Background
The autocratic methods of chancellor Metternich turned the Austrian Empire into a police state. It systematically suppressed any open-minded movement that would in some way undermined the blessed order. Metternich was conservative by nature and by conviction. The Austrian Empire, made up of various nationalities, was a remnant of the old political conjuncture and it had hard to get used to the new time. In the 16th century there were still various small nations and states connected to Austria, which halted the larger community to better successfully resist the Ottoman threat. However, after the suppression of the Ottomans the needs of a centralized state disappeared. In its place, the awakening of national consciousness from the beginning of the 19th century, the Austrian community had increasingly aspired to enter into the framework of national states. The Italians, until then scattered, began to work on their national unification; the same movement occurred in the Germans. In both nations the realization of these plans could be achieved only at the expense of the estates of the Austrian Empire and the prestige of the Habsburg dynasty. Even then, in the mid-19th century, there was a lot of worries in Vienna that a free Serbian state in the Balkans could become an attractive point for its South Slavic subjects. The whole movement to strengthen mutual Slavic bonds, dubbed Pan-Slavism, was viewed with much suspicion as a pure political action under the leadership of Russia and with a view that it would ultimately serve her. The nationalist activity of Hungarians, very lively and impulsive in the first half of the 19th century, gradually received the character of a national struggle for full independence from Vienna. There was fighting on all sides. Metternich was aware of this, and as his only means for maintaining the state, he clamped down on the rebels. He did not manage to do anything notable to channel the currents with the previous measures, nor managed to rely on the part of the population that sincerely sought change in the system, but which had not yet come out of the frame of the state union. When in February 1848, the revolution broke out in Paris which destroyed the monarchy and led to the proclamation of the republic in France, it rocked from the foundations and crumbling Austrian building; uprisings broke out everywhere. German patriots gathered in Frankfurt in an All-German Parliament, which clearly expressed its desire for German unification, but not under the leadership of Austria. As a response, the All-Slavic meeting in Prague followed, in which several Serbs participated. Simultaneously to these political manifestation, fights began on the street. There were even alarms in loyal imperial Vienna. Metternich needed to be sacrificed, but it did not calm the boiling spirits, especially not where the movement got not only the character of the struggle for constitutional freedoms, but also for national liberation.Prelude
The Hungarians became the most dangerous in Austria, led by a very temperamented oratorMay Assembly
Several thousand Serbs met at the May Assembly in Sremski Karlovci on 1 May 1848. The delegates chose Šupljikac as ''voivode'', the civil and military commander. Josif Rajačić was elected the patriarch of the Serbs. The Serbs demanded a national unit consisting of Banat, Backa, Baranja and part of Srem, known collectively as '' Vojvodina''.Uprising
During the revolutions, there was much fighting in Vojvodina, in June, Hungarian and Serbian bands began fighting. General Stratimirović, head of the main committee, on 10 May, urged Prince Aleksandar for assistance and asked Stevan Knićanin, a commissioner, to intercede. Knićanin was elected military commander. In June and July a large wave of volunteers from the Principality entered Vojvodina, Knićanin arrived at 25 July. The new emperor Franz Joseph approved the appointments of Šupljikac and Rajačić. Šupljikac became the supreme military commander of the Serbian national troops on 6 October.Battles
* Battle of Pančevo (2 January 1849), Serbian victory * Battle of Vršac (January 1849), Serbian victory * Battle of Sombor (1849), Hungarian victory * Battle of Sirig (1849), Hungarian victory * Battle of Horgoš (1849), Hungarian victory * Battle of Srbobran (3 April 1849), Hungarian victory * Battles for Šajkaška (1849) ** Mošorin and Vilovo (12 April), Serbian victory ** Kać and Budisav (6 May), Serbian victory ** Vilovo, Titel and Mošorin (22–26 May), Serbian victory ** Vilovo and Mošorin (1 May), Serbian victory * Bombing of Novi Sad (12 June)References
Sources
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Popović, Radomir J. "Аврам Петронијевић и српски покрет у Војводини 1848-1849. године." Историјски часопис 57 (2008): 237-252. * * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Serb Uprising of 1848-49 Revolutions of 1848 in the Austrian Empire Serb rebellions Habsburg Serbs Serbian Vojvodina 19th-century rebellions Rebellions in Serbia Military history of Serbia