Category
page 1Croatia under Habsburg rule
Treaty of Campo Formio
Closing treaty of the War of the First Coalition
Pragmatic Sanction of 1713
edict
Treaty of Schönbrunn
peace treaty
Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia
administrative division that existed between 1868 and 1918 within the Austro-Hungary
Military Frontier
area in the north-west of present-day Croatia and south-eastern Slovenia, existing between 1460 and 1881 along the most exposed section of the Austro-Ottoman border as a defence against Turkish invasions
Kingdom of Croatia
administrative division that existed between 1527 and 1868 within the Habsburg Monarchy
Kingdom of Hungary
Crownland of the Habsburg Monarchy from 1526 and the Austrian Empire from 1804 until 1867
Kingdom of Slavonia
habsburg kingdom (1699–1868)
Illyrian movement
cultural and literary movement among the South Slavs in the Habsburg Empire in the nineteenth century

Uskoks
220px|thumb|right|During this defense of the Klis Fortress against an Ottoman invasion, an elite Croatian military faction of Uskoci was formed.

Austro-Slavism
thumb|300px|"Distribution of Races in Austria-Hungary", showing the areas inhabited by Slavic peoples (in the Historical Atlas by William R. Shepherd, 1911)
Magnate conspiracy
17th-century attempt to throw off Habsburg influence in Croatia and Hungary
Croatian Military Frontier
Habsburg territory (1553–1881)
Corpus separatum
City of Fiume under the Kingdom of Hungary (1779–1918)
Hundred Years' Croatian–Ottoman War
sequence of conflicts between the Ottoman Empire and Croatia

Rascians
Rascians ( / Raši, Rašani; ) was a historical term for Serbs. The term was derived from the Latinized name for the central Serbian region of Raška (; ). In medieval and early modern Western sources, exonym Rascia was often used as a designation for Serbian lands in general, and consequently the term Rasciani became one of the most common designations for Serbs. Because of the increasing migratory concentration of Serbs in the southern Pannonian Plain, since the late 15th century, those regions also became referred to as Rascia, since they were largely inhabited by Rasciani (Rascians). Among th

Magda Logomer
person persecuted in witch hunt in Croatia
Rakovica Revolt
armed uprising in 1871 led by Croatian politician Eugen Kvaternik
Pragmatic Sanction of 1712

Siege of Novi Zrin
siege imposed by the Ottoman Empire on the Croatian fortress of Novi Zarin in 1664
Serezaner
thumb|Illustration of a group of Seressaner during the 1848 Revolutions.
The Seressaner (, , ) were an Habsburg military police unit in Lika, Croatian Military Frontier. The name is derived from Saracens ("tent dwellers").
Trenck's Pandurs
Unit of Habsburg light infantry, 1740s