Gömör and Kishont County explained

Conventional Long Name:Gömör-Kishont County
Common Name:Gömör-Kishont
Subdivision:County
Nation:the Kingdom of Hungary
(1802-1923, 1938-1945)
Year Start:1802
Event1:Treaty of Trianon
Date Event1:4 June 1920
Event2:Merged into Borsod-Gömör County
Date Event2:1923
Event3:County recreated (First Vienna Award)
Date Event3:1938
Event4:Remerged into Borsod-Gömör County
Date Event4:1945
Capital:Rimaszombat
Putnok (1920-1923)
Stat Area1:4279
Stat Pop1:188100
Stat Year1:1910
Today:Slovakia
(3,956 km2)
Hungary
(323 km2)
Footnotes:Rimavská Sobota is the current name of the capital.

Gömör-Kishont (Hungarian: Gömör és Kishont, Slovak: Gemer a Malohont, German: link=no|Gemer und Kleinhont) was an administrative county (comitatus) of the Kingdom of Hungary. Its capital was Rimaszombat (present-day Rimavská Sobota). Most of its territory is now part of Slovakia, while a smaller part belongs to Hungary.

Geography

Around 1910, Gömör-Kishont county shared borders with the counties Zólyom, Liptó, Szepes, Abaúj-Torna, Borsod, Heves and Nógrád. It was situated in the Gömör–Szepesi-érchegység (present-day Slovak Ore Mountains) approximately between the present-day Slovak-Hungarian border, the towns Poltár and Rozsnyó (present-day Rožňava) and the Low Tatras (Hungarian: Alacsony-Tátra, Slovak: Nízke Tatry). The river Sajó flowed through the county. Its area was 4,279 km² around 1910.

History

The county Gömör-Kishont was a combination of the counties Gömör and Kishont formed in 1802. It existed until the end of World War I. Gömör is one of the oldest counties of the Kingdom of Hungary, and was already mentioned in the 11th century. Kishont is the territory approximately between the towns Tiszolc (present-day Tisovec) and Rimaszombat (present-day Rimavská Sobota). Counties of Gömör and Kishont was part of Ottoman Empire between 1541–1595 and 1596–1686.

In the aftermath of World War I, most of Gömör-Kishont county became part of newly formed Czechoslovakia, as recognized by the concerned states in 1920 by the Treaty of Trianon. The area around Putnok became part of the newly formed Hungarian county Borsod-Gömör-Kishont (currently part of Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén) in 1923. The Czechoslovak part of the county was part of the Slovak Land (Slovenská krajina/zem).

Following the provisions of the First Vienna Award, most of the Czechoslovak part became part of Hungary again in November 1938. The Gömör-Kishont county was recreated. The small northernmost part that remained in Slovak hands (a.o. the towns Dobšiná and Revúca) became part of the new Hron county (Pohronská župa). The Trianon borders were restored after World War II and the county was merged into Borsod-Gömör County. Since 1993, when Czechoslovakia was split, Gemer and Malohont have been part of Slovakia, and since 1996 divided between the Košice region and the Banská Bystrica region.

Demographics

Population by mother tongue! Census !! Total !! Hungarian !! Slovak !! German !! Other or unknown
1880[1] 169,064 83,235 (50.95%) 72,432 (44.34%) 5,714 (3.50%) 1,981 (1.21%)
1890[2] 174,810 93,695 (53.60%) 74,731 (42.75%) 4,770 (2.73%) 1,614 (0.92%)
1900[3] 183,784 103,660 (56.40%) 74,517 (40.55%) 4,059 (2.21%) 1,548 (0.84%)
1910[4] 188,098 109,994 (58.48%) 72,232 (38.40%) 2,930 (1.56%) 2,942 (1.56%)
Population by religion! Census !! Total !! Roman Catholic !! Lutheran !! Calvinist !! Jewish !! Greek Catholic !! Other or unknown
1880169,064 68,776 (40.68%) 60,138 (35.57%) 32,066 (18.97%) 4,320 (2.56%) 3,662 (2.17%) 102 (0.06%)
1890174,810 73,197 (41.87%) 59,486 (34.03%) 33,479 (19.15%) 4,572 (2.62%) 4,019 (2.30%) 57 (0.03%)
1900183,784 79,838 (43.44%) 59,459 (32.35%) 34,707 (18.88%) 5,339 (2.91%) 4,344 (2.36%) 97 (0.05%)
1910188,098 85,355 (45.38%) 57,744 (30.70%) 34,798 (18.50%) 5,603 (2.98%) 4,410 (2.34%) 188 (0.10%)

Subdivisions

In the early 20th century, the subdivisions of Gömör-Kishont county were:

Districts (járás)
DistrictCapital
FeledFeled (now Jesenské)
GaramvölgyNándorvölgy (now Vaľkovňa)
NagyrőceJolsva (now Jelšava)
Putnok Putnok
Ratkó Ratkó (now Ratková)
RimaszombatNyustya (now Hnúšťa)
RozsnyóRozsnyó (now Rožňava)
TornaljaTornalja (now Tornaľa)
Urban districts (rendezett tanácsú város)
Dobsina (now Dobšiná)
Jolsva (now Jelšava)
Nagyrőce (now Revúca)
Rimaszombat (now Rimavská Sobota)
Rozsnyó (now Rožňava)

Putnok is now in Hungary; all other named towns are now in Slovakia.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Az 1881. év elején végrehajtott népszámlálás főbb eredményei megyék és községek szerint rendezve, II. kötet (1882) . library.hungaricana.hu . 2021-09-28.
  2. Web site: A Magyar Korona országainak helységnévtára (1892) . library.hungaricana.hu . 2021-09-29.
  3. Web site: A MAGYAR KORONA ORSZÁGAINAK 1900 . library.hungaricana.hu . 2021-09-29.
  4. Web site: KlimoTheca :: Könyvtár . Kt.lib.pte.hu . 2021-09-29.