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SPIŠSKÁ SOBOTA / Szepesszombat / Georgenberg (Forum Sabathi) on the left bank of the Poprad is one of the 13 Zips towns mortgaged by King Sigismund of Luxemburg to King W³adys³aw Jagiellon II of Poland in 1412. The town was a favourite place of residence of the Dukes Lubomirski, the royal governors (Lat. starosta capitaneus) of the Zips region. Built on a high hill, Spišská Sobota functioned as a fortified outpost controlling the Poprad valley. Its thick walls protected it during the Mongol invasion of 1241-1242.

The Catholic church of Spišská Sobota was built in Romanesque style in the middle of the 13th century and came to be rebuilt in the middle of the 15th century. The winged high altar, the side altars, and the effigies gracing the interior are products of Pál Lġcsei's atelier. The appearance and height of the Renaissance campanile standing next to the church building bear a close resemblance to those of the campanile in Poprad. Spišská Sobota had ca. 1000 German inhabitants in the early 1850s. Its burghers of Saxon origin dealt mostly with agriculture and handicrafts. The town is now a suburb of Poprad.

Bibliography: Marosi, Szepesi, Szontagh 1888

THE ZIPS REGION / Spiš / Szepesség belonged to the historical territory of Hungary. It lies in a basin in the foreground of the High Tatras in the southeast. Still a wood-covered uninhabited area in the 11th century, it was settled by Hungarians of Gömör and Torna Counties at the turn of the 11th and 12th century. They were followed by two waves of German immigrants. The first group came from inside, from Abaúj County, in the latter half of the 12th century. The second, larger and foreign, group came from German-speaking areas after the Mongol invasion of 1241-1242. That the majority of the newcomers were Saxons is confirmed by the fact that Saxon law was adopted in the region. Later the influx of various Slav groups contributed to the steady increase of the population.

Autonomous institutions of the Saxons date from the 12th century. Their privileges were detailed in a charter issued by King Stephen V of Hungary in 1271. In 1317, King Charles Robert I of Anjou added new privileges to the old ones. The Zips Saxons, or Zipser, formed a mighty organisation, which was headed by a Landgraf, later called Count of the 24 Zips Towns. The Zips law, or Zipser-Willkür, was also effective in the villages that belonged to these towns.

The mortgaging of 13 Zips towns by King Sigismund of Luxemburg to King W³adys³aw Jagiellon II of Poland in 1412 was a turning point in the history of the Zips region. The 11 towns that remained under Hungarian rule lost much of their territorial significance. Although Levoèa and Kežmarok were granted the status of royal free towns, other urban settlements were bereaved of their privileges. The mortgaged towns were recovered for Hungary in 1772, after the first division of Poland. The recovered towns plus 3 other settlements were organised into an autonomous municipal authority, the Province of 16 Zips Towns, in 1778. The seat of the Province was Spišská Nová Ves. The autonomous local authorities of the region came to be united and integrated into Szepes County by the statute of 1876:XXXIII.

Bibliography: Kristó, Szepesi