Build up to the revolt After the revolution in Pest-Buda on March the 15th and the formation of a new government on March the 17th, 1848, the threat of a forcible
Magyarization of the Slovak lands grew ever more present. In
Hont County, this tension came to a boiling point as two Slovaks,
Janko Kráľ and , made demands for the abolition of
serfdom and official recognition of the Slovak language in schools and administration. Their demands soon landed the two Slovak poets in jail. On March the 28th, 1848, a vast assembly of former serfs convened by
Liptó County and held in Hodža's base of Liptovský Mikuláš was used as a proving ground for systematic recognition of new rights and extended rights to national minorities. This was met well, and soon the word was spreading about possible new freedoms that would reach Slovaks, prompting some miners from today's Central-Slovakia to demonstrate rowdily before being quieted by a special commissioner from Pest-Buda. In April 1848, Štúr and Hurban attended a preliminary Slavic meeting in Vienna, which would later provide the basis for the first
Pan-Slavic Congress to be held in
Prague. In the meantime, back in Liptovský Mikuláš, Hodža along with twenty delegates created a document entitled
Demands of the Slovak Nation which listed 14 points setting national and social goals for the Slovak nation. Naturally this document was received coldly by Pest-Buda, which subsequently imposed
martial law on Upper Hungary and issued warrants for Štúr, Hurban and Hodža on May the 12th, 1848. At the same time, uprisings among Serbs, Croats and Slovenes in the southern part of Hungary diverted Magyar attention to the south, as these conflicts were more armed uprisings than the Slovak one. Hurban attended a session of the Croatian Diet on 5 July, speaking to the Croats on the plight of the Slovaks. Hurban spoke so well a joint Croat-Slovak declaration was issued shortly thereafter which only inflamed Magyar opinion. When the full Pan-Slavic Congress met on June the 2nd, 1848, Štúr, Hurban, Hodža and many other prominent Slovaks attended, along with hundreds of other Slavic delegates. This congress was held with the aim of developing a cohesive strategy for all Slavic peoples living in Austro-Hungarian territories. The congress was cut short when an armed uprising in Prague on June the 12th prompted a hurried end to the affair. However, one critical item came out of the short congress for the Slovak cause. In the congress, the Slovaks secured the help of two Czech military officers,
Bedřich Bloudek and
František Zach, in case the Slovaks came to armed blows with the Hungarians. Though many calls for autonomy came from nearly every corner of the Empire, Vienna noted that neither at the Pan-Slavic conference, nor at other Slavic uprisings was the thought of the splitting or dissolving the Empire considered, which was only called for in Hungary. Seeing the situation as malleable, the Emperor along with his closest advisors authorized armed action against the Hungarian uprising. This first manifested itself in the form of the leader of the Croatians, Ban (governor)
Josip Jelačić, a friend of the Slovaks, who was authorized to march against the Hungarians in August 1848 after the Hungarians had defied a direct imperial order. Despite this, Vienna's response to the Hungarian uprising had stayed largely quiet and mixed. While allowing Jelacic to march against the Magyars, they had also given the Hungarian Army several units in order to help preserve internal order. At the same time, Slovaks started working with Jelacic's Croatians by creating a Slovak volunteer corps. This corps was put together and gathered in Vienna from August to September 1848. In order to lead this burgeoning revolt, a Slovak National Council was organized in Vienna, where a marker stands today commemorating the spot. The council was made up of Štúr, Hurban and Hodža— the "big three" of the Slovak nationalist groups— with the Czech František Zach as commander-in-chief.
Revolt Initially, the strategy for the volunteer corps was not clear. However, on 16 September a decision was made that the 600 men of the corps would march from Vienna, up the
Vág River valley and into
Turóc County and
Liptó County Counties via the southern Moravian town of
Břeclav. When the corps arrived at the Slovak border on the 18th, they were met with 500 more volunteers from Brno and Prague. Once convened, the volunteers received arms and swore an oath on the Slovak flag. Despite nudging Viennese cooperation, when the volunteers encountered Imperial troops on the road to
Miava they were regarded coolly by the troops. Once the volunteers arrived in Miava, an assembly of Slovaks with Hurban presiding took the step of
seceding from Hungary on 19 September 1848. Imperial troops soon ordered the Slovaks volunteers to leave Myjava, though this order was rejected and instead the corps attacked an Imperial detachment and confiscated its supplies. Despite this inauspicious act, Imperial troops ordered both sides to halt the fighting. After several more days of indecisive armed action, the volunteers retreated back into Moravia. Not long after, the new commander of Imperial forces sent to restore order in the Kingdom of Hungary,
Count von Lamberg, was hacked and mangled by an irate mob in central Budapest only three days after arrival. This halted attempts at negotiations between Kossuth and the Imperial party. The Viennese response was to formally order the disbandment the Hungarian Diet and the appointment of Ban Josip Jelačić as newest commander over Hungary. However, effective response to this latest development was also halted by another popular, pan-Germanic uprising in Vienna at the time which resulted in the death of war minister
Count Latour on 6 October 1848. In this midst of the turmoil in Vienna, which saw the Emperor and the Imperial Diet flee to
Olomouc in Moravia, Magyars stepped up measures against Slovaks, stripping the leaders of the Slovak National Council of their Hungarian citizenship and executing a handful of prisoners. This move caused the Slovak faction to appeal more to the Imperial court and despite initial concerns of the commander-in-chief
Prince Windisch-Grätz, another Slovak volunteer unit was allowed to be created. Initial recruitment problems delayed this second campaign of the volunteer units until 4 December 1848. Throughout December and January, the Slovak volunteers under Bloudek worked with Imperial troops to reoccupy
Túrócszentmárton. On 13 January 1849 a mass rally in Túrócszentmárton was followed by the signing up of new volunteers. Acting with Imperial support, Bloudek moved east and, picking up another few thousand volunteers, occupied Eperjes (
Prešov) on 26 February and Kassa (
Košice) on 2 March. Meanwhile, another detachment of Slovaks was defeated after running into Magyar forces near Murányalja (
Muráň) in Besztercebánya (
Banská Bystrica). To make matters worse, dissension between Czech and Slovak officers in the volunteer corps began to erupt. After leading activist rallies in Eperjes and Túrócszentmárton, Štúr and Hurban led a delegation of twenty-four men to meet the new
Emperor Franz Jozef with a proposal to make Slovakia an autonomous grand duchy directly under Viennese oversight with representation in the Imperial Diet. The delegates also requested a Slovak provincial diet, with further demands for Slovak schools and institutions. Despite a formal audience with the Emperor, little real progress resulted and the Slovaks were sent packing hoping for more productive results in the future. After several victorious battles in Spring of 1849, Kossuth and the Hungarian Diet declared the Habsburgs deposed on 14 April 1849. Around the same time, the Slovak volunteer corps, largely stationed in
Árva County, was dealing with internal struggles of its own. Conflicts between Czech and Slovak officers soon brought about the effectual dissolving of the corps. After Russian intervention by
Tsar Nicholas I brought about the gradual fall of Kossuth and Hungarian independence. During this period, the corps was revived one final time to 'mop-up' isolated Magyar units until the eventual capitulation of Magyar forces at Világos (what is now
Şiria in Romania) on 13 August 1849. On 9 October 1849, the Imperial army transferred the Slovak corps from the central territories of Upper Hungary to Pozsony, where it was formally disbanded on 21 November 1849. This marked the end of Slovak participation in the Revolutions of 1848–1849 that swept the continent of Europe ==Hungarian perspective==