English edit

Etymology edit

From voivode +‎ -ate (a rank or office). Compare Romanian voievodat.

Noun edit

voivodate (plural voivodates)

  1. Synonym of voivodeship
    • 1914, James David Bourchier, Prince Kropotkin, Čedomilj Mijatović, Donald Mackenzie Wallace, A Short History of Russia and the Balkan States, page 145:
      These legendary accounts seem to show the Moldavian voivodate was founded, like that of Walachia, by Vlach immigrants from Hungary, during the first half of the 14th century.
    • 1981, Bogdan Szajkowski, Marxist Governments: A World Survey, volume 3: Mozambique – Yugoslavia, page 591:
      The Daco-Roman entity vanished from recorded history for one thousand years, then reappeared in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries in the form of the voivodates Wallachia and Moldavia. Transylvania, the third historical province of Romania, was by that time part of the kingdom of Hungary. Turkish suzerainty over the voivodates was established in the fifteenth century.
    • 2004, Viorel Achim, translated by Richard Davies, The Roma in Romanian History, page 44:
      It would appear that the legal status that would for a long time apply to the Gypsies in the voivodate of Transylvania and the later in the Transylvanian principality was established during the reign of Sigismund.