged), and the region was mainly populated with Serbs. In 1699 the Bačka came into the possession of the Habsburg Monarchy of Austria. A Bacsensis County was established in the western parts of the region, while the eastern parts of Bačka were incorporated into Tisa-Mureş section of Habsburg Military Frontier. After this part of the Military Frontier was abolished in 1751, the eastern parts of Bačka were also included into Bacsensis county. The only part of Bačka which remained within the Military Frontier was Šajkaška, but it also came under civil administration in 1873.



According to the Austrian census from 1715, Serbs, Bunjevci, and Šokci comprised most of the region's population. During the 18th century, the Habsburgs carried out an intensive colonisation of the area, which had low population density after the last Ottoman Wars, as much of the Serbian population had been decimated through warfare. The new settlers were primarily Serbs, Hungarians, and Germans. Because many of the Germans came from Swabia, they were known as Donauschwaben, or Danube Swabians. Some Germans also came from Austria, and some from Bavaria and Alsace. Lutheran Slovaks, Rusyns, and others were also colonized but to a much smaller extent.



There was also an emigration of Serbs from the eastern parts of the region, which belonged to Military Frontier until 1751. After the abolishment of the Tisa-Mureş section of Military Frontier, many Serbs emigrated from north-eastern parts of Bačka. They moved either to Russia (notably to New Serbia and Slavo-Serbia) or to Banat, where the Military Frontier was still needed.



In 1848 and 1849, Bačka was part of the Serbian Voivodship, a Serbian autonomous region within Austrian Empire, while between 1849 and 1860 it was part of the Voivodship of Serbia and Tamiš Banat, a separate Austrian crown land, the successor of the Serbian Voivodship. After 1860, when Voivodship of Serbia and Tamiš Banat was abolished, the Bačka-Bodrog County was formed in the territory of Bačka. The county was part of the Kingdom of Hungary, which became one of two autonomous parts of Austria-Hungary in 1867.



The territory of Bačka (as part of Banat, Bačka and Baranja region) united with the Kingdom of Serbia in 1918. By the Treaty of Trianon (4 June 1920), the original territory of Bačka was divided between the newly independent Hungary and the newly created Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, which was later renamed the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. The northern part of region was later incorporated into Bács-Kiskun County of Hungary. The southern part of the region was a county of Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes between 1918 and 1922, then a province (oblast) of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes between 1922 and 1929, and in 1929 it was incorporated into Danube Banovina, which was a province of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.



In 1941 Yugoslav Bačka was occupied by the Axis powers and attached to Horthy's Hungary. During the occupation, Hungarian troops killed 19,573 civilians in Yugoslav Bačka, mostly of Serb, Jewish and Roma ethnicity, while many more civilians were arrested, violated or tortured. The occupation ended in 1944 with the end of the Second World War and Yugoslav Bačka became part of the new Democratic Federal Yugoslavia (later the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia). Following the defeat of the Axis troops, most of the German population that lived in the area left from the region together with German army. The smaller part of the German population that did not leave the area was sent to prison camps by the new Yugoslav authorities. Members of the Yugoslav partisan army also killed a certain number of inhabitants of Hungarian and German ethnic origin after the war, mainly as a revenge for genocide and ethnic cleansing that Hungarian troops committed against Yugoslav peoples during the war.



Together with Syrmia and Banat, Yugoslav Bačka is part of the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina since 1945. Since 1992, Yugoslav Bačka has been part of Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (renamed to Serbia and Montenegro in 2003), and since 2006 it is part of an independent Serbia.

City/Town : Latitude: 46, Longitude: 19.333333


Birth

Matches 1 to 1 of 1

   Last Name, Given Name(s)    Birth    Person ID   Tree 
1 Maric, Mileva  19 Dec 1875Bačka, Srbija I65618 Nederlandse voorouders 
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