Bleiburg
Template:Infobox Town AT Bleiburg (Template:Lang-sl) is a small town in the south Austrian state of Carinthia (Koroška), south-east of Klagenfurt, in the district of Völkermarkt, some four kilometres (2.5 miles) from the border with Slovenia.
The municipality consists of the twelve Katastralgemeinden Aich (Dob), Bleiburg, Grablach (Grablje), Kömmel (Komelj), Moos (Blato), Oberloibach (Libuče), Rinkenberg (Vogrče), Sankt Margarethen (Šmarjeta), Schattenberg (Senčni kraj), Unterloibach (Libuče), Weißenstein (Belšak) and Woroujach (Borovje). According to a 2001 census, 30.4% of the population are Carinthian Slovenes (in 1971, they were 52.8%).
Geography
The border town is located in the valley of the Feistritz creek, a right tributary of the Drava, north of the Peca massif of the Karavanke mountain range. It is home to a district court, military barracks and to the local productive and services industry. The name of Bleiburg, literally meaning 'Lead Castle', can be attributed to the lead mining operations in the Peca mountain.
History
The area was part of the Liupicdorf estate in the Duchy of Carinthia, which about 1000 Bishop Albuin I of Brixen dedicated to his brother Count Aribo. The oldest surviving document mentioning the town as castrum et forum Pliburch is dated to 1228. The comital estates of Bleiburg Castle were seized by the Habsburg dukes Albert III and Leopold III in 1369, the settlement received town privileges the next year. On 16 March 1393 Duke Albert granted the citizens the right to hold the annual Wiesenmarkt ('meadow market') fair, which has taken place every year up to today at least since 1428 on September 1. In 1601 the castle was ceded to the Thurn-Valsasina comital family, who had it rebuilt in its present Renaissance style.
Between 1918 and 1920, Bleiburg was occupied by Yugoslav troops. In spite of the overwhelming Slovene majority in the area, the town remained in Austria after the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire along national/ethnic lines after the end of World War I. In the Carinthian Plebiscite of 1920, in fact, the inhabitants of southern Carinthia rejected the proposal to unite with the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (the later Yugoslavia), and chose to remain in Austria. In the constituency of Bleiburg, however, a majority of the population cast its vote for Yugoslavia.
Bleiburg repatriations
In May 1945, Bleiburg was the initial location of a series of war crimes, in the course of which Yugoslav Partisans executed thousands of Croatian Home Guard and Ustaše, Slovene Home Guard and Serbian Chetnik troopers, as well as civilians, who had surrendered to the British forces in Allied-occupied Austria, only to be forcibly repatriated in the Operation Keelhaul.[1]
In early September 2004, Austrian media reported that the Croatian government had decided to purchase a plot of land near Bleiburg in order to erect a monument to commemorate the massacre, which sparked some minor political controversy in Austria.
Town sign controversy
Bleiburg/Pliberk became famous in Austrian and Slovenian media in the years 2005 and 2007, due to a long controversy over the erection of a bilingual place name. The controversy was part of a decade-long Carinthian "place sign struggle" (Ortstafelstreit, Template:Lang-sl) between representatives of the Carinthian Slovenes and right-wing politicians of the German-speaking mainstream society.
In December 2005, the Constitutional Court of Austria ruled that the topographic sign at the entrance to the town of Bleiburg was unconstitutional, since it was written only in German, and ordered the erection of a bilingual, German-Slovene sign.[2] In February 2006, the Carinthian governor Jörg Haider made a great stir by personally moving the German sign for a few meters, hoping to create a new legal situation that would require a new decision of the Constitutional Court.[3]
However, already in March 2006, the district commissioner of Völkermarkt issued an official ordinance, enforcing the erection of a bilingual sign in accordance to the decision of the Court.[2] Nevertheless Governor Jörg Haider refused to carry out the ordinance, further fanning the controversy's flames. In August of the same year, Haider personally added a small plaque with the Slovene name of the town (Pliberk) under the German one. In December 2006, the Austrian Constitutional Court declared such action illegal, reiterating its decision that proper bilingual signs should be erected.
In February 2007, the Carinthian Regional Prosecution started a legal procedure against Governor Haider and his deputy Gerhard Dörfler for official misconduct in the case of the Bleiburg place sign.[4] Investigations were scrapped after the governor had died in a traffic accident on 11 October 2008. Upon another verdict by the Constitutional Court on 9 July 2010, proper bilingual signs were finally erected at the behest of Haider's successor Gerhard Dörfler.
Gallery
-
Bleiburg, church
-
Bleiburg, view to a street with another church
-
Einersdorf, church
-
Aich. chapel
Politics
Seats in the municipal council (elections as of 2003):
- Austrian People's Party: 9
- Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ): 8
- Enotna Lista: 5
- Freedom Party of Austria: 1
The mayor of Bleiburg is Stefan Visotschnig from SPÖ and a member of the local Slovene minority.[5]
Notable people
- Kiki Kogelnik, artist, born January 22, 1935 in Bleiburg, died February 1, 1997 in Vienna
- Anton Webern, composer, spent Easter and summer vacations at his family's estate called Preglhof, in the countryside near Bleiburg, until 1912
References
- ^ Yugoslavia, Manipulations with the Number of Second World War Victims - Vladimir Zerjavic
- ^ a b http://24ur.com/novice/slovenija/pliberk-bleiburg-ali-oboje.html
- ^ http://kaernten.orf.at/stories/88204/
- ^ http://www.demokracija.si/index.php?sekcija=clanki&clanek=10007
- ^ http://www.siol.net/slovenija/novice/2009/03/enotna_lista_na_avstrijskem_koroskem_prvic_osvojila_mesto_zupana.aspx