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Kingdom of Dalmatia

The Kingdom of Dalmatia (Croatian: Kraljevina Dalmacija; German: Königreich Dalmatien; Italian: Regno di Dalmazia) was a crown land of the Austrian Empire (1815–1867) and the Cisleithanian half of Austria-Hungary (1867–1918). It encompassed the entirety of the region of Dalmatia, with its capital at Zadar.

Kingdom of Dalmatia
Kraljevina Dalmacija (Croatian)
Königreich Dalmatien (German)
Regno di Dalmazia (Italian)
1797–1805
1815–1918
Dalmatia (red) in Austria-Hungary, 1914
StatusCrown land of the Austrian Empire and part of Cisleithania in Austria-Hungary
CapitalZadar
Common languagesCroatian, Italian
Religion
Roman Catholic
GovernmentConstitutional monarchy
King 
• 1815–1835
Francis I
• 1835–1848
Ferdinand I
• 1848–1916
Francis Joseph I
• 1916–1918
Charles I
Governor 
• 1815–1831
Franjo Tomašić (first)
• 1911–1918
Mario Attems (last)
LegislatureDiet of Dalmatia
Historical eraNew Imperialism / WWI
12 May 1797
29 October 1918
CurrencyFlorin
(1815–1892),
Crown
(1892–1918)
Today part ofCroatia
Montenegro

History edit

The Habsburg monarchy had annexed the lands of Dalmatia after the Napoleonic War of the First Coalition: when Napoleon Bonaparte launched his Italian Campaign into the Habsburg duchies of Milan and Mantua in 1796, culminating in the Siege of Mantua, he compelled Emperor Francis II to make peace. In 1797 the Treaty of Campo Formio was signed, whereby the Habsburg emperor renounced possession of the Austrian Netherlands and officially recognized the independence of the Italian Cisalpine Republic. In turn, Napoleon ceded to him the possessions of the Republic of Venice, including the Dalmatian coast (Venetian Dalmatia) and the Bay of Kotor (Venetian Albania). La Serenissima had sided with Austria in order to defend her Domini di Terraferma and was occupied by French troops on 14 May 1797. The treaty ended the centuries-long history of the Venetian Republic.

The newly acquired Habsburg crown land stretched from the Rab Island and Karlobag in the north down the Adriatic coast to Budva in the south, while the Republic of Ragusa (Dubrovnik) retained its independence until 1808. When in 1804 Francis II created the title of Emperor of Austria for himself (as Francis I), he also added that of "King of Dalmatia" (Dalmatiae Rex). However, the possessions were again lost after the Austrian defeat in the Battle of Austerlitz and the 1805 Peace of Pressburg, when they temporarily formed part of the French Illyrian Provinces. Not until the Congress of Vienna in 1814–15 was the Kingdom of Dalmatia formed from the regained territories, now including the former Republic of Ragusa and stretching down to Sutomore in the southeast.

Around 1850, the Austrians had the Prevlaka fortress erected to control the maritime traffic in the Bay of Kotor. Upon the Revolutions of 1848, Dalmatia was temporarily under the control of Ban Josip Jelačić of Croatia. However, the Italian-speaking elite dominating the Diet of Dalmatia urged autonomy for the kingdom as an Austrian crown land – against the Croatian national revival movement's demand for a Triune Kingdom of Croatia, Slavonia, and Dalmatia. In the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, a unification with the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia was denied. While Croatia-Slavonia was incorporated into the Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen, Dalmatia remained a crown land of the Cislethanian (Austrian) half of the Dual Monarchy.

The kingdom was a separate administrative division of Austria-Hungary until 1918, when its territory – except for Zadar and the islands of Lastovo and Palagruza which were annexed by the Kingdom of Italy – became part of the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs and the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (later the Kingdom of Yugoslavia). As a result of the Vidovdan Constitution (in 1921), the majority of the kingdom was divided into the Split Oblast and Dubrovnik Oblast, with the Bay of Kotor being administratively split off to the largely Montenegrin Zeta Oblast.

First Austrian Administration edit

Many workers and citizens throughout Dalmatia were revolted by the fall of the Venetian Republic in 1797. A strong movement for unification of Dalmatia with Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia emerged. The Franciscans and many other members of the clergy held gatherings, for example in the village of Gornji Karin, where they demanded unification.[1] They were joined by Archbishop Lelije Cipiko of Split, the Bishop of Makarska and the Orthodox clergy. In June 1797, they formed a delegation which planned to travel to Vienna and ask the Emperor to approve unification but they were pre-empted by the Treaty of Campo Formio, so they decided to contact the Croatian Ban instead.[1] By the Treaty of Campo Formio, signed on 18 October 1797 between the French First Republic and the Habsburg monarchy, Venetian territories were divided between the two states with Habsburg Monarchy gaining Istria and Dalmatia.

The Austrian army, with about 4,000 soldiers, was led by the Croatian general Mathias Rukavina von Boynograd in claiming the newly acquired territories. Rukavina, a supporter of the unification of Dalmatia and Croatia-Slavonia, was named Military Governor of Dalmatia. The people and the clergy were delighted to see the arrival of a Croat-led army composed predominantly of ethnic Croats.[2] However, Dalmatia was treated as a newly conquered territory and so it had no autonomous government but was directly subjected to the government in Vienna.

In 1798, the Imperial and Royal Government (Croatian: Carska i kraljevska Vlada; Italian: Cesareo Regio Governo), headed by the governor, was founded in Zadar. Members of the government and the governor were appointed by the Emperor and were subordinated to the Imperial and Royal Court Committee for Istria, Dalmatia, and Albania in Venice (Croatian: Carsko i kraljevsko dvorsko povjerenstvo za Istru, Dalmaciju i Albaniju; Italian: Ces. Reg. commissione aulica per l'Istria, Dalmazia ed Albania), and since 1802 to the Viennese Royal Chamber's Section for Dalmatia and the Bay of Kotor (Croatian: Sekcija za Dalmaciju i Boku kotorsku Dvorske kancelarije). Dalmatia was divided into administrative-court districts, headed by the rectors and judge-administrators. Seats of the districts were in Cres, Krk, Rab, Pag, Zadar, Nin, Novigrad, Skradin, Šibenik, Knin, Sinj, Trogir, Split, Klis, Omiš, Brač, Hvar, Korčula, Imotski, Makarska, Poljica and Metković.

In 1802, the Habsburg court officially rejected the request for the unification of Dalmatia with the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia. During its short first administration of Dalmatia, the Austrian government did little to change the existing Venetian system and implemented only limited reforms in education and the judiciary. In 1803, a gymnasium was opened in Zadar. After the Austrian defeat against Napoleon, according to the provisions of the 1805 Peace of Pressburg, Dalmatia was handed over to the French, who annexed it to Napoleon's client state of the Kingdom of Italy. That ended the first Austrian administration of Dalmatia.

French Administration edit

Following the Peace of Pressburg, Napoleon sent General Gabriel Jean Joseph Molitor to take over Dalmatia. In February 1806, the French occupied northern Dalmatia down to the Neretva River. The Bay of Kotor, which was also given to the French by the Peace, was held by the Russians and their Montenegrin allies. In addition, the Russians also occupied the Korčula and sought to capture the Republic of Ragusa.[3]

End of the Republic of Ragusa edit

According to the provisions of the Peace of Pressburg, France was entitled to all of Dalmatia and the Bay of Kotor. The territory of the Republic of Ragusa (Dubrovnik) cut off terrestrial connection between those French territories.[4] With Napoleon's army on one side, and the weakened Ottoman Empire on other, the Republic was no longer safe.[5] On May 27, 1806, endangered by the Russians, the Republic surrendered without resistance to the French troops. A French force of about 1,200 soldiers under the command of General Jacques Lauriston entered the city under the false pretenses.[6] Since the entry of the French army into Dubrovnik, war operations in the Ottoman Empire, led by the joint Russian military and Montenegrin paramilitary forces, who were assisted by Serb population from the hinterland, began. At the beginning of October 1806, with the help of General Auguste de Marmont, the hostile Russian army was expelled from the territory of the Dubrovnik Republic. Shortly thereafter, the French took over Dubrovnik's government. The needs of a large number of French troops financially exhausted Dubrovnik. Dubrovnik's mercantile navy was destroyed or lost in the Mediterranean ports, and the once very lucrative trade with the hinterland was interrupted. On January 31, 1808, General Marmont, with Napoleon's approval, dissolved Dubrovnik's Senate and abolished Dubrovnik's independence. After the abolition of the Republic, the Dubrovnik area with Bay of Kotor was subjected to Napoleon's Kingdom of Italy and between 1810 and 1814 included in the French Illyrian Provinces.

Dalmatia under the French edit

 
Marshal Auguste de Marmont, military commander of Dalmatia during French rule (1806–1813)

Soon after the occupation of Dalmatia, Napoleon appointed General Vincenzo Dandolo to the position of the provéditeur général of Dalmatia (appointed on April 28, 1806) and General Auguste de Marmont to the position of a military commander of Dalmatia (appointed on June 12, 1806).[7][8] Dalmatia was administratively linked to the Kingdom of Italy whose seat was in Milan. On October 14, 1809, Illyrian Provinces were created with the Treaty of Schönbrunn.[9] The center of the Dalmatian Government (Italian: La Proveditura Generale), led by the General Dandolo, was in Zadar. Italian become the official language. Dalmatian interests were advocated (only formally) by the so-called Dalmatian minister without portfolio who worked at the then central government of the Kingdom of Italy in Milan. Ivan Stratico served as a Minister for a long time. Proveditura Generale was divided into six departments (judiciary, internal affairs, finance, military affairs, teaching, accounting) that were led by the department heads. In addition, there were also 1 police and 1 military supervisor. All of them were subordinated to the Secretary-General (Italian: Segretario Generale) who was Proveditore Generale's right hand. Main Council of Dalmatians (Italian: Consiglio Generale della Dalmazia) was an advisory body. It was composed of 48 members who were chosen by the Government from the districts, one or more from each, according to the number of districts' inhabitants. The first members were appointed by the Government alone, and after each year 12 of them would resign, after which the Council proposed a list from which the Government would then pick 12 new candidates and appoint them to serve on the council. The council was presided over by the Proveditore Generale and it discussed various subjects relevant for Dalmatia. Councils' conclusions were only valid after Proveditore Generale's formal confirmation.[10]

The judiciary was separated from the administration. There were 22 local or reconciliatory courts (Italian: Giudici Locali o di Pace), primarily in all districts, as well as in some other more important areas. Zadar, Split and Dubrovnik were seats of the tribunals which were courts of appeal for local courts and first-instance courts in all civil and criminal cases. Furthermore, a Court of Appeal for Tribunal verdicts was established in Zadar, while the Court in Milan was the Supreme Court (Italian: Tribunale di Cassazione). The original intention was to introduce French laws (Napoleonic Code et al.), but it soon became apparent that this would have been unfeasible due to the popular perceptions and customs, especially in property, inheritance and marital affairs. Therefore, in addition to superior French laws, Austrian and Venetian laws were also implied. The equality of all before the law was introduced as well.[10]

Dalmatia was territorially divided into counties, districts, municipalities, and villages. According to such division, Dalmatia was divided into four counties: Zadar, Šibenik, Split and Makarska. Zadar County was divided into six districts (Zadar, Krk, Cres, Lošinj, Rab and Pag), Šibenik County into three (Šibenik, Skradin and Knin), Split County into five (Split, Trogir, Sinj, Nerežišća and Hvar) and Makarska into three (Makarska, Imotski and Korčula). County was led by a commissioner (Italian: Delegato), district by a Vice-commissioner (Italian: Vice-delegato), municipality by a municipal mayor, and village by an elder captain (Italian: Capitani-anziani). When the Bay of Kotor was given to France by the 1809 Treaties of Tilsit, and a year later the Republic of Dubrovnik was abolished, a special Proveditore Generale, Dominik Garagnin, was appointed to rule over four counties (Cavtat, Ston, Lopud and Kotor) and two districts (Herceg Novi and Budva).

The new territorial-administrative system has fundamentally redefined the existing Venetian system in Dalmatia. Some forms of governing bodies from the Venetian period were retained, e.g. the position of the Proveditore Generale and in military terms, the reshuffled institutions of territorial forces. During the French rule in Dalmatia, not much has been done for Dalmatian economic prosperity.[9] The first feature of the cultural revival of Dalmatia under the French administration was the launch of the bilingual weekly Il Regio Dalmata – Kraglski Dalmatin, whose first issue came out on July 12, 1806. Particular attention was devoted to education, as there were virtually no schools in Dalmatia when General Dandolo first arrived. French sought to build road connections with northern Croatia, and partly with Bosnia and Herzegovina. Construction of new roads was probably followed by military-strategic interests (with respect to the maritime blockade of the Adriatic by England and Russia), but they were also used for economic purposes. Many Dalmatians, especially lower clergymen with the Franciscans at their forehead, hated the French administration, seeing in them "atheists and Jacobins" because the French revoked numerous privileges of some Dalmatian municipalities and corporations trying to modernize Dalmatia.

 
Franjo Tomašić, the first governor of the Kingdom of Dalmatia

Second Austrian Administration edit

 
Landward Gate in Zadar, the capital of the Kingdom of Dalmatia, 1909

Already in 1811, the British took over Vis from French, and in 1812 Lastovo, Korčula, Pelješac, Hvar, Cavtat, Dubrovnik islands and Split. Kotor was held by the Russians. After Napoleon's defeat in the 1813 Battle of Leipzig, the Austrian Empire took control of the Illyrian provinces. The takeover of Dalmatia was easily accomplished in the fall of 1813 by General Franjo Tomašić and his troops of 2,900 Croatian soldiers, because the people of Dalmatia, under the leadership of the clergy, especially the Franciscans, met them as liberators. After the surrender of Zadar (December 6), General Todor Milutinović went on a military campaign to take over Dubrovnik (succeeding on January 27, 1814) and Bay of Kotor, which he did by June 1814. Thus, territory stretching from Zrmanja river to the town of Budva was again subordinated to Vienna. This was confirmed at the 1815 Congress of Vienna.[10]

Baron Tomašić was appointed new Governor of Dalmatia, while the administration was taken over by the newly formed Provincial Government which was led by Tomašić himself. In order to integrate the area between Rab and Budva, the Viennese court has established a special territorial unit - Kingdom of Dalmatia. With the same intent, Pope Leo XII issued papal bull Locum Beati Petri by which he founded unified Zadar metropolis which was superior to all Dalmatian dioceses, including historical Archdioceses of Split and Dubrovnik.[11] In the period between 1816 and 1822, all new bodies of central and provincial government were founded in Zadar. The judicial reorganization was carried out as well. These administrative and judicial bodies worked until 1852/1854 and some until 1868, when the whole administration was reformed, when new judicial organs and provincial governing bodies were established. Such organization, with minor changes, remained in force until 1918. By the provisions of the 1861 February Patent, Diet of Dalmatia was founded. Austrians were bringing foreign civil servants to Dalmatia, mostly from Austria and northern Italy (then part of the Monarchy).[12] In 1832, a new road that went through Velebit's Mali Alan mountain pass was opened. It was the only connection between Dalmatia and continental Croatia. The Austrian government increased the number of schools; by 1839 there were 50, and by 1846 around 150, attended by a third of school children. Croatian language in schools was almost an exception in comparison to Italian.

Croatian National Revival in Dalmatia edit

French and Austrian rule greatly contributed to Croatian national awakening in Dalmatia, which was also influenced by the ideas of the Illyrian movement, active in the Kingdom of Croatia. In 1835, Božidar Petranović began printing Serbo-Dalmatian Magazine (Croatian: Srbsko-dalmatinski magazin) in Zadar, while in 1844 Ante Kuzmanić launched Zora dalmatinska magazine (English: Dalmatian Dawn) and began working on the linguistic and national awareness of the Dalmatians, which was until then only encouraged by the clergy. Revolutionary 1848 initially created political division between the markists, who wanted to rebuild the Republic of St. Mark, and the monarchists, proponents of the Habsburg monarchy. As wealthy Italians had full control over cities and their assemblies due to the electoral system, proposals of the Croatian Kingdom's county and city assemblies to the "Dalmatian brothers of the same blood and language" for the unification of Dalmatia and Croatia, were rejected. Nevertheless, Croatian national movement was very strong. In response to the Autonomist Party's refusal to accept unification, vicars and inhabitants of the Dalmatian Hinterland sent a letter to the Croatian ban Josip Jelačić in which they stated that they were still seeking unification and that its opponents were in the great minority. In December 1848, Emperor Franz Joseph I appointed Jelačić Governor of Dalmatia. His appointment was opposed by the Split and Zadar municipalities (both governed by the Autonomist Party), while Croats, especially those in Dubrovnik, met Jelačić with great expectations that were later mostly not fulfilled.[13] Jelačić's role remained largely ceremonial, and the Viennese court refused any discussion on the matter of unification. In 1851, ban Jelačić visited Kingdom, and was welcomed with special enthusiasm in Dobrota.[14] In order to counter the opponents of unification (Italians in particular), Croats were establishing public libraries and cultural societies throughout Dalmatia, mostly under the "Slavic" name. Eventually, Government made the decision by which the Croatian language was taught as a second language in Dalmatian schools. However, there weren't many schools in which the Croatian language was being taught so that's why the Franciscans founded first Croatian gymnasium in 1854 in Sinj.

Conflict between People's and Autonomist parties edit

 
Mihovil Pavlinović was one of the most prominent advocators of unification of Dalmatia with the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia.

In 1860, Emperor Franz Joseph I decided to renew the Empire's constitutional and political life so he convened an expanded Imperial Council. Representatives of the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia, Ambroz Vranyczany and Josip Juraj Strossmayer, raised the question of the unification of the Kingdoms of Croatia-Slavonia and Dalmatia. A representative of Dalmatia, Frane Borelli, stated that the Italians were indeed a minority in Dalmatia, but that he didn't believe it was the right time for unification. At the time, there were two opposing political parties in Dalmatia: Croatian nationalist liberal People's Party, led by Miho Klaić and Mihovil Pavlinović, and Italian nationalist conservative Autonomist Party, led by Antonio Bajamonti and Luigi Lapenno. Autonomist Party was supported by the Dalmatian Governor Lazar Mamula, the cities of Zadar and Split, some other smaller cities and municipalities, as well as the Viennese court that feared the weakening of Austria in relation to Croatia-Slavonia and Hungary if the unification happened. People's Party was supported by Stari Grad, Vrboska, Metković, Bol, Dubrovnik and Kotor. The main point of People's Party program was the unification of Dalmatia with Croatia-Slavonia and the introduction of Croatian language in the administration and education.

On the occasion of the convocation of the Ban's Conference in Zagreb in 1860, representatives from Dalmatia were invited to discuss unification, but the Autonomist Party, supported by Ante Mamula, obstructed initiative.[15] Diet of Dalmatia was first convened in 1861. Autonomist Party held the majority of seats due to the unfair electoral system by which large landowners, clerks, and representatives of wealthy citizens, although accounting for only around 20% of the Dalmatian population, had a significant advantage. Diet refused unification of Dalmatia with Croatia-Slavonia. The Austro-Prussian War and Third Italian War of Independence resulted in the 1866 maritime Battle of Vis. After the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, which strengthened the division and unveiled the prospect of unification of Dalmatia with Croatia-Slavonia to a minimum, the People's Party returned to the political and cultural struggle to croatize Dalmatia, especially focusing on schools, wanting to introduce Croatian as a teaching language. Therefore, their aim was to win power in the municipalities, since the school curriculums were within the municipal scope.[16] In 1862, they launched a weekly in Italian Il Nazionale in order to win over voters whose primary language was Italian. They later started publishing weekly in Croatian Narodni list (English: People's Gazette) as well. In 1869, Mihovil Pavlinović wrote Croatian political program -Hrvatska misao (English: Croatian Thought), in which he advocated the Croatian right to independence and the establishment of unified and constitutional Croatian state that would have included all "historical Croatian territories", including Dalmatia.[17][18]

In October 1869, an armed revolt known as the Krivošije uprising occurred in the Bay of Kotor hinterland region of Krivošije.[19] The uprising broke out after a decisive Prussian victory over the Austrian Empire in the 1866 Battle of Königgrätz, and the consequent introduction of mandatory conscription for the people from that region who were by then traditionally exempt from conscription. Due to conscription, sailors lost essential years they could have used for working at sea. People that lived in the mountains were disarmed so they lost the opportunity to go to Herzegovina to hunt small and large cattle. The formal peace accord, by which the conscription was abandoned, and people allowed to retain their weapons, was signed on 11 January 1870.[20]

Members of the People's and Autonomist parties were increasingly clashing as tensions began to rise. On July 31, 1869, during the visit of the Italian ship on a hydrographic mission, a clash between Italian sailors and Croatian citizens of Šibenik broke out. 14 Italian sailors and a few Croats were seriously injured. This clash turned into a diplomatic conflict between the Kingdom of Italy and Austria-Hungary, known as the Monzambano Affair.[21] In the meantime, the People's Party started getting better organized and slowly winning rural municipalities in the Dalmatian Hinterland and on the islands, which culminated in the 1870 election, when it won the majority of seats in the Diet. On February 15, 1873, the Party won the first major city - Šibenik, where Ante Šupuk was elected mayor. In 1882, despite intimidation and violence by the Autonomist Party's paramilitary units, the People's Party Gajo Bulat defeated the Autonomist Party's Antonio Bajamonti, thus becoming the Mayor of Split. Shortly thereafter, the People's Party won the election in the Stari Grad and Trogir municipalities, while the Autonomist Party only governed Zadar. In 1883, Croatian was proclaimed the official language of the Diet of Dalmatia.

At the same time, the network of Croatian schools grew. In 1866, the Croatian Teachers' School (Croatian: Hrvatska učiteljska škola) was opened in Arbanasi near Zadar. In 1883, there were about 300 primary, and 3 high schools (in Dubrovnik, Kotor and Split) in which the Croatian language was thought. In 1898, Croatian gymnasium was opened in Zadar.

Serbo-Croatian split edit

 
Erection of the monument dedicated to Ivan Gundulić in Dubrovnik, 20 May 1893

Ever since Vuk Karadžić, Ilija Garašanin and Jovan Subotić started writing about Dalmatia as a Serbian land, and following the recognition of the Kingdom of Serbia as an independent state at the 1878 Congress of Berlin, the different interests of Croats and Serbs in Dalmatia became more evident. Serbs continuously started mentioning Dalmatia as a "Serbian land".[22] After Croatia's enthusiasm with the Austro-Hungarian occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, which involved numerous Croatian soldiers from Dalmatia, many of whom had died, and the request for the unification of Bosnia-Herzegovina with Croatia-Slavonia, the conflict was inevitable.[23] In 1879, Serbs from Bukovica voted for the Italian candidate of the Autonomist Party, instead of People's Party Mihovil Klaić. The People's Party called this the Bukovica betrayal.[23] Shortly afterward, separate Croatian and Serbian parties were founded, but Croats still held a majority in the Diet of Dalmatia.

In November 1881, Serbs and Montenegrins that lived in the hinterland of the Bay of Kotor, on the territory of the Kingdom of Dalmatia, rebelled against the mandatory conscription, which was the obligation of all citizens of the Monarchy. The Austrian army, headed by field marshal Stjepan Jovanović, suppressed this rebellion in May 1882.

In 1891, Frano Supilo started publishing Crvena Hrvatska (English: Red Croatia), the journal in which he was writing against Serbian pretensions on Dalmatia and in favor of the unification of Dalmatia with Croatia.[24] In 1893, on the occasion of the erection of a monument dedicated to Ivan Gundulić in Dubrovnik, there were great tensions between Croats and Serbs. Namely, many Croatian dignitaries, politicians, and artists came to Dubrovnik so the festivity turned into an exhibition of Croatian nationalism when people started chanting for Croatia, as opposed to the wishes of some of the people of Dubrovnik who were proponents of Serbian ideas, like Medo Pucić.

With the affirmation of the so-called New Direction Policy, Serbo-Croatian relations started getting better. This was confirmed by the signing of the Zadar Resolution on 25 February 1907. Dr. Lovro Monti stated: "With Serbs, we can do a lot, without Serbs a little, and against Serbs nothing."[25] In 1905, for the first time, a native of Dalmatia, Niko Nardelli (NS), was appointed Governor. In 1912, Italian was abolished in public offices and courts. However, the Austrian government still used Italian and German in its official correspondence.

First World War edit

 
SMS Erzherzog Ferdinand Max, 1905

Immediately upon the outbreak of the First World War, all organizations that the government considered close to Serbia or to the idea of the creation of a single state for all South Slavic peoples were forbidden. Many prominent politicians were persecuted and arrested while some emigrated. Until 1915, when the Kingdom of Italy joined the Entente Powers after the Treaty of London, there were no war operations on the Adriatic, but since then the maritime conflicts became frequent. Due to the Allied blockade of the Strait of Otranto, trade in the Adriatic almost completely stopped. The government recruited many ships for military purposes, while the civilian sailing has been almost completely suspended. Mandatory blackouts were imposed on the islands and in the ports due to the fear of bombing. A number of church bells were removed, melted and used for war purposes. Fighting was also taking place around Lastovo and the distant islands so artillery batteries were placed there. In 1917, French Air Force bombed Lastovo.[26]

In Dalmatia, hunger and scarcity began to emerge, while at the same time Hungarian laws banned the export of foodstuff to the Austrian half of the Monarchy (which Dalmatia was part of) in the case of war. Dalmatia received food aid through the port of Trieste, but the amounts were inadequate, sometimes even completely useless, and often arriving too late (for example, supplies intended for 1917 arrived in 1918[27]). Therefore, Franciscans and benefactors from Zagreb organized the action of sending Dalmatian children to Slavonia and Moslavina so they could have adequate nutrition. The war destroyed Dalmatian agriculture. At the end of the war, epidemics of the typhus, cholera, smallpox and Spanish influenza broke out, causing the death of many people.[27]

In 1915, Croats made up 34% of Austro-Hungarian Navy personnel.[28] Apart from the Navy, Dalmatians also fought in land units, namely in the 22nd Imperial Regiment, 23rd Zadar Imperial Home Guard Regiment, 37th Dubrovnik Imperial Regiment and the Dalmatian Mounted Rifles. Following the Italian announcement of war, Croats were mostly sent to fight on fronts against Italy because the government expected them to be motivated to fight against those who mistreated them in the past.

As the war ceased, there were also cases of defection, and in February 1918 a rebellion of sailors in the Bay of Kotor broke out, the Cattaro Mutiny. In 1917, representatives of Dalmatia in Imperial Council headed by Vjekoslav Spinčić, Josip Smodlaka and Ivo Prodan, wrote the May Declaration, in which they presented a program of unification of all South Slavs within the Austria-Hungary that had to be divided into three equal parts - Austria, Hungary, and Croatia. At the end of the war, the National Council for Dalmatia was founded in Zadar and the unified National Organization for Dalmatia in Split. These bodies soon started to independently govern Dalmatia.[27] In the last days of the Monarchy, General Stjepan Sarkotić managed to convince Hungarian Prime Minister Sándor Wekerle and Emperor Charles I. to support the unification of Dalmatia with Croatia, but that didn't happen until the collapse of the Monarchy in 1918. On October 29, 1918, when the Austro-Hungarian Parliament dismantled, the Croatian Parliament passed a decision by which Croatia-Slavonia terminated state-law relations with Austria-Hungary and, together with Dalmatia and town of Rijeka, joined State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs.

Demographic history edit

1818–1857 edit

According to M. Lorković, the total population of Dalmatia numbered 297,912 in 1818; 326,739 in 1825; 338,599 in 1830; 390,381 in 1840; and 393,715 in 1850.[29][30]

Based on the 1857 census, the Kingdom of Dalmatia had 415,628 inhabitants.[31] According to an analysis of the 1857 census, 318,500 (76.5%) inhabitants were Croats, 77,500 (18.5%) were Serbs, and ca. 20,000 were Italian-speakers (5%).[32] The percentage of Dalmatian Serbs had been 19.9% in the 1830–50 period.[32] In the cities, the inhabitants were 71% Croat, 22% Italian and 7% Serb.[32] There were 745 Serbs in Kotor; in all other cities there were fewer than 400.[32] The number of Serbs in Dalmatia fell; however, in the north it rose.[32] Among the Orthodox, there was one priest for every 400 people, while among the Catholics, there was one priest for every 330 people.[32]

1880 edit

The 1880 Austrian census, recorded the following ethnic groups in the Kingdom:[citation needed]

1900 edit

The 1900 Austrian census:[33]

Religion
Language[33]

1910 edit

According to the official 1910 Austrian census, population by religion and mother language was:[34]

Religion
Language
  • Serbo-Croatian: 610,649
  • Italian: 18,028
  • German: 3,081
  • Others: 3,077

Cities edit

The major cities were (1900):[35]

Administrative subdivisions edit

 
Map of the Kingdom of Dalmatia
 
Extent of the Kingdom of Dalmatia, superimposed on the modern-day internal borders of Croatia (the Bay of Kotor area is in Montenegro)

From 1822 to 1868 the Kingdom of Dalmatia was administratively divided into four circles (counties, Italian: circoli or capitanati circolari, Croatian: okruzi or okružna poglavarstva) - Zadar, Split, Dubrovnik and Kotor - these were subdivided into smaller districts (Italian: distretti-preture, Croatian: kotari-preture), each comprised municipalities (Italian: comuni, Croatian: općine). In 1868 the circles were abolished and Dalmatia was divided into 13 larger (administrative) districts (Italian: distretti politici or capitanati distrettuali, Croatian: kotari or kotarska poglavarstva) whose capitals were (1880):

Districts, as governmental units with the government-appointed prefect (Italian: capitano distrettuale, Croatian: kotarski poglavar), were subdivided into judicial districts (Italian: distretti giudiziari, Croatian: sudski kotari) and these into municipalities (Italian: comuni, Croatian: općine) as local authorities with the elected municipal council (Italian: consiglio comunale, Croatian: općinsko vijeće) and the mayor (Italian: podestà, Croatian: načelnik) elected by the council.

Religion edit

The Roman Catholic archbishop had his seat in Zadar, while the diocese of Kotor, diocese of Hvar, diocese of Dubrovnik, diocese of Šibenik and diocese of Split were bishoprics. At the head of the Orthodox community stood the bishop of Zadar.

The use of Croatian-Slavonic liturgies written in the Glagolitic alphabet, a very ancient privilege of the Roman Catholics in Dalmatia and Croatia, caused much controversy during the first years of the 20th century. There was considerable danger that the Latin liturgies would be altogether superseded by the Glagolitic, especially among the northern islands and in rural communes, where the Slavonic element is all-powerful. In 1904, the Vatican forbade the use of Glagolitic at the festival of SS. Cyril and Methodius, as likely to impair the unity of Catholicism. A few years previously the Slavonic archbishop Rajcevic of Zara, in discussing the "Glagolitic controversy", had denounced the movement as "an innovation introduced by Panslavism to make it easy for the Catholic clergy, after any great revolution in the Balkan States, to break with Latin Rome."

Governors edit

Head of the Austrian imperial administration in Dalmatia was Imperial-Royal Provincial Governor (Italian: I. R. Governatore Provinciale, Croatian: c. k. Guverner) appointed by the emperor. From 1852 he was known as Imperial-Royal Lieutenant (Italian: I. R. Luogotenente, Croatian: c. k. Namjesnik).

  • Franjo Tomašić (1815–1831)
  • Wenzeslau Lilienberg Water (1831–1841)
  • Ivan August Turszky (1841–1848)
  • Ludwig von Welden (1848)
  • Josip Jelačić (1848–1859)
  • Lazar Mamula (1859–1865)
  • Franjo Filipović (1865–1868)
  • Johann Wagner (1868–1869)
  • Gottfried Auersperg (1869)
  • Julius Fluk von Leidenkron (1869–1870)
  • Gavrilo Rodić (1870–1881)
  • Stjepan Jovanović (1882–1885)
  • Ludovik Cornaro (1885–1886)
  • Dragutin Blažeković (1886–1890)
  • Emil David (1890–1902)
  • Erasmus Handel (1902–1905)
  • Nicola Nardelli (1905–1911)
  • Mario Attems (1911–1918)

Military edit

Military units in the kingdom at the start of the First World War:

  • Common Army
    • 22nd (Dalmatian) Infantry Regiment "Graf von Lacy" (garrison: Spalato/Split)
  • Imperial-Royal Landwehr
    • Imperial-Royal Mounted Dalmatian State Rifle Division (garrison: Sinj)
    • 23rd Imperial-Royal Landwehr Infantry Regiment (garrison: Zara/Zadar)
    • 37th Imperial-Royal Landwehr Infantry Regiment (garrison: Gravosa/Gruž)

Politics edit

Dalmatian Parliament edit

The Kingdom of Dalmatia held elections to the Parliament of Dalmatia in 1861, 1864, 1867, 1870, 1876, 1883, 1889, 1895, 1901, 1908.

Reichsrat edit

1907

In the 1907 elections, Dalmatia elected the following representatives to the lower chamber of the Reichsrat (Imperial Council)[36]

1911

In the 1911 elections, Dalmatia elected the following representatives:[36]

See also edit

Literature edit

  • Bilandžić, Dušan (1999). Hrvatska moderna povijest. Golden marketing. ISBN 953-6168-50-2.
  • Macan, Trpimir (1992). Povijest hrvatskog naroda. Školska knjiga. ISBN 86-401-0058-6.
  • Stipetić, Vladimir (2012). Dva stoljeća razvoja hrvatskog gospodarstva (1820.-2005.). HAZU. ISBN 978-953-154-110-7.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Macan, 265.
  2. ^ Macan, 266.
  3. ^ Ferdo Šišić, Hrvatska povijest, Kratki pregled povijesti republike dubrovačke, Zagreb, 1913.
  4. ^ Ferdo Šišić, Hrvatska povijest, Kratki pregled povijesti republike dubrovačke, Zagreb, 1913
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-09-03. Retrieved 2017-11-04.
  6. ^ "Gradoplov :: Radio Dubrovnik". radio.hrt.hr.
  7. ^ http://www.filatelija.net/crticeizpp5.htm[dead link]
  8. ^ "Izvještaj generala Molitora o pohodu u Dalmaciju 1806. godine". Hrvatski povijesni portal. 12 February 2023.
  9. ^ a b Tado ORŠOLIĆ, Teritorijalne snage za francuske uprave u Dalmaciji (1806.–1809.)
  10. ^ a b c Ferdo Šišić, Hrvatska povijest, Austrijska i francuska dalmacija i Ilirija (1797.-1815.), Zagreb, 1913.
  11. ^ http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/95497 Stjepan Ćosić, Državna uprava u Dalmaciji i crkveni preustroj 1828./1830. godine, p. 51
  12. ^ Macan, 271.
  13. ^ Macan, 288.
  14. ^ "Vanda Babić, Josip Miletić: Kulturni život Boke i preporodna gibanja [Bay of Kotor's Cultural Life and Revolutionary Movements], Kolo, Broj 3, Fall of 2007". matica.hr. Retrieved 9 April 2018.
  15. ^ Macan, 294.
  16. ^ Macan, 309.
  17. ^ "povijest.net, Hrvatski narodni preporod u Dalmaciji i Istri, Hrvoje Petrić". 12 February 2023.
  18. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-11-07. Retrieved 2017-11-06.
  19. ^ (nje.) W. R. Rosner: Schönfeld, Anton (Maria Emmerich Wilhelm) Frh. von (1827-1898), Feldzeugmeister, ÖBL 1815-1950, sv. 11 (Lfg. 51, 1995), p. 70f.
  20. ^ (Montenegrin) Tomislav Grgurević: Crna Gora i Bokeljski ustanak, Montenegrina/Feljton iz lista Republika, objavljen krajem 2007. Pristupljeno 16. svibnja 2016.
  21. ^ Lawrence Sondhaus: The Naval Policy of Austria-Hungary, 1867-1918: Navalism, Industrial Development, and the Politics of Dualism, Purdue University Press, 1994., p. 12.
  22. ^ Macan, p. 312.
  23. ^ a b "SLOBODNA DALMACIJA, NEDJELJA 13. kolovoza 2000. - podlistak: Preokret i odvajanje". arhiv.slobodnadalmacija.hr.
  24. ^ Crvena Hrvatska, Dubrovnik, No. 32, August 12, 1893, p. 1–2.
  25. ^ Bilandžić, p. 25.
  26. ^ Hlede, Vjekoslav. . www.lastovo.org. Archived from the original on 2013-04-07. Retrieved 2017-11-12.
  27. ^ a b c Franko Mirošević: Prilozi za povijest Dalmacije u 1918. godini
  28. ^ "When Czech mariners sailed the seas - Radio Prague". 10 May 2011.
  29. ^ Šime Peričić (1998). Gospodarska povijest Dalmacije od 18. do 20. stoljeća. Matica hrvatska. p. 98. ISBN 9789536419159.
  30. ^ Igor Karaman (2000). Hrvatska na pragu modernizacije, 1750-1918. Naklada Ljevak. p. 151. ISBN 978-953-178-155-8.
  31. ^ Statistische übersichten über die bevölkerung und den viehstand von Österreich nach der zählung vom 31. October 1857, p. 49
  32. ^ a b c d e f Marino Manini (2001). Zbornik radova s Međunarodnog znanstvenog skupa Talijankska uprava na hrvatskom prostoru i egzodus Hrvata 1918-1943. Hrvatski institut za povijest. p. 312.
  33. ^ a b Gemeindelexikon der im Reichsrate vertretenen Königreiche und Länder, Bd. 14 Dalmatien, p. 88
  34. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-05-29.
  35. ^ Gemeindelexikon der im Reichsrate vertretenen Königreiche und Länder, Bd. 14 Dalmatien
  36. ^ a b "Dvije pobjede don Ive Prodana na izborima za Carevinsko vijeće u Beču".

External links edit

  • Jayne, Kingsley Garland (1911). "Dalmatia" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 7 (11th ed.). pp. 772–776.
  • German protectorate

44°07′00″N 15°13′00″E / 44.1167°N 15.2167°E / 44.1167; 15.2167

kingdom, dalmatia, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, january,. This 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 Dalmatia news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Kingdom of Dalmatia Croatian Kraljevina Dalmacija German Konigreich Dalmatien Italian Regno di Dalmazia was a crown land of the Austrian Empire 1815 1867 and the Cisleithanian half of Austria Hungary 1867 1918 It encompassed the entirety of the region of Dalmatia with its capital at Zadar Kingdom of DalmatiaKraljevina Dalmacija Croatian Konigreich Dalmatien German Regno di Dalmazia Italian 1797 18051815 1918Flag Coat of armsDalmatia red in Austria Hungary 1914StatusCrown land of the Austrian Empire and part of Cisleithania in Austria HungaryCapitalZadarCommon languagesCroatian ItalianReligionRoman CatholicGovernmentConstitutional monarchyKing 1815 1835Francis I 1835 1848Ferdinand I 1848 1916Francis Joseph I 1916 1918Charles IGovernor 1815 1831Franjo Tomasic first 1911 1918Mario Attems last LegislatureDiet of DalmatiaHistorical eraNew Imperialism WWI Fall of the Republic of Venice12 May 1797 Independence29 October 1918CurrencyFlorin 1815 1892 Crown 1892 1918 Preceded by Succeeded by1797 Venetian Dalmatia1815 Illyrian Provinces 1805 Kingdom of Italy1918 State of Slovenes Croats and SerbsToday part ofCroatiaMontenegro Contents 1 History 1 1 First Austrian Administration 1 2 French Administration 1 2 1 End of the Republic of Ragusa 1 2 2 Dalmatia under the French 1 3 Second Austrian Administration 1 3 1 Croatian National Revival in Dalmatia 1 3 2 Conflict between People s and Autonomist parties 1 3 3 Serbo Croatian split 1 3 4 First World War 2 Demographic history 2 1 1818 1857 2 2 1880 2 3 1900 2 4 1910 3 Cities 4 Administrative subdivisions 5 Religion 6 Governors 7 Military 8 Politics 8 1 Dalmatian Parliament 8 2 Reichsrat 9 See also 10 Literature 11 References 12 External linksHistory editThe Habsburg monarchy had annexed the lands of Dalmatia after the Napoleonic War of the First Coalition when Napoleon Bonaparte launched his Italian Campaign into the Habsburg duchies of Milan and Mantua in 1796 culminating in the Siege of Mantua he compelled Emperor Francis II to make peace In 1797 the Treaty of Campo Formio was signed whereby the Habsburg emperor renounced possession of the Austrian Netherlands and officially recognized the independence of the Italian Cisalpine Republic In turn Napoleon ceded to him the possessions of the Republic of Venice including the Dalmatian coast Venetian Dalmatia and the Bay of Kotor Venetian Albania La Serenissima had sided with Austria in order to defend her Domini di Terraferma and was occupied by French troops on 14 May 1797 The treaty ended the centuries long history of the Venetian Republic The newly acquired Habsburg crown land stretched from the Rab Island and Karlobag in the north down the Adriatic coast to Budva in the south while the Republic of Ragusa Dubrovnik retained its independence until 1808 When in 1804 Francis II created the title of Emperor of Austria for himself as Francis I he also added that of King of Dalmatia Dalmatiae Rex However the possessions were again lost after the Austrian defeat in the Battle of Austerlitz and the 1805 Peace of Pressburg when they temporarily formed part of the French Illyrian Provinces Not until the Congress of Vienna in 1814 15 was the Kingdom of Dalmatia formed from the regained territories now including the former Republic of Ragusa and stretching down to Sutomore in the southeast Around 1850 the Austrians had the Prevlaka fortress erected to control the maritime traffic in the Bay of Kotor Upon the Revolutions of 1848 Dalmatia was temporarily under the control of Ban Josip Jelacic of Croatia However the Italian speaking elite dominating the Diet of Dalmatia urged autonomy for the kingdom as an Austrian crown land against the Croatian national revival movement s demand for a Triune Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia and Dalmatia In the Austro Hungarian Compromise of 1867 a unification with the Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia was denied While Croatia Slavonia was incorporated into the Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen Dalmatia remained a crown land of the Cislethanian Austrian half of the Dual Monarchy The kingdom was a separate administrative division of Austria Hungary until 1918 when its territory except for Zadar and the islands of Lastovo and Palagruza which were annexed by the Kingdom of Italy became part of the State of Slovenes Croats and Serbs and the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes later the Kingdom of Yugoslavia As a result of the Vidovdan Constitution in 1921 the majority of the kingdom was divided into the Split Oblast and Dubrovnik Oblast with the Bay of Kotor being administratively split off to the largely Montenegrin Zeta Oblast First Austrian Administration edit Many workers and citizens throughout Dalmatia were revolted by the fall of the Venetian Republic in 1797 A strong movement for unification of Dalmatia with Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia emerged The Franciscans and many other members of the clergy held gatherings for example in the village of Gornji Karin where they demanded unification 1 They were joined by Archbishop Lelije Cipiko of Split the Bishop of Makarska and the Orthodox clergy In June 1797 they formed a delegation which planned to travel to Vienna and ask the Emperor to approve unification but they were pre empted by the Treaty of Campo Formio so they decided to contact the Croatian Ban instead 1 By the Treaty of Campo Formio signed on 18 October 1797 between the French First Republic and the Habsburg monarchy Venetian territories were divided between the two states with Habsburg Monarchy gaining Istria and Dalmatia The Austrian army with about 4 000 soldiers was led by the Croatian general Mathias Rukavina von Boynograd in claiming the newly acquired territories Rukavina a supporter of the unification of Dalmatia and Croatia Slavonia was named Military Governor of Dalmatia The people and the clergy were delighted to see the arrival of a Croat led army composed predominantly of ethnic Croats 2 However Dalmatia was treated as a newly conquered territory and so it had no autonomous government but was directly subjected to the government in Vienna In 1798 the Imperial and Royal Government Croatian Carska i kraljevska Vlada Italian Cesareo Regio Governo headed by the governor was founded in Zadar Members of the government and the governor were appointed by the Emperor and were subordinated to the Imperial and Royal Court Committee for Istria Dalmatia and Albania in Venice Croatian Carsko i kraljevsko dvorsko povjerenstvo za Istru Dalmaciju i Albaniju Italian Ces Reg commissione aulica per l Istria Dalmazia ed Albania and since 1802 to the Viennese Royal Chamber s Section for Dalmatia and the Bay of Kotor Croatian Sekcija za Dalmaciju i Boku kotorsku Dvorske kancelarije Dalmatia was divided into administrative court districts headed by the rectors and judge administrators Seats of the districts were in Cres Krk Rab Pag Zadar Nin Novigrad Skradin Sibenik Knin Sinj Trogir Split Klis Omis Brac Hvar Korcula Imotski Makarska Poljica and Metkovic In 1802 the Habsburg court officially rejected the request for the unification of Dalmatia with the Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia During its short first administration of Dalmatia the Austrian government did little to change the existing Venetian system and implemented only limited reforms in education and the judiciary In 1803 a gymnasium was opened in Zadar After the Austrian defeat against Napoleon according to the provisions of the 1805 Peace of Pressburg Dalmatia was handed over to the French who annexed it to Napoleon s client state of the Kingdom of Italy That ended the first Austrian administration of Dalmatia French Administration edit Following the Peace of Pressburg Napoleon sent General Gabriel Jean Joseph Molitor to take over Dalmatia In February 1806 the French occupied northern Dalmatia down to the Neretva River The Bay of Kotor which was also given to the French by the Peace was held by the Russians and their Montenegrin allies In addition the Russians also occupied the Korcula and sought to capture the Republic of Ragusa 3 End of the Republic of Ragusa edit Further information Republic of Ragusa End of the Republic According to the provisions of the Peace of Pressburg France was entitled to all of Dalmatia and the Bay of Kotor The territory of the Republic of Ragusa Dubrovnik cut off terrestrial connection between those French territories 4 With Napoleon s army on one side and the weakened Ottoman Empire on other the Republic was no longer safe 5 On May 27 1806 endangered by the Russians the Republic surrendered without resistance to the French troops A French force of about 1 200 soldiers under the command of General Jacques Lauriston entered the city under the false pretenses 6 Since the entry of the French army into Dubrovnik war operations in the Ottoman Empire led by the joint Russian military and Montenegrin paramilitary forces who were assisted by Serb population from the hinterland began At the beginning of October 1806 with the help of General Auguste de Marmont the hostile Russian army was expelled from the territory of the Dubrovnik Republic Shortly thereafter the French took over Dubrovnik s government The needs of a large number of French troops financially exhausted Dubrovnik Dubrovnik s mercantile navy was destroyed or lost in the Mediterranean ports and the once very lucrative trade with the hinterland was interrupted On January 31 1808 General Marmont with Napoleon s approval dissolved Dubrovnik s Senate and abolished Dubrovnik s independence After the abolition of the Republic the Dubrovnik area with Bay of Kotor was subjected to Napoleon s Kingdom of Italy and between 1810 and 1814 included in the French Illyrian Provinces Dalmatia under the French edit nbsp Marshal Auguste de Marmont military commander of Dalmatia during French rule 1806 1813 Soon after the occupation of Dalmatia Napoleon appointed General Vincenzo Dandolo to the position of the provediteur general of Dalmatia appointed on April 28 1806 and General Auguste de Marmont to the position of a military commander of Dalmatia appointed on June 12 1806 7 8 Dalmatia was administratively linked to the Kingdom of Italy whose seat was in Milan On October 14 1809 Illyrian Provinces were created with the Treaty of Schonbrunn 9 The center of the Dalmatian Government Italian La Proveditura Generale led by the General Dandolo was in Zadar Italian become the official language Dalmatian interests were advocated only formally by the so called Dalmatian minister without portfolio who worked at the then central government of the Kingdom of Italy in Milan Ivan Stratico served as a Minister for a long time Proveditura Generale was divided into six departments judiciary internal affairs finance military affairs teaching accounting that were led by the department heads In addition there were also 1 police and 1 military supervisor All of them were subordinated to the Secretary General Italian Segretario Generale who was Proveditore Generale s right hand Main Council of Dalmatians Italian Consiglio Generale della Dalmazia was an advisory body It was composed of 48 members who were chosen by the Government from the districts one or more from each according to the number of districts inhabitants The first members were appointed by the Government alone and after each year 12 of them would resign after which the Council proposed a list from which the Government would then pick 12 new candidates and appoint them to serve on the council The council was presided over by the Proveditore Generale and it discussed various subjects relevant for Dalmatia Councils conclusions were only valid after Proveditore Generale s formal confirmation 10 The judiciary was separated from the administration There were 22 local or reconciliatory courts Italian Giudici Locali o di Pace primarily in all districts as well as in some other more important areas Zadar Split and Dubrovnik were seats of the tribunals which were courts of appeal for local courts and first instance courts in all civil and criminal cases Furthermore a Court of Appeal for Tribunal verdicts was established in Zadar while the Court in Milan was the Supreme Court Italian Tribunale di Cassazione The original intention was to introduce French laws Napoleonic Code et al but it soon became apparent that this would have been unfeasible due to the popular perceptions and customs especially in property inheritance and marital affairs Therefore in addition to superior French laws Austrian and Venetian laws were also implied The equality of all before the law was introduced as well 10 Dalmatia was territorially divided into counties districts municipalities and villages According to such division Dalmatia was divided into four counties Zadar Sibenik Split and Makarska Zadar County was divided into six districts Zadar Krk Cres Losinj Rab and Pag Sibenik County into three Sibenik Skradin and Knin Split County into five Split Trogir Sinj Nerezisca and Hvar and Makarska into three Makarska Imotski and Korcula County was led by a commissioner Italian Delegato district by a Vice commissioner Italian Vice delegato municipality by a municipal mayor and village by an elder captain Italian Capitani anziani When the Bay of Kotor was given to France by the 1809 Treaties of Tilsit and a year later the Republic of Dubrovnik was abolished a special Proveditore Generale Dominik Garagnin was appointed to rule over four counties Cavtat Ston Lopud and Kotor and two districts Herceg Novi and Budva The new territorial administrative system has fundamentally redefined the existing Venetian system in Dalmatia Some forms of governing bodies from the Venetian period were retained e g the position of the Proveditore Generale and in military terms the reshuffled institutions of territorial forces During the French rule in Dalmatia not much has been done for Dalmatian economic prosperity 9 The first feature of the cultural revival of Dalmatia under the French administration was the launch of the bilingual weekly Il Regio Dalmata Kraglski Dalmatin whose first issue came out on July 12 1806 Particular attention was devoted to education as there were virtually no schools in Dalmatia when General Dandolo first arrived French sought to build road connections with northern Croatia and partly with Bosnia and Herzegovina Construction of new roads was probably followed by military strategic interests with respect to the maritime blockade of the Adriatic by England and Russia but they were also used for economic purposes Many Dalmatians especially lower clergymen with the Franciscans at their forehead hated the French administration seeing in them atheists and Jacobins because the French revoked numerous privileges of some Dalmatian municipalities and corporations trying to modernize Dalmatia nbsp Franjo Tomasic the first governor of the Kingdom of DalmatiaSecond Austrian Administration edit nbsp Landward Gate in Zadar the capital of the Kingdom of Dalmatia 1909Already in 1811 the British took over Vis from French and in 1812 Lastovo Korcula Peljesac Hvar Cavtat Dubrovnik islands and Split Kotor was held by the Russians After Napoleon s defeat in the 1813 Battle of Leipzig the Austrian Empire took control of the Illyrian provinces The takeover of Dalmatia was easily accomplished in the fall of 1813 by General Franjo Tomasic and his troops of 2 900 Croatian soldiers because the people of Dalmatia under the leadership of the clergy especially the Franciscans met them as liberators After the surrender of Zadar December 6 General Todor Milutinovic went on a military campaign to take over Dubrovnik succeeding on January 27 1814 and Bay of Kotor which he did by June 1814 Thus territory stretching from Zrmanja river to the town of Budva was again subordinated to Vienna This was confirmed at the 1815 Congress of Vienna 10 Baron Tomasic was appointed new Governor of Dalmatia while the administration was taken over by the newly formed Provincial Government which was led by Tomasic himself In order to integrate the area between Rab and Budva the Viennese court has established a special territorial unit Kingdom of Dalmatia With the same intent Pope Leo XII issued papal bull Locum Beati Petri by which he founded unified Zadar metropolis which was superior to all Dalmatian dioceses including historical Archdioceses of Split and Dubrovnik 11 In the period between 1816 and 1822 all new bodies of central and provincial government were founded in Zadar The judicial reorganization was carried out as well These administrative and judicial bodies worked until 1852 1854 and some until 1868 when the whole administration was reformed when new judicial organs and provincial governing bodies were established Such organization with minor changes remained in force until 1918 By the provisions of the 1861 February Patent Diet of Dalmatia was founded Austrians were bringing foreign civil servants to Dalmatia mostly from Austria and northern Italy then part of the Monarchy 12 In 1832 a new road that went through Velebit s Mali Alan mountain pass was opened It was the only connection between Dalmatia and continental Croatia The Austrian government increased the number of schools by 1839 there were 50 and by 1846 around 150 attended by a third of school children Croatian language in schools was almost an exception in comparison to Italian Croatian National Revival in Dalmatia edit French and Austrian rule greatly contributed to Croatian national awakening in Dalmatia which was also influenced by the ideas of the Illyrian movement active in the Kingdom of Croatia In 1835 Bozidar Petranovic began printing Serbo Dalmatian Magazine Croatian Srbsko dalmatinski magazin in Zadar while in 1844 Ante Kuzmanic launched Zora dalmatinska magazine English Dalmatian Dawn and began working on the linguistic and national awareness of the Dalmatians which was until then only encouraged by the clergy Revolutionary 1848 initially created political division between the markists who wanted to rebuild the Republic of St Mark and the monarchists proponents of the Habsburg monarchy As wealthy Italians had full control over cities and their assemblies due to the electoral system proposals of the Croatian Kingdom s county and city assemblies to the Dalmatian brothers of the same blood and language for the unification of Dalmatia and Croatia were rejected Nevertheless Croatian national movement was very strong In response to the Autonomist Party s refusal to accept unification vicars and inhabitants of the Dalmatian Hinterland sent a letter to the Croatian ban Josip Jelacic in which they stated that they were still seeking unification and that its opponents were in the great minority In December 1848 Emperor Franz Joseph I appointed Jelacic Governor of Dalmatia His appointment was opposed by the Split and Zadar municipalities both governed by the Autonomist Party while Croats especially those in Dubrovnik met Jelacic with great expectations that were later mostly not fulfilled 13 Jelacic s role remained largely ceremonial and the Viennese court refused any discussion on the matter of unification In 1851 ban Jelacic visited Kingdom and was welcomed with special enthusiasm in Dobrota 14 In order to counter the opponents of unification Italians in particular Croats were establishing public libraries and cultural societies throughout Dalmatia mostly under the Slavic name Eventually Government made the decision by which the Croatian language was taught as a second language in Dalmatian schools However there weren t many schools in which the Croatian language was being taught so that s why the Franciscans founded first Croatian gymnasium in 1854 in Sinj Conflict between People s and Autonomist parties edit nbsp Mihovil Pavlinovic was one of the most prominent advocators of unification of Dalmatia with the Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia In 1860 Emperor Franz Joseph I decided to renew the Empire s constitutional and political life so he convened an expanded Imperial Council Representatives of the Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia Ambroz Vranyczany and Josip Juraj Strossmayer raised the question of the unification of the Kingdoms of Croatia Slavonia and Dalmatia A representative of Dalmatia Frane Borelli stated that the Italians were indeed a minority in Dalmatia but that he didn t believe it was the right time for unification At the time there were two opposing political parties in Dalmatia Croatian nationalist liberal People s Party led by Miho Klaic and Mihovil Pavlinovic and Italian nationalist conservative Autonomist Party led by Antonio Bajamonti and Luigi Lapenno Autonomist Party was supported by the Dalmatian Governor Lazar Mamula the cities of Zadar and Split some other smaller cities and municipalities as well as the Viennese court that feared the weakening of Austria in relation to Croatia Slavonia and Hungary if the unification happened People s Party was supported by Stari Grad Vrboska Metkovic Bol Dubrovnik and Kotor The main point of People s Party program was the unification of Dalmatia with Croatia Slavonia and the introduction of Croatian language in the administration and education On the occasion of the convocation of the Ban s Conference in Zagreb in 1860 representatives from Dalmatia were invited to discuss unification but the Autonomist Party supported by Ante Mamula obstructed initiative 15 Diet of Dalmatia was first convened in 1861 Autonomist Party held the majority of seats due to the unfair electoral system by which large landowners clerks and representatives of wealthy citizens although accounting for only around 20 of the Dalmatian population had a significant advantage Diet refused unification of Dalmatia with Croatia Slavonia The Austro Prussian War and Third Italian War of Independence resulted in the 1866 maritime Battle of Vis After the Austro Hungarian Compromise of 1867 which strengthened the division and unveiled the prospect of unification of Dalmatia with Croatia Slavonia to a minimum the People s Party returned to the political and cultural struggle to croatize Dalmatia especially focusing on schools wanting to introduce Croatian as a teaching language Therefore their aim was to win power in the municipalities since the school curriculums were within the municipal scope 16 In 1862 they launched a weekly in Italian Il Nazionale in order to win over voters whose primary language was Italian They later started publishing weekly in Croatian Narodni list English People s Gazette as well In 1869 Mihovil Pavlinovic wrote Croatian political program Hrvatska misao English Croatian Thought in which he advocated the Croatian right to independence and the establishment of unified and constitutional Croatian state that would have included all historical Croatian territories including Dalmatia 17 18 In October 1869 an armed revolt known as the Krivosije uprising occurred in the Bay of Kotor hinterland region of Krivosije 19 The uprising broke out after a decisive Prussian victory over the Austrian Empire in the 1866 Battle of Koniggratz and the consequent introduction of mandatory conscription for the people from that region who were by then traditionally exempt from conscription Due to conscription sailors lost essential years they could have used for working at sea People that lived in the mountains were disarmed so they lost the opportunity to go to Herzegovina to hunt small and large cattle The formal peace accord by which the conscription was abandoned and people allowed to retain their weapons was signed on 11 January 1870 20 Members of the People s and Autonomist parties were increasingly clashing as tensions began to rise On July 31 1869 during the visit of the Italian ship on a hydrographic mission a clash between Italian sailors and Croatian citizens of Sibenik broke out 14 Italian sailors and a few Croats were seriously injured This clash turned into a diplomatic conflict between the Kingdom of Italy and Austria Hungary known as the Monzambano Affair 21 In the meantime the People s Party started getting better organized and slowly winning rural municipalities in the Dalmatian Hinterland and on the islands which culminated in the 1870 election when it won the majority of seats in the Diet On February 15 1873 the Party won the first major city Sibenik where Ante Supuk was elected mayor In 1882 despite intimidation and violence by the Autonomist Party s paramilitary units the People s Party Gajo Bulat defeated the Autonomist Party s Antonio Bajamonti thus becoming the Mayor of Split Shortly thereafter the People s Party won the election in the Stari Grad and Trogir municipalities while the Autonomist Party only governed Zadar In 1883 Croatian was proclaimed the official language of the Diet of Dalmatia At the same time the network of Croatian schools grew In 1866 the Croatian Teachers School Croatian Hrvatska uciteljska skola was opened in Arbanasi near Zadar In 1883 there were about 300 primary and 3 high schools in Dubrovnik Kotor and Split in which the Croatian language was thought In 1898 Croatian gymnasium was opened in Zadar Serbo Croatian split edit nbsp Erection of the monument dedicated to Ivan Gundulic in Dubrovnik 20 May 1893Ever since Vuk Karadzic Ilija Garasanin and Jovan Subotic started writing about Dalmatia as a Serbian land and following the recognition of the Kingdom of Serbia as an independent state at the 1878 Congress of Berlin the different interests of Croats and Serbs in Dalmatia became more evident Serbs continuously started mentioning Dalmatia as a Serbian land 22 After Croatia s enthusiasm with the Austro Hungarian occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina which involved numerous Croatian soldiers from Dalmatia many of whom had died and the request for the unification of Bosnia Herzegovina with Croatia Slavonia the conflict was inevitable 23 In 1879 Serbs from Bukovica voted for the Italian candidate of the Autonomist Party instead of People s Party Mihovil Klaic The People s Party called this the Bukovica betrayal 23 Shortly afterward separate Croatian and Serbian parties were founded but Croats still held a majority in the Diet of Dalmatia In November 1881 Serbs and Montenegrins that lived in the hinterland of the Bay of Kotor on the territory of the Kingdom of Dalmatia rebelled against the mandatory conscription which was the obligation of all citizens of the Monarchy The Austrian army headed by field marshal Stjepan Jovanovic suppressed this rebellion in May 1882 In 1891 Frano Supilo started publishing Crvena Hrvatska English Red Croatia the journal in which he was writing against Serbian pretensions on Dalmatia and in favor of the unification of Dalmatia with Croatia 24 In 1893 on the occasion of the erection of a monument dedicated to Ivan Gundulic in Dubrovnik there were great tensions between Croats and Serbs Namely many Croatian dignitaries politicians and artists came to Dubrovnik so the festivity turned into an exhibition of Croatian nationalism when people started chanting for Croatia as opposed to the wishes of some of the people of Dubrovnik who were proponents of Serbian ideas like Medo Pucic With the affirmation of the so called New Direction Policy Serbo Croatian relations started getting better This was confirmed by the signing of the Zadar Resolution on 25 February 1907 Dr Lovro Monti stated With Serbs we can do a lot without Serbs a little and against Serbs nothing 25 In 1905 for the first time a native of Dalmatia Niko Nardelli NS was appointed Governor In 1912 Italian was abolished in public offices and courts However the Austrian government still used Italian and German in its official correspondence First World War edit nbsp SMS Erzherzog Ferdinand Max 1905Immediately upon the outbreak of the First World War all organizations that the government considered close to Serbia or to the idea of the creation of a single state for all South Slavic peoples were forbidden Many prominent politicians were persecuted and arrested while some emigrated Until 1915 when the Kingdom of Italy joined the Entente Powers after the Treaty of London there were no war operations on the Adriatic but since then the maritime conflicts became frequent Due to the Allied blockade of the Strait of Otranto trade in the Adriatic almost completely stopped The government recruited many ships for military purposes while the civilian sailing has been almost completely suspended Mandatory blackouts were imposed on the islands and in the ports due to the fear of bombing A number of church bells were removed melted and used for war purposes Fighting was also taking place around Lastovo and the distant islands so artillery batteries were placed there In 1917 French Air Force bombed Lastovo 26 In Dalmatia hunger and scarcity began to emerge while at the same time Hungarian laws banned the export of foodstuff to the Austrian half of the Monarchy which Dalmatia was part of in the case of war Dalmatia received food aid through the port of Trieste but the amounts were inadequate sometimes even completely useless and often arriving too late for example supplies intended for 1917 arrived in 1918 27 Therefore Franciscans and benefactors from Zagreb organized the action of sending Dalmatian children to Slavonia and Moslavina so they could have adequate nutrition The war destroyed Dalmatian agriculture At the end of the war epidemics of the typhus cholera smallpox and Spanish influenza broke out causing the death of many people 27 In 1915 Croats made up 34 of Austro Hungarian Navy personnel 28 Apart from the Navy Dalmatians also fought in land units namely in the 22nd Imperial Regiment 23rd Zadar Imperial Home Guard Regiment 37th Dubrovnik Imperial Regiment and the Dalmatian Mounted Rifles Following the Italian announcement of war Croats were mostly sent to fight on fronts against Italy because the government expected them to be motivated to fight against those who mistreated them in the past As the war ceased there were also cases of defection and in February 1918 a rebellion of sailors in the Bay of Kotor broke out the Cattaro Mutiny In 1917 representatives of Dalmatia in Imperial Council headed by Vjekoslav Spincic Josip Smodlaka and Ivo Prodan wrote the May Declaration in which they presented a program of unification of all South Slavs within the Austria Hungary that had to be divided into three equal parts Austria Hungary and Croatia At the end of the war the National Council for Dalmatia was founded in Zadar and the unified National Organization for Dalmatia in Split These bodies soon started to independently govern Dalmatia 27 In the last days of the Monarchy General Stjepan Sarkotic managed to convince Hungarian Prime Minister Sandor Wekerle and Emperor Charles I to support the unification of Dalmatia with Croatia but that didn t happen until the collapse of the Monarchy in 1918 On October 29 1918 when the Austro Hungarian Parliament dismantled the Croatian Parliament passed a decision by which Croatia Slavonia terminated state law relations with Austria Hungary and together with Dalmatia and town of Rijeka joined State of Slovenes Croats and Serbs Demographic history edit1818 1857 edit According to M Lorkovic the total population of Dalmatia numbered 297 912 in 1818 326 739 in 1825 338 599 in 1830 390 381 in 1840 and 393 715 in 1850 29 30 Based on the 1857 census the Kingdom of Dalmatia had 415 628 inhabitants 31 According to an analysis of the 1857 census 318 500 76 5 inhabitants were Croats 77 500 18 5 were Serbs and ca 20 000 were Italian speakers 5 32 The percentage of Dalmatian Serbs had been 19 9 in the 1830 50 period 32 In the cities the inhabitants were 71 Croat 22 Italian and 7 Serb 32 There were 745 Serbs in Kotor in all other cities there were fewer than 400 32 The number of Serbs in Dalmatia fell however in the north it rose 32 Among the Orthodox there was one priest for every 400 people while among the Catholics there was one priest for every 330 people 32 1880 edit The 1880 Austrian census recorded the following ethnic groups in the Kingdom citation needed 371 565 Croats 78 714 Serbs 27 305 Italians1900 edit The 1900 Austrian census 33 Religion496 966 Catholics 96 279 Eastern Orthodox 539 OthersLanguage 33 Serbo Croatian 565 276 95 2 Italian 15 279 2 6 German 2 306 0 4 Total 593 7841910 edit According to the official 1910 Austrian census population by religion and mother language was 34 Religion539 057 Catholics 105 332 Orthodox 1 257 OthersLanguageSerbo Croatian 610 649 Italian 18 028 German 3 081 Others 3 077Cities editThe major cities were 1900 35 Zadar the capital with 13 016 inhabitants Split 18 547 Sibenik 10 072 Dubrovnik 8 437 Administrative subdivisions edit nbsp Map of the Kingdom of Dalmatia nbsp Extent of the Kingdom of Dalmatia superimposed on the modern day internal borders of Croatia the Bay of Kotor area is in Montenegro From 1822 to 1868 the Kingdom of Dalmatia was administratively divided into four circles counties Italian circoli or capitanati circolari Croatian okruzi or okruzna poglavarstva Zadar Split Dubrovnik and Kotor these were subdivided into smaller districts Italian distretti preture Croatian kotari preture each comprised municipalities Italian comuni Croatian opcine In 1868 the circles were abolished and Dalmatia was divided into 13 larger administrative districts Italian distretti politici or capitanati distrettuali Croatian kotari or kotarska poglavarstva whose capitals were 1880 Benkovac Dubrovnik Hvar Imotski Knin Korcula Kotor Makarska Metkovic Sinj Split Sibenik ZadarDistricts as governmental units with the government appointed prefect Italian capitano distrettuale Croatian kotarski poglavar were subdivided into judicial districts Italian distretti giudiziari Croatian sudski kotari and these into municipalities Italian comuni Croatian opcine as local authorities with the elected municipal council Italian consiglio comunale Croatian opcinsko vijece and the mayor Italian podesta Croatian nacelnik elected by the council Religion editThe Roman Catholic archbishop had his seat in Zadar while the diocese of Kotor diocese of Hvar diocese of Dubrovnik diocese of Sibenik and diocese of Split were bishoprics At the head of the Orthodox community stood the bishop of Zadar The use of Croatian Slavonic liturgies written in the Glagolitic alphabet a very ancient privilege of the Roman Catholics in Dalmatia and Croatia caused much controversy during the first years of the 20th century There was considerable danger that the Latin liturgies would be altogether superseded by the Glagolitic especially among the northern islands and in rural communes where the Slavonic element is all powerful In 1904 the Vatican forbade the use of Glagolitic at the festival of SS Cyril and Methodius as likely to impair the unity of Catholicism A few years previously the Slavonic archbishop Rajcevic of Zara in discussing the Glagolitic controversy had denounced the movement as an innovation introduced by Panslavism to make it easy for the Catholic clergy after any great revolution in the Balkan States to break with Latin Rome Governors editHead of the Austrian imperial administration in Dalmatia was Imperial Royal Provincial Governor Italian I R Governatore Provinciale Croatian c k Guverner appointed by the emperor From 1852 he was known as Imperial Royal Lieutenant Italian I R Luogotenente Croatian c k Namjesnik Franjo Tomasic 1815 1831 Wenzeslau Lilienberg Water 1831 1841 Ivan August Turszky 1841 1848 Ludwig von Welden 1848 Josip Jelacic 1848 1859 Lazar Mamula 1859 1865 Franjo Filipovic 1865 1868 Johann Wagner 1868 1869 Gottfried Auersperg 1869 Julius Fluk von Leidenkron 1869 1870 Gavrilo Rodic 1870 1881 Stjepan Jovanovic 1882 1885 Ludovik Cornaro 1885 1886 Dragutin Blazekovic 1886 1890 Emil David 1890 1902 Erasmus Handel 1902 1905 Nicola Nardelli 1905 1911 Mario Attems 1911 1918 Military editMilitary units in the kingdom at the start of the First World War Common Army 22nd Dalmatian Infantry Regiment Graf von Lacy garrison Spalato Split Imperial Royal Landwehr Imperial Royal Mounted Dalmatian State Rifle Division garrison Sinj 23rd Imperial Royal Landwehr Infantry Regiment garrison Zara Zadar 37th Imperial Royal Landwehr Infantry Regiment garrison Gravosa Gruz Politics editDalmatian Parliament edit The Kingdom of Dalmatia held elections to the Parliament of Dalmatia in 1861 1864 1867 1870 1876 1883 1889 1895 1901 1908 Reichsrat edit 1907Main article 1907 Cisleithanian legislative election in the Kingdom of Dalmatia In the 1907 elections Dalmatia elected the following representatives to the lower chamber of the Reichsrat Imperial Council 36 Croatian Party Ante Dulibic Vicko Ivcevic Frane Ivanisevic Ante Tresic Pavicic Ante Vukovic Juraj Biankini Party of Rights Ivo Prodan Josip Virgil Peric Serb People s Party Dusan Baljak Miho Bjeladinovic Independent Frane Bulic1911Main article 1911 Cisleithanian legislative election in the Kingdom of Dalmatia In the 1911 elections Dalmatia elected the following representatives 36 Croatian Party Vicko Ivcevic Pero Cingrija Ante Tresic Pavicic Juraj Biankini Party of Rights Ivo Prodan Ante Dulibic Ante Sesardic Josip Virgil Peric Serb People s Party Dusan Baljak Gjuro Vukotic Croatian Popular Progressive Party Josip SmodlakaSee also edit nbsp Croatia portalDalmatia History of Croatia History of Dalmatia Kingdom of Croatia Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary Habsburg Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia Timeline of Croatian history Diet of DalmatiaLiterature editBilandzic Dusan 1999 Hrvatska moderna povijest Golden marketing ISBN 953 6168 50 2 Macan Trpimir 1992 Povijest hrvatskog naroda Skolska knjiga ISBN 86 401 0058 6 Stipetic Vladimir 2012 Dva stoljeca razvoja hrvatskog gospodarstva 1820 2005 HAZU ISBN 978 953 154 110 7 References edit a b Macan 265 Macan 266 Ferdo Sisic Hrvatska povijest Kratki pregled povijesti republike dubrovacke Zagreb 1913 Ferdo Sisic Hrvatska povijest Kratki pregled povijesti republike dubrovacke Zagreb 1913 Međunarodni znanstveni skup Francuska uprava u Dubrovniku 1808 1814 Archived from the original on 2014 09 03 Retrieved 2017 11 04 Gradoplov Radio Dubrovnik radio hrt hr http www filatelija net crticeizpp5 htm dead link Izvjestaj generala Molitora o pohodu u Dalmaciju 1806 godine Hrvatski povijesni portal 12 February 2023 a b Tado ORSOLIC Teritorijalne snage za francuske uprave u Dalmaciji 1806 1809 a b c Ferdo Sisic Hrvatska povijest Austrijska i francuska dalmacija i Ilirija 1797 1815 Zagreb 1913 http hrcak srce hr file 95497 Stjepan Cosic Drzavna uprava u Dalmaciji i crkveni preustroj 1828 1830 godine p 51 Macan 271 Macan 288 Vanda Babic Josip Miletic Kulturni zivot Boke i preporodna gibanja Bay of Kotor s Cultural Life and Revolutionary Movements Kolo Broj 3 Fall of 2007 matica hr Retrieved 9 April 2018 Macan 294 Macan 309 povijest net Hrvatski narodni preporod u Dalmaciji i Istri Hrvoje Petric 12 February 2023 Niksa Stancic Iz rukopisne ostavstine Mihovila Pavlinovica Historijski zbornik 25 26 Zagreb 1972 73 p 305 332 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 11 07 Retrieved 2017 11 06 nje W R Rosner Schonfeld Anton Maria Emmerich Wilhelm Frh von 1827 1898 Feldzeugmeister OBL 1815 1950 sv 11 Lfg 51 1995 p 70f Montenegrin Tomislav Grgurevic Crna Gora i Bokeljski ustanak Montenegrina Feljton iz lista Republika objavljen krajem 2007 Pristupljeno 16 svibnja 2016 Lawrence Sondhaus The Naval Policy of Austria Hungary 1867 1918 Navalism Industrial Development and the Politics of Dualism Purdue University Press 1994 p 12 Macan p 312 a b SLOBODNA DALMACIJA NEDJELJA 13 kolovoza 2000 podlistak Preokret i odvajanje arhiv slobodnadalmacija hr Crvena Hrvatska Dubrovnik No 32 August 12 1893 p 1 2 Bilandzic p 25 Hlede Vjekoslav Povijest Lastova www lastovo org Archived from the original on 2013 04 07 Retrieved 2017 11 12 a b c Franko Mirosevic Prilozi za povijest Dalmacije u 1918 godini When Czech mariners sailed the seas Radio Prague 10 May 2011 Sime Pericic 1998 Gospodarska povijest Dalmacije od 18 do 20 stoljeca Matica hrvatska p 98 ISBN 9789536419159 Igor Karaman 2000 Hrvatska na pragu modernizacije 1750 1918 Naklada Ljevak p 151 ISBN 978 953 178 155 8 Statistische ubersichten uber die bevolkerung und den viehstand von Osterreich nach der zahlung vom 31 October 1857 p 49 a b c d e f Marino Manini 2001 Zbornik radova s Međunarodnog znanstvenog skupa Talijankska uprava na hrvatskom prostoru i egzodus Hrvata 1918 1943 Hrvatski institut za povijest p 312 a b Gemeindelexikon der im Reichsrate vertretenen Konigreiche und Lander Bd 14 Dalmatien p 88 Spezialortsrepertorium der osterreichischen Lander I XII Wien 1915 1919 Archived from the original on 2013 05 29 Gemeindelexikon der im Reichsrate vertretenen Konigreiche und Lander Bd 14 Dalmatien a b Dvije pobjede don Ive Prodana na izborima za Carevinsko vijece u Becu External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kingdom of Dalmatia Jayne Kingsley Garland 1911 Dalmatia Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 7 11th ed pp 772 776 German protectorate 44 07 00 N 15 13 00 E 44 1167 N 15 2167 E 44 1167 15 2167 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kingdom of Dalmatia amp oldid 1202241006, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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