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Slovak Uprising of 1848–49

The Slovak Uprising (of 1848/49) (Slovak: Slovenské povstanie), Slovak Volunteer Campaigns (Slovak: Slovenské dobrovoľnícke výpravy) or Slovak Revolt was an uprising of Slovaks in Western parts of Upper Hungary (today mostly Western Slovakia) with the aim of equalizing Slovaks, democratizing political life and achieving social justice[2][3] within the 1848–49 revolutions in the Habsburg Monarchy. It lasted from September 1848 to November 1849. In October 1848, Slovak leaders replaced their original Hungaro-federal program by Austro-federal, called for the separation of a Slovak district (Slovak: Slovenské Okolie) from the Kingdom of Hungary and for the formation of a new autonomous district within the framework of the Habsburg Monarchy.[4][2]

Slovak Uprising of 1848
Part of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848

Painting of Capt. Ján Francisci with Slovak volunteers on Myjava (Miava) by Peter Michal Bohúň
Date19 September 1848 – 21 November 1849
Location
Western parts of Upper Hungary (today Western Slovakia)
Result

Military stalemate

  • Slovak militia and peasant guerrillas claimed the surrender of Hungarians
  • Hungary claimed the Slovak revolt was crushed
Belligerents

Slovak National Council

Supported by:

 Kingdom of Hungary

  • Hungarian Armies and Militias
  • Pro-loyalist Slovak volunteers
Commanders and leaders
Strength
Several thousand volunteers, with Austrian Imperial support Unknown
Casualties and losses
Unknown but heavy Unknown but heavy

Background edit

The year 1848 is well-noted in history as a peaking moment in nationalist sentiment among European nationalities. The Slovaks were certainly an important part of the general revolts occurring in the lands of the Habsburg Monarchy. After the revolutionary fervor left Paris in 1848 it traveled to Vienna, where a popular uprising ousted the reactionary government of Prince Klemens von Metternich on 13 March 1848. This revolutionary fervor soon spread to the Hungarian lands of the Empire. On 15 March, mass protests in Buda and Pest along with a proclamation of the Hungarian Diet, under direction of Lajos Kossuth, saw the Hungarian Kingdom declare itself independent of Habsburg domination.

Slovaks before 1848 edit

Slovaks were not prominently placed in this first wave of revolution to reach Hungarian lands. On 26–28 August 1844, a meeting between both Catholic and Protestant confessions of Slovaks met along with other factions in Liptószentmiklós (today: Liptovský Mikuláš). This town in the Žilina Region was the base of Slovak nationalist Michal Miloslav Hodža, uncle of future Czechoslovak politician Milan Hodža. The meeting, though with fewer than wished Catholic participation, formed a non-sectarian association called the Tatrín in order to unite all Slovak groups in one national bloc.[5] Catholics later became more involved in 1847 with their acceptance of Ľudovít Štúr's standardization of the Slovak language.

 
Michal Miloslav Hodža
 
Jozef Miloslav Hurban

In addition to the uniting of Slovaks in one national bloc, there were other factors leading to the rise in Slovak consciousness before 1848. In 1845, governmental authorities permitted the printing of Slovak language newspapers for the first time. The first one was Ľudovít Štúr's The Slovak National News which printed its first issue on 1 August 1845. This was quickly followed by Jozef Miloslav Hurban's Slovak Views on the Sciences, Arts and Literature which did not have as much success as Štúr's paper. Beyond the printed word, representatives of the Slovak National Movement worked among average Slovaks promoting education, Sunday schools, libraries, amateur theatre, temperance societies and other social functions.[6] In agriculture, Samuel Jurkovič founded a credit cooperative in the village of Sobotište, called the Farmer's Association, which was the first of its kind in Europe.[7]

In November 1847 Ľudovít Štúr, the member of the Hungarian Diet for Zólyom (now Zvolen), spoke before his colleagues in Pressburg (Pozsony, today's Bratislava). In his speech to the Diet, Štúr summed up his six-point platform involving problematic political and economic issues. His points were:

  • To proclaim through the Diet the legal, universal and permanent abolishment of serfdom, achieved through a buy-out of feudal contracts with state funds at minimum expense to commoners.
  • To abolish the patrimonial court and free commoners from noble control.
  • To allow commoners to represent their own interests via membership in County government and the Diet.
  • To free privileged towns from county jurisdiction and reorganize the administration of royally chartered towns on the principal of representation by strengthening their voting rights in the Diet.
  • To abolish the privilege of nobility and make all persons equal before the courts, abolish tax exemption for nobility and inheritance, ensure commoners the right to serve in public office and ensure freedom of the press.
  • To reorganize the education system in a way to best serve the needs of the people and to ensure a better livelihood for teachers.

Along with these points, of which several even met the praise of Kossuth, Štúr raised the issues about the use of the Slovak language in government and the enforcement of Magyar interference in many parts of Slovak life, including religion.[8]

Events of 1848–1849 edit

The events of the years 1848–1849 caused the buildup outbreak of the Slovak Uprising.

Build up to the revolt edit

After the revolution in Pest-Buda in 1848 March 15., and the formation of a new government on 17 March. the threat of forcible Magyarization grew ever more present. In Hont County, some of this tension came to a boiling point where two Slovaks, named Janko Kral and Jan Rotarides made demands for the liquidation of serfdom and recognition of the Slovak language in schools and the government. These demands soon landed the pair in jail.[9] On 28 March 1848 a vast assembly of former serfs convened by Liptó County and held in Hodza's base of Liptovský Mikuláš was used as a proving ground for systematic recognition of new rights and extended rights to national minorities. This was met well and soon the word was spreading about possible new freedoms that would reach Slovaks, prompting some miners in the area comprising today's Central-Slovakia to demonstrate rowdily before being quieted by a special commissioner from Pest-Buda.

In April 1848 Štúr and Hurban attended a preliminary Slavic meeting in Vienna, which would later provide the basis for the first Pan-Slavic Congress to be held in Prague. In the meantime, back in Liptovský Mikuláš, Hodža along with twenty delegates created a document entitled Demands of the Slovak Nation which listed 14 points setting national and social goals for the Slovak nation. Naturally this document was received coldly by Pest-Buda, which subsequently imposed martial law on Upper Hungary and issued warrants for Štúr, Hurban and Hodža on 12 May 1848.[10] At the same time, uprisings among Serbs, Croats and Slovenes in the southern part of Hungary diverted Magyar attention to the south, as these conflicts were more armed uprisings than the Slovak one. Hurban attended a session of the Croatian Diet on 5 July, speaking to the Croats on the plight of the Slovaks. Hurban spoke so well a joint Croat-Slovak declaration was issued shortly thereafter which only inflamed Magyar opinion.[11] When the full Pan-Slavic Congress met on 2 June 1848, Štúr, Hurban, Hodža and many other prominent Slovaks attended, along with hundreds of other Slavic delegates. This congress was held with the aim of developing a cohesive strategy for all Slavic peoples living in Austro-Hungarian territories. The congress was cut short when an armed uprising in Prague on 12 June prompted a hurried end to the affair. However, one critical item came out of the short congress for the Slovak cause. In the congress, the Slovaks secured the help of two Czech military officers, Bedřich Bloudek and František Zach, in case the Slovaks came to armed blows with the Hungarians.

 
František Zach in 1867

Though many calls for autonomy came from nearly every corner of the Empire, Vienna noted that at neither the Pan-Slavic conference nor other Slavic uprisings was the thought of the breakup of the Empire considered, only this was so in Hungary. Seeing the situation as malleable, the Emperor along with his closest advisors authorized armed action against the Hungarian uprising. This first manifested itself in the form of the leader of the Croatians, Ban (governor) Josip Jelačić, a friend of the Slovaks, who was authorized to march against the Hungarians in August 1848 after the Hungarians had defied a direct imperial order. Despite this, Vienna's response to the Hungarian uprising had stayed largely quiet and mixed.[12] While allowing Jelacic to march against the Magyars, they had also given the Hungarian Army several units in order to help preserve internal order. At the same time, Slovaks started working with Jelacic's Croatians by creating a Slovak volunteer corps. This corps was put together and gathered in Vienna from August to September 1848. In order to lead this burgeoning revolt, a Slovak National Council was organized in Vienna, where a marker stands today commemorating the spot. The council was made up of Štúr, Hurban and Hodža—the "big three" of the Slovak nationalist groups—with the Czech František Zach as commander-in-chief.

Revolt edit

 
Slovak volunteers, 1848/49

Initially, the strategy for the volunteer corps was not clear. However, on 16 September a decision was made that the 600 men of the corps would march from Vienna, up the Vág River valley and into Turóc County and Liptó County Counties via the southern Moravian town of Břeclav. When the corps arrived at the Slovak border on the 18th, they were met with 500 more volunteers from Brno and Prague. Once convened, the volunteers received arms and swore an oath on the Slovak flag. Despite nudging Viennese cooperation, when the volunteers encountered Imperial troops on the road to Miava they were regarded coolly by the troops.[13]

Once the volunteers arrived in Miava, an assembly of Slovaks with Hurban presiding took the step of seceding from Hungary on 19 September 1848. Imperial troops soon ordered the Slovaks volunteers to leave Myjava, though this order was rejected and instead the corps attacked an Imperial detachment and confiscated its supplies. Despite this inauspicious act, Imperial troops ordered both sides to halt the fighting. After several more days of indecisive armed action, the volunteers retreated back into Moravia. Not long after, the new commander of Imperial forces sent to restore order in the Kingdom of Hungary, Count von Lamberg, was hacked and mangled by an irate mob in central Budapest only three days after arrival.[14] This halted attempts at negotiations between Kossuth and the Imperial party.[15] The Viennese response was to formally order the disbandment the Hungarian Diet and the appointment of Ban Josip Jelačić as newest commander over Hungary. However, effective response to this latest development was also halted by another popular, pan-Germanic uprising in Vienna at the time which resulted in the death of war minister Count Latour on 6 October 1848.

In this midst of the turmoil in Vienna, which saw the Emperor and the Imperial Diet flee to Olomouc in Moravia, Magyars stepped up measures against Slovaks, stripping the leaders of the Slovak National Council of their Hungarian citizenship and executing a handful of prisoners. This move caused the Slovak faction to appeal more to the Imperial court and despite initial concerns of the commander-in-chief Prince Windisch-Grätz, another Slovak volunteer unit was allowed to be created.[16] Initial recruitment problems delayed this second campaign of the volunteer units until 4 December 1848. Throughout December and January, the Slovak volunteers under Bloudek worked with Imperial troops to reoccupy Túrócszentmárton. On 13 January 1849 a mass rally in Túrócszentmárton was followed by the signing up of new volunteers. Acting with Imperial support, Bloudek moved east and, picking up another few thousand volunteers,[17] occupied Eperjes (Prešov) on 26 February and Kassa (Košice) on 2 March. Meanwhile, another detachment of Slovaks was defeated after running into Magyar forces near Murányalja (Muráň) in Besztercebánya (Banská Bystrica). To make matters worse, dissension between Czech and Slovak officers in the volunteer corps began to erupt.

 
A young Emperor Franz Joseph I

After leading activist rallies in Eperjes and Túrócszentmárton, Štúr and Hurban led a delegation of twenty-four men to meet the new Emperor Franz Jozef with a proposal to make Slovakia an autonomous grand duchy directly under Viennese oversight with representation in the Imperial Diet. The delegates also requested a Slovak provincial diet, with further demands for Slovak schools and institutions. Despite a formal audience with the Emperor, little real progress resulted and the Slovaks were sent packing hoping for more productive results in the future.[18]

After several victorious battles in Spring of 1849, Kossuth and the Hungarian Diet declared the Habsburgs deposed on 14 April 1849. Around the same time, the Slovak volunteer corps, largely stationed in Árva County, was dealing with internal struggles of its own. Conflicts between Czech and Slovak officers soon brought about the effectual dissolving of the corps.[19] After Russian intervention by Tsar Nicholas I brought about the gradual fall of Kossuth and Hungarian independence. During this period, the corps was revived one final time to 'mop-up' isolated Magyar units until the eventual capitulation of Magyar forces at Világos (what is now Şiria in Romania) on 13 August 1849. On 9 October 1849, the Imperial army transferred the Slovak corps from the central territories of Upper Hungary to Pozsony, where it was formally disbanded on 21 November 1849. This marked the end of Slovak participation in the Revolutions of 1848–1849 that swept the continent of Europe[20]

Aftermath edit

Slovak perspective edit

Historians Anton Špiesz and Dušan Čaplovič sum up the impacts of the uprising and the era the following way:

Many Magyar historians have presented a positive evaluation of Kossuth and the Magyar revolution. On the other hand, they have branded the activities of Štúr and the Slovak volunteers and their cooperation with the Viennese Court and Imperial army as counter-revolutionary. In truth, Štúr and the Slovak leaders, by their conduct during the revolution of 1848–49, demonstrated that they well understood the [...] nature of Magyar nationalism, which refused to even acknowledge Slovak existence. [...Kossuth's] contention that the Viennese Court was oppressing Hungary economically and politically cannot be accepted without major reservations. After all, Hungary had enjoyed a permanent credit balance in trade with the nations of Cisleithania; more money had flown into the Hungarian treasury from those nations than vice versa. Indeed, even the measure of political freedom enjoyed by Hungary had been greater than that of the Czech Kingdom, or even of Austria 'proper' and the other ethnic groups of Cisleithania. It is possible, however, to sympathize with Kossuth and the Magyar leaders in their fear of various political combinations under active contemplation in Central Europe at the time; for instance, German unification, embracing the entirety of the Habsburg realm, or a complete restructuring of the Austrian Empire on an ethnic basis. In either of these constructs, the Magyars would have found themselves in the minority. [...] These various consideration may help clarify, but they certainly do not justify, the total suppression of non-Magyar nationalities in Hungary.

— Anton Špiesz and Dušan Čaplovič, 2006.

Hungarian perspective edit

The Hungarian revolution took place in a legally complex environment. Hungary was a de iure independent kingdom tied to Austria by a common ruler. At first king Ferdinand V endorsed the reformist demands of the Hungarian diet and appointed a constitutional government led by Lajos Batthyány. The conservative circles of the Vienna court feared the growing independence of the Hungarians, so they instructed the Ban of Croatia to attack Hungary. Legally this meant that a monarch attacks one of his country's lawful government with another of his country's army. Later the conservatives in Vienna forced Ferdinand to abdicate and replaced him with the young Franz Joseph. He was not crowned a king of Hungary therefore his rule lacked a legal basis in Hungary. In order to defeat the now open (but lawful) rebellion of Hungary, the Viennese court manipulated the ethnic minorities of Hungary into revolt against the Hungarian government (the very same government that achieved the abolition of serfdom in the Kingdom, regardless of ethnicity).


Many Slovak peasants were more concerned with the abolition of feudal servitude, and not with wider national goals. Religious differences also played a key role, as the leaders of the Slovak volunteers were predominantly Protestant, which led to difficulties in eliciting support in regions with a catholic Slovak majority.[21]

The claim that the Slovak nation sided with Vienna[citation needed] is erroneous - they could hardly recruit around 2000 people from Upper Hungary (however their highest number is estimated cca. 10,000[22]) - in fact the number of Slovaks fighting on the Hungarian side was a magnitude greater (estimated around 40,000 by historians). However, there were cases of ethnic Slovaks resisting recruitment into the Hungarian Army, notably in the western part of the Nyitra County and in parts of the Gömör és Kishont County, especially in the town of Tiszolcz (Tisovec) where the locals protested against the unlawful Hungarian recruitment and were led by Štefan Marko Daxner.[23] The Slovaks had a much higher percentage of their population serving in the Honvédség (Home Guard) than Hungarians. Notable troops with purely or almost purely Slovak soldiers were found in the 2., the 4., the 34., the 51., the 60. and the 124. infantry battalions, and a great many Slovaks served in the most famous red-hatted 9. battalion. Also, the 8. and 10. Hussar regiments had more companies composed of Slovak soldiers. There were also a lot of high-ranking officers in the Honvédség, who considered themselves Slovak patriots, most notably Lajos Beniczky, who was nicknamed the "Duke of Slovaks" by contemporaries, and he didn't learn Hungarian until after the end of the war.[citation needed]

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ Liptai, E.: Magyarország hadtörténete I. (1984), Zrínyi Military Publisher ISBN 963-326-320-4 p. 481.
  2. ^ a b Škvarna, Dušan (20 September 2018). "Revolučné dvojročie: S akými ambíciami vystupovala slovenská politika v rokoch 1848/1849?". Historická revue. Slovenský archeologický a historický inštitút. Retrieved 16 January 2020.
  3. ^ Mikuláš Teich; Dušan Kováč; Martin D. Brown (2011). Slovakia in History. Cambridge University Press. p. 126. ISBN 978-1-139-49494-6.
  4. ^ Anton Špiesz (2006). Illustrated Slovak History. Wauconda, Illinois: Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers. p. 325. ISBN 0-86516-500-9.
  5. ^ Špiesz, p. 107
  6. ^ Špiesz, pp. 108–109
  7. ^ Špiesz, p. 109
  8. ^ Špiesz, pp. 110
  9. ^ Špiesz, pp. 111
  10. ^ Mallows, pp. 191
  11. ^ Špiesz, pp. 114–115
  12. ^ Špiesz, pp. 115
  13. ^ Špiesz, pp. 116
  14. ^ Historical Commission of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences, vol. 13 pp. 429
  15. ^ Špiesz, pp. 117
  16. ^ Špiesz, pp. 118–119
  17. ^ Špiesz, pp. 119
  18. ^ Bartl, pp. 222
  19. ^ Špiesz, pp. 121
  20. ^ Špiesz, pp. 122
  21. ^ Mikuláš Teich; Dušan Kováč; Martin D. Brown (2011). Slovakia in History. Cambridge University Press. p. 126. ISBN 978-1-139-49494-6. from the original on 8 February 2017.
  22. ^ http://www.forumhistoriae.sk/documents/10180/887951/Kovac_Sondy-2013.pdf, p. 93.
  23. ^ "Slovenské povstanie r. 1848/49" [The Slovak Uprising in the years of 1848/49]. zlatyfond.sme.sk (in Slovak). Proti assentírkam postavili sa Slováci iba v Tisovci, v Gemeri a v západnej Nitrianskej. Shromaždenie ľudu v Tisovci pod vedením Štefana Marka Daxnera uzavrelo, protestovať proti nezákonnému spôsobu regrútačky a zaslalo svoj protest stoličnému výboru vo forme sťažnosti.
    Translation: The Slovaks stood up against the conscription in Tisovec, in Gemer and in western Nitra. An assembly led by Štefan Marko Daxner settled on protesting against the unlawful recruitment and sent a complaint to the county committee.

References edit

  • Špiesz, Anton (2006), Illustrated Slovak History, Wauconda, Illinois: Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, ISBN 0-86516-500-9
  • Mallows, Lucinda (2007), Slovakia: The Bradt Travel Guide, Guilford, Connecticut: Bradt Travel Guides, ISBN 978-1-84162-188-3
  • Historical Commission of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences (1982), Neue Deutsche Biographie, Leipzig, Germany: Duncker & Humblot
  • Bartl, Július (2002), Slovak History: Chronology & Lexicon, Wauconda, Illinois: Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, ISBN 0-86516-444-4

slovak, uprising, 1848, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, lear. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages The examples and perspective in this article may not include all significant viewpoints Please improve the article or discuss the issue February 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message 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 Slovak Uprising of 1848 49 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message This article s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced February 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message The Slovak Uprising of 1848 49 Slovak Slovenske povstanie Slovak Volunteer Campaigns Slovak Slovenske dobrovoľnicke vypravy or Slovak Revolt was an uprising of Slovaks in Western parts of Upper Hungary today mostly Western Slovakia with the aim of equalizing Slovaks democratizing political life and achieving social justice 2 3 within the 1848 49 revolutions in the Habsburg Monarchy It lasted from September 1848 to November 1849 In October 1848 Slovak leaders replaced their original Hungaro federal program by Austro federal called for the separation of a Slovak district Slovak Slovenske Okolie from the Kingdom of Hungary and for the formation of a new autonomous district within the framework of the Habsburg Monarchy 4 2 Slovak Uprising of 1848Part of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848Painting of Capt Jan Francisci with Slovak volunteers on Myjava Miava by Peter Michal BohunDate19 September 1848 21 November 1849LocationWestern parts of Upper Hungary today Western Slovakia ResultMilitary stalemate Slovak militia and peasant guerrillas claimed the surrender of Hungarians Hungary claimed the Slovak revolt was crushedBelligerentsSlovak National Council Slovak militia and peasant guerrillas Volunteers from Bohemia and Moravia 1 Supported by Austrian Empire Kingdom of Hungary Hungarian Armies and Militias Pro loyalist Slovak volunteersCommanders and leadersĽudovit SturJozef Miloslav HurbanMichal Miloslav HodzaJanko KraľJan Francisci RimavskyBedrich BloudekFrantisek ZachFerdinand ILajos KossuthLajos BatthyanyJozef BemHenryk DembinskiArtur GorgeySandor PetofiSandor RozsaIstvan SzechenyiJozef WysockiStrengthSeveral thousand volunteers with Austrian Imperial supportUnknownCasualties and lossesUnknown but heavyUnknown but heavy Contents 1 Background 1 1 Slovaks before 1848 2 Events of 1848 1849 2 1 Build up to the revolt 2 2 Revolt 3 Aftermath 3 1 Slovak perspective 3 2 Hungarian perspective 4 See also 5 Notes and references 6 ReferencesBackground editThe year 1848 is well noted in history as a peaking moment in nationalist sentiment among European nationalities The Slovaks were certainly an important part of the general revolts occurring in the lands of the Habsburg Monarchy After the revolutionary fervor left Paris in 1848 it traveled to Vienna where a popular uprising ousted the reactionary government of Prince Klemens von Metternich on 13 March 1848 This revolutionary fervor soon spread to the Hungarian lands of the Empire On 15 March mass protests in Buda and Pest along with a proclamation of the Hungarian Diet under direction of Lajos Kossuth saw the Hungarian Kingdom declare itself independent of Habsburg domination Slovaks before 1848 editSlovaks were not prominently placed in this first wave of revolution to reach Hungarian lands On 26 28 August 1844 a meeting between both Catholic and Protestant confessions of Slovaks met along with other factions in Liptoszentmiklos today Liptovsky Mikulas This town in the Zilina Region was the base of Slovak nationalist Michal Miloslav Hodza uncle of future Czechoslovak politician Milan Hodza The meeting though with fewer than wished Catholic participation formed a non sectarian association called the Tatrin in order to unite all Slovak groups in one national bloc 5 Catholics later became more involved in 1847 with their acceptance of Ľudovit Stur s standardization of the Slovak language nbsp Michal Miloslav Hodza nbsp Jozef Miloslav Hurban In addition to the uniting of Slovaks in one national bloc there were other factors leading to the rise in Slovak consciousness before 1848 In 1845 governmental authorities permitted the printing of Slovak language newspapers for the first time The first one was Ľudovit Stur s The Slovak National News which printed its first issue on 1 August 1845 This was quickly followed by Jozef Miloslav Hurban s Slovak Views on the Sciences Arts and Literature which did not have as much success as Stur s paper Beyond the printed word representatives of the Slovak National Movement worked among average Slovaks promoting education Sunday schools libraries amateur theatre temperance societies and other social functions 6 In agriculture Samuel Jurkovic founded a credit cooperative in the village of Sobotiste called the Farmer s Association which was the first of its kind in Europe 7 In November 1847 Ľudovit Stur the member of the Hungarian Diet for Zolyom now Zvolen spoke before his colleagues in Pressburg Pozsony today s Bratislava In his speech to the Diet Stur summed up his six point platform involving problematic political and economic issues His points were To proclaim through the Diet the legal universal and permanent abolishment of serfdom achieved through a buy out of feudal contracts with state funds at minimum expense to commoners To abolish the patrimonial court and free commoners from noble control To allow commoners to represent their own interests via membership in County government and the Diet To free privileged towns from county jurisdiction and reorganize the administration of royally chartered towns on the principal of representation by strengthening their voting rights in the Diet To abolish the privilege of nobility and make all persons equal before the courts abolish tax exemption for nobility and inheritance ensure commoners the right to serve in public office and ensure freedom of the press To reorganize the education system in a way to best serve the needs of the people and to ensure a better livelihood for teachers Along with these points of which several even met the praise of Kossuth Stur raised the issues about the use of the Slovak language in government and the enforcement of Magyar interference in many parts of Slovak life including religion 8 Events of 1848 1849 editThe events of the years 1848 1849 caused the buildup outbreak of the Slovak Uprising Build up to the revolt edit After the revolution in Pest Buda in 1848 March 15 and the formation of a new government on 17 March the threat of forcible Magyarization grew ever more present In Hont County some of this tension came to a boiling point where two Slovaks named Janko Kral and Jan Rotarides made demands for the liquidation of serfdom and recognition of the Slovak language in schools and the government These demands soon landed the pair in jail 9 On 28 March 1848 a vast assembly of former serfs convened by Lipto County and held in Hodza s base of Liptovsky Mikulas was used as a proving ground for systematic recognition of new rights and extended rights to national minorities This was met well and soon the word was spreading about possible new freedoms that would reach Slovaks prompting some miners in the area comprising today s Central Slovakia to demonstrate rowdily before being quieted by a special commissioner from Pest Buda In April 1848 Stur and Hurban attended a preliminary Slavic meeting in Vienna which would later provide the basis for the first Pan Slavic Congress to be held in Prague In the meantime back in Liptovsky Mikulas Hodza along with twenty delegates created a document entitled Demands of the Slovak Nation which listed 14 points setting national and social goals for the Slovak nation Naturally this document was received coldly by Pest Buda which subsequently imposed martial law on Upper Hungary and issued warrants for Stur Hurban and Hodza on 12 May 1848 10 At the same time uprisings among Serbs Croats and Slovenes in the southern part of Hungary diverted Magyar attention to the south as these conflicts were more armed uprisings than the Slovak one Hurban attended a session of the Croatian Diet on 5 July speaking to the Croats on the plight of the Slovaks Hurban spoke so well a joint Croat Slovak declaration was issued shortly thereafter which only inflamed Magyar opinion 11 When the full Pan Slavic Congress met on 2 June 1848 Stur Hurban Hodza and many other prominent Slovaks attended along with hundreds of other Slavic delegates This congress was held with the aim of developing a cohesive strategy for all Slavic peoples living in Austro Hungarian territories The congress was cut short when an armed uprising in Prague on 12 June prompted a hurried end to the affair However one critical item came out of the short congress for the Slovak cause In the congress the Slovaks secured the help of two Czech military officers Bedrich Bloudek and Frantisek Zach in case the Slovaks came to armed blows with the Hungarians nbsp Frantisek Zach in 1867 Though many calls for autonomy came from nearly every corner of the Empire Vienna noted that at neither the Pan Slavic conference nor other Slavic uprisings was the thought of the breakup of the Empire considered only this was so in Hungary Seeing the situation as malleable the Emperor along with his closest advisors authorized armed action against the Hungarian uprising This first manifested itself in the form of the leader of the Croatians Ban governor Josip Jelacic a friend of the Slovaks who was authorized to march against the Hungarians in August 1848 after the Hungarians had defied a direct imperial order Despite this Vienna s response to the Hungarian uprising had stayed largely quiet and mixed 12 While allowing Jelacic to march against the Magyars they had also given the Hungarian Army several units in order to help preserve internal order At the same time Slovaks started working with Jelacic s Croatians by creating a Slovak volunteer corps This corps was put together and gathered in Vienna from August to September 1848 In order to lead this burgeoning revolt a Slovak National Council was organized in Vienna where a marker stands today commemorating the spot The council was made up of Stur Hurban and Hodza the big three of the Slovak nationalist groups with the Czech Frantisek Zach as commander in chief Revolt edit nbsp Slovak volunteers 1848 49 Initially the strategy for the volunteer corps was not clear However on 16 September a decision was made that the 600 men of the corps would march from Vienna up the Vag River valley and into Turoc County and Lipto County Counties via the southern Moravian town of Breclav When the corps arrived at the Slovak border on the 18th they were met with 500 more volunteers from Brno and Prague Once convened the volunteers received arms and swore an oath on the Slovak flag Despite nudging Viennese cooperation when the volunteers encountered Imperial troops on the road to Miava they were regarded coolly by the troops 13 Once the volunteers arrived in Miava an assembly of Slovaks with Hurban presiding took the step of seceding from Hungary on 19 September 1848 Imperial troops soon ordered the Slovaks volunteers to leave Myjava though this order was rejected and instead the corps attacked an Imperial detachment and confiscated its supplies Despite this inauspicious act Imperial troops ordered both sides to halt the fighting After several more days of indecisive armed action the volunteers retreated back into Moravia Not long after the new commander of Imperial forces sent to restore order in the Kingdom of Hungary Count von Lamberg was hacked and mangled by an irate mob in central Budapest only three days after arrival 14 This halted attempts at negotiations between Kossuth and the Imperial party 15 The Viennese response was to formally order the disbandment the Hungarian Diet and the appointment of Ban Josip Jelacic as newest commander over Hungary However effective response to this latest development was also halted by another popular pan Germanic uprising in Vienna at the time which resulted in the death of war minister Count Latour on 6 October 1848 In this midst of the turmoil in Vienna which saw the Emperor and the Imperial Diet flee to Olomouc in Moravia Magyars stepped up measures against Slovaks stripping the leaders of the Slovak National Council of their Hungarian citizenship and executing a handful of prisoners This move caused the Slovak faction to appeal more to the Imperial court and despite initial concerns of the commander in chief Prince Windisch Gratz another Slovak volunteer unit was allowed to be created 16 Initial recruitment problems delayed this second campaign of the volunteer units until 4 December 1848 Throughout December and January the Slovak volunteers under Bloudek worked with Imperial troops to reoccupy Turocszentmarton On 13 January 1849 a mass rally in Turocszentmarton was followed by the signing up of new volunteers Acting with Imperial support Bloudek moved east and picking up another few thousand volunteers 17 occupied Eperjes Presov on 26 February and Kassa Kosice on 2 March Meanwhile another detachment of Slovaks was defeated after running into Magyar forces near Muranyalja Muran in Besztercebanya Banska Bystrica To make matters worse dissension between Czech and Slovak officers in the volunteer corps began to erupt nbsp A young Emperor Franz Joseph I After leading activist rallies in Eperjes and Turocszentmarton Stur and Hurban led a delegation of twenty four men to meet the new Emperor Franz Jozef with a proposal to make Slovakia an autonomous grand duchy directly under Viennese oversight with representation in the Imperial Diet The delegates also requested a Slovak provincial diet with further demands for Slovak schools and institutions Despite a formal audience with the Emperor little real progress resulted and the Slovaks were sent packing hoping for more productive results in the future 18 After several victorious battles in Spring of 1849 Kossuth and the Hungarian Diet declared the Habsburgs deposed on 14 April 1849 Around the same time the Slovak volunteer corps largely stationed in Arva County was dealing with internal struggles of its own Conflicts between Czech and Slovak officers soon brought about the effectual dissolving of the corps 19 After Russian intervention by Tsar Nicholas I brought about the gradual fall of Kossuth and Hungarian independence During this period the corps was revived one final time to mop up isolated Magyar units until the eventual capitulation of Magyar forces at Vilagos what is now Siria in Romania on 13 August 1849 On 9 October 1849 the Imperial army transferred the Slovak corps from the central territories of Upper Hungary to Pozsony where it was formally disbanded on 21 November 1849 This marked the end of Slovak participation in the Revolutions of 1848 1849 that swept the continent of Europe 20 Aftermath editSlovak perspective edit Historians Anton Spiesz and Dusan Caplovic sum up the impacts of the uprising and the era the following way Many Magyar historians have presented a positive evaluation of Kossuth and the Magyar revolution On the other hand they have branded the activities of Stur and the Slovak volunteers and their cooperation with the Viennese Court and Imperial army as counter revolutionary In truth Stur and the Slovak leaders by their conduct during the revolution of 1848 49 demonstrated that they well understood the nature of Magyar nationalism which refused to even acknowledge Slovak existence Kossuth s contention that the Viennese Court was oppressing Hungary economically and politically cannot be accepted without major reservations After all Hungary had enjoyed a permanent credit balance in trade with the nations of Cisleithania more money had flown into the Hungarian treasury from those nations than vice versa Indeed even the measure of political freedom enjoyed by Hungary had been greater than that of the Czech Kingdom or even of Austria proper and the other ethnic groups of Cisleithania It is possible however to sympathize with Kossuth and the Magyar leaders in their fear of various political combinations under active contemplation in Central Europe at the time for instance German unification embracing the entirety of the Habsburg realm or a complete restructuring of the Austrian Empire on an ethnic basis In either of these constructs the Magyars would have found themselves in the minority These various consideration may help clarify but they certainly do not justify the total suppression of non Magyar nationalities in Hungary Anton Spiesz and Dusan Caplovic 2006 Hungarian perspective edit The Hungarian revolution took place in a legally complex environment Hungary was a de iure independent kingdom tied to Austria by a common ruler At first king Ferdinand V endorsed the reformist demands of the Hungarian diet and appointed a constitutional government led by Lajos Batthyany The conservative circles of the Vienna court feared the growing independence of the Hungarians so they instructed the Ban of Croatia to attack Hungary Legally this meant that a monarch attacks one of his country s lawful government with another of his country s army Later the conservatives in Vienna forced Ferdinand to abdicate and replaced him with the young Franz Joseph He was not crowned a king of Hungary therefore his rule lacked a legal basis in Hungary In order to defeat the now open but lawful rebellion of Hungary the Viennese court manipulated the ethnic minorities of Hungary into revolt against the Hungarian government the very same government that achieved the abolition of serfdom in the Kingdom regardless of ethnicity Many Slovak peasants were more concerned with the abolition of feudal servitude and not with wider national goals Religious differences also played a key role as the leaders of the Slovak volunteers were predominantly Protestant which led to difficulties in eliciting support in regions with a catholic Slovak majority 21 The claim that the Slovak nation sided with Vienna citation needed is erroneous they could hardly recruit around 2000 people from Upper Hungary however their highest number is estimated cca 10 000 22 in fact the number of Slovaks fighting on the Hungarian side was a magnitude greater estimated around 40 000 by historians However there were cases of ethnic Slovaks resisting recruitment into the Hungarian Army notably in the western part of the Nyitra County and in parts of the Gomor es Kishont County especially in the town of Tiszolcz Tisovec where the locals protested against the unlawful Hungarian recruitment and were led by Stefan Marko Daxner 23 The Slovaks had a much higher percentage of their population serving in the Honvedseg Home Guard than Hungarians Notable troops with purely or almost purely Slovak soldiers were found in the 2 the 4 the 34 the 51 the 60 and the 124 infantry battalions and a great many Slovaks served in the most famous red hatted 9 battalion Also the 8 and 10 Hussar regiments had more companies composed of Slovak soldiers There were also a lot of high ranking officers in the Honvedseg who considered themselves Slovak patriots most notably Lajos Beniczky who was nicknamed the Duke of Slovaks by contemporaries and he didn t learn Hungarian until after the end of the war citation needed See also editHungarian Revolution of 1848 for further Magyar history surrounding the Revolutions of 1848 Revolutions of 1848 in the Habsburg areas for a broader view of the Revolutions of 1848 in the Habsburg Empire Revolutions of 1848 for the most broad view of the European conflicts of the era in general Slovak National Uprising second Slovak revolt from August to October 1944 Velvet Revolution third and the most successful Slovak revolt in 1989 Nad Tatrou sa blyska Lightning over the Tatras the official national anthem of Slovakia The song was popular among the 1848 Slovak volunteer soldiers Notes and references edit Liptai E Magyarorszag hadtortenete I 1984 Zrinyi Military Publisher ISBN 963 326 320 4 p 481 a b Skvarna Dusan 20 September 2018 Revolucne dvojrocie S akymi ambiciami vystupovala slovenska politika v rokoch 1848 1849 Historicka revue Slovensky archeologicky a historicky institut Retrieved 16 January 2020 Mikulas Teich Dusan Kovac Martin D Brown 2011 Slovakia in History Cambridge University Press p 126 ISBN 978 1 139 49494 6 Anton Spiesz 2006 Illustrated Slovak History Wauconda Illinois Bolchazy Carducci Publishers p 325 ISBN 0 86516 500 9 Spiesz p 107 Spiesz pp 108 109 Spiesz p 109 Spiesz pp 110 Spiesz pp 111 Mallows pp 191 Spiesz pp 114 115 Spiesz pp 115 Spiesz pp 116 Historical Commission of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences vol 13 pp 429 Spiesz pp 117 Spiesz pp 118 119 Spiesz pp 119 Bartl pp 222 Spiesz pp 121 Spiesz pp 122 Mikulas Teich Dusan Kovac Martin D Brown 2011 Slovakia in History Cambridge University Press p 126 ISBN 978 1 139 49494 6 Archived from the original on 8 February 2017 http www forumhistoriae sk documents 10180 887951 Kovac Sondy 2013 pdf p 93 Slovenske povstanie r 1848 49 The Slovak Uprising in the years of 1848 49 zlatyfond sme sk in Slovak Proti assentirkam postavili sa Slovaci iba v Tisovci v Gemeri a v zapadnej Nitrianskej Shromazdenie ľudu v Tisovci pod vedenim Stefana Marka Daxnera uzavrelo protestovat proti nezakonnemu sposobu regrutacky a zaslalo svoj protest stolicnemu vyboru vo forme staznosti Translation The Slovaks stood up against the conscription in Tisovec in Gemer and in western Nitra An assembly led by Stefan Marko Daxner settled on protesting against the unlawful recruitment and sent a complaint to the county committee References editSpiesz Anton 2006 Illustrated Slovak History Wauconda Illinois Bolchazy Carducci Publishers ISBN 0 86516 500 9 Mallows Lucinda 2007 Slovakia The Bradt Travel Guide Guilford Connecticut Bradt Travel Guides ISBN 978 1 84162 188 3 Historical Commission of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences 1982 Neue Deutsche Biographie Leipzig Germany Duncker amp Humblot Bartl Julius 2002 Slovak History Chronology amp Lexicon Wauconda Illinois Bolchazy Carducci Publishers ISBN 0 86516 444 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Slovak Uprising of 1848 49 amp oldid 1223468631, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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