
The Banat of Temesvar ? Borderland Colonization in the Habsburg Monarchy
Borderland Colonization in the Habsburg Monarchy
Series: Stanford Studies on Central and Eastern Europe;
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Estimated delivery time: In stock at the publisher, but not at Prospero's office. Delivery time approx. 3-5 weeks.
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Product details:
- Edition number 1
- Publisher MK ? Stanford University Press
- Date of Publication 4 February 2025
- ISBN 9781503639942
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages344 pages
- Size 229x152x22 mm
- Weight 562 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 1 map 778
Categories
Long description:
This book explores the establishment and development of a multi-ethnic frontier society on the Habsburg?Ottoman border, in the historic region of the Banat (today divided between Romania, Serbia, and Hungary). After it passed from Ottoman to Habsburg control in the early eighteenth century, the Habsburgs sought to settle the region with Western and Central European migrants, mainly though not exclusively German-speakers from the Holy Roman Empire. Historian Timothy Olin argues that this policy led to destabilizing demographic changes and laid the foundations for the ethno-religious tensions that characterized the region through the twentieth century and beyond.
Imperial authorities used colonists as a means to ensure the loyalty and stability of the province and to prevent Hungarian?Ottoman collusion. Their settlement, beginning in the 1710s and lasting until the 1820s, led to government-sponsored displacement and resettlement of many local villages. In the process of narrating the history of the region, Olin argues that the land empires of Europe engaged in forms of settlement that fit the larger patterns of colonial rule in other parts of Europe and the world, and demonstrates that the movement of settlers and the culture they brought with them began a process of Europeanization in the borderlands of the continent and helped solidify Europe's boundaries.
"With extraordinary variety of scale, centering human perspectives in the bald story of reconquest and expansion, Timothy Olin rewrites our understanding of migration, cultural identities, and layered multiethnic negotiation in the Habsburg borderlands. An invaluable portrait of the dynamics of continental empire-building."
?Rita Krueger, Temple University More