The Lordship of Vukovar (German: Herrschaft Vukovar, Serbo-Croatian: Vukovarsko vlastelinstvo, Вуковарско властелинство) was a large land estate, lordship, established in the Kingdom of Slavonia in 1731, after the liberation of the region from the Ottoman rule following the 1699 Treaty of Karlowitz.[1] The seat of the lordship was in the town of Vukovar, on the banks of the Danube river where between 1749 and 1751 representative Eltz Manor was constructed. The lordship existed until the end of the World War II in Yugoslavia and the establishment of the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia in 1945. Significant part of its agricultural estates was subsequently run by the agricultural production company—Vupik.[2]
History
The 1687 Battle of Mohács opened the space to the Habsburg Empire forces to reconquest areas in Slavonia and Syrmia from the Ottoman Empire with 10 years of fighting in the areas between Vukovar and Ilok which led to almost complete depopulation of the region until 1699.[3]
In 1784 Eltz family coat of arms was introduced to the Lordship of Vukovar while comprehensive land measurement of the region was completed in 1788.[3] During the Revolutions of 1848 uprising spread over the lordship and Hugo Filip Karlo was murdered by rebellious soldiers in front of Vukovar accusing him of being Hungarian spy.[3] The order in the lordship was re-established by the Ban of CroatiaJosip Jelačić who himself stayed at the Eltz Manor in May 1849.[3]