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Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia

The Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia (Croatian: Kraljevina Hrvatska i Slavonija; Hungarian: Horvát-Szlavónország or Horvát–Szlavón Királyság; Austrian German: Königreich Kroatien und Slawonien) was a nominally autonomous kingdom and constitutionally defined separate political nation[9][10] within the Austro-Hungarian Empire. It was created in 1868 by merging the kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia following the Croatian–Hungarian Settlement of 1868. It was associated with the Kingdom of Hungary within the dual Austro-Hungarian state, being within the Lands of the Crown of St. Stephen, also known as Transleithania. While Croatia had been granted a wide internal autonomy with "national features", in reality, Croatian control over key issues such as tax and military issues was minimal and hampered by Hungary.[11][12] It was internally officially referred to as the Triune Kingdom of Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia,[13][14] also simply known as the Triune Kingdom, and had claims on Dalmatia, which was administrated separately by the Austrian Cisleithania.[15] The city of Rijeka, following a disputed section in the 1868 Settlement known as the Rijeka Addendum [hr], became a corpus separatum and was legally owned by Hungary, but administrated by both Croatia and Hungary.

Kingdom of Croatia and Slavonia
Kraljevina Hrvatska i Slavonija (Croatian)
Краљевина Хрватска и Славонија (Serbian)
Horvát–Szlavón Királyság (Hungarian)
Königreich Kroatien und Slawonien (German)
1868–1918
Anthem: Gott erhalte Franz den Kaiser
God Save Emperor Francis
Croatia-Slavonia (number 17) within Austria-Hungary
StatusConstituent kingdom within Austria-Hungary
(part of the Lands of the Crown of St Stephen)
CapitalZagreb
Official languagesCroatian[1][2][3][4][5]
Religion
Roman Catholic
GovernmentConstitutional parliamentary monarchy
King 
• 1868–1916
Franz Joseph I
• 1916–1918
Karl IV
Ban 
• 1868–1871 (first)
Levin Rauch de Nyék
• 1917–1918 (last)
Antun Mihalović
LegislatureParliament
Historical eraNew Imperialism • WWI
26 September 1868
• Incorporation of parts of the Military Frontier
15 July 1881
29 October 1918
Area
1910[6]42,541 km2 (16,425 sq mi)
Population
• 1880[7]
1,892,499
• 1910[8]
2,621,954
Currency
Today part ofCroatia
Serbia

The Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia was ruled by the emperor of Austria, who bore the title King of Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia and was confirmed by the State Sabor (Parliament of Croatia-Slavonia or Croatian-Slavonian Diet) upon accession.[16] The King's appointed steward was the ban of Croatia and Slavonia. On 21 October 1918, Emperor Karl I, known as King Karlo IV in Croatia, issued a Trialist manifest, which was ratified by the Hungarian side on the next day and which unified all Croatian Crown Lands.[17] One week later, on 29 October 1918, the Croatian State Sabor proclaimed an independent kingdom which entered the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs.

Name

 
Ivan Mažuranić, Ban (viceroy) of the Triune Kingdom of Croatia (in office 1873–1880)

The kingdom used the formal title of the Triune Kingdom of Croatia, Slavonia, and Dalmatia, thereby pressing its claim on the Kingdom of Dalmatia. But Dalmatia was a Kronland within the imperial Austrian part of Austria-Hungary (also known as Cisleithania). The claim was, for most of the time, supported by the Hungarian government, which backed the Croatia–Slavonia in an effort to increase its share of the dual state. The union between the two primarily Croatian lands of Austria-Hungary never took place, however.[18] According to the Article 53 of the Croatian–Hungarian Agreement, governing Croatia's political status in the Hungarian-ruled part of Austria-Hungary, the ban's official title was "Ban of Kingdom of Dalmatia, Croatia and Slavonia".[19][20][21] Not only would different parts of the Monarchy at the same time use different styles of the titles, but even the same institutions would at the same time use different naming standards for the same institution. For instance, when the Imperial and Royal Court in Vienna would list the Croatian Ban as one of the Great Officers of State in the Kingdom of Hungary (Barones Regni),[22] the style used would be Regnorum Croatiae, Dalmatiae et Slavoniae Banus, but when the Court would list the highest officials of the Kingdom of Croatia and Slavonia, the title would be styled as "Ban of Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia" (putting Slavonia before Dalmatia and omitting "Kingdom").[23] The laws passed in Croatia–Slavonia used the phrase "Kingdom of Dalmatia, Croatia and Slavonia".[24]

In Hungarian, Croatia is referred to as Horvátország and Slavonia as Szlavónia. The combined polity was known by the official name of Horvát-Szlavón Királyság. The short form of the name was Horvát-Szlavónország and, less frequently Horvát-Tótország.[25][26]

The order of mentioning Dalmatia was a contentious issue, as it was ordered differently in the Croatian- and Hungarian-language versions of the 1868 Settlement.[27]

History

The Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia was created in 1868, when the former kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia were joined into one single kingdom (the full civil administration was introduced in the Kingdom of Slavonia in 1745 and it was, as one of the Lands of the Crown of St. Stephen, administratively included into both Kingdom of Croatia and Kingdom of Hungary, but it existed virtually until 1868). The Croatian parliament, elected in a questionable manner, confirmed the subordination of Croatia–Slavonia to Hungary in 1868 with signing of Hungarian–Croatian union constitution called the Nagodba (Croatian–Hungarian Settlement, known also as Croatian–Hungarian Agreement or Hungarian–Croatian Compromise of 1868).[28] This kingdom included parts of present-day Croatia and Serbia (eastern part of Syrmia).

After the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867 the only remaining open question of the new state was the status of Croatia, which would be solved with the Hungarian–Croatian Compromise of 1868 when agreement was reached between the Parliament of Hungary on one hand and the Parliament of Croatia–Slavonia on the other hand, with regard to the composition by a joint enactment of the constitutional questions at issue between them.[29] Settlement reached between Hungary and Croatia was in Croatian version of the Settlement named "The Settlement between Kingdom of Hungary, united with Erdély on the one side and the Kingdoms of Dalmatia, Croatia and Slavonia".[30] In the Hungarian version[31] neither Hungary, nor Croatia, Dalmatia and Slavonia are styled kingdoms, and Erdély is not even mentioned, while Settlement is named as the Settlement between Parliament of Hungary and Parliament of Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia. Both versions received Royal sanction and both as such became fundamental laws of the state with constitutional importance, pursuant to article 69. and 70. of the Settlement.

With this compromise the parliament of personal union[32] (in which Croatia–Slavonia had only twenty-nine, after 1881 – forty deputies) controlled the military, the financial system, Sea (Maritime) Law, Commercial Law, the law of Bills of Exchange and Mining Law, and generally matters of commerce, customs, telegraphs, Post Office, railways, harbours, shipping, and those roads and rivers which jointly concern Hungary and Croatia–Slavonia.[29]

Similarly to these affairs, trade matters including hawking, likewise with regard to societies which do not exist for public gain, and also with regard to passports, frontier police, citizenship and naturalization, the legislation was joint, but the executive in respect of these affairs was reserved to Kingdom of Croatia–Slavonia.[29] The citizenship was named "Hungarian–Croatian citizenship" in Croatia–Slavonia.[33] In the end, fifty-five per cent of the total income of Croatia–Slavonia were assigned to the Joint Treasury ("Joint Hungarian–Croatian Ministry of Finance").

The kingdom existed until 1918 when it joined the newly formed State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs, which together with the Kingdom of Serbia formed the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. The new Serb–Croat–Slovene Kingdom was divided into counties between 1918 and 1922 and into oblasts between 1922 and 1929. With the formation of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1929, most of the territory of the former Kingdom of Croatia–Slavonia became a part of the Sava Banate and in 1939 autonomous Croatian Banate (Banovina of Croatia).

Government and politics

Political status

← common emperor-king, common ministries


← entities


← partner states

The Austro–Hungarian Compromise (Ausgleich) of 1867 created the Dual Monarchy. Under the Compromise, Austria and Hungary each had separate parliaments (the Imperial Council and the Diet of Hungary) that passed and maintained separate laws. Each region had its own government, headed by its own prime minister. The "common monarchy" consisted of the emperor-king and the common ministers of foreign affairs, defense and finance in Vienna. The Compromise confirmed Croatia–Slavonia's historic, eight-centuries-old relationship with Hungary and perpetuated the division of the Croat lands, for both Dalmatia and Istria remained under Austrian administration (as Kingdom of Dalmatia and Margraviate of Istria).[34]

At Franz Joseph's insistence, Hungary and Croatia reached the Compromise (or Nagodba in Croatian) in 1868, giving the Croats a special status in Hungary. The agreement granted the Croats autonomy over their internal affairs. The Croatian Ban would now be nominated by the joint Croatian–Hungarian government led by the Hungarian Prime Minister, and appointed by the king. Areas of "common" concern to Hungarians and Croats included finance, currency matters, commercial policy, the post office, and the railroad. Croatian became the official language of Croatia's government, and Croatian representatives discussing "common" affairs before the Croatian–Hungarian diet were permitted to speak Croatian.[35] A ministry of Croatian Affairs was created within the Hungarian government.[36]

Although the Nagodba provided a measure of political autonomy to Croatia–Slavonia, it was subordinated politically and economically to Hungary in the Croatian–Hungarian entity of the Monarchy.[34]

 
Royal Bans Standard of Levin Rauch, the first Ban of Croatia–Slavonia (1868–1871)
 
Sculpture symbolizing the Triune Kingdom of Croatia, Zagreb

Parliament

The Croatian Parliament or the Royal Croatian–Slavonian–Dalmatian Sabor (Croatian: Kraljevski Hrvatsko–slavonsko–dalmatinski sabor or Sabor Kraljevina Hrvatske, Slavonije i Dalmacije) had legislative authority over the autonomous issues according to the Croatian–Hungarian Settlement of 1868. A draft law (bill), approved by the Diet, became a statute (an act) after the royal assent (sanction). It also had to be signed by the Ban. The King had the power to veto all legislation passed by the Diet and also to dissolve it and call new elections. If the King dissolved the Diet, he would have to call new elections during the period of three months.

The parliament was summoned annually at Zagreb by the King or by the King especially appointed commissioner (usually the Ban). It was unicameral, but alongside 88 elected deputies (in 1888), 44 ex officio members were Croatian and Slavonian high nobility (male princes, counts and barons – similar to hereditary peers – over the age of 24 who paid at least 1,000 florins a year land tax), high dignitaries of the Roman Catholic, Greek Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches and supreme county prefects (veliki župani) of all Croatian–Slavonian counties. Legislative term was three years, after 1887 – five years.

The Croatian Parliament elected twenty-nine (after reincorporation of Croatian Military Frontier and Slavonian Military Frontier in 1881 – forty) deputies to the House of Representatives and two members (after 1881 – three) to the House of Magnates of the Diet of Hungary. The delegates of Croatia–Slavonia were allowed to use Croatian in the proceedings, but they voted personally.

The Kingdom of Croatia–Slavonia held independent elections for the Croatian Parliament in 1865, 1867, 1871, 1872, 1878, 1881, 1883, 1884, 1887, 1892, 1897, 1901, 1906, 1908, 1910, 1911, 1913.

Main political parties represented in the Parliament were People's Party (People's Liberal Party), Independent People's Party (after 1880), Croatian-Hungarian Party (People's (National) Constitutional Party or Unionist Party) (1868–1873), Party of Rights, Pure Party of Rights (after 1895), Starčević's Party of Rights (after 1908), Serb Independent Party (after 1881), Croatian Peoples' Peasant Party (after 1904), Croat-Serb Coalition (after 1905) etc.

Autonomous Government

The Autonomous Government or Land Government, officially "Royal Croatian–Slavonian–Dalmatian Land Government"(Croatian: Zemaljska vlada or Kraljevska hrvatsko–slavonsko–dalmatinska zemaljska vlada)[37] was established in 1869 with its seat in Zagreb (Croatian Parliament Act No. II of 1869).[38] Until 1914 it possessed three departments:

  • Department of Internal Affairs (Croatian: Odjel za unutarnje poslove);
  • Department of Religion and Education (Croatian: Odjel za bogoštovlje i nastavu);
  • Department of Justice (Croatian: Odjel za pravosuđe).
  • The Department of National Economy was established in 1914 as a fourth department (Croatian: Odjel za narodno gospodarstvo)[34]

At the head of the Autonomous Government in Croatia–Slavonia stood the Ban, who was responsible to the Croatian–Slavonian–Dalmatian Diet.[39]

Ban (Prime Minister and Viceroy)

 
Banski dvori (Ban's Court), the palace of the Ban of Croatia, in Zagreb, today the seat of the Croatian Government

The Ban was appointed by the King, on the proposal and under the counter-signature of the Joint Hungarian minister-president.[39]

List of bans (viceroys) from 1868 until 1918:

Law

The supreme court of the Kingdom of Croatia and Slavonia was the Table of Seven in Zagreb ("Table of Septemvirs" or "Court of Seven"; Croatian: Stol sedmorice, Latin: Tabula Septemviralis), while the second-level court (court of appeal) was the Ban's Table or Ban's Court (Croatian: Banski stol, Latin: Tabula Banalis) in Zagreb.[40]

After the judicial reorganization of 1874 – 1886 (complete separation of judicial and administrative power, laws on judges' independence and judicial organization, the Organization of Courts of the First Instance Act of 1874 (with 1886 amendments), the Judicial Power Act of 1874 and the Judges' Disciplinary Responsibility (etc.) Act of 1874, the Croatian Criminal Procedure Act of 1875, the Croatian Criminal Procedure Press Offences Act of 1875) and reincorporation of Croatian Military Frontier and Slavonian Military Frontier in 1881; courts of first instance became 9 royal court tables with collegiate judgeships (Croatian: kraljevski sudbeni stolovi in Zagreb, Varaždin, Bjelovar, Petrinja, Gospić, Ogulin, Požega, Osijek and Mitrovica; criminal and major civil jurisdiction; all of which had been former county courts and Land Court/Royal County Court Table in Zagreb), approximately 63 royal district courts with single judges (Croatian: kraljevski kotarski sudovi; mainly civil and misdemeanor jurisdiction; former district administrative and judicial offices and city courts) and local courts (Croatian: mjesni sudovi), also with single judges, which were established in each municipality and city according to the Local Courts and Local Courts Procedure Act of 1875 as special tribunals for minor civil cases. The Royal Court Table in Zagreb was also a jury court for press offences. Judges were appointed by the king, but their independence was legally guaranteed.[41]

Counties

 
Counties of Croatia-Slavonia within Austria-Hungary

In 1886, under Croatian ban Dragutin Khuen-Héderváry, Croatia–Slavonia was divided into eight counties (županije, known as comitatus):[42]

  1. Modruš-Rijeka County
  2. Zagreb County
  3. Varaždin County
  4. Bjelovar-Križevci County
  5. Virovitica County
  6. Požega County
  7. Srijem County
  8. Lika-Krbava County

Lika-Krbava became a county after the incorporation of the Croatian Military Frontier into Croatia–Slavonia in 1881.[42] The counties were subsequently divided into a total of 77 districts (Croatian: kotari, similar to Austrian Bezirke) as governmental units. Cities (gradovi) and municipalities (općine) were local authorities.

Symbols

Flag

 
 
 
Left: The flag with the coat of arms used internally "for autonomic affairs" by decree of the viceroy. It was officially prescribed to be crowned with the Crown of St. Stephen, but often used an alternate design, as depicted here.[43][44]
Center: The official, but less common, flag with the coat of arms, topped with the crown of St. Stephen[45][46]Right: The flag without the coat of arms was the civil flag that was also used outside of the Kingdom.[44]

According to the 1868 Agreement and the Decree No. 18.307 of 16 November 1867 of the Department of the Interior of the Royal Country Government:

The red–white–blue tricolor is the civil flag in the Kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia, which with the united coat of arms of Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia with the crown of St. Stephen on top is the official flag for usage in autonomous affairs. The aforementioned civil flag may be used by everyone in an appropriate way.[47]

It was also stated that the emblem for "joint affairs of the territories of the Hungarian Crown" is formed by the united Coat of Arms of Hungary and Dalmatia, Croatia and Slavonia.[48][49]

However, there existed several variations of the internally used version of the flag, with some variants using an unofficial type of crown or simply omitting the crown instead of using the officially prescribed Hungarian Crown of St. Stephen. There were also variations in the design of the shield. The unofficial Coat of Arms was the preferred design and its widespread use was the reason that the Ban issued a Decree on 21 November 1914, stating that it had become "a custom in the Kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia to use flags that are not adequate either in state-juridical or in political sense" and which strengthened flag related laws. It reiterated the aforementioned definitions of Croatian flags from 1867 and further stated that "Police authorities shall punish violations of this Decree with a fine of 2 to 200 K or with arrest from 6 hours to 14 days and confiscate the unauthorized flag or emblem."[47][50]

Coat of arms

Demographics

Nationality

1910 National Census of Croatia-Slavonia[8]
Nationality Population Percentage
Total 2,621,954 100.0%
Croats 1,638,354 62.5%
Serbs 644,955 24.6%
Germans 134,078 5.0%
Hungarians 105,948 4.1%
Others 98,619 3.8%

Religion

Data taken from the 1910 census.[8]

Literacy

According to the 1910 census, illiteracy rate in Kingdom of Croatia–Slavonia was 45.9%. The lowest illiteracy was in Zagreb, Osijek and Zemun.

Illiteracy rates of Kingdom of Croatia–Slavonia 1880–1910[52]
Year Total illiteracy Males Females Total population
1880 73.9% 67.8% 79.9% 1,892,449
1890 66.9% 60.1% 73.5% 2,186,410
1900 54.4% 46.8% 61.8% 2,416,304
1910 45.9% 37.6% 53.7% 2,621,954

Military

 
Memorial to Croatian soldiers who fought in World War I

The Croatian Home Guard was the military of the Kingdom. Additionally, Croats made up 5 percent of members in the Austro-Hungarian Common Army, a higher proportion than the percentage of the general population of the empire they composed.[53] Notable Croatians in the Austro-Hungarian Army included Field Marshal Svetozar Boroević, commander of the Imperial and Royal Aviation Troops Emil Uzelac, commander of the Austro-Hungarian Navy Maximilian Njegovan and Josip Broz Tito who later became Marshal and President of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.[54]

Culture

The modern University of Zagreb was founded in 1874. The Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts and Matica hrvatska were the main cultural institutions in the kingdom. In 1911 the main cultural institution in the Kingdom of Dalmatia, Matica dalmatinska, merged with Matica hrvatska. Vijenac was one of the most important cultural magazines in the kingdom. The building of the Croatian National Theatre in Zagreb was opened in 1895. The Croatian National Theatre in Osijek was established in 1907. The Sisters of Charity Hospital in Zagreb was the first established in the kingdom.

Religion

Catholic Church

Roughly 75% of the population were Roman Catholic, with the remaining 25% Orthodox. The Catholic Church had the following hierarchy within the kingdom:

Dioceses Croatian name Est. Cathedral
Archdiocese of Zagreb Zagrebačka nadbiskupija 1093 Zagreb Cathedral
Eparchy of Križevci (Greek-Catholic) Križevačka biskupija (Križevačka eparhija) 1777 Cathedral of the Holy Trinity in Križevci
Diocese of Srijem Srijemska biskupija 4th century Cathedral of St. Peter and St. Paul in Đakovo
Diocese of Senj-Modruš Senjsko-modruška biskupija 1168 Cathedral of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Senj

Judaism

In 1890, there were 17,261 Jews living in the kingdom. In 1867 the Zagreb Synagogue was built.

Transportation

The first railway line opened in the kingdom was the Zidani MostZagrebSisak route which began operations in 1862. The ZaprešićVaraždinČakovec line was opened in 1886 and the VinkovciOsijek line was opened in 1910.

Sports

The Croatian Sports Association was formed in 1909 with Franjo Bučar as its president. While Austria-Hungary had competed in the modern Olympics since the inaugural games in 1896, the Austrian Olympic Committee and Hungarian Olympic Committee held the exclusive right to send their athletes to the games. The association organized a national football league in 1912.

Legacy

In 1918, during the last days of World War I, the Croatian parliament abolished the Hungarian–Croatian personal union, and both parts of the Kingdom of Croatia and Slavonia and the Kingdom of Dalmatia (excluding Zadar and Lastovo), became part of the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs, which together with the Kingdom of Serbia, formed the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (later known as the Kingdom of Yugoslavia). The new Serb–Croat–Slovene Kingdom was divided into counties between 1918 and 1922 and into oblasts between 1922 and 1929. With the formation of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1929, most of the territory of the former Kingdom of Croatia–Slavonia became a part of the Sava Banovina, and most of the former Kingdom of Dalmatia became part of the Littoral Banovina.

On the basis of the political agreement between Dragiša Cvetković and Vlatko Maček (Cvetković-Maček Agreement) and the "Decree on the Banovina of Croatia" (Uredba o Banovini Hrvatskoj) dated 24 August 1939, the autonomous Banovina of Croatia (Banate of Croatia) was created by uniting the Sava Banovina, the Littoral Banovina, and districts Brčko, Derventa, Dubrovnik, Fojnica, Gradačac, Ilok, Šid and Travnik.

Notes

  1. ^ The flag with the Coat of Arms was used internally for usage in autonomic affairs and was officially prescribed to depict the Hungarian Crown of St. Stephen above the shield, but an unofficial design using another type of crown was most often used instead. The same flag without the Coat of Arms was used as a Civil Flag.
  1. ^ See §. 2. 57. 58. 59. 60. Zakonski čl. XII. 1868. (Croatian–Hungarian Settlement) (in Croatian) "§. 57. Za organe zajedničke vlade ustanovljuje se takodjer hrvatski jezik službenim jezikom unutar granicah kraljevinah Dalmacije, Hrvatske i Slavonije. §.58. Predloge i spise u hrvatskom jeziku sastavljene; pa iz kraljevinah Hrvatske i Slavonije na zajedničko ministarstvo podnešene, imade to ministarstvo primati i rješitbe svoje na istom jeziku izdavati. §. 59. Obzirom na to, da su kraljevine Hrvatska i Slavonija politički narod, imajući posebni svoj teritorij i u pogledu nutarnjih svojih poslovah vlastito zakonodavstvo i autonomnu vladu, ustanovljuje se nadalje; da se zastupnici istih kraljevinah tako na zajedničkom saboru kako i u delegaciji mogu služiti i jezikom hrvatskim. §. 60. Na zajedničkom saboru stvoreni i podpisom Nj. c. i kr. apošt. Veličanstva providjeni zakoni izdavat će se za kraljevine Dalmaciju, Hrvatsku i Slavoniju u izvorniku hrvatskom i odaslati saboru tih kraljevinah. (transl.) §. 57. For the organs of the joint government, Croatian is also established as the official language within the boundaries of the Kingdoms of Dalmatia, Croatia and Slavonia. §.58. Proposals and writings composed in Croatian; and submitted from the Kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia to the joint ministry, the ministry has to receive them and issue its decision in the same language. §.59. Considering that the Kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia are a political nation, having their own separate territory and, in terms of its own affairs, its own legislation and autonomous government, is further established; that the representatives of the same Kingdoms can use both in the joint parliament and in the delegation Croatian. §.60. Laws created at the joint Parliament, and sanctioned by H.I. and R. Apostolic Majesty shall be issued for the Kingdoms of Dalmatia, Croatia and Slavonia in the Croatian original and shall be sent to the Parliament of these Kingdoms." Sbornik zakona i naredabah valjanih za kraljevine Hrvatsku i Slavoniju za god. 1868. (Komad I.-VI., br. 1.-19.) p. 122.-123.
  2. ^ Biondich, Mark; Stjepan Radić, the Croat Peasant Party, and the politics of mass mobilization, 1904–1928; University of Toronto Press, 2000 ISBN 0-8020-8294-7, page 9
  3. ^ Marcus Tanner, "A nation forged in war", Yale University Press, ISBN 0-300-09125-7, page 99
  4. ^ According to articles 56 and 57 of Nagodba only official language in Croatia is Croatian (Po čl. 56. i 57. Hrvatsko-ugarske nagodbe u Hrvatskoj je u službenoj uporabi samo hrvatski jezik), Dragutin Pavličević, "Povijest Hrvatske", Naklada Pavičić, Zagreb, 2007, ISBN 978-953-6308-71-2, page 273
  5. ^ 56. In the whole territory of Croatia–Slavonia, Croatian is the language alike of the Legislature, the Administration and the Judicature. 57. Inside the frontiers of Croatia–Slavonia, the Croatian is prescribed as the official language for the organs of the Joint Government also. http://www.h-net.org/~habsweb/sourcetexts/nagodba2.htm – online text from Robert William Seton-Watson, "The Southern Slav Question and the Habsburg Monarchy", London, Constable and Co., 1911, ISBN 0-7222-2328-5, page 371
  6. ^ Rothschild, Joseph (1974). East Central Europe between the Two World Wars. University of Washington Press. p. 155. ISBN 978-0-295-80364-7.
  7. ^ Biondich 2000, p. 15
  8. ^ a b c Seton-Watson, Hugh (1945). Eastern Europe Between the Wars, 1918–1941 (3rd ed.). CUP Archive. p. 434. ISBN 1-00-128478-X.
  9. ^ See §. 59.Zakonski čl. XII. 1868. (Croatian–Hungarian Settlement) (in Croatian) "§. 59. Obzirom na to, da su kraljevine Hrvatska i Slavonija politički narod, imajući posebni svoj teritorij i u pogledu nutarnjih svojih poslovah vlastito zakonodavstvo i autonomnu vladu, ustanovljuje se nadalje; da se zastupnici istih kraljevinah tako na zajedničkom saboru kako i u delegaciji mogu služiti i jezikom hrvatskim. (transl.) §.59. Considering that the Kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia are a political nation, having their own separate territory and, in terms of its own affairs, its own legislation and autonomous government, is further established; that the representatives of the same Kingdoms can use both in the joint parliament and in the delegation Croatian." Sbornik zakona i naredabah valjanih za kraljevine Hrvatsku i Slavoniju za god. 1868. (Komad I.-VI., br. 1.-19.) p. 123.
  10. ^ See; translation of the law XLIV. 1868. (law on nationality)/1868-ik évi XLIV. TÖRVÉNYCZIKK a nemzetiségi egyenjogúság tárgyában. THE LAW OF NATIONALITIES (Act XLIV of the year 1868.) "since all citizens of Hungary, according to the principles of the constitution, form from a political point of view one nation — the indivisible unitary Hungarian nation — of which every citizen of the fatherland is a member, no matter to what nationality he belongs: since, moreover, this equality of right can only exist with reference to the official use of the various languages of the country,...§ 29. The provisions of this law do not extend to Croatia Slavonia and Dalmatia, which possess a special territory and form politically a special nation;" RACIAL PROBLEMS IN HUNGARY By SCOTUS VIATOR, Author, Robert William Seton-Watson. Publisher, Constable, 1908.
  11. ^ Hrvatska enciklopedija (LZMK). "Hrvatsko-ugarska nagodba". Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  12. ^ "Nagodba". britannica.com. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  13. ^ Croatian–Hungarian settlement, Constitution, 1868, Article §. 1.
  14. ^ (Croatian) Law codex, S. V., no. 30, Issued by the Sabor, (Zagreb), Y: 1917, p: 101, 'Law act III:1917, Coronation oath'
  15. ^ Goldstein & Jovanović 1999.
  16. ^ See; Charles IV. Coronation diploma inaugurale issued to the Parliament of Croatia–Slavonia pursuant to §. 2. of the Settlement Zak. čl. III. : 1917. zajedničkog ugarsko-hrvatskog državnog sabora, kojim se kraljevska zavjernica, što ju je Njegovo Veličanstvo kralj izdao zemlji prije Svoje sretne posvete i krunisanja, te kraljevska zakletva, što ju je položio prigodom krunisanja, uvršćuju medju zakone države [Legal. Art. III. : 1917. of the Joint Hungarian–Croatian State Parliament, by which the coronation testament which His Majesty the King has given to the land before His happy consecration and crowning, and the royal oath which he placed upon the occasion of the crowning, are enshrined in the laws of the state], (in Croatian) "§. 1. Sveto i nepovredimo obdržavat ćemo, a kraljevskom Našom moći i po drugih obdržavati dati nasljedbu na kraljevski prestol, ustanovljenu u zakonskom članku 1. i 2. članku god. 1723.; - krunisanje koje se ima obaviti u smislu zakonskog članka 3. godine 1791.; - prava, ustav, zakonitu neodvisnost, slobodu i zemljišnu cjelovitost Ugarske te Hrvatske, Slavonije i Dalmacije, a isto tako cjelokupnost i zemaljski ustav kraljevina Hrvatske, Slavonije i Dalmacije, koje s kraljevinom Ugarskom sačinjavaju jednu te istu državnu zajednicu. Sveto i strogo obdržavat ćemo, a kraljevskom Našom moći i po drugima obdržavati dati zakonito postojeće sloboštine, povlastice, zakonske običaje i dosad po saborima stvorene i po slavnim Našim predjima, krunisanim Ugarske Kraljevima posvećene, kakono i one, što će i odsada po saborima stvoriti i po Nama kao krunjenom Kralju ugarskom posvetiti zakone Ugarske te Hrvatske, Slavonije i Dalmacije u svih njihovih točkama, člancima i zaporkama tako, kako što će njihov smisao i uporaba zajedničkim suglasjem kralja i sabora ustanovljeni biti; izuzevši ipak dokinutu onu zaporku zakona blagopopokojnoga Andrije II. od god. 1222., počevši od riječi: "Quodsi vero nos" sve do onih riječi "in perpetuam facultatem". Za obezbjedjenje svega toga služit će i ona kraljevska zakletva Naša, što ćemo ju po sadržaja ove Naše kraljevske zavjernice na osnovu riječi krunidbene zakletve slavnoga Nam predšastnika Ferdinanda I. prigodom krunisanja Našega položiti. ... §. 3. Sve one strane i pripadnosti Ugarske te Hrvatske, Slavonije i Dalmacije što su već natrag stečene, pa i one, što će božjom pomoćju odsele biti natrag pribavljene, pripojit ćemo u smislu krunitbene Naše zakletve rečenim kraljevinama." Krunidbena zavjernica Karla IV. Zbornik zakona i naredaba valjanih za Kraljevine Hrvatsku i Slavoniju, kom. V. str. 101-105., Zagreb 1917.
  17. ^ Budisavljević Srđan, Stvaranje Države SHS, (Creation of the state of SHS), Zagreb, 1958, p. 132-133.
  18. ^ Goldstein, Ivo; Jovanović, Nikolina (1999). Croatia: a history. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. ISBN 1-85065-525-1.
  19. ^ Zakonski članak o nagodbi, koju s jedne strane kraljevina Ugarska, sjedinjena s Erdeljem, s druge strane kraljevine Hrvatska i Slavonija sklopiše za izravnanje postojavših izmedju njih državnopravnih pitanjah. [Legal Article on the settlement that, on the one side, the Kingdom of Hungary, united with Erdély, on the other side the Kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia have concluded to settle the existing between them constitutional issues], (in Croatian) " §. 53. Banu gradjanskoga stališta bit će i od sada naslov: "Ban kraljevinah Dalmacije, Hrvatske i Slavonije" i časti banskoj pripadati će sva ona prijašnja preimućtva i dostojanstva, koja se slažu s njegovim položajem. Po tome i nadalje ostaje članom kuće velikašah zajedničkoga sabora.[§. 53. The Ban of the civil status will be and from now on titled: "Ban of the Kingdoms of Dalmatia, Croatia and Slavonia" and dignity of the Ban will keep all previous precedences and honours, which are in accordance with its position. For this reason, he remains a member of the House of Magnates of the Joint Parliament.]", Sbornik zakona i naredabah valjanih za kraljevine Hrvatsku i Slavoniju za god. 1868. (Komad I.-VI., br. 1.-19.) p. 122., Retrieved 2018-09-27
  20. ^ The Hungaro–Croatian Compromise (in Croatian)
  21. ^ Hungarian version of the Settlement has a different order of the Ban's title 1868. évi XXX. törvénycikk a Magyarország, s Horvát-, Szlavon és Dalmátországok közt fenforgott közjogi kérdések kiegyenlítése iránt létrejött egyezmény beczikkelyezéséről (in Hungarian) "53. § A polgári állásu bán ezután is Horvát-, Szlavon- és Dalmátországok bánja czimmel él, s a báni hivatal mindazon előjogait és méltóságait élvezi, a melyek uj állásával összeférnek. Ennélfogva ezután is tagja marad a közös országgyülés főrendi házának.", Magyar joganyagok - 1868. évi XXX. törvénycikk, Retrieved 2018-09-28
  22. ^ Court and state guide issued by the Imperial and Royal Court, for the year 1878. Hof- und Staats-handbuch der Oesterreichisch-Ungarischen Monarhie für 1878. (in German), Königreich Ungarn und die damit verbundenen Theile, " Barones Regni (Bannerherren) .. Regnorum Croatiae, Dalmatiae et Slavoniae Banus (Ban von Croatien, Dalmatien und Slavonien) ", Druck und Verlag der Kaiserlich-Ko̲niglichen Hof- und Staatsdruckerei, Wien, p. 691., Retrieved 2018-09-28
  23. ^ Court and state guide issued by the Imperial and Royal Court, for the year 1878. Hof- und Staats-handbuch der Oesterreichisch-Ungarischen Monarhie für 1878. (in German), Königreich Croatien und Slavonien nebst der croatisch–slavonischen Militärgrenze, " Ban von Croatien, Slavonien und Dalmatien", Druck und Verlag der Kaiserlich-Ko̲niglichen Hof- und Staatsdruckerei, Wien, p. 887., Retrieved 2018-09-28
  24. ^ Ines Sabotič, Stjepan Matković (April 2005). "Saborski izbori i zagrebačka izborna tijela na prijelazu iz 19. u 20. stoljeće" [Parliamentary Elections and Zagreb Electoral Bodies at the Turn of the 19th and 20th Centuries]. Drustvena Istrazivanja: Journal for General Social Issues (in Croatian). Zagreb, Croatia: Institute of Social Sciences Ivo Pilar. 14 (1-2 (75–76)): 168. ISSN 1330-0288. Retrieved 22 August 2012. [...] Zakona o izbornom redu za kraljevinu Dalmacije, Hrvatske i Slavonije{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  25. ^ A Magyar Sz. Korona országai Magyarország, Horvát-Tótország és a Katonai Őrvidék új térképe Magyarország 5 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine (map), 1877. Retrieved 25 December 2012. (in Hungarian)
  26. ^ Hivatalos Statistikai Közlemények. Kiadja: A Földmivelés-, Ipar- És Kereskedelemügyi Magyar Királyi Ministerium Statistikai Osztálya. Évf. 2. Füz. 1. 1869. p. 160.
  27. ^ Mikuláš Teich, Roy Porter, The National Question in Europe in Historical Context, 1993, p.284
  28. ^ Britannica 2009 Nagodba
  29. ^ a b c Constitution of Union between Croatia–Slavonia and Hungary
  30. ^ Zakonski članak o nagodbi, koju s jedne strane kraljevina Ugarska, sjedinjena s Erdeljem, s druge strane kraljevine Hrvatska i Slavonija sklopiše za izravnanje postojavših izmedju njih državnopravnih pitanjah. [Legal Article on the settlement that, on the one side, the Kingdom of Hungary, united with Erdély, on the other side the Kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia have concluded to settle the existing between them constitutional issues], Sbornik zakona i naredabah valjanih za kraljevine Hrvatsku i Slavoniju za god. 1868. (Komad I.-VI., br. 1.-19.) p. 122., Retrieved 2018-09-27
  31. ^ 1868. évi XXX. törvénycikk a Magyarország, s Horvát-, Szlavon és Dalmátországok közt fenforgott közjogi kérdések kiegyenlítése iránt létrejött egyezmény beczikkelyezéséről, Magyar joganyagok - 1868. évi XXX. törvénycikk, Retrieved 2018-09-28
  32. ^ State union between Hungary and Croatia–Slavonia was formally known as personal union, in reality it was real union with self rule for Croatia–Slavonia.
  33. ^ Kosnica, Ivan (2017). "Citizenship in Croatia–Slavonia during the First World War". Journal on European History of Law. 8 (1): 58–65.
  34. ^ a b c Biondich 2000, p. 9
  35. ^ History of Hungary
  36. ^ Trpimir Macan: Povijest hrvatskog naroda, 1971, pp. 358–368 (full text of the Croatian–Hungarian Settlement in Croatian)
  37. ^ Najviši reškript, kojim se potvrdjuje zakonski članak ob ustrojstvu autonomne hrvatsko–slavonsko–dalmatinske zemaljske vlade, [The highest rescript, confirming the legal article for the organization of the autonomous Croatian–Slavonian–Dalmatian Land Government (1869)], Sbornik zakona i naredabah valjanih za kraljevinu Hrvatsku i Slavoniju za god. 1869. ( in Croatian) komad I.-VIII., p. 07.-12.| Retrieved 2018-09-27
  38. ^ After the establishment of the Royal Croatian–Slavonian–Dalmatian Land Government (Royal Land Government or informally Autonomous Government), the Croatian Court Chancellery or (officially) Royal Croatian–Slavonian–Dalmatian Court Chancellery in Vienna (1862–1869) as supreme governmental body for Croatia and Slavonia organized in accordance with the October Diploma and the February Patent and the Royal Croatian–Slavonian Council of Lieutenancy in Zagreb (1861–1869) were abolished.
  39. ^ a b http://www.h-net.org/~habsweb/sourcetexts/nagodba3.htm The Hungaro–Croatian Compromise of 1868 (The Nagodba), III
  40. ^ Hrvatska pravna povijest 1790. – 1918., Croatian Supreme Court
  41. ^ Ivan Čepulo (April 2006). "Izgradnja modernog hrvatskog sudstva 1848 – 1918" [Building up of the Modern Croatian Judiciary 1848 – 1918]. Zbornik Pravnog fakulteta u Zagrebu: Collected Papers of Zagreb Law Faculty (in Croatian). Zagreb, Croatia: University of Zagreb, Law Faculty. 56 (2–3): 325–383. ISSN 0350-2058. Retrieved 20 January 2017.
  42. ^ a b Biondich 2000, p. 11
  43. ^ Jelena Boršak-Marijanović, Zastave kroz stoljeća, Croatian History Museum, Zagreb, 1996, p. 110
  44. ^ a b Ban (viceroy) Iván Skerlecz: "According to the § 61 article I from the year 1868 of Agreement and of decree of the Department of Interior of the Royal Country Government of November 16th, 1867, No. 18.307, red-white-blue tricolour is the civil flag in the Kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia, which with the united Coat-of-Arms of Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia with the crown of saint Stephen on the top is official flag for usage in autonomous affairs. Above-mentioned civil flag may be used by everyone in appropriate way." . Archived from the original on 1 January 2009. Retrieved 29 November 2009. [1]
  45. ^ Heimer, Željko. "Hrvatska-povijesne zastave". zeljko-heimer-fame.from.hr. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
  46. ^ Heimer, Željko; Zdvořák, Janko Ehrlich. "Croatia in the Habsburg Empire". crwflags.com. Retrieved 4 March 2019.[permanent dead link]
  47. ^ a b Heimer, Željko; Zdvořák, Janko Ehrlich. "Croatia in the Habsburg Empire". crwflags.com. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
  48. ^ The Hungaro–Croatian Compromise of 1868 (The Nagodba), II
  49. ^ Croatia – Historical Flags (1848–1918), www.fotw.net
  50. ^ Heimer, Željko. "Hrvatska-povijesne zastave". zeljko-heimer-fame.from.hr. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
  51. ^ Kroatien, Slavonien, Dalmatien Und Das Militargrenzland, p. 20.
  52. ^ Pokušaji smanjivanja nepismenosti u Banskoj Hrvatskoj početkom 20. stoljeća, p. 133-135
  53. ^ McMeekin, Sean (2013). July 1914: Countdown to War. Internet Archive. New York: Basic Books. p. 32. ISBN 978-0-465-03145-0.
  54. ^ Pero Simic: Tito, tajna veka Novosti; 2nd edition (2009) ISBN 978-8674461549

References

  • Biondich, Mark (2000). Stjepan Radić, the Croat Peasant Party, and the Politics of Mass Mobilization. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-8294-7.

Further reading

  • Ćirković, Sima (2004). The Serbs. Malden: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 9781405142915.
  • Miller, Nicholas J. (1997). Between Nation and State: Serbian Politics in Croatia Before the First World War. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 9780822939894.

External links

  • Jayne, Kingsley Garland (1911). "Croatia-Slavonia" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 7 (11th ed.). pp. 471–477.
  • Codex diplomaticus Regni Croatiae, Slavoniae et Dalmatiae, Internet Archive – digital library
  • Euratlas Maps
  • Erdélyi Magyar Adatbank Map
  • Map Archived 5 December 2012 at archive.today
  • Ethnic map
45°48′N 15°58′E / 45.800°N 15.967°E / 45.800; 15.967

kingdom, croatia, slavonia, croatian, kraljevina, hrvatska, slavonija, hungarian, horvát, szlavónország, horvát, szlavón, királyság, austrian, german, königreich, kroatien, slawonien, nominally, autonomous, kingdom, constitutionally, defined, separate, politic. The Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia Croatian Kraljevina Hrvatska i Slavonija Hungarian Horvat Szlavonorszag or Horvat Szlavon Kiralysag Austrian German Konigreich Kroatien und Slawonien was a nominally autonomous kingdom and constitutionally defined separate political nation 9 10 within the Austro Hungarian Empire It was created in 1868 by merging the kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia following the Croatian Hungarian Settlement of 1868 It was associated with the Kingdom of Hungary within the dual Austro Hungarian state being within the Lands of the Crown of St Stephen also known as Transleithania While Croatia had been granted a wide internal autonomy with national features in reality Croatian control over key issues such as tax and military issues was minimal and hampered by Hungary 11 12 It was internally officially referred to as the Triune Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia and Dalmatia 13 14 also simply known as the Triune Kingdom and had claims on Dalmatia which was administrated separately by the Austrian Cisleithania 15 The city of Rijeka following a disputed section in the 1868 Settlement known as the Rijeka Addendum hr became a corpus separatum and was legally owned by Hungary but administrated by both Croatia and Hungary Kingdom of Croatia and SlavoniaKraljevina Hrvatska i Slavonija Croatian Kraљevina Hrvatska i Slavoniјa Serbian Horvat Szlavon Kiralysag Hungarian Konigreich Kroatien und Slawonien German 1868 1918Flag a Coat of ArmsAnthem Gott erhalte Franz den KaiserGod Save Emperor FrancisCroatia Slavonia number 17 within Austria HungaryStatusConstituent kingdom within Austria Hungary part of the Lands of the Crown of St Stephen CapitalZagrebOfficial languagesCroatian 1 2 3 4 5 ReligionRoman CatholicGovernmentConstitutional parliamentary monarchyKing 1868 1916Franz Joseph I 1916 1918Karl IVBan 1868 1871 first Levin Rauch de Nyek 1917 1918 last Antun MihalovicLegislatureParliamentHistorical eraNew Imperialism WWI 1868 Settlement26 September 1868 Incorporation of parts of the Military Frontier15 July 1881 Independence29 October 1918Area1910 6 42 541 km2 16 425 sq mi Population 1880 7 1 892 499 1910 8 2 621 954CurrencyFlorin 1868 1892 Crown 1892 1918 Preceded by Succeeded byKingdom of CroatiaKingdom of Slavonia State of Slovenes Croats and SerbsToday part ofCroatiaSerbiaThe Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia was ruled by the emperor of Austria who bore the title King of Croatia Slavonia and Dalmatia and was confirmed by the State Sabor Parliament of Croatia Slavonia or Croatian Slavonian Diet upon accession 16 The King s appointed steward was the ban of Croatia and Slavonia On 21 October 1918 Emperor Karl I known as King Karlo IV in Croatia issued a Trialist manifest which was ratified by the Hungarian side on the next day and which unified all Croatian Crown Lands 17 One week later on 29 October 1918 the Croatian State Sabor proclaimed an independent kingdom which entered the State of Slovenes Croats and Serbs Contents 1 Name 2 History 3 Government and politics 3 1 Political status 3 2 Parliament 3 3 Autonomous Government 3 4 Ban Prime Minister and Viceroy 4 Law 5 Counties 6 Symbols 6 1 Flag 6 2 Coat of arms 7 Demographics 7 1 Nationality 7 2 Religion 7 3 Literacy 8 Military 9 Culture 10 Religion 10 1 Catholic Church 10 2 Judaism 11 Transportation 12 Sports 13 Legacy 14 Notes 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External linksName EditMain article Triune Kingdom Ivan Mazuranic Ban viceroy of the Triune Kingdom of Croatia in office 1873 1880 The kingdom used the formal title of the Triune Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia and Dalmatia thereby pressing its claim on the Kingdom of Dalmatia But Dalmatia was a Kronland within the imperial Austrian part of Austria Hungary also known as Cisleithania The claim was for most of the time supported by the Hungarian government which backed the Croatia Slavonia in an effort to increase its share of the dual state The union between the two primarily Croatian lands of Austria Hungary never took place however 18 According to the Article 53 of the Croatian Hungarian Agreement governing Croatia s political status in the Hungarian ruled part of Austria Hungary the ban s official title was Ban of Kingdom of Dalmatia Croatia and Slavonia 19 20 21 Not only would different parts of the Monarchy at the same time use different styles of the titles but even the same institutions would at the same time use different naming standards for the same institution For instance when the Imperial and Royal Court in Vienna would list the Croatian Ban as one of the Great Officers of State in the Kingdom of Hungary Barones Regni 22 the style used would be Regnorum Croatiae Dalmatiae et Slavoniae Banus but when the Court would list the highest officials of the Kingdom of Croatia and Slavonia the title would be styled as Ban of Croatia Slavonia and Dalmatia putting Slavonia before Dalmatia and omitting Kingdom 23 The laws passed in Croatia Slavonia used the phrase Kingdom of Dalmatia Croatia and Slavonia 24 In Hungarian Croatia is referred to as Horvatorszag and Slavonia as Szlavonia The combined polity was known by the official name of Horvat Szlavon Kiralysag The short form of the name was Horvat Szlavonorszag and less frequently Horvat Totorszag 25 26 The order of mentioning Dalmatia was a contentious issue as it was ordered differently in the Croatian and Hungarian language versions of the 1868 Settlement 27 History EditThe Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia was created in 1868 when the former kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia were joined into one single kingdom the full civil administration was introduced in the Kingdom of Slavonia in 1745 and it was as one of the Lands of the Crown of St Stephen administratively included into both Kingdom of Croatia and Kingdom of Hungary but it existed virtually until 1868 The Croatian parliament elected in a questionable manner confirmed the subordination of Croatia Slavonia to Hungary in 1868 with signing of Hungarian Croatian union constitution called the Nagodba Croatian Hungarian Settlement known also as Croatian Hungarian Agreement or Hungarian Croatian Compromise of 1868 28 This kingdom included parts of present day Croatia and Serbia eastern part of Syrmia After the Austro Hungarian Compromise of 1867 the only remaining open question of the new state was the status of Croatia which would be solved with the Hungarian Croatian Compromise of 1868 when agreement was reached between the Parliament of Hungary on one hand and the Parliament of Croatia Slavonia on the other hand with regard to the composition by a joint enactment of the constitutional questions at issue between them 29 Settlement reached between Hungary and Croatia was in Croatian version of the Settlement named The Settlement between Kingdom of Hungary united with Erdely on the one side and the Kingdoms of Dalmatia Croatia and Slavonia 30 In the Hungarian version 31 neither Hungary nor Croatia Dalmatia and Slavonia are styled kingdoms and Erdely is not even mentioned while Settlement is named as the Settlement between Parliament of Hungary and Parliament of Croatia Slavonia and Dalmatia Both versions received Royal sanction and both as such became fundamental laws of the state with constitutional importance pursuant to article 69 and 70 of the Settlement With this compromise the parliament of personal union 32 in which Croatia Slavonia had only twenty nine after 1881 forty deputies controlled the military the financial system Sea Maritime Law Commercial Law the law of Bills of Exchange and Mining Law and generally matters of commerce customs telegraphs Post Office railways harbours shipping and those roads and rivers which jointly concern Hungary and Croatia Slavonia 29 Similarly to these affairs trade matters including hawking likewise with regard to societies which do not exist for public gain and also with regard to passports frontier police citizenship and naturalization the legislation was joint but the executive in respect of these affairs was reserved to Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia 29 The citizenship was named Hungarian Croatian citizenship in Croatia Slavonia 33 In the end fifty five per cent of the total income of Croatia Slavonia were assigned to the Joint Treasury Joint Hungarian Croatian Ministry of Finance The kingdom existed until 1918 when it joined the newly formed State of Slovenes Croats and Serbs which together with the Kingdom of Serbia formed the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes The new Serb Croat Slovene Kingdom was divided into counties between 1918 and 1922 and into oblasts between 1922 and 1929 With the formation of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1929 most of the territory of the former Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia became a part of the Sava Banate and in 1939 autonomous Croatian Banate Banovina of Croatia Government and politics EditPolitical status Edit Main article Croatian Hungarian Agreement Austria HungaryLands of the Austrian Imperial CouncilLands of the Crown of Saint StephenKingdom of HungaryKingdom of Croatia Slavonia common emperor king common ministries entities partner statesThe Austro Hungarian Compromise Ausgleich of 1867 created the Dual Monarchy Under the Compromise Austria and Hungary each had separate parliaments the Imperial Council and the Diet of Hungary that passed and maintained separate laws Each region had its own government headed by its own prime minister The common monarchy consisted of the emperor king and the common ministers of foreign affairs defense and finance in Vienna The Compromise confirmed Croatia Slavonia s historic eight centuries old relationship with Hungary and perpetuated the division of the Croat lands for both Dalmatia and Istria remained under Austrian administration as Kingdom of Dalmatia and Margraviate of Istria 34 At Franz Joseph s insistence Hungary and Croatia reached the Compromise or Nagodba in Croatian in 1868 giving the Croats a special status in Hungary The agreement granted the Croats autonomy over their internal affairs The Croatian Ban would now be nominated by the joint Croatian Hungarian government led by the Hungarian Prime Minister and appointed by the king Areas of common concern to Hungarians and Croats included finance currency matters commercial policy the post office and the railroad Croatian became the official language of Croatia s government and Croatian representatives discussing common affairs before the Croatian Hungarian diet were permitted to speak Croatian 35 A ministry of Croatian Affairs was created within the Hungarian government 36 Although the Nagodba provided a measure of political autonomy to Croatia Slavonia it was subordinated politically and economically to Hungary in the Croatian Hungarian entity of the Monarchy 34 Royal Bans Standard of Levin Rauch the first Ban of Croatia Slavonia 1868 1871 Sculpture symbolizing the Triune Kingdom of Croatia Zagreb Parliament Edit See also Croatian Parliament and Political parties in Croatia Historical parties The Croatian Parliament or the Royal Croatian Slavonian Dalmatian Sabor Croatian Kraljevski Hrvatsko slavonsko dalmatinski sabor or Sabor Kraljevina Hrvatske Slavonije i Dalmacije had legislative authority over the autonomous issues according to the Croatian Hungarian Settlement of 1868 A draft law bill approved by the Diet became a statute an act after the royal assent sanction It also had to be signed by the Ban The King had the power to veto all legislation passed by the Diet and also to dissolve it and call new elections If the King dissolved the Diet he would have to call new elections during the period of three months The parliament was summoned annually at Zagreb by the King or by the King especially appointed commissioner usually the Ban It was unicameral but alongside 88 elected deputies in 1888 44 ex officio members were Croatian and Slavonian high nobility male princes counts and barons similar to hereditary peers over the age of 24 who paid at least 1 000 florins a year land tax high dignitaries of the Roman Catholic Greek Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches and supreme county prefects veliki zupani of all Croatian Slavonian counties Legislative term was three years after 1887 five years The Croatian Parliament elected twenty nine after reincorporation of Croatian Military Frontier and Slavonian Military Frontier in 1881 forty deputies to the House of Representatives and two members after 1881 three to the House of Magnates of the Diet of Hungary The delegates of Croatia Slavonia were allowed to use Croatian in the proceedings but they voted personally The Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia held independent elections for the Croatian Parliament in 1865 1867 1871 1872 1878 1881 1883 1884 1887 1892 1897 1901 1906 1908 1910 1911 1913 Main political parties represented in the Parliament were People s Party People s Liberal Party Independent People s Party after 1880 Croatian Hungarian Party People s National Constitutional Party or Unionist Party 1868 1873 Party of Rights Pure Party of Rights after 1895 Starcevic s Party of Rights after 1908 Serb Independent Party after 1881 Croatian Peoples Peasant Party after 1904 Croat Serb Coalition after 1905 etc Autonomous Government Edit The Autonomous Government or Land Government officially Royal Croatian Slavonian Dalmatian Land Government Croatian Zemaljska vlada or Kraljevska hrvatsko slavonsko dalmatinska zemaljska vlada 37 was established in 1869 with its seat in Zagreb Croatian Parliament Act No II of 1869 38 Until 1914 it possessed three departments Department of Internal Affairs Croatian Odjel za unutarnje poslove Department of Religion and Education Croatian Odjel za bogostovlje i nastavu Department of Justice Croatian Odjel za pravosuđe The Department of National Economy was established in 1914 as a fourth department Croatian Odjel za narodno gospodarstvo 34 At the head of the Autonomous Government in Croatia Slavonia stood the Ban who was responsible to the Croatian Slavonian Dalmatian Diet 39 Ban Prime Minister and Viceroy Edit Main article Ban of Croatia Banski dvori Ban s Court the palace of the Ban of Croatia in Zagreb today the seat of the Croatian Government The Ban was appointed by the King on the proposal and under the counter signature of the Joint Hungarian minister president 39 List of bans viceroys from 1868 until 1918 1868 1871 Baron Levin Rauch de Nyek 1871 1872 Koloman pl Bedekovic de Komor 1872 1873 Antun pl Vukanovic acting 1873 1880 Ivan Mazuranic 1880 1883 Count Ladislav Pejacevic de Virovitica 1883 Herman pl Ramberg acting 1883 1903 Count Karoly Khuen Hedervary de Hedervar 1903 1907 Count Teodor Pejacevic de Virovitica 1907 1908 Aleksandar pl Rakodczay 1908 1910 Baron Pavao Rauch de Nyek 1910 1912 Nikola pl Tomasic 1912 1913 Baron Slavko Cuvaj de Ivanska 1913 1917 Baron Ivan Skerlecz de Lomnica 1917 1918 Antun pl MihalovicLaw EditThe supreme court of the Kingdom of Croatia and Slavonia was the Table of Seven in Zagreb Table of Septemvirs or Court of Seven Croatian Stol sedmorice Latin Tabula Septemviralis while the second level court court of appeal was the Ban s Table or Ban s Court Croatian Banski stol Latin Tabula Banalis in Zagreb 40 After the judicial reorganization of 1874 1886 complete separation of judicial and administrative power laws on judges independence and judicial organization the Organization of Courts of the First Instance Act of 1874 with 1886 amendments the Judicial Power Act of 1874 and the Judges Disciplinary Responsibility etc Act of 1874 the Croatian Criminal Procedure Act of 1875 the Croatian Criminal Procedure Press Offences Act of 1875 and reincorporation of Croatian Military Frontier and Slavonian Military Frontier in 1881 courts of first instance became 9 royal court tables with collegiate judgeships Croatian kraljevski sudbeni stolovi in Zagreb Varazdin Bjelovar Petrinja Gospic Ogulin Pozega Osijek and Mitrovica criminal and major civil jurisdiction all of which had been former county courts and Land Court Royal County Court Table in Zagreb approximately 63 royal district courts with single judges Croatian kraljevski kotarski sudovi mainly civil and misdemeanor jurisdiction former district administrative and judicial offices and city courts and local courts Croatian mjesni sudovi also with single judges which were established in each municipality and city according to the Local Courts and Local Courts Procedure Act of 1875 as special tribunals for minor civil cases The Royal Court Table in Zagreb was also a jury court for press offences Judges were appointed by the king but their independence was legally guaranteed 41 Counties Edit Counties of Croatia Slavonia within Austria Hungary In 1886 under Croatian ban Dragutin Khuen Hedervary Croatia Slavonia was divided into eight counties zupanije known as comitatus 42 Modrus Rijeka County Zagreb County Varazdin County Bjelovar Krizevci County Virovitica County Pozega County Srijem County Lika Krbava CountyLika Krbava became a county after the incorporation of the Croatian Military Frontier into Croatia Slavonia in 1881 42 The counties were subsequently divided into a total of 77 districts Croatian kotari similar to Austrian Bezirke as governmental units Cities gradovi and municipalities opcine were local authorities Symbols EditFlag Edit Left The flag with the coat of arms used internally for autonomic affairs by decree of the viceroy It was officially prescribed to be crowned with the Crown of St Stephen but often used an alternate design as depicted here 43 44 Center The official but less common flag with the coat of arms topped with the crown of St Stephen 45 46 Right The flag without the coat of arms was the civil flag that was also used outside of the Kingdom 44 According to the 1868 Agreement and the Decree No 18 307 of 16 November 1867 of the Department of the Interior of the Royal Country Government The red white blue tricolor is the civil flag in the Kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia which with the united coat of arms of Croatia Slavonia and Dalmatia with the crown of St Stephen on top is the official flag for usage in autonomous affairs The aforementioned civil flag may be used by everyone in an appropriate way 47 It was also stated that the emblem for joint affairs of the territories of the Hungarian Crown is formed by the united Coat of Arms of Hungary and Dalmatia Croatia and Slavonia 48 49 However there existed several variations of the internally used version of the flag with some variants using an unofficial type of crown or simply omitting the crown instead of using the officially prescribed Hungarian Crown of St Stephen There were also variations in the design of the shield The unofficial Coat of Arms was the preferred design and its widespread use was the reason that the Ban issued a Decree on 21 November 1914 stating that it had become a custom in the Kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia to use flags that are not adequate either in state juridical or in political sense and which strengthened flag related laws It reiterated the aforementioned definitions of Croatian flags from 1867 and further stated that Police authorities shall punish violations of this Decree with a fine of 2 to 200 K or with arrest from 6 hours to 14 days and confiscate the unauthorized flag or emblem 47 50 Coat of arms Edit The official version had St Stephen s crown due to Croatia Slavonia being part of Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen Version without crown Unofficial but more common design of the coat of arms without the St Stephen s crown The coat of arms of the Triune Kingdom on the building of the Croatian Parliament The coat of arms of the Triune Kingdom on the roof of the St Mark s Church ZagrebDemographics EditNationality Edit 1910 National Census of Croatia Slavonia 8 Nationality Population PercentageTotal 2 621 954 100 0 Croats 1 638 354 62 5 Serbs 644 955 24 6 Germans 134 078 5 0 Hungarians 105 948 4 1 Others 98 619 3 8 1875 data without the Military Frontier 51 Croats and Serbs 1 032 000 Germans 31 700 Hungarians 12 000 Czechs and Slovaks 5 000 Italians 2 000 Slovenians 2 000 Others 2 000Religion Edit Data taken from the 1910 census 8 Roman Catholic 1 877 833 Eastern Orthodox 653 184 Protestant 51 707 Uniate 17 592Literacy Edit According to the 1910 census illiteracy rate in Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia was 45 9 The lowest illiteracy was in Zagreb Osijek and Zemun Illiteracy rates of Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia 1880 1910 52 Year Total illiteracy Males Females Total population1880 73 9 67 8 79 9 1 892 4491890 66 9 60 1 73 5 2 186 4101900 54 4 46 8 61 8 2 416 3041910 45 9 37 6 53 7 2 621 954Military Edit Memorial to Croatian soldiers who fought in World War I The Croatian Home Guard was the military of the Kingdom Additionally Croats made up 5 percent of members in the Austro Hungarian Common Army a higher proportion than the percentage of the general population of the empire they composed 53 Notable Croatians in the Austro Hungarian Army included Field Marshal Svetozar Boroevic commander of the Imperial and Royal Aviation Troops Emil Uzelac commander of the Austro Hungarian Navy Maximilian Njegovan and Josip Broz Tito who later became Marshal and President of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 54 Culture EditThe modern University of Zagreb was founded in 1874 The Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts and Matica hrvatska were the main cultural institutions in the kingdom In 1911 the main cultural institution in the Kingdom of Dalmatia Matica dalmatinska merged with Matica hrvatska Vijenac was one of the most important cultural magazines in the kingdom The building of the Croatian National Theatre in Zagreb was opened in 1895 The Croatian National Theatre in Osijek was established in 1907 The Sisters of Charity Hospital in Zagreb was the first established in the kingdom Religion EditCatholic Church Edit Roughly 75 of the population were Roman Catholic with the remaining 25 Orthodox The Catholic Church had the following hierarchy within the kingdom Dioceses Croatian name Est CathedralArchdiocese of Zagreb Zagrebacka nadbiskupija 1093 Zagreb CathedralEparchy of Krizevci Greek Catholic Krizevacka biskupija Krizevacka eparhija 1777 Cathedral of the Holy Trinity in KrizevciDiocese of Srijem Srijemska biskupija 4th century Cathedral of St Peter and St Paul in ĐakovoDiocese of Senj Modrus Senjsko modruska biskupija 1168 Cathedral of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in SenjJudaism Edit In 1890 there were 17 261 Jews living in the kingdom In 1867 the Zagreb Synagogue was built Transportation EditThe first railway line opened in the kingdom was the Zidani Most Zagreb Sisak route which began operations in 1862 The Zapresic Varazdin Cakovec line was opened in 1886 and the Vinkovci Osijek line was opened in 1910 Sports EditThe Croatian Sports Association was formed in 1909 with Franjo Bucar as its president While Austria Hungary had competed in the modern Olympics since the inaugural games in 1896 the Austrian Olympic Committee and Hungarian Olympic Committee held the exclusive right to send their athletes to the games The association organized a national football league in 1912 Legacy EditIn 1918 during the last days of World War I the Croatian parliament abolished the Hungarian Croatian personal union and both parts of the Kingdom of Croatia and Slavonia and the Kingdom of Dalmatia excluding Zadar and Lastovo became part of the State of Slovenes Croats and Serbs which together with the Kingdom of Serbia formed the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes later known as the Kingdom of Yugoslavia The new Serb Croat Slovene Kingdom was divided into counties between 1918 and 1922 and into oblasts between 1922 and 1929 With the formation of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1929 most of the territory of the former Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia became a part of the Sava Banovina and most of the former Kingdom of Dalmatia became part of the Littoral Banovina On the basis of the political agreement between Dragisa Cvetkovic and Vlatko Macek Cvetkovic Macek Agreement and the Decree on the Banovina of Croatia Uredba o Banovini Hrvatskoj dated 24 August 1939 the autonomous Banovina of Croatia Banate of Croatia was created by uniting the Sava Banovina the Littoral Banovina and districts Brcko Derventa Dubrovnik Fojnica Gradacac Ilok Sid and Travnik Notes EditThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message The flag with the Coat of Arms was used internally for usage in autonomic affairs and was officially prescribed to depict the Hungarian Crown of St Stephen above the shield but an unofficial design using another type of crown was most often used instead The same flag without the Coat of Arms was used as a Civil Flag See 2 57 58 59 60 Zakonski cl XII 1868 Croatian Hungarian Settlement in Croatian 57 Za organe zajednicke vlade ustanovljuje se takodjer hrvatski jezik sluzbenim jezikom unutar granicah kraljevinah Dalmacije Hrvatske i Slavonije 58 Predloge i spise u hrvatskom jeziku sastavljene pa iz kraljevinah Hrvatske i Slavonije na zajednicko ministarstvo podnesene imade to ministarstvo primati i rjesitbe svoje na istom jeziku izdavati 59 Obzirom na to da su kraljevine Hrvatska i Slavonija politicki narod imajuci posebni svoj teritorij i u pogledu nutarnjih svojih poslovah vlastito zakonodavstvo i autonomnu vladu ustanovljuje se nadalje da se zastupnici istih kraljevinah tako na zajednickom saboru kako i u delegaciji mogu sluziti i jezikom hrvatskim 60 Na zajednickom saboru stvoreni i podpisom Nj c i kr apost Velicanstva providjeni zakoni izdavat ce se za kraljevine Dalmaciju Hrvatsku i Slavoniju u izvorniku hrvatskom i odaslati saboru tih kraljevinah transl 57 For the organs of the joint government Croatian is also established as the official language within the boundaries of the Kingdoms of Dalmatia Croatia and Slavonia 58 Proposals and writings composed in Croatian and submitted from the Kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia to the joint ministry the ministry has to receive them and issue its decision in the same language 59 Considering that the Kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia are a political nation having their own separate territory and in terms of its own affairs its own legislation and autonomous government is further established that the representatives of the same Kingdoms can use both in the joint parliament and in the delegation Croatian 60 Laws created at the joint Parliament and sanctioned by H I and R Apostolic Majesty shall be issued for the Kingdoms of Dalmatia Croatia and Slavonia in the Croatian original and shall be sent to the Parliament of these Kingdoms Sbornik zakona i naredabah valjanih za kraljevine Hrvatsku i Slavoniju za god 1868 Komad I VI br 1 19 p 122 123 Biondich Mark Stjepan Radic the Croat Peasant Party and the politics of mass mobilization 1904 1928 University of Toronto Press 2000 ISBN 0 8020 8294 7 page 9 Marcus Tanner A nation forged in war Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 09125 7 page 99 According to articles 56 and 57 of Nagodba only official language in Croatia is Croatian Po cl 56 i 57 Hrvatsko ugarske nagodbe u Hrvatskoj je u sluzbenoj uporabi samo hrvatski jezik Dragutin Pavlicevic Povijest Hrvatske Naklada Pavicic Zagreb 2007 ISBN 978 953 6308 71 2 page 273 56 In the whole territory of Croatia Slavonia Croatian is the language alike of the Legislature the Administration and the Judicature 57 Inside the frontiers of Croatia Slavonia the Croatian is prescribed as the official language for the organs of the Joint Government also http www h net org habsweb sourcetexts nagodba2 htm online text from Robert William Seton Watson The Southern Slav Question and the Habsburg Monarchy London Constable and Co 1911 ISBN 0 7222 2328 5 page 371 Rothschild Joseph 1974 East Central Europe between the Two World Wars University of Washington Press p 155 ISBN 978 0 295 80364 7 Biondich 2000 p 15 a b c Seton Watson Hugh 1945 Eastern Europe Between the Wars 1918 1941 3rd ed CUP Archive p 434 ISBN 1 00 128478 X See 59 Zakonski cl XII 1868 Croatian Hungarian Settlement in Croatian 59 Obzirom na to da su kraljevine Hrvatska i Slavonija politicki narod imajuci posebni svoj teritorij i u pogledu nutarnjih svojih poslovah vlastito zakonodavstvo i autonomnu vladu ustanovljuje se nadalje da se zastupnici istih kraljevinah tako na zajednickom saboru kako i u delegaciji mogu sluziti i jezikom hrvatskim transl 59 Considering that the Kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia are a political nation having their own separate territory and in terms of its own affairs its own legislation and autonomous government is further established that the representatives of the same Kingdoms can use both in the joint parliament and in the delegation Croatian Sbornik zakona i naredabah valjanih za kraljevine Hrvatsku i Slavoniju za god 1868 Komad I VI br 1 19 p 123 See translation of the law XLIV 1868 law on nationality 1868 ik evi XLIV TORVENYCZIKK a nemzetisegi egyenjogusag targyaban THE LAW OF NATIONALITIES Act XLIV of the year 1868 since all citizens of Hungary according to the principles of the constitution form from a political point of view one nation the indivisible unitary Hungarian nation of which every citizen of the fatherland is a member no matter to what nationality he belongs since moreover this equality of right can only exist with reference to the official use of the various languages of the country 29 The provisions of this law do not extend to Croatia Slavonia and Dalmatia which possess a special territory and form politically a special nation RACIAL PROBLEMS IN HUNGARY By SCOTUS VIATOR Author Robert William Seton Watson Publisher Constable 1908 Hrvatska enciklopedija LZMK Hrvatsko ugarska nagodba Retrieved 6 April 2019 Nagodba britannica com Retrieved 6 April 2019 Croatian Hungarian settlement Constitution 1868 Article 1 Croatian Law codex S V no 30 Issued by the Sabor Zagreb Y 1917 p 101 Law act III 1917 Coronation oath Goldstein amp Jovanovic 1999 See Charles IV Coronation diploma inaugurale issued to the Parliament of Croatia Slavonia pursuant to 2 of the Settlement Zak cl III 1917 zajednickog ugarsko hrvatskog drzavnog sabora kojim se kraljevska zavjernica sto ju je Njegovo Velicanstvo kralj izdao zemlji prije Svoje sretne posvete i krunisanja te kraljevska zakletva sto ju je polozio prigodom krunisanja uvrscuju medju zakone drzave Legal Art III 1917 of the Joint Hungarian Croatian State Parliament by which the coronation testament which His Majesty the King has given to the land before His happy consecration and crowning and the royal oath which he placed upon the occasion of the crowning are enshrined in the laws of the state in Croatian 1 Sveto i nepovredimo obdrzavat cemo a kraljevskom Nasom moci i po drugih obdrzavati dati nasljedbu na kraljevski prestol ustanovljenu u zakonskom clanku 1 i 2 clanku god 1723 krunisanje koje se ima obaviti u smislu zakonskog clanka 3 godine 1791 prava ustav zakonitu neodvisnost slobodu i zemljisnu cjelovitost Ugarske te Hrvatske Slavonije i Dalmacije a isto tako cjelokupnost i zemaljski ustav kraljevina Hrvatske Slavonije i Dalmacije koje s kraljevinom Ugarskom sacinjavaju jednu te istu drzavnu zajednicu Sveto i strogo obdrzavat cemo a kraljevskom Nasom moci i po drugima obdrzavati dati zakonito postojece slobostine povlastice zakonske obicaje i dosad po saborima stvorene i po slavnim Nasim predjima krunisanim Ugarske Kraljevima posvecene kakono i one sto ce i odsada po saborima stvoriti i po Nama kao krunjenom Kralju ugarskom posvetiti zakone Ugarske te Hrvatske Slavonije i Dalmacije u svih njihovih tockama clancima i zaporkama tako kako sto ce njihov smisao i uporaba zajednickim suglasjem kralja i sabora ustanovljeni biti izuzevsi ipak dokinutu onu zaporku zakona blagopopokojnoga Andrije II od god 1222 pocevsi od rijeci Quodsi vero nos sve do onih rijeci in perpetuam facultatem Za obezbjedjenje svega toga sluzit ce i ona kraljevska zakletva Nasa sto cemo ju po sadrzaja ove Nase kraljevske zavjernice na osnovu rijeci krunidbene zakletve slavnoga Nam predsastnika Ferdinanda I prigodom krunisanja Nasega poloziti 3 Sve one strane i pripadnosti Ugarske te Hrvatske Slavonije i Dalmacije sto su vec natrag stecene pa i one sto ce bozjom pomocju odsele biti natrag pribavljene pripojit cemo u smislu krunitbene Nase zakletve recenim kraljevinama Krunidbena zavjernica Karla IV Zbornik zakona i naredaba valjanih za Kraljevine Hrvatsku i Slavoniju kom V str 101 105 Zagreb 1917 Budisavljevic Srđan Stvaranje Drzave SHS Creation of the state of SHS Zagreb 1958 p 132 133 Goldstein Ivo Jovanovic Nikolina 1999 Croatia a history C Hurst amp Co Publishers ISBN 1 85065 525 1 Zakonski clanak o nagodbi koju s jedne strane kraljevina Ugarska sjedinjena s Erdeljem s druge strane kraljevine Hrvatska i Slavonija sklopise za izravnanje postojavsih izmedju njih drzavnopravnih pitanjah Legal Article on the settlement that on the one side the Kingdom of Hungary united with Erdely on the other side the Kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia have concluded to settle the existing between them constitutional issues in Croatian 53 Banu gradjanskoga stalista bit ce i od sada naslov Ban kraljevinah Dalmacije Hrvatske i Slavonije i casti banskoj pripadati ce sva ona prijasnja preimuctva i dostojanstva koja se slazu s njegovim polozajem Po tome i nadalje ostaje clanom kuce velikasah zajednickoga sabora 53 The Ban of the civil status will be and from now on titled Ban of the Kingdoms of Dalmatia Croatia and Slavonia and dignity of the Ban will keep all previous precedences and honours which are in accordance with its position For this reason he remains a member of the House of Magnates of the Joint Parliament Sbornik zakona i naredabah valjanih za kraljevine Hrvatsku i Slavoniju za god 1868 Komad I VI br 1 19 p 122 Retrieved 2018 09 27 The Hungaro Croatian Compromise in Croatian Hungarian version of the Settlement has a different order of the Ban s title 1868 evi XXX torvenycikk a Magyarorszag s Horvat Szlavon es Dalmatorszagok kozt fenforgott kozjogi kerdesek kiegyenlitese irant letrejott egyezmeny beczikkelyezeserol in Hungarian 53 A polgari allasu ban ezutan is Horvat Szlavon es Dalmatorszagok banja czimmel el s a bani hivatal mindazon elojogait es meltosagait elvezi a melyek uj allasaval osszefernek Ennelfogva ezutan is tagja marad a kozos orszaggyules forendi hazanak Magyar joganyagok 1868 evi XXX torvenycikk Retrieved 2018 09 28 Court and state guide issued by the Imperial and Royal Court for the year 1878 Hof und Staats handbuch der Oesterreichisch Ungarischen Monarhie fur 1878 in German Konigreich Ungarn und die damit verbundenen Theile Barones Regni Bannerherren Regnorum Croatiae Dalmatiae et Slavoniae Banus Ban von Croatien Dalmatien und Slavonien Druck und Verlag der Kaiserlich Ko niglichen Hof und Staatsdruckerei Wien p 691 Retrieved 2018 09 28 Court and state guide issued by the Imperial and Royal Court for the year 1878 Hof und Staats handbuch der Oesterreichisch Ungarischen Monarhie fur 1878 in German Konigreich Croatien und Slavonien nebst der croatisch slavonischen Militargrenze Ban von Croatien Slavonien und Dalmatien Druck und Verlag der Kaiserlich Ko niglichen Hof und Staatsdruckerei Wien p 887 Retrieved 2018 09 28 Ines Sabotic Stjepan Matkovic April 2005 Saborski izbori i zagrebacka izborna tijela na prijelazu iz 19 u 20 stoljece Parliamentary Elections and Zagreb Electoral Bodies at the Turn of the 19th and 20th Centuries Drustvena Istrazivanja Journal for General Social Issues in Croatian Zagreb Croatia Institute of Social Sciences Ivo Pilar 14 1 2 75 76 168 ISSN 1330 0288 Retrieved 22 August 2012 Zakona o izbornom redu za kraljevinu Dalmacije Hrvatske i Slavonije a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link A Magyar Sz Korona orszagai Magyarorszag Horvat Totorszag es a Katonai Orvidek uj terkepe Magyarorszag Archived 5 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine map 1877 Retrieved 25 December 2012 in Hungarian Hivatalos Statistikai Kozlemenyek Kiadja A Foldmiveles Ipar Es Kereskedelemugyi Magyar Kiralyi Ministerium Statistikai Osztalya Evf 2 Fuz 1 1869 p 160 Mikulas Teich Roy Porter The National Question in Europe in Historical Context 1993 p 284 Britannica 2009 Nagodba a b c Constitution of Union between Croatia Slavonia and Hungary Zakonski clanak o nagodbi koju s jedne strane kraljevina Ugarska sjedinjena s Erdeljem s druge strane kraljevine Hrvatska i Slavonija sklopise za izravnanje postojavsih izmedju njih drzavnopravnih pitanjah Legal Article on the settlement that on the one side the Kingdom of Hungary united with Erdely on the other side the Kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia have concluded to settle the existing between them constitutional issues Sbornik zakona i naredabah valjanih za kraljevine Hrvatsku i Slavoniju za god 1868 Komad I VI br 1 19 p 122 Retrieved 2018 09 27 1868 evi XXX torvenycikk a Magyarorszag s Horvat Szlavon es Dalmatorszagok kozt fenforgott kozjogi kerdesek kiegyenlitese irant letrejott egyezmeny beczikkelyezeserol Magyar joganyagok 1868 evi XXX torvenycikk Retrieved 2018 09 28 State union between Hungary and Croatia Slavonia was formally known as personal union in reality it was real union with self rule for Croatia Slavonia Kosnica Ivan 2017 Citizenship in Croatia Slavonia during the First World War Journal on European History of Law 8 1 58 65 a b c Biondich 2000 p 9 History of Hungary Trpimir Macan Povijest hrvatskog naroda 1971 pp 358 368 full text of the Croatian Hungarian Settlement in Croatian Najvisi reskript kojim se potvrdjuje zakonski clanak ob ustrojstvu autonomne hrvatsko slavonsko dalmatinske zemaljske vlade The highest rescript confirming the legal article for the organization of the autonomous Croatian Slavonian Dalmatian Land Government 1869 Sbornik zakona i naredabah valjanih za kraljevinu Hrvatsku i Slavoniju za god 1869 in Croatian komad I VIII p 07 12 Retrieved 2018 09 27 After the establishment of the Royal Croatian Slavonian Dalmatian Land Government Royal Land Government or informally Autonomous Government the Croatian Court Chancellery or officially Royal Croatian Slavonian Dalmatian Court Chancellery in Vienna 1862 1869 as supreme governmental body for Croatia and Slavonia organized in accordance with the October Diploma and the February Patent and the Royal Croatian Slavonian Council of Lieutenancy in Zagreb 1861 1869 were abolished a b http www h net org habsweb sourcetexts nagodba3 htm The Hungaro Croatian Compromise of 1868 The Nagodba III Hrvatska pravna povijest 1790 1918 Croatian Supreme Court Ivan Cepulo April 2006 Izgradnja modernog hrvatskog sudstva 1848 1918 Building up of the Modern Croatian Judiciary 1848 1918 Zbornik Pravnog fakulteta u Zagrebu Collected Papers of Zagreb Law Faculty in Croatian Zagreb Croatia University of Zagreb Law Faculty 56 2 3 325 383 ISSN 0350 2058 Retrieved 20 January 2017 a b Biondich 2000 p 11 Jelena Borsak Marijanovic Zastave kroz stoljeca Croatian History Museum Zagreb 1996 p 110 a b Ban viceroy Ivan Skerlecz According to the 61 article I from the year 1868 of Agreement and of decree of the Department of Interior of the Royal Country Government of November 16th 1867 No 18 307 red white blue tricolour is the civil flag in the Kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia which with the united Coat of Arms of Croatia Slavonia and Dalmatia with the crown of saint Stephen on the top is official flag for usage in autonomous affairs Above mentioned civil flag may be used by everyone in appropriate way Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia and Dalmatia 1867 1918 Archived from the original on 1 January 2009 Retrieved 29 November 2009 1 Heimer Zeljko Hrvatska povijesne zastave zeljko heimer fame from hr Retrieved 2 March 2019 Heimer Zeljko Zdvorak Janko Ehrlich Croatia in the Habsburg Empire crwflags com Retrieved 4 March 2019 permanent dead link a b Heimer Zeljko Zdvorak Janko Ehrlich Croatia in the Habsburg Empire crwflags com Retrieved 2 March 2019 The Hungaro Croatian Compromise of 1868 The Nagodba II Croatia Historical Flags 1848 1918 www fotw net Heimer Zeljko Hrvatska povijesne zastave zeljko heimer fame from hr Retrieved 2 March 2019 Kroatien Slavonien Dalmatien Und Das Militargrenzland p 20 Pokusaji smanjivanja nepismenosti u Banskoj Hrvatskoj pocetkom 20 stoljeca p 133 135 McMeekin Sean 2013 July 1914 Countdown to War Internet Archive New York Basic Books p 32 ISBN 978 0 465 03145 0 Pero Simic Tito tajna veka Novosti 2nd edition 2009 ISBN 978 8674461549References EditBiondich Mark 2000 Stjepan Radic the Croat Peasant Party and the Politics of Mass Mobilization University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 8294 7 Further reading EditCirkovic Sima 2004 The Serbs Malden Blackwell Publishing ISBN 9781405142915 Miller Nicholas J 1997 Between Nation and State Serbian Politics in Croatia Before the First World War Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 9780822939894 External links Edit Croatia portalJayne Kingsley Garland 1911 Croatia Slavonia Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 7 11th ed pp 471 477 Codex diplomaticus Regni Croatiae Slavoniae et Dalmatiae Internet Archive digital library Euratlas Maps Erdelyi Magyar Adatbank Map Map Archived 5 December 2012 at archive today Ethnic map 45 48 N 15 58 E 45 800 N 15 967 E 45 800 15 967 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia amp oldid 1156281355, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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