Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 1120480
Rebellions on the Ban's Military Border in the 18th Century
Rebellions on the Ban's Military Border in the 18th Century // Governing the Borders, Challenging the State. Cultures of Disobedience in Eastern Europe and the Balkans (16th – beginning of the 19th centuries)
Pariz, Francuska, 2018. (pozvano predavanje, nije recenziran, neobjavljeni rad, znanstveni)
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Naslov
Rebellions on the Ban's Military Border in the 18th
Century
Autori
Štefanec, Nataša
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Sažeci sa skupova, neobjavljeni rad, znanstveni
Skup
Governing the Borders, Challenging the State. Cultures of Disobedience in Eastern Europe and the Balkans (16th – beginning of the 19th centuries)
Mjesto i datum
Pariz, Francuska, 16.09.2018
Vrsta sudjelovanja
Pozvano predavanje
Vrsta recenzije
Nije recenziran
Ključne riječi
Todor Kijuk, bune, rani novi vijek, 18. stoljeće, Varaždinski generalat, Banska krajina
(Todor Kijuk, rebellions, early modern period, 18th century, Varaždin Generalcy, Ban's Border, Ban's Frontier)
Sažetak
After the Great Turkish War (1683-1699) Habsburgs submitted their conquered lands to both civil and military authorities which brought great disorder to already devastated area disposed to migrations, disorder and crimes. Parts of the newly conquered territories were eventually attached to the Military Border. In the 1730s the military authorities in Vienna started extensive reforms aimed at militarisation of the border society. One had to regulate four highly different military sections in today's Croatian area: Karlovac Generalate was the most traditionally set border section ruled from Graz ; Varaždin Generalate was set up according to the Statuta Valachorum (1630) ; newly established Slavonian Border was ruled from Vienna ; Ban's border was from 1703 controlled by the Croatian-Slavonian Ban (viceroy). First three sections were the area of long-lasting power struggle among various Austrian interest groups, while the Ban's Border was dominated by the Croatian- Slavonian elites. Habsburg military authorities implemented, with more or less success, more than 30 large reform packages in the 18th century. Reforms provoked numerous rebellions. This presentation will address several rebellions on the Ban's border with an aim to reconstruct which segment of reforms homogenised and mobilised frontiersmen, who were their (chosen) leaders, were they following any established rebellion pattern (did they develop "culture of disobedience"), did they have political, ideological or just practical goals, what was the response of the military authorities in Zagreb and Vienna, how was the offence categorized and punished (was punishment intended to restore symbolic order or reform groups and individuals). Rebellions will be analysed in the context of the growing need of the early modern state to control the violence, even in a militarised society.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Povijest
Napomena
Organizator: The Centre for Russian, Caucasian and
Central European Studies (CERCEC), L'École des
hautes études en sciences sociales, Paris