Ung County

County of the Kingdom of Hungary From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ung County (in Latin: comitatus Unghvariensis; Hungarian: Ung (vár)megye; also in Slovak: Užský komitát/ Užská župa / Užská stolica; Romanian: Comitatul Ung) was an administrative county (comitatus) of the Kingdom of Hungary. Its territory is now mostly in western Ukraine, a smaller part in eastern Slovakia, and a very small area in Hungary.

CapitalUngvár (now Uzhhorod)
1910
3,230 km2 (1,250 sq mi)
Today part ofUkraine
(2,795 km2)

Slovakia
(419 km2)

Hungary
(16 km2)
Quick facts Capital, Area ...
Ung County
Comitatus Unghvariensis (Latin)
Ung vármegye (Hungarian)
Komitat Ung (German)
Ужаньска жупа (Rusyn)
Užská župa (Slovak)
Comitatul Ung (Romanian)
County of the Kingdom of Hungary
(11th century-1544)
County of the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom
(1544-1564)
County of the Kingdom of Hungary
(1564-1920, 1938-1945)
Coat of arms of Ung
Coat of arms

CapitalUngvár (now Uzhhorod)
Area
  Coordinates48°37′N 22°18′E
 
 1910
3,230 km2 (1,250 sq mi)
Population 
 1910
162,089
History 
 Established
11th century
 Treaty of Trianon
4 June 1920
 Merged into Szabolcs-Ung County
1923
 County recreated (First Vienna Award)
2 November 1938
 Disestablished
1945
Today part ofUkraine
(2,795 km2)

Slovakia
(419 km2)

Hungary
(16 km2)
Close

Geography

Map of Ung county in the Kingdom of Hungary (1891)
Map of Ung, 1891.

Ung county shared borders with the Cisleithanian crownland Galicia (now in Poland and Ukraine) and the Hungarian counties Bereg, Szabolcs and Zemplén. It was situated between the Carpathian Mountains in the north, the rivers Tisza and Latorca (present-day Latorica) in the south, and the river Laborc (present-day Laborec) in the west. The rivers Latorca and Ung (present-day Uzh) flowed through the county. Its area was 3,230 km2 (1,250 sq mi) around 1910.

Capitals

Initially, the capital of the county was the Uzhhorod Castle (Hungarian: Ungvári vár), later the town of Ungvár (present-day Uzhhorod).

History

Ung is one of the oldest counties of the Kingdom of Hungary. In the aftermath of World War I, most of Ung county became part of newly formed Czechoslovakia, as recognized by the concerned states in the 1920 Treaty of Trianon. The town of Záhony and the village of Győröcske remained in Hungary, which was merged into Szabolcs-Ung County in 1923.

Following the provisions of the First Vienna Award, all but the westernmost part of the county became part of Hungary again in November 1938, and the county was recreated. In 1939, following the annexation of the remainder of Carpathian Ruthenia after Czechoslovakia became abolished, the rest of the territories became part of Hungary again, however those were assigned to the administrative branch offices of Ung.

After World War II, as the 1920 borders were restored, the westernmost part was returned to Czechoslovakia. The rest (except Záhony and Győröcske) became part of the Soviet Union, Ukrainian SSR, Zakarpattia Oblast, while a small part remained in Hungary.

Demographics

Ethnic map of the county with data of the 1910 census (see the key in the description).
More information Census, Total ...
Population by mother tongue[a]
CensusTotalRuthenianHungarianSlovakGermanOther or unknown
1880[1] 126,70742,095 (34.25%)39,479 (32.12%)36,920 (30.04%)3,614 (2.94%)795 (0.65%)
1890[2] 135,24746,521 (34.40%)37,182 (27.49%)40,035 (29.60%)10,318 (7.63%)1,191 (0.88%)
1900[3] 153,26655,742 (36.37%)46,306 (30.21%)42,876 (27.97%)7,099 (4.63%)1,243 (0.81%)
1910[4] 162,08961,711 (38.07%)53,824 (33.21%)36,364 (22.43%)8,383 (5.17%)1,807 (1.11%)
Close
More information Census, Total ...
Population by religion[b]
CensusTotalGreek CatholicRoman CatholicCalvinistJewishOther or unknown
1880 126,70765,128 (51.40%)27,466 (21.68%)17,238 (13.60%)16,423 (12.96%)452 (0.36%)
1890 135,24772,190 (53.38%)28,836 (21.32%)18,056 (13.35%)15,599 (11.53%)566 (0.42%)
1900 153,26683,936 (54.76%)32,904 (21.47%)19,003 (12.40%)16,776 (10.95%)647 (0.42%)
1910 162,08989,149 (55.00%)34,549 (21.31%)20,092 (12.40%)17,587 (10.85%)712 (0.44%)
Close

Subdivisions

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

More information Districts (járás), District ...
Districts (járás)
DistrictCapital
  NagybereznaNagyberezna (now Velykyi Bereznyi)
  NagykaposNagykapos (now Veľké Kapušany)
  PerecsenyPerecseny (now Perechyn)
  SzerednyeSzerednye (now Serednye)
  SzobráncSzobránc (now Sobrance)
  UngvárUngvár (now Uzhhorod)
Urban districts (rendezett tanácsú város)
  Ungvár (now Uzhhorod)
Close

The towns of Veľké Kapušany and Sobrance are now in Slovakia; the other towns mentioned are in Ukraine.

Notes

  1. Only linguistic communities > 1% are displayed.
  2. Only religious communities > 1% are displayed.

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI