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Burgenland (German pronunciation: [ˈbʊʁɡn̩lant] ; Hungarian: Őrvidék; Croatian: Gradišće; Austro-Bavarian: Burgnland; Slovene: Gradiščanska; Slovak: Hradsko) is the easternmost and least populous state of Austria. It consists of two statutory cities and seven rural districts, with a total of 171 municipalities. It is 166 km (103 mi) long from north to south but much narrower from west to east (5 km (3.1 mi) wide at Sieggraben). The region is part of the Centrope Project. The name of Burgenland was invented/coined in 1922, after its territories became part of Austria. The population of Burgenland as of 1 January 2024 is 301,951. Burgenland's capital is Eisenstadt.
Burgenland | |
---|---|
State | |
![]() Flag ![]() Coat of arms | |
Anthem: "Mein Heimatvolk, mein Heimatland" | |
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Country | |
Capital | Eisenstadt |
Government | |
• Body | Landtag Burgenland |
• Governor | Hans Peter Doskozil (SPÖ) |
Area | |
• Total | 3,680 km2 (1,420 sq mi) |
Population (2023) | |
• Total | 301,250 |
• Density | 82/km2 (210/sq mi) |
GDP | |
• Total | €9.498 billion (2021) |
• Per capita | €32,000 (2021) |
Time zone | UTC+1 (CET) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC+2 (CEST) |
ISO 3166 code | AT-1 |
HDI (2022) | 0.890 very high · 9th of 9 |
NUTS Region | AT1 |
Votes in Bundesrat | 3 (of 62) |
Website | www |
History
The territory of present-day Burgenland was successively part of the Roman Empire, the Hun Empire, the Kingdom of the Ostrogoths, the Italian Kingdom of Odoacer, the Kingdom of the Lombards, the Avar Khaganate, the Frankish Empire, Dominion Aba belonging to the Aba (family); Aba – Koszegi, the Kingdom of Hungary, the Habsburg monarchy, the Austrian Empire, Austria-Hungary, and lastly Austria.
Burgenland is the only Austrian province which has never been part of the Archduchy of Austria, Holy Roman Empire, German Confederation nor Austria-Hungary's Cisleithania.
Prehistory and antiquity
From the 4th century BC, the area was dominated by Celts and in the 1st century AD it became part of the Roman Empire. During Roman administration, it was part of the province of Pannonia, and later part of the provinces of Pannonia Superior (in the 2nd century) and Pannonia Prima (in the 3rd century). During the late Roman Empire, Pannonia Prima province was part of larger administrative units, such are Diocese of Pannonia, Praetorian prefecture of Illyricum and Praetorian prefecture of Italy.
Early Germanic states
The first Germanic people to settle in this region were the Ostrogoths, who came to Pannonia in AD 380. The Ostrogoths became allies of Rome and were allowed to settle in Pannonia, being tasked to defend the Roman borders. In the 5th century, the area was conquered by the Huns, but after their defeat, an independent Kingdom of the Ostrogoths in Pannonia was formed. The territory of present-day Burgenland became part of the Italian Kingdom of Odoacer, but at the end of the 5th century the Ostrogothic king Theodoric conquered this kingdom and restored Ostrogothic administration in western Pannonia.
In the 6th century, the territory was included in another Germanic state, the Kingdom of the Lombards. However, the Lombards subsequently left towards Italy and the area came under the control of the Avars. For a brief period in the 7th century, the area became part of the Slavic State of Samo, however it subsequently came back under Avar control. After the Avar defeat at the end of the 8th century, the area became part of the Frankish Empire. After the Battle of Lechfeld (or Augsburg) in 955, new Germanic settlers came to the area.
Medieval Kingdom of Hungary
In 1043, Henry III and King Samuel Aba of Hungary signed a peace treaty. On 20 September 1058, Agnes of Poitou and Andrew I of Hungary met to negotiate the border. The area of Burgenland remained the western frontier of the medieval Kingdom of Hungary until the 16th century.
The majority of the population was Germanic, except for the Hungarian border guards of the frontier March (Gyepű). Germanic immigration from neighbouring Austria was also continuous in the Middle Ages.
Habsburg administration
In 1440 the territory of present-day Burgenland was controlled by the Habsburgs of Austria, and in 1463 the northern part of it (with the town of Kőszeg) became a mortgage-territory according to the peace treaty of Wiener Neustadt. In 1477 King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary had retaken the area, but in 1491 it was mortgaged again by King Vladislaus II of Bohemia and Hungary to Emperor Maximilian I. In 1647 Emperor Ferdinand II returned it to the Kingdom of Hungary (which itself was a Habsburg possession in this time).
In the 16th century, the medieval Kingdom of Hungary lost its independence and its northwestern part that was not conquered by the Ottoman Empire was included in the Habsburg Empire. This Habsburg possession was known as Royal Hungary and it included territory of present-day Burgenland and western Hungary. Royal Hungary still had counties. What is today Burgenland was in those times the Moson, Sopron and Vas counties of Hungary.
In the 16th and 17th centuries German Protestant refugees arrived in Western Royal Hungary to shelter from the religious wars of the Holy Roman Empire, particularly from the suppression of the Reformation in Austrian territories, then ruled by the staunchly Roman Catholic Habsburgs. After the Habsburg military victory against the Ottomans at the end of the 17th century, the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary was enlarged to include much of the territory of the former medieval Kingdom of Hungary. In the 17th and 18th centuries the region of Western Hungary was dominated by the wealthy Catholic landowning families, for example the Esterházys and Batthyánys. In 1867, the Habsburg Empire was transformed into the dual monarchy of Austria-Hungary.
Dissolution of Austria-Hungary
According to the 1910 census 291,800 people lived on the territory of present-day Burgenland. Among them 217,072 were German-speaking (74%), 43,633 Croatian-speaking (15%) and 26,225 (9%) Hungarian-speaking. Roma people were counted according to their native language.
In December 1918, the Republic of Heinzenland was declared by Austrian politician with the goal of the territory being annexed by Austria. However, it was taken over within two days by Hungary.
From March to August 1919, Burgenland was part of the Hungarian Soviet Republic.
The area had also been discussed as the site of a Czech Corridor to Yugoslavia. The decision on "German West Hungary" (Deutsch-Westungarn) was fixed in the treaties of Saint Germain and Trianon. Despite diplomatic efforts by Hungary, the victorious parties of World War I set the date of Burgenland's official unification with Austria for 28 August 1921. However, on that day sharpshooters with the support of Hungary prevented the establishment of Austrian police control and customs. Lieutenant Colonel Pál Prónay and his men, the Rongyos Gárda, defended western Hungary from occupation by Austrian officials and forces of the Austrian Gendarmerie. Prónay had help from Hungarians and Croatians who did not want to live under Austrian rule, leading to the Uprising in West Hungary in 1921. Prónay occupied the whole area and created the state of Lajtabánság.
Ninth Austrian province
With the help of Italian diplomatic mediation in the , the crisis was resolved in the autumn of 1921, when Hungary committed to disarm the sharpshooters by 6 November 1921. This was in exchange for a plebiscite on the unification of certain territories, including Ödenburg (Sopron), the designated capital of Burgenland, and eight surrounding villages. The vote took place from 14 to 16 December, and resulted in a clear (but doubted by Austria)[citation needed] vote of the people who inhabited the Sopron district to be part of Hungary. Consequently, the territory was incorporated into Austria, except for the Sopron district which was united with Hungary.
Further border adjustments were made in 1922 by the League of Nations border committee. After their decision was approved on 17 September, 10 Settlements were returned to Hungary. That included 8 settlements in the Pinka valley: Kisnarda, Nagynarda, Felsőcsatár, Alsócsatár, Németkeresztes, Magyarkeresztes, Horvátlövő and Pornóapáti, as well as Rendek (Liebing) and Rőtfalva (Rattersdorf) north of Kőszeg. The latter two was handed back to Austria in a swap agreement on 22 November in exchange for Szentpéterfa and Ólmod.
In contrast to all the other present Austrian states, which had been part of Cisleithania, Burgenland did not constitute a specific Kronland, and when it was formed it did not have its own regional political and administrative institutions such as a Landtag (representative assembly) and Statthalter (imperial governor).
On 18 July 1922, the first elections for the parliament of Burgenland took place. Various interim arrangements were required due to the changeover from Hungarian to Austrian jurisdiction. The parliament decided in 1925 on Eisenstadt as the capital of Burgenland, and moved from the various provisional estates throughout the country to the newly built Landhaus in 1929.
The first Austrian census in 1923 registered 285,600 people in Burgenland. The ethnic composition of the province had changed slightly: the percentage of German speakers increased compared to 1910 (227,869 people, 80%) while the percentage of Hungarian speakers rapidly declined (14,931 people, 5%). This was due mainly to the emigration of the Hungarian civil servants and intellectuals after the territory was ceded to Austria.
In 1923, emigration to the United States of America, which started in the late 19th century, reached its climax; in some places up to a quarter of the population went overseas.
After the Nazi German Anschluss of Austria, the administrative unit of Burgenland was dissolved. Northern and central Burgenland joined the district of Niederdonau (Lower Danube) while southern Burgenland joined Styria.[citation needed] The Jews of Burgenland were forced to emigrate in the immediate aftermath of the Anschluss.
The policy of Germanization also affected other minorities, especially Burgenland Croats and Hungarians. Minority schools were closed and the use of their native language discouraged.
In 1944, the Nazis began to build the Südostwall (South-east wall) with the help of mostly Jewish forced labor and collaborating inhabitants. Soviet troops crossed the Hungarian–Austrian border during the Vienna offensive and were only somewhat delayed by the unfinished fortifications. In the last days of the Nazi regime many executions and death marches of Jewish forced laborers took place.
Occupation
As of 1 October 1945 Burgenland was reestablished with Soviet support and given to the Soviet forces in exchange for Styria, which was in turn occupied by the United Kingdom.
Under Soviet occupation, people in Burgenland had to endure a period of serious mistreatment and an extremely slow economic progress, the latter induced by the presence of Soviet troops which discouraged investment. The Soviet occupation ended with the signing of the Austrian Independence Treaty of Vienna in 1955 by the Occupying Forces.
The brutally crushed Hungarian Revolution on 23 October 1956 resulted in a wave of Hungarian refugees on the Hungarian-Austrian border, especially at the Andau Bridge (Brücke von Andau). They were received by the inhabitants of Burgenland with overwhelming hospitality.
In 1957, the construction of the "anti-Fascist Protective Barrier" resulted in a complete sealing off of the area under Soviet influence from the rest of the world, turning the Hungarian-Austrian border next to Burgenland into a deadly zone of minefields and barbed wire (on the Hungarian side of the border): part of the Iron Curtain. Even during the era of the Iron Curtain, local trains between the north and south of Burgenland operated as "corridor trains" (Korridorzüge) – they had their doors locked as they crossed through Hungarian territory.
Between 1965 and 1971, the minefields were cleared because people were often harmed by them,[citation needed] even on the Austrian side of the border.
Recent history
Despite Burgenland (especially the area around the Neusiedler See) always producing excellent wine, some vintners in Burgenland added illegal substances to their wine in the mid-1980s. When this was revealed, Austria's wine exports dwindled dramatically. After recovering from the scandal, vintners in Austria, and not only in Burgenland, started focusing on quality and mostly stopped producing low-quality wine.[citation needed]
On 27 July 1989, the foreign ministers of Austria and Hungary, Alois Mock and Gyula Horn, cut the Iron Curtain in the village of Klingenbach in a symbolic act with far-reaching consequences. At the same time, the border crossing at Nickelsdorf (Austria) / Hegyeshalom (Hungary) was opened by the Hungarian border patrol and this enabled the escape of East Germans. Directly behind the wires special medic troops of the Austrian Red Cross awaited them and provided first assistance. Thousands of East Germans fled to the West in this way. Again, the inhabitants of Burgenland received them with great hospitality. Later, this was often referred to as the beginning of German reunification.[citation needed]
After 1990 Burgenland regained its traditional role as a bridge between the western and eastern parts of Central Europe. In 2003 it joined an Interreg project Centrope. Cross-border links were further strengthened when Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic joined the European Union in 2004. All three countries became part of the Schengen zone in late 2007, and border controls ceased to exist in the region.
In 2021, Burgenland grew by about 6,000 m2. This was due to the change of flood protection measures along the river Lafnitz, which forms part of the border between Burgenland and Styria, in the late 1970s. As the course of the river changed somewhat along with the change of the flood protection measures, some areas belonging to Styria ended up to the east of the river and some areas belonging to Burgenland ended up to the west of the river. In 2010, it was decided by legislators together with the local councils that the areas to the west of the river would be part of Styria and the areas to the east of the river would be part of Burgenland, reflecting the perceptions and attitudes of the population. This decision was put into law in 2021.
Geography
Burgenland is the third-smallest of Austria's nine states at 3,962 km2 (1,530 sq mi). The province's highest point is exactly on the border with Hungary, on the Geschriebenstein, 884 metres (2,900 ft) above sea level. The highest point entirely within Burgenland is 879 metres above sea level; the lowest point (which is also the lowest point of Austria) at 114 metres (374 ft), is in the municipal area of Apetlon.
Burgenland borders the Austrian states of Styria to the southwest and Lower Austria to the northwest. To the east it borders Hungary (Vas County and Győr-Moson-Sopron County). In the extreme north and south there are short borders with Slovakia (Bratislava Region) and Slovenia (Mura Statistical Region) respectively.
Burgenland and Hungary share the Neusiedler See (Hungarian: Fertő-tó), a lake known for its reeds and shallowness, as well as its mild climate throughout the year. The Neusiedler See is Austria's largest lake. It is a tourist attraction, bringing ornithologists, sailors, and wind and kite surfers into the region north of the lake.
Politics
Burgenland's provincial assembly (Landtag) has 36 seats. At the election held on 26 January 2020, the Social Democratic Party (SPÖ) won an absolute majority of 19 seats, the Austrian People's Party (ÖVP) won 11 seats, the Freedom Party (FPÖ) won 4 seats and the Green Party won 2 seats. The voting age for regional elections in Burgenland was reduced to 16 years in 2003.
Economy
The province's gross domestic product (GDP) was €9 billion in 2018, accounting for 2.3% of Austria's economic output. GDP per capita adjusted for purchasing power was €27,300 or 90% of the EU27 average in the same year. Burgenland is the province with the lowest GDP per capita in Austria.
Administrative divisions
Burgenland consists of nine districts, two statutory cities and seven rural districts. From north to south:
Statutory cities
These combine the attributes of district and city.
- Eisenstadt
- Rust
Rural districts
- Neusiedl am See (administrative center Neusiedl am See)
- Eisenstadt-Umgebung (Eisenstadt)
- Mattersburg (Mattersburg)
- Oberpullendorf (Oberpullendorf)
- Oberwart (Oberwart)
- Güssing (Güssing)
- Jennersdorf (Jennersdorf)
Demographics
Population development
Year | Pop. | ±% |
---|---|---|
1869 | 254,301 | — |
1880 | 270,090 | +6.2% |
1890 | 282,225 | +4.5% |
1900 | 292,426 | +3.6% |
1910 | 292,007 | −0.1% |
1923 | 285,698 | −2.2% |
1934 | 299,447 | +4.8% |
1939 | 287,866 | −3.9% |
1951 | 276,136 | −4.1% |
1961 | 271,001 | −1.9% |
1971 | 272,319 | +0.5% |
1981 | 269,771 | −0.9% |
1991 | 270,880 | +0.4% |
2001 | 277,569 | +2.5% |
2011 | 285,685 | +2.9% |
2021 | 297,506 | +4.1% |
Source: Censuses |
The historical population is given in the following chart:

Minorities
Burgenland has notable Croatian (130,000) and Hungarian (5,000–15,000) populations.[citation needed] Croats number 30,000.
Croats
The Croats arrived after the devastating Ottoman war in 1532, when the Ottoman army destroyed some settlements in their ethnic territory. The emigration in great haste of the remaining Catholic population of western Slavonia into Burgenland was – as far as possible – organized by estate owners. The archives of the Sabor (the Croatian parliament) from this period contain numerous references to such resettlements. As reported in the spring of 1538 by the Ban of Croatia, Petar Keglević, who himself owned large estates in western Slavonia, that the country's population at the Ottoman border was preparing to emigrate. Their resettlement by estate owners was finished only in 1584. They have preserved their strong Catholic faith and their language until today, and in the 19th century their national identity grew stronger because of the influence of the National Revival in Croatia. Between 1918 and 1921 Croats opposed the planned annexation of West-Hungary to Austria, and in 1923 seven Croatian villages voted for a return to Hungary. The Croatian Cultural Association of Burgenland was established in 1934. In the Nazi era (1938–45) the Croatian language was officially prohibited, and the state pursued an aggressive policy of Germanization. The Austrian State Treaty of 1955 guaranteed minority rights for every native ethnic minority in Austria but Croats had to fight for the use of their language in schools and offices even in the 1960s and 1970s. In 2000 51 new bilingual village name signs were erected in Burgenland (47 Croatian and 4 Hungarian).
The Burgenland Croatian language is a 16th-century dialect which is different from standard Croatian. In minority schools and media the local dialect is used, and it has had a written form since the 17th century (the Gospel was first translated to this dialect in 1711). Today the language is endangered by assimilation, according to the UNESCO's Red Book of Endangered Languages. The Croats of Burgenland belong to the same group as their relatives on the other side of the modern-day border with Hungary.
Hungarians
Hungarians live in the villages of Oberwart/Felsőőr, Unterwart/Alsóőr and Siget in der Wart/Őrisziget. The three villages together are called Upper Őrség (Hun: Felső-Őrség, German: Wart), and they have formed a language island since the 11th century. The other old Hungarian language island in Oberpullendorf/Felsőpulya has almost disappeared today. The Hungarians of Burgenland were "őrök", i.e. guards of the western frontier, and their special dialect is similar to the Székelys in Transylvania. Their cultural centre is Oberwart/Felsőőr. Another distinct Hungarian group were the indentured agricultural workers living on the huge estates north of Neusiedler See. They arrived mainly from the region. After the dissolution of the manors in the mid-20th century this group ceased to exist.
Roma and Jews
In addition to Germans, Croats and Hungarians, Burgenland used to have substantial Roma and Jewish populations, but these were wiped out by the Nazi regime. Before their deportation during 1938, the traditionally very religious Burgenland Jews were concentrated in the famous "Seven Communities" (Siebengemeinden/Sheva kehillot) in Eisenstadt, Mattersburg, Kittsee, Frauenkirchen, Kobersdorf, Lackenbach and Deutschkreutz, where they formed a substantial part of the population: e.g. in Lackenbach, 62% of the population was Jewish as of 1869. After the war, Jews from Burgenland founded the Jerusalem haredi neighbourhood of Kiryat Mattersdorf, reminding of the original name of Mattersburg, once a centre of a famous yeshiva.
Religion
According to 2021 figures of Statistics Austria, Burgenland's population is mostly Christian (80.3%), with the highest proportion of Protestants in Austria (11.4%). 65.5% of the population are Roman Catholic, and further 3.4% are adherents of other Christian denominations (mostly Orthodox Christians). Islam is practiced by 2.2%, while 0.7% profess another religion. 16.8% of Burgenland's inhabitants profess no affiliation with any religion or denomination.
Names
In Slovak, Burgendland is known as Hradsko; in Croatian as Gradišće; in Hungarian as Őrvidék, Felsőőrvidék or Várvidék; in Slovene as Gradiščanska.
As the region was not a territorial entity before 1921, it never had an official name. Until the end of World War I the German-speaking western borderland of the Kingdom of Hungary was sometimes unofficially called Deutsch-Westungarn (German West Hungary). The historical region included the border city of Sopron in Hungary (known as Ödenburg in German).
The name Vierburgenland (Land of Four Castles) was created in 1919 by Odo Rötig, a Viennese resident of Sopron. It was derived from the four vármegye of the Kingdom of Hungary (in German Komitaten, 'counties') known in Hungarian as Pozsony, Moson, Sopron and Vas, or in German as Pressburg, Wieselburg, Ödenburg and Eisenburg. After the town of Pozsony/Pressburg (Bratislava) was assigned to Czechoslovakia, the number vier was to be changed to drei (=three), but after it became clear that none of the Burgen would be part of the Burgenland, the number was dropped completely but the name Burgenland was kept because it was deemed to be appropriate for a region with so many old frontier castles. The "Burgenland" name was adopted by the first provincial Landtag in 1922.
In Hungarian the German name is generally accepted but there are three modern alternatives used by minor groups. The Hungarian translation of the German name, "Várvidék", was invented by , an expert of the region in the 1970s, and it is becoming increasingly popular especially in tourist publications. The other two names "Őrvidék" and "Felső-Őrvidék" are derived from the name of the most important old Magyar language island, the Felső-Őrség. This microregion is around the town Felsőőr/Oberwart, so these new names are a bit misleading; however they are sometimes used.
The Croatian and Slovenian names "Gradišće" and "Gradiščansko" are calques of the German name. The village of Jennersdorf is no more than 5 kilometers from the Slovenian and Hungarian borders (see the United Slovenia movement).
Alternatively, the Serbs, Czechs and Slovaks call the western shores of the Neusiedler See, the lake adjoining the town of Rust, Luzic or Lusic. However, the descendants of Luzic Serbs, Bosniaks, Croats, Czechs and Slovaks were eventually assimilated into the ethnic German or Hungarian cultures over four centuries.
The province has a long history of Slavic, as well Austrian-German and Hungarian-Magyar settlement. The province's easternmost portion (the shores of the Neusiedler See) carried its own topographical term Seewinkel in Austrian-German. This is the area least influenced by Austrian-German since the Hungarian and Slovak borders are less than 10 kilometers away.
Symbols
Heraldic description of the coat-of-arms of Burgenland:
- Or, standing upon a rock sable, an eagle regardant, wings displayed gules, langued of the same, crowned and armed of the first, on his breast an escutcheon paly of four, of the third and white fur, fimbriated of the field, and in dexter and sinister cantons two crosslets paty sable.
The arms were introduced in 1922 after the new province was created. They were composed from the arms of the two most important medieval noble families of the region, the counts of and (Mattersdorf-Forchtenstein, eagle on the rock) and the counts of (Güssing, three bars of red and white fur).
The flag of the province shows two stripes of red and gold, the colours of the coat-of-arms. It was officially confirmed in 1971.
Culture
The cultural offerings are diverse and especially in the summer famous for the Seefestspiele Mörbisch and the Nova Rock Festival with numerous international rockbands.
The permanent exhibition at Forchtenstein Castle shows an impressive collection of the dukes of Esterházy, at whose court at Esterházy Palace worked the world-famous musician Joseph Haydn, who composed from the Burgenland Croatian folk-song "V jutro rano se ja stanem" ("In the morning I rise up early") the melody of "Gott erhalte Franz den Kaiser" ("God save Franz the Emperor"), which became the melody of today's national anthem of Germany. There are also cultural events organized by the minorities such as Croatian or Hungarian folk evenings.
The dialect spoken in Burgenland is called Hianzisch.
People from Burgenland tend to be the butt of a joke cycle by people from other regions of Austria, similar to the German East Frisian jokes. These jokes portray people from Burgenland as dumb or slow on the uptake.
Media
Radio
- Radio OP (2009)
References
- "Basisdaten Bundesländer" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2006-10-09. Retrieved 2023-09-01.
- "Sub-national HDI – Area Database – Global Data Lab". hdi.globaldatalab.org. Retrieved 2018-09-13.
- "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original on April 10, 2023. Retrieved July 30, 2023.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - Henry A. Fischer (23 February 2011). Emigrants and Exiles: Book Three, Volume One. Author House. pp. 252–. ISBN 978-1-4567-4365-9.
- Landeschronik Niederösterreich: 3000 Jahre in Daten, Dokumenten und Bildern, Seite 104, Karl Gutkas, C. Brandstätter, 1990.
- Wilfried Marxer (27 February 2012). Direct Democracy and Minorities. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 17–. ISBN 978-3-531-94304-6.
- Leonard V. Smith (2018). Sovereignty at the Paris Peace Conference of 1919. Oxford University Press. pp. 147–. ISBN 978-0-19-967717-7.
- Günter Bischof (12 July 2017). Quiet Invaders Revisited: Biographies of Twentieth Century Immigrants to the United States. StudienVerlag. pp. 126–. ISBN 978-3-7065-5882-2.
- "Határ Ausztriával". trianon100.hu/ (in Hungarian). Retrieved 2025-01-09.
- Zalmon, Milka (2003). "Forced Emigration of the Jews of Burgenland" (PDF). Yad Vashem Studies. XXXI: 287–324. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2005-03-30.
- Linke, Reinhard (2019-06-27). "27. Juni 1989: Ein Foto verändert Europa". noe.ORF.at (in German). Archived from the original on 2019-06-28. Retrieved 2021-08-15.
- "Burgenland ist größer geworden (in German)". burgenland.ORF.at (in German). 2021-08-09. Archived from the original on 2021-08-09. Retrieved 2021-08-15.
- Gunnar Strunz (2012). Burgenland: Natur und Kultur zwischen Neusiedler See und Alpen. Trescher Verlag. ISBN 978-3-89794-221-9.
- "Regional GDP per capita ranged from 30% to 263% of the EU average in 2018". Eurostat. Archived from the original on 2020-04-17.
- "Historic Censuses - STATISTICS AUSTRIA". Statistics Austria.
- "Natuknica" (in Croatian).
- Kölner geographische Arbeiten, Ausgaben 15–18, Seite 69, Geographisches Institut der Universität zu Köln, 1963
- "Lackenbach History". JewishGen KehilaLinks. Archived from the original on October 1, 2024. Retrieved October 1, 2024.
- "Bevölkerung 2021 nach ausgewählter Religion bzw. Kirche und Religionsgesellschaft und Bundesland" (ODS) (in German). Statistics Austria. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
- "Von den "vier Burgen" blieb nur eine". Die Presse (in German). 2011-11-11. Archived from the original on 2021-01-12. Retrieved 2021-08-15.
- "Címerhatározó/Burgenland címere – Wikikönyvek". hu.wikibooks.org.
- Slavonic and East European review, Volume 34, page 2, University of London. School of Slavonic and East European Studies, Committee of American Scholars, Sir Bernard Pares, Robert William Seton-Watson, Harold Williams, Norman Brooke Jopson, Published by the Modern Humanities Research Association for the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University of London, 1955.
- Die lustigsten Burgenländer-Witze. oe24.at, retrieved 22 March 2023.
- Burgenländer-Witze – Hier findest du die lustigsten! witze.tv, retrieved 22 March 2023.
- Burgenländer-Witze. witze.at, retrieved 22 March 2023.
Sources
- History of Burgenland (archived link)
Further reading
- Imre, Joseph. "Burgenland and the Austria-Hungary Border Dispute in International Perspective, 1918–22." Region: Regional Studies of Russia, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia 4.2 (2015): 219–246.
- Swanson, John C. "The Sopron plebiscite of 1921: A success story." East European Quarterly 34.1 (2000): 81+ link.
External links
- Official website
(in German)
- Burgenland Tourism
- Burgenland-Croatian Center
- The Burgenland Bunch Genealogy Group
This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Burgenland news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2025 Learn how and when to remove this message Burgenland German pronunciation ˈbʊʁɡn lant Hungarian Orvidek Croatian Gradisce Austro Bavarian Burgnland Slovene Gradiscanska Slovak Hradsko is the easternmost and least populous state of Austria It consists of two statutory cities and seven rural districts with a total of 171 municipalities It is 166 km 103 mi long from north to south but much narrower from west to east 5 km 3 1 mi wide at Sieggraben The region is part of the Centrope Project The name of Burgenland was invented coined in 1922 after its territories became part of Austria The population of Burgenland as of 1 January 2024 is 301 951 Burgenland s capital is Eisenstadt BurgenlandStateFlagCoat of armsAnthem Mein Heimatvolk mein Heimatland source source source Country AustriaCapitalEisenstadtGovernment BodyLandtag Burgenland GovernorHans Peter Doskozil SPO Area Total3 680 km2 1 420 sq mi Population 2023 Total301 250 Density82 km2 210 sq mi GDP Total 9 498 billion 2021 Per capita 32 000 2021 Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST ISO 3166 codeAT 1HDI 2022 0 890 very high 9th of 9NUTS RegionAT1Votes in Bundesrat3 of 62 Websitewww wbr burgenland wbr atHistoryThe territory of present day Burgenland was successively part of the Roman Empire the Hun Empire the Kingdom of the Ostrogoths the Italian Kingdom of Odoacer the Kingdom of the Lombards the Avar Khaganate the Frankish Empire Dominion Aba belonging to the Aba family Aba Koszegi the Kingdom of Hungary the Habsburg monarchy the Austrian Empire Austria Hungary and lastly Austria Burgenland is the only Austrian province which has never been part of the Archduchy of Austria Holy Roman Empire German Confederation nor Austria Hungary s Cisleithania Prehistory and antiquity From the 4th century BC the area was dominated by Celts and in the 1st century AD it became part of the Roman Empire During Roman administration it was part of the province of Pannonia and later part of the provinces of Pannonia Superior in the 2nd century and Pannonia Prima in the 3rd century During the late Roman Empire Pannonia Prima province was part of larger administrative units such are Diocese of Pannonia Praetorian prefecture of Illyricum and Praetorian prefecture of Italy Early Germanic states The Ostrogothic Kingdom in Pannonia The first Germanic people to settle in this region were the Ostrogoths who came to Pannonia in AD 380 The Ostrogoths became allies of Rome and were allowed to settle in Pannonia being tasked to defend the Roman borders In the 5th century the area was conquered by the Huns but after their defeat an independent Kingdom of the Ostrogoths in Pannonia was formed The territory of present day Burgenland became part of the Italian Kingdom of Odoacer but at the end of the 5th century the Ostrogothic king Theodoric conquered this kingdom and restored Ostrogothic administration in western Pannonia In the 6th century the territory was included in another Germanic state the Kingdom of the Lombards However the Lombards subsequently left towards Italy and the area came under the control of the Avars For a brief period in the 7th century the area became part of the Slavic State of Samo however it subsequently came back under Avar control After the Avar defeat at the end of the 8th century the area became part of the Frankish Empire After the Battle of Lechfeld or Augsburg in 955 new Germanic settlers came to the area Medieval Kingdom of Hungary In 1043 Henry III and King Samuel Aba of Hungary signed a peace treaty On 20 September 1058 Agnes of Poitou and Andrew I of Hungary met to negotiate the border The area of Burgenland remained the western frontier of the medieval Kingdom of Hungary until the 16th century The majority of the population was Germanic except for the Hungarian border guards of the frontier March Gyepu Germanic immigration from neighbouring Austria was also continuous in the Middle Ages Habsburg administration Habsburg mortgages in Burgenland between the 15th and 17th centuries In 1440 the territory of present day Burgenland was controlled by the Habsburgs of Austria and in 1463 the northern part of it with the town of Koszeg became a mortgage territory according to the peace treaty of Wiener Neustadt In 1477 King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary had retaken the area but in 1491 it was mortgaged again by King Vladislaus II of Bohemia and Hungary to Emperor Maximilian I In 1647 Emperor Ferdinand II returned it to the Kingdom of Hungary which itself was a Habsburg possession in this time In the 16th century the medieval Kingdom of Hungary lost its independence and its northwestern part that was not conquered by the Ottoman Empire was included in the Habsburg Empire This Habsburg possession was known as Royal Hungary and it included territory of present day Burgenland and western Hungary Royal Hungary still had counties What is today Burgenland was in those times the Moson Sopron and Vas counties of Hungary The Kingdom of Hungary as divided into 3 parts In the 16th and 17th centuries German Protestant refugees arrived in Western Royal Hungary to shelter from the religious wars of the Holy Roman Empire particularly from the suppression of the Reformation in Austrian territories then ruled by the staunchly Roman Catholic Habsburgs After the Habsburg military victory against the Ottomans at the end of the 17th century the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary was enlarged to include much of the territory of the former medieval Kingdom of Hungary In the 17th and 18th centuries the region of Western Hungary was dominated by the wealthy Catholic landowning families for example the Esterhazys and Batthyanys In 1867 the Habsburg Empire was transformed into the dual monarchy of Austria Hungary Dissolution of Austria Hungary According to the 1910 census 291 800 people lived on the territory of present day Burgenland Among them 217 072 were German speaking 74 43 633 Croatian speaking 15 and 26 225 9 Hungarian speaking Roma people were counted according to their native language In December 1918 the Republic of Heinzenland was declared by Austrian politician with the goal of the territory being annexed by Austria However it was taken over within two days by Hungary From March to August 1919 Burgenland was part of the Hungarian Soviet Republic The area had also been discussed as the site of a Czech Corridor to Yugoslavia The decision on German West Hungary Deutsch Westungarn was fixed in the treaties of Saint Germain and Trianon Despite diplomatic efforts by Hungary the victorious parties of World War I set the date of Burgenland s official unification with Austria for 28 August 1921 However on that day sharpshooters with the support of Hungary prevented the establishment of Austrian police control and customs Lieutenant Colonel Pal Pronay and his men the Rongyos Garda defended western Hungary from occupation by Austrian officials and forces of the Austrian Gendarmerie Pronay had help from Hungarians and Croatians who did not want to live under Austrian rule leading to the Uprising in West Hungary in 1921 Pronay occupied the whole area and created the state of Lajtabansag Ninth Austrian province Protocol of Venice from Oct 13 1921 With the help of Italian diplomatic mediation in the the crisis was resolved in the autumn of 1921 when Hungary committed to disarm the sharpshooters by 6 November 1921 This was in exchange for a plebiscite on the unification of certain territories including Odenburg Sopron the designated capital of Burgenland and eight surrounding villages The vote took place from 14 to 16 December and resulted in a clear but doubted by Austria citation needed vote of the people who inhabited the Sopron district to be part of Hungary Consequently the territory was incorporated into Austria except for the Sopron district which was united with Hungary Further border adjustments were made in 1922 by the League of Nations border committee After their decision was approved on 17 September 10 Settlements were returned to Hungary That included 8 settlements in the Pinka valley Kisnarda Nagynarda Felsocsatar Alsocsatar Nemetkeresztes Magyarkeresztes Horvatlovo and Pornoapati as well as Rendek Liebing and Rotfalva Rattersdorf north of Koszeg The latter two was handed back to Austria in a swap agreement on 22 November in exchange for Szentpeterfa and olmod A memorial in Krensdorf to soldiers who died in the two World Wars In contrast to all the other present Austrian states which had been part of Cisleithania Burgenland did not constitute a specific Kronland and when it was formed it did not have its own regional political and administrative institutions such as a Landtag representative assembly and Statthalter imperial governor On 18 July 1922 the first elections for the parliament of Burgenland took place Various interim arrangements were required due to the changeover from Hungarian to Austrian jurisdiction The parliament decided in 1925 on Eisenstadt as the capital of Burgenland and moved from the various provisional estates throughout the country to the newly built Landhaus in 1929 The first Austrian census in 1923 registered 285 600 people in Burgenland The ethnic composition of the province had changed slightly the percentage of German speakers increased compared to 1910 227 869 people 80 while the percentage of Hungarian speakers rapidly declined 14 931 people 5 This was due mainly to the emigration of the Hungarian civil servants and intellectuals after the territory was ceded to Austria In 1923 emigration to the United States of America which started in the late 19th century reached its climax in some places up to a quarter of the population went overseas After the Nazi German Anschluss of Austria the administrative unit of Burgenland was dissolved Northern and central Burgenland joined the district of Niederdonau Lower Danube while southern Burgenland joined Styria citation needed The Jews of Burgenland were forced to emigrate in the immediate aftermath of the Anschluss The policy of Germanization also affected other minorities especially Burgenland Croats and Hungarians Minority schools were closed and the use of their native language discouraged In 1944 the Nazis began to build the Sudostwall South east wall with the help of mostly Jewish forced labor and collaborating inhabitants Soviet troops crossed the Hungarian Austrian border during the Vienna offensive and were only somewhat delayed by the unfinished fortifications In the last days of the Nazi regime many executions and death marches of Jewish forced laborers took place Occupation Burgenland under Soviet administration 1945 1955 As of 1 October 1945 Burgenland was reestablished with Soviet support and given to the Soviet forces in exchange for Styria which was in turn occupied by the United Kingdom Under Soviet occupation people in Burgenland had to endure a period of serious mistreatment and an extremely slow economic progress the latter induced by the presence of Soviet troops which discouraged investment The Soviet occupation ended with the signing of the Austrian Independence Treaty of Vienna in 1955 by the Occupying Forces The brutally crushed Hungarian Revolution on 23 October 1956 resulted in a wave of Hungarian refugees on the Hungarian Austrian border especially at the Andau Bridge Brucke von Andau They were received by the inhabitants of Burgenland with overwhelming hospitality In 1957 the construction of the anti Fascist Protective Barrier resulted in a complete sealing off of the area under Soviet influence from the rest of the world turning the Hungarian Austrian border next to Burgenland into a deadly zone of minefields and barbed wire on the Hungarian side of the border part of the Iron Curtain Even during the era of the Iron Curtain local trains between the north and south of Burgenland operated as corridor trains Korridorzuge they had their doors locked as they crossed through Hungarian territory Between 1965 and 1971 the minefields were cleared because people were often harmed by them citation needed even on the Austrian side of the border Recent history Burgenland is part of Centrope a project establishing a multinational region in four Central European states Slovakia Austria Hungary and the Czech Republic Despite Burgenland especially the area around the Neusiedler See always producing excellent wine some vintners in Burgenland added illegal substances to their wine in the mid 1980s When this was revealed Austria s wine exports dwindled dramatically After recovering from the scandal vintners in Austria and not only in Burgenland started focusing on quality and mostly stopped producing low quality wine citation needed On 27 July 1989 the foreign ministers of Austria and Hungary Alois Mock and Gyula Horn cut the Iron Curtain in the village of Klingenbach in a symbolic act with far reaching consequences At the same time the border crossing at Nickelsdorf Austria Hegyeshalom Hungary was opened by the Hungarian border patrol and this enabled the escape of East Germans Directly behind the wires special medic troops of the Austrian Red Cross awaited them and provided first assistance Thousands of East Germans fled to the West in this way Again the inhabitants of Burgenland received them with great hospitality Later this was often referred to as the beginning of German reunification citation needed After 1990 Burgenland regained its traditional role as a bridge between the western and eastern parts of Central Europe In 2003 it joined an Interreg project Centrope Cross border links were further strengthened when Hungary Slovakia and the Czech Republic joined the European Union in 2004 All three countries became part of the Schengen zone in late 2007 and border controls ceased to exist in the region In 2021 Burgenland grew by about 6 000 m2 This was due to the change of flood protection measures along the river Lafnitz which forms part of the border between Burgenland and Styria in the late 1970s As the course of the river changed somewhat along with the change of the flood protection measures some areas belonging to Styria ended up to the east of the river and some areas belonging to Burgenland ended up to the west of the river In 2010 it was decided by legislators together with the local councils that the areas to the west of the river would be part of Styria and the areas to the east of the river would be part of Burgenland reflecting the perceptions and attitudes of the population This decision was put into law in 2021 GeographyUnterwart Landscape East Styrian Hills Burgenland is the third smallest of Austria s nine states at 3 962 km2 1 530 sq mi The province s highest point is exactly on the border with Hungary on the Geschriebenstein 884 metres 2 900 ft above sea level The highest point entirely within Burgenland is 879 metres above sea level the lowest point which is also the lowest point of Austria at 114 metres 374 ft is in the municipal area of Apetlon Burgenland borders the Austrian states of Styria to the southwest and Lower Austria to the northwest To the east it borders Hungary Vas County and Gyor Moson Sopron County In the extreme north and south there are short borders with Slovakia Bratislava Region and Slovenia Mura Statistical Region respectively Burgenland and Hungary share the Neusiedler See Hungarian Ferto to a lake known for its reeds and shallowness as well as its mild climate throughout the year The Neusiedler See is Austria s largest lake It is a tourist attraction bringing ornithologists sailors and wind and kite surfers into the region north of the lake PoliticsBurgenland s provincial assembly Landtag has 36 seats At the election held on 26 January 2020 the Social Democratic Party SPO won an absolute majority of 19 seats the Austrian People s Party OVP won 11 seats the Freedom Party FPO won 4 seats and the Green Party won 2 seats The voting age for regional elections in Burgenland was reduced to 16 years in 2003 EconomyThe province s gross domestic product GDP was 9 billion in 2018 accounting for 2 3 of Austria s economic output GDP per capita adjusted for purchasing power was 27 300 or 90 of the EU27 average in the same year Burgenland is the province with the lowest GDP per capita in Austria Administrative divisionsBurgenland consists of nine districts two statutory cities and seven rural districts From north to south Districts of BurgenlandStatutory cities These combine the attributes of district and city Eisenstadt RustRural districts Neusiedl am See administrative center Neusiedl am See Eisenstadt Umgebung Eisenstadt Mattersburg Mattersburg Oberpullendorf Oberpullendorf Oberwart Oberwart Gussing Gussing Jennersdorf Jennersdorf DemographicsPopulation development Historical populationYearPop 1869254 301 1880270 090 6 2 1890282 225 4 5 1900292 426 3 6 1910292 007 0 1 1923285 698 2 2 1934299 447 4 8 1939287 866 3 9 1951276 136 4 1 1961271 001 1 9 1971272 319 0 5 1981269 771 0 9 1991270 880 0 4 2001277 569 2 5 2011285 685 2 9 2021297 506 4 1 Source Censuses The historical population is given in the following chart Minorities Burgenland has notable Croatian 130 000 and Hungarian 5 000 15 000 populations citation needed Croats number 30 000 Croats The Croats arrived after the devastating Ottoman war in 1532 when the Ottoman army destroyed some settlements in their ethnic territory The emigration in great haste of the remaining Catholic population of western Slavonia into Burgenland was as far as possible organized by estate owners The archives of the Sabor the Croatian parliament from this period contain numerous references to such resettlements As reported in the spring of 1538 by the Ban of Croatia Petar Keglevic who himself owned large estates in western Slavonia that the country s population at the Ottoman border was preparing to emigrate Their resettlement by estate owners was finished only in 1584 They have preserved their strong Catholic faith and their language until today and in the 19th century their national identity grew stronger because of the influence of the National Revival in Croatia Between 1918 and 1921 Croats opposed the planned annexation of West Hungary to Austria and in 1923 seven Croatian villages voted for a return to Hungary The Croatian Cultural Association of Burgenland was established in 1934 In the Nazi era 1938 45 the Croatian language was officially prohibited and the state pursued an aggressive policy of Germanization The Austrian State Treaty of 1955 guaranteed minority rights for every native ethnic minority in Austria but Croats had to fight for the use of their language in schools and offices even in the 1960s and 1970s In 2000 51 new bilingual village name signs were erected in Burgenland 47 Croatian and 4 Hungarian The Burgenland Croatian language is a 16th century dialect which is different from standard Croatian In minority schools and media the local dialect is used and it has had a written form since the 17th century the Gospel was first translated to this dialect in 1711 Today the language is endangered by assimilation according to the UNESCO s Red Book of Endangered Languages The Croats of Burgenland belong to the same group as their relatives on the other side of the modern day border with Hungary Hungarians Hungarians live in the villages of Oberwart Felsoor Unterwart Alsoor and Siget in der Wart Orisziget The three villages together are called Upper Orseg Hun Felso Orseg German Wart and they have formed a language island since the 11th century The other old Hungarian language island in Oberpullendorf Felsopulya has almost disappeared today The Hungarians of Burgenland were orok i e guards of the western frontier and their special dialect is similar to the Szekelys in Transylvania Their cultural centre is Oberwart Felsoor Another distinct Hungarian group were the indentured agricultural workers living on the huge estates north of Neusiedler See They arrived mainly from the region After the dissolution of the manors in the mid 20th century this group ceased to exist Roma and Jews In addition to Germans Croats and Hungarians Burgenland used to have substantial Roma and Jewish populations but these were wiped out by the Nazi regime Before their deportation during 1938 the traditionally very religious Burgenland Jews were concentrated in the famous Seven Communities Siebengemeinden Sheva kehillot in Eisenstadt Mattersburg Kittsee Frauenkirchen Kobersdorf Lackenbach and Deutschkreutz where they formed a substantial part of the population e g in Lackenbach 62 of the population was Jewish as of 1869 After the war Jews from Burgenland founded the Jerusalem haredi neighbourhood of Kiryat Mattersdorf reminding of the original name of Mattersburg once a centre of a famous yeshiva Religion According to 2021 figures of Statistics Austria Burgenland s population is mostly Christian 80 3 with the highest proportion of Protestants in Austria 11 4 65 5 of the population are Roman Catholic and further 3 4 are adherents of other Christian denominations mostly Orthodox Christians Islam is practiced by 2 2 while 0 7 profess another religion 16 8 of Burgenland s inhabitants profess no affiliation with any religion or denomination NamesIn Slovak Burgendland is known as Hradsko in Croatian as Gradisce in Hungarian as Orvidek Felsoorvidek or Varvidek in Slovene as Gradiscanska As the region was not a territorial entity before 1921 it never had an official name Until the end of World War I the German speaking western borderland of the Kingdom of Hungary was sometimes unofficially called Deutsch Westungarn German West Hungary The historical region included the border city of Sopron in Hungary known as Odenburg in German The name Vierburgenland Land of Four Castles was created in 1919 by Odo Rotig a Viennese resident of Sopron It was derived from the four varmegye of the Kingdom of Hungary in German Komitaten counties known in Hungarian as Pozsony Moson Sopron and Vas or in German as Pressburg Wieselburg Odenburg and Eisenburg After the town of Pozsony Pressburg Bratislava was assigned to Czechoslovakia the number vier was to be changed to drei three but after it became clear that none of the Burgen would be part of the Burgenland the number was dropped completely but the name Burgenland was kept because it was deemed to be appropriate for a region with so many old frontier castles The Burgenland name was adopted by the first provincial Landtag in 1922 In Hungarian the German name is generally accepted but there are three modern alternatives used by minor groups The Hungarian translation of the German name Varvidek was invented by an expert of the region in the 1970s and it is becoming increasingly popular especially in tourist publications The other two names Orvidek and Felso Orvidek are derived from the name of the most important old Magyar language island the Felso Orseg This microregion is around the town Felsoor Oberwart so these new names are a bit misleading however they are sometimes used The Croatian and Slovenian names Gradisce and Gradiscansko are calques of the German name The village of Jennersdorf is no more than 5 kilometers from the Slovenian and Hungarian borders see the United Slovenia movement Alternatively the Serbs Czechs and Slovaks call the western shores of the Neusiedler See the lake adjoining the town of Rust Luzic or Lusic However the descendants of Luzic Serbs Bosniaks Croats Czechs and Slovaks were eventually assimilated into the ethnic German or Hungarian cultures over four centuries The province has a long history of Slavic as well Austrian German and Hungarian Magyar settlement The province s easternmost portion the shores of the Neusiedler See carried its own topographical term Seewinkel in Austrian German This is the area least influenced by Austrian German since the Hungarian and Slovak borders are less than 10 kilometers away SymbolsHeraldic description of the coat of arms of Burgenland Or standing upon a rock sable an eagle regardant wings displayed gules langued of the same crowned and armed of the first on his breast an escutcheon paly of four of the third and white fur fimbriated of the field and in dexter and sinister cantons two crosslets paty sable The arms were introduced in 1922 after the new province was created They were composed from the arms of the two most important medieval noble families of the region the counts of and Mattersdorf Forchtenstein eagle on the rock and the counts of Gussing three bars of red and white fur The flag of the province shows two stripes of red and gold the colours of the coat of arms It was officially confirmed in 1971 CultureSeefestspiele Morbisch The cultural offerings are diverse and especially in the summer famous for the Seefestspiele Morbisch and the Nova Rock Festival with numerous international rockbands The permanent exhibition at Forchtenstein Castle shows an impressive collection of the dukes of Esterhazy at whose court at Esterhazy Palace worked the world famous musician Joseph Haydn who composed from the Burgenland Croatian folk song V jutro rano se ja stanem In the morning I rise up early the melody of Gott erhalte Franz den Kaiser God save Franz the Emperor which became the melody of today s national anthem of Germany There are also cultural events organized by the minorities such as Croatian or Hungarian folk evenings The dialect spoken in Burgenland is called Hianzisch People from Burgenland tend to be the butt of a joke cycle by people from other regions of Austria similar to the German East Frisian jokes These jokes portray people from Burgenland as dumb or slow on the uptake MediaRadio Radio OP 2009 References Basisdaten Bundeslander PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2006 10 09 Retrieved 2023 09 01 Sub national HDI Area Database Global Data Lab hdi globaldatalab org Retrieved 2018 09 13 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original on April 10 2023 Retrieved July 30 2023 a href wiki Template Cite web title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Henry A Fischer 23 February 2011 Emigrants and Exiles Book Three Volume One Author House pp 252 ISBN 978 1 4567 4365 9 Landeschronik Niederosterreich 3000 Jahre in Daten Dokumenten und Bildern Seite 104 Karl Gutkas C Brandstatter 1990 Wilfried Marxer 27 February 2012 Direct Democracy and Minorities Springer Science amp Business Media pp 17 ISBN 978 3 531 94304 6 Leonard V Smith 2018 Sovereignty at the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 Oxford University Press pp 147 ISBN 978 0 19 967717 7 Gunter Bischof 12 July 2017 Quiet Invaders Revisited Biographies of Twentieth Century Immigrants to the United States StudienVerlag pp 126 ISBN 978 3 7065 5882 2 Hatar Ausztriaval trianon100 hu in Hungarian Retrieved 2025 01 09 Zalmon Milka 2003 Forced Emigration of the Jews of Burgenland PDF Yad Vashem Studies XXXI 287 324 Archived PDF from the original on 2005 03 30 Linke Reinhard 2019 06 27 27 Juni 1989 Ein Foto verandert Europa noe ORF at in German Archived from the original on 2019 06 28 Retrieved 2021 08 15 Burgenland ist grosser geworden in German burgenland ORF at in German 2021 08 09 Archived from the original on 2021 08 09 Retrieved 2021 08 15 Gunnar Strunz 2012 Burgenland Natur und Kultur zwischen Neusiedler See und Alpen Trescher Verlag ISBN 978 3 89794 221 9 Regional GDP per capita ranged from 30 to 263 of the EU average in 2018 Eurostat Archived from the original on 2020 04 17 Historic Censuses STATISTICS AUSTRIA Statistics Austria Natuknica in Croatian Kolner geographische Arbeiten Ausgaben 15 18 Seite 69 Geographisches Institut der Universitat zu Koln 1963 Lackenbach History JewishGen KehilaLinks Archived from the original on October 1 2024 Retrieved October 1 2024 Bevolkerung 2021 nach ausgewahlter Religion bzw Kirche und Religionsgesellschaft und Bundesland ODS in German Statistics Austria Retrieved 22 July 2022 Von den vier Burgen blieb nur eine Die Presse in German 2011 11 11 Archived from the original on 2021 01 12 Retrieved 2021 08 15 Cimerhatarozo Burgenland cimere Wikikonyvek hu wikibooks org Slavonic and East European review Volume 34 page 2 University of London School of Slavonic and East European Studies Committee of American Scholars Sir Bernard Pares Robert William Seton Watson Harold Williams Norman Brooke Jopson Published by the Modern Humanities Research Association for the School of Slavonic and East European Studies University of London 1955 Die lustigsten Burgenlander Witze oe24 at retrieved 22 March 2023 Burgenlander Witze Hier findest du die lustigsten witze tv retrieved 22 March 2023 Burgenlander Witze witze at retrieved 22 March 2023 SourcesHistory of Burgenland archived link Further readingImre Joseph Burgenland and the Austria Hungary Border Dispute in International Perspective 1918 22 Region Regional Studies of Russia Eastern Europe and Central Asia 4 2 2015 219 246 Swanson John C The Sopron plebiscite of 1921 A success story East European Quarterly 34 1 2000 81 link External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Burgenland Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Burgenland Official website in German Burgenland Tourism Burgenland Croatian Center The Burgenland Bunch Genealogy Group 47 30 N 16 25 E 47 500 N 16 417 E 47 500 16 417