Austrian Silesia, officially the Duchy of Upper and Lower Silesia, was an autonomous region of the Kingdom of Bohemia and the Habsburg monarchy (from 1804 the Austrian Empire, and from 1867 the portion of Austria-Hungary). It is largely coterminous with the present-day region of Czech Silesia (with a smaller part in Poland) and was, historically, part of the larger Silesia region.
The area east of the Ostravice around Cieszyn reached from the heights of the Western Carpathians (Silesian Beskids) in the south, where it bordered with the Kingdom of Hungary, along the Olza and upper Vistula rivers to the border with Prussian Silesia in the north. In the east the Biała river at Bielsko separated it from the Lesser Poland lands of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, incorporated into the Austrian Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria upon the First Partition of Poland in 1772.
The territory west of the Oder river stretching from the town of Opava up to Bílá Voda was confined by the Jeseníky mountain range of the eastern Sudetes in the south, separating it from Moravia, and the Opava river in the north. In the west the Golden Mountains formed the border with the County of Kladsko.
When in 1804 the Habsburg emperor Francis II established the Austrian Empire, his title would include the "Duke of Upper and Lower Silesia". Austrian Silesia was connected by rail with the Austrian capital Vienna, when the Emperor Ferdinand Northern Railway line was extended to Bohumín station in 1847. In the course of the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867 the Duchy of Upper and Lower Silesia became a crown land of Cisleithania.
In November 1918 the Austria-Hungary was abolished. The major part of Austrian Silesia was ceded to the newly created state of Czechoslovakia by the 1919 Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye, with the exception of Cieszyn Silesia (the former Duchy of Teschen), which after the Polish–Czechoslovak War was split in 1920 along the Olza river with its eastern part falling to the Autonomous Silesian Voivodeship of Poland. Smaller parts of the duchy also became a part of Poland, while the adjacent Hlučín Region of Prussian Silesia fell to Czechoslovakia.
Opava | Troppau | 20,563 |
Bielsko | Bielitz | 13,060 |
Cieszyn/Těšín | Teschen | 13,004 |
Krnov | Jägerndorf | 11,792 |
Bruntál | Freudenthal | 7,595 |
Frýdek | Friedek | 7,374 (1890) |
1851 | 438,569 | 209,512 | 47.8% | 138,243 | 31.5% | 88,068 | 20.1% | 2,746 | 0.6% |
1880 | 565,475 | 269,338 | 47.6% | 154,887 | 27.4% | 126,385 | 22.4% | 14,865 | 2.6% |
1890 | 605,649 | 281,555 | 46.5% | 178,114 | 29.4% | 129,814 | 21.4% | 16,166 | 2.7% |
1900 | 680,422 | 296,571 | 43.6% | 220,472 | 32.4% | 146,265 | 21.5% | 17,114 | 2.5% |
1910 | 756,949 | 325,530 | 43.0% | 235,224 | 31.1% | 180,341 | 23.8% | 15,854 | 2.1% |
Bielitz District | Bielsko | Bílsko | 758.13 | 82,835 | 17,631 | 21.3% | 63,580 | 76.8% | 663 | 0.8% | 961 | 1.2% |
Bielsko | Bielsko | Bílsko | 4.97 | 18,568 | 15,144 | 81.6% | 2,568 | 13.8% | 136 | 0.7% | 720 | 3.9% |
Freistadt | Frysztat | Fryštát | 316.89 | 122,030 | 15,159 | 12.4% | 75,462 | 61.8% | 28,103 | 23.0% | 3,306 | 2.7% |
Freiwaldau | Frywałdów | Frývaldov | 736.38 | 68,823 | 66,855 | 97.1% | 66 | 0.1% | 62 | 0.1% | 1,840 | 2.7% |
Freudenthal | Bruntal | Bruntál | 591.65 | 49,306 | 48,852 | 99.1% | 41 | 0.1% | 49 | 0.1% | 364 | 0.7% |
Friedek (Land) | Frydek | Frýdek | 461.71 | 98,957 | 6,821 | 6.9% | 14,519 | 14.7% | 76,458 | 77.3% | 1,159 | 1.2% |
Friedek (Stadt) | Frydek | Frýdek | 10.23 | 9,879 | 5,123 | 51.9% | 574 | 5.8% | 4,033 | 40.8% | 149 | 1.5% |
Jägerndorf | Karniów | Krnov | 532.20 | 60,785 | 58,133 | 95.6% | 22 | 0.0% | 275 | 0.5% | 2,355 | 3.9% |
Teschen District | Cieszyn | Těšín | 730.38 | 102,552 | 17,045 | 16.6% | 77,147 | 75.2% | 6,204 | 6.0% | 2,156 | 2.1% |
Troppau (Land) | Opawa | Opava | 642.10 | 66,990 | 33,200 | 49.6% | 560 | 0.8% | 32,006 | 47.8% | 1,224 | 1.8% |
Opava | Opawa | Opava | 10.93 | 30,762 | 27,240 | 88.6% | 274 | 0.9% | 2,039 | 6.6% | 1,209 | 3.9% |
Wagstadt | Biełowiec | Bílovec | 351.44 | 45,462 | 14,327 | 31.5% | 411 | 0.9% | 30,313 | 66.7% | 411 | 0.9% |
Total | 5147.01 | 756,949 | 325,530 | 43.0% | 235,224 | 31.1% | 180,341 | 23.8% | 15,854 | 2.1% |
In Bach's reforms of 1854 it was reorganised into 22 districts or (distinct from the political districts listed above, rather corresponding to the judicial districts (Gerichtsbezirke)) plus the statutory city of Troppau:Gesetz vom 21. April 1854, RGBl. 104/1854:
These districts were grouped into five Bezirksämter ('district offices'):
Judicially the Landesgericht in Troppau and Kreisgericht in Teschen remained separate, each covering one of the two disconnected parts of the crown land.
In 1860 administrative responsibility for Silesia returned to the Moravian Statthalterei in Brünn/Brno; however, it remained a formally separate crown land and its administrative divisions remained unchanged.Gesetz vom 5. Juni 1860, RGBl. 142/1860:
Following the compromise of 1867 the political districts were re-established and continued in some form until Austria-Hungary's dissolution, with the following districts used at various times:
For example, in 1900, there were 8 Bezirkshauptmannschaften in Austrian Silesia (in comparison to above list without Frydek).Die postalischen Abstempelungen auf den österreichischen Postwertzeichen-Ausgaben 1867, 1883 und 1890, Wilhelm KLEIN, 1967
|
|