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https://doi.org/10.59412/hz.78.2.2

Officers and Employees of the Free and Royal City of Osijek in 1815

Eldina Lovaš ; Hrvatski institut za povijest, Podružnica za povijest Slavonije, Srijema i Baranje, Slavonski Brod
Danijel Jelaš orcid id orcid.org/0009-0007-9074-4941 ; Filozofski fakultet Sveučilišta Josipa Jurja Strossmayera, Osijek


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Sažetak

The aim of this research was to give an overview of the structure of public services and the characteristics of the municipal personnel of the Free and Royal City of Osijek after the elections held on 11 September 1815. The research is based mainly on the records of the Osijek municipal authority kept in the State Archives in Osijek, namely the salary and personnel tables, registers of citizens, records of the 1814 census, but also on the ecclesiastical register books, published canonical visitation records etc. The paper discusses the possible categorisation of the municipal personnel and provides sociodemographic analysis of available data on the individuals in the municipal service, including their ethnic and religious background, professional background, place of residence, citizen status, years in service and age.

Ključne riječi

city officers; city employees; sociodemographic analysis; free and royal city of Osijek; early 19th century

Hrčak ID:

340108

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/340108

Datum izdavanja:

28.11.2025.

Podaci na drugim jezicima: hrvatski

Posjeta: 846 *




Introduction

The earlier research on the structure and governance of the Free and Royal City of Osijek as the local authority was mainly focused either on competences of the respective bodies and officials, based on the provisions of the 1809 royal city charter2 and other legal documents or the members of the mentioned bodies, the electoral procedures, etc.3 However, only limited interest has been devoted to an important segment of the early 19th century local authority in Osijek: the officers, that is, the administrative staff, as well as other employees, mainly providers of various services employed by the city council. The research on the principal municipal bodies in Osijek, the City Council and the Elected Community, can, indeed, provide some crucial insights into legal, political and sociodemographic aspects of the way the local authority functioned in that period. However, our knowledge of the governance is incomplete without examining other segments of the municipal administration and public services supplied by the city. This paper deals primarily with the municipal personnel after the elections held on 11 September 1815, with the analysis of the available sociodemographic data on the individuals employed on that date as the central part of the article. It also discusses the development and categorisation of municipal public services of the Chamber City of Osijek (1786-1809) and the Free and Royal City of Osijek (1809-1815). The aim of the research was to systematise and analyse the available data to get an overview of structure of city’s public services and characteristics of the personnel after the 11 September 1815 elections. The idea was, on the one hand, to have a better understanding of the administrative history of Osijek, by collecting more precise information on the offices in the municipal authority, especially the lower ranking ones, as there has been very little research on the topic to date. On the other hand, the analysis of the specific sociodemographic data, namely the available data on the professional status of individuals, their legal status, place of origin or residence, their age and their religion, gives a systematic overview of characteristics of the individuals employed by the city of Osijek in the studied period. These results provide further insight into how the central government policies regarding the professionalisation of the local authority were implemented. They also help determine the principles of representation of certain demographic categories in the local authority, which can be viewed both in the context of the administrative history and social history of Osijek in the early 19th century. The obtained results and the published data from the primary sources can be used in further comparative studies of free and royal cities in the lands under the Crown of St. Stephen, including the prosopography of the municipal officials and staff on the general and local level.

Besides the mentioned 1809 city charter, the primary sources used for the research include relevant documents from two archival units kept in the State Archives in Osijek: the archival fonds “The Council of the Free and Royal City of Osijek”4 and “The Chamber City of Osijek”,5 the latter containing records for the period before the city gained its privileges. Among the most important sources are minutes of the city council,6 royal commissioner’s instruction (the second 1809 charter supplement)7 and reports on the elections,8 population censuses9 and registers of citizens,10 lists of employees and their incomes11 etc. For some individuals, it was necessary to consult the ecclesiastical baptism and death registers12 or canonical visitations, where the individuals were clergymen.13

A Brief Overview of Earlier Research on Municipal Officers and Employees of the Free and Royal Cities

The systematic research on municipal officers and employees of early modern cities in the Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen to date has had a more significant role in Hungarian than in Croatian historiography. However, since the parts of the modern-day Hungary and Croatia for centuries comprised a single state, the legal status and practices regarding the free and royal cities were very similar and sometimes the same. Therefore, the research methods and results of research done by Hungarian historians can be used for the study of the Croatian and Slavonian free and royal cities in the early 19th century. In recent decades, in Hungarian historiography there has been some progress in the study of municipal officials and public employees, as well as the beginnings of the creation of intellectual elite in the early modern Hungarian free and royal cities. Among other, we find attempts to describe the course and manner of differentiation of city officials and public servants, their competences and how the central government influenced the election of suitable individuals to certain offices. According to István H. Németh, such a practice in Hungarian free and royal cities became common in the 1670s, when central authorities began to appoint royal commissioners to oversee local elections. Besides the elections, they were also entrusted with providing detailed information to the government on various segments of city life, from finance and administration to the social and religious life of the local population. The reason why the government interfered in the previously autonomous affairs of cities was the implementation of an economic reform that aimed to increase pubic revenues.14 H. Németh therefore concluded that the state, in its desire to pursue its own interests,

...on the one hand, wanted to make the city administration even more differentiated, more complex and more subject to greater control, and on the other hand, it wanted to form a group of employees that would consist of individuals who possess the necessary knowledge, are loyal to the government and manage the city's property in a safe manner without using it for their own purposes.

In other words, “the state increasingly considered the city officials to be state servants”.15 In addition to the necessary knowledge and qualifications in law and economics, the civil servants were required to be Roman Catholic due to the Counter-Reformation effort. The careers of these individuals were primarily based on better education, but their career development was still strongly influenced by social affiliation (noble status, possession of citizen rights). By fulfilling the requirements set by the court, they became the “precursors of the new city civil service elite” that began to emerge during the 18th century.16

According to Károly Vörös, the increasing number of individuals with intellectual interests at the end of the 18th century was the result of social changes caused by the development of the economy and the weakening of feudal relations, which ultimately led to formation of individual groups that could not be included in the usual class frameworks. These individuals comprised new social elite, whose members were commoners, and they advanced in society through education.17 In a way, the confirmation that they indeed constituted a separate group within the society is provided by the instruction for conducting the census of the commoners from 1810, and then by the sections of the census itself, conducted in Osijek in 1814. According to the instruction, the sub-section “Officials and Dignitaries” (Officiales et Honorationes) was intended for men “who are scholars (...) and ardently perform useful, public activities, such as doctors or lawyers, teachers, caretakers, etc., if they are not nobles”. The group also included various state and manorial employees.18 Joseph II’s decree, making higher education more accessible to serfs contributed to the increase in the number of educated professionals in the population. The peasantry and the impoverished petty nobility also saw the opportunity to climb the social ladder through education.19 The most numerous among them were the individuals with a degree in law, most of whom were civil servants in the cities.20 Among the members of what was a relatively small intellectual elite at the end of the 18th century, Vörös lists priests, lawyers, clerks, estate managers, surveyors, doctors, pharmacists and teachers, mentioning also the emerging group of intellectuals in culture (writers, painters, actors etc.), whose income was rather low in this period.21

Árpád Toth and Erika Szívós also studied the career development of municipal staff in the early modern cities. Szívós took the example of Pest at the turn of the 19th century and concluded that individuals usually spent a long time serving as lower-ranking clerks before they advanced to higher positions, eventually becoming the decision-making officials of the municipal authority.22 In her reconstruction of Pest municipal officers and employees’ families, Szívós concluded that they “separated themselves from the traditional city’s craftsmen social class”. That was because they did not continue the family businesses, despite predominantly being the sons of craftsmen. They instead focused on education.23 However, very little is known about the education of civil servants in the studied period. For example, the municipal officers in Pest spoke several languages, including Latin and German, but not all individuals coming from other parts of the Empire employed in the city administration spoke Hungarian. Most of them had degrees in law and accounting and, depending on the service they performed, some had military, technical, humanistic or artistic education.24 Vera Bácskai analysed the portion of the civil servant intellectual class in the total population of Hungarian cities based on services they performed at the beginning of the 19th century. She concluded that the relative number of highly educated individuals in the cities was low, with half of them being civil servants. However, she also called for caution, pointing out that residents of cities in intellectual occupations were exempt from paying taxes, so those who paid taxes appear in the tax lists because they owned real estate, and their number cannot be accurately determined.25

One of the topics relevant to the study on that status of the municipal staff in early modern cities in these parts is the question of their income. Dénes Oszetzky wrote about the problems of underpayment of city employees, referring to the opinion of Joseph Mailath, who concluded in 1791 that the cause of the shortage of quality staff was their underpayment, in addition to “local intrigues”. Low incomes were often caused by the poor economic situation in the cities. This issue was also addressed by Joseph II, whose initial goal was to cut the number of employees in city administrations and then to increase the salaries of those who remained in service.26

The first categorisation of city officers and employees based on preserved archival records from the studied period was devised by a Hungarian historian Árpád Tóth, who classified them into four categories according to the kind of service they performed. He also took into consideration who else, apart from the members of the city councils, could be regarded the leading members of the municipal administration based on their job descriptions and authority. He divided them as follows: 1. officers – lawyers responsible for the legal functioning of the city; 2. officers – clerks supporting the work of notaries; 3. officers responsible for economic affairs and city revenues; and 4. experts – intellectual workers.27

Offices and Public Services of the Osijek Municipal Authority

The Chamber City of Osijek

The offices and services in the municipal authority of Osijek, of course, did not dramatically change with the newly gained status of the free and royal city in 1809, as the city was already a settlement with a developed urban life and administrative tradition dating back to the late 17th century. Nevertheless, the number of offices and positions for the municipal officer and employees did increase. One of two key sources for examining the status before the privileges is the proposal of Hungarian Royal Council of Governors on the method of unification of the three chamber municipalities (The Upper, Lower and Inner Town of Osijek), issued on 8 August 1786. The second are the minutes of the Council of The Chamber City of Osijek, which provide information on how the instructions by the Council of Governors were implemented and who were the elected officials. The second article of the proposal defines the number of the high municipal officials, as well as the category and number of administrative staff, while their salaries are listed in the supplement. The employees can be divided into three categories: administration - 1 notary (notarius), 2 vice-notaries (vicenotarius), 2 office clerks (cancellista), 1 treasurer (perceptor); public security - 1 commander of the guards (vigiliarum magister), 2 corporals (decurio), 10 constables (panduro), 5 night watchmen (vigiliarum nocturnis), 2 field guards (campi custos), 1 forest guard (silvarum custos); and auxiliary serviceman - 1 drummer (timpanotriba).28

The Free and Royal City of Osijek

Toth’s categorisation can, of course, be applied to the highly educated civil servants in the Osijek municipal authority after 1809, e.g. the higher and lower ranking clerical staff and various professionals such as physicians, teachers, priests etc. But there are other groups of employees on the city council payroll, many of which possess lower or no formal education at all. According to payrolls, the city nominally provided salaries for 78 people. However, just 75 of them will be included in this analysis. The reason for this is that one chaplain's position remained vacant in the Upper and Lower Town parishes. Also, Luka Budorović (Lucas Budorovich) simultaneously performed two duties in 1815: from 1814 he was an announcer and a house servant.29 In fact, in the years that followed the first elections in 1809 it was not unusual that one person performed duties of one or more offices. This was partly because it took time for the central government to allow the city council to employ the necessary personnel. To compensate for the shortage of personnel, skilled and educated individuals were sometimes appointed to an honorary position as aids (e.g. honorary attorney), usually to eventually be recruited as full employees in case of vacancy. Certain duties or services were sometimes assigned to municipal officials, namely the members of the City Council or Elected Community, without additional compensation.30 This is why certain duties were not stated as individual offices in the salary lists.

Having in mind all types of services listed in the salary and personnel table dated 11 September 1815, the day of the municipal elections, as well as Toth’s categorisation, we can divide the municipal officers and employees into several groups, or sectors:

  1. Administration

    1. Legal experts

    2. Financial officers

    3. Clerks

  2. Public healthcare

  3. Public education

  4. Clerics

  5. Public safety

  6. Auxiliary personnel

In the case of the municipal administration, the highest-ranking offices were established by the fifth paragraph of the 1809 city charter. The paragraph stipulates that the Council is allowed to freely appoint the highest officers of the municipal staff, namely the notary,31 vice-notary, registrar,32 attorney, chamberlain and treasurer of both treasuries,33 who also held the office of the custodian of orphans and, finally, sub-chamberlain, as well as other lower clerks and employees.34 The same paragraph explicitly states that their service was for life.35 The lower ranking clerical officers that were not mentioned in 1809 charter include at least three office clerks, one land registry officer, who kept records on the land property in the city, and one treasury clerk.36

As previously mentioned, their vacant positions were filled in the following period and there were minor changes that occurred due to practical reasons, some of which were not entirely in line with the 1809 charter. Also, there were examples that duties and services initially intended to be performed by different officers were, at least temporarily, assigned to a single individual. For instance, although the charter regulated that the duties of the treasury supervisor and orphan’s custodian were performed by a single officer, in the session minutes for that year Michael Czach appears only as the Orphans’ Custodian and Hospital Inspector.37 The explanation can be found in the 1812 minutes, session no. 53, which state that, although Czach was elected and inaugurated as both the Treasury Supervisor and Orphans’ Custodian in 1809, he was almost immediately relieved of the treasury supervisor duties at his own request, with the duties then transferred to the Treasury Clerk Vincent (Vincetius) Minasz. Minasz performed both duties until the 1812 elections, when he assumed the duties of the Chamberlain, while Franciscus Götzinger was appointed Treasury Supervisor.38 In 1810, Czach resigned from the duty of Hospital Inspector, after which, on 10 April 1810, they were transferred to Pavao (Paulus) David, an elected citizen.39 On 20 April 1811, Czach also resigned from the Orphan’s Custodian office, to which the Council later appointed Luka Ježević (Lucas Iexevich), who remained in the service after the 1815 elections.40 The offices of treasury supervisor and orphan’s custodian remained separate until 11 September 1815.41

Table 1. Administrative personnel in 1815

Subcategory Office In Latin Sources No.
Legal expertsNotary(Ordinarius) Notarius1
Vice-notaryVice-Notarius1
Attorney(Ordinarius) Fiscalis1
Honorary (part-time) AttorneyHonorarius Fiscalis1
Financial officersChamberlain (and Treasusrer)Camerarius (et Cassae Perceptor)1
Sub-ChamberlainSubcamerarius1
Treasury SupervisorCassae Contraagens, Controlor1
Orphans’ CustodianCurator Pupilorum1
Treasury ClerkCassae Scriba1
ClerksFirst Office Clerk (and Expeditor)Primarius Cancelista (et Expeditor)1
Second Office ClerkSecundarius Cancellista1
Third Office ClerkTertiarius Cancellista1
RegistrarRegistrator1
Head of the Land RegistryUrbarii Praefectus1

The public healthcare personnel consisted only of several professionals. The one with the highest education was the city physician, with a medical degree. He was accompanied by two surgeons, who were trained in performing simple medical treatments, and two midwives.42

Table 2. Public healthcare personnel in 1815

Office In Latin Sources No.
PhysicianPhysicus1
First SurgeonChyrurgus Primarius1
Second SurgeonChyrurgus Secundarius1
MidwifeObstetrix2

Five out of eight educational workers on the city payroll on 11 September 1815 were primary education teachers.43 Two clerics are also in this group, one secondary education teacher and one catechist. The 1815 salary and personnel table also lists the teacher of the local drawing school.44

Table 3. Public education personnel in 1815

Office In Latin Sources No.
Normal School TeacherNormalis Scholae Magister5
Preparatory ProfessorPreparandorum Professor1
CatechistCatheheta1
Drawing School TeacherScholae Graphidis Magister2

According to the 1809 charter, the Free and Royal City of Osijek had the right of patronage over the local parishes, i.e. the right to suggest candidates for the Roman Catholic priests.45 If we refer to salary list, we see that salaries of local priest were financed from the city treasury together with the salaries of other employees. It is rather unusual, however, and without obvious explanation, that the salary and personnel table dated 11 September 1815 does not contain entries on the Inner Town parish priests and chaplains and the Lower Town Orthodox parish priest.46 The data on those individuals had to be obtained from other sources.47 As previously mentioned, two out of three offices for second chaplain were vacant on 11 September 1815.

Table 4. Clergy on City Council payroll in 1815

Office In Latin Sources No.
Parish priestParochus4
ChaplainCapellanus4

There were several positions in the Osijek local authority reserved for the workers with lower education carrying out duties regarding the public safety and order, namely the ones patrolling the city streets and keeping watch on the public and private property, arresting and keeping in custody lawbreaking individuals.48 The most numerous were the constables, nighwatchmen and field guards. We also find two island guards in the records, keeping watch on two river islands, Borova and Nemetin.49

Table 5. Public safety personnel in 1815

Office In Latin Sources No.
Commander of the GuardsVigilarium Magister1
Prison GuardCarcerum Custos1
CorporalCorporalis2
ConstablePanduro16
NightwatchmenNocturnus Vigil5
Field GuardCampi Custos5
Island GuardInsulae Custos2

The auxiliary personnel perform various duties and services either for the Council or the citizens. Some of the jobs in this category require no skill and are among the least paid in the municipality service, such as night bell ringers.50

Table 6. The auxiliary personnel in 181551

Office In Latin Sources No.
QuartermasterQuarterioum Magister2*
Quarter DesignatorQuarterioum Designator1
Magazine KeeperMagazinarius1
AnnonucerIndictor1*
House ServantMediastinus1*
Night Bell RingerNocturnae Campanae Pulsator2
Chimney SweeperSpacicaminarius1

Sociodemographic Analysis of the Municipal Officers and Employees on 11 September 1815

A sociodemographic analysis of the municipal officers and employees of the Free and Royal City of Osijek is possible by examining data from several sources of secular and ecclesiastical provenance from the studied period, most significantly, the payrolls of the free and royal city of Osijek (1812 - 1815), the individual census of the ignoble population of Osijek in 1814, the registers of citizens, minutes of the council sessions, as well as the ecclesiastical registers (of baptisms and deaths) and canonical visitations of the three Osijek parishes.52 Based on the salary and personnel table from 11 September 1815, the type of service, date of entering the service or its duration until 1815, gender, origin, religion and occupation of the individuals were analysed. The 1814 census made it possible to determine the age of individuals and their place of residence by city district based on data on the year of birth, while the citizens’ registers answered the question of who acquired the citizen status and when. Data from the ecclesiastical registries and canonical visitations contributed to determining the beginning of the service of individual priests and chaplains in the city, as well as their year of birth and the information on their origin and education.

As previously mentioned, we can divide the local authority personnel into six groups. The most numerous groups are the employees whose work is related to public safety (42.67%) and administration (18.67%). They made up 61.34% of all city employees. An equal number of people were employed in auxiliary services and public education (10.67% each). Also, the city clergy (parish priests and chaplains) were equally represented. The fewest were the ones providing the public health services, only 6.67% of the overall number of employees.53 To fully interpret the received results, further research on the representation of the personnel groups in previous period is required, as well as the comparative study of similar cities in Croatia and Hungary. The increase in the number of the administrative staff after 1809 was, as mentioned earlier, connected with the change of the legal status of the city and central government policies regarding the professionalisation of the local authorities. The number and higher representation of the public safety officers could be related to a relatively large surface area under the city administration, especially the agricultural land. The earlier administrative divisions and physiognomy of Osijek, with physically separated districts, influenced the number of clergy and, probably, the healthcare workers.

Fig. 1. Municipal officers and employees according to type of service54

[CHART]

As for the gender distribution, almost all positions were reserved almost exclusively for men, who made up 97.33% of all those listed. The only exception was the midwives. Although, according to sources, there were several women during that time who assisted mothers during childbirth, for which they did not receive salary from the city treasury, according to the analysed payrolls, there were only two midwives (2.67%) in the city service, both Roman Catholics and Hungarians. Ana Fuchs was a midwife in the Inner Town since 1784, while Anna Szlonin worked in the Lower Town since 1811.55

With respect to the religious affiliation, Roman Catholics were the most numerous among municipal officers and employees, making up 81.33% of all personnel. The share of Orthodox Christians was 18.67%, however, they held important offices.56 For example, on 11 September 1815, three out of four lawyers in the municipal administration were Orthodox Christians: the Notary Konstantin (Constantinus) Bozda, Vice-notary Petar Jovanović (Petrus Ioannovich) and the Honorary Attorney Demetrije (Demetrius) Papphazy, while Matej Petrović (Mathaeus Petrovich) was the only Catholic among the lawyers, serving as a regular attorney. This could be merely a coincidence, but, it could also be a result of an intention to ensure that the members of the Eastern Orthodox community are adequately represented in the high-ranking offices. In any case, when an office of higher-rank was vacated, it seems that it was made sure to fill the vacancy with a member of the same social class and religious affiliation. For example, when Đuro Filković, the Vice-notary, who was Eastern Orthodox, died in 1811, he was replaced by Toma Stič (Thomas Sytch), also Eastern Orthodox.57 So, whether the representation of the Eastern Orthodox minority in the group of legal experts was initially intentional or spontaneous, it was later, most probably, intentionally maintained. On the other hand, the city finances were managed exclusively by Catholics: the City Chamberlain and Treasurer Vincent Minasz, Sub-Chamberlain Franjo (Franciscus) Svoboda, Treasury Supervisor Franjo (Franciscus) Götzinger and Franjo (Franciscus) Kellner as the Treasury Clerk. Orphans’ treasury was managed by Luka Ježević. Also, lower administrative staff was mostly Catholic: Josip Moslavac (Josephus Moszlavacz) as the first, Andrija Kovačević (Andreas Kovacsevich) as the second, and Andija Vlaškovac (Andreas Vlashkovacz) as the third office clerk. The head of the Land Registry office was Bazilije Nikolić, the member of the Eastern Orthodox Church.58 Out of the remaining city employees in intellectual professions, only two belonged to the Eastern Orthodox Church: the teacher Jovan Topalović (Ioannes Topalovich), and, of course, the Lower Town Orthodox parish priest Aleksandar Stojanović (Alexander Stojanovich).59

The salary and personnel table dated 11 September 1815 contains the data on the origin (ethnicity) of 68 individuals (90.66%).60 By consulting the records from canonical visitations, ecclesiastical registers and historiography, in addition to finding out the names of the chaplains, which are missing from the payroll, it was possible to reconstruct their places of birth. Such information was also available for the Inner Town parish priest Josip Jozepac (Josephus Josephacz), but it was not included in the analysis due to the unclear criteria for determining the origin of individuals in the studied period. In other words, it was uncertain whether term “natio” in those sources referred to the place of birth or to the place where the individual lived before moving to the city.

The conducted analysis (see Fig. 2) confirms that most of the city officers and employees were of local origin, as 69.33% of them were recorded as Slavonians.61 Only two officers came from other regions of the Habsburg Empire: the Honorary Lawyer Demetrius Papphazy, who was of Hungarian origin, and Chamberlain and Treasurer Vincent Minasz, who was of Bohemian origin. They were most likely recruited from outside of Slavonia because the City Council was unable to find qualified personnel among the local staff for these offices. Among the employees of non-Slavonian origin, the most represented group were the Hungarians (14.66%). Besides the two Hungarian midwives, who were already mentioned, the city physician Leopold Bischoff62 was also from Hungary, as well as the 50% of all city’s education workers for whom we have the available data, which is an interesting detail for which we find no explanation in the municipal records. Without further research, we can only assume that there were more individuals with adequate qualifications available in the nearby Hungary proper. The Commander of the Guard Augustins Moecke was Silesian, while two Austrians were employed in auxiliary services: Michael Kaltneker as a chimney sweep and Ignatius Vaisz as a night bell ringer.63

Fig. 2. Origin of municipal officers and employees based on the 1815 payroll64

[CHART]

By analysing the Register of Citizens data, it has been found that by 1815 only 13.33% of municipal officers and employees had the citizen status. Eight out of the ten citizens acquired the status in 1809, and two a year later. Four worked in the municipal administration as the legal experts and financial officers (attorney, treasury supervisor, orphans’ custodian, sub-chamberlain), while the notary Konstantin Bozda took the oath a year after his appointment, in 1816. The city chamberlain and treasurer Vincent Minasz also belonged to the small group of civil servants and employees (6.67%) who acquired their citizen status after 1815, by taking the oath two years later. According to the register data (Fig. 3), it can be determined that in 1815 the citizen status was no longer a requirement for performing lower-ranking public service duties in the municipal administration, which is strongly supported by the fact that 80% of employees did not have this status.65 On the other hand, it was still expected from the higher-ranking officers, especially in the legal and financial sectors, as in the case of Bozda and Minasz. The two surgeons, Jacob Resch and Wolfgang Rathgeb, also acquired the citizen status, the former in 1809 and the latter a year later. Therefore, we can say that, in that respect, the higher-ranking officers had the status in the local authority very much like the municipal officials, who were also expected to take the oath after they were elected.66

Fig. 3. Officers and employees in 1815 with the status of a citizen

[CHART]

In the 1814 census records we find information on the place of residence (city district) of the people of Osijek.67 This detail has been established for 67 city officers and employees (89.33%), while it remained unknown for 8 individuals (10.67%), because their names were not found in the census records. It is, of course, possible that some of the municipal employees moved to Osijek after the census was completed.68 According to data analysis (Fig. 4), the largest number of individuals employed by the City Council, as expected, lived in the most populous districts of Lower (37.33%) and Upper (30.67%) Town. The city employees who lived in the third district, the Inner City with the so called Alodium (also known as the New Town), were less represented (21.33%).69

Fig. 4. Place of residence of municipal officers and employees according to city districts

[CHART]

The salary and personnel table of the municipal officers and employees dated 11 September 1815 also lists the primary vocation of 63 people (84.00%). This detail provides an insight into what kind of professionals were employed in each category of public service and to which offices. Based on the data (Table 7), it is evident that among the unskilled employees the prevailing group were the agricultural workers, i.e. peasants70 (38.67%). They were mainly employed in the public security services. Only one employee who was a peasant worked in auxiliary services as a night bell ringer. The second largest group were the various intellectual workers (22.67%),71 whose jobs required additional education and/or a university degree, and they were employed in the administrative positions (legal and financial experts, office clerks), public health (doctors) and public education (as organ teachers in elementary schools, high-school teachers, etc.). The relatively large number of educated individuals in the municipal service especially among the administrative workers reflects the need to employ educated personnel to make the city function as efficiently as possible. The intellectual workers could in fact be regarded as the newly established intellectual elite in the city, having assumed the leading role in the municipal authority and thus replacing the craftsmen and merchants who were the dominant group until 1809. The remaining professionals in public services were those in specialised non-artisan vocations, such as midwives and surgeons.

Table 7. Primary vocation of municipal officers and employees and their numbers according to groups of service as stated in the 1815 salary table72

City Service Type
Vocation Administration Auxiliary Service Clerics Public Education Public Healthcare Public Safety N %
Midwife2 2 2.67
Chimney Sweeper1 1 1.33
Franciscan Friar2 2 2.67
Furrier1 1 1.33
Master Bricklayer1 1 1.33
Organist4 4 5.33
Intellectual Worker12113 17 22.67
Sacristan1 1 1.33
Supervisor731 1 1.33
Innkeeper1 1 1.33
Drummer1 1 1.33
Printer1 1 1,33
Teacher1 1 1.33
Peasant128 29 38.67
Not stated183 12 16.00
N 14 8 8 8 5 32 75 100.00
% 18.67 10.67 10.67 10.67 6.67 42.67 100.00

For 71 individuals (94.66%), it is possible to determine when they entered the public service. They can be divided into three groups according to the time of employment: 1) those employed before the unification of the chamber municipalities of Upper, Lower and Inner Town (that is, before 1786); 2) those employed during the period of the Chamber City of Osijek (1786-1809); and 3) those employed after Osijek became the free and royal city (from 1809). Since the services were for life and individuals resigned mainly due to old age and/or illness, it is not surprising that some of them were employed by three city councils over the course of several years. If we examine data on the officers and employees on 11 September 1815 (Fig. 5), we see that hiring of new personnel is highly connected to the local elections. We see similar numbers of newly recruited personnel during that time. In 1809, in 1813 (after the 1812 elections) and in 1815 the number of newly recruited personnel for each year was 12 (16.90%). One of the reasons for such employment trends can be explained by the fact that some legal experts among the municipal officers were regularly nominated and elected to vacant senatorial positions in the City Council during elections, so it was necessary to appoint or elect replacements. We can add that the individuals employed before 1809 and remaining in service until 11 September 1815 were not administrative workers, but public security, health and education workers or clerics.

Fig. 5. Municipal officers and employees on 11 September 1815 according to the year of entering the service74

[CHART]

If we convert this data to years in service, the largest groups of employees on 11 September 1815 were the ones with two (16.90%) and six years (16.90%) in service, followed by individuals who entered service in 1815 (16.90%), while the average result for all personnel is 4,49 years in service. The longest-serving city employee was the midwife Anna Fuchs, employed in 1784, with 31 years of service, followed by teacher Mirko (Emericus) Turanyi, employed in 1787, with 28 years of service and night watchman Adam (Adamus) Vencz, employed in 1795, with a total of 20 years of service. This greatly influenced the average number of years in service by sectors for public healthcare (10.2) and public education services (9), as the number of individuals working in these sectors was small. The public safety sector follows with 4.25, with higher number of experienced individuals working for the city before or since 1809, followed by the clergy (3.42) and auxiliary services (2.87). The officers working in the municipal administration spent the lowest average number of years in service (2.78).75 This, on one hand, is the result of the mentioned intention to professionalise the management of administrative, legal and financial affairs of cities. However, it is important to mention that some of the administrative officers that worked for the city in 1815 had previously served in the administration of the Virovitica County or in the local authority of other cities. So, the lower average number of years spent in the city service does not necessarily mean that the personnel were lacking experience. Only when we consider the somewhat lower average age of the officers in this sector, we see that the number of younger individuals in this sector is relatively higher in comparison to other services. (See Fig. 7 and 9). However, the administrative affairs were headed by an experienced officer, Konstantin Bozda (age 51), elected in 1815 as the retired registrar.76

Fig. 6. Municipal officers and employees on 11 September 1815 according to the years of service77

[CHART]

Fig. 7. The average years in service of municipal officers and employees on 11 September 1815 per sector

[CHART]

The main source that provides the information on years of birth for every registered male resident of Osijek (not for women) is the mentioned 1814 census of ignoble individuals, while the year of birth of the clergy could be partially established from canonical visitations. Based on these sources, it is possible to calculate both the individual and average age of city officers and employees, as well as their average age by category of service, on 11 September 1815 for 63 employees (84.00%). The average age of those municipal officers and employees in 1815 was 34.76 years. The public education employees were the oldest, with an average age of 37 years. They were followed by employees in auxiliary services (36.37 years), public security (35.68 years) and public health (35.33 years). The average age of the city administration officer was 33.58 years, while the youngest were members of the clergy, whose average was 30.25 years. (Fig. 9). Looking at the established age pyramid of Osijek male officers and employees (see Fig. 8), we see that most of the analysed employees were under 50 years of age (82.53%), with the most represented age group being those between 25 and 29 years of age, followed by those between 20 and 24. Both the youngest and oldest employees worked in the public safety department. The youngest municipal employees were constable Michael Kremer (13) and island guard Ilija Grgurević (Elias Gergurevich) (14). The oldest employees were field guard Matija Šerbedžić (Mathias Sherbegyich) (81) and constable Antun Mađarević (Antonius Magyarevich) (75).

Fig. 8. Truncated age pyramid of male municipal officers and employees on 11 September 181578

[CHART]

Fig. 9. The average age of male municipal officers and employees on 11 September 1815 per sector

[CHART]

Conclusion

In conclusion, it is necessary to address certain key points. First, it is possible to divide individuals in the municipal authority who perform administrative duties and other services into categories and sub-categories based on their profession, namely the categories for the personnel working in the administration, public healthcare, public education, public safety, as well as the clergy and the auxiliary personnel. By doing so, it is possible to obtain interesting results. The largest group comprised the employees that served in the public security and administration sector, which accounted for more than half of the municipal personnel in 1815. The number of the former group could be the result of relatively large surface area under the city limits, whereas the number of the latter is, at least partially, the result of state policies regarding the professionalisation of the local authority. Most officers and employees were of local origin. Those coming from outside the Kingdom of Slavonia were mainly employed in the administration, public education and healthcare sectors, with Hungarians being the most numerous. Further research may provide some explanation, for example, why half of the educational workers in 1815 came from Hungary proper. The representation of individuals with regards to the place of residence or religious affiliation is proportional with the demographics. While we have little proof that in case of the former it was intentional, in the case of the latter, it seems to be the result of the policy to maintain the representation of the Eastern Orthodox minority established in 1809. An interesting result is that most of the municipal officers and employees, except those in highest-ranking offices, never took the citizen’s oath, which obviously was neither a formal or informal requirement for the offices and positions. As for the local authority, the qualifications and experience of the individuals was the only criterion, aligned with general trends of professionalisation of municipal administration and services. The education of an individual employed by the city undoubtedly depended on the office, and, as expected, the most educated personnel worked in the administration, while the least qualified individuals worked in the public security sector. When it comes to other details, such as the age and length of service, the employees with the most years in service were the ones working in public healthcare and education services, while the lowest result for administrative officers can be explained by the intention to further professionalise the local administration after 1809 by hiring educated young individuals, as well as the fact that some of the officers had previous experience at similar positions before being employed by the city.

As stated in the Introduction, the aim of this paper was first to conduct the systematisation and analysis of the data in the available sources and give an overview of structure of city’s public services and characteristics of the personnel on 11 September 1815. Therefore, this study had a rather limited scope of possible analyses, and, as such, it cannot provide deeper insights into trends and policies for a longer period that could provide more information on how the local authority of Osijek functioned. With that in mind, a complete study on the officers and employees of the Free and Royal City of Osijek, constituting comprehensive research that would encompass the entire period from 1809 to 1850 will be required. The first step could be a catalogue of all offices and posts and all the personnel hired during that time, as well as a broader study on hiring policies etc. Therefore, this paper should be regarded only as an effort to contribute to this broader research topic.

Primary Sources and Literature

Archival Sources

Državni arhiv u Osijeku (State Archives in Osijek)

HR-DAOS-5. Fond Komorska ujedinjena Općina Osijeka (Cammeral Stadt Esseg) - Osijek (1786-1809).

HR-DAOS-6. Poglavarstvo slobodnog i kraljevskog grada Osijeka (1809-1850).

HR-DAOS-500. Zbirka matičnih knjiga (1868-1963).

Published Sources

Grubišić, Ante, ed. Diploma elibertationis liberae regiaeque civitatis Essekiensis, transl. Zrinka Blažević, Sanja Lazanin and Iva Polak. Osijek: Muzej Slavonije Osijek, 2010.

Habsburg Empire - Cadastral maps (XIX. century). Accessed on February, 20 2025https://maps.arcanum.com/en/map/cadastral

Lovaš, Eldina. Građani Slobodnog i kraljevskog grada Osijeka 1809. - 1850. Osijek: Državni arhiv u Osijeku, 2020.

Sršan, Stjepan, transl. and ed. Visitationes Canonicae = Kanonske vizitacije: Knjiga V: Osijek i okolica 1732.-1833. Osijek: Državni arhiv u Osijeku; Biskupija Đakovačka i Srijemska, 2007.

Sršan, Stjepan, transl. and ed. Političko-gospodarski zapisnici slobodnog kraljevskog grada Osijeka od 3. siječnja do uključivo 31. prosinca 1812. godine = Prothocolla pollitico-oeconomica liberae requiaeque civitatis Essek a 3-a Ianuarii usque 31-am Decembris inslusice anni 1812. Osijek: Državni arhiv u Osijeku, 2012.

Sršan, Stjepan. Slobodni i kraljevski grad Osijek 1809=Libera Regiaque Civitas Essek 1809. Osijek: Državni arhiv u Osijeku, 2009.

Sršan, Stjepan, ed. Zapisnici Općine Osijek. Prothocollum des Stadt-Raths zu Esseg 1786. – 1794. Osijek: Povijesni arhiv u Osijeku, 1996.

Sršan, Stjepan, ed. Zapisnici kraljevskog komorskog grada Osijeka = Prothocoll der Königl. Kammeral Stadt Essegg: 1794.-1809. Osijek: Državni arhiv u Osijeku, 2000.

Sršan, Stjepan, ed. Zapisnik političkih i gospodarskih odluka slobodnog i kraljevskog grada Osijeka za 1810. i 1811. godinu = Prothocollum determinationum politico-oeconomicarum lib. et. reg. civitatis Essekiensis pro annis 1810. et 1811. Osijek: Državni arhiv u Osijeku, 2011.

Sršan, Stjepan, transl. and ed. Zapisnik poglavarstvenih odluka slobodnog i kraljevskog grada Osijeka od 30. kolovoza do zadnjeg dana prosinca 1809. godine u političkim i gospodarskim predmetima = Prothocollum determinationum magistratualium lib. et. reg. civitatis essekiensis a 30-a augusti usque ultimam decembris anni 1809. in objectis politicis et oeconomicis. Osijek: Državni arhiv u Osijeku, 2009.

Sršan, Stjepan and Stojčić, Tihomir. Libera regiaque civitas Essek 1809. = Slobodni kraljevski grad Osijek 1809. Osijek: Muzej Slavonije, 1989.

Source data

Lovaš, Eldina. “1814 census database” (unpublished).

SAŽETAK

Časnici i namještenici Slobodnog i kraljevskog grada Osijeka 1815. godine

Cilj ovoga rada je dati pregled strukture radnih mjesta u osječkoj gradskoj upravi nakon izbora provedenih 1815. godine, zatim utvrditi popis tadašnjih gradskih zaposlenika i predstaviti njihova sociodemografska obilježja. Istraživanje je provedeno na temelju nekoliko dokumenata iz Državnog arhivu u Osijeku odnosno fonda Poglavarstvo slobodnog i kraljevskog grada Osijeka. Među njima posebno treba izdvojiti platnu listu gradskih dužnosnika, službenika i zaposlenika nakon izbora provedenih 1815. godine. Ovaj je dokument bio ključan za rekonstrukciju radnih mjesta u osječkoj gradskoj upravi - administrativnog osoblja i zaposlenika u drugim javnim službama. Na temelju te liste provedena je i kategorizacija radnih mjesta prema službama na poslove u administraciji, javnom zdravstvu, javnom obrazovanju, vjerske službe, službe u javnoj sigurnosti te pomoćne službe. Navedena platna lista, osim podataka o imenima, radnom mjestu i plaćama službenika i namještenika, donosi i druge pojedinosti, poput podatke o vjerskoj pripadnosti, porijeklu (zavičajnoj pripadnosti), primarnoj struci te godinama provedenim u službi. Za analizu su korišteni i drugi izvori poput popisa stanovništva iz 1814. godine, upisnika građana, matične knjiga i kanonske vizitacija, na temelju koji su analizirana sociodemografska obilježja općinskog osoblja. Pritom je bilo moguće utvrditi udio domicilnih zaposlenika i onih doseljenih iz drugih krajeva Monarhije, zatim udio zaposlenika s građanskim status, potom udio zaposlenika iz pojedinih gradskih četvrti i njihov udio prema primarnim zanimanjima, te dob zaposlenika i godine u službi.

Ključne riječi: gradski službenici; gradski zaposlenici; sociodemografska analiza; slobodni i kraljevski grad Osijek; početak 19. stoljeća

Notes

[1] This article was written within the research project “Izvori za povijest Istočne Hrvatske” (IPIH, 380-01-02-23-42, NextGenerationEU programme) and bilateral project “Crkvena i svjetovna elita između 15. i 19. stoljeća. Primjer hrvatskih i mađarskih elita i njihova odnosa s kraljevskim dvorom” (Horvát-magyar politikai elit és a királyi udvar a 15-19. században).

[2] The original 1809 Osijek City Charter is kept in the Museum of Slavonia Osijek (inv. no. P-1072). See: Božić-Drljača and Jelaš, Poglavarstvo, 23-25. The facsimile, transcription, and Croatian, German, and English translations of the charter in: Grubišić, Diploma. Also see: Sršan and Stojčić, Libera regiaque civitas Essek; Sršan, Slobodni i kraljevski grad Osijek 1809, 49-68.

[3] See: Lovaš and Jelaš, „Članovi uprave“; Lovaš and Plantosar, „Kontinuitet ili diskontinuitet?“, 107-124; Lovaš and Jelaš, „The 1815 Elections“, 37-59.

[4] HR-DAOS-6. The inventory of the fonds is published in: Božić-Drljača and Jelaš, Poglavarstvo, 37-147.

[5] HR-DAOS-5.

[6] Some minutes are published, thus there was no need for using the original documents. See: Sršan, Zapisnici Općine Osijek.; Sršan, Zapisnici kraljevskog komorskog grada Osijeka; Sršan, Zapisnik poglavarstvenih odluka; Sršan, Zapisnik političkih i gospodarskih odluka; Sršan, Političko-gospodarski zapisnici.

[7] Unfortunately, the original document (HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 94/1809) cannot be found among the political and economic records of the city council. Its content is known through a Croatian translation published by Stjepan Sršan in 2009. See: Sršan, Slobodni i kraljevski grad, 77-82.

[8] The original 1809 commissioner’s electoral report (HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 134/1809) is also missing from the records. It was also published as a translation by Stjepan Sršan in 2009. 1 September is the earliest possible date of the report. The city council accepted the report on 14 October 1809. See: Sršan, Slobodni i kraljevski grad Osijek 1809, 35-44; Sršan, Zapisnik poglavarstvenih odluka, 187-189.

[9] Namely, the 1814 census of the “ignoble” residents (HR-DAOS-6.1.6.1, books no. 441-443). This census was thoroughly analysed in: Lovaš, “Eszék társadalma az 1814. évi népességösszeírásban”. The entries from the census records are entered in an unpublished database by Eldina Lovaš, which were used by the authors of the paper.

[10] The most important being the alphabetical register of the citizens, containing the most comprehensive data on the individuals, such as the religion, ethnicity (origin), occupation, marital status etc. (DR-DAOS-6.1.6.5). The registers were published in: Lovaš, Građani.

[11] HR-DAOS-6.1.2.8, box 631; HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Status Personalis et Salarialis.

[12] HR-DAOS-500.

[13] Sršan, Kanonske vizitacije.

[14] H. Németh, „Állam és városok“, 774-777.

[15] Ibid., 784, 785.

[16] H. Németh, „A honorácior-hivatalnok“, 60.; H. Németh, „Állam és városok“, 777, 789.

[17] Vörös, „A modern értelmiség kezdetei Magyarországon“, 1-2.

[18] The instruction for conducting the census was analysed by Eldina Lovaš. See: Lovaš, „Eszék társadalma“, 109.

[19] Katus, „A modern Magyarország születése“, 176.

[20] Vörös, „A modern értelmiség kezdetei Magyarországon“, 4.

[21] Ibid., 4-15.

[22] Szívós, „Városvezető elit Pesten“, 9-10. On careers of senators who, prior to their election to the office, worked as clerks in the city administration, see: Tóth, „Hivatali szakszerűsödés és a rendi minták követése“, 31-32.

[23] Szívós, „Városvezető elit Pesten“, 11.

[24] Tóth, „Hivatali szakszerűsödés és a rendi minták követése“, 32-33.

[25] Bácskai, „Városok és városi társadalom Magyarországon“, 132-134.

[26] Oszetzky, „A hazai polgárság társadalmi“, 59.

[27] Tóth, „Nemesség, polgárság és honorácior értelmiség határán“, 1095, 1096, 1103-1107.

[28] HR–DAOS–5, Proposal for Unification of Chamber Municipalities of Upper, Lower and Inner Town, from 1786, box no. 1; Lovaš, „Viribus unitis“, 68-69.

[29] HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Status Personalis et Salarialis.

[30] This is why the personnel and salary tables do not provide the complete list of all duties and services performed by the municipal officials, officers and employees. Getting the complete list is possible only by conducting a comprehensive study of City Council session minutes, as such permanent or ad hoc additional responsibilities were assigned to municipal officials and personnel by the City Council.

[31] He was one of the most qualified officers in the municipal authority with an extensive knowledge of how the city administration functioned, thus having the authority over most city affairs. He regularly participated in the sessions of the city council, which is why he gained great influence. During the process of re-Catholicisation of city administration mentioned earlier, not only members of city councils but also notaries were regularly replaced. When royal commissioners took over duties in overseeing the elections and personnel policy of the free and royal cities in the 17th century, their authority and competences were reduced, so they became the appointed administrative officers, instead of the elected city officials. H. Németh, „Állam és városok“, 790-791.

[32] The keeper of the municipal records and custodian of the city archive.

[33] The second most important officer in the city administration was the chamberlain, a person who managed the city's finances. Unlike the notary, he was always elected to this position by the elected community, which became more significant after the court's decision to implement economic reform in free and royal cities at the beginning of the 18th century. H. Németh, „Állam és városok“, 794-735. At the time, the City of Osijek had two treasuries, one regular and one established to manage the contributions and expenses regarding the process of gaining the status of the free and royal city. Sršan, Zapisnik poglavarstvenih odluka, 35.

[34] Grubišić, Diploma, 45, 88, 90. Also see: Sršan, Slobodni, 42, 56; Sršan, Političko-gospodarski, 146.

[35] The highest administrative officers were elected or appointed during the electoral process in which the first municipal authority of the Free and Royal City of Osijek was established. The main source is the mentioned report of the Royal Commissioner Josip Mailath on the local elections in Osijek, which refers to the inaugural ceremony and the elections held on 28 August 1809, and the remaining procedure of establishing the municipal authority that continued at three sessions held on 29 and 30 August and 1 September. According to the report, on 29 August, before the election of the members of the City Council and the Elected Community, the Royal Commissioner appointed the (Ordinary) Notary Petar Bogoevich, who then could administer the electoral process. After the constitution of the Elected Community as the electoral body and elections for the members of the council, the process continued with the election of high-ranking clerical staff. Karl (Carolus) Breyer (sometimes Breuer) was elected Chamberlain and Treasurer of both treasuries. Michael Czach was elected Treasury Supervisor and Oprhans’ Custodian. According to the report, the Royal Commissioner appointed Đuro Filković (Georgius Filkovich) Deputy Notary. On 30 August, another session was held at which Lenotije Argirović (Leontius Argirovich), Augustin (Augustinus) Liber and Joseph (Iosephus) Schmalecker were appointed Office Clerks, whereas Vincent Minasz became the Treasury Clerk. At the last session on 1 September, the Elected Community voted for Bazilije Nikolić (Basilius Nikolich) to be the head of the Land Registry Office, while the Royal Commissioner appointed Franjo (Franciscus) Brunslik Sub-Chamberlain and the City Council was supposed to fill the remaining vacant offices independently. Sršan, Slobodni, 42-44.

[36] See: HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Status Personalis et Salarialis.

[37] The orphans’ custodian managed the property of orphans until they come of age, whereas the hospital inspector dealt with hospital and orphanage finances. Both duties, as it seems, were initially intended to be performed by the same officer.

[38] The reason stated was Czach’s poor health. Sršan, Političko-gospodarski, 146-147.

[39] Sršan, Zapisnik političkih, 94.

[40] Ježević appears as the Orphans’ Curator in the City Council minutes for the session held on 28 June 1811. Sršan, Zapisnik političkih, 541, 615.

[41] HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Status Personalis et Salarialis.

[42] HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Status Personalis et Salarialis. It seems that the local authority tried to provide, at least to a degree, equally accessible public healthcare service for all citizens, regardless of the district they lived in. The city physician Leopold Boschoff, thus, lived in the Inner Town. The first city surgeon Wolfgang (Wolfgangus) Rathgeb lived in the Lower Town, while the second city surgeon Jacobus Resch lived in the Upper Town. Even though the mentioned records state that there were only two midwives, one in the Inner and one in the Lower Town, a woman in the Upper Town provided the same service, but did not receive salary from the City Council (see Table 8). She, Elisabetha Hohenpichler, is mentioned in the canonical visitation, along with the other two, and according to the registry data, she was still alive in 1815. Sršan, Kanonske vizitacije, 197. HR-DAOS-500.93.1, book no. 839, Osijek, Upper Town, R. Cath., Register of the deceased, 1788-1827. HR-DAOS-6.1.6.1; book no. 442; Lovaš, „1814 census database“ (unpublished).

[43] In the period from November 1813 to October 1814, the number of primary education teachers was 9. This means that the number of teachers on city payroll was not fixed. See: HR-DAOS-6.1.5.2.8, Salary table for 1813/1814, no. 390/247.

[44] HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Status Personalis et Salarialis.

[45] Grubišić, Diploma, 13, 92. Sršan, Slobodni i kraljevski grad, 59.

[46] HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Status Personalis et Salarialis.

[47] The salaries of the Inner Town parish priest and the Lower Town Orthodox parish priest can be found in the 1 December 1815 salary list. The documents also contain information that the office of the Inner Town second chaplain was vacant, but according to ecclesiastical registers, this was still not the case on 11 September. See: HR-DAOS-6.1.5.2.8, Salary table for 1815/1816, no. 19/5; HR-DAOS-500.89.1., book no. 789, Osijek, Inner Town, R. Cath. Register of Births, 1796-1833, 130-133.

[48] There was some doubt whether the officers entrusted with the accommodation and provisions for the military could also be regarded public safety personnel, more so when we consider the fact the one of the quartermasters was the commander of the guards. Similarly, there was the same question for the magazine keeper. However, their duties also included certain administrative and other responsibilities. Because their duties did not entirely fit either the criteria for administrative or public safety personnel, they were included in the auxiliary personnel category.

[49] HR-DAOS-6.1.5.2.8, Salary table for 1813/1814, no. 390/247. There used to be two river islands called Borova and Nemetin east of the Lower Town, still seen on the maps from the second half of the 19th century, e.g. Cadastral maps. See: Habsburg Empire - Cadastral maps (XIX. Century).

[50] HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Status Personalis et Salarialis.

[51] In 1815, one employee performed duties and received salary of two offices: Luka Budrović (Lucas Budrovich) worked both as the City Council announcer and house servant, probably working in the City Hall. Also, as mentioned earlier, the commander of the guards August Moecke performed duties of a quartermaster. See: HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Status Personalis et Salarialis.

[52] The additional data on birth of the Upper Town parish priest Ivan (Joannes) Rasztovich, the chaplain from the Inner Town Ivan Nikola (Joannes Nicolaus) Seliskar, and the chaplain from the Lower Town Josip Stanić (Josephus Stanich) are found in: Antun Jarm, „Dijecezanski svećenici“, 68, 73, 97.

[53] According to the 1814 census, the overall share of individuals who served as officials, officers and employees of the Osijek municipal authority was 2.70%. Lovaš, „Eszék társadalma“, 172.

[54] HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Status Personalis et Salarialis.

[55] Sršan, Kanonske vizitacije, 137, 243. In Sršan’s translation of canonical visitation we find the family name “Slon”, which is most probably incorrect, because in other documents, such as the salary table and the 1814 population census her name was recorded as “Szlonin”/”Slonin”. HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Status Personalis et Salarialis; HR-DAOS-6.1.6.1; books no. 441, 443; Lovaš, „1814 census database“ (unpublished).

[56] This is proportional to the religious structure of the male population of Osijek in 1814. The Roman Catholics made up 75%, whereas the Orthodox Christians made up 20% of all those listed in the census. Such a proportion is almost identical to the religion structure of the male population of Osijek in 1814. Lovaš, „Eszék társadalma“, 138.

[57] Sršan Zapisnik političkih, 729; HR-DAOS-500.96.2, book no. 898, Osijek, E. Orth., Register of the Deceased, 1802-1817; 257; Sršan Osječki dnevnik, 109.

[58] HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Status Personalis et Salarialis.

[59] HR-DAOS-6.1.5.2.8, Salary table for 1814/1815, no. 124/64; HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Status Personalis et Salarialis.

[60] The term in the source is “natio”. It refers to a province or a place of individual’s origin, rather than the ethnicity in the present-day meaning of the word.

[61] This corresponds with the overall data on the citizens of Osijek in the first half of the 19th century, among whom the majority were the individuals who identified as Slavonians of Osijek natives. Lovaš, Građani, 30.

[62] On city physicians and Bischoff’s work see: Čandrlić, „Mjere javne zdravstvene službe“, 333-334; Čandrlić, „Pravna regulativa“, 46-52.

[63] HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Status Personalis et Salarialis.

[64] HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Status Personalis et Salarialis.

[65] Lovaš, Građani, passim.

[66] Lovaš and Jelaš, “The 1815 Elections”, 41-42, 52-58.

[67] HR-DAOS-6.1.6.1; books no. 441-443; Lovaš, „1814 census database“ (unpublished).

[68] One of them is Demetrius Papphazy, who was, according to the citizenship fee he paid 25 florins, the member of the nobility. Lovaš, Građani, 91; HR-DAOS-6.1.6.1; book no. 442. Lovaš, „1814 census database“ (unpublished).

[69] For the reference, the population of Osijek, according to the 1814 census, was 9360. The most populous district was the Lower Town with 4226 inhabitants (45.15%). The Upper Town had 3787 inhabitants (40.46%), while the Inner Town with Alodium had 1347 inhabitants (14.29%). Lovaš, „Eszék társadalma“, 130.

[70] The Latin term in the source is “agricola”.

[71] The Latin term in the source for educated individuals employed in the municipal administration is “litteratus”. In other contexts, it could be translated as “scribe”, but in this context, it certainly refers to a lettered, learned man, that is an intellectual.

[72] HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Status Personalis et Salarialis.

[73] The Latin term in the source is “speculans”, which can also mean broker, the one who deals in financial speculations.

[74] HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Status Personalis et Salarialis; HR-DAOS-500.89.1, book no. 789, Osijek, Inner Town, R. Cath., Register of Births, 1796-1833, 65; HR-DAOS-500.94.1, book no. 864, Osijek, Lower Town, R. Cath., Register of the Deceased, 1777-1817, 248; Sršan, Kanonske vizitacije, 133, 135, 193, 239.

[75] For example, see: HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Tabella Restauratorioa.

[76] HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Tabella Restauratoria.

[77] HR-DAOS-6.1.1.5, reg. no. 1537/1815, Status Personalis et Salarialis; HR-DAOS-500.89.1, book no. 789, Osijek, Inner Town, R. Cath., Register of Births, 1796-1833, 65; HR-DAOS-500.94.1, book no. 864, Osijek, Lower Town, R. Cath., Register of the Deceased, 1777-1817, 248; Sršan, Kanonske vizitacije, 133, 135, 193, 239.

[78] Jarm, „Dijecezanski svećenici“, 56, 68, 73, 89, 94, 97; HR-DAOS-6.1.6.1, books no. 441-443; Lovaš, „1814 census database“ (unpublished).

[79] Lovaš, Građani, passim.

[80] HR-DAOS-6.1.6.1, books no. 441-443; Lovaš, “1814 census database” (unpublished).

[81] In the registers of citizens, he is recorded as „Minars“ or “Minarcs”. See: Lovaš, Građani, 82-83, 154-155.

[82] In the register of citizens, he is recorded as „Pinterics“. See: Lovaš, Građani, 88-89.

[83] His family name was incorrectly recorded in the 11 September 1815 Salary and Personnel table. In the register of citizens, he is recorded as Moeke or Möke. See: Lovaš, Građani, 78-79, 118-119.

[84] In the records of the 1814 census, he is recorded as Mihael Kovačević (Michael Kovacsevics). HR-DAOS-6.1.6.1, book no. 443; Lovaš, “1814 census database” (unpublished).

[85] The name of the chaplain who served in the Upper Town on 11 September 1815 was Franjo Kasapović (Franciscus Kassapovich). HR-DAOS-500.93.1, book no. 839, Osijek, Upper Town, R. Cath., Register of the Deceased, 1788-1827, 249.

[86] The name of the chaplain who served in the Lower Town on 11 September 1815 was Josip Stanić (Josephus Stanich). HR-DAOS-500.94.1, book no. 864, Osijek, Lower Town, R. Cath., Register of the Deceased, 1777-1817, 248.

[87] The location of friary.

[88] The location of friary.

[89] In the register of citizens, he is recorded as „Kaldnegger“. See: Lovaš, Građani, 72-73.

[90] The data from: HR-DAOS-6.1.5.2.8, Salary table for 1814/1815, no. 124/64, 1815/1816, no. 19/5.; HR-DAOS-500.89.1, book no. 789, Osijek, Inner City, R. Cath., Register of Births, 1796-1833, 65; Sršan, Kanonske vizitacije, 133, 135.

[91] According to records of the canonical visitations, he took over the position of the parish priest in 1807, but according to entries in the ecclesiastical registers, it occurred in 1808. Sršan, Kanonske vizitacije, 133; HR-DAOS-500.89.1, book no. 789, Osijek, Inner Town, R. Cath., Register of Births, 1796-1833, 65.

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Appendix

APPENDICES

Appendix 1. The Table of Personnel and Salaries on 11 September 1815, with Added Data on the Citizen Status and Place of Residence

Name

(Noment Individui)

Office

(Character)

Religion

(Religio)

Ethnicity/origin (Natio) Year of Becoming a Citizen of Osijek79 City District80

Primary vocation

(Opificium v[el] vitae genus)

Years of Service

(Anni Servitii)

Annual Salary

(Annuum Salarium)

Fl.Xr.
Constantinus BozdaNotaryEastern OrthodoxSlavonian1816Lower TownIntellectual WorkerElected at the recent elections held on 11 Sep 1815450
Petrus IoannovichVice-NotaryEastern OrthodoxSlavonian-Lower TownIntellectual WorkerFrom 23 Jun 1813 to the recent elections held on 11 Sep 1815 he served in the capacity of registrar250
Mathaeus PetrovichAttorneyRoman CatholicSlavonian1809Upper TownIntellectual WorkerSince the recent elections held on 11 Sep 1815. Previously, he had worked as a honorary attorney for three years150
Demetrius PapphazyHonorary AttorneyEastern OrthodoxHungarian1831-Intellectual WorkerFrom 11 Sep 1815, the day of the recent elections-
Leonitus ArgirovichRegistrarEastern OrthodoxSlavonian-Lower TownIntellectual WorkerFrom 29 Aug 1809 to the recent elections, he served in the capacity of the first-rank office (chancery) clerk200
Iosephus MoszlavaczExpeditor and First Office ClerkRoman CatholicSlavonian-Lower TownIntellectual WorkerFrom 1 Apr 1815 to the recent elections, he served as a daily-wage clerk200
Andreas KovatsevichSecond Office ClerkRoman CatholicSlavonianLower TownIntellectual WorkerIn service since 1813150
Andreas VlashkovaczThird Office ClerkRoman CatholicSlavonian1816Lower TownIntellectual WorkerIn service since 1813150
Basilius NikolichHead of the Land RegistryEastern OrthodoxSlavonian-Lower TownIntellectual WorkerSince 29 Aug 1809200
Vincentus Minasz81Chamberlain and TreasurerRoman CatholicBohemian1817Inner and New TownIntellectual WorkerFrom 29 Aug 1809 to 29 Dec 1812, he served as a treasury clerk and supervisor;since than he served in the capacity of a chamberlain and treasurer400
Franciscus GötzingerTreasury SupervisorRoman CatholicSlavonian1810Upper TownIntellectual WorkerFrom 1 Mar 1810 to 29 Dec 1812, he served in the capacity of Sub Chamberlain; since then, he served in the capacity of supervisor300
Franciscus KellnerTreasury ClerkRoman CatholicSlavonian--Intellectual WorkerSince 2 Jan 1813150
Lucas IexevichOrphans’ CustodianRoman CatholicSlavonian1809Inner and New TownCurrierIn service since 25 Feb 1811250
Franciscus SvobodaSub-chamberlainRoman CatholicSlavonian1809Inner and New TownInnkeeperSince 12 Mar 1814120
Martinus Pinterovich82Magazine KeeperRoman CatholicSlavonian1809Lower TownSupervisorSince 1 Nov 1814100
Antonius MatkovichQuarter DesignatorRoman CatholicHungarian-Upper TownIntellectual WorkerSeven months100
Paulus HartlQuartermasterRoman CatholicSlavonian1809Upper TownMaster BricklayerSince 1812100
Leopoldus BischoffPhysicianRoman CatholicHungarian-Inner and New TownIntellectual WorkerIn service since 29 Aug 1809200
Iacobus ReschFirst-rank SurgeonRoman CatholicSlavonian1809Lower TownIntellectual WorkerIn service since 29 Aug 1809100
Wolfgangus RathgebSecond-rank SurgeonRoman CatholicSlavonian1810Upper TownIntellectual WorkerSince 22 Jul 1811100
Anna FuchsMidwifeRoman CatholicHungarian-Inner and New TownMidwifeIn service since 1784100
Anna SzloninMidwifeRoman CatholicHungarian-Lower TownMidwifeIn service since 14 Jun 1811100
Lucas BudorovichAnnouncer (also: House Servant)Roman CatholicSlavonian-Upper Town-Since 24 Feb 1814100
Augustus Mecko83Master of the Guards and QuartermasterRoman CatholicSilesian1809Inner And New TownTypographerIn service since 29 Aug 1809, with the exemption from the billet150
Basilius StefanovichPrison GuardEastern OrthodoxSlavonian-Lower Town-In service since 1 Jun 1815100
Lucas BudorovichHouse Servant (also: Announcer)Roman CatholicSlavonian-Upper Town-Since 24 Jan 181580
Balthasar KutseraDrummerRoman CatholicHungarian--Was a drummer of the Jellacsics's Glorious RegimentIn service since 1 Dec 181060
Michael LoncsarevichCorporalRoman CatholicSlavonian-Upper Town-Since 1 Oct 181496
Iacobus LippovcsevichCorporalEastern OrthodoxSlavonian-Lower Town-Since 1 Oct 181496
Antonius MagyarevichConstableRoman CatholicSlavonian-Upper TownPeasant1 year60
Ignatius HerzlConstableRoman CatholicSlavonian-Upper TownPeasant2 and a half years60
Philippus JagodichConstableRoman CatholicSlavonian-Upper TownPeasant1 year60
Mathaeus VodenicsarConstableRoman CatholicSlavonian-Upper TownPeasant2 years60
Adamus NikolichConstableRoman CatholicSlavonian-Upper TownPeasant7 months60
Martinus Kovacsevich84ConstableRoman CatholicSlavonian-Lower TownPeasant9 months60
Antonius SpoljarichConstableRoman CatholicSlavonian-Upper TownPeasant17 years in service60
Antonius PashaConstableRoman CatholicSlavonian-Upper TownPeasantSince 181060
Rochus KrixanConstableRoman CatholicSlavonian-Upper TownPeasant2 and a half years60
Martinus SchimokovichConstableRoman CatholicSlavonian-Upper TownPeasant1 and a half years60
Andreas PinterovichConstableRoman CatholicSlavonian-Upper TownPeasantSince 181360
Basilius KoszovaczConstableEastern OrthodoxSlavonian--Peasant4 months60
Demetrius DimitrievichConstableEastern OrthodoxSlavonian-Lower TownPeasant2 years60
Michael KremerConstableRoman CatholicSlavonian-Lower TownPeasant2 months60
Thimotheus RajkovichConstableEastern OrthodoxSlavonian-Lower TownPeasant5 years60
Ioannes StephanovichConstableRoman CatholicSlavonian-Lower TownPeasant2 years60
Elias GergurevichIsland GuardRoman CatholicSlavonian-Upper TownPeasantHalf a year60
Franciscus PhilippovichIsland GuardRoman CatholicSlavonian-Lower TownPeasant4 months20
Ioannes GergurevichNightwatchmanRoman CatholicSlavonian-Lower TownPeasant15 years30
Adamus VenczNightwatchmanRoman CatholicSlavonian-Lower TownPeasant20 years30
Iosephus GalganNightwatchmanRoman CatholicCroatian-Inner and New TownPeasantSince 1 May 181230
Franciscus PanczerNightwatchmanRoman CatholicSlavonian-Upper TownPeasantSince 29 Aug 180930
Ioannes BogomolyaczNightwatchmanEastern OrthodoxSlavonian--Peasant3 years30
Theodorus RadibradichField GuardEastern OrthodoxSlavonian-Lower TownPeasant12 years3230
Antonius KoprinszkyField GuardRoman CatholicHungarian-Lower TownPeasant6 years3230
Stephanus GallovaczField GuardRoman CatholicSlavonian-Inner and New TownPeasantSince 29 Aug 18093230
Mathias SherbegyichField GuardRoman CatholicSlavonian-Upper TownPeasantSince 29 Aug 18093230
Ioannes MatauschField GuardRoman CatholicSlavonian--Peasant3 years3230
Ignatius VaiszNight Bell RingerRoman CatholicAustrian-Lower TownSacristanSince 27 Mar 181020
Antonius BudimushNight Bell RingerRoman CatholicSlavonian-Lower TownPeasant2 years20

Ioannes Rasztovich

-for firewood

-for the chaplain85

-for the 2nd chaplain (vacant)

Parish Priest in the Upper TownRoman CatholicSlavonian-Upper Town-Since 29 Jan 1814

600

+

100

225

225

Fabianus Parmassevich

-for firewood

-for the chaplain86

-for the 2nd chaplain (vacant)

Parish Priest in the Lower TownRoman CatholicSlavonian-Lower Town-Since 15 Dec 1807

600

+

100

225

225

Iosephus Haymann

-for firewood

Normal School TeacherRoman CatholicHungarian--OrganistSince 1 Jul 1815

175

+

100

Emericus Turanyi

-for firewood

Normal School TeacherRoman CatholicHungarian-Lower TownOrganistSince 28 May 1787, with the exemption from the billet

175

+

100

Ioannes Vaiczer

-for firewood

Normal School TeacherRoman CatholicSlavonian-Upper TownOrganist5 and a half years, with the exemption from the billet

175

+

100

Ioannes Topalovich

-for the billet

Normal School TeacherEastern OrthodoxSlavonian--Intellectual WorkerSince 1 Nov 1814 (Julian calendar)

200

+

50

Ioannes Burger

-for the billet

Third Normal School TeacherRoman CatholicSlavonian-Inner and New TownIntellectual WorkerIn service since 1805.

200

+

50

Antonius Münczberger (for the requirements of students)Drawing School TeacherRoman CatholicHungarian-Inner and New Town--20
Pater Placidus SchrottCatechistRoman CatholicHungarian-Inner and New Town87Order of St. Francis, Province of St. Capistrano-50
Pater Adalbertus VomachkaPreparatory ProfessorRoman Catholic--Inner and New Town88Order of St. Francis, Province of St. Capistrano-100
Michael Kaltneker89Chimney SweeperRoman CatholicAustrian1809Inner and New TownChimney SweeperSince 29 Aug 1809130

Appendix 2. Individuals Absent from the Table of Personnel and Salaries on 11 September 181590

Name Office Religion Origin Citizen of Osijek City District In service since

Annual Salary

(Annuum Salarium) (Dec 1815)

Fl.Xr.

Joannes Josephacz

-for the chaplain

-for the 2nd chaplain (vacant Dec 1815)

Parish Priest in the Upper TownRoman CatholicPožega-Inner and New Town180891

100

+

200

100

Ioannes Nicolaus SeliskarVicarEastern OrthodoxPožega-Inner and New Town1813
Martinus KomendoVicarRoman CatholicSzent István-Inner and New Town1811
Alexandar StojanovichThe Lower Town Eastern Orthodox Parish PriestEastern Orthodox--Lower Town100

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