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Austro-Hungarian campaign in Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1878

The campaign to establish Austro-Hungarian rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina lasted from 29 July to 20 October 1878 against the local resistance fighters supported by the Ottoman Empire. The Austro-Hungarian Army entered the country in two large movements: one from the north into Bosnia, and another from the south into Herzegovina. A series of battles in August culminated in the fall of Sarajevo on the 19th after a day of street-to-street fighting. In the hilly countryside a guerrilla campaign continued until the last rebel stronghold fell after their leader was captured.

Austro-Hungarian invasion of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Part of the Great Eastern Crisis

Northern Austro-Hungarian camp near Mostar, painted by Alexander Ritter von Bensa and Adolf Obermüller
Date29 July – 20 October 1878
(2 months and 3 weeks)
Location
Result

Austro-Hungarian victory

  • Bosnia and Herzegovina occupied
Territorial
changes
Austro-Hungarian rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Belligerents
 Austria-Hungary
Commanders and leaders
Strength
198,930 (total)
91,260 (average)[2]
79,000 insurgents
13,800 soldiers[3]
Casualties and losses
1,205 killed
2,099 died of disease
3,966 wounded
177 missing
Total: 7,447[4]
Unknown

Background Edit

 
Bosnia, Herzegovina and Novi Pazar on a map from 1904

Following the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–78, the Congress of Berlin was organized by the Great Powers. By article 25 of the resulting Treaty of Berlin (13 July 1878), Bosnia and Herzegovina remained under the sovereignty of the Ottoman Empire,[5] but the Austro-Hungarian Empire was granted the authority to occupy the vilayet (province) of Bosnia and Herzegovina indefinitely, taking on its military defence and civil administration. The Austro-Hungarians also received the right to indefinitely occupy strategic posts in the sanjak of Novi Pazar:

The provinces of Bosnia and Herzegovina shall be occupied and administered by Austria-Hungary. The government of Austria-Hungary, not desiring to undertake the administration of the Sanjak of Novi-Pazar, which extends between Serbia and Montenegro in a South-Easterly direction to the other side of Mitrovitza, the Ottoman administration will continue to exercise its functions there. Nevertheless, in order to assure the maintenance of the new political state of affairs, as well as freedom and security of communications, Austria-Hungary reserves the right of keeping garrisons and having military and commercial roads in the whole of this part of the ancient vilayet of Bosnia. To this end the governments of Austria-Hungary and Turkey reserve to themselves to come to an understanding on the details.[6]

Although the Ottomans protested the occupation of Novi Pazar, the Imperial and Royal (K.u.K.) Foreign Minister Gyula Andrássy secretly assured the former that the occupation in Novi Pazar was "to be regarded as provisional".[7] This Austro-Hungarian expansion southward at the expense of the Ottoman Empire was designed to prevent the extension of Russian influence and the union of Serbia and Montenegro.

The Austro-Hungarians expected no trouble in carrying out their occupation. It would be, in Andrássy's words, "a walk with a brass band" (Spaziergang mit einer Blasmusikkapelle). This opinion did not take into account that the Serbs had just fought a war for independence from the Ottoman Empire, while Herzegovina had revolted. Resistance to the Austro-Hungarian takeover came mainly from the Orthodox Serbs (43% of the population) and the Bosnian Muslims (39%), barely at all from the Catholic Croats (18%).[8] The Muslim population stood to lose the most under the new Christian government. The resistors were characterised by the Austro-Hungarian government as "uncivilised" (unzivilisiert) and "treacherous" (verräterisch).[9]

Troops Edit

 
Infantry Regiment No. 17 crossing the Sava by Karl Pippich (1905)

The Austro-Hungarian Army engaged in a major mobilization effort to prepare for the assault on Bosnia and Herzegovina,[10] commanding by the end of June 1878 a force of 82,113 troops, 13,313 horses and 112 cannons in the VI, VII, XX, XVII and XVIII infantry divisions as well as a rear army in the Kingdom of Dalmatia.[11] The primary commander was Josip Filipović; the forward XVIII infantry division was under the command Stjepan Jovanović, while the rear army commander in Dalmatia was Gavrilo Rodić.[12] The occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina started on 29 July 1878 and was over on 20 October.[13]

The Ottoman army in Bosnia and Herzegovina at the time consisted of roughly 40,000 troops with 77 cannons, that combined with local militias to around 93,000 men.[14] Fierce resistance from Muslims was expected as Austro-Hungarians realized their occupation meant that Bosnian Muslims would lose their privileged status based on their religion.[5]

Occupation Edit

 
Battle of Jajce, painting by Karl Pippich
 
Illustration of Hadži Lojo preaching insurrection before the gates of Sarajevo

The original occupying force, the 13th Corps under General Josip Filipović, crossed the river Sava near Brod,[15] Kostajnica and Gradiška. The various Abteilungen assembled at Banja Luka and advanced down the road on the left side of the Vrbas river.[16] They encountered resistance by local Muslims under the dervish Hadži Loja, supported (almost openly) by the evacuating Ottoman Army troops.[17] On 3 August a troop of hussars was ambushed near Maglaj on the Bosna river, prompting Filipović to institute martial law. On 7 August a pitched battle was fought near Jajce and the Austro-Hungarian infantry lost 600 men. Most of the men that fought in the battle were from the Carniolan XVII infantry division.

A second occupying force, the 18th Division of 9,000 men under General Stjepan Jovanović, advanced out of Austrian Dalmatia along the Neretva.[18][19] On 5 August the division captured Mostar, the chief city of Herzegovina.[18][19] On 13 August at Ravnice in Herzegovina more than 70 Hungarian officers and soldiers were killed in action. In response, the Empire mobilised the 3rd, 4th and 5th Corps.[20]

 
Assault on Livno (15 August 1878) by Julius von Blaas.

The Austro-Hungarian troops were occasionally met with ferocious opposition from elements of both Muslim and Orthodox populations there, and significant battles occurred near Čitluk, Stolac, Livno and Klobuk.[21] Despite setbacks at Maglaj and Tuzla, Sarajevo was occupied in October 1878.[22]

 
"Storming of the Castle of Sarajevo", from The Graphic (1878)
 
Battle for Sarajevo, by G. Durand, from The Graphic (1878)

On 19 August the Bosnian capital, Sarajevo, a town of 50,000 inhabitants at the time, was captured only after the deployment of 52 guns and violent street fighting.[18][9] A day earlier Filipović had arrested the former Ottoman governor, Hafiz Pasha.[9] A formal report of the Austro-Hungarian General Staff remarked "small windows and numerous roof gaps allowed the discharge of fire in different directions and the most sustainable defense" and "the accused insurgents, in the nearest houses, barricaded all entrances and kept up a destructive fire against the infantry."[a] According to Filipović's own account:

"There ensued one of the most terrible battles conceivable. The troops were fired upon from every house, from every window, from each split door; and even women took part. Located at the western entrance to the city, the military hospital was full of sick and wounded insurgents. . ."[b]

The occupiers lost 57 killed and 314 wounded of the 13,000 soldiers employed in the operation. They estimated the insurgent fatalities at 300, but made no effort to estimate civilian casualties. In the days following there were many executions of accused rebels following summary trials.[9]

After the fall of Sarajevo the main insurgents retreated into the mountainous country beyond the city and there maintained their resistance for several weeks.[17] Hadži Loja surrendered to the K.u.K. Hungarian Infantry Regiment No. 37 Erzherzog Joseph on 3 October in the ravine by Rakitnica. He was sentenced to death, but his sentence was later commuted to five years' imprisonment.[24] The castle of Velika Kladuša surrendered on 20 October.[20]

Tensions remained in certain parts of the country (particularly Herzegovina) and a mass emigration of predominantly Muslim dissidents occurred. However, a state of relative stability was reached soon enough and Austro-Hungarian authorities were able to embark on a number of social and administrative reforms which intended to make Bosnia and Herzegovina into a "model colony". With the aim of establishing the province as a stable political model that would help dissipate rising South Slav nationalism, Habsburg rule did much to codify laws, to introduce new political practices, and generally to provide for modernization.

Results Edit

 
Austrian-occupied territories by September 1878

The Austro-Hungarian Empire was forced to use five corps with a collective strength of 153,300 soldiers[7][18] and 112 guns to subdue Bosnia and Herzegovina. The General Staff estimated there were 79,000 armed insurgents assisted (illegally) by 13,800 regular Ottoman soldiers[25] with about 77 guns. Total Austro-Hungarian losses were almost 5,200:[26] 946 dead, 272 missing, and 3,980 wounded.[27] The unexpected violence of the campaign led to recriminations between commanders and political leaders.[22] There is no reliable estimate of Bosnian or Ottoman losses. During the campaign, an article in the German-language Hungarian newspaper Pester Lloyd criticising the army's preparedness for the occupation was censored on the orders of Emperor-King Franz Joseph.[18]

Following the occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Austria-Hungary also occupied the Sanjak of Novi Pazar on September 10, 1879, implementing another one of the conclusions of the Congress of Berlin.

Legacy Edit

There is an exhibition in the Museum of Military History in Vienna about the 1878 campaign. It contains several items from the personal property of General Filipović, an insurgent banner and captured Ottoman weapons.[28][29]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Der ganze äußere Umkreis Sarajevos war stark besetzt. Aber auch im Inneren der Stadt gestatteten die engen Gassen mit ihren vielen Häusergruppen und einzelnen in den Erdgeschossen leicht zu verrammelnden Gebäuden, deren kleine Fenster der Stockwerke und zahlreiche Dachlücken die Abgabe des Feuers nach verschiedenen Richtungen zuließen, die nachhaltigste Verteidigung. Von der Umfassung der Stadt vertrieben, warfen sich die Insurgenten meist in die nächsten Häuser, verbarrikadierten alle Eingänge und unterhielten ein vernichtendes Feuer gegen die nachstürmende Infanterie.[23]
  2. ^ Es entspann sich einer der denkbar gräßlichsten Kämpfe. Aus jedem Hause, aus jedem Fenster, aus jeder Tür spalte wurden die Truppen beschossen; ja selbst Weiber beteiligten sich daran. Das fast ganz am westlichen Stadteingange gelegene Militärspital, voll von kranken und verwundeten Insurgenten. . .[17]

References Edit

Citations
  1. ^ Donia, Robert J. (2006). Sarajevo: A Biography. University of Michigan Press. p. 56. ISBN 0-472-11557-X.
  2. ^ Micheal Clodfelter, "Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia", p. 196
  3. ^ Plaschka 2000, p. 99–100.
  4. ^ Micheal Clodfelter, "Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia", p. 196
  5. ^ a b Zovko 2007, p. 13.
  6. ^ Modern History Sourcebook: The Treaty of Berlin, 1878—Excerpts on the Balkans hosted by Fordham University
  7. ^ a b Matsch 1982, p. 213.
  8. ^ Džaja 1994, pp. 37ff.
  9. ^ a b c d Gabriel 2011.
  10. ^ Oršolić 2000, pp. 289–291.
  11. ^ Oršolić 2000, p. 299.
  12. ^ Oršolić 2000, p. 294.
  13. ^ Oršolić 2000, p. 304.
  14. ^ Oršolić 2000, p. 301.
  15. ^ Damjanovic, Dragan (2017). "Austrougarska okupacija Bosne i Hercegovine gledana očima hrvatskog slikara: Prijelaz Save kod Broda Ferdinanda Quiquereza (Austro-Hungarian Occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina Seen through the Eyes of a Croatian Painter: Ferdinand Quiquerez's Crossing the Sava River at Brod)". Radovi Instituta Za Povijest Umjetnosti. 41 (1): 199–214. doi:10.31664/ripu.2017.41.16.
  16. ^ Richter 1907, pp. 455–57.
  17. ^ a b c Plaschka 2000, p. 45.
  18. ^ a b c d e Lackey 1995, pp. 78–79.
  19. ^ a b Zeinar 2006, pp. 402–03.
  20. ^ a b Klaic 1885, pp. 454–55.
  21. ^ Oršolić 2000, pp. 302–303.
  22. ^ a b Rothenburg 1976, p. 101-02.
  23. ^ Plaschka 2000, p. 44.
  24. ^ Plaschka 2000, p. 97.
  25. ^ Plaschka 2000, p. 99–100.
  26. ^ Calic 2010, p. 46.
  27. ^ Plaschka 2000, p. 102.
  28. ^ Popelka 1988, p. 52.
  29. ^ Rauchensteiner & Litscher 2000, p. 59.
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austro, hungarian, campaign, bosnia, herzegovina, 1878, this, article, about, military, campaign, which, austria, hungary, occupied, bosnia, herzegovina, period, civil, administration, corresponding, military, occupation, from, 1878, 1908, austro, hungarian, r. This article is about the military campaign by which Austria Hungary occupied Bosnia and Herzegovina For the period of civil administration corresponding to the military occupation from 1878 to 1908 see Austro Hungarian rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina The campaign to establish Austro Hungarian rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina lasted from 29 July to 20 October 1878 against the local resistance fighters supported by the Ottoman Empire The Austro Hungarian Army entered the country in two large movements one from the north into Bosnia and another from the south into Herzegovina A series of battles in August culminated in the fall of Sarajevo on the 19th after a day of street to street fighting In the hilly countryside a guerrilla campaign continued until the last rebel stronghold fell after their leader was captured Austro Hungarian invasion of Bosnia and HerzegovinaPart of the Great Eastern CrisisNorthern Austro Hungarian camp near Mostar painted by Alexander Ritter von Bensa and Adolf ObermullerDate29 July 20 October 1878 2 months and 3 weeks LocationBosnia and HerzegovinaResultAustro Hungarian victory Bosnia and Herzegovina occupiedTerritorialchangesAustro Hungarian rule in Bosnia and HerzegovinaBelligerents Austria HungaryBosnian Vilayet Ottoman EmpireCommanders and leadersJosip Filipovic Gavrilo Rodic Stjepan JovanovicMuhamed Hadzijamakovic 1 Abdulah Kaukcija Hadzi Loja Strength198 930 total 91 260 average 2 79 000 insurgents 13 800 soldiers 3 Casualties and losses1 205 killed2 099 died of disease3 966 wounded177 missingTotal 7 447 4 Unknown Contents 1 Background 2 Troops 3 Occupation 4 Results 5 Legacy 6 Notes 7 ReferencesBackground Edit nbsp Bosnia Herzegovina and Novi Pazar on a map from 1904See also Great Eastern Crisis Following the Russo Turkish War of 1877 78 the Congress of Berlin was organized by the Great Powers By article 25 of the resulting Treaty of Berlin 13 July 1878 Bosnia and Herzegovina remained under the sovereignty of the Ottoman Empire 5 but the Austro Hungarian Empire was granted the authority to occupy the vilayet province of Bosnia and Herzegovina indefinitely taking on its military defence and civil administration The Austro Hungarians also received the right to indefinitely occupy strategic posts in the sanjak of Novi Pazar The provinces of Bosnia and Herzegovina shall be occupied and administered by Austria Hungary The government of Austria Hungary not desiring to undertake the administration of the Sanjak of Novi Pazar which extends between Serbia and Montenegro in a South Easterly direction to the other side of Mitrovitza the Ottoman administration will continue to exercise its functions there Nevertheless in order to assure the maintenance of the new political state of affairs as well as freedom and security of communications Austria Hungary reserves the right of keeping garrisons and having military and commercial roads in the whole of this part of the ancient vilayet of Bosnia To this end the governments of Austria Hungary and Turkey reserve to themselves to come to an understanding on the details 6 Although the Ottomans protested the occupation of Novi Pazar the Imperial and Royal K u K Foreign Minister Gyula Andrassy secretly assured the former that the occupation in Novi Pazar was to be regarded as provisional 7 This Austro Hungarian expansion southward at the expense of the Ottoman Empire was designed to prevent the extension of Russian influence and the union of Serbia and Montenegro The Austro Hungarians expected no trouble in carrying out their occupation It would be in Andrassy s words a walk with a brass band Spaziergang mit einer Blasmusikkapelle This opinion did not take into account that the Serbs had just fought a war for independence from the Ottoman Empire while Herzegovina had revolted Resistance to the Austro Hungarian takeover came mainly from the Orthodox Serbs 43 of the population and the Bosnian Muslims 39 barely at all from the Catholic Croats 18 8 The Muslim population stood to lose the most under the new Christian government The resistors were characterised by the Austro Hungarian government as uncivilised unzivilisiert and treacherous verraterisch 9 Troops Edit nbsp Infantry Regiment No 17 crossing the Sava by Karl Pippich 1905 The Austro Hungarian Army engaged in a major mobilization effort to prepare for the assault on Bosnia and Herzegovina 10 commanding by the end of June 1878 a force of 82 113 troops 13 313 horses and 112 cannons in the VI VII XX XVII and XVIII infantry divisions as well as a rear army in the Kingdom of Dalmatia 11 The primary commander was Josip Filipovic the forward XVIII infantry division was under the command Stjepan Jovanovic while the rear army commander in Dalmatia was Gavrilo Rodic 12 The occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina started on 29 July 1878 and was over on 20 October 13 The Ottoman army in Bosnia and Herzegovina at the time consisted of roughly 40 000 troops with 77 cannons that combined with local militias to around 93 000 men 14 Fierce resistance from Muslims was expected as Austro Hungarians realized their occupation meant that Bosnian Muslims would lose their privileged status based on their religion 5 Occupation Edit nbsp Battle of Jajce painting by Karl Pippich nbsp Illustration of Hadzi Lojo preaching insurrection before the gates of SarajevoThe original occupying force the 13th Corps under General Josip Filipovic crossed the river Sava near Brod 15 Kostajnica and Gradiska The various Abteilungen assembled at Banja Luka and advanced down the road on the left side of the Vrbas river 16 They encountered resistance by local Muslims under the dervish Hadzi Loja supported almost openly by the evacuating Ottoman Army troops 17 On 3 August a troop of hussars was ambushed near Maglaj on the Bosna river prompting Filipovic to institute martial law On 7 August a pitched battle was fought near Jajce and the Austro Hungarian infantry lost 600 men Most of the men that fought in the battle were from the Carniolan XVII infantry division A second occupying force the 18th Division of 9 000 men under General Stjepan Jovanovic advanced out of Austrian Dalmatia along the Neretva 18 19 On 5 August the division captured Mostar the chief city of Herzegovina 18 19 On 13 August at Ravnice in Herzegovina more than 70 Hungarian officers and soldiers were killed in action In response the Empire mobilised the 3rd 4th and 5th Corps 20 nbsp Assault on Livno 15 August 1878 by Julius von Blaas The Austro Hungarian troops were occasionally met with ferocious opposition from elements of both Muslim and Orthodox populations there and significant battles occurred near Citluk Stolac Livno and Klobuk 21 Despite setbacks at Maglaj and Tuzla Sarajevo was occupied in October 1878 22 nbsp Storming of the Castle of Sarajevo from The Graphic 1878 nbsp Battle for Sarajevo by G Durand from The Graphic 1878 On 19 August the Bosnian capital Sarajevo a town of 50 000 inhabitants at the time was captured only after the deployment of 52 guns and violent street fighting 18 9 A day earlier Filipovic had arrested the former Ottoman governor Hafiz Pasha 9 A formal report of the Austro Hungarian General Staff remarked small windows and numerous roof gaps allowed the discharge of fire in different directions and the most sustainable defense and the accused insurgents in the nearest houses barricaded all entrances and kept up a destructive fire against the infantry a According to Filipovic s own account There ensued one of the most terrible battles conceivable The troops were fired upon from every house from every window from each split door and even women took part Located at the western entrance to the city the military hospital was full of sick and wounded insurgents b The occupiers lost 57 killed and 314 wounded of the 13 000 soldiers employed in the operation They estimated the insurgent fatalities at 300 but made no effort to estimate civilian casualties In the days following there were many executions of accused rebels following summary trials 9 After the fall of Sarajevo the main insurgents retreated into the mountainous country beyond the city and there maintained their resistance for several weeks 17 Hadzi Loja surrendered to the K u K Hungarian Infantry Regiment No 37 Erzherzog Joseph on 3 October in the ravine by Rakitnica He was sentenced to death but his sentence was later commuted to five years imprisonment 24 The castle of Velika Kladusa surrendered on 20 October 20 Tensions remained in certain parts of the country particularly Herzegovina and a mass emigration of predominantly Muslim dissidents occurred However a state of relative stability was reached soon enough and Austro Hungarian authorities were able to embark on a number of social and administrative reforms which intended to make Bosnia and Herzegovina into a model colony With the aim of establishing the province as a stable political model that would help dissipate rising South Slav nationalism Habsburg rule did much to codify laws to introduce new political practices and generally to provide for modernization Results Edit nbsp Austrian occupied territories by September 1878Main article Austro Hungarian rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina The Austro Hungarian Empire was forced to use five corps with a collective strength of 153 300 soldiers 7 18 and 112 guns to subdue Bosnia and Herzegovina The General Staff estimated there were 79 000 armed insurgents assisted illegally by 13 800 regular Ottoman soldiers 25 with about 77 guns Total Austro Hungarian losses were almost 5 200 26 946 dead 272 missing and 3 980 wounded 27 The unexpected violence of the campaign led to recriminations between commanders and political leaders 22 There is no reliable estimate of Bosnian or Ottoman losses During the campaign an article in the German language Hungarian newspaper Pester Lloyd criticising the army s preparedness for the occupation was censored on the orders of Emperor King Franz Joseph 18 Following the occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina Austria Hungary also occupied the Sanjak of Novi Pazar on September 10 1879 implementing another one of the conclusions of the Congress of Berlin Legacy EditThere is an exhibition in the Museum of Military History in Vienna about the 1878 campaign It contains several items from the personal property of General Filipovic an insurgent banner and captured Ottoman weapons 28 29 Notes Edit Der ganze aussere Umkreis Sarajevos war stark besetzt Aber auch im Inneren der Stadt gestatteten die engen Gassen mit ihren vielen Hausergruppen und einzelnen in den Erdgeschossen leicht zu verrammelnden Gebauden deren kleine Fenster der Stockwerke und zahlreiche Dachlucken die Abgabe des Feuers nach verschiedenen Richtungen zuliessen die nachhaltigste Verteidigung Von der Umfassung der Stadt vertrieben warfen sich die Insurgenten meist in die nachsten Hauser verbarrikadierten alle Eingange und unterhielten ein vernichtendes Feuer gegen die nachsturmende Infanterie 23 Es entspann sich einer der denkbar grasslichsten Kampfe Aus jedem Hause aus jedem Fenster aus jeder Tur spalte wurden die Truppen beschossen ja selbst Weiber beteiligten sich daran Das fast ganz am westlichen Stadteingange gelegene Militarspital voll von kranken und verwundeten Insurgenten 17 References EditCitations Donia Robert J 2006 Sarajevo A Biography University of Michigan Press p 56 ISBN 0 472 11557 X Micheal Clodfelter Warfare and Armed Conflicts A Statistical Encyclopedia p 196 Plaschka 2000 p 99 100 Micheal Clodfelter Warfare and Armed Conflicts A Statistical Encyclopedia p 196 a b Zovko 2007 p 13 Modern History Sourcebook The Treaty of Berlin 1878 Excerpts on the Balkans hosted by Fordham University a b Matsch 1982 p 213 Dzaja 1994 pp 37ff a b c d Gabriel 2011 Orsolic 2000 pp 289 291 Orsolic 2000 p 299 Orsolic 2000 p 294 Orsolic 2000 p 304 Orsolic 2000 p 301 Damjanovic Dragan 2017 Austrougarska okupacija Bosne i Hercegovine gledana ocima hrvatskog slikara Prijelaz Save kod Broda Ferdinanda Quiquereza Austro Hungarian Occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina Seen through the Eyes of a Croatian Painter Ferdinand Quiquerez s Crossing the Sava River at Brod Radovi Instituta Za Povijest Umjetnosti 41 1 199 214 doi 10 31664 ripu 2017 41 16 Richter 1907 pp 455 57 a b c Plaschka 2000 p 45 a b c d e Lackey 1995 pp 78 79 a b Zeinar 2006 pp 402 03 a b Klaic 1885 pp 454 55 Orsolic 2000 pp 302 303 a b Rothenburg 1976 p 101 02 Plaschka 2000 p 44 Plaschka 2000 p 97 Plaschka 2000 p 99 100 Calic 2010 p 46 Plaschka 2000 p 102 Popelka 1988 p 52 Rauchensteiner amp Litscher 2000 p 59 BibliographyAlbertini Luigi Massey Isabella M trans 1952 The Origins of the War of 1914 Volume 1 Oxford Oxford University Press a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Bencze Laszlo 2005 Schubert Frank N ed The Occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1878 East European Monographs Vol 126 New York Columbia University Press Calic Marie Janine 2010 Geschichte Jugoslawiens im 20 Jahrhundert Munich Beck ISBN 978 3 406 60645 8 Dzaja Srecko M 1994 Bosnien Herzegowina in der osterreichisch ungarischen Epoche 1878 1918 Die Intelligentsia zwischen Tradition und Ideologie Sudosteuropaische Arbeiten Vol 93 Munich Verlag Oldenbourg ISBN 3 48656 079 4 Gabriel Martin 2011 Die Einnahme Sarajevos am 19 August 1878 Eine Militaraktion im Grenzbereich von konventioneller und irregularer Kriegsfuhrung PDF Kakanien Revisited 1 6 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 07 14 Retrieved 2014 03 29 Klaic Vjekoslav 1885 Geschichte Bosniens von den altesten Zeiten bis zum Verfalle des Konigreiches Leipzig Friedrich Lackey Scott 1995 The Rebirth of the Habsburg Army Friedrich Beck and the Rise of the General Staff ABC CLIO ISBN 0313031312 Matsch Erwin ed 1982 November 1918 auf dem Ballhausplatz Erinnerungen Ludwigs Freiherrn von Flotow des letzten Chefs des Osterreichisch Ungarischen Auswartigen Dienstes 1895 1920 Vienna Bohlau Verlag ISBN 3 205 07190 5 Pavicic Slavko 1943 Hrvatska vojna i ratna poviest i Prvi svjetski rat Zagreb Hrvatska Knjiga Plaschka Richard Georg 2000 Avantgarde des Widerstands Modellfalle militarischer Auflehnung im 19 und 20 Jahrhundert Vienna Bohlau Verlag ISBN 3 205 98390 4 Popelka Liselotte 1988 Heeresgeschichtliches Museum Wien Graz Verlag Styria ISBN 3 222 11760 8 Rauchensteiner Manfried Litscher Manfred eds 2000 Das Heeresgeschichtliche Museum in Wien Graz Verlag Styria ISBN 3 222 12834 0 Orsolic Tado June 2000 Sudjelovanje dalmatinskih postrojbi u zaposjedanju Bosne i Hercegovine 1878 PDF Radovi Institute for Historical Sciences in Zadar in Croatian Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts 42 287 308 ISSN 1330 0474 Retrieved 2011 01 13 Richter Eduard 1907 Beitrage sur Landeskunde Bosniens und der Herzegowina Wissenschaftliche Mitteilungen aus Bosnien und der Hercegowina 10 383 548 Rothenburg G 1976 The Army of Francis Joseph West Lafayette Purdue University Press ISBN 0911198415 Schindler John 2004 Defeating Balkan Insurgency The Austro Hungarian Army in Bosnia Hercegovina 1878 82 Journal of Strategic Studies 27 3 528 52 doi 10 1080 1362369042000283010 S2CID 154616302 Zeinar Hubert 2006 Geschichte des Osterreichischen Generalstabes Vienna Bohlau Verlag ISBN 3 205 77415 9 Zovko Ljubomir 2007 Studije iz pravne povijesti Bosne i Hercegovine 1878 1941 in Croatian University of Mostar ISBN 978 9958 9271 2 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Austro Hungarian campaign in Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1878 amp oldid 1171600538, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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