Jump to content

Carniola: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
CalJW (talk | contribs)
cat
added picture of the coat of arms
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Carniola''' (Slovenian ''Kranjska'', German ''Krain'') was a region in [[Slovenia]].
'''Carniola''' (Slovenian ''Kranjska'', German ''Krain'') was a region in [[Slovenia]]. [[Image:Carniola 350h.jpg|frame|Coat Of Arms of Carniola]]


Carniola formed part of the [[Ancient Rome|Roman]] province of [[Pannonia]]. Later [[Langobard]]s settled in the area, followed by [[Slovenians]] (around the [[6th century]]). Following periods of Bavarian, Frankish and local rule, the [[Austrian]] [[Habsburg|Habsburgs]] controlled the territory almost continuously from ([[1335]] to [[1918]]), but many [[Turks|Turkish]] raids and peasant rebellions occurred ([[15th century|15th]] - [[17th century|17th centuries]]). From about 900 until the 20th century the ruling classes spoke German.
Carniola formed part of the [[Ancient Rome|Roman]] province of [[Pannonia]]. Later [[Langobard]]s settled in the area, followed by [[Slovenians]] (around the [[6th century]]). Following periods of Bavarian, Frankish and local rule, the [[Austrian]] [[Habsburg|Habsburgs]] controlled the territory almost continuously from ([[1335]] to [[1918]]), but many [[Turks|Turkish]] raids and peasant rebellions occurred ([[15th century|15th]] - [[17th century|17th centuries]]). From about 900 until the 20th century the ruling classes spoke German.

Revision as of 23:13, 28 November 2005

Carniola (Slovenian Kranjska, German Krain) was a region in Slovenia.

File:Carniola 350h.jpg
Coat Of Arms of Carniola

Carniola formed part of the Roman province of Pannonia. Later Langobards settled in the area, followed by Slovenians (around the 6th century). Following periods of Bavarian, Frankish and local rule, the Austrian Habsburgs controlled the territory almost continuously from (1335 to 1918), but many Turkish raids and peasant rebellions occurred (15th - 17th centuries). From about 900 until the 20th century the ruling classes spoke German.

Carniola became part of the Illyrian provinces of France (1809 - 1814). Austria-Hungary re-organized the territory in (1849).

The capital of Carniola, originally situated at Kranj, later moved to Ljubljana. The province ceased to exist in 1918, when it became part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes.