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'''Pacta conventa''' (] ''agreed accords'') was an alleged agreement concluded in 1102 between King ] and the ]n nobility. According to Croatian historians at this time Croatia entered a ] that would last until 1918, according to Hungarian and Serbian historians Croatia was conquered.<ref>Bellamy, p. 37</ref> The dynastic strife that followed the ] in 1526 did not change the legal nature of the pacta after the throne was occupied by ]{{Fact|date=March 2009}} | |||
⚫ | |document_name=Pacta conventa | ||
|image=Pacta Conventa (Croatia).jpg | |||
|image_width=300px | |||
| image_caption = Photo of a copy of ''Pacta conventa'' or ''Qualiter''<ref name="mdc-trogir-museum">{{cite web | url = http://hvm.mdc.hr/muzej-ispis.aspx?id=65&museum=muzej-grada-trogira&code=763:TRG | language = hr | title = Muzej grada Trogira – O muzeju |trans-title=The Museum of the City of Trogir – About the museum | publisher = Museum Documentation Center | quote = U Muzeju se nalazi bogata biblioteka obitelji Garagnin-Fanfogna koja čuva knjižnu građu od inkunabula do sredine 20. st., a nastala je zaslugom I. L. Garagnina. Tijekom 19. st. preseljena je u prostorije u kojima se i danas nalazi, s oslikanim stropovima i namjenski izrađenim drvenim ormarima za knjige. U knjižnici se nalaze djela sa svih područja ljudskog znanja, a među njima se nekoć nalazio poznati spis tzv. Pacta Conventa iliti Qualiter (danas se čuva u Budimpešti), koji govori o ugovoru hrvatskog plemstva s ugarskim vladarom. | access-date = 2015-02-08}}</ref> | |||
|date_created=1102; 14th century (manuscript) | |||
|date_ratified= | |||
| location_of_document = ]<ref name="mdc-trogir-museum"/> | |||
|writer= | |||
|signers= | |||
|purpose=Agreement concluded between King ] and the ]n nobility | |||
}} | |||
'''Pacta conventa''' (] for "agreed accords") was an agreement concluded between King ] and the ] in 1102 or afterwards, defining the status of ]. The earliest manuscript of the document is of the fourteenth century, so some historians believe it is likely a forgery. | |||
A version from the 14th century is preserved in a ] museum.{{Fact|date=March 2009}} | |||
The document titled ''Pacta conventa'' or ''Qualiter'' (the first word in the document) was found in a ] library.<ref name="mdc-trogir-museum"/> Until the 19th century it was considered that it dated to 1102. However, historians today hold that it is not an authentic document from 1102 and likely a forgery from the 14th century, but that the contents of the Pacta Conventa still correspond to the political situation of that time in Croatia.<ref name="books.google.com">Pál Engel: , 2005, p. 35-36</ref><ref name="Bárány">Bárány, Attila (2012). "The Expansion of the Kingdom of Hungary in the Middle Ages (1000– 1490)". In Berend, Nóra. The Expansion of Central Europe in the Middle Ages. Ashgate Variorum. page 344-345</ref> The document is preserved in the ] in ].<ref name="Herc">], ''Tropismena i trojezična kultura hrvatskoga srednjovjekovlja'', ], Zagreb, 2006. {{ISBN|953-150-766-X}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | The document's validity is questionable |
||
==Background== | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | After ], the last Croatian king of Croat descent, was killed on the battlefield in 1097, the Croats had refused to surrender.<ref>Hrvoje Hitrec; Hrvatska povjesnica; in Croatian</ref> To end the war, an agreement was made, probably in 1102. The Croatian nobles allegedly concluded the ''Pacta conventa'' with King ] before his crowning as the Croatian king in ].<ref name="Curta, Stephenson, p. 267">{{harvnb|Curta|Stephenson|2006|p=}}</ref> | ||
The Hungarian king offered "an agreement as pleases them" to the ] from the families of ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ].<ref>{{cite journal | url=http://www.hrvatski-vojnik.hr/hrvatski-vojnik/0732006/podlistak.asp | title=Posljednji kralj hrvatskoga roda | journal=] | issue=73 | date=February 2006 | language=hr | last=Miletić | first=Jurica | access-date=5 October 2013 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140603181145/http://www.hrvatski-vojnik.hr/hrvatski-vojnik/0732006/podlistak.asp | archive-date=3 June 2014 | url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
⚫ | == |
||
==Terms== | |||
⚫ | After ], the last Croatian king of Croat descent, was killed on the battlefield in 1097, the Croats had refused to surrender. |
||
The agreement determined that the Croatian nobles who signed the document with King ] would retain their possessions and properties without interference. It also granted the mentioned families exemption from tax or tributes to the king. Each of the twelve noble Croatian tribes were obliged to answer the king's call if someone attacked his borders and send at least ten armed horsemen to war, as far as the Drava River (]'s northern boundary with ]) at their own expense. Beyond that point, the Hungarian king paid the expenses.<ref>Jean W. Sedlar: East Central Europe in the Middle Ages, 1000–1500, University of Washington Press, 2011, p. 77. {{ISBN|029580064X}}</ref><ref>Trpimir Macan: Povijest hrvatskog naroda, 1971, p. 71 (full text of Pacta conventa in Croatian)</ref><ref>Ferdo Šišić: Priručnik izvora hrvatske historije, Dio 1, čest 1, do god. 1107., Zagreb 1914., p. 527-528 (full text of Pacta conventa in Latin)</ref> | |||
⚫ | ==Validity of the document itself== | ||
The Hungarian king offered "an agreement as pleases them" to the Croatian nobles from the families of ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] and ], ], ] and ].{{Fact|date=March 2009}} | |||
⚫ | The document's validity is questionable.<ref>{{harvnb|Fine|2006|p=71}}</ref> While some claim the earliest text concerning the alleged agreement came from the second half of the 14th century<ref name="Curta, Stephenson, p. 267"/><ref name="Fine, p. 70">{{harvnb|Fine|2006|p=70}}</ref> others call it a late medieval forgery, not a twelfth-century source.<ref name="Curta, Stephenson, p. 267"/><ref name="Bellamy, p. 37">{{harvnb|Bellamy|2003|p=37}}</ref> While various items of the text seem anachronistic to some, other historians say these could be reworkings of a text from an actual agreement.<ref name="Fine, p. 70"/> | ||
Since the 19th century, a number of historians have claimed that the ''Pacta conventa'' was not a genuine document. | |||
== Content of Pacta conventa == | |||
In 1915 and then also in 1925, ] mentioned the document in some of his works, first declaring it an outright forgery, and later saying it was a 14th-century "addendum" to the manuscript of ].<ref name="Antoljak-1995">{{cite journal | url = http://hrcak.srce.hr/65458?lang=en | language = hr | title = Milan Sufflay kao paleograf i diplomatičar | first = Stjepan | last = Antoljak | pages = 144–145 | journal = Arhivski vjesnik | number = 38 |date=November 1995 | issn = 0570-9008 | publisher = ] | access-date = 2012-05-10}}</ref> Hungarian historian ] thought it was a 14th-century forgery, Slovene historian ] dated the document to the 13th century, Croatian historians ] and ] thought it was made in 1102, while later Croatian historian ] thought it was a forgery probably made in the 14th century. Croatian historian ] in turn said the ''Pacta'' was an incomplete historical source, but not a forgery.<ref name="Antoljak-1995"/> Nada Klaić elaborated her "lack of opinion" over the matter of 1102 in a 1959 article disputing the Croatian writer ]'s earlier work on the matter.<ref>{{cite journal | url = http://www.historiografija.hr/hz/1960/HZ_13_27_KLAIC.pdf | language = hr | title = O. Mandić, "Pacta conventa" i "dvanaest" hrvatskih bratstava. | last = Klaić | first = Nada | journal = Historical Journal | publisher = Croatian Historical Society | issn = 0351-2193 | volume = XI-XII | year = 1958–59 | pages = 165–206 | access-date = 2012-05-10 | archive-date = 2016-03-04 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160304043735/http://www.historiografija.hr/hz/1960/HZ_13_27_KLAIC.pdf | url-status = dead }}</ref> | |||
The agreement determined that ] and ] would be governed by the same ruler as two separate kingdoms.{{Fact|date=March 2009}} When he was crowned in ], Coloman promised all the public and state rights to the Kingdom of Croatia and some additional rights to the Croatian nobility.{{Fact|date=March 2009}} The Croats acknowledged Coloman as the king of Croatia and ] and promised they would help him in war, at their cost on the Croatian side of ] and at his cost on the Hungarian side.{{Fact|date=March 2009}} | |||
The dispute and uncertainty over the ''Pacta conventa'' matches the overall uncertainty and dispute over the relationship between the Croatian and Hungarian kingdoms in the 10th and 11th century, with Croatian historian ] and his followers assuming ] had ruled most of the area inhabited by Croats, including ], while the Hungarian historians ], ] and János Karácsonyi thought the area between ] and ] belonged neither to Croatia nor to Hungary at the time, an opinion that Nada Klaić said she would not preclude, because the generic name "Slavonia" (lit. the land of the Slavs) may have implied so.<ref>{{cite journal | url = http://hrcak.srce.hr/index.php?show=clanak&id_clanak_jezik=68144 | language = hr | title = Croatian-Hungarian relations from the Middle Ages to the Compromise of 1868, with a special survey of the Slavonian issue | first = Ladislav | last = Heka | page = 155 | journal = Scrinia Slavonica | volume = 8 | number = 1 |date=October 2008 | issn = 1332-4853 | publisher = Croatian Historical Institute – Department of History of Slavonia, Srijem and Baranja | location = Slavonski Brod | access-date = 2012-05-10}}</ref> | |||
Coloman and his successors were invested with all the rights of kingship over the Kingdom of Croatia: to appoint the ], to issue privileges and land grants, to certify the laws voted by the ], to collect taxes and duties, to own the "royal land" (''terra regalis'') of the extinct Croat royal dynasty, to have supreme command over the Croatian army and to make foreign policy.{{Fact|date=March 2009}} | |||
⚫ | Though the validity of the document is disputed, there was at least a non-written agreement that regulated the relations between Hungary and Croatia in approximately the same way, since from 1102 until 1918 kings of Hungary were also kings of Croatia, represented by a governor (ban), but Croatia kept its own parliament (Sabor) and considerable autonomy.<ref name=Encarta>{{cite encyclopedia|title=Croatia (History)|url=http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761577939_6/Croatia.html#p40|encyclopedia=]|access-date=2009-03-06|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060629071955/http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761577939_6/Croatia.html#p40|archive-date=2006-06-29|url-status=dead}}</ref> | ||
⚫ | == |
||
The document titled Pacta Conventa that was supposedly signed in 1102 but not saved was claimed by leading Croatian historians to be a contract stipulating personal union of Hungary and Croatia.<ref name=Oxford>{{cite book|author=Ana S. Trbovich|title=A Legal Geography of Yugoslavia's Disintegration|publisher=]|year=2008|isbn=9780195333435|page=87}}</ref> However, even if its authenticity were accepted the document would still not represent anything more than a contract between the ] ], ], ] and ] and his Croatian nobility, so it would not be perceived as an interstate agreement in domain of public international law.<ref name=Oxford/> In 1105 Coloman granted privileges to maritime cities in exchange for their submission. These included the election of their own bishops and prior which is later only confirmed by the king, prohibition of Hungarians settling in towns, the cities didn't pay tributes while royal agents supervised the collection of custom duties without interfering in local politics.<ref>Curta, Stephenson, p. 266</ref> | |||
⚫ | The source of inspiration for the text of the document must have been the political and social developments that had taken place over a 300-year period following 1102<ref name="Curta, Stephenson, p. 267"/> when the two kingdoms united under the Hungarian king, either by the choice of the Croat nobility or by Hungarian force.<ref name=Encarta/> The Croatian nobility retained its laws and privileges including the restriction of military service that they owed to the king within the boundaries of Croatia.<ref name="Curta, Stephenson, p. 267"/> | ||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | ==Interpretations of the agreement== | ||
⚫ | |||
According to the ] country study on the former Yugoslavia, King Coloman crushed opposition after the death of ] and won the crown of Dalmatia and Croatia in 1102.<ref name=Congress>{{harvnb|Curtis|1992}}</ref> The crowning of Coloman forged a link between the Croatian and Hungarian crowns that lasted until the end of World War I.<ref name=Congress/> Croatians have maintained for centuries that Croatia remained a sovereign state despite the voluntary union of the two crowns.<ref name="Bellamy, p. 37"/><ref name=Congress/><ref name="Singleton, p. 29">{{harvnb|Singleton|1985|p=29}}</ref> A number of Hungarian historians also accept the view that Croatia and Hungary entered in a personal union in 1102<ref name=Barany>Bárány, Attila (2012). "The Expansion of the Kingdom of Hungary in the Middle Ages (1000– 1490)". In Berend, Nóra. The Expansion of Central Europe in the Middle Ages. Ashgate Variorum. page 344-345</ref><ref name=Marta> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170801040147/https://www.ceeol.com/aspx/issuedetails.aspx?issueid=58576a72-3bb3-47bf-b159-23daa7dc1cd2&articleId=07451a0b-fbed-4269-a7cb-3883dfa477b5 |date=2017-08-01 }} "''Medieval Hungary and Croatia were, in terms of public international law, allied by means of personal union created in the late 11th century.''"</ref><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051031132848/http://www.lib.jgytf.u-szeged.hu/folyoiratok/tiszataj/02-10/kristo.pdf |date=2005-10-31 }}(in Hungarian)</ref><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130821050105/http://szlavintezet.elte.hu/szlavtsz/slav_civil/horvat-irodalom.htm |date=2013-08-21 }}(in Hungarian)</ref><ref name="HR-HU-Heka">{{cite journal|journal=Scrinia Slavonica|issn=1332-4853|publisher=Hrvatski institut za povijest – Podružnica za povijest Slavonije, Srijema i Baranje|title= Hrvatsko-ugarski odnosi od sredinjega vijeka do nagodbe iz 1868. s posebnim osvrtom na pitanja Slavonije|trans-title=Croatian-Hungarian relations from the Middle Ages to the Compromise of 1868, with a special survey of the Slavonian issue|language=hr|url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/index.php?show=clanak&id_clanak_jezik=68144|author= Ladislav Heka|date=October 2008|volume=8|issue=1|pages=152–173}}</ref> and that, whatever the authenticity of the Pacta conventa, the contents of it correspond to the reality of rule in Croatia.<ref name="books.google.com"/><ref name=Barany/> However, some Hungarian and Serbian historians claim that Hungary annexed Croatia outright in 1102.<ref name="Bellamy, p. 37"/><ref name="Congress"/> According to Frederick Bernard Singleton, the Croatians have always maintained that they were never legally part of Hungary. In the eyes of Croatians, Croatia was a separate state which happened to share a ruler with the Hungarians. The degree of Croatian autonomy fluctuated from time to time, as well as its borders.<ref name="Singleton, p. 29"/> According to Daniel Power, Croatia became part of Hungary in the late 11th and early twelfth century.<ref>{{harvnb|Power|2006|p=186}}</ref> According to the country study on Hungary Croatia was never assimilated into Hungary; rather, it became an associate kingdom administered by a ban, or civil governor.<ref></ref> In either case, Hungarian culture permeated Croatia, the Croatian-Hungarian border shifted often, and at times Hungary treated Croatia as a vassal state.<ref name=Congress/> | |||
According to Slovenian historians the Pacta Conventa never existed, but the story about it was important to support the Croatian position in the ] in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries when the Croats claimed their rights on the basis of the agreement.<ref name=ABC>{{cite book|author=Matjaž Klemenčič, Mitja Žagar|title=The Former Yugoslavia's Diverse Peoples: A Reference Sourcebook|publisher=]|year=2004|isbn=9781576072943|page=16}}</ref> They think that although Croatia ceased to exist as an independent state, the Croatian nobility retained relatively strong powers.<ref name=ABC/> | |||
In 1105 Coloman granted privileges to maritime cities in exchange for their submission. These included the election of their own bishops and priors which is later only confirmed by the king, prohibition of Hungarians settling in towns. Also, the cities did not pay tribute, while royal agents supervised the collection of custom duties without interfering in local politics.{{sfn|Curta|Stephenson|2006|p=266}} | |||
⚫ | While Croatian historian ] thinks that some sort of surrender occurred in 1102, giving the Croatians light terms,<ref name=Michigan>{{harvnb|Fine|1991|p=285}}</ref> Slovenian historians Matjaž Klemenčič and Mitja Žagar believe the Pacta Conventa never actually existed, but the story about it was important to support the Croatian position later in the ] as being a basis of ].{{sfn|Klemenčič|Žagar|2004|p=16}} Klemenčič and Žagar think that although Croatia ceased to exist as an independent state, the Croatian nobility retained relatively strong powers.{{sfn|Klemenčič|Žagar|2004|p=16}} Klaić thinks that the Trogir manuscript, the earliest text of the alleged pact, is not the text of that surrender, but describes contemporary relations between king and nobility and then traced that current 14th century reality back to an initial agreement.<ref name=Michigan/> | ||
==Later references== | |||
After the death of ] at the ] in 1526, the Croatian parliament ] ] king of Croatia.<ref>{{cite book | url = https://archive.org/stream/southernslavques00seto/southernslavques00seto_djvu.txt | first = R. W. | last = Seton-Watson | author-link = R. W. Seton-Watson | title = The southern Slav question and the Habsburg Monarchy | year = 1911 | publisher = Constable & Company | access-date = 2012-05-12}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sabor.hr/Default.aspx?sec=404|title=Povijest saborovanja|trans-title=History of parliamentarism|language=hr|publisher=]|access-date=18 October 2010|archive-date=28 April 2012|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120428013806/http://www.sabor.hr/Default.aspx?sec=404}}</ref> According to the Croatian historical narrative,<ref name="Bellamy, p. 39">{{harvnb|Bellamy|2003|p=39}}</ref> the Croatian parliament took the opportunity in 1526 to reassert its autonomy from Hungary with the election of Ferdinand by the words:"...we joined the ] by our own free will just as we do now, the rule of Your Majesty".<ref name="Bellamy, p. 39"/> Croatian historians also argue that the struggle for ascendancy to the Habsburg throne at this time provides evidence of Croatia's political autonomy.<ref name="Bellamy, p. 39"/> In the Croatian legal interpretation of the personal union, Louis II didn't leave any heirs and the legal carrier of the union (the king) didn't exist anymore so the right to elect the king belonged once more to the Croatian nobility. Unlike Hungarian historians, the Austrians never claimed they conquered Croatia by force and there appears to be little reason to doubt Croatian claims about the events of 1526.<ref name="Bellamy, p. 39"/> | |||
The intro of The Hungaro-Croatian Compromise of 1868 (the ]) starts as: "Since Croatia and Slavonia have alike de jure and de facto belonged for centuries to the ]..."<ref>http://www.h-net.org/~habsweb/sourcetexts/nagodba1.htm The Hungaro-Croatian Compromise of 1868</ref> Although the Nagodba provided a measure of political autonomy to Croatia-Slavonia, it was subordinated politically and economically to ].<ref>{{cite book|last=Biondich|first=Mark|title=Stjepan Radić, the Croat Peasant Party, and the Politics of Mass Mobilization, 1904–1928|publisher=]|year=2000|pages=9|isbn=978-0-8020-8294-7}}</ref> | |||
==Footnotes== | ==Footnotes== | ||
Line 32: | Line 55: | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
*{{cite book| |
* {{cite book| last = Fine | first = John | title = When Ethnicity Did Not Matter in the Balkans: A Study of Identity in Pre-nationalist Croatia, Dalmatia, and Slavonia in the Medieval and Early-modern Periods | publisher = ] | isbn = 978-0-472-11414-6 | year = 2006}} | ||
*{{cite book| |
*{{cite book | last1 = Curta | first1 = Florin | first2 = Paul | last2 = Stephenson | title=Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500-1250 | url = https://archive.org/details/southeasterneuro0000curt | url-access = registration | publisher=] | year=2006 | isbn=978-0-521-81539-0}} | ||
*{{ |
* {{cite book| last = Bellamy | first = Alex J. | title = The Formation of Croatian National Identity: A Centuries-old Dream | publisher = ] | year = 2003 | isbn = 978-0-7190-6502-6}} | ||
*{{cite book|last=Biondich|first=Mark|title=Stjepan Radić, the Croat Peasant Party, and the Politics of Mass Mobilization, 1904-1928|publisher=]|year=2000|pages=9|isbn=978-0-8020-8294-7}} | |||
* {{cite web| url = http://memory.loc.gov/frd/cs/yutoc.html | title = A Country Study: Yugoslavia (Former) - The Croats and Their Territories | last = Curtis | first = Glenn E. | year = 1992 | publisher = ] | access-date = 2009-03-16}} | |||
⚫ | ] | ||
* {{cite book| last = Singleton | first = Frederick Bernard | title = A short history of the Yugoslav peoples | publisher = ] | year = 1985 | isbn = 978-0-521-27485-2}} | |||
⚫ | ] | ||
* {{cite book| last = Fine | first = John | title = The Early Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century | publisher = ] | year = 1991 | isbn = 978-0-472-08149-3}} | |||
⚫ | ] | ||
* {{cite book| last = Power | first = Daniel | title = The Central Middle Ages: Europe 950-1320 | publisher = ] | year = 2006 | isbn = 978-0-19-925312-8}} | |||
* {{cite book | first1 = Matjaž | last1 = Klemenčič | first2 = Mitja | last2 = Žagar | title = The Former Yugoslavia's Diverse Peoples: A Reference Sourcebook | publisher = ] | year = 2004 | isbn=978-1-57607-294-3 }} | |||
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Latest revision as of 17:48, 10 September 2023
Pacta conventa | |
---|---|
Photo of a copy of Pacta conventa or Qualiter | |
Created | 1102; 14th century (manuscript) |
Location | Budapest |
Purpose | Agreement concluded between King Coloman of Hungary and the Croatian nobility |
Pacta conventa (Latin for "agreed accords") was an agreement concluded between King Coloman of Hungary and the Croatian nobility in 1102 or afterwards, defining the status of Croatia in the union with Hungary. The earliest manuscript of the document is of the fourteenth century, so some historians believe it is likely a forgery.
The document titled Pacta conventa or Qualiter (the first word in the document) was found in a Trogir library. Until the 19th century it was considered that it dated to 1102. However, historians today hold that it is not an authentic document from 1102 and likely a forgery from the 14th century, but that the contents of the Pacta Conventa still correspond to the political situation of that time in Croatia. The document is preserved in the Hungarian National Museum in Budapest.
Background
After Petar Snačić, the last Croatian king of Croat descent, was killed on the battlefield in 1097, the Croats had refused to surrender. To end the war, an agreement was made, probably in 1102. The Croatian nobles allegedly concluded the Pacta conventa with King Coloman before his crowning as the Croatian king in Biograd.
The Hungarian king offered "an agreement as pleases them" to the twelve noble Croatian tribes from the families of Čudomirić, Gusić, Kačić, Kukar, Jamomet, Lasničić, Lapčan and Karinjan, Mogorović, Poletčić, Snačić, Šubić, and Tugomirić.
Terms
The agreement determined that the Croatian nobles who signed the document with King Coloman would retain their possessions and properties without interference. It also granted the mentioned families exemption from tax or tributes to the king. Each of the twelve noble Croatian tribes were obliged to answer the king's call if someone attacked his borders and send at least ten armed horsemen to war, as far as the Drava River (Croatia's northern boundary with Hungary) at their own expense. Beyond that point, the Hungarian king paid the expenses.
Validity of the document itself
The document's validity is questionable. While some claim the earliest text concerning the alleged agreement came from the second half of the 14th century others call it a late medieval forgery, not a twelfth-century source. While various items of the text seem anachronistic to some, other historians say these could be reworkings of a text from an actual agreement.
Since the 19th century, a number of historians have claimed that the Pacta conventa was not a genuine document.
In 1915 and then also in 1925, Milan Šufflay mentioned the document in some of his works, first declaring it an outright forgery, and later saying it was a 14th-century "addendum" to the manuscript of Thomas the Archdeacon. Hungarian historian János Karácsonyi thought it was a 14th-century forgery, Slovene historian Ljudmil Hauptmann dated the document to the 13th century, Croatian historians Miho Barada and Marko Kostrenčić thought it was made in 1102, while later Croatian historian Nada Klaić thought it was a forgery probably made in the 14th century. Croatian historian Stjepan Antoljak in turn said the Pacta was an incomplete historical source, but not a forgery. Nada Klaić elaborated her "lack of opinion" over the matter of 1102 in a 1959 article disputing the Croatian writer Oleg Mandić's earlier work on the matter.
The dispute and uncertainty over the Pacta conventa matches the overall uncertainty and dispute over the relationship between the Croatian and Hungarian kingdoms in the 10th and 11th century, with Croatian historian Ferdo Šišić and his followers assuming Tomislav of Croatia had ruled most of the area inhabited by Croats, including Slavonia, while the Hungarian historians Gyula Kristó, Bálint Hóman and János Karácsonyi thought the area between Drava and Sava belonged neither to Croatia nor to Hungary at the time, an opinion that Nada Klaić said she would not preclude, because the generic name "Slavonia" (lit. the land of the Slavs) may have implied so.
Though the validity of the document is disputed, there was at least a non-written agreement that regulated the relations between Hungary and Croatia in approximately the same way, since from 1102 until 1918 kings of Hungary were also kings of Croatia, represented by a governor (ban), but Croatia kept its own parliament (Sabor) and considerable autonomy.
The source of inspiration for the text of the document must have been the political and social developments that had taken place over a 300-year period following 1102 when the two kingdoms united under the Hungarian king, either by the choice of the Croat nobility or by Hungarian force. The Croatian nobility retained its laws and privileges including the restriction of military service that they owed to the king within the boundaries of Croatia.
Interpretations of the agreement
According to the Library of Congress country study on the former Yugoslavia, King Coloman crushed opposition after the death of Ladislaus I of Hungary and won the crown of Dalmatia and Croatia in 1102. The crowning of Coloman forged a link between the Croatian and Hungarian crowns that lasted until the end of World War I. Croatians have maintained for centuries that Croatia remained a sovereign state despite the voluntary union of the two crowns. A number of Hungarian historians also accept the view that Croatia and Hungary entered in a personal union in 1102 and that, whatever the authenticity of the Pacta conventa, the contents of it correspond to the reality of rule in Croatia. However, some Hungarian and Serbian historians claim that Hungary annexed Croatia outright in 1102. According to Frederick Bernard Singleton, the Croatians have always maintained that they were never legally part of Hungary. In the eyes of Croatians, Croatia was a separate state which happened to share a ruler with the Hungarians. The degree of Croatian autonomy fluctuated from time to time, as well as its borders. According to Daniel Power, Croatia became part of Hungary in the late 11th and early twelfth century. According to the country study on Hungary Croatia was never assimilated into Hungary; rather, it became an associate kingdom administered by a ban, or civil governor. In either case, Hungarian culture permeated Croatia, the Croatian-Hungarian border shifted often, and at times Hungary treated Croatia as a vassal state.
In 1105 Coloman granted privileges to maritime cities in exchange for their submission. These included the election of their own bishops and priors which is later only confirmed by the king, prohibition of Hungarians settling in towns. Also, the cities did not pay tribute, while royal agents supervised the collection of custom duties without interfering in local politics.
While Croatian historian Nada Klaić thinks that some sort of surrender occurred in 1102, giving the Croatians light terms, Slovenian historians Matjaž Klemenčič and Mitja Žagar believe the Pacta Conventa never actually existed, but the story about it was important to support the Croatian position later in the Habsburg monarchy as being a basis of their rights to statehood. Klemenčič and Žagar think that although Croatia ceased to exist as an independent state, the Croatian nobility retained relatively strong powers. Klaić thinks that the Trogir manuscript, the earliest text of the alleged pact, is not the text of that surrender, but describes contemporary relations between king and nobility and then traced that current 14th century reality back to an initial agreement.
Later references
After the death of King Louis II at the Battle of Mohács in 1526, the Croatian parliament met at Cetin and elected Ferdinand of Austria king of Croatia. According to the Croatian historical narrative, the Croatian parliament took the opportunity in 1526 to reassert its autonomy from Hungary with the election of Ferdinand by the words:"...we joined the Holy Crown of Hungary by our own free will just as we do now, the rule of Your Majesty". Croatian historians also argue that the struggle for ascendancy to the Habsburg throne at this time provides evidence of Croatia's political autonomy. In the Croatian legal interpretation of the personal union, Louis II didn't leave any heirs and the legal carrier of the union (the king) didn't exist anymore so the right to elect the king belonged once more to the Croatian nobility. Unlike Hungarian historians, the Austrians never claimed they conquered Croatia by force and there appears to be little reason to doubt Croatian claims about the events of 1526.
The intro of The Hungaro-Croatian Compromise of 1868 (the Nagodba) starts as: "Since Croatia and Slavonia have alike de jure and de facto belonged for centuries to the Crown of St. Stephen..." Although the Nagodba provided a measure of political autonomy to Croatia-Slavonia, it was subordinated politically and economically to Budapest.
Footnotes
- ^ "Muzej grada Trogira – O muzeju" [The Museum of the City of Trogir – About the museum] (in Croatian). Museum Documentation Center. Retrieved 2015-02-08.
U Muzeju se nalazi bogata biblioteka obitelji Garagnin-Fanfogna koja čuva knjižnu građu od inkunabula do sredine 20. st., a nastala je zaslugom I. L. Garagnina. Tijekom 19. st. preseljena je u prostorije u kojima se i danas nalazi, s oslikanim stropovima i namjenski izrađenim drvenim ormarima za knjige. U knjižnici se nalaze djela sa svih područja ljudskog znanja, a među njima se nekoć nalazio poznati spis tzv. Pacta Conventa iliti Qualiter (danas se čuva u Budimpešti), koji govori o ugovoru hrvatskog plemstva s ugarskim vladarom.
- ^ Pál Engel: Realm of St. Stephen: A History of Medieval Hungary, 2005, p. 35-36
- Bárány, Attila (2012). "The Expansion of the Kingdom of Hungary in the Middle Ages (1000– 1490)". In Berend, Nóra. The Expansion of Central Europe in the Middle Ages. Ashgate Variorum. page 344-345
- Eduard Hercigonja, Tropismena i trojezična kultura hrvatskoga srednjovjekovlja, Matica hrvatska, Zagreb, 2006. ISBN 953-150-766-X
- Hrvoje Hitrec; Hrvatska povjesnica; in Croatian
- ^ Curta & Stephenson 2006, p. 267
- Miletić, Jurica (February 2006). "Posljednji kralj hrvatskoga roda". Hrvatski vojnik (in Croatian) (73). Archived from the original on 3 June 2014. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
- Jean W. Sedlar: East Central Europe in the Middle Ages, 1000–1500, University of Washington Press, 2011, p. 77. ISBN 029580064X
- Trpimir Macan: Povijest hrvatskog naroda, 1971, p. 71 (full text of Pacta conventa in Croatian)
- Ferdo Šišić: Priručnik izvora hrvatske historije, Dio 1, čest 1, do god. 1107., Zagreb 1914., p. 527-528 (full text of Pacta conventa in Latin)
- Fine 2006, p. 71
- ^ Fine 2006, p. 70
- ^ Bellamy 2003, p. 37
- ^ Antoljak, Stjepan (November 1995). "Milan Sufflay kao paleograf i diplomatičar". Arhivski vjesnik (in Croatian) (38). Croatian State Archives: 144–145. ISSN 0570-9008. Retrieved 2012-05-10.
- Klaić, Nada (1958–59). "O. Mandić, "Pacta conventa" i "dvanaest" hrvatskih bratstava" (PDF). Historical Journal (in Croatian). XI–XII. Croatian Historical Society: 165–206. ISSN 0351-2193. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2012-05-10.
- Heka, Ladislav (October 2008). "Croatian-Hungarian relations from the Middle Ages to the Compromise of 1868, with a special survey of the Slavonian issue". Scrinia Slavonica (in Croatian). 8 (1). Slavonski Brod: Croatian Historical Institute – Department of History of Slavonia, Srijem and Baranja: 155. ISSN 1332-4853. Retrieved 2012-05-10.
- ^ "Croatia (History)". Encarta. Archived from the original on 2006-06-29. Retrieved 2009-03-06.
- ^ Curtis 1992
- ^ Singleton 1985, p. 29
- ^ Bárány, Attila (2012). "The Expansion of the Kingdom of Hungary in the Middle Ages (1000– 1490)". In Berend, Nóra. The Expansion of Central Europe in the Middle Ages. Ashgate Variorum. page 344-345
- Márta Font – Ugarsko Kraljevstvo i Hrvatska u srednjem vijeku [Hungarian Kingdom and Croatia in the Middlea Ages] Archived 2017-08-01 at the Wayback Machine "Medieval Hungary and Croatia were, in terms of public international law, allied by means of personal union created in the late 11th century."
- Kristó Gyula: A magyar–horvát perszonálunió kialakulása [The formation of Croatian-Hungarian personal union] Archived 2005-10-31 at the Wayback Machine(in Hungarian)
- Lukács István – A horvát irodalom története, Budapest, Nemzeti Tankönyvkiadó, 1996.[The history of Croatian literature] Archived 2013-08-21 at the Wayback Machine(in Hungarian)
- Ladislav Heka (October 2008). "Hrvatsko-ugarski odnosi od sredinjega vijeka do nagodbe iz 1868. s posebnim osvrtom na pitanja Slavonije" [Croatian-Hungarian relations from the Middle Ages to the Compromise of 1868, with a special survey of the Slavonian issue]. Scrinia Slavonica (in Croatian). 8 (1). Hrvatski institut za povijest – Podružnica za povijest Slavonije, Srijema i Baranje: 152–173. ISSN 1332-4853.
- Power 2006, p. 186
- Stephen R. Burant, ed. Hungary: A Country Study. Washington: GPO for the Library of Congress, 1989
- Curta & Stephenson 2006, p. 266.
- ^ Fine 1991, p. 285
- ^ Klemenčič & Žagar 2004, p. 16.
- Seton-Watson, R. W. (1911). The southern Slav question and the Habsburg Monarchy. Constable & Company. Retrieved 2012-05-12.
- "Povijest saborovanja" [History of parliamentarism] (in Croatian). Sabor. Archived from the original on 28 April 2012. Retrieved 18 October 2010.
- ^ Bellamy 2003, p. 39
- http://www.h-net.org/~habsweb/sourcetexts/nagodba1.htm The Hungaro-Croatian Compromise of 1868
- Biondich, Mark (2000). Stjepan Radić, the Croat Peasant Party, and the Politics of Mass Mobilization, 1904–1928. University of Toronto Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-0-8020-8294-7.
References
- Fine, John (2006). When Ethnicity Did Not Matter in the Balkans: A Study of Identity in Pre-nationalist Croatia, Dalmatia, and Slavonia in the Medieval and Early-modern Periods. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-11414-6.
- Curta, Florin; Stephenson, Paul (2006). Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500-1250. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-81539-0.
- Bellamy, Alex J. (2003). The Formation of Croatian National Identity: A Centuries-old Dream. Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7190-6502-6.
- Biondich, Mark (2000). Stjepan Radić, the Croat Peasant Party, and the Politics of Mass Mobilization, 1904-1928. University of Toronto Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-0-8020-8294-7.
- Curtis, Glenn E. (1992). "A Country Study: Yugoslavia (Former) - The Croats and Their Territories". Library of Congress. Retrieved 2009-03-16.
- Singleton, Frederick Bernard (1985). A short history of the Yugoslav peoples. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-27485-2.
- Fine, John (1991). The Early Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-08149-3.
- Power, Daniel (2006). The Central Middle Ages: Europe 950-1320. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-925312-8.
- Klemenčič, Matjaž; Žagar, Mitja (2004). The Former Yugoslavia's Diverse Peoples: A Reference Sourcebook. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-57607-294-3.
- Medieval charters and cartularies of Croatia
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