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Herzegovina uprising (1875–1877)

The Herzegovina uprising (Serbian: Херцеговачки устанак, romanizedHercegovački ustanak) was an uprising led by the Christian Serb population against the Ottoman Empire, firstly and predominantly in Herzegovina (hence its name), from where it spread into Bosnia and Raška. It broke out in the summer of 1875, and lasted in some regions up to the beginning of 1878. It was followed by the Bulgarian Uprising of 1876, and coincided with Serbian-Turkish wars (1876–1878), all of those events being part of the Great Eastern Crisis (1875–1878).[1]

Herzegovina Uprising of 1875

An illustrated depiction of Bogdan Zimonjić, Mićo Ljubibratić, Stojan Kovačević and Pecija in the 1876 issue of Orao, a Serb annual magazine published in Novi Sad
Date19 June 1875
Location
Bosnia Vilayet, Ottoman Empire
Result
Belligerents
 Ottoman Empire
Commanders and leaders
Strength
24,000+

The uprising was precipitated by the harsh treatment under the beys and aghas of the Ottoman province (vilayet) of Bosnia—the reforms announced by the Ottoman Sultan Abdülmecid I, involving new rights for Christian subjects, a new basis for army conscription and an end to the much-hated system of tax-farming were either resisted or ignored by the powerful Bosnian landowners. They frequently resorted to more repressive measures against their Christian subjects. The tax burden on Christian peasants constantly increased.

The rebels were aided with weapons and volunteers from the principalities of Montenegro and Serbia, whose governments eventually jointly declared war on the Ottomans on 18 June 1876, leading to the Serbian-Ottoman War (1876–78) and Montenegrin–Ottoman War (1876–78), which in turn led to the Russo-Turkish War (1877–78) and Great Eastern Crisis. A result of the uprisings and wars was the Berlin Congress in 1878, which gave Montenegro and Serbia independence and more territory, while Austro-Hungary occupied Bosnia and Herzegovina for 30 years, although it remained de jure Ottoman territory.

Background

In the early 19th century, most of the Balkans was under Ottoman rule. Christian communities of Serbs and Greeks, under Ottoman control for four centuries, rose up and succeeded in obtaining autonomy by means of the Serbian Revolution of 1804–17 and Greek War of Independence of 1821–29, establishing the Principality of Serbia and the Hellenic Republic.[2] The weakened Ottoman central powers was evident in separatist provincial lords (pashas) as seen in Pazvantoğlu, Ali Pasha, Gradaščević (who led a Bosnian bey rebellion in 1831–32) and Muhammad Ali.[2] Ottoman Sultan Mahmud II succeeded in abolishing the problematic Janissaries in 1826, in his reform work.[2] Beginning in the 1830s, the Ottoman Empire seemed to many European observers to be on the verge on collapsing.[2]

The tax-paying lower class (rayah, made up of Christian and Muslim peasants) in the Bosnia Vilayet of the Ottoman Empire experienced harsh economic conditions in the previous century.[3] Bosnian Muslim beys sometimes took as much as half of each peasant's crop annually, besides various taxes on farm products and animals for which Christian peasants were responsible.[3] Furthermore, tax farmers (mütesellim) levied additional taxes on the remaining yield.[3] The failure of the 1874 crop and plight of peasants and external influence in Pan-Slavism and Pan-Serbism and also Austrian aspirations on further South Slavic lands were leading causes of the ensuing rebellion.[3]

Other notable preceding Serb peasant rebellions in the region were the Herzegovina Uprising (1852–62) and Pecija's First Revolt (1858).

Preparations

 
Weapons from the Uprising.

In Herzegovina

The Serbian leaders of the people of Herzegovina: Jovan Gutić, Simun Zečević, Ilija Stevanović, Trivko Grubačić, Prodan Rupar and Petar Radović, at the end of August and beginning of September 1874, met and decided to start preparing a rebellion. They began collecting weapons and ammunition and establishing safe-places. With the assistance of Montenegro in the uprising, it was to begin in springtime 1875. The group entered in talks with Montenegrin ruler Nikola I Petrović, but he was unwilling to break and risk the unreadiness of Russia in its war with the Ottomans. The preparations continued; and in Bileća and Trebinje region, serdar Todor Mujičić, Gligor Milićević, Vasilj Svorcan and Sava Jakšić lead the revolt in these regions. Lazar Sočica led the Piva tribe in Old Herzegovina.

The Ottomans heard of the talks between Nikola I and tried to capture the ringleaders, who fled into Montenegro in the winter of 1874. In 1875, Austria was drawn in, who with its interests in Bosnia and Herzegovina, asked the Ottomans to give the ringleaders amnesty. The Ottomans agreed to enter discussions with Austria.

In Bosnia

The preparations started somewhat later than the Herzegovinian and did not manage to coordinate actions of the two regions. In the preparations are Vaso Vidović, Simo and Jovo Bilbija, Spasoje Babić and Vaso Pelagić. The plans began with firstly liberating the villages of Kozara; Prosara and Motajica, then attacking the communications and blocking the cities of the Sava river, later to take over Banja Luka. The start of the uprising was envisaged on 18 August 1875. The Ottomans imprisoned priests in Prijedor, which put further pressure on the people, therefore villagers from Dvorište, Čitluka, Petrinje, Bačvani, Pobrđani and Tavija attacked the Turks in Dvorište on 15 August. The uprising sparked wide; and the leader of the uprising was chosen to be Ostoja Kormanoš.

Uprising in Herzegovina

 
Death of Vojvoda Trifko

Gabela

The Catholic[4] population in the Gabela area suffered the difficult living conditions in what was then Turkey.[5] According to some historians, rebellion in the Gabela area started on 19 June 1875, while according to Noel Malcolm it started on 3 July 1875. British consul in Sarajevo, William Holmes, on 9 July 1875 reported that a "band" of rebels, had blocked the bridge over the Krupa river and road between Metković and Mostar.[6] In Trebinje was gathered about 2,000 Catholic and Orthodox participants and they selected Fr. Ivan Musić as leader of the uprising.[7] Dervish Pasha, governor-general of Bosnia and Herzegovina at that time, claim that both Catholics and Orthodox took part in the revolt. According to a correspondent for the Times in Herzegovina, William James Stillman, violence in Herzegovina started as a revolt of "the Catholic population between Popovo and Gabela" who "anticipated an Austrian intervention" and he also observed that Catholics at that time were "the most enthusiastic in the revolt".[8] Soon new conflicts erupted in northern Bosnia and a large number of people fled to Croatia and Montenegro. By the end of 1876, the number of refugees from Bosnia and Herzegovina was between 100,000 and perhaps 250,000 people.[9][10] According to Richard C. Hall, 150,000 people fled to Croatia.[11]

Nevesinje

 
Elders (1875).
 
Herzegovinians in Ambush, 1875.

The leaders returned in 1875 and continued their plans for revolt, the plan was for the liberation of Nevesinje region, then expansion to the rest of Herzegovina. In the meantime, Turks seek hajduk Pera Tunguz, who on 5 July, had attacked a caravan on Bišini mountain. On 9 July, the Turks clashed with the armed villagers of Jovan Gutić on the Gradac hill north of Krekovi. This conflict would be known in Serbian as Nevesinjska puška ("Nevesinje rifle") and marked the beginning of the uprising in all of Herzegovina. Firstly Nevesinje, Bileća and Stolac were involved, then in August, Gacko and the frontier towards Montenegro. Bands (known as četa) of 50–300 people and detachments of 500–2,000 people gathered and attacked Ottoman border posts and bey towers.

The Ottomans had 4 battalions of the regular army (Nizami) with a total of 1,800 soldiers, situated in Mostar, Trebinje, Nikšić, Foča and the border posts, also a larger number of başıbozuk were present all over the province. The Ottoman troops were commanded by Selim Pasha (Selim-paša) who in turn is under Dervish Pasha (Derviš-paša), the commander of the Bosnia Vilayet. After the outbreak of the uprising, the Turks tried to gain time by starting negotiations while reinforcements arrived. The rebels wanted lower taxes, which the Turks refused, and the fighting continued. In August, 4,000 Nizami arrived from Bosnia, and later 4 more battalions by sea through Klek in Trebinje. The rebels had by July and August destroyed the majority of border posts and besieged Trebinje by 5 August. The Turks regained Trebinje by 30 August. In the end of August, fighting broke out in Bosnia, and Serbia and Montenegro promised aid, sparking an intensification of the uprising.

Prince Nikola sent Petar Vukotić, while a large number of Montenegrin volunteers arrived at the command of Peko Pavlović. The Serbian government dared not to publicly assist because of international pressure but secretly sent Mićo Ljubibratić (who took part in the 1852–1862 uprising) among others. There was a conflict between the rebels because of disagreement between the representatives of the Montenegrin and Serbian governments, causing failures in the ongoing uprising.

 
Prince Peter used the surname Mrkonjić during the uprising.

Many Europeans took part in the uprising with the idea of bringing down Muslim rule over Christians (mainly Italians, former Garibaldinians).[12]

Uprising in Bosnia

According to Herr Fritz, the Serb rebels were "extremely numerous and in some cases well armed" and were divided among following troops and bands:[13]

  • Risovac and Grmeč, in West Bosnia, under the leadership of well-known Golub Babić, Marinković, Simo Davidović, Pop-Karan and Trifko Amelić. The Serbian colonel Mileta Despotović held supreme leadership and had formed 8 battalions out of the scattered bands.
  • Vučjak, in East Bosnia.
  • Pastirevo and Kozara, in North Bosnia, bands led by Marko Djenadija, Ostoja, Spasojević, Marko Bajalica, hegumen Hadzić and Pop-Stevo. The new camp of Brezovac, not far from Novi, was held by Ostoja Vojnović. The former camp of Karađorđevići in Ćorkovac was held by Ilija Sević.

The aim of the Bosnian rebel bands was to prevent any greater concentration of Ottoman troops on the Drina, which was the western frontier of Serbia. As a systemically organised insurrection in Bosnia was impossible, the rebels pursued and drove back the "Turk" (Muslim) population into their towns. The bands protected and helped the exiles into hiding in the woods and leading unarmed men, women and children, to reach the frontier of Austria or Serbia through safe conduct.[14]

According to Mackenzie and Irby who travelled the region in 1877, the state of the common Christian people was serious, and the number of fugitives exceeded 200,000 all round the frontier by January 1877.[15]

The rebels in South Bosnia had cleared the region of Muslims, presently under the command of Despotović, between the Austrian frontier and the Ottoman fortresses of Kulen Vakuf, Ključ and Glamoč.[16]

In August 1877, all Bosnian Muslims men from 15 to 70 were ordered to fight, although there was already 54 battalions, each with 400–700 men.[17]

Aftermath

 
"Refugees from Herzegovina", 1889 painting by Uroš Predić.

The uprising was the starting point of the Great Eastern Crisis, the reopening of the "Eastern Question".[18] The unrest rapidly spread among the Christian populations of the other Ottoman provinces in the Balkans (notably the April Uprising in Bulgaria) setting off what would become known as the Great Eastern Crisis. The Ottoman atrocities in suppressing unrest in the Balkan provinces eventually led to the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–78, which ended in Turkish defeat, and the signing of the Treaty of San Stefano in March 1878, followed in July of the same year by the Treaty of Berlin, severely reducing Ottoman territories and power in Europe. The Congress of Berlin decided that Bosnia and Herzegovina, while remaining nominally under Turkish sovereignty, would be governed by Austria-Hungary. Austria-Hungary annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1908. The occupation and annexation enraged Serbs and was a catalyst for the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria by the Bosnian Serb nationalist Gavrilo Princip.

Legacy

The Nevesinje municipality has a coat of arms with two rifles, symbolising the revolt. The government of Republika Srpska together with the Nevesinje municipality annually organises the anniversary of the revolt.[19]

In 1963, a Yugoslav film by Žika Mitrović about the Nevesinje rebellion was released, titled in Serbian as Невесињска пушка and in English as Thundering Mountains.[20]

Jovan Bratić (born 1974), a comic artist from Nevesinje, made a cartoon series on the Herzegovina Uprising, titled Nevesinjska puška, the first part released in 2008,[21] and the second part Nevesinjska puška 2: Bitka na Vučjem dolu.[22]

According to historian Edin Radušić "Milorad Ekmečić gave the main word in interpretations of a wide range of issues related to the uprising in domestic historiography, in the 1960s he from Vaso Čubrilović took over the primacy as the main interpreter of the uprising, and since then he had the greatest influence on other historians who have dealt with this thematic framework". Also, "Ekmečić became more openly politically engaged in recent works, openly linking the motives of the 19th century uprising with the insurgent movements from WWII and violence in Bosnia and Herzegovina from the end of the 20th century, with the thesis of religious war as the appearance of the long duration, which has one of its key episodes in the uprising of 1875–1878".[23]

See also

References

  1. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 221-226.
  2. ^ a b c d Stojanović 1968, p. 2.
  3. ^ a b c d Reid 2000, p. 309.
  4. ^ Milenko Petrovic; (2013) The Democratic Transition of Post-Communist Europe {The last important such conflict was the so-called Herzegovina Uprising of Orthodox Christians (Serbs/Montenegrins) and partially also Catholic Christians (Croats) in 1875, which spread to Bosnia} p. 68-69; Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 0230354319
  5. ^ Ivica Puljić; (2009) Uloga vojvode don Ivana Musića u ustanku hercegovačkih Hrvata (The role of Voivode Fr Ivan Music in the uprising of Herzegovinian Croats) p. 221; ISBN 978-9958-9924-0-7
  6. ^ Miloš Ković; (2010) The Beginning of the 1875 Serbian Uprising in Herzegovina The British Perspective p. 60-61; Balcanica XLI, Belgrade, [1]
  7. ^ Ivica Puljić; (2009) Uloga vojvode don Ivana Musića u ustanku hercegovačkih Hrvata (The role of Voivode Fr Ivan Music in the uprising of Herzegovinian Croats) p. 221-223; ISBN 978-9958-9924-0-7
  8. ^ Miloš Ković; (2010) The Beginning of the 1875 Serbian Uprising in Herzegovina The British Perspective p. 60-61; Balcanica XLI, Belgrade, [2]
  9. ^ Noel Malcolm; (1995), Povijest Bosne – kratki pregled p. 177-178; Erasmus Gilda, Novi Liber, Zagreb, Dani-Sarajevo, ISBN 953-6045-03-6
  10. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 223.
  11. ^ Richard C. Hall; (2014) War in the Balkans: An Encyclopedic History from the Fall of the Ottoman Empire to the Breakup of Yugoslavia p. 136; ABC-CLIO, ISBN 1610690303
  12. ^ Grémaux, René (2017). "Alone of All Her Sex? The Dutch Jeanne Merkus and the Hitherto Hidden Other Viragos in the Balkans during the Great Eastern Crisis (1875–1878)". Balcanica (XLVIII): 67–106. doi:10.2298/BALC1748067G.
  13. ^ Mackenzie & Irby 2010, p. 42.
  14. ^ Mackenzie & Irby 2010, p. 43.
  15. ^ Mackenzie & Irby 2010, p. 47.
  16. ^ Mackenzie & Irby 2010, p. 50.
  17. ^ Milojković-Djurić 1994.
  18. ^ Stojanović 1968, p. 11.
  19. ^ "Obilježeno 137 godina od ustanka "Nevesinjska puška"". Alternativna TV (in Serbian). 8 July 2012.
  20. ^ "Thundering Mountains (1963)". IMDb.
  21. ^ (in Bosnian). Moja Hercegovina. 17 April 2013. Archived from the original on 22 February 2014.
  22. ^ . 30 October 2012. Archived from the original on 22 February 2014.
  23. ^ Edin Radušić; (2020) Pitanje ustanka 1875–1878. u bosanskohercegovačkoj historiografiji: između historijske istine i multiperspektivnosti (The question of the uprising of 1875–1878. in Bosnia and Herzegovina historiography: between historical truth and multiperspectivity) p. 104-105; ANUBiH CLXXXVII [3]

Sources

  • Bataković, Dušan T. (1996). The Serbs of Bosnia & Herzegovina: History and Politics. Paris: Dialogue. ISBN 9782911527104.
  • Bataković, Dušan T., ed. (2005). Histoire du peuple serbe [History of the Serbian People] (in French). Lausanne: L’Age d’Homme. ISBN 9782825119587.
  • Bogićević, Vojislav (1950). Stanje raje u Bosni i Hercegovini pred ustanak 1875-1878 godine: povodom 75-godišnjice ustanka u Hercegovini i bosanskoj krajini 1875-1878. Državna štamparija u Sarajevu.
  • Ćirković, Sima (2004). The Serbs. Malden: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 9781405142915.
  • Čubrilović, Vasa; Antonić, Zdravko (1996). Bosanski ustanak 1875-1878 [Bosnian Uprising 1875-1878]. Službeni list SRJ. ISBN 9788635502885.
  • Ekmečić, Milorad (1973). Ustanak u Bosni 1875-1878 [Uprising in Bosnia 1875-1878]. Sarajevo: Veselin Masleša.
  • Gutić, Vasilije M. (1980). Opšta i diplomatska istorija ustanka u Hercegovini i Bosni iz 1875–1878. godine. V. Gutić.
  • Harris, David (1928). Balkan diplomacy, July, 1875 to July, 1876: from the revolt in Herzegovina to the Reichstadt agreement ... Leland Stanford Junior University.
  • Jagodić, Miloš (2004). Насељавање Кнежевине Србије : 1861–1880. Istorijski institut. ISBN 978-86-7743-046-7.
  • Ković, Miloš (2010). "The beginning of the 1875 Serbian uprising in Herzegovina: the British perspective". Balcanica (41): 55–71. doi:10.2298/BALC1041055K.
  • Mackenzie, G. M.; Irby, A. P. (2010) [1877]. Travels in the Slavonic Provinces of Turkey-In-Europe (Vols. I and II). New York: Cosimo. ISBN 978-1-61640-405-5.
  • Milojković-Djurić, Jelena (1994). Panslavism and national identity in Russia and in the Balkans, 1830-1880: images of the self and others. East European Monographs. ISBN 9780880332910.
  • Никифоров, Д.И. (2015). Петр Карагеоргиевич в Боснийском восстании 1875-1878 годов.. Новая и новейшая история (in Russian). 2: 183–191.
  • Radoičić, Mirko S. (1966). Hercegovina i Crna Gora 1875–1878 (in Serbo-Croatian). Savez udruženja boraca NOR-a, Opštinski odbor.
  • Reid, James J. (2000). Crisis of the Ottoman Empire: Prelude to Collapse 1839–1878. Franz Steiner Verlag. ISBN 978-3-515-07687-6.
  • Rupp, George Hoover (1941). A Wavering Friendship: Russia and Austria, 1876-1878. Harvard University Press.
  • Stojanović, Mihailo D. (1968) [1939]. The Great Powers and the Balkans, 1875–1878. Cambridge University Press.
  • Šipovac, T. (1979). Nevesinjska puška. Beograd.
  • Ustanak u Bosni od 1875. do 1878. god: građa za noviju srpsku istoriju rata za oslobođenje. Pajević. 1884.
  • Vojna Enciklopedija. Vol. 1. Beograd. pp. 756–759.

External links

  • . Frontal. Archived from the original on 26 March 2012.

herzegovina, uprising, 1875, 1877, other, uses, herzegovina, uprising, this, article, expanded, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, serbian, january, 2012, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, version,. For other uses see Herzegovina Uprising This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in Serbian January 2012 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Serbian article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 385 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Serbian Wikipedia article at sr Nevesiњska pushka see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated sr Nevesiњska pushka to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Herzegovina uprising Serbian Hercegovachki ustanak romanized Hercegovacki ustanak was an uprising led by the Christian Serb population against the Ottoman Empire firstly and predominantly in Herzegovina hence its name from where it spread into Bosnia and Raska It broke out in the summer of 1875 and lasted in some regions up to the beginning of 1878 It was followed by the Bulgarian Uprising of 1876 and coincided with Serbian Turkish wars 1876 1878 all of those events being part of the Great Eastern Crisis 1875 1878 1 Herzegovina Uprising of 1875An illustrated depiction of Bogdan Zimonjic Mico Ljubibratic Stojan Kovacevic and Pecija in the 1876 issue of Orao a Serb annual magazine published in Novi SadDate19 June 1875LocationBosnia Vilayet Ottoman EmpireResultRevolt suppressed Great Eastern Crisis Serbian Turkish Wars Montenegrin Ottoman WarBelligerentsSerb rebels Aided by Montenegro Serbia Ottoman EmpireCommanders and leadersBogdan Zimonjic Petar Popovic Pecija Mico Ljubibratic Stojan Kovacevic Petar Mrkonjic Mileta DespotovicAbdi Pasha Dervish Pasha Selim Pasha Reuf Pasha Mukhtar PashaStrength24 000 The uprising was precipitated by the harsh treatment under the beys and aghas of the Ottoman province vilayet of Bosnia the reforms announced by the Ottoman Sultan Abdulmecid I involving new rights for Christian subjects a new basis for army conscription and an end to the much hated system of tax farming were either resisted or ignored by the powerful Bosnian landowners They frequently resorted to more repressive measures against their Christian subjects The tax burden on Christian peasants constantly increased The rebels were aided with weapons and volunteers from the principalities of Montenegro and Serbia whose governments eventually jointly declared war on the Ottomans on 18 June 1876 leading to the Serbian Ottoman War 1876 78 and Montenegrin Ottoman War 1876 78 which in turn led to the Russo Turkish War 1877 78 and Great Eastern Crisis A result of the uprisings and wars was the Berlin Congress in 1878 which gave Montenegro and Serbia independence and more territory while Austro Hungary occupied Bosnia and Herzegovina for 30 years although it remained de jure Ottoman territory Contents 1 Background 2 Preparations 2 1 In Herzegovina 2 2 In Bosnia 3 Uprising in Herzegovina 3 1 Gabela 3 2 Nevesinje 4 Uprising in Bosnia 5 Aftermath 6 Legacy 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksBackground EditIn the early 19th century most of the Balkans was under Ottoman rule Christian communities of Serbs and Greeks under Ottoman control for four centuries rose up and succeeded in obtaining autonomy by means of the Serbian Revolution of 1804 17 and Greek War of Independence of 1821 29 establishing the Principality of Serbia and the Hellenic Republic 2 The weakened Ottoman central powers was evident in separatist provincial lords pashas as seen in Pazvantoglu Ali Pasha Gradascevic who led a Bosnian bey rebellion in 1831 32 and Muhammad Ali 2 Ottoman Sultan Mahmud II succeeded in abolishing the problematic Janissaries in 1826 in his reform work 2 Beginning in the 1830s the Ottoman Empire seemed to many European observers to be on the verge on collapsing 2 The tax paying lower class rayah made up of Christian and Muslim peasants in the Bosnia Vilayet of the Ottoman Empire experienced harsh economic conditions in the previous century 3 Bosnian Muslim beys sometimes took as much as half of each peasant s crop annually besides various taxes on farm products and animals for which Christian peasants were responsible 3 Furthermore tax farmers mutesellim levied additional taxes on the remaining yield 3 The failure of the 1874 crop and plight of peasants and external influence in Pan Slavism and Pan Serbism and also Austrian aspirations on further South Slavic lands were leading causes of the ensuing rebellion 3 Other notable preceding Serb peasant rebellions in the region were the Herzegovina Uprising 1852 62 and Pecija s First Revolt 1858 Preparations EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Weapons from the Uprising In Herzegovina Edit The Serbian leaders of the people of Herzegovina Jovan Gutic Simun Zecevic Ilija Stevanovic Trivko Grubacic Prodan Rupar and Petar Radovic at the end of August and beginning of September 1874 met and decided to start preparing a rebellion They began collecting weapons and ammunition and establishing safe places With the assistance of Montenegro in the uprising it was to begin in springtime 1875 The group entered in talks with Montenegrin ruler Nikola I Petrovic but he was unwilling to break and risk the unreadiness of Russia in its war with the Ottomans The preparations continued and in Bileca and Trebinje region serdar Todor Mujicic Gligor Milicevic Vasilj Svorcan and Sava Jaksic lead the revolt in these regions Lazar Socica led the Piva tribe in Old Herzegovina The Ottomans heard of the talks between Nikola I and tried to capture the ringleaders who fled into Montenegro in the winter of 1874 In 1875 Austria was drawn in who with its interests in Bosnia and Herzegovina asked the Ottomans to give the ringleaders amnesty The Ottomans agreed to enter discussions with Austria In Bosnia Edit The preparations started somewhat later than the Herzegovinian and did not manage to coordinate actions of the two regions In the preparations are Vaso Vidovic Simo and Jovo Bilbija Spasoje Babic and Vaso Pelagic The plans began with firstly liberating the villages of Kozara Prosara and Motajica then attacking the communications and blocking the cities of the Sava river later to take over Banja Luka The start of the uprising was envisaged on 18 August 1875 The Ottomans imprisoned priests in Prijedor which put further pressure on the people therefore villagers from Dvoriste Citluka Petrinje Bacvani Pobrđani and Tavija attacked the Turks in Dvoriste on 15 August The uprising sparked wide and the leader of the uprising was chosen to be Ostoja Kormanos Uprising in Herzegovina Edit Death of Vojvoda Trifko Gabela Edit The Catholic 4 population in the Gabela area suffered the difficult living conditions in what was then Turkey 5 According to some historians rebellion in the Gabela area started on 19 June 1875 while according to Noel Malcolm it started on 3 July 1875 British consul in Sarajevo William Holmes on 9 July 1875 reported that a band of rebels had blocked the bridge over the Krupa river and road between Metkovic and Mostar 6 In Trebinje was gathered about 2 000 Catholic and Orthodox participants and they selected Fr Ivan Music as leader of the uprising 7 Dervish Pasha governor general of Bosnia and Herzegovina at that time claim that both Catholics and Orthodox took part in the revolt According to a correspondent for the Times in Herzegovina William James Stillman violence in Herzegovina started as a revolt of the Catholic population between Popovo and Gabela who anticipated an Austrian intervention and he also observed that Catholics at that time were the most enthusiastic in the revolt 8 Soon new conflicts erupted in northern Bosnia and a large number of people fled to Croatia and Montenegro By the end of 1876 the number of refugees from Bosnia and Herzegovina was between 100 000 and perhaps 250 000 people 9 10 According to Richard C Hall 150 000 people fled to Croatia 11 Nevesinje Edit Elders 1875 Herzegovinians in Ambush 1875 The leaders returned in 1875 and continued their plans for revolt the plan was for the liberation of Nevesinje region then expansion to the rest of Herzegovina In the meantime Turks seek hajduk Pera Tunguz who on 5 July had attacked a caravan on Bisini mountain On 9 July the Turks clashed with the armed villagers of Jovan Gutic on the Gradac hill north of Krekovi This conflict would be known in Serbian as Nevesinjska puska Nevesinje rifle and marked the beginning of the uprising in all of Herzegovina Firstly Nevesinje Bileca and Stolac were involved then in August Gacko and the frontier towards Montenegro Bands known as ceta of 50 300 people and detachments of 500 2 000 people gathered and attacked Ottoman border posts and bey towers The Ottomans had 4 battalions of the regular army Nizami with a total of 1 800 soldiers situated in Mostar Trebinje Niksic Foca and the border posts also a larger number of basibozuk were present all over the province The Ottoman troops were commanded by Selim Pasha Selim pasa who in turn is under Dervish Pasha Dervis pasa the commander of the Bosnia Vilayet After the outbreak of the uprising the Turks tried to gain time by starting negotiations while reinforcements arrived The rebels wanted lower taxes which the Turks refused and the fighting continued In August 4 000 Nizami arrived from Bosnia and later 4 more battalions by sea through Klek in Trebinje The rebels had by July and August destroyed the majority of border posts and besieged Trebinje by 5 August The Turks regained Trebinje by 30 August In the end of August fighting broke out in Bosnia and Serbia and Montenegro promised aid sparking an intensification of the uprising Prince Nikola sent Petar Vukotic while a large number of Montenegrin volunteers arrived at the command of Peko Pavlovic The Serbian government dared not to publicly assist because of international pressure but secretly sent Mico Ljubibratic who took part in the 1852 1862 uprising among others There was a conflict between the rebels because of disagreement between the representatives of the Montenegrin and Serbian governments causing failures in the ongoing uprising Prince Peter used the surname Mrkonjic during the uprising Many Europeans took part in the uprising with the idea of bringing down Muslim rule over Christians mainly Italians former Garibaldinians 12 Uprising in Bosnia Edit Golub Babic According to Herr Fritz the Serb rebels were extremely numerous and in some cases well armed and were divided among following troops and bands 13 Risovac and Grmec in West Bosnia under the leadership of well known Golub Babic Marinkovic Simo Davidovic Pop Karan and Trifko Amelic The Serbian colonel Mileta Despotovic held supreme leadership and had formed 8 battalions out of the scattered bands Vucjak in East Bosnia Pastirevo and Kozara in North Bosnia bands led by Marko Djenadija Ostoja Spasojevic Marko Bajalica hegumen Hadzic and Pop Stevo The new camp of Brezovac not far from Novi was held by Ostoja Vojnovic The former camp of Karađorđevici in Corkovac was held by Ilija Sevic The aim of the Bosnian rebel bands was to prevent any greater concentration of Ottoman troops on the Drina which was the western frontier of Serbia As a systemically organised insurrection in Bosnia was impossible the rebels pursued and drove back the Turk Muslim population into their towns The bands protected and helped the exiles into hiding in the woods and leading unarmed men women and children to reach the frontier of Austria or Serbia through safe conduct 14 According to Mackenzie and Irby who travelled the region in 1877 the state of the common Christian people was serious and the number of fugitives exceeded 200 000 all round the frontier by January 1877 15 The rebels in South Bosnia had cleared the region of Muslims presently under the command of Despotovic between the Austrian frontier and the Ottoman fortresses of Kulen Vakuf Kljuc and Glamoc 16 In August 1877 all Bosnian Muslims men from 15 to 70 were ordered to fight although there was already 54 battalions each with 400 700 men 17 Aftermath Edit Refugees from Herzegovina 1889 painting by Uros Predic The uprising was the starting point of the Great Eastern Crisis the reopening of the Eastern Question 18 The unrest rapidly spread among the Christian populations of the other Ottoman provinces in the Balkans notably the April Uprising in Bulgaria setting off what would become known as the Great Eastern Crisis The Ottoman atrocities in suppressing unrest in the Balkan provinces eventually led to the Russo Turkish War of 1877 78 which ended in Turkish defeat and the signing of the Treaty of San Stefano in March 1878 followed in July of the same year by the Treaty of Berlin severely reducing Ottoman territories and power in Europe The Congress of Berlin decided that Bosnia and Herzegovina while remaining nominally under Turkish sovereignty would be governed by Austria Hungary Austria Hungary annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1908 The occupation and annexation enraged Serbs and was a catalyst for the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria by the Bosnian Serb nationalist Gavrilo Princip Legacy EditThe Nevesinje municipality has a coat of arms with two rifles symbolising the revolt The government of Republika Srpska together with the Nevesinje municipality annually organises the anniversary of the revolt 19 In 1963 a Yugoslav film by Zika Mitrovic about the Nevesinje rebellion was released titled in Serbian as Nevesiњska pushka and in English as Thundering Mountains 20 Jovan Bratic born 1974 a comic artist from Nevesinje made a cartoon series on the Herzegovina Uprising titled Nevesinjska puska the first part released in 2008 21 and the second part Nevesinjska puska 2 Bitka na Vucjem dolu 22 According to historian Edin Radusic Milorad Ekmecic gave the main word in interpretations of a wide range of issues related to the uprising in domestic historiography in the 1960s he from Vaso Cubrilovic took over the primacy as the main interpreter of the uprising and since then he had the greatest influence on other historians who have dealt with this thematic framework Also Ekmecic became more openly politically engaged in recent works openly linking the motives of the 19th century uprising with the insurgent movements from WWII and violence in Bosnia and Herzegovina from the end of the 20th century with the thesis of religious war as the appearance of the long duration which has one of its key episodes in the uprising of 1875 1878 23 See also EditHerzegovina Vilayet Austro Hungarian campaign in Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1878References Edit Cirkovic 2004 p 221 226 a b c d Stojanovic 1968 p 2 a b c d Reid 2000 p 309 Milenko Petrovic 2013 The Democratic Transition of Post Communist Europe The last important such conflict was the so called Herzegovina Uprising of Orthodox Christians Serbs Montenegrins and partially also Catholic Christians Croats in 1875 which spread to Bosnia p 68 69 Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0230354319 Ivica Puljic 2009 Uloga vojvode don Ivana Musica u ustanku hercegovackih Hrvata The role of Voivode Fr Ivan Music in the uprising of Herzegovinian Croats p 221 ISBN 978 9958 9924 0 7 Milos Kovic 2010 The Beginning of the 1875 Serbian Uprising in Herzegovina The British Perspectivep 60 61 Balcanica XLI Belgrade 1 Ivica Puljic 2009 Uloga vojvode don Ivana Musica u ustanku hercegovackih Hrvata The role of Voivode Fr Ivan Music in the uprising of Herzegovinian Croats p 221 223 ISBN 978 9958 9924 0 7 Milos Kovic 2010 The Beginning of the 1875 Serbian Uprising in Herzegovina The British Perspective p 60 61 Balcanica XLI Belgrade 2 Noel Malcolm 1995 Povijest Bosne kratki pregled p 177 178 Erasmus Gilda Novi Liber Zagreb Dani Sarajevo ISBN 953 6045 03 6 Cirkovic 2004 p 223 Richard C Hall 2014 War in the Balkans An Encyclopedic History from the Fall of the Ottoman Empire to the Breakup of Yugoslavia p 136 ABC CLIO ISBN 1610690303 Gremaux Rene 2017 Alone of All Her Sex The Dutch Jeanne Merkus and the Hitherto Hidden Other Viragos in the Balkans during the Great Eastern Crisis 1875 1878 Balcanica XLVIII 67 106 doi 10 2298 BALC1748067G Mackenzie amp Irby 2010 p 42 Mackenzie amp Irby 2010 p 43 Mackenzie amp Irby 2010 p 47 Mackenzie amp Irby 2010 p 50 Milojkovic Djuric 1994 Stojanovic 1968 p 11 Obiljezeno 137 godina od ustanka Nevesinjska puska Alternativna TV in Serbian 8 July 2012 Thundering Mountains 1963 IMDb U prodaji je drugo objedinjeno izdanje stripa Nevesinjska puska in Bosnian Moja Hercegovina 17 April 2013 Archived from the original on 22 February 2014 Intervju sa Jovanom Braticem strip autorom iz Nevesinja 30 October 2012 Archived from the original on 22 February 2014 Edin Radusic 2020 Pitanje ustanka 1875 1878 u bosanskohercegovackoj historiografiji između historijske istine i multiperspektivnosti The question of the uprising of 1875 1878 in Bosnia and Herzegovina historiography between historical truth and multiperspectivity p 104 105 ANUBiH CLXXXVII 3 Sources EditBatakovic Dusan T 1996 The Serbs of Bosnia amp Herzegovina History and Politics Paris Dialogue ISBN 9782911527104 Batakovic Dusan T ed 2005 Histoire du peuple serbe History of the Serbian People in French Lausanne L Age d Homme ISBN 9782825119587 Bogicevic Vojislav 1950 Stanje raje u Bosni i Hercegovini pred ustanak 1875 1878 godine povodom 75 godisnjice ustanka u Hercegovini i bosanskoj krajini 1875 1878 Drzavna stamparija u Sarajevu Cirkovic Sima 2004 The Serbs Malden Blackwell Publishing ISBN 9781405142915 Cubrilovic Vasa Antonic Zdravko 1996 Bosanski ustanak 1875 1878 Bosnian Uprising 1875 1878 Sluzbeni list SRJ ISBN 9788635502885 Ekmecic Milorad 1973 Ustanak u Bosni 1875 1878 Uprising in Bosnia 1875 1878 Sarajevo Veselin Maslesa Gutic Vasilije M 1980 Opsta i diplomatska istorija ustanka u Hercegovini i Bosni iz 1875 1878 godine V Gutic Harris David 1928 Balkan diplomacy July 1875 to July 1876 from the revolt in Herzegovina to the Reichstadt agreement Leland Stanford Junior University Jagodic Milos 2004 Naseљavaњe Knezhevine Srbiјe 1861 1880 Istorijski institut ISBN 978 86 7743 046 7 Kovic Milos 2010 The beginning of the 1875 Serbian uprising in Herzegovina the British perspective Balcanica 41 55 71 doi 10 2298 BALC1041055K Mackenzie G M Irby A P 2010 1877 Travels in the Slavonic Provinces of Turkey In Europe Vols I and II New York Cosimo ISBN 978 1 61640 405 5 Milojkovic Djuric Jelena 1994 Panslavism and national identity in Russia and in the Balkans 1830 1880 images of the self and others East European Monographs ISBN 9780880332910 Nikiforov D I 2015 Petr Karageorgievich v Bosnijskom vosstanii 1875 1878 godov Novaya i novejshaya istoriya in Russian 2 183 191 Radoicic Mirko S 1966 Hercegovina i Crna Gora 1875 1878 in Serbo Croatian Savez udruzenja boraca NOR a Opstinski odbor Reid James J 2000 Crisis of the Ottoman Empire Prelude to Collapse 1839 1878 Franz Steiner Verlag ISBN 978 3 515 07687 6 Rupp George Hoover 1941 A Wavering Friendship Russia and Austria 1876 1878 Harvard University Press Stojanovic Mihailo D 1968 1939 The Great Powers and the Balkans 1875 1878 Cambridge University Press Sipovac T 1979 Nevesinjska puska Beograd Ustanak u Bosni od 1875 do 1878 god građa za noviju srpsku istoriju rata za oslobođenje Pajevic 1884 Vojna Enciklopedija Vol 1 Beograd pp 756 759 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Herzegovina Uprising 1875 77 U organizaciјi Odbora za њegovaњe tradiciјa oslobodilachkih ratova Vlade Republike Srpske Obiљezhena 134 godishњica Nevesiњske pushke Frontal Archived from the original on 26 March 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Herzegovina uprising 1875 1877 amp oldid 1136178238, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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