NEW SERBIA (HISTORICAL PROVINCE)

(Redirected from Nova Serbia)
New Serbia map

'New Serbia' ( or ''Nova Srbija'', archaic Serbian name: Нова Сербија or ''Nova Serbija'', Moldovan: ''Noua Serbie'') was a territory of Imperial Russia from 1752 to 1764. It was located in the territory of present-day Kirovohrad Oblast of Ukraine. The administrative centre of New Serbia was Novomyrhorod.

Contents
History
Demographics
Settlements
References
See also
External links

History


The region was named after Serbs, who migrated in 1752 to Russian Empire from the Habsburg Monarchy (mainly from the territory of present-day Vojvodina, a province of modern Serbia, and other areas of the Pannonian Plain). Russian authorities gave these Serbian settlers land, which thus acquired its name, New Serbia. Besides Serbs, also many Moldovans, Ukrainians, and others settled in the area, thus the largest ethnic group in the province were not Serbs, but Moldovans.

Demographics


Number of inhabitants of New Serbia in 1754 was 3,989.
In 1757, population of New Serbia numbered 5,482 inhabitants, including:

Moldovans (75.33%)

Serbs (11.56%)

★ others (13.11%)

Settlements


In their new home, Serbs established new places, and consequently gave them same names such as the names of the places found in their old home in the Pannonian Plain. Serbs also changed names of some older settlements, giving them Serb names. Of the 40 settlements that existed in New Serbia, 26 were founded before arrival of the Serbs.
Some examples of places in New Serbia whose names can be also found in the territory of the Pannonian Plain (in Vojvodina and other regions as well) include:

Sombor (Dikivka), named after Sombor in Vojvodina

Sentomash, named after Sentomaš, modern Srbobran in Vojvodina

Slankamen, named after Slankamen in Vojvodina

Vrshac (Nesterivka), named after Vršac in Vojvodina

Subotica (Mala Adzhamka), named after Subotica in Vojvodina

Moshorin (Nekrasivka), named after Mošorin in Vojvodina

Senta (Mogilovo), named after Senta in Vojvodina

Kanyizha (Tri Bayraki), named after Kanjiža in Vojvodina

Martonosh (Yermina Balka), named after Martonoš in Vojvodina

Panchevo (Olyhovatka), named after Pančevo in Vojvodina

Nadlak, named after Nădlac in Romania

Turiya, named after Turija in Vojvodina

Vladimirovac, named after Vladimirovac in Vojvodina

Vukovar, named after Vukovar in Croatia

Feldvar, named after Feldvar/Feldvarac, modern Bačko Gradište in Vojvodina

Chongrad (Andrusivka), named after Csongrád in Hungary

Zemun (Plahtiyivka), named after Zemun, today part of Belgrade, in Serbia

Varazhdin (Protopopivka), named after Varaždin in Croatia

Kovin, named after Kovin in Vojvodina

Vilagosh (Deriyivka), named after Vilagoš, modern Şiria in Romania

Bechey (Usikivka), named after Bečej in Vojvodina

References



★ Mita Kostić, Nova Srbija i Slavenosrbija, Novi Sad, 2001.

★ Pavel Rudjakov, Seoba Srba u Rusiju u 18. veku, Beograd, 1995.

★ Olga M. Posunjko, Istorija Nove Srbije i Slavenosrbije, Novi Sad, 2002.

See also



Slavo-Serbia

External links



Nova Srbija i Slavenosrbija

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