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THE
FINK, SAK AND ZORAN
IMMIGRANTS AND THEIR DESCENDENTS FROM THE HABSBURG EMPIRE
(AUSTRO-HUNGARIAN EMPIRE)
Descendants of Andreas Fink
By:
Frederick William Billerbeck, Jr., Ph.D.
With
Gerry Kubinski Stiteley & Margaret Victoria Zoran Luzbetak Maday

Published in June of 2006, this first edition
carries an ISBN of 0-944619-79-7 and is a 8½x11" hardbound book. This work
contains 428 pages and includes photographs, maps, sketches, appendix,
references, and both an historical and Fink genealogy indexes.
This beautifully bound volume has been
manufactured to stand the test of time utilizing the American Library
Association (ALA) Certified Library Oversewn method to assure this book will be
with your family for generations to come. The limited first edition
carries many of the marks of a showpiece as it has decorative spine bars, and is
rounded and backed with a rich black material and is stamped in old gold foil
(both front and spine).
Additionally, this special first collector's edition carries the author's hallmark on the front cover.
Subsequent orders/printings, while maintaining the high standard for durability,
will not be such a deluxe production. The regular retail price is $75.00.
Gregath Publishing Company's standard shipping and handling of $9.00 for the
first book and $2.00 for each additional book or title in the order is in
effect.
This volume
is the second of five volumes concerned with Dr. Billerbeck's family linage
to be issued within the next few years.
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Preface
For the most part, the early Fink, Sak and Zoran family
members and their relatives emigrated from Slovenija (Carniola, Krani) which was
at the time divided among several Austrian provinces within the Habsburg Empire
(Austro - Hungary). All were Slovenes with but few exceptions. In order to
understand one’s place in time, it is essential to come to terms with and to
appreciate our Slovenian historical legacy which is our birthright. When placed
in perspective, Slovenes were and are still only a tiny tribe of Slavic people
who have survived throughout challenging centuries and even today number only a
few million people scattered throughout the surface of the earth. The uniqueness
of these people is in their known beginnings, language, love of music,
literature, industry and devotion to the Roman Catholic Church. They have been
called the “quiet people.” The miracle is that the Slovenes have survived as an
entity and have through their own ingenuity, political acumen and daring
proclaimed their national independence in June, 1991, and created the Republic
of Slovenija, a member of the European Union.
By the 6th and 7th centuries, the
Slovenes were the first of several Slavic tribes to move south of the Carpathian
Mountains and to settle in Pannonia and the eastern Alps towards the Adriatic.
The region is Alpine and is drained principally by the Drava, Sava and Mura
Rivers and includes northern Istria, where it juts upon the Adriatic. Those
other Slavic tribes which followed settled in regions immediately to the south
of the Slovenes forming the modern areas occupied by Croatians and Serbs.
Collectively, these groups of people have been called South Slavs or Yugoslavs.
Though the Slovenes have been thought of as being a branch of the South Slavs,
they have their own distinct complex language which differs from Serbo-Croatian.
Traditionally, it has been alleged that the Slovenes, a
Slavic tribe, first appeared in history sometime between the 6th and
7th centuries A.D., after migrating from the region of the Pripet
Marshes, north of the Carpathian Mountains in Eastern Poland and far Western
Russia. This scenario is increasingly being regarded as a fictionalized concept
promoted by stronger powers of Europe in order to suggest that Slovenians were
only intruders without prior rights in Central Europe. But, the recent
introduction of the Venetic theory
encourages a new understanding of Slovenian peoples historical and linguistic
past.
This book presents these two concepts for the reader’s enlightenment and
appreciation. Only time and continuing research will eventually determine
which of the two concepts is valid and enduring. (9,
136, 144, 145, 146, 147, 174 & 179)
The Avars, a well organized Turkic people, initially
dominated the new Slavic settlers until their defeat in 626, when they failed in
their siege of Constantinople. The Slavs thereupon renounced their subservience
to the defeated Avars. The story that follows to the modern stage is one of
continued struggle by the Slovenes to develop an independent nation free from
domination of Germanic and other Slavic communities which understandably left
their mark on this struggling culture. But, the ‘quiet people’ persevered and
eventually Slovenija achieved independence in 1991, and created a successful
modern democratic republic that has been embraced by the world. The Fink, Sak
and Zoran family’s story is wrapped up in this long struggle; however, they were
not present for the last great struggle for independence. Mathias Fink, Sr.,
left Slovenija which was then under Austrian domination in 1885, for America.
All of Mathias’ family members eventually followed him to Joliet, Illinois, were
they settled. In June, 1991, the author and some of his family where at the
Slovenian border when the struggle for independence began and were forced to
rearrange their travel itinerary because the border was closed. The purpose of
this trip was to learn more about the country and family. To this date no Fink
relatives have ever been located, but Marija Jurjevčič’s relatives have been
located and visited. Mathias Fink, Jr.’s, first wife, Maria, was an immigrant
from Vrhnika, Notranjska, Slovenija.
Thus, the wonder of genealogy is the unknown family linkages and accumulated
stories contained in one’s here-to-fore unfathomed and opaque inverted pyramidal
family tree, a top of which the researcher stands in the beginning of his or her
journey. It is through persistent investigative work that often reveals unique
personalities and events that may confirm one’s own place in time within the
fabric of human history that may have been only dimly sensed at an earlier date.
So, it was with the author’s own investigative work into his family history that
was at first seen only dimly and with great uncertainty, if at all. With only
meager clues and tenacious research over a long period of time was it possible
to reveal a linkage to the Fink family of Slovenija, whose known roots first
began in the 1700’s with Andreas Fink.
This book, The Fink,
Sak and Zoran Immigrants and Their Descendents from the Habsburg Empire
(Austro-Hungarian Empire), Descendants of Andreas Fink, is really a
collaborative work of many direct descendants of this family line from various
areas of the United States. Many interested descendants from the Fink, Sak and
Zoran families generously provided essential information to the author that was
vital to the development of a serious and complete publication. All of their
communications and coordination was done by telephone, mail service, FAX or by
means of the Internet. Even after about three (3) to four (4) years of effort to
write and assemble the book, this publication may not be entirely complete, but
it will certainly establish a foundation for others interested in doing further
family research and story development. This work is divided into two (2) major
parts or books in order to present this comprehensive story. Until additional
information becomes available and is reported upon, this volume should serve as
the Fink, Sak and Zoran’s family story and genealogical report. So, the text
that follows is the fascinating historical story of the Fink, Sak and Zoran
families of Austro - Hungary, as it was once known.
Also, this book provides the reader with detailed
background information so that there will be a clear understanding of one’s
heritage through the course of Slovenian history, as well as the through the
immigrant experience. The genealogical section of this book details the Fink
Family Genealogy beginning with our earliest known ancestors, Johann Fink and
Gertraud Gimpel, both born about the 1750. Just
after this book was finalized, Branka Lapajne, Ph.D., who was conducting
research for the author in Slovenija during the summer and early fall of 2005,
submitted her findings, which extends the family back a further generation. Dr.
Lapajne reports that Johann’s father was Andreas Fenk (Fink / Főnk ) and that
his mother was Agnete Kobbe. Her report also included additional information
relating to the Hočevar, Turk and Zoran lines. The completed Genealogical
Section of this book will allow readers to place themselves in known family
lines and clarify one’s family relationships.
This book is as complete as
the author could make it with the resources and time available. The book is the
result of four plus decades of work. The ability to extend the family line
beyond our earliest known ancestor has been limited by language knowledge,
availability of Slovenian genealogical records, distance, time, etc. Actually,
genealogical work on the Fink and Zoran family lines continues through the
services of Branka Lapajne, Ph.D., Willowdale, Ontario, Canada, who spends
summers in Slovenija researching family lines. Branka is a specialist in
Slovenian genealogy, who the author and his wife, Barbara J. Aust Billerbeck,
met in the central research library in Ljubljana, Slovenija, during the summer
of 2002. Also, the Fink, Sak and Zoran family members have generously provided
in depth family information, pictures and insights that have been essential to
completing the book in front of you.
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Table of Contents
Author
Introduction
Table of
Contents
Acknowledgements
Preface
Map
of Slovenija
Part I -
Historical
Perspective
Chapter One: Slovenian
Historical Perspective
The Slovenes
The New Concepts of Slovenian Origins
Slovene Christianization
Slovenian Democracy
Slovenia’s Development Outside Turkish Influence
Austrian Rule
The Yugoslav Experiment
Gottschee and The Finks
Slovenian
Historical Initiatives and International Impact
Slovenian Missionary Service
Chapter Two: Physical
Conditions of Slovenija
Geography
Environment
Chapter Three: Social
Conditions within Slovenija
Slovenija’s Hilltop Churches
Slovene Nationalism
Slovenija’s Government
Province of Carniola, Cities and Villages
Ljubljana
Vrhnika
Novo Mesto
Jurka vas
Vavta vas
Slovene Population and Ethnic Concentration
The Slovenian Language
Education within Slovenija
Slovenian Culture (Literature, Art and Music)
Foods and Drinks of Slovenija
Chapter
Four: Slovenian Economic Conditions
Economy of Slovenija
Slovenian Trading Partners
Tourism in Slovenija
Currency of Slovenija
Chapter
Five: Symbols of the Slovenian Nation
Slovenija’s
National Symbols
The Red Carnation – Slovenija’s Native Flower
Chapter
Six: Immigration to America
Slovenija to Amerika
Fink / Sak / Zoran Family Immigration to the United States
Shipping Companies and Ships
North German Lloyd (Norddeutcher Lloyd) –
1858 to 1939
Red Star Line
Ships of Immigrant Passage
S.S. Aller, built 1886
S.S. Carpathia,
built 1903
S.S. Konigin Louise, built
1896
S.S. La Bretagne, built 1885
S.S. La Touraine, built 1890
S.S. Moravia, built
1883.
S.S. Saale, built 1886
S.S. Werra, built 1882
Castle Garden and Ellis Island
The Citizenship and Naturalization Process
Chapter Seven: Joliet,
Illinois
Slovenians of Joliet, Illinois – St. Joseph Slovenian Roman Catholic Church
Parish
Part
II – Fink, Sak and Zoran Genealogy
Information
How to Trace Your Linage
Descendants of Johann Fink (Fonk)
Generation One
Generation Two
Generation Three
Generation Four
Generation Five
Generation Six
Generation Seven
Generation Eight.
Notranjska and Dolenjska, Slovenian Maps
Map of Slovenija (detailed)
Dolenjska map showing Vavta vas,
Jurka vas, Potok, Pravreče and Dolenjske Toplice
Dolenjska map showing ˇu˛emberk
Region
Part II - Chapter Notes: Fink, Sak and Zoran Genealogy
Generation 1:
Johann Fink / Fenk / Fönck, Sr., # 1
Generation 2: Anton Fink / Fonk
/ Föenk, # 2
Generation 2: Maria Turk, # 2W
Generation 3: Mathias Fink,
Sr., # 7
Generation 3: Marija Hočevar, #
7W
Generation 4: Matijas ‘Matt’ /
Mathiam Fink, Jr., # 10..........................................................
316
Generation 4: Marija Jurjevčič,
# 10W
Generation 4: Josephine ‘Josephinam’ Sula or Szulya, # 10W
Generation 4: Michael Zoran, #
11H
Generation 4: Mary Fink, # 13
Generation 5: Angela ‘Ruth’
Fink, # 19
Generation 5: Friedrich ‘Fred’ Wilhelm Billerbeck, Sr., # 19H
Generation 5: Josephine ‘Sophie’ Deloris Fink, # 22
Generation 6: Frederick ‘Fred’
William Billerbeck, Jr., # 55
General Notes
References
Part I - Historical Perspective Index
Part II - Fink, Sak and Zoran Genealogy Index
Educational Achievements by Fink, Sak and Zoran Family Members
1st Generation of
Immigrant Descendants
2nd Generation of
Immigrant Descendants
3rd Generation of
Immigrant Descendants
4th Generation of
Immigrant Descendants
5th Generation of
Immigrant Descendants
Human Genetics and Genealogy
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All book excerpts carry the
original book Copyright - reprinted here with permission.
© Fred William Billerbeck,
Jr.,
Ph.D. Page Last Updated:
May 05, 2008
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