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Banat of Craiova

The Banat of Craiova or Banat of Krajowa (German: Banat von Krajowa; Romanian: Banatul Craiovei), also known as Cisalutanian Wallachian Principality (Latin: Principatus Valachiae Cisalutanae) and Imperial Wallachia (German: Kaiserliche Walachei; Latin: Caesarea Wallachia;[1] Romanian: Chesariceasca Valahie), was a Romanian-inhabited province of the Habsburg monarchy. It emerged from the western third of Wallachia, now commonly known as Oltenia, which the Habsburgs took in a preceding war with the Ottoman Empire—in tandem with the Banat of Temeswar and Serbia. It was a legal successor to the Great Banship of Craiova, with the Wallachian Gheorghe Cantacuzino [ro] as its native leader, or Ban. Over the following years, native rule was phased out, and gave way to a direct administration. This provided the setting for Germanization of the bureaucratic elite, introducing the governing methods of enlightened absolutism and colonialism.

Banat of Craiova
Banat von Krajowa
Banatul Craiovei
Province of the Habsburg monarchy
1718–1739
Coat of arms after 1723

The Banat of Craiova shown in the bottom right corner of a French map from 1898
CapitalKrajowa (Craiova)
Population 
• 1739
34,346 families (officially registered)
History
Government
Ban / Prezes 
• 1719–1726
Gheorghe Cantacuzino
• 1726–1728
Georgius Schramm von Otterfels
• 1728–1732
Joachim Czeyka von Olbramowitz
• 1732–1733
J. H. Dietrich
• 1733–1739
Franciscus Salhausen
Historical eraEarly modern Europe
Ottoman–Habsburg wars
21 July 1718
• Territorial organization
22 February 1719
• Reorganization
27 April 1729
November 1737
18 September 1739
Subdivisions
 • TypeCounties
 • UnitsDolj, Gorj, Mehedinți, Romanați, Vâlcea
Today part ofRomania

Habsburg rule over Oltenia only lasted two decades, which fit within the reign of just one Austrian Emperor (and titular "Prince of Cisalutanian Wallachia"), Charles VI (1711–1740). Its steady encroachment on the privileges of native boyars, as well as its added pressures on the serfs and the free peasants, were highly unpopular, undermining Austrophile positions in Wallachia as a whole. The period witnessed collective tax resistance and internal migration, in an effort to conceal the total number and location of contributors. Charles VI and the Serbian Orthodox Bishops in Belgrade took charge of the Wallachian Diocese of Râmnic, curbing its traditional privileges while allowing it to maintain cultural autonomy. Some timid steps were taken toward Catholicizing Oltenia, with Catholic Bulgarians as the main proxies. Despite being pressured from above, Râmnic Bishops were able to expand their influence into southern Transylvania, providing it with support against the spread of Greek Catholicism.

Popular resistance required a steady adaptation of the administrative apparatus, which included more accurate censuses, relief of some feudal obligations, and heavy penalties for tax offenders. The process was directly supervised by Austrian officials, including Franz Paul von Wallis in the 1730s. It was cut short by an unexpected Ottoman reconquest in late 1737, which brought another devastation of Oltenia, but also witnessed the reestablishment of self-rule by the Romanians. "Imperial Wallachia" formally ended in 1739, when the Ottoman Empire recovered Serbia and Oltenia (which was returned to Wallachia) after the Treaty of Belgrade.

The claim to Oltenia was formally revived during the 1770s by Joseph II, but died out a decade later. The Banat of Temeswar, which became home to a sizable community of Romanian Oltenian and Bulgarian refugees, was kept by the Habsburg monarchy and its successors until 1918. Though rejected by the mass of the people, the Habsburg experiment in Oltenia produced some lasting changes, with some institutions maintained in place by Wallachian Prince Constantine Mavrocordatos. Austrian influence, which introduced the region to organized guilds and a postal system, also provided Wallachians with a linguistic template for modernization and re-Latinization.

History

Austrian conquest

The autonomous Banship of Craiova covered a quadrilateral western third of Wallachia, located between the Southern Carpathians to the north, the Danube to the south and west, and the Olt River (Alutus in Latin; hence "Cisalutanian") to the east. Since the 15th century, Wallachia, including its Oltenian subdivision, had been subjugated by the Ottoman Empire (its neighbor to the south), participating as such in the Ottoman–Habsburg wars. During the 17th century, members of the Wallachian boyardom, especially those linked with the Cantacuzino family, began looking to the Habsburgs as potential liberators of the country.[2] The period included several episodes in which Wallachia was declared a Habsburg fief. One such early case was on 7 January 1543, when Radu Paisie, the Prince of Wallachia, nominally attached his country to the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary.[3] In June 1598, during an episodic emancipation from Ottoman vassalage, Prince Michael the Brave and his Postelnic Andronic Cantacuzino (both of whom had served as Bans) submitted Wallachia to the Holy Roman Empire.[4] The Great Turkish War of 1683 saw Prince Șerban Cantacuzino and his Wallachian military forces fighting on the Ottoman side; however, they made a public show of their reluctance, and privately celebrated Habsburg Austria's victory in the Battle of Vienna.[5]

During the 1680s, the Habsburgs were on the offensive, and only their forced participation in the War of the Reunions prevented Wallachia from being conquered at that stage.[6] In August 1716, the Battle of Petrovaradin marked a turning point in the fourth Austro-Turkish War: the Habsburg monarchy chased the Ottoman Army out of Central Europe, and stood to occupy both Wallachia and Moldavia. As a result of this, the Sublime Porte reduced autonomy for Wallachia by introducing a new political elite, the Greek-speaking Phanariotes; Nicholas Mavrocordatos, a Phanariote known for having pacified Moldavia, was brought in to reign as titular Prince of Wallachia.[7] Seeking to undermine the Austrian advance, Ottoman commanders and the Budjak Tatars staged the mass deportation and enslavement of Wallachian peasants—Oltenians were reportedly over-represented in this exodus, as 35,000 evacuees from a total 80,000.[8] The problem was compounded by internal flight, with many more villagers fleeing for safety into the Oltenian forests and the Parâng Massif.[9] As many as 273 Oltenian villages and hamlets were left deserted, from a total 741; 190 of these ghost villages were located in the exposed southern fields.[10] The events notably witnessed the ransacking of Brâncovenești boyar estates, including their manor in Brâncoveni (which had been one of Oltenia's two major military buildings).[11]

As early as March 1716, the Austrians could count on support from an inner faction of Wallachian boyars. Formed around Spătar Radu Golescu [ro], it regarded Mavrocordatos as a "tyrant".[12] Answering to boyar requests for help, the Habsburg general Stephan von Steinville sent in some hundreds of his soldiers, which, also in August 1716, routed a 3,000-strong Wallachian army at Orșova—according to chronicler Radu Popescu [ro], these troops were secretly opposed to Mavrocordatos, and did not put up a fight. Oltenia was taken whole when the Wallachian Serdar, Cornea Brăiloiu, defected to the enemy, guiding more Austrian troops through the Vulcan Pass and into Târgu Jiu.[13] Some Oltenian boyars were soon co-opted by Prince Eugene of Savoy and his invasion force: Postelnic Ștefan Pârșcoveanu led 200 Habsburg soldiers in battle against the Mavrocordatos troops, at Bengești-Ciocadia.[14] An Austrian force under Stephan Dettine von Pivoda ventured out of Oltenia and into Pitești, then took the Wallachian capital, Bucharest on 14 November, capturing the Prince; during this episode, most Wallachian forces had been diverted to Oltenia, with Popescu invested as Ban.[15] Despite earning support from the Wallachian assembly, which declared itself subject to Emperor Charles VI on 28 November, the Austrians were not confident about establishing a bridgehead in Muntenia, and withdrew immediately after to Mărgineni and Câmpulung.[16]

In December 1716, the Ottomans retook Bucharest and placed John Mavrocordatos on the throne. On 24 February, he obtained from the Austrians recognition as Prince of Wallachia, which was understood to mean only Muntenia; the new ruler also agreed to pay Charles VI a lump tribute in "bags of gold".[17] During the following period, refugee boyars sent Charles several petitions asking for Oltenia to be kept as an autonomous part of the Empire, with its own Voivode, namely Gheorghe Cantacuzino. During this campaign, they expressed alarm that Oltenia would be incorporated with Transylvania, which was in the process of losing its autonomy.[18] The boyar delegations were also mandated to discuss the exclusion of Phanariotes and other Greeks from the table of ranks, which formed the basis of boyar privilege and revenue. They were encouraged in this by Damaschin Voinescu, the Orthodox Bishop of Râmnic, who described Greeks as "betrayers and destroyers of countries".[19]

 
Allegory of Prince Eugene of Savoy trampling on a Turk; to his right, a personification of Austria carrying the labarum and a shield with a double-headed Reichsadler. Concept drawing by Jan Wandelaar (1719)

Boyar appeals were largely ignored by Charles, who added Prince of Cisalutanian Wallachia or Imperial Wallachia (Chesariceasca Valahie) to his list of titles, assigning Steinville to the intermediary position of Supreme Director of Oltenia.[20] The administration was directly organized by a Neo-Acquistic Commission, which answered to the Aulic and War Councils.[21] By August 1717, the Austrians had gained a definitive victory at Belgrade, prompting the Porte to sue for peace. The Treaty of Passarowitz, which was signed on 21 July 1718, recognized Oltenia as an Austrian fief, under uti possidetis.[22] Negotiations were stalled when the Porte instructed its delegates not to admit that Oltenia had been conquered ("under a kind of occupation" was the preferred formula); Austria reacted by bribing Ottoman officials, as well Dutchman Nicolas Theyls and other arbiters, until consensus could finally sway in their favor.[23]

During September 1718, Prince Eugene and Grand Vizier Nevşehirli Ibrahim settled the new border: all Oltenian Danube islands were assigned to the Ottoman Empire, while, on the Olt, Austria kept whatever was west of the thalweg (including islets such as Celieni, Milcovan, Seccediu, and Tuba).[24] Both empires agreed that boyars stranded in Oltenia could keep their estates in Muntenia. The provision was nullified in practice when Princes, beginning with Nicholas Mavrocordatos, identified absentee landlords and confiscated their property. The aggrieved parties sought compensation by urging the Neo-Acquistic Commission to operate in the same way, asking to be handed down the estates of Mavrocordatos loyalists, including the Brâncovenești. The Imperial Revenue Service, which had taken over the estates in question for its own purposes, blocked the attempt.[25] Brâncoveni was taken as spoils of war by Captain Dettine.[26]

Government creation

The newly conquered region was formally organized through an imperial decree on 22 February 1719. This created an administrative commission in the city of Craiova, which had attributes as a legislative body, executive branch, and local revenue service.[27] As noted by historian Ileana Căzan, Charles VI's court took some pride in having conquered another portion of "Dacia" (and, more specifically, Roman Dacia), which were now politically linked to the reincarnated Roman Empire of the Habsburg realm: "the very conquest of Oltenia was shrouded in the notion of Roman imperial continuity. The boyars, grouped as the Administration, were [also] known as the Dacian senate."[28] The administration also acted as a court, but only heard major criminal offenses (criminalia maiora), property disputes, and some appeals sent in by the first- and second-level courts.[29] Vlach law, generally based on oral records and, more loosely, on the written code Îndreptarea legii [ro], was preserved as the statute, "except for those [provisions] that contradict sound habits".[30] Romanian was still the administrative language. However, the Phanariote infusion of Greek and Turkish terms was immediately curbed, with Latin or German neologisms introduced for the new offices and functions—beginning with the designation of commission members as Consiliari ("Counselors"), assisted by a Secretariu ("Secretary").[31]

As another concession to the locals, the commission was entirely staffed by natives, and allowed its president to use the Wallachian title of Ban. During October 1719, Steinville confirmed the administrative commission, presided upon by Gheorghe Cantacuzino as Ban. Its Council comprised four men: Brăiloiu (who died during the proceedings and was replaced with Staico Bengescu), Golescu, Grigore II Băleanu, and Ilie Știrbei.[32] Its Secretary, Nicolae de Porta, also was a Romanian.[33] All staff, including the Ban, were salaried employees of the state; Cantacuzino received 6,000 Reichsthaler annually, and his Counselors 1,000.[34] Steinville's Supreme Directorate was maintained as a supervising body, but remained headquartered in the Transylvanian city of Hermannstadt; until late 1721, Cantacuzino and his commission only had consultative powers.[35] Hermannstadt was also the higher court of appeals, but the population was largely ignorant of its judicial powers, and few sought to obtain its intervention; the commission met more significant competition from the Stabsauditoriat, a military tribunal which had the vaguely defined task of preserving public order, and which too over all penal cases.[36] Frustrating Austrian attempts at modernization, both the Counselors and parties appearing before them agreed to ignore other formalities: several trials were simply held by the Counselors in their private homes, though this was explicitly illegal.[37]

After the Supreme Directorate relinquished its powers, the Ban and his Counselors were assigned control over the administrative network, which was staffed by five Vornici (one per each county) and twenty Ispravnici (one per Plassa).[38] While towns were governed using Județi and Pârgari [ro], villages were directly supervised by Pârcălabi and Vătafi. The latter two categories had been traditionally appointed by their local boyar, but who were now directly picked by, and integrated within, the state apparatus; unlike their superiors and the equivalent urban apparatus, they did not receive salaries, but were exempted from taxation.[39] They were also a first-level judicial power, relieving the Couselors and the Ispravnici of cases such as those involving larceny or minor sexual offences.[40] The boyars were frustrated in their attempt to obtain approval for private armies of Slujitori, which they intended to use against hajduk outlaws; the Austrians "resisted the creation of any national military units, even some of reduced proportions".[41] Instead, the regime maintained collective responsibility, picked up from ancient Wallachian customs, as a deterrent, punishing "ten or twelve surrounding villages" for robbery or murder that went unsolved.[42] For long the only home guard unit tolerated by the Austrians were the 100 Dorobanți of Craiova.[43]

In Oltenia, Austria inherited the Phanariotes' complicated system of taxation, which combined the Ottoman fiscal regime with ancestral duties. The main tribute, or bir, had been owed directly to the Ottoman Sultan; it survived as contrebuțion or dajde împărătească, and was redirected toward the Habsburg Emperor.[44] Collection began in 1720, when each family was expected to pay two Reichsthaler (120 Kreuzer).[45] Various other duties were maintained, and some new ones were introduced. This was the case with the Vorspann, a tribute in horses and transport-related labor collected in lieu of contrebuțion from specific areas—the semi-autonomous region known as Țara Loviștei and villages bordering the main roads. The Vorspann was immediately abused by those in power, who now demanded a permanent supply of horses and labor.[46] The upper classes, including both boyars and some peasants of prestigious lineage (known as aleși or alessi), also received some satisfaction in matters of fiscal policy: most obtained a partial, and some a total, tax exemption from the contrebuțion. However, they were still expected to contribute the "voluntary gift" (donum gratuitum), specifically for the Emperor.[47]

 
Herman Moll's map of the Danubian Principalities in 1726, showing Oltenia as the Aust[rian] partition of Wallachia

In the aftermath of Passarowitz, Austrian administrators set about repopulating the region, allowing thousands of Muntenian families to settle in the devastated villages, especially those of Gorj and Vâlcea.[48] The Vornici were specifically instructed to drive peasants out of their forest hideouts and back into agricultural life.[49] In 1722, the Austrian conscription census, overseen by the Count of Virmont, estimated Oltenians at 25,000 families, calibrated downward by counts made in 1724 (14,719 families) and 1726 (15,665 families).[50] While re-stabilizing population growth, the Austrian government began looking into increasing the fiscal burden. Contrebuțion goals were set at 190,000 Rheingulden annually, though the target was not consistently met. In 1728, it was raised to some 212,000 Rheingulden, and continued to increase steadily; in 1736, Oltenians provided 260,352 Rheingulden in contrebuțion revenue.[51]

Answering boyar demands, the Austrians put an end to a tacit policy of homesteading, and returned to the status quo of 1716, effectively treating peasants as boyar serfs (rumâni; German: Rumoni).[52] They generally accepted claims that peasants living on boyar- or Church-owned estates also owed corvée, issuing, for the first time in history, written instructions to detail how this duty was to be carried out.[53] Against Wallachian precedents, labor on the estates was legally redefined as an individual, rather than collective, duty, and affixed at one day per week; Austrian authorities limited the number of working days by also forcing farmers to perform statute labor on public works;[54] overall, forced labor in both forms increased greatly, "to as many as fifty-two days a year, as contrasted to three to nine days normal to other parts of Wallachia at the time."[55] Instead, the regime outlawed feudal rent owed in produce (dijmă) for the entire peasant category.[56] It also reacted strongly against boyar claims of "absolute authority" over the serfs, placing the latter under the authority of civil and criminal courts. Overall, "the regulation in agrarian interactions aimed at wholly removing relations between estate-owners and peasants from the realm of the arbitrary, placing them within elaborate and state-controlled formulas."[57] This was also done for humanitarian reasons: one early inspection reported that boyars treated their peasants "like dogs".[58]

Boyar and peasant resistance

Landowning boyars remained dissatisfied with Austrian policies and alarmed by the fiscal pressures. In 1719, Steinville allowed them a temporary victory by passing regulations that precluded members of their class from selling, as opposed to leasing, land that was deemed "ancestral"; the measure targeted foreign buyers, with a statement of purpose that explicitly mentioned Catholic Bulgarians as the undesirable competitors ("[these] traders are flush with money and will buy up lots of goods, with many of the boyars' villagers opting for refuge in [the Bulgarians'] villages").[59] Bulgarian lobbying obtained that the text be modified to a less xenophobic form, driving the boyars to seek other methods of resistance.[60] One such form was cooperation with native tenant farmers toward nonpayment of the state tax. As early as 1722, there were reports that the Ban and his allies were actively using their administrative functions to undermine tax collectors by "exempting, if not all, then at least most of their own peasants".[61] The boyars were also defeated in their attempt to deny the Bulgarians their judicial autonomy. In October 1727, Charles VI settled the matter by reconfirming that only Bulgarian courts could try Bulgarian cases.[62]

During 1723, tax collectors noted that Dolj County was again missing entire villages, among them Maglavit and Rojiște, their populations having turned nomadic.[63] Two years later, another inspection in Romanați confirmed that 2,300 families had recently gone missing.[64] In Gorj, emigration focused on the Banat of Temeswar, which had no precedent to match Phanariote taxation. This alarmed the War Council: on 12 April 1726, it forbade settlement by non-Catholics.[65] Around that same time, inspector Karl von Tige noted that entire villages of Oltenia were being "placed under the protection of this or that [boyar]".[66] That year witnessed an attempt to contain the phenomenon, combining softer approaches (a de facto ban on corporal punishments for tax-evading peasants)[67] with a more thorough investigation of the boyars' activities. Under the old fiscal regime, boyars estimated their peasants' tax duties, and were not expected to provide an exact count of how many serfs they owned.[68] In early 1727, regulations were introduced by the Aulic Council, which forced the boyars to provide accurate counts of the peasants working on their estates, with tax forms known as fassiones (in Latin) or foi de mărturisanie (in Romanian); heavy fines were introduced where fraud could be ascertained.[69] This measure had the unintended consequence of driving even more peasants into hiding with the boyars' complicity—a "massive dissolving of the contributing masses".[70]

 
Manor (court) of the dissident Brâncovenești boyars, in Brâncoveni, Romanați County, as drawn by Austrian soldier Friedrich Schwantz von Springfels in 1723

Beginning in September 1725, documents issued by Austrian sources refrained from calling Cantacuzino a Ban, replacing this term with Prezes or Präses (from the Latin Praeses, "governor").[71] Historian Șerban Papacostea sees September 1726 as bringing Oltenian autonomy to a full stop, in that Cantacuzino was deposed and his office eliminated—he was replaced with a President or Prezes, Georgius Schramm von Otterfels, himself succeeded by Joachim Czeyka von Olbramowitz upon his death in late 1728; during that entire interval, Cantacuzino refused to vacate the Ban's manor and accept exile in Transylvania, as had been asked of him.[72] The clampdown on boyar authority was enhanced in 1727, when Tige noted that Cantacuzino's ouster had only reshuffled the governing clique, with the new team of Counselors being "just as zealous in promoting its own interests as the preceding one had been."[73] As Papacostea notes, in the aftermath the Habsburgs introduced not just centralism, but also Germanization, both without curtailing boyar privilege or uprooting traditional society.[74] A centralizing trend was consolidated with an imperial decree on 27 April 1729, whereby the boyars' role in policy-making and their fiscal privileges were greatly reduced, and the Vorspann tax was entirely phased out.[75]

The curtailing was met with protests from Golescu, including one he addressed to the Aulic Council in May 1728, shortly before his death.[76] The continued pressures exercised through the fassiones managed to exhaust boyar resistance, and resulted in more accurate counts of the taxpaying population. 22,000 families were recorded in 1727, rising to 31,000 in 1730; there were at least 34,346 families of any status living in Oltenia in 1739, of whom some 300 were boyar families, and 2,400 were burghers.[77] Oltenia continued to have a sizable population of free-and-landowning peasants—some 47% of the total rural population in 1722.[78] Known as moșneni or megieși in Romanian, possessionati rustici in Latin, and freie Leute in German, these groups remained over-represented in mountainous areas (135 villages in Gorj, 85 in Vâlcea).[79] As part of their conflict with government forces, the boyars obtained that most of the fiscal burden be placed on the moșneni and megieși. In 1727, moșneni families owed the state 10 Rheingulden in contrebuțion (this was marginally reduced to 8.2 Rheingulden in 1728, and remained set at that level for the remainder of Habsburg rule); megieși, meanwhile, had to pay 12–13 Rheingulden per family.[80]

A small group of endogamic families still held on to "great boyar" status. No definitive count was ever provided, but documents read by Papacostea suggest that they ranged between 17 and 24. Examples include the Argetoianus, Băleanus, Bengescus, Brăiloius, Buzescus, Fărcășanus, Glagoveanus, Otetelișanus, Pârșcoveanus, Poienarus, Știrbeis, Urdăreanus, and Zătreanus.[81] They looked down on the lesser boyars, or boiernași, which could include cadet branches of the leading aristocracy (as with the Glagoveanus and Zătreanus), or entire clans fallen into destitution (the Rudeanus).[82] These two classes fully owned 244 villages, or 32% of Oltenian villages.[83] While most boyars of both classes only had one or two villages to their name, the most powerful clans could hold much more. The Brăiloius topped the list, with 28 villages, 16 of them in Gorj.[84]

Austrian consolidation

A major downside of Austrian rule was Oltenia's removal from the Ottoman economic sphere—specifically, the occupation regime unwittingly blocked much of the cattle, horse, butter and wool trade that had linked Oltenian pastoralists to the markets of Rumelia; wool was mostly redirected toward Transylvania.[85] Similarly, the Austrians slowed down grain and barley production by curbing all exports of cereals, including to other parts of the Monarchy. The latter ban, which was meant to ensure an uninterrupted chain of supply for the Austrian garrisons, was only lifted for a while in 1726.[86] Overall, Oltenia was to remain underpopulated and underdeveloped throughout the Austrian episode. At a "demographic peak" in 1736, the Vornici were still instructed to direct peasants into discarded villagers and resume cultivation in fallow lands.[87]

During 1731, Supreme Director Franz Paul von Wallis suggested "doubling" the Oltenian Vornici with Austrian natives, who would make sure to check the fiscal records and the realities of taxation; this practice was approved by the Aulic Council and introduced during the early months of 1732.[88] In 1735, foreigners Anton Gebaur, Anton Marstaller, Franciscus Nagy and Gaspar Rauch all held offices as Vornici.[89] Meanwhile, all the boyars had been drafted as legal aides, forming Commissions which streamlined judicial procedures and documented cases appearing before the Craiova commission.[90] Also in 1732, J. H. Dietrich took over as President, imposing an Austrian, Johann Wilhelm Vogt, as one of the Oltenian Counselors. Dietrich died in 1733; under his replacement, Franciscus Salhausen, the Council included Vogt and another Austrian man, J. V. Viechtern (the latter as replacement for the Oltenian Grigore Vlasto).[91]

In 1737, the government was almost entirely non-Romanian and non-boyar, with only Ștefan Pârșcoveanu holding on to the office of Counselor.[92] Wallis had asked for his demotion as early as August 1732, but the Aulic Council was adamant in supporting him.[93] Though the Oltenians' Catholicization was not an immediate priority of the Austrian elite, their encouragement of Bulgarian, German, and Hungarian settlement could also double as proselytism—especially after the Diocese of Nicopolis ad Hystrum was relocated to Oltenia.[94] From 1723, the Franciscans began building a church in Râmnicu Vâlcea.[95] Moving the Bulgarians' Catholic see was formalized in June 1725, when Nikola Stanislavič, previously the Catholic Vicar of Wallachia, was anointed Bishop, and took up residence in Craiova.[96] Bulgarians were especially favored by the Austrians, for being "a Catholic population which proved its loyalty during the war against the Turks."[97] From 1729, Stanislavič had tasked his aide Blasius Milli with encouraging the "Paulicians" of Rumelia to settle in Oltenia.[98] As many as 2,000 Catholics from around Nikopol had done so by 1737. Mostly peasants, they formed segregated communities in Craiova and Islaz, distancing themselves from the Bulgarian merchant class.[99] New arrivals included rich Orthodox merchands from Chiprovtsi, including Iova and Iota Iovepali—first attested at Râmnicu Vâlcea in early 1732.[100] Colonization could also include Romanian families, such as a small group from the Budjak, which settled in Costești during November 1732.[101]

Once revived and Germanized, the commission remained largely powerless in tackling boyar and peasant resistance, which often took the form of sabotage and demoralization. As summarized by Papacostea: "the low-ranking Oltenian boyardom still held on to sufficient power so as to block any real application of the imperial commands. [...] Though pushed out of the main offices of the province, though the Craiova Administration was by then directly under Austria's control, the boyars still held on to the administration of counties and villages, which was entirely at their disposal."[102] As he notes, the disgruntled boyars gathered around Ilie Știrbei and Dositei Brăiloiu, whom Czeyka von Olbramowitz had already considered arresting.[103] Faced with such opposition and a parallel sharp rise in outlaw activities, this new administration finally allowed Ispravnici to organize small militias in 1734.[104]

Episodes of mass flight were still occasionally documented, including among the tax-encumbered boiernași: in 1726, the authorities largely failed to collect within this community, whose members "have scattered and are hiding out in the counties".[105] In 1728, 36 villages of Mehedinți were entirely "broken up", while in 1734, Caraula was left with only four moșneni and its Pârcălab.[106] In other cases, the exodus was temporary, with free peasants and serfs taking up seasonal jobs to fulfill their fiscal obligations. In August 1731 for instance, the poorest such peasants were roaming Oltenia to do the mowing on various estates.[107] Overall, members of the upper classes engaged one another in bloodless feuds over the scarce labor resource. Boyars included in the administration were able to outmaneuver their rivals, especially the boiernași, by imposing arbitrary obligations or simply by kidnapping peasants and pushing them into serfdom.[108] During November 1723, Tige reported that the boyars were taking additional steps to prevent inspectors from counting people and animals living on their estates. These opponents were claiming that such counts could only be performed on one's deathbed.[109] Meanwhile, peasants began organizing resistance to the corvée: in 1737, the landlords of Bistrița Monastery noted that none of their tenant farmers had shown up for work, even after obtaining a reduction of their duties.[110]

 
Orthodox monk (left) and wedded priest, in a 1722 watercolor by Schwantz von Springfels

The Catholic Emperor had uneasy relations with the Orthodox clergy. In 1725, he submitted local churches to the Serbian Bishop in Belgrade, Mojsije Petrović. This grouped Râmnic alongside parishes from the Banat of Temeswar and the purely Serbian Eparchy of Valjevo.[111] In what was a more controversial gesture that drew protests from the monastic community, Charles VI personally appointed Râmnic's Bishops and all the Staretses;[112] he also claimed direct control over the "princely" (domnești) monasteries, from Cozia and Tismana [ro] to Polovragi [ro].[113] In 1726, Petrović assigned to Bishopric to a monk Ștefan, who was never consecrated, and whose only contribution as a ktitor was Mihalcea Litterati's church in Ocnele Mari; in late 1727, he was replaced with Inochentie, who remained in charge until 1735.[114]

Monastery administrators soon took the example of boyars in sabotaging Habsburg modernization. Tige's inspection already noted that agricultural production was unusually low on estates held by the Bishopric of Râmnic; during a November 1732 survey, Wallis proposed controlling the village of Orevița by assigning it directly to the Belgrade Bishops.[115] During 1736, an old feudal privilege was abolished at Tismana, with its pastures in Jidoștița being confiscated for use by the Austrian cavalry in Cerneți.[116] The common practice under the Habsburg administration was the collection of all traditional taxes from Orthodox institutions, against tradition—which had either reduced or eliminated such burdens on the Church.[117] In a contrasting move, the Austrians sought to protect church land from boyar encroachment, which had been aggravated after the Mavrocordatos confiscations. In 1726, inspectors were proposing to review all boyar property deeds, to determine how much land had been stolen from the monasteries.[118]

Ottoman reconquest

The outbreak of a Russo-Turkish War in 1735 was contemplated by the Austrians as an opportunity to complete their expansion into Wallachia. As early as June 1735, Charles VI was preparing another attack on the Ottoman Empire, asking Wallis to ensure that Oltenia would contribute additional revenue for that effort.[119] The prospects of an Austrian annexation were viewed with alarm by the boyars of Bucharest, who were now overwhelmingly Russophile in their outlook, explicitly demanding to be placed under the Russian Empire's protection: "Wallachia's feudal class hoped to obtain Russia's support not just when it came to emancipation from Turkish suzerainty, but also to the territorial reunification, with compensation offered to the Viennese court in exchange for Oltenia."[120] In October 1736, Vornic Preda Drugănescu represented this boyar caucus on a mission to Bila Tserkva. Here, he pledged that Wallachia would surrender only to Russia, and promised to raise the sum needed for the Oltenian purchase, "because all the boyars over there [in Craiova] wish to find themselves under the Russian scepter".[121]

In January 1737, Michael von Talman was mandated by Charles VI to negotiate with Ottoman delegates at Babadag. Here, the Austrians asked for the terms negotiated at Passarowitz, including the recognition of Oltenia as a Habsburg province, to be extended beyond 1782.[122] Oltenia's geopolitical status was changed abruptly in June 1737, when Austria decided to declare war on the Ottoman Empire. The original plan was for a swift annexation of Muntenia, which would have restored Wallachia under Charles's scepter. During the advance from Oltenia and Transylvania, Wallis approached the Phanariote Prince of Wallachia, Constantine Mavrocordatos, with an offer to switch side, promising him recognition as an Austrian vassal in both Muntenia and Oltenia. Mavrocordatos and his court were scandalized by this suggestion, and preferred instead to take refuge in Ottoman-held territory.[123]

Annexation seemed to be realized in on 17 July, when Austrian troops under General Ghillany entered Bucharest.[124] They arrested the boyar regency, sending its members to Transylvania as imperial hostages.[125] At that stage, however, Muntenians were generally unenthusiastic about the change of regimes. Wallis and his men found that most urban centers in both regions had been deserted, and that the fields had been abandoned in full harvest.[126] The situation was aggravated when Wallachians caught hints that Austria intended to break apart Mehedinți, annexing its western half to the Banat of Temeswar.[127] Some boyars, including Constantin Balș, Ștefan Catargiu, and Ștefăniță Ruset, still favored the Austrian option, pledging themselves to Emperor Charles.[128]

As early as August 1737, the Austrians had again moderated their demands: delegates sent to the peace talks at Nemirov were mandated to ask for a new border on the Dâmbovița or the Argeș, preserving Oltenia and dividing Muntenia. These negotiations finally broke down when Austrian delegates accused Russia of intervening in favor of Wallachian territorial integrity.[129] The Ottoman Army subsequently retaliated with a surprisingly efficient counteroffensive. This began in September–October, when Mavrocordatos organized the retaking of Câmpulung and Pitești.[130] On 12 November, the Ottomans recaptured Bucharest;[131] with a pincer movement, they then took Craiova and trapped Charles' troops in northern Oltenia and the Muntenian fort of Perișani.[132]

Mavrocordatos reaffirmed his status as Oltenian overlord by sending Radu Comăneanu as his governor in Craiova, and appointing Ioniță Cercedja and his 200 Slujitori to assist against Wallis' army.[133] In the immediate aftermath, Oltenians found themselves encumbered by Ottoman demands, including a tribute set at 300 bags of gold; the Wallachian Kapucu managed to obtain a temporary reduction.[134] The situation proved especially difficult for civilians trapped in the disputed area, who attempted to form their own civilian government under Bishop Climent Modoran. In February 1738, he asked his flock to provide food for both the Ottomans and the Austrians, expressing sympathy for their plight: Știu că va iaste greu a sluji la doi împărați ("I know how difficult it is that you would have to serve two emperors").[135] His own palace in Râmnicu Vâlcea was severely damaged during the Austrians' defense of Oltenia.[136] Throughout the interval, hajduks rallied in the no man's land around Orșova, with outlaws of many nations being joined by a mass of runaway serfs.[137]

During May, Grand Vizier Yeğen Mehmed Pasha presented Austria with an offer to divide Oltenia between the empires.[138] The stalemate was ended only on 18 September 1739, when the Treaty of Belgrade was ratified by Charles VI, who thus recognized Oltenia's re-annexation by Ottoman-vassalized Wallachia.[139] This document unwittingly reopened the dispute between the Ottomans and the Habsburgs over what constituted the western border of Oltenia; it also alienated those of the boyars who had still believed in a Habsburg solution to their problems, "regardless of how difficult adaption to the Habsburgs' administrative and social-juridical system had been".[140] As noted by historians Constantin and Dinu C. Giurescu, nostalgia for Austrian rule was entirely marginal: Wallachian restoration was welcomed with "general joy among both peasants and boyars, who had come to realize that the old regime, whatever its shortcomings, was preferable to Austrian administration".[141]

Legacy

"Colonial" precedent

 
Oltenian (Bufeni) settlements in the modern-day Caraș-Severin County, then a part of the Banat of Temeswar
 
Prayer list at Cuvioasa Paraschiva Orthodox Church in Râmnicu Vâlcea, honoring the Iovepali family

Scholar Daniel Chirot defines Austrian Oltenia as a "premature experiment in modern colonialism".[142] Papacostea views the Austrian episode as the direct confrontation between enlightened absolutism, which "had for a goal the systematic exploitation of [Oltenian] resources", and the traditional "boyar statehood", which claimed a monopoly on peasants' labor. He describes the massive flight of peasants as an instance of class conflict, momentarily successful in defeating the Habsburg government structures, pushing these into "permanent re-adapting".[143] Overall, the experiment implied slowly but steadily adapting the boyar network to the requirements of a centralized system, which required transforming boyars into state functionaries. During this (partly successful) process, Austrian supervisors issued a set of Latin- and Romanian-language protocols, which were meant to standardize boyar activities and limit their sphere of action.[144]

The more overtly colonial aspects of Austrian governance were already dismantled by the 1730s war, when Oltenia became the source of emigration into the Banat of Temeswar. Some pro-Habsburg Romanians joined in this exodus—Diicul (Deicolus) Brăiloiu and George Brediceanu settled around Lugosch; the latter of these two boyars was the patriarch of a noted Romanian Austrian family whose members included Coriolan and Tiberiu Brediceanu.[145] By the 1750s, the authorities had become more tolerant of Gorj immigrants, who settled around Karansebesch as charcoal makers, forming an ethnographic community known as Bufeni.[146] Bulgarian and "Paulician" loyalists also established colonies in Theresiopolis and Stár Bišnov, where they merged into a single ethnic group. Stanislavič, still the community leader, took over as Bishop of Tschanad.[147] Râmnicu Vâlcea was ravaged by the war, pushing the Iovepalis and other Chiprovtsi Bulgarians into permanent exile in Transylvania.[148] By 1746, the city housed Oltenia's only Bulgarian community, which numbered ten families.[149]

Some of the Habsburg innovations, including the most unpopular ones, were also quickly undone by the Ottomans: "the Austrian work rules in Oltenia were abolished, and such forced labor was stabilized at twelve days a year for most of the century."[150] As noted in 1759 by Ottoman bureaucrat Ahmed Resmî Efendi, the palace of the Ban in Craiova was abandoned, and allowed to fall into disrepair.[151] Such dereliction went in tandem with some institutional continuity, with Wallachian Princes being readily adaptable to modern absolutism. Papacostea highlights the role of Habsburg reforms in shaping similar attempts by Phanariote rulers in the post-1739 era, though also noting that these had "modest means at their disposal, and a much reduced efficiency".[152] Prince Constantine Mavrocordatos, who oversaw Oltenia's readmission into the Wallachian realm, was directly interested in not only preserving absolutist reforms in Oltenia, but also in extending them to other parts of the country, and in expanding their scope. His war on privilege, meant to ensure fiscal stability, led him to pioneer the abolition of serfdom, and to introduce government as a mediator between boyars and peasants.[153] In 1756, the Porte itself reverted on its stances and, imitating the Austrians, proceeded to increase its demands—that year, a "colonial regime similar to that of the Austrian occupation" was introduced, with Wallachians required to contribute specified quotas of barley, flour, and wheat.[154]

Austrian contributions to the Romanian lexis, and to the language of political geography, included the designation of the old Banship as "Oltenia", which was thereafter conceptualized as distinct from Wallachia and Muntenia.[155] The Habsburg claim to this territory was revived by Emperor Joseph II and General von Buccow in the early 1770s, during turmoil caused by the Russo-Turkish War. Citing precedent, as well as a number of records that they had falsified, the Austrians demanded Oltenia, alongside a "Wallachian corner" (vaguely defined parts of Prahova, Buzău, and Râmnicu Sărat); these were to be annexed alongside parts of Moldavia, specifically Bacău and Putna.[156] In July 1771, Sultan Mustafa III agreed to relinquish Oltenia.[157]

The annexation was never carried out, since Russia vouched for Wallachia's territorial integrity; instead, Joseph accepted the northwestern tip of Moldavia, which later became known as "Bukovina".[158] Though his overall plan fell apart, the Austrians embraced a "Dacian" alternative, proposing that Henry of Prussia be made ruler of Moldavia and Wallachia, merged into a buffer state—while still seeking to restore their own "old borders on the Olt".[159] During the 1780s, Joseph's ambitions were frustrated by Russia's Catherine the Great, who embraced the "Dacian" kingdom that she expected would be Russian-friendly. The Austrian court turned its focus on the Adriatic Sea and Bosnia Eyalet; in some projects he vetted, Joseph still considered annexing or purchasing Oltenia as an extension of this southwestern realm.[160] A specific claim to Oltenia was again voiced by the Austrian court during the Oriental crisis of 1783: Joseph announced that he did not regard the Treaty of Belgrade as a renunciation of his rights in Craiova.[161]

An intervention by the Kingdom of France ended mounting hostilities between Russia and Austria, and prevented the Austrian army from staging a march on Craiova; this intervention, which ensured that Joseph "received nothing" from the crisis, also showed the strains of the Franco-Austrian alliance.[162] An 1788 map of Wallachia, done in Vienna by Ferdinand Joseph Ruhedorf, still showed the five Oltenian counties as Valachia Austriaca.[163] The Habsburgs no longer revived the claim in the 19th century. During the Crimean War, the Habsburg state, revived as the "Austrian Empire", intervened as a peacekeeper in both Moldavia and Wallachia. In 1856, Napoleon III unsuccessfully proposed that Austria take over both countries as a unified vassal state, with Francis of Modena on its throne.[164]

The United Principalities were created shortly after, still as an Ottoman subject. This tutelage was eventually cast aside in the Romanian War of Independence of the 1870s. In its wake, the Romanian Assembly of Deputies had to accept the cession of Southern Bessarabia to Russia, in exchange for Northern Dobruja. As an opponent of this trade-off, Romanați assemblyman Nicolae Lăcusteanu argued that Romania's Dobrujan rights were at least as arbitrary as Austrian rights in Oltenia.[165] During the Romanian campaign of World War I, both Muntenia and Oltenia were occupied by the Central Powers, including Austria-Hungary. According to one account, attributed to Constantin Stere, Austria intended to absorb Oltenia in late 1917, and was only stopped from doing so when the international consensus swung against imperialistic annexations.[166]

Cultural survivals

The Habsburgs' effort toward Catholicizing Oltenia mostly concentrated on reforming the Orthodox Church itself—one such measure was to impose Catholic monastic rules on Orthodox monks.[167] By 1726, Steinville's portrait had been added into frescoes of Sfântul Nicolae Church in Băile Olănești (it was covered up after 1739).[168] The issue of Catholic government in an Orthodox land became intertwined with religious disputes in Transylvania, where the Habsburgs had established a Romanian Greek Catholic congregation, part of the Eastern Catholic Churches. It was partly as a result of Gheorghe Cantacuzino's intervention that Ioan Giurgiu Patachi was elected in 1714 as the second Catholic Primate of Bălgrad.[169] Before his death in 1727, Patachi sought to establish an Eastern Catholic bishopric for Habsburg Oltenia, while seeking to "gather under his watch all of Austria's Romanians".[170] This project never took hold. Instead, in January 1728,[171] Râmnic Bishops were given an exclusive privilege in handling Orthodox life in the southernmost pockets of Transylvania, at a time when most other Orthodox Transylvanians were decreed to have been united with Rome. According to scholar Mihai Săsăujan, this state of affairs was preserved into the 1750s.[172] The situation angered the new Catholic converts: Stefan Olshavskyi, the Vicar of Mukachevo, asked that the Ecumenical Patriarchate refrain from consecrating Orthodox priests anywhere in Transylvania.[173]

The Austrians endorsed teaching in Latin by Orthodox institutions, but with only modest results (such as Antonie Dascălul's school in Craiova); by 1729, the administration was financing a more ambitious project for a Humanistic Gymnasium to be staffed by either Jesuits or Piarists.[174] Overall, Charles VI remained indifferent to cultural battles within the Wallachian Church. This also meant that, unlike the Muntenian hierarchs, there was no stake in protecting Church Slavonic in Oltenia—indirectly helping Bishop Damaschin and others who supported liturgical printing in Romanian. In these circumstances, Râmnicu Vâlcea and its printing press were major contributors to the Orthodox revival taking place in both Oltenia and Transylvania.[175] The authorities were however invested in preventing any dispute between the Eastern Catholic and Orthodox branches of Romaniandom. Historian Radu Nedici notes that Damaschin was "under the strict control of a Habsburg Catholic administration".[176] His one attempt at a polemic was a 1724 tract on the Sacraments, which displeased Patachi and had to be withdrawn from circulation.[177] Nedici and Aurel Dragne both argue that the eventual loss of Oltenia reverberated into Transylvania, leaving its remaining Orthodox congregations submitted by the Serbian Bishopric (though their primacy remained unrecognized by the Austrian court).[178]

Linguist C. Frâncu views Austrian rule in Oltenia as crucial in establishing the canons of modern Romanian as an official language—especially since, at that stage, Romanian was being purged from Austrian legal culture in Transylvania.[179] This implied a first instance of linguistic re-Latinization in Wallachia, codifying terms such as administrație ("administration"), arest ("arrest"), colonel, comandant ("commander"), comisar(iu) ("commissioner"), copie ("copy"), and deputat ("deputy").[180] The 20-years-long existence of an Imperial Wallachia spurred other changes in Romanian society. In some cases, these were to prove long-lasting—one example is the establishment of a regular postal service, which allowed private mail to be sent between Oltenia and Transylvania.[181] In parallel, the administrative commission was awarded its own post riders, or Călărași, who numbered 50 men in 1727, and who ran errands between Craiova and the Vornici.[182]

 
Via Carolina outside the Turnu Roșu Pass, in a late-18th-century watercolor by Franz Neuhauser the Younger

In 1716, Captain Friedrich Schwantz von Springfels, a mathematician trained at the University of Jena, had uncovered the remains of a Roman road running along the Olt at Cozia. He was therefore able to persuade his superiors that the banks were usable for horse transportation at any time of the year.[183] He described the path leading from Islaz to Râmnicu Vâlcea as Via Trajani, from Trajan.[184] Between 1717 and 1722, Steinville oversaw the construction of Via Carolina, a modernized road linking the Turnu Roșu Pass (and, through it, Transylvania) to Călimănești.[185] In tandem, the authorities also rebuilt and enlarged the passage through the Vâlcan Mountains, linking the Transylvanian mountainous enclave, Țara Hațegului, with Craiova and Vidin.[186]

The Austrians were also noted for exploring and cataloguing all features of Oltenian geography. This effort began early on, when Steinville's personal physician, Michael Schendo van der Bech, provided the first description of the mineral waters at Bengești-Ciocadia.[187] One noted contribution was Captain Schwantz's own regional map. Begun on Steinville's orders in 1720,[188] it endures as an "incomparable instrument of research", the "first cartographic record of all human settlements in Oltenia".[189] In keeping with Austria's imperial and "Dacian" ideology, the work is noted for attempting to record all Roman-era ruins known in the 1720s.[190] The minuteness of Schwantz's contribution was made possible by his direct involvement in surveying Oltenia. In 1738, Stefan Lutsch von Luchsenstein copied Schwantz's map into his general map of Wallachia; the Muntenian portions were based on highly inexact Ottoman depictions, making the result unusable in practice.[191]

The attempted economic revival, which remained bound to the ideology of mercantilism,[192] was also backed by monetary stabilization. The circulation of devalued Wallachian coins, Kreuzer, and Ottoman pare, was tolerated, while the circulation of bullion was centered on the Reichsthaler. The authorities attempted in vain to block the circulation of kuruşlar in Oltenia, since these were still the most frequent payment for regional exports.[193] As part of the recolonization and re-monetization drive, Austrians revived or created agricultural shows (notably at Tâmna and Cerneți), though making sure that commercial activities of this kind were subject to price controls (called narturi).[194] Austria also recognized and enforced urban privileges as codified in the Wallachian tradition. As noted by Papacostea, doing so effectively delayed town development, especially by preventing the rural-to-urban migration.[195] Urbanization stalled, including in Craiova. The Banship's capital remained "in a rather semi-agrarian phase"[196] and, a hundred years after its Wallachian reconquest, still gave the impression of an "immense bazaar".[197]

Austrian commercial innovations included Craiova's Spițăria Împărătească, the first-ever pharmacy to have been set up in the Romanian lands (operating 1718–1730).[198] From 1719, the city's administration noted that Oltenian guilds existed largely on paper, with ill-defined areas of control. They presented the population with an option between full regulation and free trade; it chose the former, resulting in the establishment of a chartered Guild of Chandlers and Soapers in August 1725.[199] Imperial envoys overrode boyar resistance when they allowed Bulgarians and Greeks to form their respective trade emporiums; the boyars mounted additional resistance when Oltenian Romanians petitioned to set up their own company, arguing that Romanians were not producing trade goods for export.[200] The Austrian regime attempted to reform the status of Rudari slaves used for gold panning by the monks of Cozia, reemploying them as salaried workers of the state. A Chamber of Gold was instituted with the purpose of clamping down on gold contraband.[201] Habsburg envoys tolerated the use of slave labor in the Oltenian salt mines (principally those of Ocnele Mari), but introduced new extraction and refining techniques. Their attempt to recover these investments drove up the price of salt, losing consumers to the coarser, but cheaper, salt of Ottoman Muntenia.[202]

Symbols

Heraldists from the Holy Roman Empire had traditionally used a lion to represent kleine Walachey ("Little Wallachia"), which, from the 16th century, generally meant the Craiova Banship. These were attributed arms, which had no local correspondent, and may have originally stood for "Dacia" or "Cumania"; the lion was apparently never used by the Bans, and neither was it taken up by the Austrian administration.[203] Before 1718, local Bans used some symbols of their own, which are attested, but not described, by contemporary sources. In the mid 17th century, Mareș Băjescu had a grapă, adecă steag bănesc ("grapă, which is to say a Ban's flag") brought in for his ceremonial investiture in Craiova.[204] Historian Ion Donat reports that the region also had its own badge, separate from the Wallachian seal, and its own flag, at least as early as the 1500s.[205] Theologian Irineu Popa [ro] argues that flags used by the Bans showed Demetrius of Thessaloniki, who is still the patron saint of Craiova.[206]

In its early years, Imperial Wallachia used a variant of the standard Wallachian seal;[207] this symbol can be found in the bottom right corner of Schwantz von Springfels' 1723 map.[208] Also in 1723, this all-Wallachian emblem was replaced with a complex seal depicting the double-headed Reichsadler displaying the Wallachian bird.[209] According to a roll of arms created by Radu Cantacuzino, the same arrangement was used as the personal arms of his brother, Ban Gheorghe.[210] The Reichsadler, a familiar presence on the Austrian border markers, became known locally as Zgripțor. The same term was used as a by-word for Habsburg rule and its officials.[211]

In their effort to modernize the administration, Austrian authorities banned the usage of private insignia on official documents. Instead, they regulated corporate heraldic seals for each of the five Oltenian counties. These referred to the main economic contribution of each Oltenian subdivision: Dolj had a fish; Gorj—a deer; Mehedinți—a beehive; Romanați—an ear of corn; and Vâlcea—a fruit-bearing tree.[212] According to historian Dan Cernovodeanu, these symbols, though not attested in writing before 1719 (and first appearing in visual form as a companion to Schwantz's 1723 map), were locally made, and likely predated the Austrian occupation.[213] They were also largely preserved into the later seals of Oltenian Bani and Caimacami, into the early 19th century.[214]

Notes

  1. ^ Lazăr, p. 81
  2. ^ Papacostea, p. 17
  3. ^ Marian Coman, "A Game of Rhetoric. Transylvanian Regional Identities in Medieval Wallachian Sources", in Annales Universitatis Apulensis. Series Historica, Vol. 16, Issue II, 2012, p. 92
  4. ^ Radu Ștefan Vergatti, "Mihai Viteazul și Andronic Cantacuzino", in Argesis. Studii și Comunicări, Seria Istorie, Vol. XXII, 2013, pp. 80, 83–85
  5. ^ Abrudan, pp. 61–63
  6. ^ Abrudan, pp. 64–65
  7. ^ Papacostea, pp. 13–17
  8. ^ Papacostea, pp. 33–36
  9. ^ Papacostea, pp. 54–55
  10. ^ Papacostea, pp. 35, 167
  11. ^ Drăghiceanu, pp. 57, 63
  12. ^ C. Tamaș, pp. 68–69
  13. ^ Papacostea, pp. 17–18. See also Abrudan, pp. 69–70; C. Tamaș, p. 68
  14. ^ Cioarec, p. 92. See also C. Tamaș, p. 68
  15. ^ Papacostea, pp. 18–20; C. Tamaș, pp. 69–70
  16. ^ Papacostea, pp. 20–21. See also Abrudan, p. 70; Căzan, p. 192; C. Tamaș, p. 70
  17. ^ Abrudan, pp. 70–71; Papacostea, pp. 20–22
  18. ^ Papacostea, pp. 23–28. See also C. Tamaș, p. 70; Vianu, p. 19
  19. ^ Papacostea, pp. 152–153
  20. ^ Papacostea, pp. 28, 286
  21. ^ Papacostea, pp. 28–29
  22. ^ Abrudan, pp. 71–74; Papacostea, p. 22
  23. ^ Abrudan, pp. 72–73
  24. ^ Abrudan, p. 74
  25. ^ Papacostea, pp. 149–150
  26. ^ Drăghiceanu, pp. 63, 72
  27. ^ Papacostea, p. 253
  28. ^ Căzan, p. 199
  29. ^ Papacostea, pp. 274–277
  30. ^ Papacostea, pp. 285–287
  31. ^ Frâncu, pp. 308–309
  32. ^ Papacostea, pp. 153–154, 252. See also C. Tamaș, p. 70
  33. ^ Frâncu, p. 308
  34. ^ Papacostea, pp. 261–262
  35. ^ Papacostea, pp. 252–252
  36. ^ Papacostea, pp. 277, 280–282
  37. ^ Papacostea, p. 275
  38. ^ Papacostea, p. 253
  39. ^ Papacostea, pp. 253–254, 258, 262–263
  40. ^ Papacostea, pp. 271, 274, 284–285. See also V. Tamaș, pp. 120–121
  41. ^ Papacostea, pp. 255–256
  42. ^ Papacostea, p. 285. See also V. Tamaș, p. 120
  43. ^ Papacostea, p. 256
  44. ^ Papacostea, pp. 224–229
  45. ^ Papacostea, p. 228
  46. ^ Papacostea, pp. 237, 248–249, 256
  47. ^ Papacostea, pp. 154–158, 166, 234–236
  48. ^ Papacostea, pp. 36–46
  49. ^ Papacostea, pp. 55–57
  50. ^ Papacostea, pp. 47, 227
  51. ^ Papacostea, pp. 228–229
  52. ^ Papacostea, pp. 60–65, 170–193
  53. ^ Papacostea, pp. 170–182, 197–198, 201–212
  54. ^ Papacostea, pp. 170–182, 197–198, 204–205
  55. ^ Aksan, p. 68
  56. ^ Papacostea, pp. 205–210
  57. ^ Papacostea, p. 273
  58. ^ Papacostea, p. 271
  59. ^ Papacostea, p. 151
  60. ^ Papacostea, pp. 151–152
  61. ^ Papacostea, pp. 47–48
  62. ^ Papacostea, pp. 279–280. See also Ciocîltan, p. 77
  63. ^ Papacostea, pp. 58–59
  64. ^ Papacostea, p. 59
  65. ^ Gaga, p. 123
  66. ^ Papacostea, p. 48
  67. ^ Papacostea, p. 60
  68. ^ Papacostea, pp. 229–230
  69. ^ Papacostea, pp. 49–51, 229–230
  70. ^ Papacostea, pp. 48–49
  71. ^ Frâncu, p. 308
  72. ^ Papacostea, pp. 253, 265
  73. ^ Papacostea, p. 265
  74. ^ Papacostea, pp. 32, 153–154, 252–253
  75. ^ Papacostea, pp. 266–268
  76. ^ C. Tamaș, pp. 70–71
  77. ^ Papacostea, pp. 51–52, 143
  78. ^ Aksan, p. 84
  79. ^ Papacostea, pp. 196–197
  80. ^ Papacostea, pp. 232–234
  81. ^ Papacostea, p. 163
  82. ^ Papacostea, p. 164
  83. ^ Papacostea, pp. 167–168
  84. ^ Papacostea, p. 168
  85. ^ Papacostea, pp. 91–96
  86. ^ Papacostea, pp. 96–104
  87. ^ Papacostea, p. 69
  88. ^ Papacostea, pp. 269–270; V. Tamaș, p. 122
  89. ^ V. Tamaș, pp. 123–125
  90. ^ Papacostea, pp. 277–279
  91. ^ Papacostea, pp. 253, 267–268. See also Cioarec, p. 93
  92. ^ Cioarec, p. 93; Papacostea, pp. 252–253, 268
  93. ^ Cioarec, p. 93
  94. ^ Papacostea, pp. 297–298. See also Călin & Oanță, pp. 331–332
  95. ^ Lazăr, p. 82
  96. ^ Călin & Oanță, pp. 329–332
  97. ^ Ciocîltan, p. 77
  98. ^ Călin & Oanță, pp. 330–331
  99. ^ Ciocîltan, pp. 77–78
  100. ^ Lazăr, pp. 81–82
  101. ^ Cioarec, p. 93
  102. ^ Papacostea, pp. 268–269
  103. ^ Papacostea, p. 268
  104. ^ Papacostea, pp. 255–256
  105. ^ Papacostea, p. 163
  106. ^ Papacostea, pp. 59, 219
  107. ^ Papacostea, pp. 196–197
  108. ^ Papacostea, pp. 198–200, 214–219, 265–266
  109. ^ Papacostea, pp. 210–211
  110. ^ Papacostea, p. 210
  111. ^ Cilibia, pp. 176–178
  112. ^ Vilibia, pp. 177–178. See also Theodorescu, p. 142
  113. ^ Papacostea, pp. 289–297
  114. ^ Theodorescu, p. 142
  115. ^ Papacostea, pp. 70–71
  116. ^ Donat, p. 113
  117. ^ Papacostea, pp. 157–163
  118. ^ Papacostea, p. 150
  119. ^ Lisnic, p. 114
  120. ^ Vianu, pp. 19–20
  121. ^ Vianu, pp. 21–22
  122. ^ Lisnic, p. 117
  123. ^ Lisnic, p. 116. See also Vianu, p. 23
  124. ^ Lisnic, p. 116. See also Papacostea, p. 305; Vianu, p. 23
  125. ^ Vianu, pp. 23–24
  126. ^ Papacostea, pp. 307–309
  127. ^ Lisnic, pp. 115–116
  128. ^ Lisnic, pp. 119–120
  129. ^ Lisnic, pp. 117–119
  130. ^ Lisnic, p. 120
  131. ^ Lisnic, p. 120
  132. ^ Papacostea, pp. 305–306, 309
  133. ^ Lisnic, p. 120
  134. ^ Lisnic, p. 123
  135. ^ Papacostea, p. 309
  136. ^ Theodorescu, pp. 142–143
  137. ^ Aksan, p. 68
  138. ^ Lisnic, pp. 123–124
  139. ^ Lisnic, pp. 123–126; Papacostea, p. 306
  140. ^ Lisnic, pp. 125–126
  141. ^ Frâncu, p. 307
  142. ^ Aksan, p. 68
  143. ^ Papacostea, pp. 10–11
  144. ^ Papacostea, pp. 257–261
  145. ^ A. Peteanu, "Din trecutul Lugojului. O pagină de istorie românească: Familia Brediceanu", in Dacia. Ziarul de Afirmare Românească al Ținutului Timiș, Issue 79/1939, p. 8
  146. ^ Gaga, pp. 123–126
  147. ^ Călin & Oanță, pp. 332–339
  148. ^ Lazăr, p. 83
  149. ^ Ciocîltan, p. 78
  150. ^ Aksan, p. 68
  151. ^ Aksan, pp. 70–71
  152. ^ Papacostea, p. 270
  153. ^ Papacostea, pp. 310–320. See also Aksan, pp. 68–69
  154. ^ Aksan, p. 69
  155. ^ Erwin Gáll, Réka Fülöp, Mihály Huba Hőgyes, "'Periferiile periferiilor'? Fenomen arheologic sau stadiul cercetării: de ce nu au fost descoperite necropole din perioada secolelor VIII‒X în Transilvania estică și centrală, respectiv în nordul și centrul Olteniei și Munteniei?", in Sorin Forțiu (ed.), ArheoVest, Nr. VIII: In Honorem Alexandru Rădulescu, Interdisciplinaritate în Arheologie și Istorie, Timișoara, noiembrie 2020, Vol. 1: Arheologie, p. 388. Timișoara & Szeged: Arheovest & JATEPress, 2020. ISBN 978-963-315-465-6
  156. ^ Iorga (1938), pp. 11–12. See also David, p. 67
  157. ^ David, p. 67; Iorga (1938), pp. 15, 19, 26
  158. ^ David, pp. 68–69; Iorga (1938), pp. 25–30
  159. ^ David, p. 68
  160. ^ Grigorovici, p. 298. See also David, p. 69
  161. ^ Grigorovici, pp. 305–306
  162. ^ Grigorovici, pp. 315–317
  163. ^ Jean-Yves Guiomar, Marie-Thérèse Lorain, "La carte de Grèce de Rigas et le nom de la Grèce", in Annales Historiques de la Révolution Française, Issue 319, January–March 2000, pp. 101–125
  164. ^ Cosmin Lucian Gherghe, Emanoil Chinezu – om politic, avocat și istoric, p. 102. Craiova: Sitech, 2009. ISBN 978-606-530-315-7
  165. ^ Constantin Sarry, Regele Carol I, Dobrogea și dobrogenii. Conferință ținută în ziua de 10 Mai 1915, la Hârșova, pp. 11–12. Bucharest: Institut de Arte Grafice Speranța, 1915
  166. ^ Alexandru Marghiloman, Note politice, Vol. 2. 1916–1917, pp. 511–512. Bucharest: Editura Institutului de Arte Grafice Eminescu, 1927
  167. ^ Cilibia, p. 176
  168. ^ Theodorescu, p. 142
  169. ^ Iorga (1921), pp. 191–192
  170. ^ Iorga (1921), p. 192
  171. ^ Dragne, pp. 62–63
  172. ^ Mihai Săsăujan, "Atitudinea cercurilor oficiale austriece față de românii ortodocși din Transilvania, la mijlocul secolului al XVIII-lea, în baza actelor Consiliului Aulic de Război și a rapoartelor conferințelor ministeriale din Viena", in Annales Universitatis Apulensis, Series Historica, Vol. 11, Issue II, 2007, pp. 234, 247–248
  173. ^ Iorga (1921), p. 193
  174. ^ Papacostea, pp. 299–300
  175. ^ Papacostea, pp. 298–299. See also Ioan I. Ică jr., "Vechea traducere românească uitată a Sinodiconului Ortodoxiei", in Revista Teologică, Vol. XXVI, 2016, pp. 221–222; Nedici, pp. 187–189, 196–197
  176. ^ Nedici, p. 196
  177. ^ Dragne, p. 63; Nedici, pp. 196–197
  178. ^ Dragne, pp. 67–68; Nedici, pp. 203–208
  179. ^ Frâncu, pp. 307–308
  180. ^ Frâncu, passim
  181. ^ Papacostea, p. 125; V. Tamaș, p. 119
  182. ^ Papacostea, p. 255
  183. ^ Zsigmond Jakó, Köleséri Sámuel tudományos levelezése (1709–1732), p. 55. Cluj-Napoca: Societatea Muzeului Ardelean, 2012. ISBN 978-606-8178-52-3
  184. ^ Căzan, p. 198
  185. ^ Căzan, pp. 198–199; Papacostea, pp. 124–125
  186. ^ Nicolae Popa, "Hațeg, un pays fondateur de la Roumanie. L'evolution de ses voies de communication", in the Review of Historical Geography and Toponomastics, Vol. I, Issue 1, 2006, p. 84
  187. ^ Samarian, p. 118
  188. ^ Căzan, pp. 196–197
  189. ^ Papacostea, p. 33
  190. ^ Căzan, p. 199
  191. ^ Căzan, pp. 199–200
  192. ^ Papacostea, p. 131
  193. ^ Papacostea, pp. 127–141
  194. ^ Papacostea, pp. 109–116
  195. ^ Papacostea, pp. 115–118
  196. ^ Cristina Șoșea, "Spatial Dynamics of Craiova Municipality. Transformation of the City's Relation with Its Peripheries", in Analele Universității din Oradea. Seria Geografie, Vol. XXIII, Issue 2, 2013, p. 377
  197. ^ Violeta-Anca Epure, "Aspecte de viață urbană în Principatele Române surprinse de consulii și voiajorii francezi prepașoptiști. Oraşele din Țara Românească (I)", in Terra Sebus. Acta Musei Sabesiensis, Vol. 11, 2019, p. 217
  198. ^ Samarian, pp. 173–174
  199. ^ Papacostea, pp. 84–86
  200. ^ Papacostea, pp. 120–123
  201. ^ Papacostea, pp. 90–91, 106
  202. ^ Papacostea, pp. 86–88, 104–106
  203. ^ Cernovodeanu, p. 78
  204. ^ Donat, p. 181; Oprea Gh. Petre, "Craiova dealungul veacurilor", Vol. VIII, Issue 374, March 1934, in Realitatea Ilustrată, p. 21
  205. ^ Donat, p. 185
  206. ^ Irineu Popa, "Biografii Luminoase: Sfântul Mare Mucenic Dimitrie, darul lui Dumnezeu pentru olteni. Izvor de har și punte peste veacuri", in Revista Ortodoxă, Issue 3/2017, p. 8
  207. ^ V. Tamaș, p. 121
  208. ^ Căzan, p. 197
  209. ^ V. Tamaș, p. 121
  210. ^ Sorin Iftimi, Vechile blazoane vorbesc. Obiecte armoriate din colecții ieșene, pp. 114, 124, 130. Iași: Palatul Culturii, 2014. ISBN 978-606-8547-02-2
  211. ^ Căzan, pp. 192–193
  212. ^ V. Tamaș, pp. 121–122
  213. ^ Cernovodeanu, pp. 185–186, 440–441
  214. ^ Ioan V. Câncea, "Sigiliile caimacamilor Craiovei", in Revista Arhivelor, Issues 6–7, 1936–1937, pp. 178–179. See also Cernovodeanu, pp. 450–453

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banat, craiova, banat, krajowa, german, banat, krajowa, romanian, banatul, craiovei, also, known, cisalutanian, wallachian, principality, latin, principatus, valachiae, cisalutanae, imperial, wallachia, german, kaiserliche, walachei, latin, caesarea, wallachia. The Banat of Craiova or Banat of Krajowa German Banat von Krajowa Romanian Banatul Craiovei also known as Cisalutanian Wallachian Principality Latin Principatus Valachiae Cisalutanae and Imperial Wallachia German Kaiserliche Walachei Latin Caesarea Wallachia 1 Romanian Chesariceasca Valahie was a Romanian inhabited province of the Habsburg monarchy It emerged from the western third of Wallachia now commonly known as Oltenia which the Habsburgs took in a preceding war with the Ottoman Empire in tandem with the Banat of Temeswar and Serbia It was a legal successor to the Great Banship of Craiova with the Wallachian Gheorghe Cantacuzino ro as its native leader or Ban Over the following years native rule was phased out and gave way to a direct administration This provided the setting for Germanization of the bureaucratic elite introducing the governing methods of enlightened absolutism and colonialism Banat of CraiovaBanat von Krajowa Banatul CraioveiProvince of the Habsburg monarchy1718 1739Flag Coat of arms after 1723The Banat of Craiova shown in the bottom right corner of a French map from 1898CapitalKrajowa Craiova Population 173934 346 families officially registered HistoryGovernmentBan Prezes 1719 1726Gheorghe Cantacuzino 1726 1728Georgius Schramm von Otterfels 1728 1732Joachim Czeyka von Olbramowitz 1732 1733J H Dietrich 1733 1739Franciscus SalhausenHistorical eraEarly modern EuropeOttoman Habsburg wars Treaty of Passarowitz21 July 1718 Territorial organization22 February 1719 Reorganization27 April 1729 Ottoman reconquestNovember 1737 Treaty of Belgrade18 September 1739Subdivisions TypeCounties UnitsDolj Gorj Mehedinți Romanați ValceaPreceded by Succeeded byWallachia Great Banship of Craiova Wallachia Great Banship of Craiova Today part ofRomaniaHabsburg rule over Oltenia only lasted two decades which fit within the reign of just one Austrian Emperor and titular Prince of Cisalutanian Wallachia Charles VI 1711 1740 Its steady encroachment on the privileges of native boyars as well as its added pressures on the serfs and the free peasants were highly unpopular undermining Austrophile positions in Wallachia as a whole The period witnessed collective tax resistance and internal migration in an effort to conceal the total number and location of contributors Charles VI and the Serbian Orthodox Bishops in Belgrade took charge of the Wallachian Diocese of Ramnic curbing its traditional privileges while allowing it to maintain cultural autonomy Some timid steps were taken toward Catholicizing Oltenia with Catholic Bulgarians as the main proxies Despite being pressured from above Ramnic Bishops were able to expand their influence into southern Transylvania providing it with support against the spread of Greek Catholicism Popular resistance required a steady adaptation of the administrative apparatus which included more accurate censuses relief of some feudal obligations and heavy penalties for tax offenders The process was directly supervised by Austrian officials including Franz Paul von Wallis in the 1730s It was cut short by an unexpected Ottoman reconquest in late 1737 which brought another devastation of Oltenia but also witnessed the reestablishment of self rule by the Romanians Imperial Wallachia formally ended in 1739 when the Ottoman Empire recovered Serbia and Oltenia which was returned to Wallachia after the Treaty of Belgrade The claim to Oltenia was formally revived during the 1770s by Joseph II but died out a decade later The Banat of Temeswar which became home to a sizable community of Romanian Oltenian and Bulgarian refugees was kept by the Habsburg monarchy and its successors until 1918 Though rejected by the mass of the people the Habsburg experiment in Oltenia produced some lasting changes with some institutions maintained in place by Wallachian Prince Constantine Mavrocordatos Austrian influence which introduced the region to organized guilds and a postal system also provided Wallachians with a linguistic template for modernization and re Latinization Contents 1 History 1 1 Austrian conquest 1 2 Government creation 1 3 Boyar and peasant resistance 1 4 Austrian consolidation 1 5 Ottoman reconquest 2 Legacy 2 1 Colonial precedent 2 2 Cultural survivals 3 Symbols 4 Notes 5 ReferencesHistory EditAustrian conquest Edit The autonomous Banship of Craiova covered a quadrilateral western third of Wallachia located between the Southern Carpathians to the north the Danube to the south and west and the Olt River Alutus in Latin hence Cisalutanian to the east Since the 15th century Wallachia including its Oltenian subdivision had been subjugated by the Ottoman Empire its neighbor to the south participating as such in the Ottoman Habsburg wars During the 17th century members of the Wallachian boyardom especially those linked with the Cantacuzino family began looking to the Habsburgs as potential liberators of the country 2 The period included several episodes in which Wallachia was declared a Habsburg fief One such early case was on 7 January 1543 when Radu Paisie the Prince of Wallachia nominally attached his country to the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary 3 In June 1598 during an episodic emancipation from Ottoman vassalage Prince Michael the Brave and his Postelnic Andronic Cantacuzino both of whom had served as Bans submitted Wallachia to the Holy Roman Empire 4 The Great Turkish War of 1683 saw Prince Șerban Cantacuzino and his Wallachian military forces fighting on the Ottoman side however they made a public show of their reluctance and privately celebrated Habsburg Austria s victory in the Battle of Vienna 5 During the 1680s the Habsburgs were on the offensive and only their forced participation in the War of the Reunions prevented Wallachia from being conquered at that stage 6 In August 1716 the Battle of Petrovaradin marked a turning point in the fourth Austro Turkish War the Habsburg monarchy chased the Ottoman Army out of Central Europe and stood to occupy both Wallachia and Moldavia As a result of this the Sublime Porte reduced autonomy for Wallachia by introducing a new political elite the Greek speaking Phanariotes Nicholas Mavrocordatos a Phanariote known for having pacified Moldavia was brought in to reign as titular Prince of Wallachia 7 Seeking to undermine the Austrian advance Ottoman commanders and the Budjak Tatars staged the mass deportation and enslavement of Wallachian peasants Oltenians were reportedly over represented in this exodus as 35 000 evacuees from a total 80 000 8 The problem was compounded by internal flight with many more villagers fleeing for safety into the Oltenian forests and the Parang Massif 9 As many as 273 Oltenian villages and hamlets were left deserted from a total 741 190 of these ghost villages were located in the exposed southern fields 10 The events notably witnessed the ransacking of Brancovenești boyar estates including their manor in Brancoveni which had been one of Oltenia s two major military buildings 11 As early as March 1716 the Austrians could count on support from an inner faction of Wallachian boyars Formed around Spătar Radu Golescu ro it regarded Mavrocordatos as a tyrant 12 Answering to boyar requests for help the Habsburg general Stephan von Steinville sent in some hundreds of his soldiers which also in August 1716 routed a 3 000 strong Wallachian army at Orșova according to chronicler Radu Popescu ro these troops were secretly opposed to Mavrocordatos and did not put up a fight Oltenia was taken whole when the Wallachian Serdar Cornea Brăiloiu defected to the enemy guiding more Austrian troops through the Vulcan Pass and into Targu Jiu 13 Some Oltenian boyars were soon co opted by Prince Eugene of Savoy and his invasion force Postelnic Ștefan Parșcoveanu led 200 Habsburg soldiers in battle against the Mavrocordatos troops at Bengești Ciocadia 14 An Austrian force under Stephan Dettine von Pivoda ventured out of Oltenia and into Pitești then took the Wallachian capital Bucharest on 14 November capturing the Prince during this episode most Wallachian forces had been diverted to Oltenia with Popescu invested as Ban 15 Despite earning support from the Wallachian assembly which declared itself subject to Emperor Charles VI on 28 November the Austrians were not confident about establishing a bridgehead in Muntenia and withdrew immediately after to Mărgineni and Campulung 16 In December 1716 the Ottomans retook Bucharest and placed John Mavrocordatos on the throne On 24 February he obtained from the Austrians recognition as Prince of Wallachia which was understood to mean only Muntenia the new ruler also agreed to pay Charles VI a lump tribute in bags of gold 17 During the following period refugee boyars sent Charles several petitions asking for Oltenia to be kept as an autonomous part of the Empire with its own Voivode namely Gheorghe Cantacuzino During this campaign they expressed alarm that Oltenia would be incorporated with Transylvania which was in the process of losing its autonomy 18 The boyar delegations were also mandated to discuss the exclusion of Phanariotes and other Greeks from the table of ranks which formed the basis of boyar privilege and revenue They were encouraged in this by Damaschin Voinescu the Orthodox Bishop of Ramnic who described Greeks as betrayers and destroyers of countries 19 Allegory of Prince Eugene of Savoy trampling on a Turk to his right a personification of Austria carrying the labarum and a shield with a double headed Reichsadler Concept drawing by Jan Wandelaar 1719 Boyar appeals were largely ignored by Charles who added Prince of Cisalutanian Wallachia or Imperial Wallachia Chesariceasca Valahie to his list of titles assigning Steinville to the intermediary position of Supreme Director of Oltenia 20 The administration was directly organized by a Neo Acquistic Commission which answered to the Aulic and War Councils 21 By August 1717 the Austrians had gained a definitive victory at Belgrade prompting the Porte to sue for peace The Treaty of Passarowitz which was signed on 21 July 1718 recognized Oltenia as an Austrian fief under uti possidetis 22 Negotiations were stalled when the Porte instructed its delegates not to admit that Oltenia had been conquered under a kind of occupation was the preferred formula Austria reacted by bribing Ottoman officials as well Dutchman Nicolas Theyls and other arbiters until consensus could finally sway in their favor 23 During September 1718 Prince Eugene and Grand Vizier Nevsehirli Ibrahim settled the new border all Oltenian Danube islands were assigned to the Ottoman Empire while on the Olt Austria kept whatever was west of the thalweg including islets such as Celieni Milcovan Seccediu and Tuba 24 Both empires agreed that boyars stranded in Oltenia could keep their estates in Muntenia The provision was nullified in practice when Princes beginning with Nicholas Mavrocordatos identified absentee landlords and confiscated their property The aggrieved parties sought compensation by urging the Neo Acquistic Commission to operate in the same way asking to be handed down the estates of Mavrocordatos loyalists including the Brancovenești The Imperial Revenue Service which had taken over the estates in question for its own purposes blocked the attempt 25 Brancoveni was taken as spoils of war by Captain Dettine 26 Government creation Edit The newly conquered region was formally organized through an imperial decree on 22 February 1719 This created an administrative commission in the city of Craiova which had attributes as a legislative body executive branch and local revenue service 27 As noted by historian Ileana Căzan Charles VI s court took some pride in having conquered another portion of Dacia and more specifically Roman Dacia which were now politically linked to the reincarnated Roman Empire of the Habsburg realm the very conquest of Oltenia was shrouded in the notion of Roman imperial continuity The boyars grouped as the Administration were also known as the Dacian senate 28 The administration also acted as a court but only heard major criminal offenses criminalia maiora property disputes and some appeals sent in by the first and second level courts 29 Vlach law generally based on oral records and more loosely on the written code Indreptarea legii ro was preserved as the statute except for those provisions that contradict sound habits 30 Romanian was still the administrative language However the Phanariote infusion of Greek and Turkish terms was immediately curbed with Latin or German neologisms introduced for the new offices and functions beginning with the designation of commission members as Consiliari Counselors assisted by a Secretariu Secretary 31 As another concession to the locals the commission was entirely staffed by natives and allowed its president to use the Wallachian title of Ban During October 1719 Steinville confirmed the administrative commission presided upon by Gheorghe Cantacuzino as Ban Its Council comprised four men Brăiloiu who died during the proceedings and was replaced with Staico Bengescu Golescu Grigore II Băleanu and Ilie Știrbei 32 Its Secretary Nicolae de Porta also was a Romanian 33 All staff including the Ban were salaried employees of the state Cantacuzino received 6 000 Reichsthaler annually and his Counselors 1 000 34 Steinville s Supreme Directorate was maintained as a supervising body but remained headquartered in the Transylvanian city of Hermannstadt until late 1721 Cantacuzino and his commission only had consultative powers 35 Hermannstadt was also the higher court of appeals but the population was largely ignorant of its judicial powers and few sought to obtain its intervention the commission met more significant competition from the Stabsauditoriat a military tribunal which had the vaguely defined task of preserving public order and which too over all penal cases 36 Frustrating Austrian attempts at modernization both the Counselors and parties appearing before them agreed to ignore other formalities several trials were simply held by the Counselors in their private homes though this was explicitly illegal 37 After the Supreme Directorate relinquished its powers the Ban and his Counselors were assigned control over the administrative network which was staffed by five Vornici one per each county and twenty Ispravnici one per Plassa 38 While towns were governed using Județi and Pargari ro villages were directly supervised by Parcălabi and Vătafi The latter two categories had been traditionally appointed by their local boyar but who were now directly picked by and integrated within the state apparatus unlike their superiors and the equivalent urban apparatus they did not receive salaries but were exempted from taxation 39 They were also a first level judicial power relieving the Couselors and the Ispravnici of cases such as those involving larceny or minor sexual offences 40 The boyars were frustrated in their attempt to obtain approval for private armies of Slujitori which they intended to use against hajduk outlaws the Austrians resisted the creation of any national military units even some of reduced proportions 41 Instead the regime maintained collective responsibility picked up from ancient Wallachian customs as a deterrent punishing ten or twelve surrounding villages for robbery or murder that went unsolved 42 For long the only home guard unit tolerated by the Austrians were the 100 Dorobanți of Craiova 43 In Oltenia Austria inherited the Phanariotes complicated system of taxation which combined the Ottoman fiscal regime with ancestral duties The main tribute or bir had been owed directly to the Ottoman Sultan it survived as contrebuțion or dajde impărătească and was redirected toward the Habsburg Emperor 44 Collection began in 1720 when each family was expected to pay two Reichsthaler 120 Kreuzer 45 Various other duties were maintained and some new ones were introduced This was the case with the Vorspann a tribute in horses and transport related labor collected in lieu of contrebuțion from specific areas the semi autonomous region known as Țara Loviștei and villages bordering the main roads The Vorspann was immediately abused by those in power who now demanded a permanent supply of horses and labor 46 The upper classes including both boyars and some peasants of prestigious lineage known as aleși or alessi also received some satisfaction in matters of fiscal policy most obtained a partial and some a total tax exemption from the contrebuțion However they were still expected to contribute the voluntary gift donum gratuitum specifically for the Emperor 47 Herman Moll s map of the Danubian Principalities in 1726 showing Oltenia as the Aust rian partition of Wallachia In the aftermath of Passarowitz Austrian administrators set about repopulating the region allowing thousands of Muntenian families to settle in the devastated villages especially those of Gorj and Valcea 48 The Vornici were specifically instructed to drive peasants out of their forest hideouts and back into agricultural life 49 In 1722 the Austrian conscription census overseen by the Count of Virmont estimated Oltenians at 25 000 families calibrated downward by counts made in 1724 14 719 families and 1726 15 665 families 50 While re stabilizing population growth the Austrian government began looking into increasing the fiscal burden Contrebuțion goals were set at 190 000 Rheingulden annually though the target was not consistently met In 1728 it was raised to some 212 000 Rheingulden and continued to increase steadily in 1736 Oltenians provided 260 352 Rheingulden in contrebuțion revenue 51 Answering boyar demands the Austrians put an end to a tacit policy of homesteading and returned to the status quo of 1716 effectively treating peasants as boyar serfs rumani German Rumoni 52 They generally accepted claims that peasants living on boyar or Church owned estates also owed corvee issuing for the first time in history written instructions to detail how this duty was to be carried out 53 Against Wallachian precedents labor on the estates was legally redefined as an individual rather than collective duty and affixed at one day per week Austrian authorities limited the number of working days by also forcing farmers to perform statute labor on public works 54 overall forced labor in both forms increased greatly to as many as fifty two days a year as contrasted to three to nine days normal to other parts of Wallachia at the time 55 Instead the regime outlawed feudal rent owed in produce dijmă for the entire peasant category 56 It also reacted strongly against boyar claims of absolute authority over the serfs placing the latter under the authority of civil and criminal courts Overall the regulation in agrarian interactions aimed at wholly removing relations between estate owners and peasants from the realm of the arbitrary placing them within elaborate and state controlled formulas 57 This was also done for humanitarian reasons one early inspection reported that boyars treated their peasants like dogs 58 Boyar and peasant resistance Edit Landowning boyars remained dissatisfied with Austrian policies and alarmed by the fiscal pressures In 1719 Steinville allowed them a temporary victory by passing regulations that precluded members of their class from selling as opposed to leasing land that was deemed ancestral the measure targeted foreign buyers with a statement of purpose that explicitly mentioned Catholic Bulgarians as the undesirable competitors these traders are flush with money and will buy up lots of goods with many of the boyars villagers opting for refuge in the Bulgarians villages 59 Bulgarian lobbying obtained that the text be modified to a less xenophobic form driving the boyars to seek other methods of resistance 60 One such form was cooperation with native tenant farmers toward nonpayment of the state tax As early as 1722 there were reports that the Ban and his allies were actively using their administrative functions to undermine tax collectors by exempting if not all then at least most of their own peasants 61 The boyars were also defeated in their attempt to deny the Bulgarians their judicial autonomy In October 1727 Charles VI settled the matter by reconfirming that only Bulgarian courts could try Bulgarian cases 62 During 1723 tax collectors noted that Dolj County was again missing entire villages among them Maglavit and Rojiște their populations having turned nomadic 63 Two years later another inspection in Romanați confirmed that 2 300 families had recently gone missing 64 In Gorj emigration focused on the Banat of Temeswar which had no precedent to match Phanariote taxation This alarmed the War Council on 12 April 1726 it forbade settlement by non Catholics 65 Around that same time inspector Karl von Tige noted that entire villages of Oltenia were being placed under the protection of this or that boyar 66 That year witnessed an attempt to contain the phenomenon combining softer approaches a de facto ban on corporal punishments for tax evading peasants 67 with a more thorough investigation of the boyars activities Under the old fiscal regime boyars estimated their peasants tax duties and were not expected to provide an exact count of how many serfs they owned 68 In early 1727 regulations were introduced by the Aulic Council which forced the boyars to provide accurate counts of the peasants working on their estates with tax forms known as fassiones in Latin or foi de mărturisanie in Romanian heavy fines were introduced where fraud could be ascertained 69 This measure had the unintended consequence of driving even more peasants into hiding with the boyars complicity a massive dissolving of the contributing masses 70 Manor court of the dissident Brancovenești boyars in Brancoveni Romanați County as drawn by Austrian soldier Friedrich Schwantz von Springfels in 1723 Beginning in September 1725 documents issued by Austrian sources refrained from calling Cantacuzino a Ban replacing this term with Prezes or Prases from the Latin Praeses governor 71 Historian Șerban Papacostea sees September 1726 as bringing Oltenian autonomy to a full stop in that Cantacuzino was deposed and his office eliminated he was replaced with a President or Prezes Georgius Schramm von Otterfels himself succeeded by Joachim Czeyka von Olbramowitz upon his death in late 1728 during that entire interval Cantacuzino refused to vacate the Ban s manor and accept exile in Transylvania as had been asked of him 72 The clampdown on boyar authority was enhanced in 1727 when Tige noted that Cantacuzino s ouster had only reshuffled the governing clique with the new team of Counselors being just as zealous in promoting its own interests as the preceding one had been 73 As Papacostea notes in the aftermath the Habsburgs introduced not just centralism but also Germanization both without curtailing boyar privilege or uprooting traditional society 74 A centralizing trend was consolidated with an imperial decree on 27 April 1729 whereby the boyars role in policy making and their fiscal privileges were greatly reduced and the Vorspann tax was entirely phased out 75 The curtailing was met with protests from Golescu including one he addressed to the Aulic Council in May 1728 shortly before his death 76 The continued pressures exercised through the fassiones managed to exhaust boyar resistance and resulted in more accurate counts of the taxpaying population 22 000 families were recorded in 1727 rising to 31 000 in 1730 there were at least 34 346 families of any status living in Oltenia in 1739 of whom some 300 were boyar families and 2 400 were burghers 77 Oltenia continued to have a sizable population of free and landowning peasants some 47 of the total rural population in 1722 78 Known as moșneni or megieși in Romanian possessionati rustici in Latin and freie Leute in German these groups remained over represented in mountainous areas 135 villages in Gorj 85 in Valcea 79 As part of their conflict with government forces the boyars obtained that most of the fiscal burden be placed on the moșneni and megieși In 1727 moșneni families owed the state 10 Rheingulden in contrebuțion this was marginally reduced to 8 2 Rheingulden in 1728 and remained set at that level for the remainder of Habsburg rule megieși meanwhile had to pay 12 13 Rheingulden per family 80 A small group of endogamic families still held on to great boyar status No definitive count was ever provided but documents read by Papacostea suggest that they ranged between 17 and 24 Examples include the Argetoianus Băleanus Bengescus Brăiloius Buzescus Fărcășanus Glagoveanus Otetelișanus Parșcoveanus Poienarus Știrbeis Urdăreanus and Zătreanus 81 They looked down on the lesser boyars or boiernași which could include cadet branches of the leading aristocracy as with the Glagoveanus and Zătreanus or entire clans fallen into destitution the Rudeanus 82 These two classes fully owned 244 villages or 32 of Oltenian villages 83 While most boyars of both classes only had one or two villages to their name the most powerful clans could hold much more The Brăiloius topped the list with 28 villages 16 of them in Gorj 84 Austrian consolidation Edit A major downside of Austrian rule was Oltenia s removal from the Ottoman economic sphere specifically the occupation regime unwittingly blocked much of the cattle horse butter and wool trade that had linked Oltenian pastoralists to the markets of Rumelia wool was mostly redirected toward Transylvania 85 Similarly the Austrians slowed down grain and barley production by curbing all exports of cereals including to other parts of the Monarchy The latter ban which was meant to ensure an uninterrupted chain of supply for the Austrian garrisons was only lifted for a while in 1726 86 Overall Oltenia was to remain underpopulated and underdeveloped throughout the Austrian episode At a demographic peak in 1736 the Vornici were still instructed to direct peasants into discarded villagers and resume cultivation in fallow lands 87 During 1731 Supreme Director Franz Paul von Wallis suggested doubling the Oltenian Vornici with Austrian natives who would make sure to check the fiscal records and the realities of taxation this practice was approved by the Aulic Council and introduced during the early months of 1732 88 In 1735 foreigners Anton Gebaur Anton Marstaller Franciscus Nagy and Gaspar Rauch all held offices as Vornici 89 Meanwhile all the boyars had been drafted as legal aides forming Commissions which streamlined judicial procedures and documented cases appearing before the Craiova commission 90 Also in 1732 J H Dietrich took over as President imposing an Austrian Johann Wilhelm Vogt as one of the Oltenian Counselors Dietrich died in 1733 under his replacement Franciscus Salhausen the Council included Vogt and another Austrian man J V Viechtern the latter as replacement for the Oltenian Grigore Vlasto 91 In 1737 the government was almost entirely non Romanian and non boyar with only Ștefan Parșcoveanu holding on to the office of Counselor 92 Wallis had asked for his demotion as early as August 1732 but the Aulic Council was adamant in supporting him 93 Though the Oltenians Catholicization was not an immediate priority of the Austrian elite their encouragement of Bulgarian German and Hungarian settlement could also double as proselytism especially after the Diocese of Nicopolis ad Hystrum was relocated to Oltenia 94 From 1723 the Franciscans began building a church in Ramnicu Valcea 95 Moving the Bulgarians Catholic see was formalized in June 1725 when Nikola Stanislavic previously the Catholic Vicar of Wallachia was anointed Bishop and took up residence in Craiova 96 Bulgarians were especially favored by the Austrians for being a Catholic population which proved its loyalty during the war against the Turks 97 From 1729 Stanislavic had tasked his aide Blasius Milli with encouraging the Paulicians of Rumelia to settle in Oltenia 98 As many as 2 000 Catholics from around Nikopol had done so by 1737 Mostly peasants they formed segregated communities in Craiova and Islaz distancing themselves from the Bulgarian merchant class 99 New arrivals included rich Orthodox merchands from Chiprovtsi including Iova and Iota Iovepali first attested at Ramnicu Valcea in early 1732 100 Colonization could also include Romanian families such as a small group from the Budjak which settled in Costești during November 1732 101 Once revived and Germanized the commission remained largely powerless in tackling boyar and peasant resistance which often took the form of sabotage and demoralization As summarized by Papacostea the low ranking Oltenian boyardom still held on to sufficient power so as to block any real application of the imperial commands Though pushed out of the main offices of the province though the Craiova Administration was by then directly under Austria s control the boyars still held on to the administration of counties and villages which was entirely at their disposal 102 As he notes the disgruntled boyars gathered around Ilie Știrbei and Dositei Brăiloiu whom Czeyka von Olbramowitz had already considered arresting 103 Faced with such opposition and a parallel sharp rise in outlaw activities this new administration finally allowed Ispravnici to organize small militias in 1734 104 Episodes of mass flight were still occasionally documented including among the tax encumbered boiernași in 1726 the authorities largely failed to collect within this community whose members have scattered and are hiding out in the counties 105 In 1728 36 villages of Mehedinți were entirely broken up while in 1734 Caraula was left with only four moșneni and its Parcălab 106 In other cases the exodus was temporary with free peasants and serfs taking up seasonal jobs to fulfill their fiscal obligations In August 1731 for instance the poorest such peasants were roaming Oltenia to do the mowing on various estates 107 Overall members of the upper classes engaged one another in bloodless feuds over the scarce labor resource Boyars included in the administration were able to outmaneuver their rivals especially the boiernași by imposing arbitrary obligations or simply by kidnapping peasants and pushing them into serfdom 108 During November 1723 Tige reported that the boyars were taking additional steps to prevent inspectors from counting people and animals living on their estates These opponents were claiming that such counts could only be performed on one s deathbed 109 Meanwhile peasants began organizing resistance to the corvee in 1737 the landlords of Bistrița Monastery noted that none of their tenant farmers had shown up for work even after obtaining a reduction of their duties 110 Orthodox monk left and wedded priest in a 1722 watercolor by Schwantz von Springfels The Catholic Emperor had uneasy relations with the Orthodox clergy In 1725 he submitted local churches to the Serbian Bishop in Belgrade Mojsije Petrovic This grouped Ramnic alongside parishes from the Banat of Temeswar and the purely Serbian Eparchy of Valjevo 111 In what was a more controversial gesture that drew protests from the monastic community Charles VI personally appointed Ramnic s Bishops and all the Staretses 112 he also claimed direct control over the princely domnești monasteries from Cozia and Tismana ro to Polovragi ro 113 In 1726 Petrovic assigned to Bishopric to a monk Ștefan who was never consecrated and whose only contribution as a ktitor was Mihalcea Litterati s church in Ocnele Mari in late 1727 he was replaced with Inochentie who remained in charge until 1735 114 Monastery administrators soon took the example of boyars in sabotaging Habsburg modernization Tige s inspection already noted that agricultural production was unusually low on estates held by the Bishopric of Ramnic during a November 1732 survey Wallis proposed controlling the village of Orevița by assigning it directly to the Belgrade Bishops 115 During 1736 an old feudal privilege was abolished at Tismana with its pastures in Jidoștița being confiscated for use by the Austrian cavalry in Cerneți 116 The common practice under the Habsburg administration was the collection of all traditional taxes from Orthodox institutions against tradition which had either reduced or eliminated such burdens on the Church 117 In a contrasting move the Austrians sought to protect church land from boyar encroachment which had been aggravated after the Mavrocordatos confiscations In 1726 inspectors were proposing to review all boyar property deeds to determine how much land had been stolen from the monasteries 118 Ottoman reconquest Edit The outbreak of a Russo Turkish War in 1735 was contemplated by the Austrians as an opportunity to complete their expansion into Wallachia As early as June 1735 Charles VI was preparing another attack on the Ottoman Empire asking Wallis to ensure that Oltenia would contribute additional revenue for that effort 119 The prospects of an Austrian annexation were viewed with alarm by the boyars of Bucharest who were now overwhelmingly Russophile in their outlook explicitly demanding to be placed under the Russian Empire s protection Wallachia s feudal class hoped to obtain Russia s support not just when it came to emancipation from Turkish suzerainty but also to the territorial reunification with compensation offered to the Viennese court in exchange for Oltenia 120 In October 1736 Vornic Preda Drugănescu represented this boyar caucus on a mission to Bila Tserkva Here he pledged that Wallachia would surrender only to Russia and promised to raise the sum needed for the Oltenian purchase because all the boyars over there in Craiova wish to find themselves under the Russian scepter 121 In January 1737 Michael von Talman was mandated by Charles VI to negotiate with Ottoman delegates at Babadag Here the Austrians asked for the terms negotiated at Passarowitz including the recognition of Oltenia as a Habsburg province to be extended beyond 1782 122 Oltenia s geopolitical status was changed abruptly in June 1737 when Austria decided to declare war on the Ottoman Empire The original plan was for a swift annexation of Muntenia which would have restored Wallachia under Charles s scepter During the advance from Oltenia and Transylvania Wallis approached the Phanariote Prince of Wallachia Constantine Mavrocordatos with an offer to switch side promising him recognition as an Austrian vassal in both Muntenia and Oltenia Mavrocordatos and his court were scandalized by this suggestion and preferred instead to take refuge in Ottoman held territory 123 Annexation seemed to be realized in on 17 July when Austrian troops under General Ghillany entered Bucharest 124 They arrested the boyar regency sending its members to Transylvania as imperial hostages 125 At that stage however Muntenians were generally unenthusiastic about the change of regimes Wallis and his men found that most urban centers in both regions had been deserted and that the fields had been abandoned in full harvest 126 The situation was aggravated when Wallachians caught hints that Austria intended to break apart Mehedinți annexing its western half to the Banat of Temeswar 127 Some boyars including Constantin Balș Ștefan Catargiu and Ștefăniță Ruset still favored the Austrian option pledging themselves to Emperor Charles 128 As early as August 1737 the Austrians had again moderated their demands delegates sent to the peace talks at Nemirov were mandated to ask for a new border on the Dambovița or the Argeș preserving Oltenia and dividing Muntenia These negotiations finally broke down when Austrian delegates accused Russia of intervening in favor of Wallachian territorial integrity 129 The Ottoman Army subsequently retaliated with a surprisingly efficient counteroffensive This began in September October when Mavrocordatos organized the retaking of Campulung and Pitești 130 On 12 November the Ottomans recaptured Bucharest 131 with a pincer movement they then took Craiova and trapped Charles troops in northern Oltenia and the Muntenian fort of Perișani 132 Mavrocordatos reaffirmed his status as Oltenian overlord by sending Radu Comăneanu as his governor in Craiova and appointing Ioniță Cercedja and his 200 Slujitori to assist against Wallis army 133 In the immediate aftermath Oltenians found themselves encumbered by Ottoman demands including a tribute set at 300 bags of gold the Wallachian Kapucu managed to obtain a temporary reduction 134 The situation proved especially difficult for civilians trapped in the disputed area who attempted to form their own civilian government under Bishop Climent Modoran In February 1738 he asked his flock to provide food for both the Ottomans and the Austrians expressing sympathy for their plight Știu că va iaste greu a sluji la doi impărați I know how difficult it is that you would have to serve two emperors 135 His own palace in Ramnicu Valcea was severely damaged during the Austrians defense of Oltenia 136 Throughout the interval hajduks rallied in the no man s land around Orșova with outlaws of many nations being joined by a mass of runaway serfs 137 During May Grand Vizier Yegen Mehmed Pasha presented Austria with an offer to divide Oltenia between the empires 138 The stalemate was ended only on 18 September 1739 when the Treaty of Belgrade was ratified by Charles VI who thus recognized Oltenia s re annexation by Ottoman vassalized Wallachia 139 This document unwittingly reopened the dispute between the Ottomans and the Habsburgs over what constituted the western border of Oltenia it also alienated those of the boyars who had still believed in a Habsburg solution to their problems regardless of how difficult adaption to the Habsburgs administrative and social juridical system had been 140 As noted by historians Constantin and Dinu C Giurescu nostalgia for Austrian rule was entirely marginal Wallachian restoration was welcomed with general joy among both peasants and boyars who had come to realize that the old regime whatever its shortcomings was preferable to Austrian administration 141 Legacy Edit Colonial precedent Edit Oltenian Bufeni settlements in the modern day Caraș Severin County then a part of the Banat of Temeswar Prayer list at Cuvioasa Paraschiva Orthodox Church in Ramnicu Valcea honoring the Iovepali family Scholar Daniel Chirot defines Austrian Oltenia as a premature experiment in modern colonialism 142 Papacostea views the Austrian episode as the direct confrontation between enlightened absolutism which had for a goal the systematic exploitation of Oltenian resources and the traditional boyar statehood which claimed a monopoly on peasants labor He describes the massive flight of peasants as an instance of class conflict momentarily successful in defeating the Habsburg government structures pushing these into permanent re adapting 143 Overall the experiment implied slowly but steadily adapting the boyar network to the requirements of a centralized system which required transforming boyars into state functionaries During this partly successful process Austrian supervisors issued a set of Latin and Romanian language protocols which were meant to standardize boyar activities and limit their sphere of action 144 The more overtly colonial aspects of Austrian governance were already dismantled by the 1730s war when Oltenia became the source of emigration into the Banat of Temeswar Some pro Habsburg Romanians joined in this exodus Diicul Deicolus Brăiloiu and George Brediceanu settled around Lugosch the latter of these two boyars was the patriarch of a noted Romanian Austrian family whose members included Coriolan and Tiberiu Brediceanu 145 By the 1750s the authorities had become more tolerant of Gorj immigrants who settled around Karansebesch as charcoal makers forming an ethnographic community known as Bufeni 146 Bulgarian and Paulician loyalists also established colonies in Theresiopolis and Star Bisnov where they merged into a single ethnic group Stanislavic still the community leader took over as Bishop of Tschanad 147 Ramnicu Valcea was ravaged by the war pushing the Iovepalis and other Chiprovtsi Bulgarians into permanent exile in Transylvania 148 By 1746 the city housed Oltenia s only Bulgarian community which numbered ten families 149 Some of the Habsburg innovations including the most unpopular ones were also quickly undone by the Ottomans the Austrian work rules in Oltenia were abolished and such forced labor was stabilized at twelve days a year for most of the century 150 As noted in 1759 by Ottoman bureaucrat Ahmed Resmi Efendi the palace of the Ban in Craiova was abandoned and allowed to fall into disrepair 151 Such dereliction went in tandem with some institutional continuity with Wallachian Princes being readily adaptable to modern absolutism Papacostea highlights the role of Habsburg reforms in shaping similar attempts by Phanariote rulers in the post 1739 era though also noting that these had modest means at their disposal and a much reduced efficiency 152 Prince Constantine Mavrocordatos who oversaw Oltenia s readmission into the Wallachian realm was directly interested in not only preserving absolutist reforms in Oltenia but also in extending them to other parts of the country and in expanding their scope His war on privilege meant to ensure fiscal stability led him to pioneer the abolition of serfdom and to introduce government as a mediator between boyars and peasants 153 In 1756 the Porte itself reverted on its stances and imitating the Austrians proceeded to increase its demands that year a colonial regime similar to that of the Austrian occupation was introduced with Wallachians required to contribute specified quotas of barley flour and wheat 154 Austrian contributions to the Romanian lexis and to the language of political geography included the designation of the old Banship as Oltenia which was thereafter conceptualized as distinct from Wallachia and Muntenia 155 The Habsburg claim to this territory was revived by Emperor Joseph II and General von Buccow in the early 1770s during turmoil caused by the Russo Turkish War Citing precedent as well as a number of records that they had falsified the Austrians demanded Oltenia alongside a Wallachian corner vaguely defined parts of Prahova Buzău and Ramnicu Sărat these were to be annexed alongside parts of Moldavia specifically Bacău and Putna 156 In July 1771 Sultan Mustafa III agreed to relinquish Oltenia 157 The annexation was never carried out since Russia vouched for Wallachia s territorial integrity instead Joseph accepted the northwestern tip of Moldavia which later became known as Bukovina 158 Though his overall plan fell apart the Austrians embraced a Dacian alternative proposing that Henry of Prussia be made ruler of Moldavia and Wallachia merged into a buffer state while still seeking to restore their own old borders on the Olt 159 During the 1780s Joseph s ambitions were frustrated by Russia s Catherine the Great who embraced the Dacian kingdom that she expected would be Russian friendly The Austrian court turned its focus on the Adriatic Sea and Bosnia Eyalet in some projects he vetted Joseph still considered annexing or purchasing Oltenia as an extension of this southwestern realm 160 A specific claim to Oltenia was again voiced by the Austrian court during the Oriental crisis of 1783 Joseph announced that he did not regard the Treaty of Belgrade as a renunciation of his rights in Craiova 161 An intervention by the Kingdom of France ended mounting hostilities between Russia and Austria and prevented the Austrian army from staging a march on Craiova this intervention which ensured that Joseph received nothing from the crisis also showed the strains of the Franco Austrian alliance 162 An 1788 map of Wallachia done in Vienna by Ferdinand Joseph Ruhedorf still showed the five Oltenian counties as Valachia Austriaca 163 The Habsburgs no longer revived the claim in the 19th century During the Crimean War the Habsburg state revived as the Austrian Empire intervened as a peacekeeper in both Moldavia and Wallachia In 1856 Napoleon III unsuccessfully proposed that Austria take over both countries as a unified vassal state with Francis of Modena on its throne 164 The United Principalities were created shortly after still as an Ottoman subject This tutelage was eventually cast aside in the Romanian War of Independence of the 1870s In its wake the Romanian Assembly of Deputies had to accept the cession of Southern Bessarabia to Russia in exchange for Northern Dobruja As an opponent of this trade off Romanați assemblyman Nicolae Lăcusteanu argued that Romania s Dobrujan rights were at least as arbitrary as Austrian rights in Oltenia 165 During the Romanian campaign of World War I both Muntenia and Oltenia were occupied by the Central Powers including Austria Hungary According to one account attributed to Constantin Stere Austria intended to absorb Oltenia in late 1917 and was only stopped from doing so when the international consensus swung against imperialistic annexations 166 Cultural survivals Edit The Habsburgs effort toward Catholicizing Oltenia mostly concentrated on reforming the Orthodox Church itself one such measure was to impose Catholic monastic rules on Orthodox monks 167 By 1726 Steinville s portrait had been added into frescoes of Sfantul Nicolae Church in Băile Olănești it was covered up after 1739 168 The issue of Catholic government in an Orthodox land became intertwined with religious disputes in Transylvania where the Habsburgs had established a Romanian Greek Catholic congregation part of the Eastern Catholic Churches It was partly as a result of Gheorghe Cantacuzino s intervention that Ioan Giurgiu Patachi was elected in 1714 as the second Catholic Primate of Bălgrad 169 Before his death in 1727 Patachi sought to establish an Eastern Catholic bishopric for Habsburg Oltenia while seeking to gather under his watch all of Austria s Romanians 170 This project never took hold Instead in January 1728 171 Ramnic Bishops were given an exclusive privilege in handling Orthodox life in the southernmost pockets of Transylvania at a time when most other Orthodox Transylvanians were decreed to have been united with Rome According to scholar Mihai Săsăujan this state of affairs was preserved into the 1750s 172 The situation angered the new Catholic converts Stefan Olshavskyi the Vicar of Mukachevo asked that the Ecumenical Patriarchate refrain from consecrating Orthodox priests anywhere in Transylvania 173 The Austrians endorsed teaching in Latin by Orthodox institutions but with only modest results such as Antonie Dascălul s school in Craiova by 1729 the administration was financing a more ambitious project for a Humanistic Gymnasium to be staffed by either Jesuits or Piarists 174 Overall Charles VI remained indifferent to cultural battles within the Wallachian Church This also meant that unlike the Muntenian hierarchs there was no stake in protecting Church Slavonic in Oltenia indirectly helping Bishop Damaschin and others who supported liturgical printing in Romanian In these circumstances Ramnicu Valcea and its printing press were major contributors to the Orthodox revival taking place in both Oltenia and Transylvania 175 The authorities were however invested in preventing any dispute between the Eastern Catholic and Orthodox branches of Romaniandom Historian Radu Nedici notes that Damaschin was under the strict control of a Habsburg Catholic administration 176 His one attempt at a polemic was a 1724 tract on the Sacraments which displeased Patachi and had to be withdrawn from circulation 177 Nedici and Aurel Dragne both argue that the eventual loss of Oltenia reverberated into Transylvania leaving its remaining Orthodox congregations submitted by the Serbian Bishopric though their primacy remained unrecognized by the Austrian court 178 Linguist C Francu views Austrian rule in Oltenia as crucial in establishing the canons of modern Romanian as an official language especially since at that stage Romanian was being purged from Austrian legal culture in Transylvania 179 This implied a first instance of linguistic re Latinization in Wallachia codifying terms such as administrație administration arest arrest colonel comandant commander comisar iu commissioner copie copy and deputat deputy 180 The 20 years long existence of an Imperial Wallachia spurred other changes in Romanian society In some cases these were to prove long lasting one example is the establishment of a regular postal service which allowed private mail to be sent between Oltenia and Transylvania 181 In parallel the administrative commission was awarded its own post riders or Călărași who numbered 50 men in 1727 and who ran errands between Craiova and the Vornici 182 Via Carolina outside the Turnu Roșu Pass in a late 18th century watercolor by Franz Neuhauser the Younger In 1716 Captain Friedrich Schwantz von Springfels a mathematician trained at the University of Jena had uncovered the remains of a Roman road running along the Olt at Cozia He was therefore able to persuade his superiors that the banks were usable for horse transportation at any time of the year 183 He described the path leading from Islaz to Ramnicu Valcea as Via Trajani from Trajan 184 Between 1717 and 1722 Steinville oversaw the construction of Via Carolina a modernized road linking the Turnu Roșu Pass and through it Transylvania to Călimănești 185 In tandem the authorities also rebuilt and enlarged the passage through the Valcan Mountains linking the Transylvanian mountainous enclave Țara Hațegului with Craiova and Vidin 186 The Austrians were also noted for exploring and cataloguing all features of Oltenian geography This effort began early on when Steinville s personal physician Michael Schendo van der Bech provided the first description of the mineral waters at Bengești Ciocadia 187 One noted contribution was Captain Schwantz s own regional map Begun on Steinville s orders in 1720 188 it endures as an incomparable instrument of research the first cartographic record of all human settlements in Oltenia 189 In keeping with Austria s imperial and Dacian ideology the work is noted for attempting to record all Roman era ruins known in the 1720s 190 The minuteness of Schwantz s contribution was made possible by his direct involvement in surveying Oltenia In 1738 Stefan Lutsch von Luchsenstein copied Schwantz s map into his general map of Wallachia the Muntenian portions were based on highly inexact Ottoman depictions making the result unusable in practice 191 The attempted economic revival which remained bound to the ideology of mercantilism 192 was also backed by monetary stabilization The circulation of devalued Wallachian coins Kreuzer and Ottoman pare was tolerated while the circulation of bullion was centered on the Reichsthaler The authorities attempted in vain to block the circulation of kuruslar in Oltenia since these were still the most frequent payment for regional exports 193 As part of the recolonization and re monetization drive Austrians revived or created agricultural shows notably at Tamna and Cerneți though making sure that commercial activities of this kind were subject to price controls called narturi 194 Austria also recognized and enforced urban privileges as codified in the Wallachian tradition As noted by Papacostea doing so effectively delayed town development especially by preventing the rural to urban migration 195 Urbanization stalled including in Craiova The Banship s capital remained in a rather semi agrarian phase 196 and a hundred years after its Wallachian reconquest still gave the impression of an immense bazaar 197 Austrian commercial innovations included Craiova s Spițăria Impărătească the first ever pharmacy to have been set up in the Romanian lands operating 1718 1730 198 From 1719 the city s administration noted that Oltenian guilds existed largely on paper with ill defined areas of control They presented the population with an option between full regulation and free trade it chose the former resulting in the establishment of a chartered Guild of Chandlers and Soapers in August 1725 199 Imperial envoys overrode boyar resistance when they allowed Bulgarians and Greeks to form their respective trade emporiums the boyars mounted additional resistance when Oltenian Romanians petitioned to set up their own company arguing that Romanians were not producing trade goods for export 200 The Austrian regime attempted to reform the status of Rudari slaves used for gold panning by the monks of Cozia reemploying them as salaried workers of the state A Chamber of Gold was instituted with the purpose of clamping down on gold contraband 201 Habsburg envoys tolerated the use of slave labor in the Oltenian salt mines principally those of Ocnele Mari but introduced new extraction and refining techniques Their attempt to recover these investments drove up the price of salt losing consumers to the coarser but cheaper salt of Ottoman Muntenia 202 Symbols EditHeraldists from the Holy Roman Empire had traditionally used a lion to represent kleine Walachey Little Wallachia which from the 16th century generally meant the Craiova Banship These were attributed arms which had no local correspondent and may have originally stood for Dacia or Cumania the lion was apparently never used by the Bans and neither was it taken up by the Austrian administration 203 Before 1718 local Bans used some symbols of their own which are attested but not described by contemporary sources In the mid 17th century Mareș Băjescu had a grapă adecă steag bănesc grapă which is to say a Ban s flag brought in for his ceremonial investiture in Craiova 204 Historian Ion Donat reports that the region also had its own badge separate from the Wallachian seal and its own flag at least as early as the 1500s 205 Theologian Irineu Popa ro argues that flags used by the Bans showed Demetrius of Thessaloniki who is still the patron saint of Craiova 206 In its early years Imperial Wallachia used a variant of the standard Wallachian seal 207 this symbol can be found in the bottom right corner of Schwantz von Springfels 1723 map 208 Also in 1723 this all Wallachian emblem was replaced with a complex seal depicting the double headed Reichsadler displaying the Wallachian bird 209 According to a roll of arms created by Radu Cantacuzino the same arrangement was used as the personal arms of his brother Ban Gheorghe 210 The Reichsadler a familiar presence on the Austrian border markers became known locally as Zgripțor The same term was used as a by word for Habsburg rule and its officials 211 In their effort to modernize the administration Austrian authorities banned the usage of private insignia on official documents Instead they regulated corporate heraldic seals for each of the five Oltenian counties These referred to the main economic contribution of each Oltenian subdivision Dolj had a fish Gorj a deer Mehedinți a beehive Romanați an ear of corn and Valcea a fruit bearing tree 212 According to historian Dan Cernovodeanu these symbols though not attested in writing before 1719 and first appearing in visual form as a companion to Schwantz s 1723 map were locally made and likely predated the Austrian occupation 213 They were also largely preserved into the later seals of Oltenian Bani and Caimacami into the early 19th century 214 Heraldic allegory of Oltenian counties in Schwantz von Springfels 1723 map of the region Arms used by Gheorghe Cantacuzino Seal used by Oltenian Caimacam Nicolae Scanavi in 1813 showing the county symbols County symbols on Caimacam Constantin Campineanu s seal 1822Notes Edit Lazăr p 81 Papacostea p 17 Marian Coman A Game of Rhetoric Transylvanian Regional Identities in Medieval Wallachian Sources in Annales Universitatis Apulensis Series Historica Vol 16 Issue II 2012 p 92 Radu Ștefan Vergatti Mihai Viteazul și Andronic Cantacuzino in Argesis Studii și Comunicări Seria Istorie Vol XXII 2013 pp 80 83 85 Abrudan pp 61 63 Abrudan pp 64 65 Papacostea pp 13 17 Papacostea pp 33 36 Papacostea pp 54 55 Papacostea pp 35 167 Drăghiceanu pp 57 63 C Tamaș pp 68 69 Papacostea pp 17 18 See also Abrudan pp 69 70 C Tamaș p 68 Cioarec p 92 See also C Tamaș p 68 Papacostea pp 18 20 C Tamaș pp 69 70 Papacostea pp 20 21 See also Abrudan p 70 Căzan p 192 C Tamaș p 70 Abrudan pp 70 71 Papacostea pp 20 22 Papacostea pp 23 28 See also C Tamaș p 70 Vianu p 19 Papacostea pp 152 153 Papacostea pp 28 286 Papacostea pp 28 29 Abrudan pp 71 74 Papacostea p 22 Abrudan pp 72 73 Abrudan p 74 Papacostea pp 149 150 Drăghiceanu pp 63 72 Papacostea p 253 Căzan p 199 Papacostea pp 274 277 Papacostea pp 285 287 Francu pp 308 309 Papacostea pp 153 154 252 See also C Tamaș p 70 Francu p 308 Papacostea pp 261 262 Papacostea pp 252 252 Papacostea pp 277 280 282 Papacostea p 275 Papacostea p 253 Papacostea pp 253 254 258 262 263 Papacostea pp 271 274 284 285 See also V Tamaș pp 120 121 Papacostea pp 255 256 Papacostea p 285 See also V Tamaș p 120 Papacostea p 256 Papacostea pp 224 229 Papacostea p 228 Papacostea pp 237 248 249 256 Papacostea pp 154 158 166 234 236 Papacostea pp 36 46 Papacostea pp 55 57 Papacostea pp 47 227 Papacostea pp 228 229 Papacostea pp 60 65 170 193 Papacostea pp 170 182 197 198 201 212 Papacostea pp 170 182 197 198 204 205 Aksan p 68 Papacostea pp 205 210 Papacostea p 273 Papacostea p 271 Papacostea p 151 Papacostea pp 151 152 Papacostea pp 47 48 Papacostea pp 279 280 See also Ciociltan p 77 Papacostea pp 58 59 Papacostea p 59 Gaga p 123 Papacostea p 48 Papacostea p 60 Papacostea pp 229 230 Papacostea pp 49 51 229 230 Papacostea pp 48 49 Francu p 308 Papacostea pp 253 265 Papacostea p 265 Papacostea pp 32 153 154 252 253 Papacostea pp 266 268 C Tamaș pp 70 71 Papacostea pp 51 52 143 Aksan p 84 Papacostea pp 196 197 Papacostea pp 232 234 Papacostea p 163 Papacostea p 164 Papacostea pp 167 168 Papacostea p 168 Papacostea pp 91 96 Papacostea pp 96 104 Papacostea p 69 Papacostea pp 269 270 V Tamaș p 122 V Tamaș pp 123 125 Papacostea pp 277 279 Papacostea pp 253 267 268 See also Cioarec p 93 Cioarec p 93 Papacostea pp 252 253 268 Cioarec p 93 Papacostea pp 297 298 See also Călin amp Oanță pp 331 332 Lazăr p 82 Călin amp Oanță pp 329 332 Ciociltan p 77 Călin amp Oanță pp 330 331 Ciociltan pp 77 78 Lazăr pp 81 82 Cioarec p 93 Papacostea pp 268 269 Papacostea p 268 Papacostea pp 255 256 Papacostea p 163 Papacostea pp 59 219 Papacostea pp 196 197 Papacostea pp 198 200 214 219 265 266 Papacostea pp 210 211 Papacostea p 210 Cilibia pp 176 178 Vilibia pp 177 178 See also Theodorescu p 142 Papacostea pp 289 297 Theodorescu p 142 Papacostea pp 70 71 Donat p 113 Papacostea pp 157 163 Papacostea p 150 Lisnic p 114 Vianu pp 19 20 Vianu pp 21 22 Lisnic p 117 Lisnic p 116 See also Vianu p 23 Lisnic p 116 See also Papacostea p 305 Vianu p 23 Vianu pp 23 24 Papacostea pp 307 309 Lisnic pp 115 116 Lisnic pp 119 120 Lisnic pp 117 119 Lisnic p 120 Lisnic p 120 Papacostea pp 305 306 309 Lisnic p 120 Lisnic p 123 Papacostea p 309 Theodorescu pp 142 143 Aksan p 68 Lisnic pp 123 124 Lisnic pp 123 126 Papacostea p 306 Lisnic pp 125 126 Francu p 307 Aksan p 68 Papacostea pp 10 11 Papacostea pp 257 261 A Peteanu Din trecutul Lugojului O pagină de istorie romanească Familia Brediceanu in Dacia Ziarul de Afirmare Romanească al Ținutului Timiș Issue 79 1939 p 8 Gaga pp 123 126 Călin amp Oanță pp 332 339 Lazăr p 83 Ciociltan p 78 Aksan p 68 Aksan pp 70 71 Papacostea p 270 Papacostea pp 310 320 See also Aksan pp 68 69 Aksan p 69 Erwin Gall Reka Fulop Mihaly Huba Hogyes Periferiile periferiilor Fenomen arheologic sau stadiul cercetării de ce nu au fost descoperite necropole din perioada secolelor VIII X in Transilvania estică și centrală respectiv in nordul și centrul Olteniei și Munteniei in Sorin Forțiu ed ArheoVest Nr VIII In Honorem Alexandru Rădulescu Interdisciplinaritate in Arheologie și Istorie Timișoara noiembrie 2020 Vol 1 Arheologie p 388 Timișoara amp Szeged Arheovest amp JATEPress 2020 ISBN 978 963 315 465 6 Iorga 1938 pp 11 12 See also David p 67 David p 67 Iorga 1938 pp 15 19 26 David pp 68 69 Iorga 1938 pp 25 30 David p 68 Grigorovici p 298 See also David p 69 Grigorovici pp 305 306 Grigorovici pp 315 317 Jean Yves Guiomar Marie Therese Lorain La carte de Grece de Rigas et le nom de la Grece in Annales Historiques de la Revolution Francaise Issue 319 January March 2000 pp 101 125 Cosmin Lucian Gherghe Emanoil Chinezu om politic avocat și istoric p 102 Craiova Sitech 2009 ISBN 978 606 530 315 7 Constantin Sarry Regele Carol I Dobrogea și dobrogenii Conferință ținută in ziua de 10 Mai 1915 la Harșova pp 11 12 Bucharest Institut de Arte Grafice Speranța 1915 Alexandru Marghiloman Note politice Vol 2 1916 1917 pp 511 512 Bucharest Editura Institutului de Arte Grafice Eminescu 1927 Cilibia p 176 Theodorescu p 142 Iorga 1921 pp 191 192 Iorga 1921 p 192 Dragne pp 62 63 Mihai Săsăujan Atitudinea cercurilor oficiale austriece față de romanii ortodocși din Transilvania la mijlocul secolului al XVIII lea in baza actelor Consiliului Aulic de Război și a rapoartelor conferințelor ministeriale din Viena in Annales Universitatis Apulensis Series Historica Vol 11 Issue II 2007 pp 234 247 248 Iorga 1921 p 193 Papacostea pp 299 300 Papacostea pp 298 299 See also Ioan I Ică jr Vechea traducere romanească uitată a Sinodiconului Ortodoxiei in Revista Teologică Vol XXVI 2016 pp 221 222 Nedici pp 187 189 196 197 Nedici p 196 Dragne p 63 Nedici pp 196 197 Dragne pp 67 68 Nedici pp 203 208 Francu pp 307 308 Francu passim Papacostea p 125 V Tamaș p 119 Papacostea p 255 Zsigmond Jako Koleseri Samuel tudomanyos levelezese 1709 1732 p 55 Cluj Napoca Societatea Muzeului Ardelean 2012 ISBN 978 606 8178 52 3 Căzan p 198 Căzan pp 198 199 Papacostea pp 124 125 Nicolae Popa Hațeg un pays fondateur de la Roumanie L evolution de ses voies de communication in the Review of Historical Geography and Toponomastics Vol I Issue 1 2006 p 84 Samarian p 118 Căzan pp 196 197 Papacostea p 33 Căzan p 199 Căzan pp 199 200 Papacostea p 131 Papacostea pp 127 141 Papacostea pp 109 116 Papacostea pp 115 118 Cristina Șoșea Spatial Dynamics of Craiova Municipality Transformation of the City s Relation with Its Peripheries in Analele Universității din Oradea Seria Geografie Vol XXIII Issue 2 2013 p 377 Violeta Anca Epure Aspecte de viață urbană in Principatele Romane surprinse de consulii și voiajorii francezi prepașoptiști Orasele din Țara Romanească I in Terra Sebus Acta Musei Sabesiensis Vol 11 2019 p 217 Samarian pp 173 174 Papacostea pp 84 86 Papacostea pp 120 123 Papacostea pp 90 91 106 Papacostea pp 86 88 104 106 Cernovodeanu p 78 Donat p 181 Oprea Gh Petre Craiova dealungul veacurilor Vol VIII Issue 374 March 1934 in Realitatea Ilustrată p 21 Donat p 185 Irineu Popa Biografii Luminoase Sfantul Mare Mucenic Dimitrie darul lui Dumnezeu pentru olteni Izvor de har și punte peste veacuri in Revista Ortodoxă Issue 3 2017 p 8 V Tamaș p 121 Căzan p 197 V Tamaș p 121 Sorin Iftimi Vechile blazoane vorbesc Obiecte armoriate din colecții ieșene pp 114 124 130 Iași Palatul Culturii 2014 ISBN 978 606 8547 02 2 Căzan pp 192 193 V Tamaș pp 121 122 Cernovodeanu pp 185 186 440 441 Ioan V Cancea Sigiliile caimacamilor Craiovei in Revista Arhivelor Issues 6 7 1936 1937 pp 178 179 See also Cernovodeanu pp 450 453References EditMircea Gheorghe Abrudan Politica orientală a Imperiului Habsburgic intre asediul Vienei 1683 și Tratatul de Pace de la Passarowitz 1718 in Astra Salvensis Vol IV Issue 8 2016 pp 61 75 Virginia H Aksan Whose Territory and Whose Peasants Ottoman Boundaries on the Danube in the 1760s in Frederick F Anscombe ed The Ottoman Balkans 1750 1830 pp 61 86 Princeton Markus Weiner Publishers 2006 ISBN 1 55876 383 X Claudiu Sergiu Călin Marius Oanță Nikola Stanislavich Episcop de Nicopole ad Hystrum 1725 1739 și Episcop de Cenad 1739 1750 in Banatica Vol 24 Issue 2 2015 pp 327 342 Ileana Căzan Cartografia austriacă in secolul al XVIII lea 1700 1775 Caracteristici și reprezentanți in Revista Istorică Vol XIV Issues 3 4 May August 2002 pp 191 206 Dan Cernovodeanu Știința și arta heraldică in Romania Bucharest Editura științifică și enciclopedică 1977 OCLC 469825245 Constantin Cilibia Arhimandritul Petronie din Timișoara stareț la Mănăstirea Segarcea in Mitropolia Olteniei Vol LXVIII Issues 9 12 September December 2016 pp 172 184 Ileana Cioarec Mari dregători din neamul boierilor Parșcoveanu in Anuarul Institutului de Cercetări Socio Umane C S Nicolăescu Plopșor Vol XIII 2012 pp 90 95 Alexandru Ciociltan The Identities of the Catholic Communities in the 18th Century Wallachia in Revista Romană de Studii Baltice și Nordice The Romanian Journal for Baltic and Nordic Studies Vol 9 Issue 1 2017 pp 71 82 Gheorghe David 1782 Ecaterina II Potemkin și regatul Daciei in Magazin Istoric September 1991 pp 66 69 Ion Donat Domeniul domnesc in Țara Romanească sec XIV XVI Bucharest Editura enciclopedică 1996 ISBN 973 454 170 6 Virgil Drăghiceanu Curțile domnești brancovenești IV Curți și conace făramate in Buletinul Comisiunii Monumentelor Istorice Vol IV 1911 pp 49 78 Aurel Dragne Biserică și societate in secolul al XVIII lea Situația clerului roman din Țara Făgărașului in Acta Terrae Fogarasiensis Vol V 2016 pp 53 88 C Francu Neologisme juridico administrative in documentele din Oltenia din timpul administrației austriece 1718 1739 I in Studii și Cercetări Lingvistice Vol XXXVI 1985 pp 307 319 Lidia Gaga Costum de enclavă Costum de contact Bufenii in Analele Banatului Etnografie Artă Vol II 1984 pp 123 141 Al Grigorovici Crisa orientală din 1783 și politica Franciei in Revista Istorică Vol XXIV Issues 10 12 October December 1938 pp 293 321 Nicolae Iorga Dări de seamă Silviu Dragomir Istoria desrobirii religioase a Romanilor din Ardeal in secolul al XVIII lea in Revista Istorică Vol VII Issues 7 9 July September 1921 pp 190 201 Romanismul in trecutul Bucovinei Bucharest Metropolis of Bukovina 1938 Gheorghe Lazăr Aux frontieres du grand commerce La famille Iovipali en Valachie XVIIIe debut du XIX e siecle in Lora Taseva Penka Danova eds Yugoiztochna Evropa prez vekovete socialna istoriya ezikovi i kulturni kontakti Studia Balcanica 35 pp 79 100 Sofia Bulgarian Academy of Sciences 2021 ISBN 978 619 7179 17 0 Angela Lisnic Locul principatelor dunărene in acțiunile politico militare ale marilor puteri in războiul Austro Ruso Turc din 1735 1739 in Revista de Istorie a Moldovei Issue 1 73 2008 pp 113 129 Radu Nedici Formarea identității confesionale greco catolice in Transilvania veacului al XVIII lea biserică și comunitate Bucharest Editura Universității București 2013 ISBN 978 606 16 0279 7 Șerban Papacostea Oltenia sub stăpanirea austriacă 1718 1739 Bucharest Editura enciclopedică 1998 ISBN 973 45 0237 9 Pompei Gh Samarian Medicina și Farmacia in Trecutul Romanesc 1382 1775 Călărași Tipografia Moderna n y Corneliu Tamaș Marele spătar Radu Golescu și curentul antifanariot in Buridava Studii și Materiale Issue 2 1976 pp 67 71 Veronica Tamaș Administrația Olteniei in timpul ocupației austriece 1718 1739 in Buridava Vol IV 1982 pp 119 125 Răzvan Theodorescu Episcopi și ctitori in Valcea secolului al XVIII lea in Buridava Issue 7 2009 pp 140 152 Al Vianu Din acțiunea diplomatică a Țării Rominești in Rusia in anii 1736 1738 in Romanoslavica Vol VIII 1963 pp 19 26 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Banat of Craiova amp oldid 1106349282, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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