A comitatus (less frequently, a comitat, or, inaccurately, a county; for the various names, their origin and use see here) is the name of an administrative unit in the Kingdom of Hungary from the 10th century to 1918.
The area of the Kingdom of Hungary also included present-day neighbouring countries of Hungary, i.e.:
The word comitatus is also used for the administrative units (megye) in present-day Hungary (since 1918, i. e. after World War I). For those counties see Counties of Hungary. This article only deals with the period before 1918.
For lists of the individual counties see Administrative divisions of the Kingdom of Hungary.
The royal county consisted of castle districts.
As a result, by royal decrees of 1267, 1290, and 1298, the king could only confirm the fact that the royal counties turned into noble ones. Nobles (mostly former royal servant families) became quasi-rulers in the counties. The change from a royal to a noble county, however, was accomplished at different times in the particular counties.
In the 15th century, the borders of the counties stabilised and basically remained unchanged till 1918. Between the early 16th century and the late 17th century, however, most of the counties ceased to exist, because they became part of the Ottoman Empire (the Turks) or of Transylvania. After the final defeat of the Turks in 1718, the three southern counties Temesiensis, Torontaliensis and Krassovinsis created the special administrative district Banatus Temesiensis (Hungarian: Temesi Bánság). This district was dissolved again in 1779, but its southernmost part remained part of the Military Frontier (Confiniaria militaria) till the late 19th century.
The bodies of the new counties considerably helped to defend the interests of lower and middle nobility with respect to the oligarchs, who were often the de-facto rulers of the kingdom, and with respect to the absolutistic efforts of the Habsburg kings. The counties as noble institutions were abolished only in the course of the Revolution of 1848 by legal articles III - V and XVI/ 1848.
The new county was a self-governing (autonomous) entity of lower gentry. It was led by the county head (comes), appointed by the king, and by his deputy, appointed by the county head. These two persons were the link between the king and the nobility. As a rule, the county heads (from the 15th /16th century onwards called main county head) were the supreme feudal lords of the county. From the beginning of the 14th century, the county head was at the same time the castellan of the respective county castle in 13 counties. People became county heads for a limited period of time and could be recalled by the king, but a number of prelates (from the 15th century also seculars) received the "eternal county leadership" of their diocese.
Note that the formal title comes was also borne by some dignitaries of the Court (e. g. comes curiae) and other nobles in the Early Middle Ages, and then by other members of middle nobility in the Late Middle Ages, and it did not mean count in these cases.
From the 13th-14th century onwards, the deputy county heads, and not the county head himself, were the real administrators of the county. This development was emphasised by the fact that the county heads were also higher dignitaries of the state or of the court at the same time (palatine, treasurer (Kingdom of Hungary) etc. ), so that they did not have much time for the management of the county. The deputy county head 's role was to administer the county during the county head 's absence. Originally, the deputy county head was a personal employee of the king and thus the main person through which the king exercised influence in the county. At the same time, the deputy was the castellan of the castle of the county head or an economic officer (Latin: provisor) of the properties of the same. Initially, the nobles of the county could not influence the appointment of the deputy county head, but in the early 15th century, they managed to put through a rule that only a noble from the same county can become the deputy county head (see below). Initially, in the 13th century, influence of nobles made itself felt only in the judicial sphere. The judges of the servientes regis - the so-called iudices servientium - developed into the noble judges (see below), and the courts of the servientes regis - the so-called sedes iudiciaria or sedria - developed into the county court (the Latin name remained sedria). The sedria meetings were led by the county head, later de-facto by his deputy (see below). Until the 15th century, the county head's co-judges were his deputy county head, the (usually four) noble judges, and a number of persons appointed ad hoc from among the present nobles. From the 15th century onwards, permanent jurors were elected from among the nobles of the county. The sedria served as the court of first instance for minor disputes of the nobles and as the appeal instance for village courts and patrimonial courts (sedes dominialis).
From the beginning of their existence, the noble judges were the real representatives of county autonomy. They were elected by the congregatio generalis (see below) and were not only judges, but also political administrators of their respective processus districts (see below). They formed the core of the newly arising class of squires.
Later, the counties even turned to political entities representing the noble autonomy (noble self-government). This evolution started especially under the kings Charles Robert and Louis I. From 1385 onwards, the counties were sending representatives to meetings of the Diet of the Kingdom of Hungary and they played a role in the collection and setting of taxes. But only in the early 15th century, the nobles managed to put through a rule that only a noble from the same county can become the deputy county head and a co-judge. From 1504 onwards the deputy county head's appointment had to be approved by the nobles (congregatio generalis -see below), so that the deputy county head definitively became the de-facto leader of the county. The county head, appointed by the king from the oligarchs (supreme nobility), was only the formal representative of the county.
The county authorities were very powerful and administered all spheres of public life. They were responsible for all inhabitants of the county, except for inhabitants of free royal towns (liberae regiae civitate), mining towns, free districts, and at the time of the Anjou kings also of royal castle domains. Until 1486, some members of the supreme nobility were exempt from the jurisdiction of the county, too.
The most important body of self-government of the county was the congregatio generalis, i. e. the county assembly convened and led by the county head. Originally, this body was created and served only as a judicial body, which comprised the judge, the sedria members and 8 elected noble jurors, and which was usually convened once a year. At the same time, the inquisitio communis (hearing of a witness) enabled the nobles to influence the proceedings conducted at the royal curia. Gradually, judicial affairs were excluded from the meetings of the congregatio generalis, which thus turned from a judicial body into an administrative body. All nobles of the county participated in person in the meetings of the congregatio and the congregatio decided on all important political, military and economic affairs.
As from the beginning of the 15th century, the territory of each county was divided into processuses each of which was administered by one of the noble judges (there were therefore usually four in each county). The aim was to simplify the administration. The number of processuses was increasing from the 18th century onwards, because the functions of the counties were increasing too. The processuses, in turn, consisted of 2 to 6 circuits (Latin: circuli), each of which was the responsibility of a deputy noble judge.
Until the 1840s (with an exception in 1785-1790), the official language of county administration was Latin.
In 1849, in the course of and after the defeat of the Magyars in the 1848-1849 Revolution, the Austrian Habsburgs established a military dictatorship in the Kingdom of Hungary and the counties were turned into simple state administration entities and authorities.
The territory of the Kingdom of Hungary consisted of counties, which in turn consisted of districts (more precisely processuses, but often simply called districts even in official documents).
64(63?) counties were created in 1867 in the Kingdom of Hungary (71 including Croatia-Slavonia). This number (71) did not change until 1918, except that the Turna county ceased to exist in 1882. The number of processus districts was steadily increasing till 1910. Around 1891 there were 409 such districts.
The powers and responsibilities of the counties were constantly decreased after 1867 and were transferred to ministries. In 1869, the counties lost the jurisdiction powers (the courts), in 1870 the responsibility for municipal towns (towns with municipal rights, i. e. former free royal towns), and later also the responsibilities in terms of construction, orphans, veterinary medicine and (overall) financial management. The most important changes concerned the towns: The Municipal Act 42/1870 abolished the ancient rights of free royal towns, and a great number of municipal towns was withdrawn from the jurisdiction of the counties. In 1876, however, the towns - except for 25 (+ 5 in Croatia-Slavonia + Rijeka) most important towns - lost their "independence" again.
In 1868 Transylvania was definitely reunited to the Kingdom of Hungary proper, and the town and district of Rijeka declared autonomous. In 1873 part of the Military Frontier was united with the Kingdom of Hungary proper and part with Croatia-Slavonia. Some greater reorganisation (incl. some changes of county borders) occurred in 1876 and smaller border changes followed in 1877, 1882 and 1884.
The Hungarian word megye (or Latin mega) is derived from the old Slavic word medzä (according to other sources: mežda) meaning approximately territorial border. The word medza and meja is still used in present-day Slovak and Slovenian in this sense, and seems to have meant rather the border of a county initially in the Hungarian language, too.
The Hungarian word ispán (county head) is derived from the old and modern Slavic word župan, which was used by the Slavs living in the Carpathian Basin before the arrival of the Hungarians and stood for the head of various territorial units.
Processus (district): Latin: processus/ reambulatio, Hungarian: szolgabírói járás, Slovak: slúžnovský obvod/slúžnovský okres, German: Stuhlbezirk
County head:
Main county head: Latin: comes (supremus), Hungarian: föispán, Slovak: hlavný župan, German: Obergespan
Deputy county head:
Congregatio generalis: Latin congregatio generalis, Hungarian: közgyűlés, Slovak: generálna kongregácia / stoličné zhromaždenie, German: Komitatsgeneralversammlung
Noble judges: Latin: iudices nobilium/ iudlium, Hungarian (pl) szolgabirák, Slovak (pl) slúžni, German Schöffen / Stuhlrichter (later Stuhlrichter only)
Jurors: Latin: iurati assessores / iurassores, Hungarian: esküdtek, Slovak: súdni prísažní, German Geschworene
Deputy noble judges: Latin: viceiudex, Hungarian: alszolgabírák, Slovak: podslúžni, German: Unterstuhlrichter(?).
Municipal town: Hungarian:törvényhatósági város , Slovak: municipálne mesto , German: Munizipalstadt/ Munizipium
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"Comitatus (Kingdom of Hungary)".
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