Serbs of Hungary

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Serbs of Hungary
Magyarországi szerbek
Срби у Мађарској
Srbi u Mađarskoj
Gorogkeleti puspoki szekesegyhaz (Belgrad-templom) (7388. szamu muemlek) 4.jpg
Total population
11,622 (2022) [1]
Regions with significant populations
Budapest, Csongrád, Pest, Bács-Kiskun
Languages
Hungarian and Serbian
Religion
Eastern Orthodoxy (Serbian Orthodox Church)

Serbs are a recognized ethnic minority in Hungary. According to data from the 2022 census, the population of ethnic Serbs in Hungary is 11,622, constituting 0.1% of the total population. [2]

Contents

History

The presence of Serbs in the territory of present-day Hungary date from the Middle Ages. The mother of the Hungarian king Géza II (1141-1162) was Helena of Serbia, a daughter of Uroš I, ruler of the Grand Principality of Serbia. [3] During the rule of Géza II, her brother Beloš Vukanović was a palatine of the Kingdom of Hungary. [4] When Hungarians under Árpád arrived to the Pannonian Basin in 896, they encountered there Slavic, Avar, and other populations. These populations however were quickly assimilated. The Serbs who later migrated into the Pannonian Basin from the Balkans, were the descendants of those Slavs who in the 7th century migrated from the Pannonian Basin southwards into the Balkan peninsula.

Since the 14th century, escaping from the Ottoman threat, a large number of Serbs migrated to the Kingdom of Hungary where many of them served as soldiers. Matthias Corvinus and his successors are known to have welcomed Serbs from the other side of the Danube, giving the exiled military commanders fiefdoms to rule and defend from the Ottomans. After the Battle of Mohács in 1526, much of the territory of present-day Hungary came under Ottoman administration. During Ottoman administration towns in the territory of present-day Hungary began decaying and the former Hungarian and German population left them. In that time, especially in the 17th century, many Serb, and other South Slavic migrants settled in the territory of present-day Hungary.

Serb frontiersman from Pomorisje, 18th century Frontiersman from Pomorisje, by Martin Engelbrecht.jpg
Serb frontiersman from Pomorišje, 18th century

After territory of present-day Hungary came under Habsburg administration, a new wave of Serb refugees from the Balnas migrated to the area in 1690, as a consequence of the Habsburg-Ottoman war. [5] This migration, called the Great Migrations of the Serbs, was not a single organized campaign but a series of waves of migration. In 1698, more than a half of population of Pécs were South Slavic (including Serbs). In 1715, the population of Buda numbered 1,539 houses, of which 769 were South Slavic (mostly Serb). In 1715, the population of Baja numbered 237 houses, of which 216 were South Slavic (Serb and Bunjevac). In 1720, 88% of population of Szentendre were South Slavic (mostly Serbs). In 1720, the population of Szeged numbered 193 houses, of which 99 were Serb. During the 18th and 19th century, however, the Hungarian-Serb ethnic border moved southward and fixed in the territory of present-day Serbian province of Vojvodina.

Following the dissolution of Austria-Hungary in 1918, the Serbian Army and South Slavic People's Administration from Novi Sad controlled not only present-day Vojvodina, but also southern parts of present-day Hungary. The Treaty of Trianon from 1920 defined the border between Hungary and the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes and assigned most of Baranya and the northernmost part of Bačka (around city of Baja) to Hungary. As a response to this, a short-lived Serb-Hungarian Baranya-Baja Republic was formed in this area in 1921. The president of the republic was Serb, Petar Dobrović.[ citation needed ] After the Serb-Croat-Slovene army evacuated the territory of the Baranya-Baja Republic the two countries signed the Citizenship Treaty according to which Serbs in Hungary gained right to opt for citizenship of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes. About two-thirds of the Serbs (called optants) left Hungary in the following decade. Almost the whole Serb population of Sárok, Deszk, Újszentiván, Szőreg, Majs, and Dunaszekcső became optants and left Hungary.[ citation needed ]

Demographics

YearSerbian speakers
191026,248
192017,132
19307,031
19415,442
19803,426
19902,953
20013,388
20113,708 [6]
20224,249 [7]

In the 17th and 18th centuries large Serb communities existed throughout Hungary, notably in Buda, Baja, Szentendre, and Szeged. After the dissolution of Austria-Hungary in 1918 and after new borders were defined by the Treaty of Trianon in 1920, the population of Serbs in Hungary has drastically diminished with only a fraction remaining within the borders of post-Trianon Hungary. [8]

Small Serb communities are scattered mostly in the southern part of the country (near the border with Serbia) where they usually make up from 2 to 5% of the population (up to around 240 ethnic Serbs at most): Battonya (241 ethnic Serbs or 4.8% of total population), Deszk (115 or 2.9%), Hercegszántó (61 or 3.7%). There are couple of settlements with Serb communities in wider Budapest region (Pest County), on the Csepel Island: Lórév (Serbian: Ловра / Lovra) - the only settlement with an ethnic Serb majority in Hungary (154 or 51%), and Szigetcsép (67 or 2.4%). [9]

Most ethnic Serbs nowadays are to be found in cities and towns. In Budapest, ethnic Serbs form 7th largest ethnic group with 2,818 people or 0.1% of city's population. [10] In Szeged, third-largest city in Hungary, Serbs form 4th largest ethnic group with 758 people or 0.4% of city's population. There are also small Serb communities in towns of Baja (131 or 0.4%) and Szentendre (114 or 0.4%).

Serbs in Hungary predominantly belong to the Eastern Orthodoxy with the Serbian Orthodox Church as the traditional church (through its diocese, the Eparchy of Buda). [11]

Heritage

Serbian Kindergarten, Primary School, High School and Students' Home Srpska gimnazija u Budimpesti.jpg
Serbian Kindergarten, Primary School, High School and Students' Home
Serbian Kovin Monastery, built in 1487 Serbian Orthodox Church, 2005 Rackeve05 036.jpg
Serbian Kovin Monastery, built in 1487

Serbs left a valuable architectural heritage in Hungary. The number of Serbian Orthodox churches is far higher than would be expected by the small size of contemporary Serb population in Hungary. These baroque churches were mostly built in the 18th and 19th centuries when Serb merchants formed rich and influential communities in Hungarian towns. Village churches show the historical presence of Serbs even in many places from where they absolutely disappeared by now.

The most complex example of Serb architectural heritage in Hungary is the old town of Szentendre, with seven Serbian Orthodox churches, brightly coloured merchant houses, the Museum of Serbian Orthodox Heritage, and the Archives of the Eparchy of Buda.

In Budapest, there is an old Serbian Orthodox church in Serb Street and the famous Serb college, Thökölyanum (Serbian: Tekelijanum).

Serbian Orthodox churches are to be found in following cities and towns: Szeged, Győr, Eger, Székesfehérvár (with a Serbian open-air village museum), Baja (two churches), Hódmezővásárhely, Vác, Esztergom, Pomáz, Mohács, Siklós. Serbian Orthodox village churches are in Csobánka (Čobanac), Lórév (Lovra), Szigetcsép (Čip), Budakalász (Kalaz), Magyarcsanád (Čanad), Battonya (Batanja), Deszk (Deska), Dunaújváros (Pantelija), Százhalombatta (Bata), Dunaföldvár (Feldvar), Alsónána (Donja Nana), Medina (Medina), Illocska (Iločac), Magyarbóly (Madžarboja), Dunaszekcső (Sečuj), Villány (Viljan), Sárok (Šarok), Majs (Majš), Lippó (Lipova), Beremend (Breme), Erdősmecske (Racmečka), Somberek (Šumberak).

There are two Serbian Orthodox monasteries: Serbian Kovin Monastery (Srpski Kovin) in Ráckeve, rare example of Serb Gothic architecture from the 15th century, and Grábóc (Grabovac).

Notable people

Arsenije III.jpg
Vitkovicsmihaly.jpg
Vukovics Sebo.jpg
Sava Tekelija by Mor Than.jpg
Jakov Ignjatovic Novak Radonic.jpg
Sztojay-official portrait 1944.jpg
Milos Crnjanski 1914.jpg
Sztevanovity Zoran portre.jpg
Radovan Jelasic crop.jpg

See also

References

  1. https://nepszamlalas2022.ksh.hu/en/
  2. https://nepszamlalas2022.ksh.hu/en/
  3. Berend, Nora; Urbańczyk, Przemysław; Wiszewski, Przemysław (2013). Central Europe in the High Middle Ages: Bohemia, Hungary and Poland, c.900–c.1300. Cambridge University Press. p. 248. ISBN   9780521781565.
  4. M. Bak, János; Veszprémy, László, eds. (2018). he Illuminated Chronicle: Chronicle of the Deeds of the Hungarians from the Fourteenth-Century Illuminated Codex. Central European University Press. p. 308. ISBN   9789633862650.
  5. Veremēs, Thanos; Kōphos, Euangelos (1998). Kosovo: Avoiding Another Balkan War. Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy. p. 181. ISBN   9789607061409.
  6. "2011 census" (PDF).
  7. https://nepszamlalas2022.ksh.hu/en/database/#/table/WBS026/N4IgFgpghgJiBcBtAugGhAZwJYwgl6GEAxgC5YD2AdvmiAGZYA2pEAThgqANZZVzwQAWSgAHEOghVSbLBE5JEIACoBJIQFEA-gAUNAJVUB5ACIBGMxJ58BIAMoRSEkADcoTAK7z8IAEwAGX18QZABfNCVlAwBVABktAHENIwBWLQAxIwTYqxBefgR7R2c3T28kEAAJaLMAkPCw0KA===
  8. "Najnovije vesti, Beograd, Srbija, Smedia". Smedia.
  9. https://nepszamlalas2022.ksh.hu/eredmenyek/vizualizaciok/a-telepulesek-legfontosabb-adatai/index_en
  10. https://nepszamlalas2022.ksh.hu/eredmenyek/vizualizaciok/a-telepulesek-legfontosabb-adatai/index_en
  11. https://www.serbdiocese.hu/eparhija/parohije/

Sources