Rosina T. Schmidt
By the end of the 19th
century the Osmanen Empire (Turkey) started falling apart. The grip, which they
held on Bosnia and Herzegovina for 400 years, came to an end by 1878 and those two
former Turkish provinces came under Austro-Hungarian administration at the Treaty
of Berlin in that year.
Prior to the change of the administration from
Turkish hands into Austro-Hungarian, back in the year of 1869 the Trapist monks
from the Eifel Region in Germany established the Maria-Stern monastery in the
Verbas valley under the leadership of Franz Pfanner. Through the ravages of 400
years of Turkish occupation it was almost an empty land with a few Croat, Serb and
Muslim localities. After the change of the administration those Monks advertised
for German settlers in North-West of Germany, who established the first German
settlement along the road between Bosanska Gradischka on the Sava River and Banja
Luka, which is in the center of Bosnia. They called the settlement WINDHORST,
after a politician of those times. The name changed during the Yugoslavian times
to NOVA PALANKA and was changed back again into WINDTHORT after the fall of
Yugoslavia in 1992.
The settlement of RUDOLFSTAL
was also established a year later, along the same road with the settlers from
Silesia, Hanover and Oldenburg areas of Germany.
Both Windhort and Rudolfstal
were established on private lands with private initiatives.
In 1885 the first Danube
Swabian settlers from Fanzfeld in the Banat established BIJELINA, and a year later
91 Donauschwaben Lutheran families from Franzfeld established the daughter
settlement of FRANZ-JOSEFSFELD. All the newcomers so far purchased their own
fields and homes.
Having observed the good
progress of those fully private settlements, the Austrian administration decided a
decade later to follow the same settlement principles as when settling Banat 150
years earlier.
The new settlements were
preplanned, with each family receiving 10-12 hectares of newly cleared land. The
prospective settlers had to prove that they also had other skills besides farming,
had exemplary life styles and needed 1,200 Kronen of cash to start with.
The lease was free for three
years. By the forth year the lease started at 1 Kronen for the homestead. After 10
years occupation it would be owned outright by the occupant.
The villages were established
in the groups of 30 families all over the Bosnia with hardly any roads connecting
them to each other. Branjevo on the Drina and Brezovopolje on the Sava were
established by the Lutheran Batschka Schwabians, but both villages were not
successful and were abandoned after WWI. Others thrived, like Königsfeld/Dubrava,
Troschelje and Karlsdorf/Karadjordjevo, Prorara and Vranovac.
Bosnia was annexed with
Austro-Hungary in 1908. The European Powers, Germany, Russia, and Austro-Hungary
approved it in a tug-of-war, in order to forestall the expansion hopes of Croatia
and Serbia. Croatia and Serbia both wanted to expand their own territory with
Serbia hoping to achieve their old dream of a Greater Serbian State.

Western Balkans 1911, by William R. Shephard,
Historical Atlas.
After the annexation, German
industrialists were quick to move into the area and established many logging camps
and saw mills, wood based factories, as well as mining industry. With them the
factory workers arrived too and more settlements quickly grew around those
employment centers.
By 1941 thirty of these newly
established places had German speaking schools, some private, some public.
However, it was pioneer time
all over. Just like their Danube Swabian ancestors pioneered first in the Swabian
Turkey, Banat and Batschka in the beginning of the 18th century, later
expanding to Syrmien and Slavonia and 200 years later their descendants became
pioneers all over again, now in Bosnia.
Ethnic German Settlements in Bosnia
Place Names |
Origin |
Establishment Year |
Ethnic Germans in
1931 Census |
Bosanski Brod, Mixed
Population |
|
|
287 |
Branjevo/Dugopolje |
Batschka, Hungary |
1891 |
112 |
Bijelina and Brcko |
|
|
287 |
Bozinci next to Derventa |
Batschka, Syrmien |
1904 |
858 |
Doboj |
|
1900 |
221 |
Franz-Ferdinandshöhe |
Galicia, Syrmien |
1898 |
106 |
Franz-Josefsfeld, (Schönborn-Petrovopolje) |
Batschka, Syrmien |
1886 |
1139 |
Jajce, mixed population |
|
1890 |
113 |
Kalenderovci –turski |
Galicia, Russia |
|
39 |
Königsfeld/Dubrava |
Galicia, Syrmien, Slavonia |
1894 |
387 |
Koratsche next to Derventa |
Galicia, Russia |
1894 |
47 |
Kardar/Vrbovac/Svilaj |
Galicia, Slavonia |
1896 |
235 |
Lukavac next to Tuzla |
|
1894 |
175 |
Obsiecko/Vrbanja |
Galicia, Bukowina |
|
Moved to Sitnes after 1918 |
Podgarci |
|
1900 |
150 |
Polje next to Derventa |
|
1900 |
92 |
Prnjavor, County seat |
|
1900 |
91 |
Prosara/Hohenberg |
Galicia, Bukovina |
1894 |
150 |
Rudolfstal/Alexndrovac |
Hannover, Oldenburg |
1880 |
620 |
Sarajevo, Capital City,
mixed population |
|
1878 |
2800 |
Schibowska/Sibovska |
Galicia, Bukovina |
1899 |
629 |
Schutzberg/Glogovac |
Galicia, Bukovina |
1895 |
1000 |
Sitneš-Zusiedlungsort |
Galicia, Bukovina |
1912 |
244 |
Teslitsch/Teslic |
|
1900 |
324 |
Travnik and Turbe |
|
1900 |
180 |
Troschelje/Troselje |
Galicia, Bukovina |
1892 |
184 |
Tuzla, Conty Seat, mixed
population |
|
1900 |
500 |
Vranovac next to Dubica |
Galicia, Bukovina |
|
150 |
Vrbaška/Karlsdorf |
Galicia, Bukovina |
1894 |
173 |
Zavidovitschi |
|
1893 |
346 |
Zenica and Zepce |
|
1893 |
432 |
Windhorst/Nova Topola |
Hannover, Westfalen |
1879 |
1435 |
The time of peace was running
out. WWI (1914-1918) slowed down the progress of those settlements.
Austro-Hungarian administration was busy with other demands and the settlers in
Bosnia felt rightfully forgotten.
After the division of
Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1918, Austro-Hungary was divided on eight different
states. Bosnia and Herzegovina ended up part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and
Slovenes. Our Bosnia-Donauschwaben felt completely isolated and disadvantaged
under the nationalist movements between the Serbs and the Croats and the envious
hostilities towards them increased dramatically.
By 1942 it was evident that the
ethnic German population in Bosnia had to be evacuated. Even though quite a large
percentage of the Bosnian Donauschwaben came originally from Austria directly,
Austria did not accept them back.
Instead the German government
made an agreement with the newly formed Yugoslavia that each settler will be
compensated for the assets, which they would live behind. In turn Germany promised
to resettle the Bosnia-Donauschwaben people in German Reich.
Some 17,360 Bosnia-Danube
Swabians arrived on 31st of December 1942 in Litzmannstadt (now
Poland), where refugee camps were established. They automatically became German
citizens. Of those 57,9% were Roman Catholic, 41.4% were Lutheran and Reformed,
and .07% belonged to other religions.
All older boys and men were to
report voluntarily to the Waffen-SS immediately. Males who refused to volunteer
were put under emotional pressure.
The German administration
intended to resettle those Bosnia-Danube Swabians along the newly formed boarder
with the Soviet Union as Soldier-Farmers, copying the very same idea, which
Austrian Emperor Carl VII used in the Military Zone some 250 year earlier. Quite a
few of the Bosnia-Donauschwaben took possession of farms there, but as we know
within a year, the winds of war forced them to be on the run again.
This times each family at its
own initiative and expense. Since all of them already had German citizenship, most
who survived the WWII war atrocities settled in Germany after the war.
Today they live in over 400
places all over Europe and the Americas.
Bibliography
Taylor, A.J.P., 1942, The
Habsburg Monarchy. Leipzig, S. Hirzel Verlag, 1942
Hoffmann, Fritz. 1982, Das
Schicksal der Bosniendeutschen in 100 Jahren von 1878 – 1978. Göppingen, O.
Hartmann-Verlag,