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Bačka

Coordinates: 46°00′N 19°20′E / 46.000°N 19.333°E / 46.000; 19.333

Bačka (Serbian Cyrillic: Бачка, pronounced [bâːtʃkaː]) or Bácska (pronounced [ˈbaːtʃkɒ]) is a geographical and historical area within the Pannonian Plain bordered by the river Danube to the west and south, and by the river Tisza to the east. It is divided between Serbia and Hungary. Most of the area is located within the Vojvodina region in Serbia and Novi Sad, the capital of Vojvodina, lies on the border between Bačka and Syrmia. The smaller northern part of the geographical area is located within Bács-Kiskun County in Hungary.

Map of the Bačka region

Name

According to Serbian historians, Bačka is a typical Slavic[1] name form, created from "Bač" (name of historical town in Bačka) and suffix "ka" (which designates "the land that belongs to Bač").

The name of "Bač" (Bács) town is of uncertain origin and its existence was recorded among Vlachs, Slavs and Hungarians in the Middle Ages. The origin of the name could be Paleo-Balkanic,[2] Romanian[citation needed], Slavic,[3] or Old Turkic.[4]

According to Hungarian historians, the denominator of the landscape may have been the first bailiff of Bač (Bács) castle, and the name which can be rendered probably Old Turkic baya derives from a dignity name.[5][6]

In the 17th and 18th century, due to the large number of Serbs who lived in Bačka, this region was called »Raczorszag« (Hungarian for "the Serb country").[7][8] Sometimes, the Hungarians used name Délvidék ("the southern or lower country") for a wider imprecisely defined geographical area, which, according to 19th century view also included Bačka. However, according to other Hungarian sources, Bačka was rather seen as part of Alföld.[9]

History

Through history, Bačka has been a part of Dacia, the Kingdom of the Iazyges, the Hun Empire, the Gepid Kingdom, the Avar Khanate, the First Bulgarian Empire, the Great Moravia, the Kingdom of Hungary, the Serb realm of Jovan Nenad, the Ottoman Empire, the Habsburg monarchy, the Austrian Empire, Austria-Hungary, the Kingdom of Serbia, 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 has been part of an independent Republic of Serbia. The smaller northern part of the region was part of the short-lived Serb-Hungarian Baranya-Baja Republic (in 1921) and part of independent Hungary since 1921.

 
"Red-headed goddess" - statuette from the early Neolithic period (archaeological site Donja Branjevina, Odžaci, Vojvodina, Serbia)

People have inhabited the region of Bačka since Neolithic times. Indo-European peoples settled in this region in three migration waves dated in 4200 BC, 3300 BC, and 2800 BC respectively. The earliest historical inhabitants of the region were probably Illyrian tribes. Later, other Indo-European peoples, including Dacians, Celts, Sarmatians (Iazyges) and Gepids were recorded as inhabitants of Bačka.

Slavs[10][11][12] settled today's Bačka in the 6th and 7th centuries, before part of them subsequently migrated to the Balkans. 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.[citation needed]

 
View of the fortress and the town of Bač
 
Coat of arms of Bács-Bodrog County
 
Kingdom of Hungary in 1490. Bács County - marked 31, Bodrog County - 32, Csongrád County - 23.

At the turn of the first millennium, during the administration of the medieval Kingdom of Hungary by Stephen I of Hungary, two counties (comitatus) were formed in this land. Bács County in the south, with city of Bács (now Bač) as its administrative centre and Bodrog County in the western and central territories with the historical city of Bodrogvár as capital (near the presenr-day village of Bački Monoštor). The two countries were later united to form Bács-Bodrog County. There were also territories of Csongrád County in the northeastern parts of Bačka. In 1085 King Ladislaus I made Bács the seat of the Archbishopric of Kalocsa-Bács. The first archbishop, Fabian (1085–1103) helped the king in the course of the campaign against Croatia and was rewarded with the title.[13] According to Serbian sources, Ilija Vid, the first known prefect of Bacsensis County was recorded in 1068 and he was an ethnic Serb.[14] In this time, the region was populated by both, Slavs and Hungarians. Serbian historian Dr. Milenko Palić also mentions that prefect Vid was an ethnic Serb and that he, together with two other ethnic Serbs whose names were Ilija and Radovan, participated in dynastic struggles in the Kingdom of Hungary, in the end of the 11th century.[15][verification needed] According to Hungarian authors, prefect Vid belonged to the Gutkeled genus,[16][17] but there is a possibility that he was a fictitious person.[17] In 1169, canons from the knighthood Order of the Holy Sepulchre built a small church in Bács in the Romanesque style. They used some building materials from much older previous edifices. Franciscans took over the church in 1300. In the second half of the 14th century, the Franciscans expanded it, forming a monastery. Today the Fanciscian monastery of Bács is the oldest church building in present-day Vojvodina. In the early 13th century Ugrin Csák, Archbishop of Kalocsa, founded a hospital in Bács, as the first such facility in this part of Europe. Pope Gregory IX wrote about the "Bačka hospital" in 1234, as being open for the sick and poor. At the beginning of the fourteenth century the town of Bács prospered during the rule of king Charles Robert I, who started building the modern fortress in 1338–42 at the site of the earlier hillfort. From the 15th century, it became the most important Hungarian defense point against the invading Ottoman forces.

In 1526 the Kingdom of Hungary was defeated in the Battle of Mohács by the Ottoman Empire, King Louis II fell in the battle. After the victorious campaign the Ottoman army led by Suleiman I withdrew from Hungary through the Danube–Tisza Interfluve, leaving only smaller garrisons in the fortifications. Within two to three weeks the retreating army killed approximately 400.000 men, burned down almost all the settlements, desolating the whole region.[18] In this chaotic period took place the revolt of the Rascians and Bačka became (from 1526 to 1527) the central region of an independent, short-lived Serbian pseudostate,[19] which existed in the territory of present-day Vojvodina. The ruler of this state was the self-appointed Emperor Jovan Nenad (previously the stableman of the king John Zápolya) and his capital city was Subotica. After Jovan Nenad was defeated and killed, his state collapsed and Bačka, for a short time, came again under Hungarian administration. Soon, the region became part of the Ottoman Empire.

After the Ottoman conquest, most of the previously decisive Hungarian majority population have fled (in the 16th–17th centuries). The relatively dense populated and prosperous southern counties of the Kingdom were devastated and became mostly abandoned and depopulated. During the Ottoman period , and later in the 17th and 18th century begun the intense settlement of the Serbs and other South Slavs from the Ottoman ruled central Balkans. They were military engaged in the borderlands by both sides. This resulted in radical changes of the population structure. Hungarian, Serb and Bunjevci peasants, and Serb and Vlach peasant soldiers lived (in ever-decreasing number) in the area, who had an impact on the landscape with their farming. In the Ottoman towns there was a Muslim population, and outside the city wall there were communities of various Christian denominations and occupations. Bačka was part of the Sanjak of Segedin (Szeged), the region was sparsely populated with Serbs (who were in an absolute majority[20]) and Muslims.

 
Battle of Zenta

During the Great Turkish War (1683–1699) on 11 September 1697, near Senta in the eastern Bačka took place one of the most decisive defeats in Ottoman history, the Battle of Zenta. Christian forces of the Holy League (1684) led by Prince Eugene of Savoy in a surprise attack destroyed the Ottoman army crossing the river Tisza. The battle resulted in a spectacular victory for Austria. As a result, in 1699 the Treaty of Karlowitz was signed, ending the Ottoman control in much of Central Europe. All the lands of the Kingdom of Hungary (except for Banat and a small chunk of Eastern Slavonia) conquered by the Ottomans in the previous 150 years were returned. Under the rule of Leopold I the Bačka became a possession of the Habsburg monarchy. Bács-Bodrog County was established in the western parts of the region and it was re-integrated into the county system of the Kingdom of Hungary, while some other (mostly eastern) parts of the Bačka were incorporated into the Tisza-Maros section of Habsburg Military Frontier, which was directly administered by the Imperial Habsburg court in Vienna. There were significant differences in the status of the inhabitants of the feudal county and the privileged newcome settlers of the Military Frontier, who composed mostly of ethnic Serbs. The Grenz infantry of the Military Frontier was primarily formed to defend Austria against the Ottoman Turks, but impliedly it was intended to offset and control the Hungarian population. This position was several times used by the Habsburg rulers as a political and tactical instrument in the following centuries.[21]

In the Rákóczi's War of Independence heavy fightings took place also in Bačka. In 1704 Francis II Rákóczi led a victorious campaign in this parts. The Serbs fought on the Emperor's side since the beginning of the war. They were used as the light cavalry in the Austrian army and as tax collectors. During the eight years of war Hungarian villages and towns of the Great Hungarian Plain and Transdanubia were burnt and robbed by the Serbs, while in Bácska Serb villages were burnt. However, there were some Serbs who fought on Rakóczi's side against the Habsburgs – the Frontiersmen of Semlak. The leader of the Kuruc Serb troops was Frontier Captain Obrad Lalić from Senta. Later, some parts of the Military Frontier were abolished in 1751, these parts of Bačka were also included into Bács-Bodrog 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 censuses from 1715 to 1720, Serbs, Bunjevci, and Šokci comprised most of the region's population (97.6% of population according to 1715–1720 census data[22][23]). There were only 530 or 1.9% Hungarians and 0.5% Germans.[22] 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. Muslim population had almost entirely left or was expelled from the region and some of the Muslim refugees from this area settled in Ottoman Bosnia.[23] The new settlers in Bačka were primarily Serbs who moved from Ottoman Balkans, Hungarians - returning to Bačka from all parts of the Habsburg Hungary, 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.[citation needed]

There was also an emigration of Serbs from the eastern parts of the region, which belonged to Military Frontier until 1751. After the abolition 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.[citation needed]

In 1848 and 1849, in the course of the Hungarian Revolution and War of Independence broke out the Serb uprising in the Délvidék. The rebels fought on the side of the Habsburg army (together with the German and Romanian regiments from Banat and numerous voluntiers from the Principality of Serbia) against the legitimate Hungarian government and the Hungarian Revolutionary Army. The fightings were characterized by largely ethnically motivated, bloody atrocities on the civilians, mostly executed by the irregular Serb forces.[24] One of the most illustrative events was the "Bloody Candlemas" of 1849 in Senta (Hungarian: véres gyertyaszentelő). On 2 February the Serb forces overrun and conquered the city, resulting mass looting, arson and massacre of the Hungarian inhabitants. In the following weeks of the occupation 2000-2800 civilians were killed partially with the assistance of the local Serbs.[25][26] As the result of the uprising Bačka was proclaimed as part of the Serbian Voivodship, meant as a Serbian autonomous region within Austrian Empire, while between 1849 and 1860 it was part of the Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar, a separate Austrian crown land (the official languages of the voivodship were German and Illyrian, i.e. Serbo-Croatian). After 1860, when the Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar was abolished, Bács-Bodrog County was again formed in the territory of Bačka. The county was part of the Kingdom of Hungary, which became one of two constitutient parts of Austria-Hungary in 1867. According to the 1910 census, the population of Bačka numbered 704,563 people and was composed of: 43.2% speakers of Hungarian (310,490), 28.1% speakers of South Slavic (Serbo-Croatian) language and 22.5% speakers of German. Linguistic composition of the region is partially different from ethnic composition since some ethnic Jews and bilingual South Slavs were in this census recorded as speakers of Hungarian language.[27][28]

In early September 1914, several years before the end of the Austria-Hungary, in a town in the West Vojvodina Bačka region known as Zombor or Sombor of some 30,000 people, including 12,000 Serb-speakers, popular demonstrations demanded the removal of all shop signs in the Cyrillic alphabet. When an angry mob chased one Serb-speaking shopkeeper to his home for refusing to remove his Cyrillic sign, he responded by shooting at the demonstrators. The local military commander demanded the shopkeeper's immediate extradition, court martialed him and executed him on the spot. The court martial also designated twelve more affluent hostages from among the Serb-speaking population who would be "arrested and immediately executed by the military authorities" in the case of any obstruction or opposition shown by the local [Serb-speaking] population to the military authorities." This would presage the Serb genocide committed in the Independent State of Croatia during most of the Second World War.[29]

At the end of October 1918, Austria-Hungary gradually dissolved and, with the Armistice of Villa Giusti of 3 November, officially capitulated to the Triple Entente. Following this capitulation, Slavs from Banat, Bačka and Baranja organized a new civil administration in these regions as well as their own military units known as People's Guard (Serbian: Narodna straža). The new civil administration was composed of local People's Boards (Serbian: Narodni odbori), which were subordinated to Serb People's Board (Serbian: Srpski narodni odbor) in Novi Sad. Military units of Serb People's Board also possessed aircraft from the Novi Sad Airport. After elections, which were organized between 18 and 24 November, Great People's Assembly of Serbs, Bunjevci and other Slavs of Banat, Bačka and Baranja (held on 25 November 1918) proclaimed unification of these regions with the Kingdom of Serbia. The assembly represented only a part of the whole population and did not met the principle of the self-determination of nations. It numbered 757 deputies, of which 578 were Serbs , 84 Bunjevci , 62 Slovaks , 21 Rusyn , 6 Germans , 3 Šokci , 2 Croats and 1 Hungarian , despite the fact that the absolute majority of the population of these regions was Hungarian and German. New administrative bodies of Banat, Bačka and Baranja (government and parliament) were also formed. Although, government in Belgrade accepted decision of unification with Serbia, it never recognized new provincial government. The provincial administration, however, was active until 12 March 1919, when it held its last session.[30]

On 1 December 1918, the Kingdom of Serbia united with the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs to form new country named the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes. Sovereignty of new kingdom was recognized by the Treaty of Saint Germain in 1919. The Treaty of Trianon of 4 June 1920 defined the exact borders between Hungary and the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (which was later renamed to Kingdom of Yugoslavia) and original territory of Bačka was divided between these two countries. The northern part of the region was a separate county of Hungary (Bács-Bodrog) with seat in Baja, which was later incorporated into Bács-Kiskun county. The southern part of the region was within the District of Novi Sad of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes between 1918 and 1922, then was divided between Bačka Oblast and Belgrade Oblast, provinces (oblasts) of the kingdom, between 1922 and 1929. In 1929, it was incorporated into Danube Banovina, which was a province of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.[citation needed]

Between 1820 and 1910, Hungarian speaking population in Bačka increased from 121,688 (31.5%) to 363,518 (44.75%). In the same time, percentage of South Slavs decreased from 44% in 1820 to 27% in 1910. 1921 census showed about 40,000 Hungarian speakers less than in census of 1910. This was especially case in Subotica where 1910 census recorded 55.587 speakers of Hungarian and 33,247 speakers of Bunjevac, while census of 1921 recorded 60,700 speakers of Serbo-Croatian and 26,750 speakers of Hungarian. This is explained by the fact that ethnic Bunjevci from Subotica who had knowledge of Hungarian language were listed as speakers of Hungarian by 1910 census. Between 1921 and 1931 census, number of Hungarian speakers in Bačka increased from 260,998 to 268,711. Slavic population increased by 91,800 inhabitants.[citation needed]

In 1941, Yugoslav Bačka was occupied by the Axis powers and attached to Horthy's Hungary (but was still internationally recognized as part of Yugoslavia). Before this occupation, according to 1931 census, Yugoslav Bačka had 784,896 inhabitants, of whom there were 284,865 Yugoslavs (Serbs, Croats, Bunjevci, Šokci), 268,711 Hungarians and 169,858 Germans. Hungarian occupation authorities expelled several thousands of Serbs from the region and settled ethnic Hungarians from other parts of Central Europe in their place, so that the Hungarian census of 1941 recorded different a demographic composition in the region. According to this census, the territory of Bačka had 789,705 inhabitants, of which 45.4% or[clarification needed] 47.2% were speakers of Hungarian language (not all of them native, however).[31] During the occupation, Hungarian troops killed about 20,000 Serbs, Jews and Roma.[32]

The occupation ended in 1944 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 the region together with German army. The smaller part of the German population (several thousands of people) that did not leave the area (mostly women, children and the elderly) were sent to prison camps, where many of them died of malnutrition and disease. After the war, members of the Yugoslav Partisan army also killed several tens of thousands of inhabitants of German, Hungarian and Serb ethnic origin (in whole of Vojvodina). Estimates about numbers of victims of the Partisans (in whole of Vojvodina) are between 17,000[33] and 56,000[34] killed Germans, between 4,000[32] and 40,000 Hungarians killed, and about 23,000–24,000 Serbs killed.[33]

Together with eastern Syrmia, western Banat, and northern Mačva, Yugoslav Bačka has been part of the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina since 1945. After 1992, Yugoslav Bačka was part of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (renamed Serbia and Montenegro in 2003), and since 2006 it has been part of the independent Republic of Serbia.

 
The Little Bačka Canal, part of the Danube–Tisa–Danube Canal system, near the village of Rumenka in the South Bačka District

Geography

Bačka is a flat, fertile agricultural area within the larger Pannonian Plain, which was once the ancient Pannonian Sea. In Hungary, it is seen as a southern extension of the Great Alfold (itself part of the Pannonian Plain), while this designation is not used in Serbia where region is simply seen as a part of the Pannonian Plain. It lies between the River Danube to the west and south, and by the River Tisa (Tisza) to the east of which confluence is located near Titel in the South Bačka District of Serbia. The region is crisscrossed by parts of the Danube–Tisa–Danube Canal system which serves a variety of economic purposes. Almost all of Bačka is divided between Serbia and Hungary. However, there are small uninhabited pockets of the area on the left bank of the Danube which are de jure parts of Croatia according to the Badinter Commission; the disputed areas have been under de facto Serbian control since 1991.[citation needed]

Most of the territory and a vast majority of the population of Bačka is part of Serbia's Autonomous Province of Vojvodina. This area within Serbia is officially divided into the districts of Southern Bačka, Western Bačka, and Northern Bačka. Novi Sad, the capital of Vojvodina, lies on the border between Bačka and Syrmia, on both banks of the river Danube. In some sources, Serbian part of Bačka is referred to as Central and Southern Bačka (Serbian: Средња и јужна Бачка / Srednja i južna Bačka; Hungarian: Közép- és Dél-Bácska) or simply Southern Bačka (Serbian: Јужна Бачка / ""Južna Bačka; Dél-Bácska). The smaller part of the region in Hungary's Bács-Kiskun County is, by the same sources, described as Northern Bačka (Hungarian: Észak-Bácska; Serbian: Северна Бачка / Severna Bačka).

Serbian Bačka

 
Bačka region within Vojvodina
 
Districts in Vojvodina
 
Map showing cities and towns in Serbian part of Bačka.

The districts of Serbia in Bačka are:

Note that municipalities of Sremski Karlovci, Petrovaradin, and Beočin and southern part of municipality of Bačka Palanka that belong to South Bačka District are geographically not located in Bačka, but in Syrmia, while municipalities of Ada, Senta and Kanjiža which are geographically located in Bačka are part of North Banat District.

Geographic or traditional subregions or regions overlapping with Serbian Bačka include Gornji Breg, Podunavlje, Potisje, Šajkaška, Telečka and Paorija.

Cities, towns and villages in the Serbian part of Bačka with more than 10,000 inhabitants (with population numbers from 2011 census):

Towns and villages in the Serbian part of Bačka with population between 5,000 and 10,000 inhabitants (with population numbers from 2011 census):

Note: Senta, Kanjiža, Ada, Mol and Horgoš are geographically located in Bačka, but they are part of the North Banat District.

Also see: List of inhabited places of Vojvodina

Hungarian Bácska

 
Bács-Kiskun County within Hungary

The Hungarian Bácska is mostly located in the Bács-Kiskun county of Hungary, while one small part of the region is located in the Baranya county.

Subregions in the Hungarian Bácska include (with population numbers):

Note that parts of Hungarian Bácska also belong to the subregions of Kiskunhalasi and Mohácsi, although the main parts of those subregions are not located in Bácska.

Most important towns in Hungarian Bácska (with population numbers):

Demographics

 
Ethnic map of Serbian Bačka (2002 census)

Serbia

According to the 2002 Serbian census, the population of the Serbian part of Bačka (in geographical borders) numbers 1,022,524 people and is composed of:[35]

Hungary

According to the 2001 census in Hungary, the rough population of the Hungarian Bácska (including districts of Bajai, Bácsalmási, and Jánoshalmai) numbering 113,432 people. [2] Note that administrative borders of the districts do not fully correspond with the geographical borders of Hungarian Bácska. Most of the inhabitants of Hungarian Bácska are ethnic Hungarians.

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Dr Dušan J. Popović, Srbi u Vojvodini, knjiga 1, Novi Sad, 1990, page 40.
  2. ^ Milica Grković, Rečnik imena Banjskog, Dečanskog i Prizrenskog vlastelinstva u XIV veku, Beograd, 1986
  3. ^ Dr. Aleksa Ivić, Istorija Srba u Vojvodini, Novi Sad, 1929
  4. ^ A Pallas Nagy Lexikona 11 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine, pallaslexikon.hu; accessed 20 August 2016.(in Hungarian)
  5. ^ Lajos Kiss, Földrajzi nevek etimológiai szótára (Etimology Dictionary of Geographical Names), Akadémiai Kiadó, 1978, p. 71
  6. ^ Bálint Ila, József Kovacsics, Veszprém megye helytörténeti lexikona (Cyclopaedia of Local History of Veszprém county), Volume 2, Volume 2, Akadémiai Kiadó, 1988, p. 169
  7. ^ "U XVII i XVIII veku u Bačkoj je već toliko Srba da putnici ovaj kraj nazivaju »Raczorszag«"
  8. ^ "Google Translate".
  9. ^ Bojan Aleksov, Religious Dissent Between the Modern and the National: Nazarenes in Hungary and Serbia 1850–1914, Otto Harrassowitz Verlag, 2006, p. 56
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 15 July 2011. Retrieved 15 March 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 14 March 2012. Retrieved 15 March 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 January 2011. Retrieved 15 March 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  13. ^ "A Pallas nagy lexikona".
  14. ^ Stevan Pavlović (1870). Srbski narodni sabor u Sremskim Karlovcima godine 1869. U Platonovoj štampariji. p. 2.
  15. ^ Dr Milenko Palić, Srbi u Mađarskoj – Ugarskoj do 1918, Novi Sad, 1995, page 10.
  16. ^ Lajos Horváth (1996). Turul Es Kereszt: Kozerdeku Torteneti Irasok. Szenci Molnár Társaság. p. 41. ISBN 978-963-8320-32-2.
  17. ^ a b Imre Dankó (1977). Opuscula ethnographica: válogatott tanulmányok. Alföldi Ny. pp. 173–76. ISBN 9789630112765.
  18. ^ "A szultán visszavonulása. | Borovszky Samu: Magyarország vármegyéi és városai | Kézikönyvtár".
  19. ^ Veselin P. Dželetović, Poslednji srpski car – Jovan Nenad, Beograd, 2007.
  20. ^ Karoly Kocsis; Eszter Kocsis-Hodosi (April 2001). Ethnic Geography of the Hungarian Minorities in the Carpathian Basin. Simon Publications, Incorporated. p. 9. ISBN 978-1-931313-75-9.
  21. ^ ""Istennel a hazáért és a szabadságért" - Újra belovagolt a Bácskába II. Rákóczi Ferenc | Délhír Portál". 27 October 2019.
  22. ^ a b "An International Symposium "Southeastern Europe 1918-1995"".
  23. ^ a b Karoly Kocsis; Eszter Kocsis-Hodosi (April 2001). Ethnic Geography of the Hungarian Minorities in the Carpathian Basin. Simon Publications, Incorporated. p. 141. ISBN 978-1-931313-75-9.
  24. ^ "Etnikai konfliktusok és a magyar-szerb háború 1848-1849-ben".
  25. ^ "A "nagy szaladás"".
  26. ^ "A zentai véres gyertyaszentelő". 31 January 2017.
  27. ^ "Magyarország népessége".
  28. ^ "1910. ÉVI NÉPSZÁMLÁLÁS 1. A népesség főbb adatai községek és népesebb puszták, telepek szerint (1912) | Könyvtár | Hungaricana".
  29. ^ Judson, Peter M. The Habsburg Empire: A New History (p. 398), Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass./London, England. Copyright © 2016 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College. ISBN 978-0-67404-776-1/LOC 2015036845.
  30. ^ Dr Drago Njegovan, Prisajedinjenje Vojvodine Srbiji, Muzej Vojvodine, Novi Sad, 2004.
  31. ^ Károly Kocsis, Eszter Kocsisné Hodosi, Ethnic Geography of the Hungarian Minorities in the Carpathian Basin, Simon Publications LLC, 1998, p. 116-153 [1]
  32. ^ a b Dimitrije Boarov, Politička istorija Vojvodine, Novi Sad, 2001, page 183.
  33. ^ a b "[sim] Srbe podjednako ubijali okupator i i "oslobodioci"".
  34. ^ Nenad Stefanović, Jedan Svet na Dunavu, Beograd, 2003, page 133.
  35. ^ Popis stanovništva, domaćinstava i stanova 2002. Knjiga 1: Nacionalna ili etnička pripadnost po naseljima. Republika Srbija, Republički zavod za statistiku Beograd 2003. ISBN 86-84433-07-6

Bibliography

  • Fodor, Pál; Dávid, Géza, eds. (2000). Ottomans, Hungarians, and Habsburgs in Central Europe: The Military Confines in the Era of Ottoman Conquest. BRILL. ISBN 9004119078.
  • Ćirković, Sima (2004). The Serbs. Malden: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 9781405142915.

External links

  • BackaBanat.com
  • Stanko Trifunović (1997). "Slovenska naselja V-VIII veka u Bačkoj i Banatu". Novi Sad: Muzej Vojvodine.

bačka, this, article, about, geographical, region, serbia, hungary, other, uses, disambiguation, coordinates, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, arti. This article is about the geographical region in Serbia and Hungary For other uses see Backa disambiguation Coordinates 46 00 N 19 20 E 46 000 N 19 333 E 46 000 19 333 This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may lend undue weight to certain ideas incidents or controversies Please help improve it by rewriting it in a balanced fashion that contextualizes different points of view June 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met June 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Backa Serbian Cyrillic Bachka pronounced baːtʃkaː or Bacska pronounced ˈbaːtʃkɒ is a geographical and historical area within the Pannonian Plain bordered by the river Danube to the west and south and by the river Tisza to the east It is divided between Serbia and Hungary Most of the area is located within the Vojvodina region in Serbia and Novi Sad the capital of Vojvodina lies on the border between Backa and Syrmia The smaller northern part of the geographical area is located within Bacs Kiskun County in Hungary Map of the Backa region Contents 1 Name 2 History 3 Geography 3 1 Serbian Backa 3 2 Hungarian Bacska 4 Demographics 4 1 Serbia 4 2 Hungary 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Bibliography 9 External linksName EditAccording to Serbian historians Backa is a typical Slavic 1 name form created from Bac name of historical town in Backa and suffix ka which designates the land that belongs to Bac The name of Bac Bacs town is of uncertain origin and its existence was recorded among Vlachs Slavs and Hungarians in the Middle Ages The origin of the name could be Paleo Balkanic 2 Romanian citation needed Slavic 3 or Old Turkic 4 According to Hungarian historians the denominator of the landscape may have been the first bailiff of Bac Bacs castle and the name which can be rendered probably Old Turkic baya derives from a dignity name 5 6 In the 17th and 18th century due to the large number of Serbs who lived in Backa this region was called Raczorszag Hungarian for the Serb country 7 8 Sometimes the Hungarians used name Delvidek the southern or lower country for a wider imprecisely defined geographical area which according to 19th century view also included Backa However according to other Hungarian sources Backa was rather seen as part of Alfold 9 History EditThrough history Backa has been a part of Dacia the Kingdom of the Iazyges the Hun Empire the Gepid Kingdom the Avar Khanate the First Bulgarian Empire the Great Moravia the Kingdom of Hungary the Serb realm of Jovan Nenad the Ottoman Empire the Habsburg monarchy the Austrian Empire Austria Hungary the Kingdom of Serbia 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 has been part of an independent Republic of Serbia The smaller northern part of the region was part of the short lived Serb Hungarian Baranya Baja Republic in 1921 and part of independent Hungary since 1921 Red headed goddess statuette from the early Neolithic period archaeological site Donja Branjevina Odzaci Vojvodina Serbia People have inhabited the region of Backa since Neolithic times Indo European peoples settled in this region in three migration waves dated in 4200 BC 3300 BC and 2800 BC respectively The earliest historical inhabitants of the region were probably Illyrian tribes Later other Indo European peoples including Dacians Celts Sarmatians Iazyges and Gepids were recorded as inhabitants of Backa Slavs 10 11 12 settled today s Backa in the 6th and 7th centuries before part of them subsequently migrated to the Balkans In the 9th century the territory of Backa 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 citation needed View of the fortress and the town of Bac Coat of arms of Bacs Bodrog County Kingdom of Hungary in 1490 Bacs County marked 31 Bodrog County 32 Csongrad County 23 At the turn of the first millennium during the administration of the medieval Kingdom of Hungary by Stephen I of Hungary two counties comitatus were formed in this land Bacs County in the south with city of Bacs now Bac as its administrative centre and Bodrog County in the western and central territories with the historical city of Bodrogvar as capital near the presenr day village of Backi Monostor The two countries were later united to form Bacs Bodrog County There were also territories of Csongrad County in the northeastern parts of Backa In 1085 King Ladislaus I made Bacs the seat of the Archbishopric of Kalocsa Bacs The first archbishop Fabian 1085 1103 helped the king in the course of the campaign against Croatia and was rewarded with the title 13 According to Serbian sources Ilija Vid the first known prefect of Bacsensis County was recorded in 1068 and he was an ethnic Serb 14 In this time the region was populated by both Slavs and Hungarians Serbian historian Dr Milenko Palic also mentions that prefect Vid was an ethnic Serb and that he together with two other ethnic Serbs whose names were Ilija and Radovan participated in dynastic struggles in the Kingdom of Hungary in the end of the 11th century 15 verification needed According to Hungarian authors prefect Vid belonged to the Gutkeled genus 16 17 but there is a possibility that he was a fictitious person 17 In 1169 canons from the knighthood Order of the Holy Sepulchre built a small church in Bacs in the Romanesque style They used some building materials from much older previous edifices Franciscans took over the church in 1300 In the second half of the 14th century the Franciscans expanded it forming a monastery Today the Fanciscian monastery of Bacs is the oldest church building in present day Vojvodina In the early 13th century Ugrin Csak Archbishop of Kalocsa founded a hospital in Bacs as the first such facility in this part of Europe Pope Gregory IX wrote about the Backa hospital in 1234 as being open for the sick and poor At the beginning of the fourteenth century the town of Bacs prospered during the rule of king Charles Robert I who started building the modern fortress in 1338 42 at the site of the earlier hillfort From the 15th century it became the most important Hungarian defense point against the invading Ottoman forces In 1526 the Kingdom of Hungary was defeated in the Battle of Mohacs by the Ottoman Empire King Louis II fell in the battle After the victorious campaign the Ottoman army led by Suleiman I withdrew from Hungary through the Danube Tisza Interfluve leaving only smaller garrisons in the fortifications Within two to three weeks the retreating army killed approximately 400 000 men burned down almost all the settlements desolating the whole region 18 In this chaotic period took place the revolt of the Rascians and Backa became from 1526 to 1527 the central region of an independent short lived Serbian pseudostate 19 which existed in the territory of present day Vojvodina The ruler of this state was the self appointed Emperor Jovan Nenad previously the stableman of the king John Zapolya and his capital city was Subotica After Jovan Nenad was defeated and killed his state collapsed and Backa for a short time came again under Hungarian administration Soon the region became part of the Ottoman Empire After the Ottoman conquest most of the previously decisive Hungarian majority population have fled in the 16th 17th centuries The relatively dense populated and prosperous southern counties of the Kingdom were devastated and became mostly abandoned and depopulated During the Ottoman period and later in the 17th and 18th century begun the intense settlement of the Serbs and other South Slavs from the Ottoman ruled central Balkans They were military engaged in the borderlands by both sides This resulted in radical changes of the population structure Hungarian Serb and Bunjevci peasants and Serb and Vlach peasant soldiers lived in ever decreasing number in the area who had an impact on the landscape with their farming In the Ottoman towns there was a Muslim population and outside the city wall there were communities of various Christian denominations and occupations Backa was part of the Sanjak of Segedin Szeged the region was sparsely populated with Serbs who were in an absolute majority 20 and Muslims Battle of Zenta During the Great Turkish War 1683 1699 on 11 September 1697 near Senta in the eastern Backa took place one of the most decisive defeats in Ottoman history the Battle of Zenta Christian forces of the Holy League 1684 led by Prince Eugene of Savoy in a surprise attack destroyed the Ottoman army crossing the river Tisza The battle resulted in a spectacular victory for Austria As a result in 1699 the Treaty of Karlowitz was signed ending the Ottoman control in much of Central Europe All the lands of the Kingdom of Hungary except for Banat and a small chunk of Eastern Slavonia conquered by the Ottomans in the previous 150 years were returned Under the rule of Leopold I the Backa became a possession of the Habsburg monarchy Bacs Bodrog County was established in the western parts of the region and it was re integrated into the county system of the Kingdom of Hungary while some other mostly eastern parts of the Backa were incorporated into the Tisza Maros section of Habsburg Military Frontier which was directly administered by the Imperial Habsburg court in Vienna There were significant differences in the status of the inhabitants of the feudal county and the privileged newcome settlers of the Military Frontier who composed mostly of ethnic Serbs The Grenz infantry of the Military Frontier was primarily formed to defend Austria against the Ottoman Turks but impliedly it was intended to offset and control the Hungarian population This position was several times used by the Habsburg rulers as a political and tactical instrument in the following centuries 21 In the Rakoczi s War of Independence heavy fightings took place also in Backa In 1704 Francis II Rakoczi led a victorious campaign in this parts The Serbs fought on the Emperor s side since the beginning of the war They were used as the light cavalry in the Austrian army and as tax collectors During the eight years of war Hungarian villages and towns of the Great Hungarian Plain and Transdanubia were burnt and robbed by the Serbs while in Bacska Serb villages were burnt However there were some Serbs who fought on Rakoczi s side against the Habsburgs the Frontiersmen of Semlak The leader of the Kuruc Serb troops was Frontier Captain Obrad Lalic from Senta Later some parts of the Military Frontier were abolished in 1751 these parts of Backa were also included into Bacs Bodrog County The only part of Backa which remained within the Military Frontier was Sajkaska but it also came under civil administration in 1873 According to the Austrian censuses from 1715 to 1720 Serbs Bunjevci and Sokci comprised most of the region s population 97 6 of population according to 1715 1720 census data 22 23 There were only 530 or 1 9 Hungarians and 0 5 Germans 22 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 Muslim population had almost entirely left or was expelled from the region and some of the Muslim refugees from this area settled in Ottoman Bosnia 23 The new settlers in Backa were primarily Serbs who moved from Ottoman Balkans Hungarians returning to Backa from all parts of the Habsburg Hungary 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 citation needed There was also an emigration of Serbs from the eastern parts of the region which belonged to Military Frontier until 1751 After the abolition of the Tisa Mures section of Military Frontier many Serbs emigrated from north eastern parts of Backa They moved either to Russia notably to New Serbia and Slavo Serbia or to Banat where the Military Frontier was still needed citation needed Ancient Indo European peoples in Backa Slavs in Backa in the 6th century Voivodeship Duchy of Bulgarian duke Salan 9th century Bach and Bodrogh counties in the 14th century Serbian empire of Jovan Nenad 1526 1527 Backa as part of the Ottoman Sanjak of Segedin in 1568 1571 Military Frontier in Backa in 1699In 1848 and 1849 in the course of the Hungarian Revolution and War of Independence broke out the Serb uprising in the Delvidek The rebels fought on the side of the Habsburg army together with the German and Romanian regiments from Banat and numerous voluntiers from the Principality of Serbia against the legitimate Hungarian government and the Hungarian Revolutionary Army The fightings were characterized by largely ethnically motivated bloody atrocities on the civilians mostly executed by the irregular Serb forces 24 One of the most illustrative events was the Bloody Candlemas of 1849 in Senta Hungarian veres gyertyaszentelo On 2 February the Serb forces overrun and conquered the city resulting mass looting arson and massacre of the Hungarian inhabitants In the following weeks of the occupation 2000 2800 civilians were killed partially with the assistance of the local Serbs 25 26 As the result of the uprising Backa was proclaimed as part of the Serbian Voivodship meant as a Serbian autonomous region within Austrian Empire while between 1849 and 1860 it was part of the Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar a separate Austrian crown land the official languages of the voivodship were German and Illyrian i e Serbo Croatian After 1860 when the Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar was abolished Bacs Bodrog County was again formed in the territory of Backa The county was part of the Kingdom of Hungary which became one of two constitutient parts of Austria Hungary in 1867 According to the 1910 census the population of Backa numbered 704 563 people and was composed of 43 2 speakers of Hungarian 310 490 28 1 speakers of South Slavic Serbo Croatian language and 22 5 speakers of German Linguistic composition of the region is partially different from ethnic composition since some ethnic Jews and bilingual South Slavs were in this census recorded as speakers of Hungarian language 27 28 In early September 1914 several years before the end of the Austria Hungary in a town in the West Vojvodina Backa region known as Zombor or Sombor of some 30 000 people including 12 000 Serb speakers popular demonstrations demanded the removal of all shop signs in the Cyrillic alphabet When an angry mob chased one Serb speaking shopkeeper to his home for refusing to remove his Cyrillic sign he responded by shooting at the demonstrators The local military commander demanded the shopkeeper s immediate extradition court martialed him and executed him on the spot The court martial also designated twelve more affluent hostages from among the Serb speaking population who would be arrested and immediately executed by the military authorities in the case of any obstruction or opposition shown by the local Serb speaking population to the military authorities This would presage the Serb genocide committed in the Independent State of Croatia during most of the Second World War 29 At the end of October 1918 Austria Hungary gradually dissolved and with the Armistice of Villa Giusti of 3 November officially capitulated to the Triple Entente Following this capitulation Slavs from Banat Backa and Baranja organized a new civil administration in these regions as well as their own military units known as People s Guard Serbian Narodna straza The new civil administration was composed of local People s Boards Serbian Narodni odbori which were subordinated to Serb People s Board Serbian Srpski narodni odbor in Novi Sad Military units of Serb People s Board also possessed aircraft from the Novi Sad Airport After elections which were organized between 18 and 24 November Great People s Assembly of Serbs Bunjevci and other Slavs of Banat Backa and Baranja held on 25 November 1918 proclaimed unification of these regions with the Kingdom of Serbia The assembly represented only a part of the whole population and did not met the principle of the self determination of nations It numbered 757 deputies of which 578 were Serbs 84 Bunjevci 62 Slovaks 21 Rusyn 6 Germans 3 Sokci 2 Croats and 1 Hungarian despite the fact that the absolute majority of the population of these regions was Hungarian and German New administrative bodies of Banat Backa and Baranja government and parliament were also formed Although government in Belgrade accepted decision of unification with Serbia it never recognized new provincial government The provincial administration however was active until 12 March 1919 when it held its last session 30 On 1 December 1918 the Kingdom of Serbia united with the State of Slovenes Croats and Serbs to form new country named the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes Sovereignty of new kingdom was recognized by the Treaty of Saint Germain in 1919 The Treaty of Trianon of 4 June 1920 defined the exact borders between Hungary and the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes which was later renamed to Kingdom of Yugoslavia and original territory of Backa was divided between these two countries The northern part of the region was a separate county of Hungary Bacs Bodrog with seat in Baja which was later incorporated into Bacs Kiskun county The southern part of the region was within the District of Novi Sad of the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes between 1918 and 1922 then was divided between Backa Oblast and Belgrade Oblast provinces oblasts of the kingdom between 1922 and 1929 In 1929 it was incorporated into Danube Banovina which was a province of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia citation needed Between 1820 and 1910 Hungarian speaking population in Backa increased from 121 688 31 5 to 363 518 44 75 In the same time percentage of South Slavs decreased from 44 in 1820 to 27 in 1910 1921 census showed about 40 000 Hungarian speakers less than in census of 1910 This was especially case in Subotica where 1910 census recorded 55 587 speakers of Hungarian and 33 247 speakers of Bunjevac while census of 1921 recorded 60 700 speakers of Serbo Croatian and 26 750 speakers of Hungarian This is explained by the fact that ethnic Bunjevci from Subotica who had knowledge of Hungarian language were listed as speakers of Hungarian by 1910 census Between 1921 and 1931 census number of Hungarian speakers in Backa increased from 260 998 to 268 711 Slavic population increased by 91 800 inhabitants citation needed In 1941 Yugoslav Backa was occupied by the Axis powers and attached to Horthy s Hungary but was still internationally recognized as part of Yugoslavia Before this occupation according to 1931 census Yugoslav Backa had 784 896 inhabitants of whom there were 284 865 Yugoslavs Serbs Croats Bunjevci Sokci 268 711 Hungarians and 169 858 Germans Hungarian occupation authorities expelled several thousands of Serbs from the region and settled ethnic Hungarians from other parts of Central Europe in their place so that the Hungarian census of 1941 recorded different a demographic composition in the region According to this census the territory of Backa had 789 705 inhabitants of which 45 4 or clarification needed 47 2 were speakers of Hungarian language not all of them native however 31 During the occupation Hungarian troops killed about 20 000 Serbs Jews and Roma 32 The occupation ended in 1944 and Yugoslav Backa 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 the region together with German army The smaller part of the German population several thousands of people that did not leave the area mostly women children and the elderly were sent to prison camps where many of them died of malnutrition and disease After the war members of the Yugoslav Partisan army also killed several tens of thousands of inhabitants of German Hungarian and Serb ethnic origin in whole of Vojvodina Estimates about numbers of victims of the Partisans in whole of Vojvodina are between 17 000 33 and 56 000 34 killed Germans between 4 000 32 and 40 000 Hungarians killed and about 23 000 24 000 Serbs killed 33 Together with eastern Syrmia western Banat and northern Macva Yugoslav Backa has been part of the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina since 1945 After 1992 Yugoslav Backa was part of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia renamed Serbia and Montenegro in 2003 and since 2006 it has been part of the independent Republic of Serbia District of Potisje and Schajkasch Battalion 18th 19th century Backa within the proclaimed borders of Serbian Voivodship in 1848 Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar 1849 1860 Banat Backa and Syrmia after 1881 the five counties which were formed in the territory of the former Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar Detailed map of Bacs Bodrog County Banat Backa and Baranja in 1918 The Little Backa Canal part of the Danube Tisa Danube Canal system near the village of Rumenka in the South Backa DistrictGeography EditBacka is a flat fertile agricultural area within the larger Pannonian Plain which was once the ancient Pannonian Sea In Hungary it is seen as a southern extension of the Great Alfold itself part of the Pannonian Plain while this designation is not used in Serbia where region is simply seen as a part of the Pannonian Plain It lies between the River Danube to the west and south and by the River Tisa Tisza to the east of which confluence is located near Titel in the South Backa District of Serbia The region is crisscrossed by parts of the Danube Tisa Danube Canal system which serves a variety of economic purposes Almost all of Backa is divided between Serbia and Hungary However there are small uninhabited pockets of the area on the left bank of the Danube which are de jure parts of Croatia according to the Badinter Commission the disputed areas have been under de facto Serbian control since 1991 citation needed Most of the territory and a vast majority of the population of Backa is part of Serbia s Autonomous Province of Vojvodina This area within Serbia is officially divided into the districts of Southern Backa Western Backa and Northern Backa Novi Sad the capital of Vojvodina lies on the border between Backa and Syrmia on both banks of the river Danube In some sources Serbian part of Backa is referred to as Central and Southern Backa Serbian Sredњa i јuzhna Bachka Srednja i juzna Backa Hungarian Kozep es Del Bacska or simply Southern Backa Serbian Јuzhna Bachka Juzna Backa Del Bacska The smaller part of the region in Hungary s Bacs Kiskun County is by the same sources described asNorthern Backa Hungarian Eszak Bacska Serbian Severna Bachka Severna Backa Serbian Backa Edit Backa region within Vojvodina Districts in Vojvodina Map showing cities and towns in Serbian part of Backa The districts of Serbia in Backa are West Backa North Backa South BackaNote that municipalities of Sremski Karlovci Petrovaradin and Beocin and southern part of municipality of Backa Palanka that belong to South Backa District are geographically not located in Backa but in Syrmia while municipalities of Ada Senta and Kanjiza which are geographically located in Backa are part of North Banat District Geographic or traditional subregions or regions overlapping with Serbian Backa include Gornji Breg Podunavlje Potisje Sajkaska Telecka and Paorija Cities towns and villages in the Serbian part of Backa with more than 10 000 inhabitants with population numbers from 2011 census Novi Sad 250 439 Subotica 97 910 Sombor 47 623 Backa Palanka 28 239 Vrbas 24 112 Becej 23 895 Temerin 19 661 Senta 18 704 Futog 18 641 Kula 17 866 Veternik 17 454 Apatin 17 411 Backa Topola 14 573 Srbobran 12 009 Kac 11 740 Towns and villages in the Serbian part of Backa with population between 5 000 and 10 000 inhabitants with population numbers from 2011 census Kanjiza 9 871 Ada 9 564 Zabalj 9 161 Crvenka 9 001 Odzaci 8 811 Curug 8 166 Sivac 7 895 Palic 7 771 Bajmok 7 414 Cantavir 6 591 Rumenka 6 495 Backo Petrovo Selo 6 350 Backi Petrovac 6 155 Mol 6 009 Horgos 5 709 Backi Jarak 5 687 Kovilj 5 414 Bac 5 399 Titel 5 294 Backo Gradiste 5 110 Đurđevo 5 092 Kisac 5 091 Stara Moravica 5 051 Kljajicevo 5 045 Note Senta Kanjiza Ada Mol and Horgos are geographically located in Backa but they are part of the North Banat District Also see List of inhabited places of Vojvodina Hungarian Bacska Edit Bacs Kiskun County within Hungary The Hungarian Bacska is mostly located in the Bacs Kiskun county of Hungary while one small part of the region is located in the Baranya county Subregions in the Hungarian Bacska include with population numbers Bajai 76 906 Bacsalmasi 18 578 Janoshalmai 17 885 Note that parts of Hungarian Bacska also belong to the subregions of Kiskunhalasi and Mohacsi although the main parts of those subregions are not located in Bacska Most important towns in Hungarian Bacska with population numbers Baja 38 143 Janoshalma 9 866 Bacsalmas 7 694 Demographics Edit Ethnic map of Serbian Backa 2002 census Main article Demographic history of Backa Serbia Edit According to the 2002 Serbian census the population of the Serbian part of Backa in geographical borders numbers 1 022 524 people and is composed of 35 559 700 54 74 Serbs 221 882 21 70 Hungarians others including Slovaks Croats Bunjevci Sokci Rusyns Montenegrins Yugoslavs Romani Germans etc Hungary Edit According to the 2001 census in Hungary the rough population of the Hungarian Bacska including districts of Bajai Bacsalmasi and Janoshalmai numbering 113 432 people 2 Note that administrative borders of the districts do not fully correspond with the geographical borders of Hungarian Bacska Most of the inhabitants of Hungarian Bacska are ethnic Hungarians 3 Gallery Edit Novi Sad Subotica Srbobran Baja Kanjiza Wheat field near TemerinSee also EditBacka Oblast Bacs Bodrog Bacs Kiskun Banat Backa and Baranja Eparchy of Backa FK Backa Backa Palanka North Backa District South Backa District Vojvodina West Backa DistrictNotes Edit Dr Dusan J Popovic Srbi u Vojvodini knjiga 1 Novi Sad 1990 page 40 Milica Grkovic Recnik imena Banjskog Decanskog i Prizrenskog vlastelinstva u XIV veku Beograd 1986 Dr Aleksa Ivic Istorija Srba u Vojvodini Novi Sad 1929 A Pallas Nagy Lexikona Archived 11 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine pallaslexikon hu accessed 20 August 2016 in Hungarian Lajos Kiss Foldrajzi nevek etimologiai szotara Etimology Dictionary of Geographical Names Akademiai Kiado 1978 p 71 Balint Ila Jozsef Kovacsics Veszprem megye helytorteneti lexikona Cyclopaedia of Local History of Veszprem county Volume 2 Volume 2 Akademiai Kiado 1988 p 169 U XVII i XVIII veku u Backoj je vec toliko Srba da putnici ovaj kraj nazivaju Raczorszag Google Translate Bojan Aleksov Religious Dissent Between the Modern and the National Nazarenes in Hungary and Serbia 1850 1914 Otto Harrassowitz Verlag 2006 p 56 Archived copy Archived from the original on 15 July 2011 Retrieved 15 March 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Archived copy Archived from the original on 14 March 2012 Retrieved 15 March 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Archived copy Archived from the original on 9 January 2011 Retrieved 15 March 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link A Pallas nagy lexikona Stevan Pavlovic 1870 Srbski narodni sabor u Sremskim Karlovcima godine 1869 U Platonovoj stampariji p 2 Dr Milenko Palic Srbi u Mađarskoj Ugarskoj do 1918 Novi Sad 1995 page 10 Lajos Horvath 1996 Turul Es Kereszt Kozerdeku Torteneti Irasok Szenci Molnar Tarsasag p 41 ISBN 978 963 8320 32 2 a b Imre Danko 1977 Opuscula ethnographica valogatott tanulmanyok Alfoldi Ny pp 173 76 ISBN 9789630112765 A szultan visszavonulasa Borovszky Samu Magyarorszag varmegyei es varosai Kezikonyvtar Veselin P Dzeletovic Poslednji srpski car Jovan Nenad Beograd 2007 Karoly Kocsis Eszter Kocsis Hodosi April 2001 Ethnic Geography of the Hungarian Minorities in the Carpathian Basin Simon Publications Incorporated p 9 ISBN 978 1 931313 75 9 Istennel a hazaert es a szabadsagert Ujra belovagolt a Bacskaba II Rakoczi Ferenc Delhir Portal 27 October 2019 a b An International Symposium Southeastern Europe 1918 1995 a b Karoly Kocsis Eszter Kocsis Hodosi April 2001 Ethnic Geography of the Hungarian Minorities in the Carpathian Basin Simon Publications Incorporated p 141 ISBN 978 1 931313 75 9 Etnikai konfliktusok es a magyar szerb haboru 1848 1849 ben A nagy szaladas A zentai veres gyertyaszentelo 31 January 2017 Magyarorszag nepessege 1910 EVI NEPSZAMLALAS 1 A nepesseg fobb adatai kozsegek es nepesebb pusztak telepek szerint 1912 Konyvtar Hungaricana Judson Peter M The Habsburg Empire A New History p 398 Belknap Press of Harvard University Press Cambridge Mass London England Copyright c 2016 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College ISBN 978 0 67404 776 1 LOC 2015036845 Dr Drago Njegovan Prisajedinjenje Vojvodine Srbiji Muzej Vojvodine Novi Sad 2004 Karoly Kocsis Eszter Kocsisne Hodosi Ethnic Geography of the Hungarian Minorities in the Carpathian Basin Simon Publications LLC 1998 p 116 153 1 a b Dimitrije Boarov Politicka istorija Vojvodine Novi Sad 2001 page 183 a b sim Srbe podjednako ubijali okupator i i oslobodioci Nenad Stefanovic Jedan Svet na Dunavu Beograd 2003 page 133 Popis stanovnistva domacinstava i stanova 2002 Knjiga 1 Nacionalna ili etnicka pripadnost po naseljima Republika Srbija Republicki zavod za statistiku Beograd 2003 ISBN 86 84433 07 6Bibliography EditFodor Pal David Geza eds 2000 Ottomans Hungarians and Habsburgs in Central Europe The Military Confines in the Era of Ottoman Conquest BRILL ISBN 9004119078 Cirkovic Sima 2004 The Serbs Malden Blackwell Publishing ISBN 9781405142915 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Backa BackaBanat com Stanko Trifunovic 1997 Slovenska naselja V VIII veka u Backoj i Banatu Novi Sad Muzej Vojvodine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Backa amp oldid 1147213318, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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