Principality of Transylvania (1711–1867)
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Grand Principality of Transylvania | |||||||||
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1711–1867 | |||||||||
Capital | Hermannstadt (Nagyszeben, Transylvanian | ||||||||
Monarch | |||||||||
• 1711–1740 (first) | Charles III | ||||||||
• 1848–1867 (last) | Franz Joseph I | ||||||||
History | |||||||||
15 June 1703 – 1 May 1711 | |||||||||
29 April 1711 | |||||||||
7 January 1764 | |||||||||
31 October 1784 – 14 December 1784 | |||||||||
15 March 1848 – 4 October 1849 | |||||||||
29 May 1867 | |||||||||
| |||||||||
Today part of | Romania |
The Principality of Transylvania, from 1765 the Grand Principality of Transylvania, was a
History
In the Great Turkish War, the Habsburg Emperor Leopold I had occupied the vassal Ottoman Principality of Transylvania and forced Prince Michael I Apafi to acknowledge his overlordship in his capacity as King of Hungary. Upon Apafi's death in 1690, Emperor Leopold decreed the Diploma Leopoldinum, which affiliated the Transylvanian territory with the Habsburg monarchy. In 1697 Michael's son and heir Prince Michael II Apafi finally renounced Transylvania in favour of Leopold; the transfer to the Habsburg lands was confirmed by the 1699 Treaty of Karlowitz between the Holy League and the Ottoman Empire.
After Rákóczi's War of Independence had failed, the Peace of Szatmár was concluded in 1711: Habsburg control over Transylvania was consolidated, and the Princes of Transylvania were replaced with Habsburg imperial governors (Gubernatoren). In 1765 Maria Theresa and her son Emperor Joseph II proclaimed the Grand Principality of Transylvania, consolidating the special separate status of Transylvania within the Habsburg Monarchy, established by the Diploma Leopoldinum in 1691.
From about 1734 onwards, southern Transylvania became the settlement area of German-speaking
The majority of the Transylvanian population was Romanian, many of them peasants working for Hungarian magnates under the precarious conditions of serfdom. The 1784 Revolt of Horea, Cloșca and Crișan, however, and all demands of political equality were of no avail.
During the
In 1853, the Transylvanian Military Frontier, which existed from 1762, was abolished and again incorporated into Transylvania.
The 1863-1864 Transylvanian Diet summoned in Sibiu (the first meeting of Transylvania's governing body after the 1848 Revolution) proclaimed that the Romanian nation, language, and cults (Greek Catholic and Eastern Orthodox) were to be elevated to the same rank as those of the other nations, thus granting Romanians complete equality of rights with the rest of the inhabitants of Transylvania. Also, it was on this occasion that the Romanians held the relative majority of seats in the Transylvanian Diet for the first time, following a provisional, liberal regulation (Romanians: 48 deputies for 1,300,913 inhabitants or one deputy for 28,280 people; Hungarians: 44 deputies for 568,172 inhabitants or one deputy for 12,913 people; Saxons: 33 deputies for 204,031 inhabitants or one deputy for 6,370 people).[11]
In September 1865, the emperor, now looking for a reconciliation with the Hungarians amidst the pressing Austrian military and economic crisis, dissolved the Sibiu Diet and convened a new diet in Cluj, chosen according to a different electoral regulation, one that grossly favored the Hungarian side. On 19 November 1865, this new Transylvanian Diet voted for the affiliation with Hungary. With the subsequent Austro-Hungarian Compromise (Ausgleich), the centuries-long autonomous status of Hungarian nobility, Székelys and Transylvanian Saxons ended and the Grand Principality of Transylvania was incorporated into Hungary proper within the Dual Monarchy, codified on 6 December 1868.[12]
Following the Compromise, on 3 May 1868, during a popular assembly attended by some 60,000 peasants from throughout Transylvania, the representatives of the Transylvanian Romanians issued the Blaj Pronouncement, a political declaration against the Hungarian system of government that did away with Transylvania's long-standing autonomy. It called for the autonomy of Transylvania, the reopening of its Diet on the basis of proportional representation, and the recognition of the laws approved by the Diet of Sibiu. It specified that Romanians did not recognise the Parliament of Hungary or its right to make laws for Transylvania. At the same time, the document expressed the principles of the passivist doctrine of refusing to recognise Hungarian institutions and boycotting the country's political life.
Borders
Before its abolition in 1867, the Principality of Transylvania bordered the
Demographics
Year | Total | Romanians | Hungarians and Székelys | Germans | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1700 | ~500,000 | ~50% | ~30% | ~20% | Estimation by Benedek Jancsó[13] |
1700 | ~800,000–865,000 | Recent estimates[14] | |||
1712–1713 | 34% | 47% | 19% | Official estimate[13] | |
1720 | 806,221 | 49.6% | 37.2% | 12.2% | Estimation by Károly Kocsis & Eszter Kocsisné Hodosi[15] |
1721 | - | 48,28% | 36.09% | 15.62% | Estimation by Ignác Acsády[16] |
1730 | ~725,000 | 57.9% | 26.2% | 15.1% | Austrian statistics |
1765 | ~1,000,000 | 55.9% | 26% | 12% | Estimation by Bálint Hóman and Gyula Szekfü |
1773[17] | 1,066,017 | 63.5% | 24.2% | 12.3% | |
1784 | 1,440,986 | - | - | - | Official census |
1790[18] | 1,465,000 | 50.8% | 30.4% | - | |
1835 | - | 62.3% | 23.3% | 14.3% | |
1850 | 2,073,372 | 59.1% | 25.9% | 9.3% |
Governors
See also
- Transylvania
- List of rulers of Transylvania
- Transylvanian Saxons
- Unio Trium Nationum, pact between the three Estates of Transylvania (Hungarian nobility, Saxon patricians, and free Székelys), which endured into the 19th century
References
- ^ Trócsányi, Zsolt (2002), Transylvania in the Habsburg Empire, Akadémiai Kiadó, retrieved 10 March 2016
- ^ Trócsányi, Zsolt (2002), From the Enlightenment to Reaction Under Emperor Francis (1771–1830): The Diet of 1790–91;The 'Supplex Libellus Valachorum', Akadémiai Kiadó, retrieved 10 March 2016
- ^ Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. C. Knight. 1843. pp. 162–.
- ^ Francis Lieber; Edward Wigglesworth (1836). Encyclopædia Americana: A Popular Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature, History, Politics, and Biography, Brought Down to the Present Time; Including a Copious Collection of Original Articles in American Biography; on the Basis of the Seventh Edition of the German Conversations-Lexicon. Desilver, Thomas, & Company. pp. 320–.
- ISBN 978-1-84162-419-8.
- ISBN 9780582290846.
- ^ Laszlo Péter, Hungary's Long Nineteenth Century: Constitutional and Democratic Traditions in a European Perspective, BRILL, 2012, p. 56
- ^ "Unió Erdéllyel". Múlt-Kor. 29 May 2003.
- ^ "unió Erdélylyel". Magyar Katolikus Lexikon.
- ^ a b Austrian Constitution of 4 March 1849. (Section I, Art. I and Section IX., Art. LXXIV)
- ^ "Dieta de la Sibiu din 1863". 3 July 2020.
- ^ Prof. dr. PÁL Judit - Unió vagy autonómia? Erdély uniójának törvényi szabályozása. Magyar Kisebbség. Nemzetpolitikai szemle. Új sorozat. XIV. évf. 2009. 1-2. (51-52.) sz. 64-80. - Prof. dr. PÁL Judit - Union or autonomy? The legal reagulation of the union of Transylvania. Magyar Kisebbség. Nemzetpolitikai szemle. Új sorozat. XIV. évf. 2009. 1-2. (51-52.) sz. 64-80.
- ^ ISBN 0-88033-491-6
- ISBN 0-88033-491-6
- ^ Károly Kocsis, Eszter Kocsisné Hodosi, Ethnic Geography of the Hungarian Minorities in the Carpathian Basin, Simon Publications LLC, 1998, p. 102 (Table 19) [1]
- ^ Acsády Ignác: Magyarország népessége a Pragamtica Sanctio korában, Magyar statisztikai közlemények 12. kötet - Ignác Acsády: The population of Hungary in the ages of the Pragmatica Sanction, Magyar statisztikai közlemények vol. 12.
- ^ "A Growing Population in the Grip of Underdeveloped Agriculture".
- ^ Peter Rokai – Zoltan Đere – Tibor Pal – Aleksandar Kasaš, Istorija Mađara, Beograd, 2002, pages 376–377.