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CARINTHIA (PROVINCE)

Carinthia before 1900.

'Carinthia' (Slovene ''Koroška'', German ''Kärnten'', Croatian ''Koruška'') is an informal province in the north of Slovenia. It contains the towns of Dravograd, Ravne na Koroškem, Črna, Mežica and Prevalje.The area is often referred to as 'Slovene Carinthia' in English to distinguish it from the neighbouring Austrian federal state of Carinthia.

Contents
History
See also

History


Carinthia was settled by Slavic tribes around the 6th century. They formed a new people, called Karantanians, and Carinthia became the central part of the duchy of Karantania, the first state of Old Slovenians and also the first stable Slavic state ever. Karantania lost autonomy in the early 9th century when it fell under Frankish power and formed the March of Carinthia. The Duchy of Carinthia was later controlled by the Habsburgs (1335 - 1918), under the Holy Roman Empire until 1806 and later Austria-Hungary. It was populated by Germans and Slovenes. After World War I military forces of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (later renamed Yugoslavia) occupied southern Carinthia. Those parts which are today Slovenian territory were annexed without referendum. However, in the region north of this, the voters in the Carinthian Plebiscite on October 10, 1920 determined that those parts should remain with the newly founded Republic of Austria. With the break up of Yugoslavia in 1991 the Yugoslav section of Carinthia became a part of independent Slovenia.
The borders of Slovenian Carinthia today have expanded considerably eastward compared to the original province. For example, historical maps clearly show Slovenj Gradec as a Styrian town.

See also



Carinthia (Austrian state)

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