Conventional Long Name: | Csongrád County |
Common Name: | Csongrád |
Subdivision: | County |
Nation: | the Kingdom of Hungary (11th century-1538) County of the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom (1538-1552) County of the Kingdom of Hungary (1715-1786, 1790-1946) |
S1: | Csongrád-Csanád County |
Year Start: | 11th century |
Event1: | Ottoman conquest |
Date Event1: | 1552 |
Event2: | Great Turkish War begins |
Date Event2: | 14 July 1683 |
Event3: | Treaty of Karlowitz |
Date Event3: | 26 January 1699 |
Event4: | County recreated |
Date Event4: | 1715 |
Event5: | Merged into Békés-Csanád-Csongrád County |
Date Event5: | 1 June 1786 |
Event6: | County recreated |
Date Event6: | 26 April 1790 |
Event7: | Treaty of Trianon |
Date Event7: | 4 June 1920 |
Event8: | Re-annexation of ceded areas |
Date Event8: | 11 April 1941 |
Event9: | Monarchy abolished |
Date Event9: | 1 February 1946 |
Capital: | Csongrád |
Stat Area1: | 3569 |
Stat Pop1: | 325,568 |
Stat Year1: | 1910 |
Today: | Hungary (3,462 km2) Serbia (107 km2) |
Csongrád (Hungarian: Csongrád, Serbian: Чонград, Serbian: Čongrad) was an administrative county (Latin: [[Comitatus (Kingdom of Hungary)|comitatus]]) of the Kingdom of Hungary. Its territory, which was smaller than that of present-day Csongrád-Csanád County, is now part of Hungary, except a very small area which belongs to Serbia. The capital of the county was Szentes.
The county was named after a town of Csongrád, which has a Slavic origin, meaning "black city" (Slavic languages: čon/čorni = black, Slavic languages: [[Grad (toponymy)|grad]] = city/town).
In the late-19th and early-20th centuries Csongrád county shared borders with the Hungarian counties of Pest-Pilis-Solt-Kiskun, Jász-Nagykun-Szolnok, Békés, Csanád, Torontál and Bács-Bodrog. Prior to the reforms of the late-19th century it had shared borders with the Kiskunság/Jászkunság, Pest County, Heves County, the Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar (1849-1860) and its predecessor the Banat of Temeswar (until 1786). Until the mid-18th century the southern part of the county, including Szeged, had been part of the Military Frontier, which the rest of the county bordered. The river Tisza flowed through the county. Its area was 3544km2 around 1910.
Csongrád county arose in the 11th century as one of the first counties of the Kingdom of Hungary. It was taken by the Ottoman Empire in the 16th century, and reconquered by the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary at the end of the 17th century (recognised in the 1699 Treaty of Karlowitz). The southern part of the county, including Szeged, was part of the (Mureș) Military Frontier until the mid-18th century.
On 1 June 1786 the county was merged with Békés and Csanád counties to form Békés-Csanád-Csongrád; they were re-separated in 1790.
In the period following the revolutions of 1848 (1849–1860), Csongrád was part of the Military District of Pest-Ofen.
The county gained Kiskundorozsma with the abolition of the Jászkunság in 1876. Prior to that the area had formed a large salient (panhandle) mostly separating the southernmost area from the rest of the county; the two areas were connected by a small section of land between Kiskundorozsma and the Tisza only around 3.2km (02miles) across.
In 1920, the Treaty of Trianon assigned a small part of the territory of the county – a small area around Horgos (now Horgoš, Vojvodina) in northern Délvidék – to the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (renamed to Yugoslavia in 1929); the rest remained in Hungary. During World War II, Hungary annexed the lost territory, but after the end of the war the previous borders were restored.
In the, the south-western part of Csanád County (which comprised the Hungarian part of pre-1920 Torontál County and the south-western part of pre-1920 Csanád County) was added to Csongrád county; Kardoskút was transferred to Békés county. Csongrád County was renamed Csongrád-Csanád County on 4 June 2020.
1880[1] | 228,413 | 214,885 (98.05%) | 2,289 (1.04%) | 1,988 (0.91%) |
---|---|---|---|---|
1890[2] | 261,340 | 256,469 (98.14%) | 2,743 (1.05%) | 2,128 (0.81%) |
1900[3] | 295,927 | 289,953 (97.98%) | 3,582 (1.21%) | 2,392 (0.81%) |
1910[4] | 325,568 | 319,274 (98.07%) | 2,862 (0.88%) | 3,432 (1.05%) |
1880 | 228,413 | 160,353 (70.20%) | 55,441 (24.27%) | 7,354 (3.22%) | 3,236 (1.42%) | 2,029 (0.89%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1890 | 261,340 | 188,312 (72.06%) | 57,785 (22.11%) | 8,510 (3.26%) | 4,239 (1.62%) | 2,494 (0.95%) |
1900 | 295,927 | 216,593 (73.19%) | 61,315 (20.72%) | 9,537 (3.22%) | 4,838 (1.63%) | 3,644 (1.23%) |
1910 | 325,568 | 243,343 (74.74%) | 61,832 (18.99%) | 10,296 (3.16%) | 5,449 (1.67%) | 4,648 (1.43%) |
In the early 20th century, the subdivisions of Csongrád county were:
Districts (Hungarian: járás) | ||
---|---|---|
District | Capital | |
Csongrád | Csongrád | |
Tiszáninnen | Kiskundorozsma | |
Tiszántúl | Mindszent | |
Urban counties (Hungarian: törvényhatósági jogú város) | ||
Hódmezővásárhely | ||
Szeged | ||
Urban districts (Hungarian: rendezett tanácsú város) | ||
Szentes | ||
In the early 19th century Csongrád County was divided into two Latin: [[Processus (Kingdom of Hungary)|processus]], which were separated by the Tisza: Latin: Processus Cis-Tybiscanus in the west and Latin: Processus Trans-Tybiscanus in the east.[5]
In 1854 Csongrád county comprised the following German: Bezirke (presented as they appear in the defining act):[6]