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Pejačević family

The House of Pejačević or Pejácsevich (Croatian: Pejačevići, Serbian: Пејачевићи, Hungarian: Pejácsevich or Pejácsevics, Bulgarian: Пеячевичи) is an old Croatian noble family, remarkable during the period in history marked by the Ottoman war in the Kingdom of Croatia and Austro-Hungarian Empire respectively. Notable members of the family were politicians, clerics, artists, senior military officers, Bans (viceroys) of Croatia and other high state officials. They were very potent and influential in the political, social, economic and cultural life of the country, and especially distinguished in the region of Slavonia. In German and Spanish, the family name was sometimes rendered Pejacsevich, i.e. a simplified variant of the Hungarian spelling.

Pejačević / Pejácsevich
Parent familyParčević
CountryRepublic of Ragusa
Founded14th century
FounderDmitar Pejačević
TitlesBaron (1712)
Count of Virovitica (1772)
Connected familiesVirovitica (extinct)
Ruma-Retfala (extinct)
Našice (present)

Family origin edit

The origin of the family dates back to the 14th-century territory of southeastern Croatia and the neighbouring medieval Bosnia and Herzegovina. There are sources that connect the ancestors of the family with the Bosnian king Stjepan Dabiša (English: Stephen Dabisha), who ruled from 1391 to 1395, and his son Parčija (English: Parchia). Parčija's descendants used to be called Parčević (Parchevich). One of several family branches that came out of them later (in the 16th century) was the Pejačević family.

The 59th volume of the "Archive for the Austrian History" issued by the Imperial Academy of Sciences in Vienna in 1880 includes a long chapter about Baron Petar Parčević (1612–1674), the archbishop of Marcianople, a town in eastern Bulgaria. The text of that chapter is based on the researches made by Count Julijan Pejačević (1833–1906), a chronicler of the family. Despite the doubts of some historians, later analyses mostly showed and confirmed that he had a history-based approach and his theses had been proven. This refers particularly to the research of Bulgarian historiography, including those conducted by Bojan Penev and Boris Jocov in the 1920s and 1930s. The research dealt with the connected families of Parčević and Pejačević (as well as some other related families) during their residence in the territory of today's Bulgaria (then occupied by the Ottoman Empire). Particular facts have been described in Encyclopedia Bulgaria (1981-1997) (Енциклопедия България), issued in Sofia, in detail.

Bulgarian period edit

The Parčević family settled in the second half of the 14th century in Bulgaria. Encyclopedia Bulgaria specifies that Parčija arrived there with his family along with Ragusan merchants. The reason for that migration has not been determined with certainty, but it was most probably caused by disputes and conflicts among the noblemen in southeastern Croatia and Bosnia, where Parčija had his estates.

Having lived the first years in Veliko Tarnovo (until 1399), the Parčević family moved to the west of the country and settled in a little town named Chiprovtsi. This is why some historians believe that the Pejačević family originated from there. At that time Chiprovtsi was a mining and metalsmithing centre, developed by German (Transylvanian Saxon) miners, who arrived in 13th and 14th century. Ragusan merchants and Bosnian Franciscan priests came there as well. They were all Roman Catholics, and a mixture of nationalities and religions was created in Chiprovtsi at that time. The Ottomans, who conquered that region soon after that, made this ethnic mixture even more various.

The branches of Parchevich family lived not only in Chiprovtsi, but also in the neighboring villages, even founding some new ones, like Kneže (Knezhe), Pejakovo or Pejačevo (Pe'yachevo) and Čerka (Cherka). Some of the branches of the family later took the names of these places, creating family names like Knežević, Pejačević and Čerkić.

Genealogy of the first family members edit

  • Parčija, mentioned in 1386.
  • Nikola I Parčević, son of Parčija
  • Andrija I Parčević, son of Parčija
  • Petar I Parčević, son of Andrija I, died after 1423.
  • Nikola II Parčević, son of Petar I, mentioned between 1437 and 1470.
  • Gjoni Parčević, son of Nikola II, mentioned in 1481, had sons:
  • Ivan I Parčević, mentioned in 1563
  • Stjepan Knežević
  • Tomislav "Tomo" Tomagjonović
  • Dmitar Pejačević, mentioned between 1561 and 1563. The first to call himself Pejačević.
  • Nikola I Pejačević
  • Juraj I Pejačević, baron, married Margareta Parčević.
  • Marko I Pejačević
  • Matija I Pejačević, married Agata Knežević. Died in c. 1688.
 
Coat of arms of Parčević family, ancestral house of Pejačević
 
Coat of arms of Knežević family, closely related to Pejačević

Connections with Franciscans edit

During the long period of their residence in Bulgaria, the Pejačević family was continually connected with the Franciscan order of the Province of Silver Bosnia. The Franciscan members had arrived to Bulgaria earlier, somewhere in the mid-14th century. This has been specified by Vitomir Belaj, PhD from the Faculty of Philosophy in Zagreb in his work "Act Bulgariae ecclesiastica from Father Eusebius Fermenjin as ethnologic source" published in Miscellany for the works of the scientific conference "Life and work of the father Eusebius Fermenjin" in 1998. The author has written that the catholic Franciscans had arrived from medieval Bosnia in western Bulgaria at the time of Bosnian vicar Bartul Alvernski (Bartholomew of Alverno), who himself originated from Italy, in 1366.

Contact between the ancestors of the Pejačević family and members of the Franciscan order must have been started at the very beginning, but they were intensified by the end of the 16th century, when the Catholic enclave in Chiprovtsi was visited by missionaries sent by the pope. Clement VIII (1592–1605), for example, sent to Bulgaria his visitator Petar Zlojutrić, a Bosnian Franciscan, better known as Petar Solinat (born in the town of Soli in medieval Bosnia, today's Tuzla). Solinat did not come back to Rome, but stayed in Bulgaria and in 1601 became the first Catholic bishop of the new diocese of Sofia, situated in Chiprovtsi. He succeeded in achieving permission from the Ottoman authorities to open some new Catholic monasteries, parishes and even a new school.

Pejačevićs and their related families were affiliated with Franciscans through schooling of their children or entering of their members into the Franciscan order. One of the best examples was already mentioned Petar Parčević, the Franciscan, writer and archbishop, born in Chiprovtsi and educated in Italy.

 
Remains of old Catholic cathedral of St. Mary in Chiprovtsi

Facts about Croatian origin edit

There are many facts to prove the Croatian origin of the Pejačević family. It is indisputable that a great deal of Bulgarian Catholics, especially those in the Chiprovtsi enclave and its surroundings, originated from medieval Croatian and Bosnian territory, and particularly from the Republic of Ragusa (present-day Dubrovnik). Not only the tight connection between the Bulgarian Catholics and Franciscans itself, but the organizational belonging of the monks to the Franciscan Province of Silver Bosnia prove that. There are historical documents related to Bulgarian Catholics, originating from several different regions of Bulgaria (e.g. Chiprovtsi, Sofia, Targovishte, Rakovski etc.), among which many private letters, that are written in Italian, Latin, German and Croatian language as well. Vitomir Belaj, PhD, has specified that some documents have been written in Croatian Ikavian accent, the others in Dubrovnik speech, both however influenced by the Bulgarian language. It is interesting that the language of Ragusan merchants, who had lived in Bulgaria for several generations, in some documents is called "Bosnian" and in others "Illyrian".

 
Map showing borders in 1683, prior to Great Austro-Turkish war and Chiprovtsi uprising

Chiprovtsi Uprising in 1688 edit

The Habsburg imperial army, supported by some European states, penetrated deep into the Ottoman territory in south-eastern Europe, which encouraged the Chiprovtsi Catholics in 1688 to rise up against the occupiers in order to free Bulgaria.

The leaders of the uprising were brothers Ivan and Mihail Stanislavov together with Bogdan Marinov, all ethnic Bulgarians. Đuro II (Bulgarian: Georgi; English: George) Pejačević (1655–1725), a son of Matija I, joined the leadership, too. After heavy fighting, the Ottomans managed to suppress the uprising by the end of 1688 and destroyed Chiprovtsi and neighboring villages like Klisura, Zhelezna and Kopilovtsi. The surviving inhabitants, including Đuro's brothers Marko II (Mark), Ivan (John) and probably Nikola (Nicholas), together with their families, fled to the north, until they reached the Habsburg controlled territories.

Rise of the family in Slavonia and Srijem edit

First years edit

Pejačevićs were one of the Catholic families from Chiprovtsi in Bulgaria that moved, most probably through Wallachia and Transilvania, to the Hungarian town of Pécs and soon after that to Osijek in Slavonia, a northeastern Croatian province, in the Kingdom of Hungary. Josip Bösendorfer, PhD, Croatian historian, wrote in the scientific journal "Narodna starina" (English: Folk Art Antiquities), published in 1932 in Zagreb:

Those Chiprovtsians came to Osijek from Pecs, because they escaped from Rákóczi's uprising. Hence, they occurred in the first decade of the 18th century. All the families were connected through marriages, they witnessed each other's public documents, they were godparents and marriage witnesses, and testified in court and law procedures as well.

Bösendorfer listed the families coming from Chiprovtsi that settled in Osijek, describing them and giving their family trees, in this order: Margićs, Gegićs, Stejkićs, Čerkićs, Frankolukins, Nikolantins, Lekićs, Adamovićs, Pejačevićs.

Affirmation of baronage edit

On June 10, 1712, the Holy Roman Emperor and the Croato-Hungarian King Charles III of Habsburg acknowledged the Pejačević brothers as Barons on behalf of the old title their ancestors received in Bulgaria.

 
Pejačević Castle in Virovitica, seat of Virovitica branch of the family
 
Pejačević Castle in Našice, seat of Našice branch of the family

While some family members stayed in Osijek (e.g. brothers Marko II (1664–1727) and Ivan (1666–1724)), the others settled in Srijem and Bačka, two provinces at the frontier of Croatia. In her work "Pejačević family and Virovitica", published in 2006 as a part of the Miscellany of works for the international symposium titled "725 years of Franciscans in Virovitica" (under auspices of HAZU – Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts), professor Silvija Lučevnjak, the director of Našice Heritage Museum, wrote that Đuro Pejačević left the army service in 1696 and started to work as manager of a post office in Bač district. Like his brothers, he was very skilful in commercial matters as well, and he gained more and more property. Pejačevićs traded real estates, houses, cattle and cereals, doing business up to Austria and northern Italy.

Nikola II Leopold Pejačević (1706–1732), one of Đuro's sons, became manager of the duke Odescalchi's estate in Ilok (1728–1730). In that lucrative business he had the help from his brother Đuro III and cousin Marko III Aleksandar, a son of Ivan Pejačević.

At the beginning of the 1730s, the family strongly increased its power and property. It bought estates in Orahovica and Feričanci (1730), Našice and Podgorač (1734), and soon after that (1745) a great Mitrovica estate. In 1745 Marko III Aleksandar (1694–1762) was appointed administrator of the newly formed Srijem county, and in 1751 he was announced the grand iupanus (župan) of that county.

Gaining the Virovitica estate edit

In the meantime (1747), a part of Mitrovica's demesne land had been included into the Military Frontier, so Marko III Aleksandar was given the right to buy Virovitica and Retfala estates. The rest of Mitrovica's estate in his ownership got a new district seat – Ruma.

On August 29, 1749, the Holy Roman Empress and the Croato-Hungarian Queen Maria Theresa of Habsburg-Lothringen granted the Virovitica estate to Baron Marko III Aleksandar Pejačević, and it became the most significant property of the family in the second half of the 18th century. Marko's heirs kept it for the following 92 years, until 1841.

In the time of Baron Marko, the Pejačević family achieved the largest territorial expansion and became one of the greatest landowners in Slavonia. Although he faced the serf rebellions, he was recognized for improving the economic development of the area he ran. When he died in 1762, leaving no children behind, his property was inherited by his relatives Leopold (1740–1765), a great-grandson of Đuro II, and Josip II (Joseph) of Našice (1710–1787), a son of Marko II.

Family branches edit

Considering the relative large size and territorial distribution of the family, historians have divided it into the several branches, according to the most significant assets. Hence the following branches came out: Našice branch, Virovitica branch and Ruma-Retfala branch.

 
Portrait of Count Antun Pejačević (1749–1802)
 
Portrait of Baron Marko III. Aleksandar Pejačević (1694–1762)

Našice branch edit

Našice estate was the one of the family's properties managed by Josip II Pejačević. He bought it on August 3, 1734, together with his brother Ignjat Tomo (English: Ignatius (Iggy) Thomas). He built a manor house there for his family, after he had finished his military service and returned home. Našice stayed part of the family's property for the next 211 years, until 1945. As several male members of the family died within a couple of years of each other in the 1760s, Josip inherited all their possessions, because he remained the only heir in the whole family.

After Josip's death, all of his property was divided among his children Žigmund (Sigismund; 1741–1806), Josipa Elizabeta (Josephine Elizabeth), Karlo III Ferdinand (Charles III Ferdinand; 1745–1815) and Antun (Anthony; 1749–1802).

Karlo III Ferdinand is considered the founder of the Našice branch, because he inherited the estate of the same name. By the end of 18th and the beginning of 19th century he started with preparations for construction of a new castle in Našice, with the support of his son Vincencije Ljudevit (Vincent Louis; 1780–1820). The castle was completed and furnished in 1812. Later (in 1865) it was enlarged and architecturally enriched to become a gorgeous baroque edifice.

The Našice branch of the family has its representatives today, living outside Croatia. They are interested in the return of their castles in Našice, expropriated after World War II, back in their hands.

Virovitica branch edit

As the sole heir, Josip II Pejačević took over the Virovitica estate in 1769. On July 22, 1772, the Holy Roman Empress and the Croato-Hungarian Queen Maria Theresa of Austria gave him the title of hereditary count, and since then the whole family carries the full name "Pejačević of Virovitica".

Josip was succeeded in Virovitica by his youngest son Antun, a Habsburg imperial army lieutenant field marshal with an outstanding military career. In 1800 Antun had a beautiful new castle built in the center of Virovitica, but soon he died (in 1802) and did not live to see the completion of construction.

Virovitica branch was continued by Antun's sons Antun (c. 1775 – 1838) and Stjepan (Stephen; after 1775 – 1824), who did not run the estates successfully and fell into debt. In 1841 Antun Pejačević (1810–1862), Antun's son, sold Virovitica estate and moved to Buda, Hungary. Neither he nor his brother Ivan Nepomuk Pejačević (John of Nepomuk; 1803–1855) – also living in the capital of Hungary – had any children, so this branch of the family died out. Some historians call it the Buda branch.

 
Photo of Ladislav Pejačević (1824–1901), Ban of Croatia
 
Count Petar Pejačević (1804–1887)

Ruma-Retfala branch edit

In his will, dated September 15, 1780, count Josip II Pejačević left his estates Ruma and Retfala to his eldest son Žigmund (1741–1806), who established the Ruma-Retfala branch of the family. Žigmund had only one son (Ivan Nepomuk; 1765–1821), but nine grandchildren, so his family branch expanded in the first half of the 19th century. His grandchildren either did not marry or had only female children, so the family branch ceased to exist at the beginning of the 20th century.

The most notable representative of that branch was Count Petar Pejačević (1804–1887), the eldest son of Ivan Nepomuk. He performed a lot of state and public functions, among which were the grand župan of Križevci County, grand župan of Virovitica County, grand župan of Srijem County, member of the Croatian Parliament, minister for Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia in the Hungarian government and imperial and royal chamberlain. During the turbulent period following the revolutions of 1848, he came into conflicts with the Croatian Parliament, because of his radically Hungarian nationalism-oriented attitude.

Bans (viceroys) of Croatia edit

The Pejačević family has produced a number of prominent and famous people through history, among which were the two Bans of Croatia, Ladislav /Ladislaus/ and Teodor /Theodore/.

Count Ladislav Pejačević (1824–1901) was the son of Ferdinand Karlo Rajner /Rainer/ (1800–1878), and the grandson of Karlo III Ferdinand, the founder of Našice branch. He was an influential Croatian politician, member of Croatian Parliament from the Unionist Party of Croatia and member of the delegation of Parliament that signed the Croatian-Hungarian Agreement in 1868. In 1880 Sabor – the Parliament of Croatia – elected him as Ban of Croatia, and he remained in office until 1883.

As the reincorporation of the Croatian and Slavonian Frontiers into Croatian-Slavonian Crown land was proclaimed on July 15, 1881, Ladislav Pejačević was given the task to perform it. On August 1, 1881, he took over the administration of the former Frontiers.

On August 24, 1883, he quit after the Council of ministers in Vienna concluded that bilingual Croatian-Hungarian official emblems in Croatia, installed by the Hungarian administration, should stay and were not allowed to be removed from the official buildings. He was then succeeded by Károly Khuen-Héderváry, a Hungarian political hardliner, whose reign was marked by strong Hungarization.

Count Teodor Pejačević (1855–1928), the eldest son of Ladislav Pejačević, was a long-term župan of Virovitica County and Ban of Croatia from 1903 to 1907. He also took part as the Minister for Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia in the Hungarian Government from 1913 to 1917.

 
Count Teodor Pejačević (1855–1928), Ban of Croatia
 
Countess Dora Pejačević (1885–1923), Croatian composer

At the beginning of the 20th century, he was faced with a new direction of Croatian policy marked by political alliance between Croats and Serbs in Austria-Hungary for mutual benefit. A Croat-Serb Coalition was formed in 1905 and it governed the Croatian lands from 1906 until the dissolution of the Dual Monarchy in 1918. As Teodor Pejačević supported the ruling Coalition in its resistance towards the Hungarian quest in 1907 to introduce the Hungarian language to be the official language on railways in Croatia, he was forced to resign.

Among his children, the best known is his daughter Dora, a Croatian composer.

Contemporary history of the family edit

With the arrival of communism in Eastern and Central Europe, the family was expropriated and exiled. The surviving members of the family emigrated from the Eastern Bloc to countries like Austria, Switzerland, Italy, France, Germany, Great Britain, Spain, Argentina, Uruguay, Colombia, Venezuela, and the US, where some of their relatives already had lived before.[1] With the return of democracy, family properties were returned partially to its members.[2]

Today in Croatia lives a descendant of a female line of the Pejačević family, baron Nikola Adamović of Čepin, knight and ambassador of the Order of Malta to the Republic of Croatia.  

The family members who live in Argentina are descendants of count Petar Pejačević (1908–1987), who was the second son of Marko VI (1882–1923) and the grandson of Teodor Pejačević. Marcos Pejacsevich (Osijek, 1940-), entrepreneur, president of the Argentine–Croatian Chamber of Industry and Commerce, and current head of the Argentinean branch of the family is the younger son of Petar.[3]

Ladislav (Laszlo) Pejačević, born in 1941, a member of another branch of the family who lives in Vienna, is a descendant of Petar's younger brother Geza (born in 1917).

The successors of Marko VII, the youngest brother of Petar Pejačević, who was born in 1923 in Budapest, live in Great Britain: his son Peter, born in 1954 in London, and his grandson Alexander, born in 1988.  

There are also living members of another branch of the family, who originate from Karlo IV Pejačević (1825–1880), the second son of Ferdinand Karlo Rajner and younger brother of Ladislav, ban of Croatia. Karlo's great-grandson Andrija (Andrew), born in 1910, moved to the United States of America, where he got married in 1954 in Pasadena, and where his daughter was born. The former German Minister of Defence, Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg, is a descendant of this family, through Ludwine, Countess Pejacsevich de Verocze, married to Jakob, Count of Eltz.

See also edit

Bibliography edit

  • "Archive for the Austrian History" of Austrian Academy of Sciences (Archiv für österreichische Geschichte" von der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften), 59. volume, Vienna 1880.
  • Vitomir Belaj, PhD, (Faculty of Philosophy in Zagreb): "Act Bulgariae ecclesiastica from Father Eusebius Fermenjin as ethnologic source" published in Miscellany for the works of the scientific conference "Life and work of the father Eusebius Fermenjin", Našice 1998.
  • Josip Bösendorfer, PhD, Croatian historian: "Colony of Chiprovtsians in Osijek" published in scientific journal "Narodna starina" (Folk Art Antiquities), Zagreb 1932.
  • Prof. Silvija Lučevnjak, director of Našice Heritage Museum: "Pejačević family and Virovitica" published in of the Miscellany of works for the international symposium titled "725 years of Franciscans in Virovitica" (under auspices of HAZU – Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts), Virovitica 2006.

References edit

  1. ^ Pejascevich, Marie (2005). A 20th Century Odyssey. Gopher Publishers. ISBN 905179200X.
  2. ^ Osječko-baranjska županija (2011). "Informacija o stanju, gospodarenju i zaštiti šuma na području Osječko-baranjske županije" (PDF). Osječko-baranjska županija.
  3. ^ Rey, David. "Encuentro de la diáspora croata sudamericana en Buenos Aires". La Voz de Croacia - Glas Hrvatske.

External links edit

  • Marek, Miroslav. "Pejačević family list – Czech-Hungarian version of the names". Genealogy.EU.
  • Georgi Peyachevich – one of the leaders of the Chiprovtzi uprising
  • The history of Chiprovtsi
  • Franz Xavier de Peyachevich, Jacob Peyachevich and Christopher Peikich influenced the philosophical thought in Bulgaria in the spirit of Catholic scholasticism
  • A Našice castle – transfer negotiations to the old owners

pejačević, family, house, pejačević, pejácsevich, croatian, pejačevići, serbian, Пејачевићи, hungarian, pejácsevich, pejácsevics, bulgarian, Пеячевичи, croatian, noble, family, remarkable, during, period, history, marked, ottoman, kingdom, croatia, austro, hun. The House of Pejacevic or Pejacsevich Croatian Pejacevici Serbian Peјacheviћi Hungarian Pejacsevich or Pejacsevics Bulgarian Peyachevichi is an old Croatian noble family remarkable during the period in history marked by the Ottoman war in the Kingdom of Croatia and Austro Hungarian Empire respectively Notable members of the family were politicians clerics artists senior military officers Bans viceroys of Croatia and other high state officials They were very potent and influential in the political social economic and cultural life of the country and especially distinguished in the region of Slavonia In German and Spanish the family name was sometimes rendered Pejacsevich i e a simplified variant of the Hungarian spelling Pejacevic PejacsevichParent familyParcevicCountryRepublic of RagusaFounded14th centuryFounderDmitar PejacevicTitlesBaron 1712 Count of Virovitica 1772 Connected familiesVirovitica extinct Ruma Retfala extinct Nasice present Contents 1 Family origin 2 Bulgarian period 2 1 Genealogy of the first family members 2 2 Connections with Franciscans 2 3 Facts about Croatian origin 2 4 Chiprovtsi Uprising in 1688 3 Rise of the family in Slavonia and Srijem 3 1 First years 3 2 Affirmation of baronage 3 3 Gaining the Virovitica estate 4 Family branches 4 1 Nasice branch 4 2 Virovitica branch 4 3 Ruma Retfala branch 5 Bans viceroys of Croatia 6 Contemporary history of the family 7 See also 8 Bibliography 9 References 10 External linksFamily origin editThe origin of the family dates back to the 14th century territory of southeastern Croatia and the neighbouring medieval Bosnia and Herzegovina There are sources that connect the ancestors of the family with the Bosnian king Stjepan Dabisa English Stephen Dabisha who ruled from 1391 to 1395 and his son Parcija English Parchia Parcija s descendants used to be called Parcevic Parchevich One of several family branches that came out of them later in the 16th century was the Pejacevic family The 59th volume of the Archive for the Austrian History issued by the Imperial Academy of Sciences in Vienna in 1880 includes a long chapter about Baron Petar Parcevic 1612 1674 the archbishop of Marcianople a town in eastern Bulgaria The text of that chapter is based on the researches made by Count Julijan Pejacevic 1833 1906 a chronicler of the family Despite the doubts of some historians later analyses mostly showed and confirmed that he had a history based approach and his theses had been proven This refers particularly to the research of Bulgarian historiography including those conducted by Bojan Penev and Boris Jocov in the 1920s and 1930s The research dealt with the connected families of Parcevic and Pejacevic as well as some other related families during their residence in the territory of today s Bulgaria then occupied by the Ottoman Empire Particular facts have been described in Encyclopedia Bulgaria 1981 1997 Enciklopediya Blgariya issued in Sofia in detail Bulgarian period editThe Parcevic family settled in the second half of the 14th century in Bulgaria Encyclopedia Bulgaria specifies that Parcija arrived there with his family along with Ragusan merchants The reason for that migration has not been determined with certainty but it was most probably caused by disputes and conflicts among the noblemen in southeastern Croatia and Bosnia where Parcija had his estates Having lived the first years in Veliko Tarnovo until 1399 the Parcevic family moved to the west of the country and settled in a little town named Chiprovtsi This is why some historians believe that the Pejacevic family originated from there At that time Chiprovtsi was a mining and metalsmithing centre developed by German Transylvanian Saxon miners who arrived in 13th and 14th century Ragusan merchants and Bosnian Franciscan priests came there as well They were all Roman Catholics and a mixture of nationalities and religions was created in Chiprovtsi at that time The Ottomans who conquered that region soon after that made this ethnic mixture even more various The branches of Parchevich family lived not only in Chiprovtsi but also in the neighboring villages even founding some new ones like Kneze Knezhe Pejakovo or Pejacevo Pe yachevo and Cerka Cherka Some of the branches of the family later took the names of these places creating family names like Knezevic Pejacevic and Cerkic Genealogy of the first family members edit Parcija mentioned in 1386 Nikola I Parcevic son of Parcija Andrija I Parcevic son of ParcijaPetar I Parcevic son of Andrija I died after 1423 Nikola II Parcevic son of Petar I mentioned between 1437 and 1470 Gjoni Parcevic son of Nikola II mentioned in 1481 had sons Ivan I Parcevic mentioned in 1563 Stjepan Knezevic Tomislav Tomo Tomagjonovic Dmitar Pejacevic mentioned between 1561 and 1563 The first to call himself Pejacevic Nikola I PejacevicJuraj I Pejacevic baron married Margareta Parcevic Marko I Pejacevic Matija I Pejacevic married Agata Knezevic Died in c 1688 dd dd dd dd dd dd dd nbsp Coat of arms of Parcevic family ancestral house of Pejacevic nbsp Coat of arms of Knezevic family closely related to PejacevicConnections with Franciscans edit During the long period of their residence in Bulgaria the Pejacevic family was continually connected with the Franciscan order of the Province of Silver Bosnia The Franciscan members had arrived to Bulgaria earlier somewhere in the mid 14th century This has been specified by Vitomir Belaj PhD from the Faculty of Philosophy in Zagreb in his work Act Bulgariae ecclesiastica from Father Eusebius Fermenjin as ethnologic source published in Miscellany for the works of the scientific conference Life and work of the father Eusebius Fermenjin in 1998 The author has written that the catholic Franciscans had arrived from medieval Bosnia in western Bulgaria at the time of Bosnian vicar Bartul Alvernski Bartholomew of Alverno who himself originated from Italy in 1366 Contact between the ancestors of the Pejacevic family and members of the Franciscan order must have been started at the very beginning but they were intensified by the end of the 16th century when the Catholic enclave in Chiprovtsi was visited by missionaries sent by the pope Clement VIII 1592 1605 for example sent to Bulgaria his visitator Petar Zlojutric a Bosnian Franciscan better known as Petar Solinat born in the town of Soli in medieval Bosnia today s Tuzla Solinat did not come back to Rome but stayed in Bulgaria and in 1601 became the first Catholic bishop of the new diocese of Sofia situated in Chiprovtsi He succeeded in achieving permission from the Ottoman authorities to open some new Catholic monasteries parishes and even a new school Pejacevics and their related families were affiliated with Franciscans through schooling of their children or entering of their members into the Franciscan order One of the best examples was already mentioned Petar Parcevic the Franciscan writer and archbishop born in Chiprovtsi and educated in Italy nbsp Remains of old Catholic cathedral of St Mary in ChiprovtsiFacts about Croatian origin edit There are many facts to prove the Croatian origin of the Pejacevic family It is indisputable that a great deal of Bulgarian Catholics especially those in the Chiprovtsi enclave and its surroundings originated from medieval Croatian and Bosnian territory and particularly from the Republic of Ragusa present day Dubrovnik Not only the tight connection between the Bulgarian Catholics and Franciscans itself but the organizational belonging of the monks to the Franciscan Province of Silver Bosnia prove that There are historical documents related to Bulgarian Catholics originating from several different regions of Bulgaria e g Chiprovtsi Sofia Targovishte Rakovski etc among which many private letters that are written in Italian Latin German and Croatian language as well Vitomir Belaj PhD has specified that some documents have been written in Croatian Ikavian accent the others in Dubrovnik speech both however influenced by the Bulgarian language It is interesting that the language of Ragusan merchants who had lived in Bulgaria for several generations in some documents is called Bosnian and in others Illyrian nbsp Map showing borders in 1683 prior to Great Austro Turkish war and Chiprovtsi uprisingChiprovtsi Uprising in 1688 edit The Habsburg imperial army supported by some European states penetrated deep into the Ottoman territory in south eastern Europe which encouraged the Chiprovtsi Catholics in 1688 to rise up against the occupiers in order to free Bulgaria The leaders of the uprising were brothers Ivan and Mihail Stanislavov together with Bogdan Marinov all ethnic Bulgarians Đuro II Bulgarian Georgi English George Pejacevic 1655 1725 a son of Matija I joined the leadership too After heavy fighting the Ottomans managed to suppress the uprising by the end of 1688 and destroyed Chiprovtsi and neighboring villages like Klisura Zhelezna and Kopilovtsi The surviving inhabitants including Đuro s brothers Marko II Mark Ivan John and probably Nikola Nicholas together with their families fled to the north until they reached the Habsburg controlled territories Rise of the family in Slavonia and Srijem editFirst years editPejacevics were one of the Catholic families from Chiprovtsi in Bulgaria that moved most probably through Wallachia and Transilvania to the Hungarian town of Pecs and soon after that to Osijek in Slavonia a northeastern Croatian province in the Kingdom of Hungary Josip Bosendorfer PhD Croatian historian wrote in the scientific journal Narodna starina English Folk Art Antiquities published in 1932 in Zagreb Those Chiprovtsians came to Osijek from Pecs because they escaped from Rakoczi s uprising Hence they occurred in the first decade of the 18th century All the families were connected through marriages they witnessed each other s public documents they were godparents and marriage witnesses and testified in court and law procedures as well Bosendorfer listed the families coming from Chiprovtsi that settled in Osijek describing them and giving their family trees in this order Margics Gegics Stejkics Cerkics Frankolukins Nikolantins Lekics Adamovics Pejacevics Affirmation of baronage edit On June 10 1712 the Holy Roman Emperor and the Croato Hungarian King Charles III of Habsburg acknowledged the Pejacevic brothers as Barons on behalf of the old title their ancestors received in Bulgaria nbsp Pejacevic Castle in Virovitica seat of Virovitica branch of the family nbsp Pejacevic Castle in Nasice seat of Nasice branch of the familyWhile some family members stayed in Osijek e g brothers Marko II 1664 1727 and Ivan 1666 1724 the others settled in Srijem and Backa two provinces at the frontier of Croatia In her work Pejacevic family and Virovitica published in 2006 as a part of the Miscellany of works for the international symposium titled 725 years of Franciscans in Virovitica under auspices of HAZU Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts professor Silvija Lucevnjak the director of Nasice Heritage Museum wrote that Đuro Pejacevic left the army service in 1696 and started to work as manager of a post office in Bac district Like his brothers he was very skilful in commercial matters as well and he gained more and more property Pejacevics traded real estates houses cattle and cereals doing business up to Austria and northern Italy Nikola II Leopold Pejacevic 1706 1732 one of Đuro s sons became manager of the duke Odescalchi s estate in Ilok 1728 1730 In that lucrative business he had the help from his brother Đuro III and cousin Marko III Aleksandar a son of Ivan Pejacevic At the beginning of the 1730s the family strongly increased its power and property It bought estates in Orahovica and Fericanci 1730 Nasice and Podgorac 1734 and soon after that 1745 a great Mitrovica estate In 1745 Marko III Aleksandar 1694 1762 was appointed administrator of the newly formed Srijem county and in 1751 he was announced the grand iupanus zupan of that county Gaining the Virovitica estate edit In the meantime 1747 a part of Mitrovica s demesne land had been included into the Military Frontier so Marko III Aleksandar was given the right to buy Virovitica and Retfala estates The rest of Mitrovica s estate in his ownership got a new district seat Ruma On August 29 1749 the Holy Roman Empress and the Croato Hungarian Queen Maria Theresa of Habsburg Lothringen granted the Virovitica estate to Baron Marko III Aleksandar Pejacevic and it became the most significant property of the family in the second half of the 18th century Marko s heirs kept it for the following 92 years until 1841 In the time of Baron Marko the Pejacevic family achieved the largest territorial expansion and became one of the greatest landowners in Slavonia Although he faced the serf rebellions he was recognized for improving the economic development of the area he ran When he died in 1762 leaving no children behind his property was inherited by his relatives Leopold 1740 1765 a great grandson of Đuro II and Josip II Joseph of Nasice 1710 1787 a son of Marko II Family branches editConsidering the relative large size and territorial distribution of the family historians have divided it into the several branches according to the most significant assets Hence the following branches came out Nasice branch Virovitica branch and Ruma Retfala branch nbsp Portrait of Count Antun Pejacevic 1749 1802 nbsp Portrait of Baron Marko III Aleksandar Pejacevic 1694 1762 Nasice branch edit Nasice estate was the one of the family s properties managed by Josip II Pejacevic He bought it on August 3 1734 together with his brother Ignjat Tomo English Ignatius Iggy Thomas He built a manor house there for his family after he had finished his military service and returned home Nasice stayed part of the family s property for the next 211 years until 1945 As several male members of the family died within a couple of years of each other in the 1760s Josip inherited all their possessions because he remained the only heir in the whole family After Josip s death all of his property was divided among his children Zigmund Sigismund 1741 1806 Josipa Elizabeta Josephine Elizabeth Karlo III Ferdinand Charles III Ferdinand 1745 1815 and Antun Anthony 1749 1802 Karlo III Ferdinand is considered the founder of the Nasice branch because he inherited the estate of the same name By the end of 18th and the beginning of 19th century he started with preparations for construction of a new castle in Nasice with the support of his son Vincencije Ljudevit Vincent Louis 1780 1820 The castle was completed and furnished in 1812 Later in 1865 it was enlarged and architecturally enriched to become a gorgeous baroque edifice The Nasice branch of the family has its representatives today living outside Croatia They are interested in the return of their castles in Nasice expropriated after World War II back in their hands Virovitica branch edit As the sole heir Josip II Pejacevic took over the Virovitica estate in 1769 On July 22 1772 the Holy Roman Empress and the Croato Hungarian Queen Maria Theresa of Austria gave him the title of hereditary count and since then the whole family carries the full name Pejacevic of Virovitica Josip was succeeded in Virovitica by his youngest son Antun a Habsburg imperial army lieutenant field marshal with an outstanding military career In 1800 Antun had a beautiful new castle built in the center of Virovitica but soon he died in 1802 and did not live to see the completion of construction Virovitica branch was continued by Antun s sons Antun c 1775 1838 and Stjepan Stephen after 1775 1824 who did not run the estates successfully and fell into debt In 1841 Antun Pejacevic 1810 1862 Antun s son sold Virovitica estate and moved to Buda Hungary Neither he nor his brother Ivan Nepomuk Pejacevic John of Nepomuk 1803 1855 also living in the capital of Hungary had any children so this branch of the family died out Some historians call it the Buda branch nbsp Photo of Ladislav Pejacevic 1824 1901 Ban of Croatia nbsp Count Petar Pejacevic 1804 1887 Ruma Retfala branch edit In his will dated September 15 1780 count Josip II Pejacevic left his estates Ruma and Retfala to his eldest son Zigmund 1741 1806 who established the Ruma Retfala branch of the family Zigmund had only one son Ivan Nepomuk 1765 1821 but nine grandchildren so his family branch expanded in the first half of the 19th century His grandchildren either did not marry or had only female children so the family branch ceased to exist at the beginning of the 20th century The most notable representative of that branch was Count Petar Pejacevic 1804 1887 the eldest son of Ivan Nepomuk He performed a lot of state and public functions among which were the grand zupan of Krizevci County grand zupan of Virovitica County grand zupan of Srijem County member of the Croatian Parliament minister for Croatia Slavonia and Dalmatia in the Hungarian government and imperial and royal chamberlain During the turbulent period following the revolutions of 1848 he came into conflicts with the Croatian Parliament because of his radically Hungarian nationalism oriented attitude Bans viceroys of Croatia editThe Pejacevic family has produced a number of prominent and famous people through history among which were the two Bans of Croatia Ladislav Ladislaus and Teodor Theodore Count Ladislav Pejacevic 1824 1901 was the son of Ferdinand Karlo Rajner Rainer 1800 1878 and the grandson of Karlo III Ferdinand the founder of Nasice branch He was an influential Croatian politician member of Croatian Parliament from the Unionist Party of Croatia and member of the delegation of Parliament that signed the Croatian Hungarian Agreement in 1868 In 1880 Sabor the Parliament of Croatia elected him as Ban of Croatia and he remained in office until 1883 As the reincorporation of the Croatian and Slavonian Frontiers into Croatian Slavonian Crown land was proclaimed on July 15 1881 Ladislav Pejacevic was given the task to perform it On August 1 1881 he took over the administration of the former Frontiers On August 24 1883 he quit after the Council of ministers in Vienna concluded that bilingual Croatian Hungarian official emblems in Croatia installed by the Hungarian administration should stay and were not allowed to be removed from the official buildings He was then succeeded by Karoly Khuen Hedervary a Hungarian political hardliner whose reign was marked by strong Hungarization Count Teodor Pejacevic 1855 1928 the eldest son of Ladislav Pejacevic was a long term zupan of Virovitica County and Ban of Croatia from 1903 to 1907 He also took part as the Minister for Croatia Slavonia and Dalmatia in the Hungarian Government from 1913 to 1917 nbsp Count Teodor Pejacevic 1855 1928 Ban of Croatia nbsp Countess Dora Pejacevic 1885 1923 Croatian composerAt the beginning of the 20th century he was faced with a new direction of Croatian policy marked by political alliance between Croats and Serbs in Austria Hungary for mutual benefit A Croat Serb Coalition was formed in 1905 and it governed the Croatian lands from 1906 until the dissolution of the Dual Monarchy in 1918 As Teodor Pejacevic supported the ruling Coalition in its resistance towards the Hungarian quest in 1907 to introduce the Hungarian language to be the official language on railways in Croatia he was forced to resign Among his children the best known is his daughter Dora a Croatian composer Contemporary history of the family editWith the arrival of communism in Eastern and Central Europe the family was expropriated and exiled The surviving members of the family emigrated from the Eastern Bloc to countries like Austria Switzerland Italy France Germany Great Britain Spain Argentina Uruguay Colombia Venezuela and the US where some of their relatives already had lived before 1 With the return of democracy family properties were returned partially to its members 2 Today in Croatia lives a descendant of a female line of the Pejacevic family baron Nikola Adamovic of Cepin knight and ambassador of the Order of Malta to the Republic of Croatia The family members who live in Argentina are descendants of count Petar Pejacevic 1908 1987 who was the second son of Marko VI 1882 1923 and the grandson of Teodor Pejacevic Marcos Pejacsevich Osijek 1940 entrepreneur president of the Argentine Croatian Chamber of Industry and Commerce and current head of the Argentinean branch of the family is the younger son of Petar 3 Ladislav Laszlo Pejacevic born in 1941 a member of another branch of the family who lives in Vienna is a descendant of Petar s younger brother Geza born in 1917 The successors of Marko VII the youngest brother of Petar Pejacevic who was born in 1923 in Budapest live in Great Britain his son Peter born in 1954 in London and his grandson Alexander born in 1988 There are also living members of another branch of the family who originate from Karlo IV Pejacevic 1825 1880 the second son of Ferdinand Karlo Rajner and younger brother of Ladislav ban of Croatia Karlo s great grandson Andrija Andrew born in 1910 moved to the United States of America where he got married in 1954 in Pasadena and where his daughter was born The former German Minister of Defence Karl Theodor zu Guttenberg is a descendant of this family through Ludwine Countess Pejacsevich de Verocze married to Jakob Count of Eltz See also editBans viceroys of Croatia History of Croatia Croatian nobility Ladislav Pejacevic Teodor Pejacevic Dora Pejacevic List of titled noble families in the Kingdom of Hungary NasiceBibliography edit Archive for the Austrian History of Austrian Academy of Sciences Archiv fur osterreichische Geschichte von der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften 59 volume Vienna 1880 Vitomir Belaj PhD Faculty of Philosophy in Zagreb Act Bulgariae ecclesiastica from Father Eusebius Fermenjin as ethnologic source published in Miscellany for the works of the scientific conference Life and work of the father Eusebius Fermenjin Nasice 1998 Josip Bosendorfer PhD Croatian historian Colony of Chiprovtsians in Osijek published in scientific journal Narodna starina Folk Art Antiquities Zagreb 1932 Prof Silvija Lucevnjak director of Nasice Heritage Museum Pejacevic family and Virovitica published in of the Miscellany of works for the international symposium titled 725 years of Franciscans in Virovitica under auspices of HAZU Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts Virovitica 2006 References edit Pejascevich Marie 2005 A 20th Century Odyssey Gopher Publishers ISBN 905179200X Osjecko baranjska zupanija 2011 Informacija o stanju gospodarenju i zastiti suma na podrucju Osjecko baranjske zupanije PDF Osjecko baranjska zupanija Rey David Encuentro de la diaspora croata sudamericana en Buenos Aires La Voz de Croacia Glas Hrvatske External links editMarek Miroslav Pejacevic family list Czech Hungarian version of the names Genealogy EU Pejacevic one of the distinguished noble families of Podravina a region in Croatia Georgi Peyachevich one of the leaders of the Chiprovtzi uprising Photos of some family members Pejacevic family in Nasice The history of Chiprovtsi Franz Xavier de Peyachevich Jacob Peyachevich and Christopher Peikich influenced the philosophical thought in Bulgaria in the spirit of Catholic scholasticism Two Pejacevic castles in Nasice A Nasice castle transfer negotiations to the old owners Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pejacevic family amp oldid 1149936748, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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