Help


from Wikipedia
« »  
After the fall of Rome, which ruled the area of modern-day Slavonia until the 5th century, Ostrogoths and Lombards controlled the area before the arrival of Avars and Slavs, when the Pannonian Croatia was established in the 7th century.
It was later incorporated into the Kingdom of Croatia and, after its decline, the kingdom was ruled through a personal union with Hungary.
The Ottoman conquest of Slavonia took place in 1536 – 1552.
In 1699, after the Great Turkish War, Slavonia was transferred to the Habsburgs.
Reform of the empire through the Compromise of 1867 assigned it to the Hungarian part of the realm, and a year later to the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia.
In 1918, when Austria-Hungary dissolved, Slavonia was a part of the short-lived State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs which in turn became a part of the kingdom later renamed Yugoslavia.
During the Croatian War of Independence, Slavonia saw fierce fighting — including the Battle of Vukovar.

2.229 seconds.