Serbs in Hungary

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Main Square in Szentendre
Main Square in Szentendre

The Serbs are an ethnic minority in Hungary. According to the 2001 census, there were 7,350 Serbs in Hungary or 0.1% of population. [1]

Contents

Small Serb communities are scattered in the southern part of the country, in the regions of Baranya (Serbian: Baranja), Bácska (Serbian: Bačka), Bánát (Serbian: Banat), and Pomorišje. Places with relatively large concentration of Serbs include Deszk (Serbian: Deska) and Szőreg (Serbian: Sirig). These Serb communities are not larger than maximum 300 people and only constitute 2-5% of the population of the given village. There are also some Serbs who live in the central part of the country - in bigger towns like Budapest, Szentendre, etc. The only settlement with an ethnic Serb majority in Hungary is Lórév/Lovra on Csepel Island. This small village of 307 people had 180 Serb inhabitants in 2001 (and 202 people with a Serb "cultural heritage").

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 Jelena, a cousin of the great župan of Raška, Uroš I. During the rule of Géza II, his uncle, Beluš, a brother of Jelena, was a palatine of the Hungarian Kingdom.

Since the 14th century, escaping from the Ottoman threat, a large number of Serbs migrated to the Hungarian Kingdom where many of them served as soldiers. After the Battle of Mohács in 1526, much of the territory of present-day Hungary came under Ottoman rule. During Ottoman rule Hungarian towns began decaying and the former Magyar and German population left them. In that time, especially in the 17th century, many Serb, Bosniak and other Southern Slavic immigrants settled in Hungary. It is interesting that most of the Ottoman soldiers in the territory of present-day Hungary were South Slavs (mostly Serbs and Bosniaks).

After territory of present-day Hungary came under Habsburg rule, a new wave of Serb refugees migrated to the area in 1690, as a consequence of the Habsburg-Ottoman war. In the first half of the 18th century, Serbs and South Slavs were ethnic majority in several cities in the territory of present-day Hungary, including Buda, Szentendre, Baja, Pécs, Szeged, etc. It should be noted that after the devastating Ottoman wars these cities had a very low population.

Frontiersman from Pomorišje, first half of the 18th century.
Frontiersman from Pomorišje, first half of the 18th century.

In 1698, more than a half of population of Pécs were South Slavs (including Serbs). In 1715, the population of Buda numbered 1,539 houses, of which 769 were South Slavic (mostly Serbian), 701 German, and 68 Hungarian. In 1715, the population of Baja numbered 237 houses, of which 216 were South Slavic (Serb and Bunjevac), 16 Hungarian, and 5 German. In 1720, 88% of population of Szentendre were South Slavs (mostly Serbs). In 1720, the population of Szeged numbered 193 houses, of which 99 were Serbian.

In 1921, a short-lived Serb-Hungarian Baranya-Baja Republic was formed. It included the region of Baranya and the northern part of Bácska around city of Baja. The president of the republic was Petar Dobrović.

The Treaty of Trianon meant a turning point in the history of the Hungarian Serbs. After the Serb army evacuated the territory of the Baranya-Baja Republic the two countries signed a citizenship treaty. According to that treaty, members of the Serb minority 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.

In 1910, 26,248 people in the territory of present-day Hungary spoke Serbian language. In 1920, number of Serbian speakers was 17,132, in 1930 7,031, in 1941 5,442, in 1970 11,177, in 1980 3,426, in 1990 2,953, and in 2001 3,388 (compared with 3,816 declared Serbs in the same year). [2]

Notable Serbs and notable persons of Serb descent from the territory of present-day Hungary include:

  • Jovan Pačić (1771-1849), poet and officer. He was born in Baja.
  • Mihály Vitkovics (1778-1829), Hungarian and Serb poet.
  • Sándor Petőfi (1823-1849), a Hungarian national poet of mixed Serb and Slovak descent.
  • Miloš Crnjanski (1893-1977), Serbian poet, author, and a diplomat
  • Petar Dobrović (1890-1942), a painter, politician, and president of the short lived Baranya-Baja Republic.
  • Stojan Vujičić (1933-2002), Serb-Hungarian novelist, literature historian.
  • Zorán Sztevanovity (born in 1942), singer, guitar player.
  • Dusán Sztevanovity (born in 1945), lyricist.
  • Radovan Jelašić (born in 1968 in Baja), a governor of the National Bank of Serbia.
  • Jakov Ignjatović (1822-1899), Serbian novelist and prose writer
  • János Damjanich (born Jovan Damjanić) (1804-1849), a general of the Hungarian army in 1848/1849 revolution. Damjanić is a controversial historical figure; being an ethnic Serb, he led the army that fought against his own people during the revolution. After the collapse of the Hungarian revolution in 1849, he was sentenced to death and executed together with twelve other Hungarian generals. Therefore, the Hungarians consider Damjanić a national hero, while the Serbs gave him a nickname "ljuta guja, srpski izdajica" ("a fury snake, the traitor of the Serbs").

Serbs left a valuable architectural heritage in Hungary. The number of Serb Orthodox churches is higher than we should expect by the small number of present-day Serb population. These Baroque churches were mostly built in the 18-19th centuries when Serb merchants formed rich and influential communities in Hungarian towns. Village churches show the historical presence of Serbs in places from where they absolutely disappeared by now.

Towns, cultural institutions, churches and monasteries:

  1. Dr. Dušan J. Popović, Srbi u Vojvodini, knjige 1-3, Novi Sad, 1990.
  2. Dr. Aleksa Ivić, Istorija Srba u Vojvodini, Novi Sad, 1929.
  3. Milojko Brusin, Naša razgraničenja sa susedima 1919-1920, Novi Sad, 1998.
  4. Peter Rokai, Zoltan Đere, Tibor Pal, Aleksandar Kasaš, Istorija Mađara, Beograd, 2002.
  5. Drago Njegovan, Prisajedinjenje Vojvodine Srbiji, Novi Sad, 2004.
  6. Stojan Vujičić, Srbi u Budimu i Pešti, Budimpešta, 1997.
  7. Nada Miletić Stanić, Pravoslavne crkve u Baranji, Novi Sad, 1999.

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