Волоські статути (Ukrainian Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Волоські статути" in Ukrainian language version.

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archive.org

  • Nicholas J. Miller (1998). Between Nation and State: Serbian Politics in Croatia Before the First World War. University of Pittsburgh Press. с. 5.
  • Aleksa Djilas (1991). The Contested Country: Yugoslav Unity and Communist Revolution, 1919-1953. Harvard University Press. с. 210. ISBN 978-0-674-16698-1. While no South Slav group was without some Vlach ingredient, there is no evidence that all or most Serbs in Croatia were of Vlach origin. The thesis that Croatian Serbs were "Vlasi" occurred regularly in Ustasha propaganda — without any serious evidence to support it.

books.google.com

  • Lampe та Jackson, 1982, с. 62. Lampe, John R.; Jackson, Marvin R. (1982). Balkan Economic History, 1550-1950: From Imperial Borderlands to Developing Nations. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-30368-0. Архів оригіналу за 7 березня 2021. Процитовано 31 травня 2020.
  • B. Fowkes (6 березня 2002). Ethnicity and Ethnic Conflict in the Post-Communist World. Palgrave Macmillan UK. с. 12. ISBN 978-1-4039-1430-9. Архів оригіналу за 26 травня 2022. Процитовано 31 травня 2020. ... but in fact the name was also applied to Slavs who shared the same pastoral, nomadic life as the Romanian shepherds. The Orthodox refugees who settled on the border (krajina) between Habsburg and Ottoman territory, and who are in part the ancestors of the Krajina Serbs who lived in Croatia until driven out recently, were also described officially as Vlachs and given privileged military status under that name (the Habsburg ruler Ferdinand II issued a 'Statute of the Vlachs' for them in 1630). To apply the term Vlach to someone, therefore, was to say that they were either nomads or free peasant-soldiers. It did not imply a definitive conclusion about their ethnic group.
  • Lampe та Jackson, 1982, с. 62
    In 1630 the Habsburg Emperor signed the Statuta Valachorum, or Vlach Statutes (Serbs and other Balkan Orthodox peoples were often called Vlachs). They recognized formally the growing practice of awarding such refugee families a free grant of crown land to farm communally as their zad- ruga. In return all male members over sixteen were obliged to do military service. The further guarantees of religious freedom and of no feudal obligations made the Orthodox Serbs valuable allies for the monarchy in its seventeenth-century struggle ...
    Lampe, John R.; Jackson, Marvin R. (1982). Balkan Economic History, 1550-1950: From Imperial Borderlands to Developing Nations. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-30368-0. Архів оригіналу за 7 березня 2021. Процитовано 31 травня 2020.
  • Béla K. Király; Gunther Erich Rothenberg (1979). Special Topics and Generalizations on the 18th and 19th Centuries. Brooklyn College Press. с. 301. ISBN 978-0-930888-04-6. Архів оригіналу за 16 вересня 2021. Процитовано 31 травня 2020. After Ferdinand II issued the Statuta Vlachorum on October 5, 1630,51 the first broad privileges for Vlachs (Serbs) in the Varazdin region, the Vienna Court tried to remove the Military Frontier from civil jurisdiction. The Statuta defined the rights and obligations of frontiersmen and provided the first formal administrative organization for the Military Frontier, which was now detached from Croatia. ... The term Vlach was often used interchangeably with Serb because the latter, too, were mostly a pastoral people.
  • Trbovich, 2008, с. 190
    This also explains why extremist Croat nationalism is both reflected and rooted in the attempted revision of history. The Croats have always resented the rights granted to Serbs in Croatia, and most especially Krayina's historic separate existence. Croat historians have claimed that Krayina's settlers were not Serbs but “Vlachs,”81 [footnote:] While all Orthodox settlers were indeed called Vlachs by the Habsburg authorities, and some truly were Vlachs and different from the Serbs, the majority were Serbian and even the Vlachs assimilated into Serbs by the nineteenth century. As Nicholas Miller explains, “the term Vlach became a weapon in the war to devalue Serbian claims to territory and history in Croatia.”
    Trbovich, Ana S. (2008). A Legal Geography of Yugoslavia's Disintegration. Oxford University Press, USA. ISBN 978-0-19-533343-5. Архів оригіналу за 8 жовтня 2021. Процитовано 31 травня 2020. (хор.)

civitas.rs

matica.hr

srce.hr

hrcak.srce.hr

  • Škiljan, Filip (2014). Identitet Srba u Hrvatskoj. Хорватський політологічний огляд. Загреб. 51 (2): 119. Архів оригіналу за 29 жовтня 2020. Процитовано 31 травня 2020.

web.archive.org

  • Kršev, 2011, с. 147. Kršev, Boris N. (2011). STATUTA VALACHORUM – Pravna osnova nastanka Vojne granice - Krajine (PDF). Civitas (серб.). Novi Sad: Fakultet za pravne i poslovne studije (2). Архів оригіналу (PDF) за 27 грудня 2020. Процитовано 31 травня 2020.
  • Lampe та Jackson, 1982, с. 62. Lampe, John R.; Jackson, Marvin R. (1982). Balkan Economic History, 1550-1950: From Imperial Borderlands to Developing Nations. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-30368-0. Архів оригіналу за 7 березня 2021. Процитовано 31 травня 2020.
  • Škiljan, Filip (2014). Identitet Srba u Hrvatskoj. Хорватський політологічний огляд. Загреб. 51 (2): 119. Архів оригіналу за 29 жовтня 2020. Процитовано 31 травня 2020.
  • Neven Budak, Habsburzi i Hrvati [Архівовано 27 жовтня 2020 у Wayback Machine.], Kolo 3, 2002. (хор.)
  • B. Fowkes (6 березня 2002). Ethnicity and Ethnic Conflict in the Post-Communist World. Palgrave Macmillan UK. с. 12. ISBN 978-1-4039-1430-9. Архів оригіналу за 26 травня 2022. Процитовано 31 травня 2020. ... but in fact the name was also applied to Slavs who shared the same pastoral, nomadic life as the Romanian shepherds. The Orthodox refugees who settled on the border (krajina) between Habsburg and Ottoman territory, and who are in part the ancestors of the Krajina Serbs who lived in Croatia until driven out recently, were also described officially as Vlachs and given privileged military status under that name (the Habsburg ruler Ferdinand II issued a 'Statute of the Vlachs' for them in 1630). To apply the term Vlach to someone, therefore, was to say that they were either nomads or free peasant-soldiers. It did not imply a definitive conclusion about their ethnic group.
  • Lampe та Jackson, 1982, с. 62
    In 1630 the Habsburg Emperor signed the Statuta Valachorum, or Vlach Statutes (Serbs and other Balkan Orthodox peoples were often called Vlachs). They recognized formally the growing practice of awarding such refugee families a free grant of crown land to farm communally as their zad- ruga. In return all male members over sixteen were obliged to do military service. The further guarantees of religious freedom and of no feudal obligations made the Orthodox Serbs valuable allies for the monarchy in its seventeenth-century struggle ...
    Lampe, John R.; Jackson, Marvin R. (1982). Balkan Economic History, 1550-1950: From Imperial Borderlands to Developing Nations. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-30368-0. Архів оригіналу за 7 березня 2021. Процитовано 31 травня 2020.
  • Béla K. Király; Gunther Erich Rothenberg (1979). Special Topics and Generalizations on the 18th and 19th Centuries. Brooklyn College Press. с. 301. ISBN 978-0-930888-04-6. Архів оригіналу за 16 вересня 2021. Процитовано 31 травня 2020. After Ferdinand II issued the Statuta Vlachorum on October 5, 1630,51 the first broad privileges for Vlachs (Serbs) in the Varazdin region, the Vienna Court tried to remove the Military Frontier from civil jurisdiction. The Statuta defined the rights and obligations of frontiersmen and provided the first formal administrative organization for the Military Frontier, which was now detached from Croatia. ... The term Vlach was often used interchangeably with Serb because the latter, too, were mostly a pastoral people.
  • Trbovich, 2008, с. 190
    This also explains why extremist Croat nationalism is both reflected and rooted in the attempted revision of history. The Croats have always resented the rights granted to Serbs in Croatia, and most especially Krayina's historic separate existence. Croat historians have claimed that Krayina's settlers were not Serbs but “Vlachs,”81 [footnote:] While all Orthodox settlers were indeed called Vlachs by the Habsburg authorities, and some truly were Vlachs and different from the Serbs, the majority were Serbian and even the Vlachs assimilated into Serbs by the nineteenth century. As Nicholas Miller explains, “the term Vlach became a weapon in the war to devalue Serbian claims to territory and history in Croatia.”
    Trbovich, Ana S. (2008). A Legal Geography of Yugoslavia's Disintegration. Oxford University Press, USA. ISBN 978-0-19-533343-5. Архів оригіналу за 8 жовтня 2021. Процитовано 31 травня 2020. (хор.)