Английская Википедия:Bars County

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Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Infobox Former Subdivision Bars (Latin: comitatus Barsiensis, Hungarian: Bars, Slovak: Tekov, German: Barsch) was an administrative county (comitatus) of the Kingdom of Hungary. Its territory is now in central and southern Slovakia. Today in Slovakia, Tekov is the informal designation of the corresponding territory.

Geography

Map of Bars county in the Kingdom of Hungary (1891)
Map of Bars, 1891.
Файл:Slovakia Tekov.jpg
Former county of Bars superimposed on map of contemporary Slovakia

Bars County shared borders with the Hungarian counties of Шаблон:Hungarian county link, Шаблон:Hungarian county link, Шаблон:Hungarian county link, Шаблон:Hungarian county link, Шаблон:Hungarian county link and Шаблон:Hungarian county link. It was situated along the Garam river between Hont in the east, Körmöcbánya and Felsőbesenyő in the north (which were part of the county), the Zsitva river in the west, and Zsitvabesenyő and Bény in the south (which was not part of the county). The rivers Garam and Zsitva ran through the county. The county was characterised by mining. Around 1910, its area was Шаблон:Convert.

Capitals

The capital of the county was the Bars Castle, then the Léva Castle, then from the late 16th century Kistapolcsány and since the 18th century Aranyosmarót.

History

The county arose in the 11th century. The southern part of this county was occupied by Ottoman Empire between 1663 and 1685 and managed as Uyvar Eyalet by her. In the aftermath of World War I, the area became part of newly formed Czechoslovakia, as recognized by the concerned states in 1920 by the Treaty of Trianon.

Following the provisions of the First Vienna Award, the southern part of the area was returned to Hungary in November 1938. This was merged with the southern part of the former Hont county to form Bars-Hont county, with the capital Léva.

After World War II, the Trianon borders were restored and the area lay again completely in Czechoslovakia. In 1993, Czechoslovakia was split and Tekov became part of Slovakia.

Demographics

Файл:Bars ethnic map.png
Ethnic map of the county with data of the 1910 census (see the key in the description)
Population by mother tongueШаблон:Efn
Census Total Slovak Hungarian German Other or unknown
1880[1] 142,691 79,108 (57,05%) 42,118 (30.37%) 16,863 (12.16%) 576 (0.42%)
1890[2] 152,910 87,016 (56.91%) 47,611 (31.14%) 17,561 (11.48%) 722 (0.47%)
1900[3] 165,122 94,879 (57.46%) 52,317 (31.68%) 17,325 (10.49%) 601 (0.36%)
1910[4] 178,500 97,824 (54.80%) 62,022 (34.75%) 17,366 (9.73%) 1,288 (0.72%)
Population by religionШаблон:Efn
Census Total Roman Catholic Calvinist Jewish Lutheran Other or unknown
1880 142,691 118,284 (82.90%) 16,491 (11.56%) 4,927 (3.45%) 2,738 (1.92%) 251 (0.18%)
1890 152,910 127,761 (83.55%) 16,920 (11.07%) 5,157 (3.37%) 3,030 (1.98%) 42 (0.03%)
1900 165,122 139,729 (84.62%) 17,018 (10.31%) 5,191 (3.14%) 3,115 (1.89%) 69 (0.04%)
1910 178,500 153,286 (85.87%) 16,795 (9.41%) 4,969 (2.78%) 3,253 (1.82%) 197 (0.11%)

Subdivisions

Файл:Bars county administrative map.jpg

In the early 20th century, the subdivisions of Bars county were:

Districts (járás)
District Capital
Шаблон:Color box Aranyosmarót Aranyosmarót (now Zlaté Moravce)
Шаблон:Color box Garamszentkereszt Garamszentkereszt (now Žiar nad Hronom)
Шаблон:Color box Léva Léva (now Levice)
Шаблон:Color box Oszlány Oszlány (now Oslany)
Шаблон:Color box Verebély Verebély (now Vráble)
Urban districts (rendezett tanácsú város)
Шаблон:Color box Körmöcbánya (now Kremnica)
Шаблон:Color box Léva (now Levice)
Шаблон:Color box Újbánya (now Nová Baňa)

Notes

Шаблон:Notelist

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:HUCountiesto1918 Шаблон:Authority control