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The Balkan joint family household: seeking its origins
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 January 2009
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1 This term is a literary, not a folk term and is often misleadingly used. Todorova suggests eliminating the term from historical-demographical analyses (Todorova, Maria, ‘Myth-making in European family history: the zadruga revisited’, East European Politics and Societies 4 (1990), 64).Google Scholar
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7 Mosely, , ‘The distribution of the zadruga’, 58–69Google Scholar; Stoianovich, Traian, ‘Family and household in the Western Balkans, 1500–1870’, Mémorial Ömer Lutfi Barkan (Bibliothèque de l'Institut Français d'Études Anatoliennes d'Istanbul) 28 (1980), 189–203Google Scholar; Todorova, Maria, ‘Population structure, marriage patterns, family and household (according to Ottoman documentary material from North-Eastern Bulgaria in the 60s of the 19th century)’, Études balkaniques 19 (1983), 59–72Google Scholar; Todorova, Maria, ‘Recent research on household and family in the Balkans (15–19th century)’, in Grimm, Gerhard ed., Von der Pruth-Ebene bis zum Gipfel des Ida. Festschrift zum 70. Geburtstag von Emanuel Turczynski (Munich, 1989), 11–22.Google Scholar
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11 The Lika region is part of the so-called Krajina or Republik of Krajina, populated mainly by Serbs seeking independence from Croatia at the time of writing of this paper.
12 It is accidental that the material was not destroyed; it was not supposed to preserved. It was also an accident that I came across it. An alert civil servant of the Steiermärkisches Landesarchiv in Graz (the Styrian Regional Archives in Graz) called my attention to this forgotten box, ‘full of strange material’ – household listings, describing the composition and land holdings of more than 2,000 households. The census was named ‘Conscriptio terrenorum et hominum beeder graffschafften Lica and Corbavia’ (‘Description of the land and the population of both the principalities Lika and Krbava’). It is located in the Steiermärkisches Landesarchiv in Graz, Innerösterreichische Hofkammer, call number 1712–X–268. Additional parts of the census (summaries) are located in the Arhiv Hrvatske in Zagreb (SLK, kutja 4) and in the Wiener Kriegsarchiv (IÖHKR/Croatica, 1714–IV–21).
13 Their origins and the name Bunjevci are still in dispute. The name was first mentioned in the sixteenth century. They probably were Vlachs who, in contrast to the majority, became absorbed into the Catholic Croat community.
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15 Ibid.
16 Ibid.
17 Ibid.
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29 Ibid., 88–94.
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50 Ibid., 280.
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60 See, for instance, Halpern, Joel M. and Anderson, David, ‘The zadruga, a century of change’, Anthropologica N.S. 12 (1970), 83–97CrossRefGoogle Scholar. The authors demonstrate that in the case of the Serbian village Orašac, despite increasing longevity, reduced fertility and decline in household size, one cannot speak of the decline of the zadruga during the century from 1870 to 1970.
61 Hammel, , ‘The zadruga as process’, 345–6.Google Scholar
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