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Borsod County

Borsod was an administrative county (comitatus) of the Kingdom of Hungary. The capital of the county was Miskolc. After World War II, the county was merged with the Hungarian parts of Abaúj-Torna County and Zemplén counties to form Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén county.

Borsod County
Comitatus Borsodiensis (Latin)
Borsod vármegye (Hungarian)
Komitat Borschod (German)
County of the Kingdom of Hungary
(11th century-1621)
County of the Principality of Transylvania
(1621–1629)
County of the Kingdom of Hungary
(1629–1645)
County of the Principality of Transylvania
(1645–1648)
County of the Kingdom of Hungary
(1648–1923, 1938–1945)
Coat of arms

CapitalBorsod;
Miskolc (1724–1945)
Area
 • Coordinates48°6′N 20°47′E / 48.100°N 20.783°E / 48.100; 20.783
 
• 1910
3,629 km2 (1,401 sq mi)
Population 
• 1910
289,914
History 
• Established
11th century
• Merged into Borsod-Gömör-Kishont County
1923
• County recreated (First Vienna Award)
1938
• Merged into Borsod-Gömör County
1945
Today part ofHungary

Etymology edit

The name comes from the personal name Bors (an early medieval magnate) with the -d suffix used to derive place names in old Hungarian language. The personal name Bors could have derived from bors (Hungarian "pepper") and/or derived from Turkish (a theory of János Melich) or from the Slavic personal name Boriš (a theory of Elemér Moór). The problem has not been sufficiently resolved yet. E.g. Lajos Kiss suggests the Turkish origin,[1] whilst Slovak scholars have been suggesting the Slavic origin since the times of Ján Stanislav[2] who accepted Moór's theory as more reliable and pointed to several place names with similar etymology (*Bor[I]ša).[3] Ján Steinhübel points to the Czech name Borša (a member of the retinue of Břetislav II);[4] from the same name derives also e.g. Boršov nad Vltavou.[2]

Geography edit

Before World War I, Borsod county shared borders with the counties of Gömör-Kishont, Abaúj-Torna, Zemplén, Szabolcs, Hajdú and Heves. The river Tisza formed the southeastern border, and the river Sajó flowed through the county. Its area was 3,629 km2 around 1910.

History edit

Borsod is one of the oldest counties of the Kingdom of Hungary. In the early history of the Kingdom of Hungary, each county (in Latin comitatus) formed around a castle (the majority of these castles were motte castles; most of the stone-built castles were constructed after the Mongol invasion of Hungary in the mid-13th century). The castle – which stood near modern-day Edelény – bore the name of its first steward, Bors, who lived during the reigns of either High Prince Géza or his son Stephen I.

The county's borders became permanent in the early 14th century, when the neighbouring Torna County was formed, and they remained basically unchanged for the next six hundred years. Judging from the place names, originally the majority of the population were ethnic Hungarians, but later other groups immigrated to the area too: Pechenegs (in the late 10th/early 11th century) and úz groups (11th–12th century). This is also evident from place names like Szirmabesenyő (besenyő is the Hungarian word for Pecheneg) and Ózd (from "úz").

The parishes of the county belonged to the Diocese of Eger from the beginning. Several monasteries were founded in the region, in Százd (by the Aba clan, 11th century), Boldva (by the queen, 12th century), Kács (by the Örsúr clan), Tapolca (by the Miskolc clan), Bélháromkút (by the Bishop of Eger, after 1232).

 
The castle of Diósgyőr, built in the second half of the 13th century

The Battle of Mohi – marking the beginning of the Mongol invasion which had a disastrous effect on Hungary – took place in Borsod county, near the village of Muhi, on 11 April 1241. The Mongols defeated the army of King Béla IV. During the two-year invasion, 16 of the county's 69 villages were completely destroyed.

In 1248, when King Béla ordered stone castles to be built throughout the kingdom, several new castles were constructed in Borsod county too (Cserépvár, Csorbakő, Dédes, Diósgyőr, Éleskő), many in places of former, destroyed motte castles. The monastery of Boldva was destroyed during a second Mongol invasion in 1285.

In the papal tithe registers from 1332 to 1335, the county is mentioned as having 91 parishes. The county had about 240 villages at that time. Before the battle of Mohács (1526), which marks the beginning of the Ottoman occupation of Hungary (lasting for over 160 years) the county had 13 castles, 13 market towns (oppidum, including Miskolc and Mezőkövesd) and 250 villages, owned by 235 different feudal lords including dioceses and monasteries. The steward of the county was the captain of the Castle of Diósgyőr.

In 1566, the Ottomans occupied the castles of Dédes and Diósgyőr, and after the Battle of Mezőkeresztes ( 26–28 October 1596) they occupied Miskolc too. These areas were under Ottoman control until 1687.

In the next century, an important historical event of Prince Rákóczi's freedom fight took place in the county: the Diet of Ónod, where Hungary was declared independent of Habsburg rule, was held here, next to the village of Ónod, on 18 June 1707.

In 1724, it was decided that the county hall of Borsod would be built in Miskolc, thus the town officially became the seat of the county. The building was constructed between 1825 and 1827.

 
The county hall of Borsod (later Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén) in Miskolc. This is not the old building built in 1724 but a newer one built in its place between 1811 and 1836.

There were some minor changes in the area of the county during the 19th century: between 1807 and 1812 the villages Szőlőske, Cegléd, Tihamér, Almagyar, Felnémet and Bekölce (many of these are today city parts of Eger) were annexed to the neighbouring Heves county, while Egerfarmos, Ivánka, Szőkepuszta and the mill of Kistálya were annexed from Heves to Borsod. In 1850 several other towns and villages of Borsod were annexed to neighbouring counties: Andornak, Kistálya and Felsőtárkány to Heves, Domaháza and Sikátor to Gömör and Kishont. Onga, formerly belonging to Abaúj county, and Külsőböcs, formerly of Zemplén county, became parts of Borsod. In 1907, Miskolc was granted the rank of city with municipal rights, becoming de jure independent from Borsod county.

Of the 63 counties of Hungary, Borsod was the 39th largest by area, 23rd largest by population and 11th largest by population density (80 persons/km2) in 1910. Between 1899 and 1913 many people left Hungary and emigrated to other countries; from Borsod 23,797 people emigrated, which, not counting the 7,313 who eventually came back, makes the county 18th in the list of Hungarian counties with the most emigrees.

In 1919, Borsod county had 177 villages (13 of them had a population larger than 2000).

 
Borsod (10) and Gömör-Kishont (9) counties after the Treaty of Trianon. In 1923, the two counties were merged to form Borsod-Gömör County. (6) Nógrád County (7) territory assigned from Gömör-Kishont County to Nógrád County in 1921. (8) territory assigned from Gömör-Kishont County to Borsod County in 1938. (11) the city of Miskolc (urban county).

After World War I and the Treaty of Trianon, Hungary lost many of its territories to neighbouring countries. The loss did not affect Borsod county, its borders remained unchanged, but of the surrounding counties, Abaúj-Torna (Abaúj had been merged with Torna in 1882) lost 48% of its area to the newly formed state of Czechoslovakia, Zemplén lost 72% and Gömör-Kishont lost 92.5%. In 1923, Borsod county was merged with the remaining part of former Gömör-Kishont county to form "Borsod-Gömör-Kishont temporarily united county" with its capital at Miskolc.

On 2 November 1938, the First Vienna Award returned to Hungary some parts of Gömör and Kishont lost in 1920; Borsod and Gömör-Kishont became independent from each other again but the border between them slightly changed.

In 1941, the county had 382,324 inhabitants (378,303 Hungarians, 272 Germans, 240 Slovaks, 165 Romanians, 210 Ruthenians, 2103 Gypsies and 2324 other; 225,476 Roman Catholics, 19,625 Greek Catholics, 226 Greek Orthodox, 8657 Evangelicals, 109,809 Protestants, 105 Unitarians, 970 Baptists, 16,997 Jews, 164 of other religions).

After World War II, the Vienna Award was declared void and Hungary lost the northern territories to Czechoslovakia again; in 1945, the 1938 law was repealed and the remaining part of Gömör-Kishont was merged with Borsod county again, forming Borsod-Gömör county. On 16 March 1950, during an extensive administrative reform, the remaining parts of Abaúj-Torna and Zemplén counties were merged to Borsod-Gömör, creating the modern-day county of Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén, with only Borsod's county seat Miskolc keeping its county seat status – Sátoraljaújhely, of Zemplén, and Szikszó, of Abaúj county, lost it.

 
Borsod-Gömör, Abaúj, and Zemplén counties after World War II. In 1950, the three counties were merged to form the modern Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén County. (1) Nógrád-Hont County (2) territories assigned from Szabolcs County to Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén County. (3) territories assigned from Borsod-Gömör County to Heves County. (5) the city of Debrecen (urban county).

Today, the area that was once Borsod county is the most urbanized and industrialized area of Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén, with 3/4 of the county's population living there. The county's three largest cities – Miskolc, Ózd and Kazincbarcika – can also be found there. In colloquial speech, Borsod county is often used to mean Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén as a whole.

Demographics edit

 
Ethnic map of the county with data of the 1910 census (see the key in the description).
Population by mother tongue[a]
Census Total Hungarian Slovak German Other or unknown
1880[5] 195,980 174,900 (92.64%) 10,462 (5.54%) 2,250 (1.19%) 1,180 (0.63%)
1890[6] 216,794 202,896 (93.59%) 9,738 (4.49%) 3,160 (1.46%) 1,000 (0.46%)
1900[7] 257,586 243,117 (94.38%) 9,338 (3.63%) 3,155 (1.22%) 1,976 (0.77%)
1910[8] 289,914 281,874 (97.23%) 4,115 (1.42%) 2,379 (0.82%) 1,546 (0.53%)
Population by religion[b]
Census Total Roman Catholic Calvinist Jewish Greek Catholic Lutheran Other or unknown
1880 195,980 94,662 (48.30%) 73,524 (37.52%) 12,826 (6.54%) 10,279 (5.24%) 4,420 (2.26%) 269 (0.14%)
1890 216,794 109,412 (50.47%) 77,038 (35.54%) 13,880 (6.40%) 10,986 (5.07%) 5,373 (2.48%) 105 (0.05%)
1900 257,586 137,980 (53.57%) 83,310 (32.34%) 16,477 (6.40%) 12,850 (4.99%) 6,700 (2.60%) 269 (0.10%)
1910 289,914 160,699 (55.43%) 88,856 (30.65%) 18,346 (6.33%) 14,086 (4.86%) 7,299 (2.52%) 628 (0.22%)

Subdivisions edit

 

In the early 20th century, the subdivisions of Borsod county were:

Districts (járás)
District Capital
Edelény District Edelény
Mezőcsát District Mezőcsát
Mezőkövesd District Mezőkövesd
Miskolc District Miskolc
Ózd District Ózd
Sajószentpéter District Sajószentpéter
Urban counties (törvényhatósági jogú város)
Miskolc (from 1909)
Urban districts (rendezett tanácsú város)
Miskolc (until 1909)

Notes edit

  1. ^ Only linguistic communities > 1% are displayed.
  2. ^ Only religious communities > 1% are displayed.

Sources edit

  • Hungarian Catholic Lexicon (Hungarian only) (articles: Borsod, Gömör és Kishont közigazgatásilag egyelőre egyesített vármegye, Borsod vármegye, Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén megye and Borsod-Gömör vármegye.)
  1. ^ Kiss, Lajos (1978). Földrajzi nevek etimológiai szótára (in Hungarian). Budapest: Akadémiai. p. 121.
  2. ^ a b Monika, Tihányiová (2013). "Niekoľko poznámok k šľachtickému rodu Miškovcov" (PDF). Verbum Historiae (in Slovak) (2). Univerzita Komenského: 20. ISSN 1339-4053.
  3. ^ Stanislav, Ján (2004). Slovenský juh v stredoveku II (in Slovak). Slovenské literárne centrum. p. 60. ISBN 80-88878-89-6.
  4. ^ Steinhübel, Ján (2004). Nitrianske kniežatsvo (in Slovak). Bratislava: Veda. p. 441. ISBN 80-224-0812-3.
  5. ^ "Az 1881. év elején végrehajtott népszámlálás főbb eredményei megyék és községek szerint rendezve, II. kötet (1882)". library.hungaricana.hu. Retrieved 28 September 2021.
  6. ^ "A Magyar Korona országainak helységnévtára (1892)". library.hungaricana.hu. Retrieved 29 September 2021.
  7. ^ "A MAGYAR KORONA ORSZÁGAINAK 1900". library.hungaricana.hu. Retrieved 29 September 2021.
  8. ^ "KlimoTheca :: Könyvtár". Kt.lib.pte.hu. Retrieved 29 September 2021.

borsod, county, borsod, administrative, county, comitatus, kingdom, hungary, capital, county, miskolc, after, world, county, merged, with, hungarian, parts, abaúj, torna, county, zemplén, counties, form, borsod, abaúj, zemplén, county, comitatus, borsodiensis,. Borsod was an administrative county comitatus of the Kingdom of Hungary The capital of the county was Miskolc After World War II the county was merged with the Hungarian parts of Abauj Torna County and Zemplen counties to form Borsod Abauj Zemplen county Borsod CountyComitatus Borsodiensis Latin Borsod varmegye Hungarian Komitat Borschod German County of the Kingdom of Hungary 11th century 1621 County of the Principality of Transylvania 1621 1629 County of the Kingdom of Hungary 1629 1645 County of the Principality of Transylvania 1645 1648 County of the Kingdom of Hungary 1648 1923 1938 1945 Coat of armsCapitalBorsod Miskolc 1724 1945 Area Coordinates48 6 N 20 47 E 48 100 N 20 783 E 48 100 20 783 19103 629 km2 1 401 sq mi Population 1910289 914History Established11th century Merged into Borsod Gomor Kishont County1923 County recreated First Vienna Award 1938 Merged into Borsod Gomor County1945Today part ofHungary Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 3 History 4 Demographics 5 Subdivisions 6 Notes 7 SourcesEtymology editThe name comes from the personal name Bors an early medieval magnate with the d suffix used to derive place names in old Hungarian language The personal name Bors could have derived from bors Hungarian pepper and or derived from Turkish a theory of Janos Melich or from the Slavic personal name Boris a theory of Elemer Moor The problem has not been sufficiently resolved yet E g Lajos Kiss suggests the Turkish origin 1 whilst Slovak scholars have been suggesting the Slavic origin since the times of Jan Stanislav 2 who accepted Moor s theory as more reliable and pointed to several place names with similar etymology Bor I sa 3 Jan Steinhubel points to the Czech name Borsa a member of the retinue of Bretislav II 4 from the same name derives also e g Borsov nad Vltavou 2 Geography editBefore World War I Borsod county shared borders with the counties of Gomor Kishont Abauj Torna Zemplen Szabolcs Hajdu and Heves The river Tisza formed the southeastern border and the river Sajo flowed through the county Its area was 3 629 km2 around 1910 History editBorsod is one of the oldest counties of the Kingdom of Hungary In the early history of the Kingdom of Hungary each county in Latin comitatus formed around a castle the majority of these castles were motte castles most of the stone built castles were constructed after the Mongol invasion of Hungary in the mid 13th century The castle which stood near modern day Edeleny bore the name of its first steward Bors who lived during the reigns of either High Prince Geza or his son Stephen I The county s borders became permanent in the early 14th century when the neighbouring Torna County was formed and they remained basically unchanged for the next six hundred years Judging from the place names originally the majority of the population were ethnic Hungarians but later other groups immigrated to the area too Pechenegs in the late 10th early 11th century and uz groups 11th 12th century This is also evident from place names like Szirmabesenyo besenyo is the Hungarian word for Pecheneg and ozd from uz The parishes of the county belonged to the Diocese of Eger from the beginning Several monasteries were founded in the region in Szazd by the Aba clan 11th century Boldva by the queen 12th century Kacs by the Orsur clan Tapolca by the Miskolc clan Belharomkut by the Bishop of Eger after 1232 nbsp The castle of Diosgyor built in the second half of the 13th centuryThe Battle of Mohi marking the beginning of the Mongol invasion which had a disastrous effect on Hungary took place in Borsod county near the village of Muhi on 11 April 1241 The Mongols defeated the army of King Bela IV During the two year invasion 16 of the county s 69 villages were completely destroyed In 1248 when King Bela ordered stone castles to be built throughout the kingdom several new castles were constructed in Borsod county too Cserepvar Csorbako Dedes Diosgyor Elesko many in places of former destroyed motte castles The monastery of Boldva was destroyed during a second Mongol invasion in 1285 In the papal tithe registers from 1332 to 1335 the county is mentioned as having 91 parishes The county had about 240 villages at that time Before the battle of Mohacs 1526 which marks the beginning of the Ottoman occupation of Hungary lasting for over 160 years the county had 13 castles 13 market towns oppidum including Miskolc and Mezokovesd and 250 villages owned by 235 different feudal lords including dioceses and monasteries The steward of the county was the captain of the Castle of Diosgyor In 1566 the Ottomans occupied the castles of Dedes and Diosgyor and after the Battle of Mezokeresztes 26 28 October 1596 they occupied Miskolc too These areas were under Ottoman control until 1687 In the next century an important historical event of Prince Rakoczi s freedom fight took place in the county the Diet of onod where Hungary was declared independent of Habsburg rule was held here next to the village of onod on 18 June 1707 In 1724 it was decided that the county hall of Borsod would be built in Miskolc thus the town officially became the seat of the county The building was constructed between 1825 and 1827 nbsp The county hall of Borsod later Borsod Abauj Zemplen in Miskolc This is not the old building built in 1724 but a newer one built in its place between 1811 and 1836 There were some minor changes in the area of the county during the 19th century between 1807 and 1812 the villages Szoloske Cegled Tihamer Almagyar Felnemet and Bekolce many of these are today city parts of Eger were annexed to the neighbouring Heves county while Egerfarmos Ivanka Szokepuszta and the mill of Kistalya were annexed from Heves to Borsod In 1850 several other towns and villages of Borsod were annexed to neighbouring counties Andornak Kistalya and Felsotarkany to Heves Domahaza and Sikator to Gomor and Kishont Onga formerly belonging to Abauj county and Kulsobocs formerly of Zemplen county became parts of Borsod In 1907 Miskolc was granted the rank of city with municipal rights becoming de jure independent from Borsod county Of the 63 counties of Hungary Borsod was the 39th largest by area 23rd largest by population and 11th largest by population density 80 persons km2 in 1910 Between 1899 and 1913 many people left Hungary and emigrated to other countries from Borsod 23 797 people emigrated which not counting the 7 313 who eventually came back makes the county 18th in the list of Hungarian counties with the most emigrees In 1919 Borsod county had 177 villages 13 of them had a population larger than 2000 nbsp Borsod 10 and Gomor Kishont 9 counties after the Treaty of Trianon In 1923 the two counties were merged to form Borsod Gomor County 6 Nograd County 7 territory assigned from Gomor Kishont County to Nograd County in 1921 8 territory assigned from Gomor Kishont County to Borsod County in 1938 11 the city of Miskolc urban county After World War I and the Treaty of Trianon Hungary lost many of its territories to neighbouring countries The loss did not affect Borsod county its borders remained unchanged but of the surrounding counties Abauj Torna Abauj had been merged with Torna in 1882 lost 48 of its area to the newly formed state of Czechoslovakia Zemplen lost 72 and Gomor Kishont lost 92 5 In 1923 Borsod county was merged with the remaining part of former Gomor Kishont county to form Borsod Gomor Kishont temporarily united county with its capital at Miskolc On 2 November 1938 the First Vienna Award returned to Hungary some parts of Gomor and Kishont lost in 1920 Borsod and Gomor Kishont became independent from each other again but the border between them slightly changed In 1941 the county had 382 324 inhabitants 378 303 Hungarians 272 Germans 240 Slovaks 165 Romanians 210 Ruthenians 2103 Gypsies and 2324 other 225 476 Roman Catholics 19 625 Greek Catholics 226 Greek Orthodox 8657 Evangelicals 109 809 Protestants 105 Unitarians 970 Baptists 16 997 Jews 164 of other religions After World War II the Vienna Award was declared void and Hungary lost the northern territories to Czechoslovakia again in 1945 the 1938 law was repealed and the remaining part of Gomor Kishont was merged with Borsod county again forming Borsod Gomor county On 16 March 1950 during an extensive administrative reform the remaining parts of Abauj Torna and Zemplen counties were merged to Borsod Gomor creating the modern day county of Borsod Abauj Zemplen with only Borsod s county seat Miskolc keeping its county seat status Satoraljaujhely of Zemplen and Szikszo of Abauj county lost it nbsp Borsod Gomor Abauj and Zemplen counties after World War II In 1950 the three counties were merged to form the modern Borsod Abauj Zemplen County 1 Nograd Hont County 2 territories assigned from Szabolcs County to Borsod Abauj Zemplen County 3 territories assigned from Borsod Gomor County to Heves County 5 the city of Debrecen urban county Today the area that was once Borsod county is the most urbanized and industrialized area of Borsod Abauj Zemplen with 3 4 of the county s population living there The county s three largest cities Miskolc ozd and Kazincbarcika can also be found there In colloquial speech Borsod county is often used to mean Borsod Abauj Zemplen as a whole Demographics edit nbsp Ethnic map of the county with data of the 1910 census see the key in the description Population by mother tongue a Census Total Hungarian Slovak German Other or unknown1880 5 195 980 174 900 92 64 10 462 5 54 2 250 1 19 1 180 0 63 1890 6 216 794 202 896 93 59 9 738 4 49 3 160 1 46 1 000 0 46 1900 7 257 586 243 117 94 38 9 338 3 63 3 155 1 22 1 976 0 77 1910 8 289 914 281 874 97 23 4 115 1 42 2 379 0 82 1 546 0 53 Population by religion b Census Total Roman Catholic Calvinist Jewish Greek Catholic Lutheran Other or unknown1880 195 980 94 662 48 30 73 524 37 52 12 826 6 54 10 279 5 24 4 420 2 26 269 0 14 1890 216 794 109 412 50 47 77 038 35 54 13 880 6 40 10 986 5 07 5 373 2 48 105 0 05 1900 257 586 137 980 53 57 83 310 32 34 16 477 6 40 12 850 4 99 6 700 2 60 269 0 10 1910 289 914 160 699 55 43 88 856 30 65 18 346 6 33 14 086 4 86 7 299 2 52 628 0 22 Subdivisions edit nbsp In the early 20th century the subdivisions of Borsod county were Districts jaras District CapitalEdeleny District EdelenyMezocsat District MezocsatMezokovesd District MezokovesdMiskolc District Miskolcozd District ozdSajoszentpeter District SajoszentpeterUrban counties torvenyhatosagi jogu varos Miskolc from 1909 Urban districts rendezett tanacsu varos Miskolc until 1909 Notes edit Only linguistic communities gt 1 are displayed Only religious communities gt 1 are displayed Sources editHungarian Catholic Lexicon Hungarian only articles Borsod Gomor es Kishont kozigazgatasilag egyelore egyesitett varmegye Borsod varmegye Borsod Abauj Zemplen megye and Borsod Gomor varmegye Kiss Lajos 1978 Foldrajzi nevek etimologiai szotara in Hungarian Budapest Akademiai p 121 a b Monika Tihanyiova 2013 Niekoľko poznamok k sľachtickemu rodu Miskovcov PDF Verbum Historiae in Slovak 2 Univerzita Komenskeho 20 ISSN 1339 4053 Stanislav Jan 2004 Slovensky juh v stredoveku II in Slovak Slovenske literarne centrum p 60 ISBN 80 88878 89 6 Steinhubel Jan 2004 Nitrianske kniezatsvo in Slovak Bratislava Veda p 441 ISBN 80 224 0812 3 Az 1881 ev elejen vegrehajtott nepszamlalas fobb eredmenyei megyek es kozsegek szerint rendezve II kotet 1882 library hungaricana hu Retrieved 28 September 2021 A Magyar Korona orszagainak helysegnevtara 1892 library hungaricana hu Retrieved 29 September 2021 A MAGYAR KORONA ORSZAGAINAK 1900 library hungaricana hu Retrieved 29 September 2021 KlimoTheca Konyvtar Kt lib pte hu Retrieved 29 September 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Borsod County amp oldid 1217763923, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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