In their
accompanying letter they addressed
individual points beginning with the fact
that through these new demands they would
become destitute and would lead to great
hardships. It was impossible to provide the
Robot labor with their teams of livestock
because the landlord had no local fields of
his own in their community, but only small
plots, all of which were mortgaged. The
provision to provide one ninth of their
produce and crops was unquestionably an
immense burden. They themselves had built
and operated the “pub” and the butcher shop
with their former landlord’s permission to
do so. These unilateral changes in the
contract that had served both parties for
the past 19 years were contrary to the laws
of the land. Contracts were equally binding
on the landlord as on his tenants. Through
the proposed changes the community was
placed at a disadvantage and they would be
treated as those subjects without a contract
and the landlord could forbid the right and
freedom of movement and migration elsewhere
off of his estates. The village of Györköny
lay on the major road and was surrounded by
a fertile area, where there was enough
pasture and meadows for livestock as well as
reeds and brush. But in actuality they were
forced to buy reeds to cover the roofs of
their dwellings and stables and brush for
the making of brooms in Paks for cash.
The
situation which they faced left them with
few alternatives and the Robot demanded of
them and the use of their teams were not an
option for them and they would have to
consider on a move elsewhere—a threat that
they had raised in 1722 with Meszlenyi’s
father if he imposed the hated Robot labor
upon them and which had led to some of the
families leaving at that time. It was this
declaration that they had sent to the County
through their eight representatives, which
had led to their imprisonment there in the County dungeons in Simontornya. The
community humbly requested that the State
Chancellery arrange for the release of the
imprisoned villagers, for they could hardly
provide their landlord with Robot service
while in jail! They also requested that the
men who brought their deposition to the
State Chancellery on their behalf would not
be imprisoned by the County following their
return home.
In their
letter to the County on April 7, 1741, the
State Chancellery summarized the argument of
the peasant farmers and ordered an
investigation into the quarrel, the holding
of hearings with both parties and the
release of all those in prison, if there was
no further reason for them to be held in
jail.
The
County hesitated with making a reply until a
second debate of the issue was completed.
And of course, the County again sided with
the nobleman. They pointed out that the
regulations in the new contract were much
better than what the colonists in Györköny
claimed. The old contract dealt with the
early settlement when the village was
situated on an undeveloped prairie. The
present day village was much improved and
much more economically viable, and because
of that the noble had a right to benefit and
share in their good fortune and prosperity
as they continued to develop their land
holdings and his estate. His new contract
was placed in the keeping of the Archives of
the County.
At the
beginning of 1742 the village sent another
inquiry to the State Chancellery and the
Empress Maria Theresia, which was much the
same as the previous deposition. Pal Meszlenyi’s new contract had been presented
to the Empress prior to this. It was
perhaps the first occasion when the young
Empress was confronted by the Urbarium issue
as it was called, relating to the
landholding nobles raising the demands they
placed upon their peasant subjects at will,
holding them back from economic betterment
of themselves and as a result lowering the
tax base for the Crown. The nobles in
Hungary were free from all taxation, only
the peasants paid them. Poor peasants were
simply unable to support the crown
adequately from the Empress’ perspective.
This was the beginning of the twenty five
year long struggle in which she engaged with
the nobles of Hungary and the County
Administrations, in which she finally
succeeded in her Urbarium Regulation of 1767
that protected the peasants from further
demands from their landlords. But for now,
Györköny was not offered such protection by
her. Her silence with regard to the issue
was considered consent to the noble’s new
contract demands that was also supported by
the County. It would remain in force in
Györköny until 1767…
At a
General Assembly of the County, a further
communiqué from the State Chancellery of
November 14, 1741 was dealt with. The
County was charged with seeing to it that
the inhabitants of Györköny were allowed
back into their houses and that the
situation should revert back to the status
quo when they served their former landlord
without interference on the part of his son
Pal Meszlenyi their current landlord. The
contents of this deposition were not shared
with the inhabitants of the village, but in
the Minutes of the sitting of the Assembly,
it was noted that if there were no
restrictions on the free movement of the
peasant population in the County, a
catastrophe could be in the making because
of the large numbers of German colonists
already residing there.
The
inhabitants of Györköny were still opposed
to any form of Robot labor for the
landlord. Contacting the State Chancellery
they offered to pay 400 Gulden annually
instead, as long as they would not be faced
with any additional obligations. But before
there was a response, Pal Meszlenyi found
another solution.
In
December of 1741 he moved into the village
with sixty soldiers. He was a captain in
the Military. He quartered for to five men
in each of the houses he chose and ordered
all of the colonists to assemble, and then,
one by one, the men were stood between two
cavalry officers armed with flogging canes,
and in the presence of the County Judge each
was asked if he was prepared to accept the
new contract. They of course signed it,
each in turn, but in their deposition to the
State Chancellery they indicated they had
only done so under pressure and duress and
sought protection with the State Chancellery
against the ongoing quartering of troops in
their homes and appealed to the authorities
to rescind the power of the County to force
them to provide the Robot labor. The County
dismissed the allegation that force had been
used, they had simply assisted Meszlenyi
assert his rights and the County Judge had
only done his job, informing the peasants of
their duties and obligations.
The
community, however, continued in its
opposition. A new deposition went to the
State Chancellery and the County on May 25,
1742 along with a copy of a letter they had
sent to Meszlenyi. In it, they asked for
release from Robot labor and other
obligations and would pay an annual Arende
of 500 Gulden, otherwise, they declared they
would rather move away then to provide Robot
labor, but on leaving they would take their
possessions and livestock with them, but
were prepared to sell their houses and
vineyards to those who would replace them.
They would not undertake plowing until Her
Majesty responded to their proposal.
Unfortunately, this letter was already out
of date. On the order of the Governor of
the County, in mid December 1741, the
Supreme Court Justice of the County
accompanied by soldiers from the County
arrived in the village and declared to the
village Richter (like a local mayor but with
no authority) that the military would be
stationed in the village until the
inhabitants performed Robot labor for their
landlord, otherwise he would have to carry
out his other orders. The inhabitants of
Györköny would be forced to leave the
village and new colonists from Raab County
would be given their houses, fields and
vineyards because they had agreed to provide
forty days of Robot labor annually.
Because
all of the villagers refused to comply with
the threat, family by family were driven out
of their homes with what they could carry,
on the evening of December 16th
and they spent the night in stables,
haylofts or under the open sky, and then the
next day they sought refuge in the
neighboring villages of: Dorog, Paks, Pataj,
Tengelic, while most of them headed for
Bikács.
Only a
few people remained in the village, and hid
and saved whatever they could. According to
the Tax Conscription List of 1742, there
were twelve persons in the village at the
time, but they had smuggled their
possessions to other villages. In Bikács
there were twenty-five refugee families, in Paks there were eight and two were in
Tengelic. According to figures assembled by
the County there had been forty-two peasant
farmers, and 23 cottagers there previous to
their expulsion. When the military left on
May 1, 1742 most of the families returned to
the village.
In a
letter of June 12th to the County
from the State Chancellery they were told to
convince Meszlenyi to accept the offered 500
Gulden annually for release from all dues,
and if he refused to comply the old contract
of 1722/1723 would be in effect and the
County was charged to hinder all and any
persecution of the population of the
village.
The
inhabitants of Györköny attempted to reach
the State Chancellery to declare the new
contract to be null and void and sought
redress, that they as “free peasants” were
imprisoned and forced to do Robot labor. If
they were forced to give up their homes to
maintain their freedom, they looked to the
Chancellery officials to grant them
permission to do so.
The
State Chancellery decreed that if colonists
left an estate for another they would be
compensated for what they left behind. The
Empress agreed with the steps the
Chancellery had taken and wrote to that
effect on August 14, 1742.
On
November 14, 1742 the villagers sent another
letter of complaint to the State Chancellery
and the County. Listed as charges were the
following:
The
Military serving Meszlenyi had taken away
the cut wood from their properties, and took
what they wanted from their gardens and when
they were confronted for their theft by
Thomas Falb an elderly and respected man
they beat him.
The
landlord wants to settle new colonists in
our village even though we have not left.
Most of these colonists returned to their
former homes when they saw we were not yet
prepared to leave.
The
landlord had forbidden the villagers to
plough or mow the meadows. They would only
do so if and when the landlord meets the
requirements of their contract.
The
State Chancellor still believed that the
question could be resolved by a further
decree or action by the Empress. And
finally, on November 11th the
County was informed to urge Meszlenyi to
deal with his subjects on the basis of their
old contract for the time being. The County
held a hearing involving both parties. The
issue was the right of the German colonists
to leave and migrate elsewhere. It would
sabotage the colonization plans and have
economic consequences.
On
January 4, 1743 the community sent a moving
letter to the State Chancellery. They
re-iterated their old complaints, but now
included some new ones. The landlord had
taken a ninth of their wheat and a double
rate of wine, and four of the colonists sat
in prison again. The letter ends this way:
“We plead to your
esteemed beneficent officials of the
State Chancellery for
mercy, for the sake of the wounds
of our Redeemer, to
bring our terrible time of testing to
an end, and to notify
the County of Tolna and our noble
landlord to release
our comrades who were arrested and
imprisoned on
December 13th and have the excess
wheat
and wine returned
that went beyond the terms of our
contract. On this
hangs the matter of whether we will
remain here or move
elsewhere.”
It was
signed: the scattered, displaced and exiled
colonists of Györköny.
The
State Chancellor again wrote to the County
that the village had fulfilled all of the
regulations of their original contract. It
was now a matter of returning the excess
wheat and wine and the release of their
imprisoned neighbors. This letter from the
State Chancellery, written on January 4th
was answered by the County on April 4th,
that according to the wishes of the
Chancellery all of the parties: the County,
Meszlenyi and the villagers were informed of
the Chancellery’s concerns and decision.
The imprisoned peasants were released, but
the “rabble rousers” who had moved away
would probably continue to cause unrest in
the future.
But even
with the Urbarium Regulation of 1767 the lot
of the German settlers in Györköny improved
very little.