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1847 - Štefan KlčŠtefan Klč (Š is pronounces "sh" and č is pronounced "ch") was born on August 7, 1847 to Tomáš Klč and Zuzana Štefik in House #425 in the town of Myjava which was in Nyitra kraj (the Nyitra region), in Uhorské kráľovstvo (the Kingdom of Hungary). The area was ruled by Ferdinánd V, whose titles included the Emperor of Austria, King of Hungary, King of Lombardy-Venetia, and King of Bohemia. The people of Myjava were ethnic Slovaks, but they could not claim the name "Slovakia" for their land. When Štefan was one year old, the town of Myjava would be at the very center of a revolution for Slovak independence. On the day after his birth, Štefan was baptized by Pastor Jánoš Schulz at the town's Lutheran church known as the Evanjelická Cirkev Augsburského Vyznania (the Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession) in Myjava. His baptismal sponsors were Sámuel Doška and Alžbeta Wiskup. Slovakia, HungaryThe region had been settled first by Celtic tribes around 400 BCE, then by Germanic tribes, and finally by Slavic tribes over the course of several centuries. The major political regions that emerged consisted of three historic lands: Bohemia and Moravia in the west (often called the Czech Lands) and Slovakia in the east. Slovakia had been ruled by Hungary for almost 1,000 years and was known as Horné Uhorsko (Upper Hungary). From 1526 to 1918, the Kingdom of Hungary came under the control of the Habsburg monarchy, which had ruled areas around Austria since 1276. In the late Middle Ages, the Latin terms "Natio Hungarica" and "Hungarus" referred to all of the population, as loyalty and patriotism towards the crown existed among all inhabitants, regardless of ethnic origins. The Latin Regnum Hungariae (Regnum meaning kingdom); Regnum Marianum (Kingdom of St. Mary); or simply Hungaria was the form used in official documents from the beginning of the kingdom to the 1840s. The German name (Königreich Ungarn) was used from 1849 to the 1860s, and the Hungarian name (Magyar Királyság) was used in the 1840s, and again from the 1860s to 1918. The Slovak name of the kingdom was Uhorské kráľovstvo. In Austria-Hungary (1867-1918), the unofficial name Transleithania was sometimes used to denote the regions covered by the Kingdom of Hungary. Officially, the term Lands of the Holy Hungarian Crown of Saint Stephen was included for the Hungarian part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, although this term was also in use prior to that time. In the sixteenth century, Hungary served as a buffer between the Ottoman Empire of the Turks and the Holy Roman Empire to the west and the Kingdom of Poland to the north. As the Turks encroached on Hungarian soil, they captured the area that is today the modern nation of Hungary, while another Hungarian region, Transylvania, became a Turkish protectorate. Only Slovakia was left as the remaining independent piece of the Kingdom of Hungary. In 1536 it became known as "Royal Hungary" with Bratislava, as the capital. From 1526 to 1830, nineteen Habsburg sovereigns were crowned "Kings and Queens of Hungary" in the St. Martin's Cathedral in Bratislava. At the time, Bratislava was known as Prešporok (in Slovak), Pressburg (in German), and Pozsony (in Hungarian). Bratislava remained the capital of Hungary until the Turks were finally ousted from Central Europe in 1786 and Buda became the capital city. MyjavaThe Myjava River flows through the town of Myjava which is located in the Myjava Highlands at the foothills of the White Carpathian Mountains, not far from the range known as the Little Carpathians. It is situated just 10 kilometers away from the modern border with the Czech Republic. Today, Myjava is the administrative center of the okres Myjava (Myjava district) which consists of 2 towns and 15 villages. The town and district are located in Trenčiansky kraj (the Trenčín region). The area is also part of a tourist region called Stredne Povazie. The town of Myjava was founded in 1586. The area had been settled centuries before in what has been called the Valach or Wallachian colonization wave. From the 10th to the 13th centuries, shepherds known as the Valaši, who lived in present-day Romania, began moving their flocks of Valašsko (Wallachia) sheep to new pastures high in the Carpathian Mountains. The Wallachian sheep were small, with rough wool, and were able to withstand the harsh conditions of living in the mountains yet could produce relatively high yields of milk. The Valaši were looking for refuge from the destructive raids of various Eastern tribes and from the continuing threat of the Ottoman Empire. This gradual Wallachian colonization spread across the entire mountain area of Slovakia as well as the Carpathian regions of southern Poland. By the end of the 15th century it reached the end of its migration in the Moravian area now known as Valašsko (Wallachia). Myjava was connected with the name of a Lutheran pastor named Daniel Krman (1663-1740) who was known for his scientific and literary activities. He established the original Protestant church in Myjava dating back to 1711. In 1785, a new evangelical church was constructed and in 1856 a tower was added. This building is the dominant landmark in Myjava. In 1848, the inhabitants of Myjava were involved in the struggle for the liberation of Slovakia that culminated in the first Slovak Uprising. During that year, a revolution broke out in Hungary which dealt with the liberation of peasants from serfdom. Encouraged by the revolution, and concerned that the newly-formed Hungarian government favored continued Magyar domination of a centralized government, culture and language, a group of Slovak leaders drafted the Petition of the Slovak Nation in May 1848. It demanded equality for the various nationalities within Hungary. The petition stated:
However, the Hungarian revolutionary government, headed by Governor-President Lajos Kossuth, refused to grant equality to the ethnic nationalities within Hungary. Although Kossuth was himself of Slovakian ancestry, he considered himself an ethnic Hungarian and insisted that there could be no independent Slovak nationality or ethnicity within the nation of Hungary. The Slovak's revolutionary demands were met with repressive measures by Kossuth's government. This in turn provoked the formation in September 1848 of a Slovak National Council under the leadership of Jozef Miloslav Hurban (1817-1888), Ľudovít Štúr (1815-1856), and Michal Miloslav Hodža (1811-1870). Ľudovít Štúr, a Lutheran, was the leader of a Slovak national revival in the 19th century, and the author of a Slovak language standard that eventually led to the contemporary Slovak literary language. On September 19, 1848, the Slovak National Council founded by Štúr, Hurban and Hodža held their initial meeting at a public gathering in Myjava as the first national authority in Slovak history, representing the political and military power of Slovakia. They announced the independence of Slovakia from the government in Budapest and began an armed uprising for national liberation and self-determination. In three military campaigns, and corresponding political activity, the Slovak National Council struggled over the next year to secure an equal standing for the Slovak people in the family of European nations. Between November 1848 and April 1849, armed Slovaks military units helped the Habsburg king, Franz Joseph, defeat the Hungarian revolutionary government on Slovak territory. In March 1849, the Slovaks even temporarily managed to administor Slovakia themselves. However, in the summer of 1849, Russian forces helped the Habsburg king defeat the revolutionary Hungarians and in November, when the Slovaks were not needed anymore, the Slovak army corps were dissolved in Vienna. In December 1851, King Franz Joseph abolished the last vestiges of constitutionalism and began to rule Hungary as absolute master. The quashing of the Slovak uprising signaled an end to a vision of a Slovak nation for many years. At the end of the 19th century, many people left Myjava and emigrated, mainly to the United States. The town was completely rebuilt after the Second World War. Trenčiansky krajA kraj is the highest-level administrative unit in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and historically in Czechoslovakia. For lack of other English expressions, the term is often translated as region, territory, or province. A kraj is subdivided into okresy (districts). The Trenčiansky kraj (Trenčín Region) is one of eight Slovak administrative regions today. It consists of 9 districts (okresy). Formerly, the area was the Trenčiansky komitát of the Kingdom of Hungary. A Hungarian komitát (comitatus in Latin) was the name of a historic administrative county. The Trenčiansky komitát shared borders with the Austrian lands of Moravia and Galicia and the Hungarian counties of Árva (Orava), Turóc (Turiec) and Nyitra (Nitra). The river Váh flowed through the county. Trenčiansky komitát arose at the end of the 11th century, when most parts of the territory were conquered by the Kingdom of Hungary. Okres Myjava (Myjava district) is a district in the Trenčín Region of western Slovakia. Until 1918, the district was part of the Hungarian county of Nitra. It contains the town of Myjava. Nové Mesto nad Váhom District (okres Nové Mesto nad Váhom) is a district in the Trenčín Region of western Slovakia. Until 1918, the district was mostly part of the Hungarian county of Nitra, with an area in the north forming part of the county of Trenčín. It contains the towns of Lubina, Hrušové, Bošáca, and Moravské Lieskové. 1856 - Anna PlašenkaAnna Plašenka was born November 29, 1856 to Jiriho Plašenka and Anna Pavlovik in House #39 in Hrušové, Slovakia, Hungary. Anna was baptized the same day. HrušovéToday, the village of Hrušové is in the Nové Mesto nad Váhom District in the Trenčín Region of western Slovakia. Hrušové is less than a mile southeast of the larger town of Lubina. Lubina is a village and municipality in Nové Mesto nad Váhom District in the Trenčín Region of western Slovakia. In historical records the village was first mentioned in 1392. Lubina was the site of the parish church for Hrušove. 1872 - marriageŠtefan Klč married Anna Plašenka on May 12, 1872 in either the village of Hrušove or in Myjava, Stefan's home town. Or perhaps they married in the Evangelical Church in nearby Lubina, about a mile and a half from Hrušove. Stefan Klč became a miller in Hrušove like Anna's father, Jiriho Plašenka. We don't know if Stefan learned this trade after his marriage by working for his father-in-law, or if he was apprenticed to Jiriho Plašenka before his marriage and the situation led to him marry the boss's daughter. 1880s - childrenEva Klč was born September 6, 1885 in House #39 in Hrušove. Eva also had brown hair and blue eyes. She had an older sister, Katherine, and a younger sister, Anna. We have no records of their birth dates. Eva married Stefan Ochodnicky in the town of Lubina on February 16, 1904 at the Evangelical (Protestant) Church. (See Stefan Ochodnicky and Eva Klč) Stefan emigrated to the United States in 1906 and Eva followed a year later in 1907. Eva's sister Anna also emigrated to the United States. deathsStefan Klč died in Hrušove. We have no record of his death date. Anna Klč died in Hrušove at age 62, on August 22, 1919.
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