16th century with chaikas, 1597.
Pavle Bakić commanded the Šajkaši in the service of
Ferdinand, the Archduke of Austria and King of Hungary and Croatia. The Šajkaši participated in the
Battle of Mohács (1526). After the battle the Šajkaši were still unpaid for their services. Ferdinand reprimanded the court for not having paid at least part of the unpaid salary to the Šajkaši. Bakić once again turned to Ferdinand, alerting him that the nonpayment to the Šajkaši would cause estrangement of the Serbs in his lands, and those of Zapolya and the Ottoman Empire. He also informed Ferdinand of the persecution of Serbs by the Austrian staff and officers.
17th century From all the writings in Serbian and German by the estimable Archimandrite
Jovan Rajić (Johann Raics, 1726–1801), it has been established that the old Šajkaš Corps had their staff in the city of
Komárno (Comorn, Hungarian: Komorom) which is along the upper Danube and that the personnel were under the Hungarian and Polish King Ladislaus III (1424–1444) and those following him until they were included under the rule of
Leopold I (1640–1705). The old Šajkaš Corps was established in 1526 and dissolved in 1746. By far the majority of the Šajkaši were Serbs who had come north and west as direct result of the Turkish advance into the Balkans. As Ottoman conquest continued throughout the 1500s, thousands fled north across the Danube into lands vacated by the Serbs, also moving away from the Turks. In addition, thousands of refugees, generally of the Orthodox faith, had entered the largely deserted lands of northern Medieval Serbia where few of the original natives had survived the brutal wars. These Serbs formed the nucleus of the military frontiersmen, beginning in the early 1500s, and of the river fleet, the Šajkaši formations. In 1690, a major Serbian immigration took place. Some 30,000 families from
Kosovo sought refuge across the Sava and Danube rivers among their kin folk after the Austrian supported revolt failed and left them defenceless in the face of Ottoman reprisals.
18th century These newly arrived Serbs together with the members of the earlier Šajkaši Corps formed the new Šajkaši Battalion on the lower Danube. They defended the border between the Habsburg and Ottoman empires. Like the other regiments of the Austrian Military Frontier, the Šajkaši settled the deserted borderlands designated for them by the Austrian crown in exchange for military service. The Šajkaši battalion's first lower Danube villages were:
Titel,
Lok,
Mošorin (Moschorin),
Vilovo (Willova),
Gardinovci (Gardinovatz) and
Žabalj (Zsablia, formerly Josefdorf). Six more villages were authorized on 7 June 1769:
Čurug,
Gospođinci,
Šajkaš (St. Ivan), Upper
Kovilj, Lower Kovilj, and
Kać (Kaacs). In 1800 and 1801, two more --
Djurdjevo and
Nadalj—were also settled. On 1 January 1809, the battalion totaled six companies (a division). This battalion, along the model of the other regiments of the Military Frontier, was organized according to the standing order of the Austrian military-civil administration. The duties of and support for the Battalion's frontiersmen were the same as all other frontiersmen. A history of the Šajkaš Battalion was written between 1842 and 1847 by one of its officers, Captain Jovan Trumić. Apparently the only surviving copy is now at the Serbian scholarly society,
Matica srpska, in
Novi Sad. The original Trumić manuscript and other documents about the Šajkaši were brought to light in 2004 by Slavko Gavrilović, a Serbian scholar who specialized in the Šajkaš Battalion. Included in Captain Trumić's study are valuable statistics from 1844. There were 30,315 inhabitants on the lands of the Šajkaš Battalion at that time: 28,656 Serbs; 758 Germans; 528 Hungarians; 196 Wallachians; and 177 others. Within the jurisdiction of the Battalion, there were 28,275 Eastern Orthodox Christians (Non-Uniates, mostly Serbs); 1,627 Roman Catholics (includes Croatians); 329 Protestant Evangelists (Lutherans); 63 Uniates; and 21 Protestant Reformed (Calvenists). Among the additional documents Slavko Gavrilović published in 2004 is a list of the officers who served in the Šajka Battalion between 1762 and 1873. Captain Trumić is among them. A total of 246 Serbian officers are listed. The list is interesting today for the large number of Serbian officers and for the details about their military service which provide information about the officers of both the Šajkaš Battalion and the Military Frontier. The list is chronological. The dates and places correspond not only to assignments within the Military Frontier but also to postings in far-away wars waged by the Habsburg crown. The list reveals that these officers were transferred to those wars. After 1699, the service of the military frontiersmen was not limited to protecting the Habsburg Empire from the Ottomans. They were required, by regulation, to serve where called. The high command in Vienna viewed the Military Frontier as a vast pool of self-sufficient recruits for the Austrian military, and their participation in the major wars involving the Austrian crown seems to bear this out.
19th century By an imperial decree of the Habsburg ruler, Empress
Maria Theresa, a special unit of the Austrian Danube Fleet, the Šajkaš Battalion of the lower Danube, was created in 1763. It was abolished under another Habsburg, Emperor
Franz Joseph, in 1872. Of the Battalion's Serbian officers, 89 were promoted from the ranks of non-commissioned officers. Sixty came from several of the Military Frontier's other regiments which were either named for the regimental headquarter cities—Brod, Gradiska, Ogulin, Otocac, Petrovaradin, Slunj, Titel and Varazdin—or regions of the Military Frontier --
Banat,
Banija,
Lika, and
Slavonia. Some were cadets or arrived fresh from the Military Frontier School in Vienna. The Trumić list includes the year the officers joined the Battalion and his rank and prior post. Also shown are each officer's promotions and the year he was transferred out of the Battalion as well as his rank and new post. A staggering number military frontiersmen (
graničari as they were called in Serbian) from the regiments of the Military Frontier were called up to the Austrian armies engaged in various European wars, such as the
Austrian War of Succession (1741–1748); the Seven Years' War (1756–1763); the
Bavarian War of Succession (1778–1779); the wars against post-revolutionary France (1792–1800); the
Napoleonic Wars (1805–1815); the Austro-Italian Wars (1848–1849, 1859, 1866) and the
Revolution of 1848 and the wars against the Hungarians (1848–1849). Postings on the list include places in northern Italy,
Mantua and
Solferino, made famous in the Napoleonic Wars and in the Austro-Italian Wars. According to the list, Lieutenant Michael Stanisavljević was transferred to Mantua in 1784 and Captain Marcus Rajčević was killed in the
Battle of Solferino in 1859. During the Austro-Turkish War of 1788–1791, the Austrians organized Serbian volunteers into special military force known as the
Serbian Free Corps (
Frei Corps), usually commanded by Austrian officers of Serbian descent. From the Šajkaš Battalion, Adjutant George Bešanović transferred to the Bosnian-Serbian
Frei Corps in 1788. Lieutenant Gligorije Popović and Lieutenant Thimotie Zivković transferred to Count Gyulay's
Frei Corps in 1793. Lieutenant Arsenije Sečujac transferred to the 3rd Serbian
Frei Crops Battalion in 1813. Thirty-five were transferred to other regiments of the Military Frontier. Fifty-one died while in serving in the Battalion, but whether the death was in line of duty is not specified. Seventy-seven retired from the Battalion with pensions. The length of service varied from a few months to as many as 30 years, if not more. Several Serbs became majors, colonels and battalion commanders. In 1763, the year the Šajkaš Battalion was created, Theodor Stanisavljević was a
Major and the Battalion Commander of the Petrovaradin Frontier Infantry Regiment. In 1773, he was Colonel in the Šajkaš Battalion. He died in 1783. Colonel Aron Stanisavljević, in 1813 after 35 years with the Battalion, was promoted to Brigadier General and
Major-General and transferred to Banat. That same year, Lieutenant Colonel Johann Nepomuk Majdić became Battalion Commander. In 1816, Captain Thimotie Zivković returned to the Battalion and was promoted to Colonel and battalion Commander. In 1835, Colonel Franz Jankovic was appointed Major General and Commander of the Supreme Shipping Office in Vienna. In 1849, Major Johann Bunčić was the Battalion Commander of the Ogulin Frontier Regiment and Adjutant to the Austrian-Serbian Army Corps when he joined the Sajkas Battalion. The next year, he was transferred to the Petrovaradin Frontier Infantry Regiment as a colonel.
Šajkaši Battalion The Frontier Šajkaši Battalion (
Krajiški šajkaški bataljon), known in German as
Czaikisten-Bataillon, was active in the period of 1763–1873. After the
Treaty of Belgrade (1739) the Habsburg-Ottoman border was set up on the Danube and Sava rivers. The Šajkaši bands in
Komárno,
Esztergom,
Győr and other places were abolished, until the establishment of the Šajkaši Battalion in
Bačka, between the Danube and
Tisa, in 1763 upon decision of the
Habsburg War Council. The Serb colonising community which was employed into the battalion (the
šajkaši) was given the
Šajkaška region, which initially included six villages, eventually increased by eight. The battalion headquarters were in
Titel. The battalion had four bands in 1769, with ca. 1,116 men, although it was constantly expanded. ==Šajkaši migrations==