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Župa

A župa (or zhupa, županija) is a historical type of administrative division in Southeast Europe and Central Europe, that originated in medieval South Slavic culture, commonly translated as "parish", later synonymous "kotar", commonly translated as "county".[1][2] It was mentioned for the first time in the eighth century. It was initially used by the South and West Slavs, denoting various territorial units of which the leader was the župan. In modern Bosnian, Croatian and Slovenian, the term župa also means an ecclesiastical parish, while term županija is used in Bosnia and Croatia (in Bosnia also kanton as synonymous) for lower state organizational units.[3]

Etymology

The word župa or zhupa (Slovakian, Czech, Serbo-Croatian and Bulgarian: жупа; adopted into Hungarian: ispán and rendered in Greek as ζουπανία (zoupania, "land ruled by a župan")), is derived from Slavic. Its medieval Latin equivalent was comitatus. It is mostly translated into "county" or "district".[4] According to Kmietowicz, it seems that the territorial organization had been created in Polish territories before the Slav Migrations.[5] Some Slavic nations changed its name into "opole", "okolina", "kraj" and "vierw", but it has survived in župan.[5] Some scholars consider the word's older meaning was "open area in the valley".[3] This interpretation is confirmed by the Bulgarian župa (tomb), Polish zupa and Ukrainian župa (salt mine), and Old Slavonic župište (tomb).[3] As such, the Proto-Slavic *župa wouldn't derive from *gheu-p- (with *gheu- meaning "bend, distort"),[3] yet from Indo-European *g(h)eup-/*gheub- meaning "cavity, pit",[6] which derives from Nostratic *gopa meaning "hollow, empty".[7] However, Albert Bruckner suggested the opposite evolution; župa as a back formation from title župan (for the etymology see corresponding article),[8] which is a borrowing from Iranian languages (*fsu-pāna, "shepherd").[9]

Usage

The division had a widespread distribution and did not always had a concrete institutional definition.[10] The term župa was at first the territorial and administrative unit of a tribe but was later only an administrative unit without tribal features.[11][12][3] The South Slavs that settled in Roman lands to a certain degree adopted Roman state organization, but retained their own tribal organization.[13] Slavic tribes were divided into fraternities, each including a certain number of families.[13] The territory inhabited by a tribe was a župa, and its leader was the župan.[13]

The zhupa (plural zhupi) was an administrative unit in the First Bulgarian Empire, a subdivision of a larger unit called comitatus. In these countries, the equivalent of "county" is "judet" (from Latin judicium).[citation needed] The Croats and the Slovaks used the terms županija and župa for the counties in the Kingdom of Croatia and Kingdom of Hungary. German language translation of the word for those counties was komitat (from Latin comitatus, "countship") during the Middle Ages, but later it was gespanschaft (picking up the span root that previously came from župan).[citation needed]

Bosnia

Territorial-political organization in medieval Bosnia was intricate, and composed on several levels. In this scheme in the territorial-political organizational order of the medieval Bosnian state, župa or parish was basic unit of the state organization, with feudal estate at the bottom, followed by village municipality, both below župa, and county or zemlja above it, with the state monarch at the top.[1]

Croatia

The Croatian word župa signifies both a secular unit (county) and a religious unit (parish), ruled over by a "župan" (count) and "župnik" (parish priest).[14]

Croatian medieval state was divided into eleven ζουπανίας (zoupanias; župas), and the ban ruled over additional three župas Krbava, Lika, and Gacka).[15]

Today the term županija is the name for the Croatian regional government, the counties of Croatia. Mayors of counties hold the title of župan (pl. župani), which is usually translated as "county prefect". In the 19th century, the counties of the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia were called županija. The Croats preserved the term župa until the modern times as the name for local clerical units, parishes of the Catholic Church and of the Protestant churches. The parish priest is called župnik.

Hungary

In c. 1074, the župa is mentioned in Hungary as -spán, also as határispánságok (march, frontier county). The derivative titles were ispán, nominated by the king for not defined time, and gradually replaced by főispán in the 18-19th century; megyésispán, also nominated by the king but could be expelled anytime; alispán was the leader of the jurisdiction in the county if the 'megyésispán' was not available; várispán was more linked to the "vár" (fortress) in Hungary in the times of Árpád.

Serbia

The Serbs in the Early Middle Ages were organized into župe, a confederation of village communities (roughly the equivalent of a county),[4] headed by a local župan (a magistrate or governor).[16] Thus the title of Grand Župan in Raška in 11th-12th century meant "supreme župan" of župans who ruled over župas.[12]

Dušan's Code (1349) named the administrative hierarchy as following: "land(s), city(ies), župa(s) and krajište(s)", the župa(s) and krajište(s) were one and the same, with the župa on the border were called krajište (frontier).[17] The župa consisted of villages, and their status, rights and obligations were regulated in the constitution. The ruling nobility possessed hereditary allodial estates, which were worked by dependent sebri, the equivalent of Greek paroikoi; peasants owing labour services, formally bound by decree.[18]

Though the territorial unit today is unused, there are a number of traditional župe in Kosovo, around Prizren: Sredačka Župa, Sirinićka Župa, Gora, Opolje and Prizrenski Podgor. The Serbian language maintains the word in toponyms, the best known being that of the Župa Aleksandrovačka.

Slovakia

The term župa was popularized in Slovak professional literature in the 19th century as a synonym to contemporary Slovak term stolica (county).[19] After the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, it was used as the official name of administrative units of Slovakia within Czechoslovakia in 1919 – 1928 and then again in the Slovak Republic during WWII in 1940–1945.[20] Nowadays, the term is used semi-officially as a short alternative name for the self-governing regions of Slovakia.[21] The president of the self-governing region is semi-officially called župan.

Slovenia

During World War II, when Slovenia was partitioned between Italy, Hungary, and Germany on 17 April 1941, in the Italian portion, named province of Ljubljana, the new administration was led by an Italian High Commissioner, but there also were Presidents of the Council of Zhupans of Ljubljana: Marko Natlačen (1941), Leon Rupnik (1942-1943).[citation needed]

See also

Citations

  1. ^ a b Anđelić 1982, pp. 9–24.
  2. ^ Gluhak 1990, pp. 225, 227.
  3. ^ a b c d e Gluhak 1993, p. 713.
  4. ^ a b Fine 1991, p. 304.
  5. ^ a b Kmietowicz 1976, p. 185, footnote.
  6. ^ Gluhak 1993, pp. 713–714.
  7. ^ Gluhak 1993, p. 714.
  8. ^ Alemany 2009, p. 7.
  9. ^ Gluhak 1990, p. 228.
  10. ^ Biliarsky 2011, p. 368.
  11. ^ Vucinich 1975, p. 161.
  12. ^ a b Gluhak 1990, p. 227.
  13. ^ a b c The Yugoslav village 1972, p. 39.
  14. ^ Quintavalle 2007, p. 140.
  15. ^ Živković 2012, p. 144.
  16. ^ Evans 2007, p. xxi.
  17. ^ Radovanović 2002, p. 5
  18. ^ p. 290
  19. ^ Terminology of public admin n.d.
  20. ^ Acta Universitatis, p. 146.
  21. ^ Piško 2009.

Sources

  • Acta Universitatis Carolinae: Geographica, Volume 38, Issue 1. Universita Karlova. 2005. p. 146.
  • Alemany, Agustí (2009). "From Central Asia to the Balkans: the title *ču(b)-pān". In Allison, Christine; Joisten-Pruschke, Anke; Wendtland, Antje (eds.). From Daēnā to Dîn: Religion, Kultur und Sprache in der iranischen Welt. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag. pp. 3–12. ISBN 978-344705917-6.
  • Anđelić, Pavao (1982). Studije o teritorijalnopolitičkoj organizaciji srednjovjekovne Bosne [Studies on the territorial political organization of medieval Bosnia] (in Serbo-Croatian). Sarajevo: Svjetlost, OOUR Izdavačka djelatnost. pp. 9–24.
  • Biliarsky, Ivan (2011). Word and Power in Mediaeval Bulgaria. Brill. p. 368. ISBN 978-900419145-7.
  • Brückner, Alexander (1908). "Über Etymologische Anarchie". Indogermanische Forschungen. 23: 206–219. doi:10.1515/if-1909-0118. S2CID 202507000.
  • Brugmann, Karl (1900). "Aksl. župa 'Bezirk'". Indogermanische Forschungen. 11: 111–112. doi:10.1515/9783110242539.111. S2CID 170500221.
  • Erdal, Marcel (1988). "The Turkic Nagy-Szent-Miklós inscription in Greek letters". Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae. 42: 221–234.
  • Evans, Arthur (2007). Through Bosnia and the Herzegovina on Foot During the Insurrection, August and September 1875. Cosimo. ISBN 978-1-60206-270-2.
  • Fine, John Van Antwerp (1991). The Early Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century. Michigan: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0-472-08149-7.
  • Fine, John Van Antwerp (1994), The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest, University of Michigan Press, ISBN 978-0-472-08260-5
  • Gluhak, Alemko (1990), Porijeklo imena Hrvat [Origin of the name Croat] (in Croatian), Zagreb, Čakovec: Alemko Gluhak
  • Gluhak, Alemko (1993), Hrvatski etimološki rječnik [Croatian etymological dictionary] (in Croatian), Zagreb: August Cesarec, ISBN 953-162-000-8
  • Kmietowicz, Frank A. (1976). Ancient Slavs. Worzalla Pub. Co. pp. 185, footnote.
  • Piško, Michal (3 October 2009). "Slovo župa je praslovanského pôvodu, aj tak ho nechceme" [The word county is of Proto-Slavic origin, we don't want it anyway]. SME (in Slovak). Retrieved 1 March 2016.
  • Quintavalle, Arturo Carlo (2007). Quintavalle, Arturo Carlo (ed.). Medioevo: la chiesa e il palazzo: atti del convegno internazionale di studi, Parma, 20-24 settembre 2005 [Middle Ages: the church and the palace: proceedings of the international study conference, Parma, 20-24 September 2005] (in Italian) (Illustrated ed.). Electa. p. 140.
  • Smiljanić, Franjo (2007), "O položaju i funkciji župana u hrvatskim srednjovjekovnim vrelima od 9. do 16. stoljeća" [About position and function of župan in Croatian historical sources from 9th until 16th century], Povijesni Prilozi (in Croatian), 33 (33)
  • Štih, Peter (1995). "Novi pokušaji rješavanja problematike Hrvata u Karantaniji" [New attempts to resolve the problems of Croats in Karantania]. In Budak, Neven (ed.). Etnogeneza Hrvata [Ethnogenesis of Croats] (in Croatian). Matica hrvatska. ISBN 953-6014-45-9.
  • "Terminológia verejnej správy na Slovensku" [Terminology of public administration in Slovakia] (PDF). Komunálne výskumné a poradenské centrum [Communal Research and Advisory Center] (in Slovak). Retrieved 1 March 2016.
  • Tomović, G. (1999). "Župa i Župan". Leksikon srpskog srednjeg veka. Beograd. pp. 195–198.
  • Vucinich, Wayne S. (1975). A study in social survival: The Katun in Bileća Rudine. Denver: University of Denver.
  • The Yugoslav village. University of Zagreb Institute for Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology. Institute for Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology. SOUR for rural sociology. 1972. p. 39.
  • Živković, Tibor (2012). De conversione Croatorum et Serborum: A Lost Source. Belgrade: The Institute of History.

Župa, other, uses, disambiguation, župa, zhupa, županija, historical, type, administrative, division, southeast, europe, central, europe, that, originated, medieval, south, slavic, culture, commonly, translated, parish, later, synonymous, kotar, commonly, tran. For other uses see Zupa disambiguation A zupa or zhupa zupanija is a historical type of administrative division in Southeast Europe and Central Europe that originated in medieval South Slavic culture commonly translated as parish later synonymous kotar commonly translated as county 1 2 It was mentioned for the first time in the eighth century It was initially used by the South and West Slavs denoting various territorial units of which the leader was the zupan In modern Bosnian Croatian and Slovenian the term zupa also means an ecclesiastical parish while term zupanija is used in Bosnia and Croatia in Bosnia also kanton as synonymous for lower state organizational units 3 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Usage 2 1 Bosnia 2 2 Croatia 2 3 Hungary 2 4 Serbia 2 5 Slovakia 2 6 Slovenia 3 See also 4 Citations 5 SourcesEtymology EditThe word zupa or zhupa Slovakian Czech Serbo Croatian and Bulgarian zhupa adopted into Hungarian ispan and rendered in Greek as zoypania zoupania land ruled by a zupan is derived from Slavic Its medieval Latin equivalent was comitatus It is mostly translated into county or district 4 According to Kmietowicz it seems that the territorial organization had been created in Polish territories before the Slav Migrations 5 Some Slavic nations changed its name into opole okolina kraj and vierw but it has survived in zupan 5 Some scholars consider the word s older meaning was open area in the valley 3 This interpretation is confirmed by the Bulgarian zupa tomb Polish zupa and Ukrainian zupa salt mine and Old Slavonic zupiste tomb 3 As such the Proto Slavic zupa wouldn t derive from gheu p with gheu meaning bend distort 3 yet from Indo European g h eup gheub meaning cavity pit 6 which derives from Nostratic gopa meaning hollow empty 7 However Albert Bruckner suggested the opposite evolution zupa as a back formation from title zupan for the etymology see corresponding article 8 which is a borrowing from Iranian languages fsu pana shepherd 9 Usage EditThe division had a widespread distribution and did not always had a concrete institutional definition 10 The term zupa was at first the territorial and administrative unit of a tribe but was later only an administrative unit without tribal features 11 12 3 The South Slavs that settled in Roman lands to a certain degree adopted Roman state organization but retained their own tribal organization 13 Slavic tribes were divided into fraternities each including a certain number of families 13 The territory inhabited by a tribe was a zupa and its leader was the zupan 13 The zhupa plural zhupi was an administrative unit in the First Bulgarian Empire a subdivision of a larger unit called comitatus In these countries the equivalent of county is judet from Latin judicium citation needed The Croats and the Slovaks used the terms zupanija and zupa for the counties in the Kingdom of Croatia and Kingdom of Hungary German language translation of the word for those counties was komitat from Latin comitatus countship during the Middle Ages but later it was gespanschaft picking up the span root that previously came from zupan citation needed Bosnia Edit Main article Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Middle Ages Territorial political organization in medieval Bosnia was intricate and composed on several levels In this scheme in the territorial political organizational order of the medieval Bosnian state zupa or parish was basic unit of the state organization with feudal estate at the bottom followed by village municipality both below zupa and county or zemlja above it with the state monarch at the top 1 Croatia Edit Main articles Duchy of Croatia and Counties of Croatia The Croatian word zupa signifies both a secular unit county and a religious unit parish ruled over by a zupan count and zupnik parish priest 14 Croatian medieval state was divided into eleven zoypanias zoupanias zupas and the ban ruled over additional three zupas Krbava Lika and Gacka 15 Today the term zupanija is the name for the Croatian regional government the counties of Croatia Mayors of counties hold the title of zupan pl zupani which is usually translated as county prefect In the 19th century the counties of the Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia were called zupanija The Croats preserved the term zupa until the modern times as the name for local clerical units parishes of the Catholic Church and of the Protestant churches The parish priest is called zupnik Hungary Edit Main article Ispan In c 1074 the zupa is mentioned in Hungary as span also as hatarispansagok march frontier county The derivative titles were ispan nominated by the king for not defined time and gradually replaced by foispan in the 18 19th century megyesispan also nominated by the king but could be expelled anytime alispan was the leader of the jurisdiction in the county if the megyesispan was not available varispan was more linked to the var fortress in Hungary in the times of Arpad Serbia Edit See also Serbia in the Middle Ages The Serbs in the Early Middle Ages were organized into zupe a confederation of village communities roughly the equivalent of a county 4 headed by a local zupan a magistrate or governor 16 Thus the title of Grand Zupan in Raska in 11th 12th century meant supreme zupan of zupans who ruled over zupas 12 Dusan s Code 1349 named the administrative hierarchy as following land s city ies zupa s and krajiste s the zupa s and krajiste s were one and the same with the zupa on the border were called krajiste frontier 17 The zupa consisted of villages and their status rights and obligations were regulated in the constitution The ruling nobility possessed hereditary allodial estates which were worked by dependent sebri the equivalent of Greek paroikoi peasants owing labour services formally bound by decree 18 Though the territorial unit today is unused there are a number of traditional zupe in Kosovo around Prizren Sredacka Zupa Sirinicka Zupa Gora Opolje and Prizrenski Podgor The Serbian language maintains the word in toponyms the best known being that of the Zupa Aleksandrovacka Slovakia Edit The term zupa was popularized in Slovak professional literature in the 19th century as a synonym to contemporary Slovak term stolica county 19 After the collapse of the Austro Hungarian Monarchy it was used as the official name of administrative units of Slovakia within Czechoslovakia in 1919 1928 and then again in the Slovak Republic during WWII in 1940 1945 20 Nowadays the term is used semi officially as a short alternative name for the self governing regions of Slovakia 21 The president of the self governing region is semi officially called zupan Slovenia Edit During World War II when Slovenia was partitioned between Italy Hungary and Germany on 17 April 1941 in the Italian portion named province of Ljubljana the new administration was led by an Italian High Commissioner but there also were Presidents of the Council of Zhupans of Ljubljana Marko Natlacen 1941 Leon Rupnik 1942 1943 citation needed See also EditGrand Zupan a Serbian medieval title equivalent to Grand Prince Gespan Ban Gau ShireCitations Edit a b Anđelic 1982 pp 9 24 Gluhak 1990 pp 225 227 a b c d e Gluhak 1993 p 713 a b Fine 1991 p 304 a b Kmietowicz 1976 p 185 footnote Gluhak 1993 pp 713 714 Gluhak 1993 p 714 Alemany 2009 p 7 Gluhak 1990 p 228 Biliarsky 2011 p 368 Vucinich 1975 p 161 a b Gluhak 1990 p 227 a b c The Yugoslav village 1972 p 39 Quintavalle 2007 p 140 Zivkovic 2012 p 144 Evans 2007 p xxi Radovanovic 2002 p 5 p 290 Terminology of public admin n d Acta Universitatis p 146 Pisko 2009 Sources EditActa Universitatis Carolinae Geographica Volume 38 Issue 1 Universita Karlova 2005 p 146 Alemany Agusti 2009 From Central Asia to the Balkans the title cu b pan In Allison Christine Joisten Pruschke Anke Wendtland Antje eds From Daena to Din Religion Kultur und Sprache in der iranischen Welt Wiesbaden Harrassowitz Verlag pp 3 12 ISBN 978 344705917 6 Anđelic Pavao 1982 Studije o teritorijalnopolitickoj organizaciji srednjovjekovne Bosne Studies on the territorial political organization of medieval Bosnia in Serbo Croatian Sarajevo Svjetlost OOUR Izdavacka djelatnost pp 9 24 Biliarsky Ivan 2011 Word and Power in Mediaeval Bulgaria Brill p 368 ISBN 978 900419145 7 Bruckner Alexander 1908 Uber Etymologische Anarchie Indogermanische Forschungen 23 206 219 doi 10 1515 if 1909 0118 S2CID 202507000 Brugmann Karl 1900 Aksl zupa Bezirk Indogermanische Forschungen 11 111 112 doi 10 1515 9783110242539 111 S2CID 170500221 Erdal Marcel 1988 The Turkic Nagy Szent Miklos inscription in Greek letters Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 42 221 234 Evans Arthur 2007 Through Bosnia and the Herzegovina on Foot During the Insurrection August and September 1875 Cosimo ISBN 978 1 60206 270 2 Fine John Van Antwerp 1991 The Early Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century Michigan University of Michigan Press ISBN 0 472 08149 7 Fine John Van Antwerp 1994 The Late Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 08260 5 Gluhak Alemko 1990 Porijeklo imena Hrvat Origin of the name Croat in Croatian Zagreb Cakovec Alemko Gluhak Gluhak Alemko 1993 Hrvatski etimoloski rjecnik Croatian etymological dictionary in Croatian Zagreb August Cesarec ISBN 953 162 000 8 Kmietowicz Frank A 1976 Ancient Slavs Worzalla Pub Co pp 185 footnote Pisko Michal 3 October 2009 Slovo zupa je praslovanskeho povodu aj tak ho nechceme The word county is of Proto Slavic origin we don t want it anyway SME in Slovak Retrieved 1 March 2016 Quintavalle Arturo Carlo 2007 Quintavalle Arturo Carlo ed Medioevo la chiesa e il palazzo atti del convegno internazionale di studi Parma 20 24 settembre 2005 Middle Ages the church and the palace proceedings of the international study conference Parma 20 24 September 2005 in Italian Illustrated ed Electa p 140 Smiljanic Franjo 2007 O polozaju i funkciji zupana u hrvatskim srednjovjekovnim vrelima od 9 do 16 stoljeca About position and function of zupan in Croatian historical sources from 9th until 16th century Povijesni Prilozi in Croatian 33 33 Stih Peter 1995 Novi pokusaji rjesavanja problematike Hrvata u Karantaniji New attempts to resolve the problems of Croats in Karantania In Budak Neven ed Etnogeneza Hrvata Ethnogenesis of Croats in Croatian Matica hrvatska ISBN 953 6014 45 9 Terminologia verejnej spravy na Slovensku Terminology of public administration in Slovakia PDF Komunalne vyskumne a poradenske centrum Communal Research and Advisory Center in Slovak Retrieved 1 March 2016 Tomovic G 1999 Zupa i Zupan Leksikon srpskog srednjeg veka Beograd pp 195 198 Vucinich Wayne S 1975 A study in social survival The Katun in Bileca Rudine Denver University of Denver The Yugoslav village University of Zagreb Institute for Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology Institute for Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology SOUR for rural sociology 1972 p 39 Zivkovic Tibor 2012 De conversione Croatorum et Serborum A Lost Source Belgrade The Institute of History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Zupa amp oldid 1131764832, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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