Changing Environment as a Factor in Innovative and Discontinuous Trends in the Culture of Slovak Colonists in the Great Hungarian Plain Cover Image

Zmena prostredia ako faktor inovatívnych a diskontinuitných trendov v kultúre slovenských kolonistov na Dolnej zemi
Changing Environment as a Factor in Innovative and Discontinuous Trends in the Culture of Slovak Colonists in the Great Hungarian Plain

Author(s): Ján Botík
Subject(s): Energy and Environmental Studies, Environmental Geography, Human Ecology, Environmental interactions, 17th Century, 18th Century
Published by: Historický ústav SAV
Keywords: environment; Great Hungarian Plain; Pannonian Plain; colonists; rooting; innovation; adaptation; construction technologies; discontinuity;

Summary/Abstract: After the expulsion of Ottomans from the territory of the Kingdom of Hungary and demarcating the so called Military Frontier region between the Kingdom of Hungary and the Ottoman Empire (1699-1718), approximately 40,000 Slovak families emigrated from Slovakia to the southern regions of Hungary over the course of the 18th century. Most of them moved to the area of the Great Hungarian Plain (Alföld), which extends over the current regions of Hungary, Romania, Serbia and Croatia. The aim of this massive migration was to colonize the area of southern Hungary, which was significantly unpopulated, devastated and abandoned. The most significant consequence of this migration was that Slovak colonists resettled from the mountainous environment of the Carpathians into the lowland environment of the Pannonian Basin. This change of environment meant they also had to adapt to the different ecological realities of their new surroundings. Within the adaptation process, the original cultural system of the Slovaks was significantly penetrated by innovative and discontinuous trends. First and most radically, this was reflected in the way that the Slovaks learnt the new, previously unknown construction methods and architectural principles of clay housing construction typical of the Pannonian Plain.

  • Issue Year: 11/2017
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 80-96
  • Page Count: 17
  • Language: Slovak