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I know. Srem was ruled by some Serbian kings before the Ottomans. There are also mentions of Serb individuals in Banat even before the Ottomans.
But Vojvodina Serbs all claim origins from the more recent migrations.
These oral traditions can be misleading. There is around 10% of n-p189.2 + j2b1 in native Vojvodina Serbs. I suppose it came from Krajina Serbs settling there during Habsburg Empire/Austria-Hungary? This is a significant percentage.
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It's possible. Our mainsteam history see average native Vojvodinian Serb as descendant of settlers from Raška or Kosovo in 1690 with Čarnojević.
Sremac from Poreklo said that in Syrmia there is a small number of Serbs whose ancestors arrived in 1690. Most of them are in Syrmia before 1690 or they came from Krajina in 18th and 19th century (eastern part of Syrmia have a lot of Serbs with Krajina origin in 18th and 19th century - between Inđija and Zemun).
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I know a lot of Sremci from eastern Syrmia whose ancestors came from northern Dalmatia and Lika roughly 1770-1900.
For example village Surduk was founded by Serbian settlers from these regions in 1770s. Surnames of native Surdučani are almost 100% Lika and northern Dalmatian.
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Djurovski, Šaranac and Marković are probably connected then. Note the hotspot in Southern Serbia, Northern Macedonia, and Western Bulgaria. There is also a Bulgarian from Radomir who is under L712 and an F15008(F16045) is from Vratsa.
Yes, he is from Q project. Todor does not reply to me, so I do not know if it is his actual surname or just his name. Anyway, he matches with a Bulgarian(common ancestor in last 300 years) from Plovdiv whose village is in the skirts of the Central Balkan Mountains. The village was populated by Turks before Russo-Turkish War so his ancestor was not a native of the region. There is a register that mentions Bulgarians of that village came from Razlog, Blagoevgrad in the last 150 years. So even if it is not Razlog still should have origin from Western Bulgaria or even from Southern Serbia as they are somehow connected to the Todor from Svrljig.
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Eastern part of Srem and whole Banat were under Ottoman rule until 1718.
How could Serbs fleeing from Ottomans in migration 1690. settle these areas if these areas are still under Ottomans?
Simple logic says its not possible.
Yeah, I dislike that mainstream "Serbs are in Vojvodina since 1690."
No its not true.
There are Ottoman census defters who record Serbian majority presence in Vojvodina in 16th and 17th century. Even Hungarian historians admit that.
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Here is ethnic-religious map of Srem in 16th century during Ottoman rule.
Blue are Serbs, red are Croats and Hungarians - these red areas are mostly in todays Croatia. Green crescent are Muslim populated areas.
As you can see, a lot of toponymes that exist today in Srem, existed even nearly 500 years ago!
All Serbian Orthodox monasteries on Fruška gora are recorded. There were even 25 of them.
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An example of Srem Serb whose ancestors are in Srem long time before 1690 is Siniša Kovačević https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siniša_Kovačević
He say his cousin historian researched origin of family in many archives and determined they are present in Srem about 20 generations, their far origin is from here https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grahovo,_Nikšić
In 1690 Serbs settled in smaller part of present day Vojvodina, only in part of Bačka (plus in Baranja and western Hungary). Not in Syrmia, Banat and southern/eastern Bačka.
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Last edited by Varda; 04-28-2021 at 05:30 PM.
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On the map in my previous post is marked that Serbs in 1690 settled only in part of Bačka of present day Vojvodina. But it happened that large part of Serbs who in 1690 settled in present day Hungary was pushed towards the south in present day Vojvodina in uprising of Ferenc Rákóczi 1703-11. Serbian settlers were target of Rákóczi's revolutionary army, many of them moved to the south and some were killed.
Last edited by Varda; 04-28-2021 at 06:04 PM.
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