Labinština

Istria County showing Labinština

Labinština (Croatian: Labinšćina / Labinština,[1] Italian: L'Albonese / Agro Albonese) is a peninsula which is 25 km long and 13 km wide. It is located on the eastern coast of Istria County in Croatia, and was named after the city of Labin which had control of the territory. Istria County was occupied by many invaders throughout its history. The County was made up of 16 Comuni; one of these was Albona/Labin. Labin was the head township of the Labinština peninsula under the Roman Empire in 177 BC, during the Venice Republic between 1365-1799, the Austria-Hungary Empire between 1814-1918 and many other occupations by foreign armies. The meaning of Albona/Labin is "Al"= high and "bon"= colony" (high colony) in the Celtic language. During the Venice and Austrian occupations, Istria was divided into farming fractions or townships (comuni) each having a chief town called capo-comune. [2][3]

Labinština Peninsula in Istria County, Croatia

The borders of the Labinština Peninsula are made up of the Arsa/Raša river, which starts in the lake Cosliaco / Cepich the only lake in the Istrian County, on the west and south, and the gulf of Quarnaro / Kvarner Croatian: Kvarnerski zaljev, Italian: Golfo del Quarnaro / Kvarner Gulf on the east and south. This Lake was being fed by the Croatian: Planinski masiv Učka, mountain range located just east of valle dell'Arsa, near Croatian: Opatija / Italian: Abbazia and the eastern coast of Istria. Italian: Monte Maggiore, Croatian: Vojak being the highest peak. The Romans used this mountain range water source, and the Cepich lake, to feed major cities, from Albona/Labin on the east side of Istria, to the city of Pola on the tip of Istria. Lake Cepich was emptied and dried in the mid-1900s to get rid of malaria-causing swamps. The lake bed became good agricultural land. Albona / Labin, was the head of the territory and townships of the Labinština peninsula. In 1632, the territory was divided into 12 townships called Comuni (municipalities), Ville (hamlets), Contrade (districts) and Parishes which were the heads of districts before the organization of municipalities). Before the division there were only four Parish branches controlling the peninsula.

St Lucia church in Skitaca built in 1616

The Comuni before 1632

Dubrova-S.Domenica
Vettua-S.Martino
Schitazza-S.Lucia
Produbas-S.Lorenzo

The person who was the head of each Commune or Contrada was called Zuppan and was elected to the position. One of the head townships (Head Commune) was the city of Albona; the other was the city of Fianona. Before 1600 there were only two Head Communes in the Labinšćina. In 1632, under the Venice Republic, and in 1800, under Austria-Hungary, control over the other townships in the Labinšćina peninsula was changed. Twelve townships (Contrade) were mapped in the Labinšćina Peninsula. These twelve communes were placed under the control of Albona, the Head Commune.

Albona Republic

Roman soldiers built military roads starting in Rome, capital of the Roman Empire, continuing in every direction across the Empire. One of the roads came across Istria County and then branched to major cities. This road came through the city of Barban. The Romans built a bridge across the Raša River in Istria County. The road continued through Albona/Labin toward Dalmatia. The Romans built Aqueducts in Istria and other parts of the Roman Empire. Učka mountain (Monte Maggiore) is the largest mountain in Istria, located in the Ćićarija (Ciceria) mountain range on the east side of the Istrian peninsula. From this mountain range, water was transported to many cities by Roman aqueducts. The city of Pula (Pola) on the southern tip of Istria was the summer home of the Emperors and Caesar family who also built the Amphitheater, also known as the Arena. The Aqueducts were made of lead pipes and tubes to transport and direct water to various places in Istria. Using aqueducts as a way of transporting water where it was needed had been used across the vast Roman Empire for many centuries.

The following inscriptions in the church of S.Sabastian's altar was written on the marble tile. Latin: M-IVLIO SEVERO FILIPPO NOBILISSIMO CAESARI NOBILISSIMO PRINCIPI IVVENTVTIS RESPVBLICA ALBONESSIVM (Italian: Marco Iulio Severo Filippo nobilissimo Caesare nobilissimo Principe (ivventvtis) Albona Republica, English: Mark Gulio Severo Filippo most noble Caesar most noble Prince (ivventvtis) Albona Republic)

12 Communes or Townships in the Labinshina Peninsula of Istria County in Croatia

.[4] On page 383 we read- "One of the noble family named Luciani settled in the classical Republica Albonesium, the only classical Istrian Republic, as early as the 14th century".[5]

Austrian Littoral (Istria County)

The Austrian Littoral was formed in 1813 from coastal territories which were controlled by the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The Littoral included the cities of: Trieste, Gorizia and Gradisca, Fiume, the Istrian peninsula, the Kvarner (Quarnero) Islands, and Croatia that was not under military control. This gave Austria control of the major ports on the Kvarner Gulf. Austria began mapping the Littoral for agricultural and tax purposes. The Territory was divided into agricultural fractions. All the parcels were surveyed and mapped to show ownership. Each parcel of land was classified starting from class "I" as the best arable land, to the least arable land, and so-noted on the maps. Grains were harvested, and each type was noted showing yield per acre. The census, surveying, classification of land and forests, and all other noted yields of grain and animals, was completed in 1837.

Townships or Ville in Labinština, Istria County in the 1800

The townships of the territory of Albona were as follows with the city of ALBONA / LABIN as the Head Commune or capo comune of the territory:

Cerovica Cere Cugn Vettua
S.Domenica Bersetz Marina Ripenda
Chermenizza Bergod Vlahovo Albona

Cerovica (Istria)

The township Croatian: Cerovica / Italian: Cerovizza is bordered on the east by the sea of Quarnero from S.Martino to Brovinje; to the North by the Township Chermenizza; and to the East by the Township Croatian: Vlahovo. The head hamlet of the Township of Cerovica was Croatian: Skitača Italian: Schitazza which is located approximately 4 km north-east of Brovinje. In the hamlet of Skitača is the chapel of Saint Lucy of Albona which became a parish church for all of the Township of Cerovica. The small chapel was built in 1616 and became a Parish in 1632. The last time it was renovated was in the 1990s.[6]

Census Data in 1827 for the Township of Cerovica (Istria)

Males Females Families Dwellings
211 216 99 86
Oxen Cows Sheep Veal Pigs
130 92 1370 49 50

The Classifications of the land in the Township of Cerovica (Istria)

Campi arativi nudi (Bare Arrable Lots) Campi olivati (Olive Lots) Campi Vitali (Vines Lots) Vitali & Olivati (Vines & Olives) Vitali Semplici (Simple Vines)Olivati Semplici (Simple Olives) Prati (Meadows) Pascoli Nudi (Bare Pastures) Pascoli Cespuliosi (Bushi fields) Orti (Gardens)Boschi (Woods)
Class31332111213

Hamlets in the Township of Cerovica (Istria) in the 1800

Populated Hamlets and Fractions in Cerovica in 1800
Names in 1800 Names today Names in 1800 Names today
Brovegni Brovinje Callioni ?
Bauni ? Cecuti ?
Stara Polatsa ? Polesidi Crni
Buruti ? GerLatz ?
Vlacichovo golac Sikuli ?
Mikalinca Mikaljini Prodol ?
Miliwoja Millevoi Pribili, Winigrad ?
Dregne Drenje Fragnoli ?
Wiscowichi Ucici Raune Ravni
Mikulianski ? Prodoll ?
Centina ? Cerovizza Cerovica
Squaranska Skvaranska Principi ?
Lemechi ? Tomicici ?
Schitazza Skitača Curata ?
St.Johan Chapel Sv.Ivan Scerna Punta Crna Punta

There were no villages in Cerovica in the 1800s, only hamlets and small settlements with a few houses. A Village is a group of houses in the country larger than a hamlet, but smaller than a city or town having a market. In the hamlet of Prodol there was a coal mine which employed between four and six men daily. The people of the hamlet of Brovinje near the sea were fishermen and farmers. The names of these hamlets were German in the 1800s. Between 1918 and 1945 the names were changed to Italian. After 1945, the names were changed again, this time to Croatian. Some hamlets joined with other very close hamlets or fractions to form a brand new name or using only one name for the group.[7]

See also

References

  1. Page 19 (Note 16 - The "šćina" or "śtina" added to a town's name means that it also refers to the surroundings of that town.
    Kalsbeek, Jannke (1998). The Čakavian Dialect of Orbanići Near Žminj in Istria: Volume25. Rodopi. pp. 19–24. ISBN 9789042007123.
  2. Jackson, Thomas Graham (1887). Dalmatia, the Quarnero / Qvarner and Istria, with Cettigne in Montenegro and the island of Grado, Volume 3. London: Oxford University press. pp. 249–279.
  3. Labin,Yugoslavia (1870). Statuto della citta di Albona dell'a. 1341 (in Italian). Trieste: Societa del Gabinetto di Minerva. pp. III–IX. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  4. name=AlbonaLabin, Yugoslavia (1870). Societa del Gabinetto di Minerva, ed. Statuto municipale della città di Albona dell'a. 1341 (in Italian) (1341 ed.). Trieste: Società del Gabinetto di Minerva,. pp. III–XVI. Retrieved 24 June 2013.
  5. Burton, Richard (December 1873). "Notes on the Castellieri or Prehistoric Ruins on the Istrian Peninsula". Anthropologia, in which are included the proceedings of the London Anthropological society. 1: 376–392. Retrieved 21 September 2013.
  6. Burton, Richard (1874). Charnock, Richard, ed. "The castellieri of the Istrian peninsula". Anthropologia. London. 1: 392–393. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  7. http://www.catasti.archiviodistatotrieste.it/Divenire/ua.htm?idUa=10649433
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