- Gömör-Kishont
Infobox Former Subdivision
native_name =
conventional_long_name = Gömör-Kishont County
common_name = Gömör-Kishont
subdivision = County
nation = theKingdom of Hungary
p1 =
s1 =
year_start = 1786
event_end = Treaty of Trianon
year_end = 1920
date_end = June 4
capital = Rimaszombat
stat_area1 = 4279
stat_pop1 = 188100
stat_year1 = 1910
today =Slovakia ,Hungary
footnotes =Rimavská Sobota is the current name of the capital.Gömör-Kishont (Hungarian: "Gömör és Kishont", Slovak: "Gemer a Malohont", German: "Gemer und Kleinhont") is the name of a historic administrative county (
comitatus ) of theKingdom of Hungary . Its capital wasRimavská Sobota . Its territory is currently in southernSlovakia and northernHungary .Geography
Around 1910, Gömör-Kishont county shared borders with the counties Zólyom (Zvolen), Liptó (Liptov), Szepes (Spiš),
Abaúj-Torna (Abov-Turňa),Borsod , Heves and Nógrád (Novohrad). It was situated inSlovenské rudohorie approximately between the present-day Slovak-Hungarian border, the townsPoltár andRožňava and theLow Tatra s (Nízke Tatry). The river Slaná flowed through the county. Its area was 4,279 km² around 1910.History
The county Gömör-Kishont was a combination of the counties Gömör (Gemer) and Kishont (Malohont). It existed from 1786 until the end of
World War I , with an interruption from 1790 until 1802. Gömör is one of the oldest counties of theKingdom of Hungary , and was already mentioned in the 11th century. Kishont is the territory approximately between the townsTisovec andRimavská Sobota .In the aftermath of
World War I , most of Gömör-Kishont county became part of newly formed Czechoslovakia, as recognized by the concerned states in the 1920Treaty of Trianon . The area aroundPutnok became part of the Hungarian countyBorsod-Gömör-Kishont (currently part ofBorsod-Abaúj-Zemplén ). The Czechoslovak part of the county was part of the Slovak Land ("Slovenská krajina/zem").Following the provisions of the controversial
First Vienna Award , most of the Czechoslovak part came under Hungarian control in November 1938. The Gömör-Kishont county was recreated. The small northernmost part that remained in Slovak hands (a.o. the townsDobšiná andRevúca ) became part of the new Hron county ("Pohronská župa"). The Trianon borders were restored after World War II. Since 1993, whenCzechoslovakia was split, Gemer and Malohont have been part ofSlovakia , and since 1996 divided between the Košice region and the Banská Bystrica region.ubdivisions
In the early 20th century, the subdivisions of Gömör-Kishont/Gemer-Malohont county were:
Putnok is currently inHungary ; all other named towns are currently inSlovakia .References
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