Croatian Research
at the
Family History Library
by
Thomas K.
Edlund
© copyright 1996 by Thomas K. Edlund and FEEFHS; all rights
reserved
First Posted: 15 October
1996
Webmaster's Note: Thomas K Edlund, the author of this
article, is responsible for cataloging of all Croatian microforms and books at
the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah. FEEFHS has been very
fortunate to have him present to lecture on this subject at each of the first
three FEEFHS Conventions (1994-1996). Up until now, however, only outlines were
provided at these lectures. This is an exclusive web reprint of the full
copyrighted article that appears (will all diacritical marks) in Volume 4 Issues
2 & 3 of the FEEFHS Newsletter
Croatian Research at the Family History Library
by Thomas K.
Edlund
The officers of FEEFHS, in their ongoing effort to
encourage and assist genealogical research in Eastern Europe, have asked me to
summarize the resources available from the Family History Library (FHL) which
relate to the former Austrian kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia, with marginal
reference made to Slovenia.
Such a request is meaningful only when
contextualized to the intellectual access systems provided by the information
retrieval systems of the FHL. As with the holdings of other libraries, the
collections of the FHL are inventoried and described in a catalog. Distributed
yearly to over 2,700 Family History Centers worldwide, the Family History
Library Catalog (FHLC) is the single resource providing information to the
microfilming efforts of the Genealogical Society of Utah (GSU).
The
intent of this lecture is to familiarize the researcher, in a general way, with
the methods of locating materials of interest currently available at the FHL.
The presentation is actually intended more as a "practicum" than a lecture. In
addition to retrieval procedures, I will cover background history, size of the
collection, the GSU's microfilming endeavors in contemporary Croatia and
Slovenia, record types represented in the collection, research aids necessary to
use them, and finally review specific examples.
A Short History of Croatia
Organized in 1946 as a
Republic of the South Slav Federation and now an independent country, Croatia is
comprised of the old Austrian territories of Dalmatia, most of Istria, and the
former Hungarian crown land of Croatia-Slavonia. It extends in a crescent from
the fertile plain between the Danube, Drava, and Sava rivers east to the Gulf of
Venice, and then southward along the Adriatic coast to the frontier of
Montenegro; bound on the north by Slovenia and Hungary, on the east by Serbia.
Within this crescent, boarders follow those of Bosnia-Herzegovina south to the
Crna Gora corridor.
Prior to 1919, the period represented by FHL church
records, the population was 82% peasant. The economy of Croatia-Slavonia was
based on agriculture and cattle breeding. Mountain folk of Istria and Dalmatia
have been traditionally wine and olive growers, or fishermen and seafarers. The
people of both areas are primarily Croatian and Roman Catholic.
The
Croats, or Chrobáti Hrváti, migrated to the Danube valley in the 6th
century C.E. from a region called White Croatia, now in Ukraine between the Bug
and Dnieper rivers. They continued south along the coast to the Roman stronghold
of Salona (conquered in 614 C.E.). During the 7th century they were converted to
Christianity, and a Bishopric for all Croatian lands was established at Nín
(north of Zadar). Shortly afterward they received privilege of using the
national language in church services.
From the time of the first Dux
Croatorum, the power and influence of Croatia grew. The leadership of
Branislav was followed by that of Dimitrije Zvonimir in 1089. Zvonimir, however,
a man personally crowned by Papa Gregory VII yet considered a papal
lackey, was assassinated while enlisting support to battle the Seljuk Turks.
Anarchy and civil war followed.
The Byzantines secured a position in
Dalmatia, and in 1091, László I of Hungary occupied most of Pannonian Croatia.
Claiming the throne as Zvonimir's brother-in-law, for the next eight centuries
Croatia was connected with Hungary. The relationship often changed; some kings
attempted to abolish the personal union and to integrate Croatia with Hungary.
On other occasions, Croats selected their kings independently.
Slowly,
through the intrigue and incest which defined the Middle Ages, the power and
influence of Croatia was whittled away. With the extinction of the Arpáds (the
Hungarian national dynasty who introduced feudalism to Croatia), the Croats
crowned Ladislas, a Neapolitan prince, as King in 1403. This noble ruler,
obviously interested in "the good" of his newly acquired country, promptly sold
Dalmatia to Venice, which ruled it for the next four centuries.
The
appearance of the Turks in the Balkans during the 15th century imposed a period
of hard struggle. Bosnia, which under Kotromanic / Kotromanich became an
independent kingdom, fell in 1463. The Croat defeat at Krbavsko Polje in 1493
was followed by the defeat of Louis II of Hungary in 1526, and the greater part
of Pannonian Croatia and central Hungary fell to the Turks. The once wide
Croatian kingdom was reduced to a reliquiae reliquiarum. Zagreb, formerly a
heartland city, was now a border fortress and the new capital.
This
depressing decline brings us only to the opening of the Hapsburg period, a time
of attempted Germanizing that shatters the spine of even amateur students of
European history - a foreshadow of Germanizing to be attempted again during Nazi
occupation. Briefly, affairs went from bad to worse. Notable highlights of low
points included the failed coup d'état of Prince Zrinsksi and the assassination
of Archduke Francis Ferdinand at Sarajevo.
This is a backdrop to the
records we will look at today. The church books of Croatia and Slavonia reflect
this historical turmoil in many ways, most notably in linguistic diversity. The
vital records of a single parish in northern Dalmatia can be written in
Glagolitic, Italian, Latin, Croatian and Hungarian.
Size and Scope of the Collection
As of May 1, 1996, the
FHL Croatian / Slovenia collection consisted of church books from 673 Roman
Catholic, 179 Orthodox, and 36 Greek Catholic parishes. The GSU has been filming
in Croatian since March 1985. The filming agreement, signed on 18 December 1984
by then Departmental Director Richard G. Scott, was for 750,000 frames. While
that exposure count was surpassed some 54 months ago, the Society still has two
cameras in Croatia. The microfilming so far has been organized in 9 projects
summarized as follows:
1) Various church books from the State Archive of
Croatia. Filming is completed.
2) Orthodox church records of the Blaski
diocese. Filming is completed.
3) Documents from district church archives
throughout Croatia. Project still in progress.
4) Church records from the
Archive of Osijek. Project is completed.
5) Material from the Historical
Archive of Varasdin. Project is completed.
6) Catholic church books from
the Historical Archives of Zadar and Split. Project is completed.
6A)
Orthodox church books from the Historical Archives of Zadar and Split. Project
is completed.
7) Dubrovnik -- ongoing.
8) Rijeka --
ongoing.
At present, 2012 reels of 35 mm. microfilm, each comprised of an
average of 750 frames (2 pages of text per frame) are cataloged and available
for use. In processing documents account for another 287 reels of film. Primary
areas of focus are Slavonia, Dalmatia, Rijeka, Slovenia (Marburg, Vas, and
Zala). Span dates for these films are late 1500's to the 1940's. Languages
represented are Croatian, German, Glagolitic, Hungarian, Italian, Latin,
Serbian, and Sloven.
In Slovenia, filming began on 26 September 1992 and
ended in January 1994. Total output for the project was 249 reels. The records
are exclusively civil registration: 1868 to 1918. Language of the text is
Hungarian. Records are from the counties of Zala and Vas, comprising about 60
civil registration offices currently located in Croatia and Slovenia. The split
is about 50-50.
The FHL also has extensive records filmed under contracts
with the Österreich Kriegsarchiv. These include, but are not limited to, 265
reels of church records, 294 reels of land and tax documents from the district
of Laibach, Slovenia; as well as 76 reels of church records from the district of
Tarvis, Slovenia.
Record Types
The record groups microfilmed in Croatia
are diverse, forming a linguistic tapestry as varied and beautiful as the
Balkans themselves.
General Information
In the broadest of terms the FHL
collection for Croatia and Slavonia begins in the mid-1400's and continues
through the end of World War I. Significant termination dates are 1869 for
Austrian Army and Naval records; and 1900 for church books from the former
Yugoslavia. Church records, in the main, begin in the later 1600's. The earliest
examples are from the 1460's.
Linguistic diversity for the collection is
greater than for most other geographic areas. Languages of primary interest are:
- Latin An Indo-European language, moderately inflected, and used
extensively by the Roman Catholic Church.
- Serbian a Slavic language closely allied to Croatian. considered
the official language of Yugoslavia. Serbian differs from Croatian slightly in
vocabulary and is written in the cyrillic script.
- German Official language of the Austrian Empire, and as such the
language of record for the Austrian military.
- Glagolitic Properly speaking, Glagolitsa is a script, not a
language. The literature of Dalmatia, however, took on a unique character that
can be considered at least a dialect. In most circumstances one can read the
text of a Glagolitic manuscript if s/he is familiar with Croatian and the
epigraphy.
- Croatian The language used for most post-Latin period Roman
Catholic parish registers.
- Hungarian All civil documents now being filmed in Slovenia.
- Italian Language common to the 1600-1800 Roman Catholic parish
registers for Dalmatia and Istria.
- Slovene Language of Slovenia, closely allied with
Serbo-Croatian.
Religious documents for the area, in order of
significance or volume, are Roman Catholic, Orthodox (also referred to as Greek,
Serbian, or now Croatian Orthodox), Greek Catholic, and Jewish. Greek Catholic
has two meanings in South Slav research. First, it refers to an Orthodox
believer who is not a member of the state religion. Second, it refers to a
Uniate -- one who practices the Eastern rite but recognizes the ruling authority
of the Bishop of Rome.
Military Documents
The overwhelming majority of
military records relating to Croatia and Slavonia microfilmed by the FHL are
from the Military Archives in Vienna. The Kriegsarchiv collection,
unfortunately, is not longer intact. Many of the more recent documents were
claimed by modern successor nation of the empire, including both Hungary and
Yugoslavia.
I would like now to briefly discuss two main document groups
contained in the collection: the records of the Central Command and those of
individual units.
Records of the Central Command
This
record group is the only possible source of information on Austrian soldiers and
officers prior to 1740. Genealogically relevant series are:
1)
Commissions. 1466-1866, containing officers' commissions, instructions,
appointments and information concerning military service (complete with
biography).
2) Nobility Grants. 1636-1753, these grants were
received for distinguished service or valor.
3) Vital
Certificates. A small, but indexed, collection of birth, marriage, and death
certificates.
4) Wills. 1639-1771, this collection is quite
incomplete yet indexed, and is arranged chronologically.
5) Pension
and Assistance Records. Accessed by unit designator (i.e. regiment).
Includes:
- Pensions: 1749-1922
- Invalid Office: 1723-1803
- Orphans' Commission: 1702-1770
- Soldier Orphans: 1770-1870
6) Army Rank and Regiment Schematics.
1583-1849. records continue commission records; include decorations, orders,
and sometimes death dates.
7) Payment Books. 1753-1819. Documents
record pensions, wages, and salary data, with supplementary biographical data.
Completely indexed.
8) Marriage Bonds. 1750-1918. To insure the
monetary support of family members, officers less in rank than Lt. General were
required to bond themselves in the event of death. These records are important
as a supplement to the regular muster lists, which did not generally include
names of family members. Information of value includes the officer's name, name
of spouse, spouse's place of origin, and on occasion spouse's parents. Records
are completely indexed.
9) Military School Records. Biography of
students. Includes both the Marine-Akademie (1802-1918) and the
Kriegsschule in Vienna (1871-1914).
10) Military Court Records.
Archival documents include the Courts of Vienna (1753-1869), Graz (1784-1849),
the Invalidenhaus in Vienna (1805-1860), and Pettau (1760-1859). All series
contain valuable probate information. Some are indexed.
Records of
Individual Units
Records for soldiers and officers after 1740 are
also available in micro-format at FHL. While many of these records created after
1869 were transferred to modern nations derivative from the Austrian Empire,
pre-1869 documents have been filmed and provide a complete record of each person
who performed military service. Many record series include:
1) Muster
Rolls. 1740-1820. Contain name of soldier, place of birth, age religion,
learned occupation, and marital status. After 1770 the rolls include names of
dependant children. Musters were taken annually, and indicated soldiers'
transfers. Arrangement is by unit.
2) Foundation Books. 1820-1918.
These series comprise a local continuation of the muster rolls. Their purpose
was to establish a statistical foundation for the military service. They served
as a running sensus of soldiers (and their needs) so the government could plan
for horses, feed, etc. After the introduction of universal conscription in 1869,
foundation books were kept by the state military registration district. The
records have a sheet for each soldier, which was updated annually.
3)
Service Records. 1823-1918. These documents supplement the muster and
foundation books with information concerning an officer's actual service record.
Common genealogical valuable information concerns parentage. Files are arranged
alphabetically.
4) Records of the Navy. 1760-1918. Materials from
this series are identical to those from the Army. Many of the records have been
deaccessioned to the government of Croatia. Access is by unit.
Church Records
In my opinion, the church books of Croatia and
Slavonia comprise some of the most rewarding and genealogically concentrated
records in the FHL. The documents are well preserved, properly organized, and
accurately filmed.
Content of the registers is identical to church
records from other countries, e.g. births, marriages, marriage banns, and
deaths. Occasionally encountered are confirmations, communion records, and
anniversaria. To date I have not seen any documents corresponding to the
German Familienbücher. Microfilming has been exclusively of original
parish registers. To find these records, the researcher must use the FHL
catalog.
The Catalog
The Family History Library Catalog (FHLC)
is the single source of access to genealogical records microfilmed by the GSU.
This reference resource has three major sections: author-title, locality, and
subject. The major difficulty the catalog possess for an English speaker is that
it is written for an international audience. Elements of description, such as
title, author, or content notes composed in the language of the source document.
simple as this sounds, Serbian record are cataloged in Croatian, while Latin
records are in English.
Title Access
Title access, most
common in libraries containing published materials, is not really an option when
dealing with manuscripts. The vast majority of catalog records are described, as
far as title is concerned, by generic, i.e. "uniform" terms. For example,
religious vital documents are referred to as "parish registers." Obviously this
traditional access point is meaningless, and I mention it only because many
patrons approach a library catalog with this avenue in mind.
Author
Access
Another traditional library access point is the author of a
text. Such a approach will work with the FHL catalog. Authorship can be a either
a person(s) or a corporation, i.e. a religious group. Generally, religious vital
records are found under corporation authorship, such as Jewish, Protestant,
Roman Catholic, or Lutheran. Examples include:
- Rimokatoli ka crkva. upa Zagreb
- Pravoslavna crkva. upa Vukovar
- Grkokatoli ka crkva. upa Karlovac
- idovska op ina Zagreb
Using the author catalog is effective if
you know the religion (i.e. author) desired. It is useful because one can locate
in one place a list of parishes alphabetically arranged by religious
denomination. The same principle works for military records; the difference
being a file sort of regiment / unit instead of denomination / parish. The FHL
author / title catalog is most useful for obtaining an overview of what is
available in a general category, not for a specific location.
Locality
Access
Just as the author/title catalog groups together records of a
corporation, the locality catalog arranges records that relate to one city,
town, village, or continent. Similar record types are cataloged together by
subheadings, such as: Church records, Civil registration, Census. Even the
beginning researcher is aware that in earlier times localities enjoyed a wide
range of spelling variations. Additionally, tradition at the FHL dictates
catalog records to be written in the language of the text, or of the nation
state.
Unfortunately, both of these criteria are subject to change over
time. This leaves you, the family historian, with somewhat of a problem. Which
language, or what country, did I decide your records of interest belonged to?
Believe it or not, there is both a reason to the process. The Library catalog
attempts to provide a historical perspective for the patron.
This example
can illustrate: the city of Belovar, over the last two centuries, has been
located in the national entities of Austrian Slavonia, Hungary, Yugoslavia, and
now Croatia. I don't mean to infer that the city itself has moved; rather
nations, somewhat fragile things, have dissolved or been reorganized with
different boundaries. Four different patrons could claim ancestry from the four
nation states I just mentioned, and all four might be talking about the same
village.
For this reason, I try to provide locality access for all
historical references. You will find the same catalog record reproduced in three
places: under the locality headings for Austria, Hungary, and Croatia. This is
important, at least for use of the microfiche catalog. For a Hungarian place
name can be, and frequently is, quite different from its German
counterpart.
What is important for you the researcher to know, is what
the "correct" name is. Of course all the names are correct, in one application
or another. But when I as writer of the FHLC create what is called a "locality
authority," the form I choose by default becomes the official name; at least as
far the catalog is concerned, and as such, official for your research. So lets
look at the reference works used to establish these authorities.
Maps and Gazetteers
To make locality authorities
available to the patron, the Library has designated certain gazetteers as
standard reference works. The patron should first locate the village or city an
appropriate gazetteer before searching the catalog. Most patrons don't do this
of course, although many would avoid a great deal of work if they did. For it is
not just spelling problems that are avoided by checking. Some gazetteers state
what churches were in the village, and if there was no church, where the people
went to attend one.
A cursory glance at the FHLC lists no catalog entry
of Lovinac, Dalmatia. It would be wrong to assume the Library has no records for
the village, however. If we check the Gemeindelexikon for Austria, volume
14 Dalmatia, we find that Lovinac had no church. Roman Catholics living
in the town attend church at Polichic. It was in this village where the parish
was located, and under its name are the church books cataloged. So what could
have been considered a dead-end is actually faulty research. Lets now review
some reference works used to establish locality or parish names.
First is
one by Raffelsperger. This is the reference used for Austria before the
constitutional re-division of 1867 that followed the seven weeks war.
Arrangement is alphabetical for the entire empire. I must warn you though, it is
difficult to find an entry if you are coming armed with Slavic or Hungarian
spellings.
Second is the Gemeindelexikon. This gazetteer is dated
1908 and is lacking those lands put under Hungarian rule by the compromise
mentioned earlier. Included in those territories were the Austrian kingdoms of
Croatia and Slavonia. This gazetteer is of use to us for Dalmatia, Istria, and
the Kustenland. Each district of Austria was given a volume and organized
geographically. To find a specific locality, there is and index at each volume's
end. This will refer you to a page number in the relevant volume that will
provide information.
For those areas of the former Yugoslavia not in the
Gemeindelexikon we turn to the Hungarian gazetteer of 1913. Part two of
this publication is for the kingdom of Croatia, which by this time included
Slavonia. Arrangement here is alphabetical. Be forewarned of spelling
mutations.
Next is the standard Hungarian gazetteer published in 1878.
This text is used as a name authority for modern Hungary. It does not contain
the areas of Dalmatia or Croatia/Slavonia, but is used for Slovenia. The work is
in two volumes. Information is organized by governmental districts. Access to
districts is by an alphabetical sorting of villages and cities in volume
two.
Finally for all the modern republics that constituted the former
Yugoslavia, I use the only source available, a postal directory titled:
Imenik naselonih mesta. Two editions exist, 1974 and 1985. Sometimes you
need to check both to locate your locality. Arrangement is strictly
alphabetical.
These are the basic methods for locating information in the
FHLC, and finding genealogical materials for Croatia and Slavonia. If you have
research problems with the FHL collection or need assistance in its effective
use, please contact me, the reference staff at the FHL, or your local FHC
director.
Reference sources:
- Maps
- Jugoslavija auto atlas. Zagreb, 1973. 1:500,000.
- Generalkarte von Mitteleuropa. Vienna, 1899-1967.
1:200,000.
- Gazetteers
- A Magyar Szent Korona Országainak Helységnévtára. Budapest, 1913,
pp. 1348-1712 (Horvát-Szlavonországok).
- Gemeindelexikon der in Reichsrate Vertretenen Königreiche und
Länder, XIV (Dalmatien). Vienna, 1908.
- Allgemeines Geographisch-Statistisches Lexikon aller Österreichischen
Staaten. Vienna, 1845.
- Dictionaries
- New English-Croatian and Croatian-English Dictionary. F. A.
Bogadek. New York, 1957.
- Postal directories
- Imenik Naseljenih Mesta u SFRJ. Belgrade,
1985.
© copyright 1996 by Thomas K. Edlund and FEEFHS; all rights reserved
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Webmaster's Note: Diacritical marks were
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Chrobati Hrvati, Nin, Laszlo I, Arpads, Familienbucher,
Orszagainak, Helysegnevtara, Horvatt- Szlavonorszagok,
Konigreiche, Lander, Osterreichischen
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