Chapter

1848 Revolution & Crownland Administration

Revolutions of 1848 produced Serbian Vojvodina's May Assembly at Sremski Karlovci and, soon after, the Austrian crownland 'Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar'. You read this moment in church-led politics and squares where proclamations echoed, even as the crownland's capital sat beyond today's Serbian border.

1848 - 1861
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Places connected to this chapter

Places are linked through Research Center era-node mappings.

spiritual

Saint Nicholas Cathedral, Sremski Karlovci

Baroque cathedral tied to Karlovci's role in 1848 political church‑leadership; a stage for proclamations and later remembrance that braided liturgy with national projects. Anchor modes: material_layer|custodian | Search hooks: Saint Nicholas Cathedral, Sremski Karlovci;May Assembly;procession;baroque;Eparchy of Srem

Step inside to see iconography and architecture; the square outside frames memory of assemblies and parades.

political

Sremski Karlovci

Town where the 1699 Treaty of Karlowitz was signed and the 1848 May Assembly proclaimed Serbian Vojvodina—one square stitching imperial diplomacy to local autonomy claims. Anchor modes: material_layer|signal | Search hooks: Sremski Karlovci;Treaty of Karlowitz;May Assembly;town square;parade

Walk the compact center linking the Patriarchate, cathedral, and treaty memory—often featured on event programs.

Celebrations and traditions

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More chapters in Vojvodina

Adjacent chapters stay inside the same cultural region.

Chapter

18th–19th c. Colonization & Multiethnic Settlements

1718 - 1918

Imperial colonization brought Germans (Danube Swabians), Slovaks, Rusyns, and others, imprinting towns with new churches, house-types, and foodways that still flavor today's festivals. Read this layer in Kačarevo (Franzfeld) bacon-curing traditions and Bački Petrovac's Slovak Lutheran rhythm that continues in annual gatherings.

Chapter

Austro‑Hungarian Urban Modernity & Secession

1867 - 1918

Under Dual Monarchy, cities in northern Vojvodina bloomed with Hungarian Secession (Art Nouveau). You read this era in Subotica's synagogue and Raichle's fantastical palace—civic façades that still host exhibitions and concerts and signal a cosmopolitan, multi-confessional townscape.

Chapter

Habsburg Reconquest & Military Frontier

1699 - 1881

The Habsburg Monarchy's Great Turkish War victories and the Treaty of Karlowitz reset borders and created the Military Frontier. You read this through the fortified Petrovaradin—'Gibraltar on the Danube'—and Sremski Karlovci where the 1699 treaty was signed and the Serbian Patriarchate's seat anchored clerical life along the new border.

Chapter

Yugoslav Statehood, War Ruptures & Provincial Autonomy

1918 - 1990

This century-thread runs from unification (1918) through occupation and the Novi Sad Raid (1942), to the Socialist Autonomous Province with 1974's expanded self-rule. You read it in memorials along the Danube, in museum galleries framing multiethnic life, and in interwar-origin harvest rites that survived into socialist civic calendars.