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Karađorđe

Đorđe Petrović OSA OSV (pronounced [dʑôːrdʑe pětroʋitɕ]; Serbian Cyrillic: Ђорђе Петровић; 14 November [O.S. 3 November] 1762 – 25 July [O.S. 14 July] 1817), better known by the sobriquet Karađorđe (pronounced [kâradʑoːrdʑe]; Serbian Cyrillic: Карађорђе, lit.'Black George'), was a Serbian revolutionary who led the struggle for his country's independence from the Ottoman Empire during the First Serbian Uprising of 1804–1813.

Karađorđe
Карађорђе
Karađorđe, by Vladimir Borovikovsky, 1816
Grand Vožd of Serbia
Reign15 February 1804 – 21 September 1813
PredecessorTitle created
SuccessorMiloš Obrenović I
President of the Governing Council
Reign22 January 1811 – 3 October 1813
PredecessorJakov Nenadović
SuccessorPetar Nikolajević Moler (1815)
Born14 November [O.S. 3 November] 1762
Viševac, Sanjak of Smederevo, Rumelia Eyalet, Ottoman Empire
Died25 July [O.S. 14 July] 1817 (aged 54)
Radovanje Grove, Sanjak of Smederevo, Rumelia Eyalet, Ottoman Empire
Burial
Spouse
Jelena Jovanović
(m. 1785)
IssueSima, Sava, Sara, Poleksija, Stamenka, Aleksa, Alexander
HouseKarađorđević
FatherPetar Jovanović
MotherMarica (née Živković)
ReligionSerbian Orthodox
Signature

Born into an impoverished family in the Šumadija region of Ottoman Serbia, Karađorđe distinguished himself during the Austro-Turkish War of 1788–1791 as a member of the Serbian Free Corps, a militia of Habsburg and Ottoman Serbs, armed and trained by the Austrians. Fearing retribution following the Austrians' and Serb rebels' defeat in 1791, he and his family fled to the Austrian Empire, where they lived until 1794, when a general amnesty was declared. Karađorđe subsequently returned to Šumadija and became a livestock merchant. In 1796, the rogue governor of the Sanjak of Vidin, Osman Pazvantoğlu, invaded the Pashalik of Belgrade, and Karađorđe fought alongside the Ottomans to quash the incursion.

In early 1804, following a massacre of Serb chieftains by renegade Ottoman janissaries known as Dahis, the Serbs of the Pashalik rebelled. Karađorđe was unanimously elected to lead the uprising against the Dahis at an assembly of surviving chiefs in February 1804. Within six months, most of the Dahi leaders had been captured and executed by Karađorđe's forces, and by 1805, the final remnants of Dahi resistance had been crushed. Karađorđe and his followers demanded far-reaching autonomy, which Sultan Selim interpreted as but the first step towards complete independence. Selim promptly declared jihad against the rebels and ordered an army to march into the Pashalik. The Ottomans suffered a string of defeats at the hands of Karađorđe's forces. By 1806, the rebels had captured all the major towns in the Pashalik, including Belgrade and Smederevo, and expelled their Muslim inhabitants. Burdened by the demands of the Russo-Turkish War of 1806–1812, Selim offered the Serbs extensive autonomy. However, Karađorđe refused in light of Russia's avowal to aid the rebels should they continue fighting.

Frequent infighting, together with Napoleon's invasion of Russia in 1812, weakened the rebels, and the Ottomans were able to reverse many of their gains. Karađorđe was forced to flee Serbia in October 1813 and Belgrade fell later that month, bringing the First Serbian Uprising to a close. He and his followers sought refuge in the Austrian Empire, but were arrested and detained. Despite Ottoman requests for extradition, the Austrians handed Karađorđe over to the Russians, who offered him refuge in Bessarabia. There, he joined the Greek secret society known as Filiki Eteria, which planned to launch a pan-Balkan uprising against the Ottomans. Karađorđe returned to Serbia in secret in July 1817, but was killed shortly thereafter by agents of Miloš Obrenović, a rival rebel leader, who was concerned that Karađorđe's reappearance would cause the Ottomans to renege on the concessions they had agreed to following the Second Serbian Uprising of 1815. Karađorđe is considered the founder of the Karađorđević dynasty, which ruled Serbia in several intervals during the 19th and 20th centuries. His murder resulted in a violent, decades-long feud between his descendants and those of Obrenović, with the Serbian throne changing hands several times.

Origins Edit

Đorđe Petrović was born into an impoverished family in the village of Viševac, in the Šumadija region of Ottoman Serbia, on 14 November [O.S. 3 November] 1768.[1][a] He was the oldest of his parents' five children. His father, Petar Jovanović, was a highwayman (or hajduk) in his youth, but had since become a peasant farmer. His mother, Marica (née Živković), was a homemaker.[3] Petrović's surname was derived from his father's given name, in line with contemporary Serbian naming conventions.[4] Like most of his contemporaries, Petrović was illiterate.[5][6] His family celebrated the feast day of Saint Clement.[7] They are said to have been descended from the Vasojevići tribe of Montenegro's Lim River valley.[8] His ancestors are thought to have migrated from Montenegro to Šumadija in the late 1730s or early 1740s.[9] Petrović's childhood was strenuous and difficult.[3] His parents were forced to move around often in search of a livelihood.[10] His father worked as a day labourer and servant for a sipahi (Serbian: spahija), an Ottoman cavalryman. Petrović himself spent his adolescence working as a shepherd.[9] In 1785, he married Jelena Jovanović,[11] whose family hailed from the village of Masloševo.[9] The couple had seven children, six of whom reached adulthood.[1]

Petrović worked for several landlords across Šumadija until 1787, when he and his family left the region and settled in the Austrian Empire, fearing persecution at the hands of the Ottoman janissaries.[10] It is said that as they were preparing to cross the Danube into Austria, Petrović's father began to have second thoughts about leaving Šumadija. Knowing that the entire family would be put in jeopardy if his father stayed behind, Petrović either took his father's life or arranged for someone to kill him instead.[12][b]

Early military exploits Edit

 
Members of the Serbian Free Corps, 1798

Following the outbreak of the Austro-Turkish War of 1788–1791, Petrović joined the Serbian Free Corps (German: Serbische Freikorps), and took part in fighting the Ottomans in western Serbia.[10][15] The Free Corps was a volunteer militia made up of both Ottoman and Habsburg Serbs that was armed and trained by the Austrians. It was led by a Habsburg Serb officer, Major Mihailo Mihaljević.[16] Petrović's participation in the war brought him invaluable military experience, as well as insight into the Austrians' military techniques.[10] He distinguished himself in combat and was decorated for bravery, reaching the rank of sergeant (German: Wachtmeister).[17][18] In this capacity, he was given command over a squad of 25 men.[19]

The Austrians and Serb rebels briefly succeeded in liberating a strip of land east and south of Belgrade, which in Serbian historiography came to be known as Koča's Frontier (Serbian: Kočina Krajina), after one of the senior rebel leaders, Koča Anđelković. In 1791, the Austrians and Ottomans signed the Treaty of Sistova. The Austrians agreed to return all the territory that they and the Serbs had captured south of the Danube in exchange for minor territorial concessions in northern Bosnia, effectively abandoning the Serbs and leaving them to resist the Ottomans on their own. The rebels were crushed by 1792 and most of their leaders executed.[20] Unwilling to surrender, Petrović became a hajduk and briefly fought the Ottomans as an outlaw.[21] He and his family once again sought refuge in the Austrian Empire, this time finding sanctuary in the Krušedol Monastery, at the foot of Fruška Gora, where Petrović worked as a forester.[14][22]

In 1793, Hadji Mustafa Pasha was appointed governor of the Pashalik of Belgrade. He declared a general amnesty for former rebels and announced that Muslims would no longer serve as tax-collectors in areas where Christians formed a majority of the population. These changes were part of a plan devised by Sultan Selim aimed at improving relations with the Pashalik's Christian population.[23] Sensing that it was safe, Petrović returned to Šumadija in 1794, together with his family.[24] He settled in Topola, where he became a livestock merchant and traded with the Austrians. His business dealings led him to establish connections with many Habsburg Serbs.[10] In 1796, Osman Pazvantoğlu, the renegade governor of the Sanjak of Vidin, who had rejected the authority of the Sublime Porte, launched an invasion of the Pashalik of Belgrade. Overwhelmed, Mustafa Pasha formed a Serbian national militia to help stop the incursion.[20] Petrović joined the militia and became a boluk-bashi (Serbian: Buljukbaša),[c] leading a company of 100 men.[10]

In return for their service, the Serbs of the Pashalik were granted a number of privileges. They were allowed to bear arms and raise autonomous military units. After the Serb militias joined the war on Mustafa Pasha's side, Pazvantoğlu suffered a string of defeats. He retreated to Vidin, which was subsequently besieged.[23] The war against Pazvantoğlu marked the first time that Petrović distinguished himself in the eyes of the Ottomans, who bestowed him with the sobriquet "Black George" (Serbian: Karađorđe; Turkish: Kara Yorgi), partly because of his dark hair and partly because of his sinister reputation.[22][25] Karađorđe's service in the Serbian militia resulted in him becoming well acquainted with Ottoman military doctrine.[26]

First Serbian Uprising (1804–1813) Edit

Revolt against the Dahis Edit

 
Nineteenth-century illustration of the Orašac Assembly with Karađorđe at its centre

In 1798, Napoleon invaded Egypt, forcing the Porte to redeploy thousands of regulars from the Balkans in order to resist the French. The janissaries in the Pashalik of Belgrade, known as Dahis (Serbian: Dahije), who had been expelled from the region on Selim's orders nearly a decade earlier, were pardoned and allowed to return to Belgrade on the condition that they obey Mustafa Pasha. The détente between the aging governor and the Dahis did not last long. In 1801, Mustafa Pasha was killed by a Dahi assassin.[23]

The power vacuum caused by Mustafa Pasha's murder resulted in a period of infighting between the Dahis that would last until 1802. By this time, four senior Dahi commanders emerged triumphant and agreed to share power within the Pashalik. The Serbs were stripped of the privileges that they had been granted under Mustafa Pasha. Dahi bands roamed the countryside, killing peasants, looting property and setting homes on fire. Thousands of villagers were displaced and forced to flee into the mountains, where over the next several years, the able-bodied men formed ad hoc guerrilla bands.[10]

In mid-July 1803, Karađorđe obtained arms and munitions from Habsburg Serb merchants in Zemun. Later that month, he dispatched couriers through Šumadija calling for a meeting of Serbian notables to devise a strategy for resisting the Dahis.[27] The flow of arms from the Austrian Empire into the Pashalik, combined with their inability to crush the guerrillas in the countryside, made the Dahi leadership increasingly uneasy.[20] In January and February 1804, the Dahis launched a pre-emptive assault against the Pashalik's Serbian chieftains (known as knezovi, or "princes"), killing between 70 and 150 of them.[26] The killings outraged the Serbian rayah, the Pashalik's tax-paying lower class.[21] By this time, Karađorđe was a well known and well respected figure in Šumadija.[26] He narrowly escaped being killed in the two-month massacre, which came to be known as the Slaughter of the Knezes (Serbian: Seča knezova). Upon killing the chieftains, the Dahis impaled their severed heads on wooden stakes and put them on public display.[5]

On Candlemas, 14 February [O.S. 2 February] 1804, the surviving chieftains assembled in the village of Orašac, near Aranđelovac, to decide on a course of action.[24] They agreed to launch a rebellion against the Dahis and Karađorđe was elected without opposition to lead it.[28] It is said that he twice refused to lead the uprising, arguing that his violent temper would make him unsuitable for the role. Karađorđe's initial refusal only reinforced the chieftains' convictions that he was the only suitable candidate, and eventually, he agreed to lead the rebels.[4][21] This event marked the beginning of the First Serbian Uprising, the opening phase of what would come to be known as the Serbian Revolution.[25]

By the start of the revolt, the Pashalik of Belgrade had a population of about 400,000, 10 percent of which was Muslim.[29] Its Serb population was roughly 250,000.[30] At first, the rebels numbered around 30,000 men.[31] In this initial stage, they were joined by a significant amount of the Pashalik's Muslim population, whom the rebels dubbed the "Good Turks".[32][d] Karađorđe and his followers appealed to Sultan Selim for assistance against the Dahis, who had since rejected the authority of the Porte. Austria sent weapons and supplies to the rebels, while Russia lobbied on their behalf, encouraging the Porte to grant the Serbs further autonomy following the Dahis' removal. In May, Selim ordered a 7,000-strong army under of the command of Bekir Pasha, the governor of Bosnia, to march into the Pashalik. The Serbs welcomed Bekir Pasha and his men as liberators, and the Dahis were soon defeated through the joint efforts of Bekir Pasha's army and the rebels. By late August, the most prominent Dahi leaders had been captured by Karađorđe's men, beheaded, and their severed heads sent to the Sultan as trophies.[21]

The Dahis resisted for another year before they were completely defeated.[33] Karađorđe and his followers then demanded that Serbia be granted autonomous status similar to that enjoyed by neighbouring Wallachia. Selim suspected that Karađorđe's demands for autonomy were but the first step towards complete independence.[34] He responded by declaring a jihad against the rebels.[35] Hafiz Pasha, the Ottoman governor of Niš, was then ordered to march into Šumadija and destroy Karađorđe's army.[34]

Rebellion against the Porte Edit

Initial successes Edit

 
The remains of the sconce from the Battle of Deligrad

The rebels first clashed with Ottoman regulars at the Battle of Ivankovac in August 1805, scoring a decisive victory.[36][37] Belgrade was soon besieged by about 16,000 rebel fighters.[38] The rebel leaders used anti-Muslim rhetoric to mobilize the peasantry, calling upon them to rise up and drive the Ottomans "across the blue sea". In order to further galvanize the population, Karađorđe appealed to memories of the Battle of Kosovo of June 1389, which paved the way for the Ottoman conquest of Serbia and the rest of the western Balkans, declaring that Serbia's defeat in the battle needed to be avenged.[39] He sought to further cement his authority by harkening back to symbols of Medieval Serbia, such as the relics of Stefan the First-Crowned, and placing old heraldic symbols on flags and seals to establish continuity between the Serbian Empire and himself.[40][e] Portraits of Dušan the Mighty, the founder of the Serbian Empire, are said to have hung from the walls of the rebels' headquarters.[42]

Karađorđe was feared by enemies and allies alike because of his volatile temper.[43] He considered executions to be the only way in which military infractions could be rectified, and according to the military historian Brendon A. Rehm, personally killed 125 people.[22] In 1806, he ordered that his brother Marinko be hanged. According to one account, Marinko had been accused of raping a peasant girl.[12] Another suggests that he had been attempting to seduce young women whose husbands were away at the front.[44] Whatever the case, Karađorđe entertained senior rebel leaders in his home while his brother's lifeless body dangled from the front gate—a warning to others to refrain from the behaviour in which Marinko had been engaging.[12] Muslims, combatants and non-combatants alike, were killed unremittingly, as illustrated in this contemporary account describing the capture of the village of Čučuge, near Ub, in April 1806:

In their flight the Turks threw away their arms and clothing in order to run the better, but to no purpose. The Serbs caught up with them and killed them, some with swords, some with knives and some with daggers, while others had their brains beaten out with cudgels and staves. They say that over 2,800 Turks perished and only those got away who had good horses. When our army mustered again at the camp at Ub, I saw that many of our soldiers had blood-stained swords ... and their gun-butts also were smashed and broken; they were laden with every sort of spoil.[45]

 
Battle of Mišar, painting by Afanasij Šeloumov

Serbs who neglected to join the uprising were brutalized in equal measure. Males who could not produce an adequate excuse for why they were not fighting were killed and their houses torched.[5][46] While most of the rebels were Serbs, the Pashalik's Romani (Gypsy) residents, the majority of whom were Muslim, also fought on the rebel side.[47] Some Albanians also pledged allegiance to Karađorđe and fought on his behalf.[48]

In 1806, the rebels twice dispatched the diplomat Petar Ičko to Constantinople to negotiate with the Porte. The two parties eventually reached an understanding, which came to be known as Ičko's Peace, in which the Ottomans agreed to grant the rebels extensive autonomy. Due to the Balkans' poor communications and transport infrastructure, it took several months for news of the Porte's offer to reach the rebels.[49] In August 1806, the rebels defeated the Ottomans at the Battle of Mišar.[50] Later that month, they scored another victory at the Battle of Deligrad.[51] Smederevo was captured in November and made the capital of Karađorđe's revolutionary state.[52] Belgrade, with the exception of its imposing fortress, fell in early December. The outbreak of the Russo-Ottoman War that month, compounded by Russia's avowal to provide extensive materiel and financial support to the rebels should they continue fighting, convinced Karađorđe not to accept anything short of complete independence. He promptly refused to accept the terms of the agreement negotiated by Ičko.[49]

 
Monument and the Cemetery to the Liberators of Belgrade 1806 in Karađorđe's Park

In March 1807, Karađorđe issued a promise to Suleiman Pasha, the Governor of Belgrade, that he and his garrison would be granted safe passage if they vacated the city's besieged fortress. When Suleiman and his garrison emerged from the fortress, they were ambushed.[53] Adult men were killed on the spot, women and girls were forcibly converted to Orthodox Christianity and made to marry their captors, and young children were placed in the care of Orthodox Christian families.[54][55] One contemporary account suggests that as many as 3,000 non-Christians – mostly Muslims, but also Jews – were forced to convert to Orthodox Christianity.[54] Jews that resisted conversion were either killed or expelled.[56] Belgrade's mosques were either destroyed or turned into churches.[57]

Losses mount Edit

As the revolution progressed, rebel strength peaked at around 50,000 fighters.[38] Despite their initial successes, the rebel leaders were seldom on good terms, and constant infighting plagued their camp. In the western part of the country, Jakov Nenadović was the principal figure. In the east, Milenko Stojković and Petar Dobrnjac held sway. The latter two opposed Karađorđe's attempts to create a centralized state, fearing that this would result in their own power being diminished.[26] Others, such as Nenadović, complained that Karađorđe was becoming too authoritarian. Nenadović suggested that the rebels establish a central council to rein in Karađorđe's power and write a constitution based on the rule of law.[58] Karađorđe balked at the possibility. "It's easy for this sovereign law of yours to rule in a warm room, behind this table", he responded, "but let us see tomorrow, when the Turks strike, who will meet them and beat them."[59][60]

 
Detail of Skull Tower

In May 1809, the rebels captured Sjenica. They repulsed an Ottoman attack on the village of Suvodol in early June, and seized Novi Pazar later that month, but failed to take its fortress.[61] Minor clashes also took place in the north of Kosovo.[48] Lacking numbers and adequate military training, the rebels failed to establish a corridor to Montenegro and gain access to the Adriatic Sea, which Karađorđe had described as one of his key aims.[61] The rebels experienced further setbacks in Niš, where 3,000 were surrounded at Čegar Hill in May–June 1809. Knowing that he and his men would be impaled if captured, rebel commander Stevan Sinđelić fired at his entrenchment's gun powder magazine, setting off a massive explosion that killed him and everyone else in the vicinity. On the site of the battle, the Ottoman commander Hurshid Pasha built a stone tower with the skulls of Sinđelić and his fighters embedded in its walls as a warning to others who wished to rebel.[61][62]

The fall of Čegar allowed the Ottomans to establish a land corridor extending along the Morava River valley from Niš to the Danube. Their advance was brought to a halt after the Russians crossed the Danube in September 1809 and attacked the Ottomans in northern Bulgaria, offering the rebels temporary respite. The rebels soon recaptured all the land they had lost but were exhausted by the fighting.[63] Henceforth, they were continuously on the defensive.[64] The rebel leaders quarrelled amongst themselves, blaming each other for the recent defeats. Karađorđe blamed the Russians for not intervening earlier on the rebels' behalf.[61] He subsequently wrote Napoleon seeking military assistance, and in 1810, dispatched an emissary to France.[65] Nothing came of these requests, as the French did not believe that the rebels had the military capacity to dislodge the Ottomans from the Balkans.[66] As his battlefield setbacks mounted, Karađorđe's behaviour became more volatile. In late 1809, he shot and wounded one of his commanders, Petar Jokić [sr], for making a poor military decision in the vicinity of Ćuprija.[12][44]

 
 
A map of Revolutionary Serbia in 1809 (left) and 1813 (right)

In 1810, Dobrnjac mutinied against Karađorđe and nearly succeeded in dislodging him. He was joined in his revolt by Milenko Stojković.[67] In June 1810, Russian troops entered Serbia for a second time, distributing weapons and supplies to Karađorđe and his followers. Field Marshal Mikhail Kutuzov took part in planning joint actions against both the Ottomans and the mutineers.[64] By the following year, Dobrnjac and Stojković were defeated.[67] Karađorđe attempted to placate the mutineers. In January 1811, he established the People's Governing Council (Serbian: Praviteljstvujušči Sovjet), a cabinet consisting of members who supported Karađorđe as well as those who opposed him.[68] It consisted of twelve members, one for each of the nahije (districts) of rebel Serbia.[58] Karađorđe appointed Stojković as the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Nenadović as the Minister of the Interior, and Dobrnjac as the Minister of Justice. Also inducted into Karađorđe's cabinet were Mladen Milovanović, as the Minister of War; Dositej Obradović, as the Minister of Education; and Sima Marković, as the Minister of Finance. Dobrnjac and Stojković refused to accept the posts that were offered to them, fearing that their acceptance would legitimize Karađorđe and undermine their own position. Karađorđe accused them of insubordination and exiled them to Wallachia, replacing them with loyalists.[68] The Governing Council soon recognized Karađorđe as Serbia's hereditary leader and pledged allegiance to his "lawful heirs".[58]

Defeat Edit

In mid-1812, Russia and the Ottoman Empire signed the Treaty of Bucharest, bringing the Russo-Ottoman War to a close. For his efforts, Karađorđe received the Order of Saint Anna from the Russians. The Governing Council scrambled to take an oath of loyalty to Russia in the hope that this would garner them further protection, to no avail.[69] The Russian Emperor, Alexander, was aware of Napoleon's plans to invade Russia and desperately sought to return as many Russian soldiers as possible in order to repel the attack.[64][70] As part of the Treaty of Bucharest, the Russians and Ottomans agreed that Serbian fortifications built after 1804 were to be destroyed, while cities and forts from which the Ottomans had been expelled over the course of the uprising were to be reoccupied and garrisoned by Ottoman troops. In exchange, the Ottomans agreed to declare a general amnesty for former rebels, as well as to grant the Serbs of the Pashalik of Belgrade some degree of autonomy. As part of the agreement, the Russians agreed to withdraw their forces from Serbia, as well as from Wallachia and Moldavia. The Russians encouraged Karađorđe and his followers to negotiate directly with the Porte regarding the minutiae of the handover of cities and fortifications to the Ottomans. Trepidation filled the rebel camp once it became clear that there was nothing to prevent the Ottomans from exacting reprisals against the Pashalik's Serb population after the Russians withdrew. Karađorđe thus refused to abide by the terms of the Treaty of Bucharest and fighting continued.[71]

Deprived of foreign assistance, the rebels were quickly routed by the Ottomans, whose units were manned primarily by Albanians and Bosnian Muslims.[66][72] In early October, Karađorđe fled to the Austrian Empire.[73] He was joined by around 100,000 other Serbs fleeing the Ottoman advance, including 50,000 from Belgrade and its environs alone.[74] Belgrade fell later that month.[66][75] The city's fall marked the end of the First Serbian Uprising.[71] The Ottomans singled out men and boys over the age of 15 for execution, and sold women and children into slavery. Torture was used extensively and executions were particularly brutal.[66] "Men were roasted alive, hanged by their feet over smoking straw until they asphyxiated, castrated, crushed with stones, and bastinadoed," one eyewitness wrote. "Their women and children were raped and sometimes taken by force to harems. Outside Stambul Gate in Belgrade, there were always on view the corpses of impaled Serbs being gnawed by packs of dogs."[76][77] Another account relays how infants and toddlers were boiled alive.[78] In one day alone, 1,800 women and children were sold into slavery at a Belgrade market.[79] Churches across the city were destroyed and mosques that had been converted into churches following the city's capture in 1806 were returned to their original use.[57] Others were deliberately torched by the Ottomans for the purpose of inflicting suffering on the city's inhabitants. In one instance, several dozen Serb refugees seeking shelter in a mosque were burned alive inside.[78]

In late October 1813, Hurshid Pasha declared a general amnesty for the rebels that had survived, though Karađorđe and some senior Orthodox clerics were specifically exempted.[66] Many rebel leaders agreed to lay down their arms, the most notable of these being Miloš Obrenović, the rebel commander in Užice.[80] A large number of Serb refugees subsequently returned to their homes, as did many of the Muslims that had been displaced in the fighting.[30]

Exile, return to Serbia and death Edit

 
The Assassination of Karadjordje, Mór Than (1863), National Museum of Serbia

Upon crossing the Danube, Karađorđe and his followers were arrested by the Austrian authorities. They were initially detained at the Petrovaradin Fortress in Novi Sad and later transferred to a prison in Graz. The Ottomans demanded that Karađorđe and the other rebel leaders be extradited to face punishment. The Austrians refused and instead turned them over to the Russians.[81] Karađorđe spent a year in Austrian custody before being allowed to go to Russia.[22] Like many of the other rebel leaders, he settled in Bessarabia.[81] He attempted to adjust to civilian life, commissioning a portrait of himself by the painter Vladimir Borovikovsky.[82] In April 1815, Obrenović orchestrated another anti-Ottoman rebellion in Serbia, which came to be known as the Second Serbian Uprising. Unlike Karađorđe's revolt, the Second Serbian Uprising ended relatively quickly and resulted in a rebel victory. In November 1815, the Ottomans accepted Obrenović's demands for wide-ranging autonomy. The terms that they agreed to were identical to those rejected by Karađorđe in 1807.[80]

 
Karađorđe's sarcophagus in the Church of Saint George, Topola

The Russians prohibited Karađorđe from returning to the Balkans to take part in the Second Serbian Uprising. Karađorđe objected and traveled to Saint Petersburg to plead his case, but was arrested and detained.[22] Upon his release, he joined the Filiki Eteria, a Greek nationalist secret society that intended to launch a pan-Balkan uprising against the Ottomans. The Filiki Eteria promised Karađorđe a position of military leadership in the planned uprising and offered to smuggle him into the Pashalik of Belgrade. Karađorđe secretly entered the Pashalik on 24 July [O.S. 12 July] 1817, crossing the Danube together with his servant, Naum Krnar. He then contacted his kum, Vujica Vulićević, who offered him an abode in the oak forest of Radovanje Grove, near Velika Plana. Unbeknownst to Karađorđe, Vulićević was on Obrenović's payroll. After escorting Karađorđe and his servant to a tent in the forest, Vulićević informed Obrenović of Karađorđe's whereabouts through a courier. Shortly thereafter, he received a letter from Obrenović telling him that Karađorde was to be killed.[81] Vulićević enlisted one of his close confidantes, Nikola Novaković, to take Karađorđe's life. The following morning, just before sunrise, Novaković snuck into Karađorđe's tent and axed him to death while he slept. He then went to the riverside and shot Krnar with a rifle as he was gathering water. Karađorđe's lifeless body was beheaded.[83] His severed head was taken to Belgrade and presented to Marashli Ali Pasha,[83] who had been appointed the governor of the Pashalik two years prior.[80] Ali Pasha had the head flayed, stuffed and sent to the Sultan himself.[83]

Obrenović feared that Karađorđe's return would prompt the Ottomans to renege on the agreement reached by the Porte and Obrenović's followers in November 1815.[84] By extension, Karađorđe's murder precluded the Serbs of the Pashalik from taking part in the Balkan-wide rebellion that the Filiki Eteria had been planning.[85] In Constantinople, Karađorđe's head was impaled on a stake and left on public display for a week. His body was buried on Serbian soil, but his skull ended up in the hands of a Constantinople museum. It was stolen some years later and buried in Greece.[86]

Legacy Edit

 
Karađorđe's statue in front of the Church of Saint Sava

Karađorđe's descendants adopted the surname Karađorđević in his honour.[87] His murder resulted in a violent, decades-long feud between his descendants and those of Obrenović, with the Serbian throne changing hands several times.[85][88] The feud came to an abrupt end in June 1903, when rebellious Royal Serbian Army officers killed the Obrenović king, Alexander, and his wife, Queen Draga, thereby rendering the Obrenović line extinct. Karađorđe's grandson, Peter Karađorđević, then ascended the throne.[89][90]

In order to tie himself to his grandfather's legacy, Peter commissioned a bronze crown cast from a piece of Karađorđe's first cannon.[91] In addition, the Order of Karađorđe's Star was introduced as Serbia's highest state decoration.[92][93] The first feature-length film to emerge from Serbia and the Balkans, whose plot revolves around Karađorđe and his actions before, during and after the First Serbian Uprising, was released in 1911.[94] Work soon began on the construction of the Church of Saint George, a Karađorđević dynasty mausoleum at Oplenac, near Topola.[86] In 1913, a monument to Karađorđe was unveiled at Kalemegdan Park.[95] During the Austro-Hungarian occupation of Serbia, the monument was torn down by the Austro-Hungarian Army and destroyed.[96]

In November 1918, Peter ascended the throne of the newly established Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, which was later renamed Yugoslavia.[97] Karađorđe's head was repatriated from Greece in 1923 and reunited with the rest of his body. His remains were buried in a white marble sarcophagus within the church in 1930.[86] The Karađorđević dynasty ruled Yugoslavia until 1941, when its members were forced into exile by Germany's invasion and occupation of the country.[98] The monarchy was abolished by Josip Broz Tito's communist government in 1945.[99]

Misha Glenny, a journalist specializing in the Balkans, believes that the First Serbian Uprising "marked the beginning of modern history on the Balkan peninsula."[100] The uprising kindled the flame of ethno-religious nationalism among the Christians of Southeastern Europe and inspired the subsequent Greek War of Independence.[101] Karađorđe's struggle against the Ottomans also had an important influence on the Bosnian Muslim revolutionary Husein Gradaščević, who instigated the Great Bosnian Uprising.[102] Karađorđe is viewed in a negative light by some modern Bosniaks. In 2011, the chief Mufti of the Islamic Community of Serbia, Muamer Zukorlić, filed a petition to rename a street in Sjenica named after Karađorđe. Zukorlić alleged that Karađorđe and his followers had indiscriminately targeted the town's residents in 1809, a notion disputed by Serbian historians.[103] The historian Ivo Banac surmises that "there would be no Bosnian Muslims today" had Karađorđe extended his uprising west of the Drina.[104]

 
The Life and Deeds of the Immortal Leader Karađorđe was the first feature film released in the Balkans.

Karađorđe's exploits were popularized across Europe by the linguist and folklorist Vuk Karadžić, who recorded and published the ballads of the blind gusle player and epic poet Filip Višnjić, many of which pertained to the First Serbian Uprising.[105] Karađorđe is referenced in a number of works of 19th-century fiction. While he was still alive, the Hungarian dramatist István Balog [hu] wrote a stage play about him, titled Black George, which premiered in August 1812.[106] Several years later, the Russian poet Alexander Pushkin penned a ballad about Karađorđe titled The Song of George the Black.[107] The Irish poet George Croly also wrote a ballad about him. Karađorđe is mentioned in Honoré de Balzac's 1842 novel A Start in Life, as the grandfather of one of the book's main characters.[108] The Montenegrin prince-bishop and poet Petar II Petrović-Njegoš dedicated his 1847 epic poem The Mountain Wreath to "the ashes of the Father of Serbia", a reference to Karađorđe.[109][110] The surname Karamazov, used in the Russian writer Fyodor Dostoyevsky's 1880 novel The Brothers Karamazov, is believed to have partially been inspired by Karađorđe, whose exploits popularized the use of the prefix "kara" to mean "black" within Russia.[111]

Karađorđe's likeness was featured on the obverse of five-million dinar banknotes issued by the National Bank of Yugoslavia in 1993 and 1994.[112] The anniversary of the First Serbian Uprising's commencement, 15 February, is celebrated annually in Serbia through a public holiday known as Statehood Day, first introduced in July 2001.[113] A monument to Karađorđe stands in front of Belgrade's Church of Saint Sava, within the eponymous Karađorđe's Park.[114]

Descendants Edit

Karađorđe
b. 1768 – d. 1817
reigned 1804–1813
Alexis
b. 1801 – d. 1830
Alexander Karađorđević
b. 1806 – d. 1885
reigned 1842–1858
George
b. 1827 – d. 1884
Peter I
b. 1844 – d. 1921
reigned 1903–1921
Arsen
b. 1859 – d. 1938
Alexis
b. 1859 – d. 1920
Bojidar
b. 1862 – d. 1908
George
b. 1887 – d. 1972
Alexander I
b. 1888 – d. 1934
reigned 1921–1934
Paul Karađorđević
b. 1893 – d. 1976
ruled 1934–1941
(as prince regent)
Peter II
b. 1923 – d. 1970
reigned 1934–1945
Tomislav
b. 1928 – d. 2000
Andrew
b. 1929 – d. 1990
Alexander
b. 1924 – d. 2016
Nicholas
b. 1928 – d. 1954
Alexander Karađorđević
b. 1945
Nicholas
b. 1958
George
b. 1984
Michael
b. 1985
Karl Vladimir
b. 1964
Dimitri Mihailo
b. 1965
Dimitri
b. 1958
Michael
b. 1958
Sergius
b. 1963
Dušan
b. 1977
Peter
b. 1980
Philip
b. 1982
Alexander
b. 1982
Stefan
b. 2018

See also Edit

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ The year of his birth is uncertain, though most historians believe it to have been 1768.[2]
  2. ^ According to the historian Michael Broers, the story is likely apocryphal.[13] The historian Michael Boro Petrovich disagrees, saying "it is no legend" that the event occurred.[12] According to the author and diplomat Duncan Wilson, rumours that Karađorđe had killed his own father had spread throughout Šumadija by 1804.[14]
  3. ^ Boluk-bashi was equivalent to the rank of captain.[19]
  4. ^ The Serbs referred to all Muslims in the Pashalik as "Turks", though most of them were Bosnian Muslims, Albanians, or non-Turkish Muslims from other parts of the Ottoman Empire.[32]
  5. ^ Among the old heraldic symbols was the double-headed white eagle used by the Nemanjić dynasty.[41]

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b Johnson 2014, p. 158.
  2. ^ Stojančević 1982, p. 23; Mackenzie 1996a, p. 211; Jelavich & Jelavich 2000, p. 29.
  3. ^ a b Mackenzie 1996b, p. 137.
  4. ^ a b Petrovich 1976, p. 30.
  5. ^ a b c Berend 2003, p. 123.
  6. ^ Anscombe 2014, p. 163.
  7. ^ Petrovich 1976, p. 63.
  8. ^ Stojančević 1982, p. 23; Banac 1984, p. 45; Roberts 2007, p. 118; Morrison 2008, p. 21.
  9. ^ a b c Stojančević 1982, p. 23.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Jelavich & Jelavich 2000, p. 29.
  11. ^ Roberts 2007, p. 486.
  12. ^ a b c d e Petrovich 1976, p. 49.
  13. ^ Broers 2010, pp. 177–178.
  14. ^ a b Wilson 1970, p. 38.
  15. ^ Judah 2000, p. 50.
  16. ^ Singleton 1985, p. 76.
  17. ^ Palmer 1970, p. 32.
  18. ^ Skrivanić 1982, p. 311.
  19. ^ a b Skrivanić 1982, p. 310.
  20. ^ a b c Singleton 1985, p. 77.
  21. ^ a b c d Singleton 1985, p. 78.
  22. ^ a b c d e Rehm 1992, p. 392.
  23. ^ a b c Jelavich & Jelavich 2000, pp. 27–28.
  24. ^ a b Fotić 2009, p. 308.
  25. ^ a b Pavlowitch 2002, p. 29.
  26. ^ a b c d Jelavich & Jelavich 2000, p. 30.
  27. ^ Petrovich 1976, p. 26.
  28. ^ Jelavich & Jelavich 2000, p. 31.
  29. ^ Pavlowitch 2002, p. 28.
  30. ^ a b Judah 2000, p. 87.
  31. ^ Jelavich & Jelavich 2000, p. 29; Berend 2003, p. 123.
  32. ^ a b Judah 2000, p. 51.
  33. ^ Glenny 2012, p. 11.
  34. ^ a b Singleton 1985, p. 79.
  35. ^ Judah 2000, p. 52; Pavlowitch 2002, p. 28; Sperber 2017, p. 168.
  36. ^ Castellan 1992, p. 238.
  37. ^ Judah 2000, pp. 51–52.
  38. ^ a b Broers 2010, p. 179.
  39. ^ Lampe 2000, p. 49.
  40. ^ Pavlowitch 2002, p. 31.
  41. ^ Banac 1984, p. 142.
  42. ^ Judah 2000, p. 61.
  43. ^ Singleton 1985, p. 83.
  44. ^ a b Stojančević 1982, p. 39.
  45. ^ Esdaile 2007, p. 251.
  46. ^ Broers 2010, p. 178.
  47. ^ Reinhartz 2006, p. 87.
  48. ^ a b Malcolm 1998, p. 179.
  49. ^ a b Castellan 1992, p. 239.
  50. ^ Petrovich 1976, p. 40.
  51. ^ Vucinich 1982, p. 97.
  52. ^ Jelavich & Jelavich 2000, p. 32.
  53. ^ Vucinich 1982, p. 180.
  54. ^ a b Lebel 2007, p. 70.
  55. ^ Vovchenko 2016, p. 299.
  56. ^ Ristović 2016, p. 26.
  57. ^ a b Hall 1995, p. 67.
  58. ^ a b c Singleton 1985, p. 80.
  59. ^ Petrovich 1976, p. 51.
  60. ^ Lampe 2000, p. 48.
  61. ^ a b c d Vucinich 1982, p. 141.
  62. ^ Judah 2000, pp. 279–280.
  63. ^ Petrovich 1976, p. 68.
  64. ^ a b c Jelavich & Jelavich 2000, p. 34.
  65. ^ Singleton 1985, p. 81.
  66. ^ a b c d e Singleton 1985, p. 82.
  67. ^ a b Petrovich 1976, p. 47.
  68. ^ a b Petrovich 1976, pp. 73–74.
  69. ^ Petrovich 1976, p. 76.
  70. ^ Judah 2000, p. 53.
  71. ^ a b Jelavich & Jelavich 2000, p. 35.
  72. ^ Pavlowitch 2002, p. 30.
  73. ^ Petrovich 1976, p. 80.
  74. ^ Ninić 1989, p. 93.
  75. ^ Castellan 1992, p. 242.
  76. ^ Petrovich 1976, p. 84.
  77. ^ Glenny 2012, p. 19.
  78. ^ a b Vovchenko 2016, pp. 301–302.
  79. ^ Petrovich 1976, p. 81; Castellan 1992, p. 243; Judah 2000, p. 53.
  80. ^ a b c Jelavich & Jelavich 2000, p. 36.
  81. ^ a b c Petrovich 1976, p. 110.
  82. ^ Segesten 2011, p. 142; p. 158, note 5.
  83. ^ a b c Petrovich 1976, p. 111.
  84. ^ Singleton 1985, p. 86.
  85. ^ a b Jelavich & Jelavich 2000, p. 37.
  86. ^ a b c Jovanović 1989, pp. 70–72.
  87. ^ Norris 2008, p. 30.
  88. ^ Judah 2000, pp. 53, 56.
  89. ^ Singleton 1985, p. 98.
  90. ^ Pavlowitch 2002, p. 73.
  91. ^ Banac 1984, p. 143.
  92. ^ Banac 1984, p. 150.
  93. ^ Todić 2014, p. 450.
  94. ^ Norris 2008, p. 111.
  95. ^ Calic 2019, p. 376.
  96. ^ Knežević 2018, p. 286.
  97. ^ Pavlowitch 2002, p. 111.
  98. ^ Pavlowitch 2002, pp. 137–139.
  99. ^ Pavlowitch 2002, pp. 157–158.
  100. ^ Glenny 2012, p. 2.
  101. ^ Jelavich & Jelavich 2000, p. 68.
  102. ^ Turhan 2014, p. 206.
  103. ^ Barlovac 11 May 2011.
  104. ^ Banac 1996, p. 132.
  105. ^ Wilson 1970, pp. 110–111.
  106. ^ Gyõre 2007, pp. 77–78.
  107. ^ Shaw 1993, p. 163.
  108. ^ Goldsworthy 1998, p. 24.
  109. ^ Djilas 1966, p. 332.
  110. ^ Wachtel 1998, p. 45.
  111. ^ Martinsen 2003, p. 57.
  112. ^ Živančević-Sekeruš 2014, p. 46.
  113. ^ Šarić 2012, pp. 38–39.
  114. ^ Norris 2008, p. 195.

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Karađorđe
Born: 14 November 1768 Died: 25 July 1817
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Title created
Grand Vožd of Serbia
14 February 1804 – 21 September 1813
Succeeded by
Miloš Obrenović I
as Prince of Serbia
Political offices
Preceded by President of the Administering Council
22 January 1811 – 3 October 1813
Succeeded by

karađorđe, Đorđe, petrović, redirects, here, football, player, Đorđe, petrović, footballer, Đorđe, petrović, pronounced, dʑôːrdʑe, pětroʋitɕ, serbian, cyrillic, Ђорђе, Петровић, november, november, 1762, july, july, 1817, better, known, sobriquet, pronounced, . Đorđe Petrovic redirects here For the football player see Đorđe Petrovic footballer Đorđe Petrovic OSA OSV pronounced dʑoːrdʑe petroʋitɕ Serbian Cyrillic Ђorђe Petroviћ 14 November O S 3 November 1762 25 July O S 14 July 1817 better known by the sobriquet Karađorđe pronounced karadʑoːrdʑe Serbian Cyrillic Karaђorђe lit Black George was a Serbian revolutionary who led the struggle for his country s independence from the Ottoman Empire during the First Serbian Uprising of 1804 1813 KarađorđeKaraђorђeKarađorđe by Vladimir Borovikovsky 1816Grand Vozd of SerbiaReign15 February 1804 21 September 1813PredecessorTitle createdSuccessorMilos Obrenovic IPresident of the Governing CouncilReign22 January 1811 3 October 1813PredecessorJakov NenadovicSuccessorPetar Nikolajevic Moler 1815 Born14 November O S 3 November 1762Visevac Sanjak of Smederevo Rumelia Eyalet Ottoman EmpireDied25 July O S 14 July 1817 aged 54 Radovanje Grove Sanjak of Smederevo Rumelia Eyalet Ottoman EmpireBurialSt George s Church TopolaSpouseJelena Jovanovic m 1785 wbr IssueSima Sava Sara Poleksija Stamenka Aleksa AlexanderHouseKarađorđevicFatherPetar JovanovicMotherMarica nee Zivkovic ReligionSerbian OrthodoxSignatureBorn into an impoverished family in the Sumadija region of Ottoman Serbia Karađorđe distinguished himself during the Austro Turkish War of 1788 1791 as a member of the Serbian Free Corps a militia of Habsburg and Ottoman Serbs armed and trained by the Austrians Fearing retribution following the Austrians and Serb rebels defeat in 1791 he and his family fled to the Austrian Empire where they lived until 1794 when a general amnesty was declared Karađorđe subsequently returned to Sumadija and became a livestock merchant In 1796 the rogue governor of the Sanjak of Vidin Osman Pazvantoglu invaded the Pashalik of Belgrade and Karađorđe fought alongside the Ottomans to quash the incursion In early 1804 following a massacre of Serb chieftains by renegade Ottoman janissaries known as Dahis the Serbs of the Pashalik rebelled Karađorđe was unanimously elected to lead the uprising against the Dahis at an assembly of surviving chiefs in February 1804 Within six months most of the Dahi leaders had been captured and executed by Karađorđe s forces and by 1805 the final remnants of Dahi resistance had been crushed Karađorđe and his followers demanded far reaching autonomy which Sultan Selim interpreted as but the first step towards complete independence Selim promptly declared jihad against the rebels and ordered an army to march into the Pashalik The Ottomans suffered a string of defeats at the hands of Karađorđe s forces By 1806 the rebels had captured all the major towns in the Pashalik including Belgrade and Smederevo and expelled their Muslim inhabitants Burdened by the demands of the Russo Turkish War of 1806 1812 Selim offered the Serbs extensive autonomy However Karađorđe refused in light of Russia s avowal to aid the rebels should they continue fighting Frequent infighting together with Napoleon s invasion of Russia in 1812 weakened the rebels and the Ottomans were able to reverse many of their gains Karađorđe was forced to flee Serbia in October 1813 and Belgrade fell later that month bringing the First Serbian Uprising to a close He and his followers sought refuge in the Austrian Empire but were arrested and detained Despite Ottoman requests for extradition the Austrians handed Karađorđe over to the Russians who offered him refuge in Bessarabia There he joined the Greek secret society known as Filiki Eteria which planned to launch a pan Balkan uprising against the Ottomans Karađorđe returned to Serbia in secret in July 1817 but was killed shortly thereafter by agents of Milos Obrenovic a rival rebel leader who was concerned that Karađorđe s reappearance would cause the Ottomans to renege on the concessions they had agreed to following the Second Serbian Uprising of 1815 Karađorđe is considered the founder of the Karađorđevic dynasty which ruled Serbia in several intervals during the 19th and 20th centuries His murder resulted in a violent decades long feud between his descendants and those of Obrenovic with the Serbian throne changing hands several times Contents 1 Origins 2 Early military exploits 3 First Serbian Uprising 1804 1813 3 1 Revolt against the Dahis 3 2 Rebellion against the Porte 3 2 1 Initial successes 3 2 2 Losses mount 3 2 3 Defeat 4 Exile return to Serbia and death 5 Legacy 6 Descendants 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 Citations 10 ReferencesOrigins EditĐorđe Petrovic was born into an impoverished family in the village of Visevac in the Sumadija region of Ottoman Serbia on 14 November O S 3 November 1768 1 a He was the oldest of his parents five children His father Petar Jovanovic was a highwayman or hajduk in his youth but had since become a peasant farmer His mother Marica nee Zivkovic was a homemaker 3 Petrovic s surname was derived from his father s given name in line with contemporary Serbian naming conventions 4 Like most of his contemporaries Petrovic was illiterate 5 6 His family celebrated the feast day of Saint Clement 7 They are said to have been descended from the Vasojevici tribe of Montenegro s Lim River valley 8 His ancestors are thought to have migrated from Montenegro to Sumadija in the late 1730s or early 1740s 9 Petrovic s childhood was strenuous and difficult 3 His parents were forced to move around often in search of a livelihood 10 His father worked as a day labourer and servant for a sipahi Serbian spahija an Ottoman cavalryman Petrovic himself spent his adolescence working as a shepherd 9 In 1785 he married Jelena Jovanovic 11 whose family hailed from the village of Maslosevo 9 The couple had seven children six of whom reached adulthood 1 Petrovic worked for several landlords across Sumadija until 1787 when he and his family left the region and settled in the Austrian Empire fearing persecution at the hands of the Ottoman janissaries 10 It is said that as they were preparing to cross the Danube into Austria Petrovic s father began to have second thoughts about leaving Sumadija Knowing that the entire family would be put in jeopardy if his father stayed behind Petrovic either took his father s life or arranged for someone to kill him instead 12 b Early military exploits Edit nbsp Members of the Serbian Free Corps 1798Following the outbreak of the Austro Turkish War of 1788 1791 Petrovic joined the Serbian Free Corps German Serbische Freikorps and took part in fighting the Ottomans in western Serbia 10 15 The Free Corps was a volunteer militia made up of both Ottoman and Habsburg Serbs that was armed and trained by the Austrians It was led by a Habsburg Serb officer Major Mihailo Mihaljevic 16 Petrovic s participation in the war brought him invaluable military experience as well as insight into the Austrians military techniques 10 He distinguished himself in combat and was decorated for bravery reaching the rank of sergeant German Wachtmeister 17 18 In this capacity he was given command over a squad of 25 men 19 The Austrians and Serb rebels briefly succeeded in liberating a strip of land east and south of Belgrade which in Serbian historiography came to be known as Koca s Frontier Serbian Kocina Krajina after one of the senior rebel leaders Koca Anđelkovic In 1791 the Austrians and Ottomans signed the Treaty of Sistova The Austrians agreed to return all the territory that they and the Serbs had captured south of the Danube in exchange for minor territorial concessions in northern Bosnia effectively abandoning the Serbs and leaving them to resist the Ottomans on their own The rebels were crushed by 1792 and most of their leaders executed 20 Unwilling to surrender Petrovic became a hajduk and briefly fought the Ottomans as an outlaw 21 He and his family once again sought refuge in the Austrian Empire this time finding sanctuary in the Krusedol Monastery at the foot of Fruska Gora where Petrovic worked as a forester 14 22 In 1793 Hadji Mustafa Pasha was appointed governor of the Pashalik of Belgrade He declared a general amnesty for former rebels and announced that Muslims would no longer serve as tax collectors in areas where Christians formed a majority of the population These changes were part of a plan devised by Sultan Selim aimed at improving relations with the Pashalik s Christian population 23 Sensing that it was safe Petrovic returned to Sumadija in 1794 together with his family 24 He settled in Topola where he became a livestock merchant and traded with the Austrians His business dealings led him to establish connections with many Habsburg Serbs 10 In 1796 Osman Pazvantoglu the renegade governor of the Sanjak of Vidin who had rejected the authority of the Sublime Porte launched an invasion of the Pashalik of Belgrade Overwhelmed Mustafa Pasha formed a Serbian national militia to help stop the incursion 20 Petrovic joined the militia and became a boluk bashi Serbian Buljukbasa c leading a company of 100 men 10 In return for their service the Serbs of the Pashalik were granted a number of privileges They were allowed to bear arms and raise autonomous military units After the Serb militias joined the war on Mustafa Pasha s side Pazvantoglu suffered a string of defeats He retreated to Vidin which was subsequently besieged 23 The war against Pazvantoglu marked the first time that Petrovic distinguished himself in the eyes of the Ottomans who bestowed him with the sobriquet Black George Serbian Karađorđe Turkish Kara Yorgi partly because of his dark hair and partly because of his sinister reputation 22 25 Karađorđe s service in the Serbian militia resulted in him becoming well acquainted with Ottoman military doctrine 26 First Serbian Uprising 1804 1813 EditRevolt against the Dahis Edit nbsp Nineteenth century illustration of the Orasac Assembly with Karađorđe at its centreIn 1798 Napoleon invaded Egypt forcing the Porte to redeploy thousands of regulars from the Balkans in order to resist the French The janissaries in the Pashalik of Belgrade known as Dahis Serbian Dahije who had been expelled from the region on Selim s orders nearly a decade earlier were pardoned and allowed to return to Belgrade on the condition that they obey Mustafa Pasha The detente between the aging governor and the Dahis did not last long In 1801 Mustafa Pasha was killed by a Dahi assassin 23 The power vacuum caused by Mustafa Pasha s murder resulted in a period of infighting between the Dahis that would last until 1802 By this time four senior Dahi commanders emerged triumphant and agreed to share power within the Pashalik The Serbs were stripped of the privileges that they had been granted under Mustafa Pasha Dahi bands roamed the countryside killing peasants looting property and setting homes on fire Thousands of villagers were displaced and forced to flee into the mountains where over the next several years the able bodied men formed ad hoc guerrilla bands 10 In mid July 1803 Karađorđe obtained arms and munitions from Habsburg Serb merchants in Zemun Later that month he dispatched couriers through Sumadija calling for a meeting of Serbian notables to devise a strategy for resisting the Dahis 27 The flow of arms from the Austrian Empire into the Pashalik combined with their inability to crush the guerrillas in the countryside made the Dahi leadership increasingly uneasy 20 In January and February 1804 the Dahis launched a pre emptive assault against the Pashalik s Serbian chieftains known as knezovi or princes killing between 70 and 150 of them 26 The killings outraged the Serbian rayah the Pashalik s tax paying lower class 21 By this time Karađorđe was a well known and well respected figure in Sumadija 26 He narrowly escaped being killed in the two month massacre which came to be known as the Slaughter of the Knezes Serbian Seca knezova Upon killing the chieftains the Dahis impaled their severed heads on wooden stakes and put them on public display 5 On Candlemas 14 February O S 2 February 1804 the surviving chieftains assembled in the village of Orasac near Aranđelovac to decide on a course of action 24 They agreed to launch a rebellion against the Dahis and Karađorđe was elected without opposition to lead it 28 It is said that he twice refused to lead the uprising arguing that his violent temper would make him unsuitable for the role Karađorđe s initial refusal only reinforced the chieftains convictions that he was the only suitable candidate and eventually he agreed to lead the rebels 4 21 This event marked the beginning of the First Serbian Uprising the opening phase of what would come to be known as the Serbian Revolution 25 By the start of the revolt the Pashalik of Belgrade had a population of about 400 000 10 percent of which was Muslim 29 Its Serb population was roughly 250 000 30 At first the rebels numbered around 30 000 men 31 In this initial stage they were joined by a significant amount of the Pashalik s Muslim population whom the rebels dubbed the Good Turks 32 d Karađorđe and his followers appealed to Sultan Selim for assistance against the Dahis who had since rejected the authority of the Porte Austria sent weapons and supplies to the rebels while Russia lobbied on their behalf encouraging the Porte to grant the Serbs further autonomy following the Dahis removal In May Selim ordered a 7 000 strong army under of the command of Bekir Pasha the governor of Bosnia to march into the Pashalik The Serbs welcomed Bekir Pasha and his men as liberators and the Dahis were soon defeated through the joint efforts of Bekir Pasha s army and the rebels By late August the most prominent Dahi leaders had been captured by Karađorđe s men beheaded and their severed heads sent to the Sultan as trophies 21 The Dahis resisted for another year before they were completely defeated 33 Karađorđe and his followers then demanded that Serbia be granted autonomous status similar to that enjoyed by neighbouring Wallachia Selim suspected that Karađorđe s demands for autonomy were but the first step towards complete independence 34 He responded by declaring a jihad against the rebels 35 Hafiz Pasha the Ottoman governor of Nis was then ordered to march into Sumadija and destroy Karađorđe s army 34 Rebellion against the Porte Edit Initial successes Edit nbsp The remains of the sconce from the Battle of DeligradThe rebels first clashed with Ottoman regulars at the Battle of Ivankovac in August 1805 scoring a decisive victory 36 37 Belgrade was soon besieged by about 16 000 rebel fighters 38 The rebel leaders used anti Muslim rhetoric to mobilize the peasantry calling upon them to rise up and drive the Ottomans across the blue sea In order to further galvanize the population Karađorđe appealed to memories of the Battle of Kosovo of June 1389 which paved the way for the Ottoman conquest of Serbia and the rest of the western Balkans declaring that Serbia s defeat in the battle needed to be avenged 39 He sought to further cement his authority by harkening back to symbols of Medieval Serbia such as the relics of Stefan the First Crowned and placing old heraldic symbols on flags and seals to establish continuity between the Serbian Empire and himself 40 e Portraits of Dusan the Mighty the founder of the Serbian Empire are said to have hung from the walls of the rebels headquarters 42 Karađorđe was feared by enemies and allies alike because of his volatile temper 43 He considered executions to be the only way in which military infractions could be rectified and according to the military historian Brendon A Rehm personally killed 125 people 22 In 1806 he ordered that his brother Marinko be hanged According to one account Marinko had been accused of raping a peasant girl 12 Another suggests that he had been attempting to seduce young women whose husbands were away at the front 44 Whatever the case Karađorđe entertained senior rebel leaders in his home while his brother s lifeless body dangled from the front gate a warning to others to refrain from the behaviour in which Marinko had been engaging 12 Muslims combatants and non combatants alike were killed unremittingly as illustrated in this contemporary account describing the capture of the village of Cucuge near Ub in April 1806 In their flight the Turks threw away their arms and clothing in order to run the better but to no purpose The Serbs caught up with them and killed them some with swords some with knives and some with daggers while others had their brains beaten out with cudgels and staves They say that over 2 800 Turks perished and only those got away who had good horses When our army mustered again at the camp at Ub I saw that many of our soldiers had blood stained swords and their gun butts also were smashed and broken they were laden with every sort of spoil 45 nbsp Battle of Misar painting by Afanasij SeloumovSerbs who neglected to join the uprising were brutalized in equal measure Males who could not produce an adequate excuse for why they were not fighting were killed and their houses torched 5 46 While most of the rebels were Serbs the Pashalik s Romani Gypsy residents the majority of whom were Muslim also fought on the rebel side 47 Some Albanians also pledged allegiance to Karađorđe and fought on his behalf 48 In 1806 the rebels twice dispatched the diplomat Petar Icko to Constantinople to negotiate with the Porte The two parties eventually reached an understanding which came to be known as Icko s Peace in which the Ottomans agreed to grant the rebels extensive autonomy Due to the Balkans poor communications and transport infrastructure it took several months for news of the Porte s offer to reach the rebels 49 In August 1806 the rebels defeated the Ottomans at the Battle of Misar 50 Later that month they scored another victory at the Battle of Deligrad 51 Smederevo was captured in November and made the capital of Karađorđe s revolutionary state 52 Belgrade with the exception of its imposing fortress fell in early December The outbreak of the Russo Ottoman War that month compounded by Russia s avowal to provide extensive materiel and financial support to the rebels should they continue fighting convinced Karađorđe not to accept anything short of complete independence He promptly refused to accept the terms of the agreement negotiated by Icko 49 nbsp Monument and the Cemetery to the Liberators of Belgrade 1806 in Karađorđe s ParkIn March 1807 Karađorđe issued a promise to Suleiman Pasha the Governor of Belgrade that he and his garrison would be granted safe passage if they vacated the city s besieged fortress When Suleiman and his garrison emerged from the fortress they were ambushed 53 Adult men were killed on the spot women and girls were forcibly converted to Orthodox Christianity and made to marry their captors and young children were placed in the care of Orthodox Christian families 54 55 One contemporary account suggests that as many as 3 000 non Christians mostly Muslims but also Jews were forced to convert to Orthodox Christianity 54 Jews that resisted conversion were either killed or expelled 56 Belgrade s mosques were either destroyed or turned into churches 57 Losses mount Edit As the revolution progressed rebel strength peaked at around 50 000 fighters 38 Despite their initial successes the rebel leaders were seldom on good terms and constant infighting plagued their camp In the western part of the country Jakov Nenadovic was the principal figure In the east Milenko Stojkovic and Petar Dobrnjac held sway The latter two opposed Karađorđe s attempts to create a centralized state fearing that this would result in their own power being diminished 26 Others such as Nenadovic complained that Karađorđe was becoming too authoritarian Nenadovic suggested that the rebels establish a central council to rein in Karađorđe s power and write a constitution based on the rule of law 58 Karađorđe balked at the possibility It s easy for this sovereign law of yours to rule in a warm room behind this table he responded but let us see tomorrow when the Turks strike who will meet them and beat them 59 60 nbsp Detail of Skull TowerIn May 1809 the rebels captured Sjenica They repulsed an Ottoman attack on the village of Suvodol in early June and seized Novi Pazar later that month but failed to take its fortress 61 Minor clashes also took place in the north of Kosovo 48 Lacking numbers and adequate military training the rebels failed to establish a corridor to Montenegro and gain access to the Adriatic Sea which Karađorđe had described as one of his key aims 61 The rebels experienced further setbacks in Nis where 3 000 were surrounded at Cegar Hill in May June 1809 Knowing that he and his men would be impaled if captured rebel commander Stevan Sinđelic fired at his entrenchment s gun powder magazine setting off a massive explosion that killed him and everyone else in the vicinity On the site of the battle the Ottoman commander Hurshid Pasha built a stone tower with the skulls of Sinđelic and his fighters embedded in its walls as a warning to others who wished to rebel 61 62 The fall of Cegar allowed the Ottomans to establish a land corridor extending along the Morava River valley from Nis to the Danube Their advance was brought to a halt after the Russians crossed the Danube in September 1809 and attacked the Ottomans in northern Bulgaria offering the rebels temporary respite The rebels soon recaptured all the land they had lost but were exhausted by the fighting 63 Henceforth they were continuously on the defensive 64 The rebel leaders quarrelled amongst themselves blaming each other for the recent defeats Karađorđe blamed the Russians for not intervening earlier on the rebels behalf 61 He subsequently wrote Napoleon seeking military assistance and in 1810 dispatched an emissary to France 65 Nothing came of these requests as the French did not believe that the rebels had the military capacity to dislodge the Ottomans from the Balkans 66 As his battlefield setbacks mounted Karađorđe s behaviour became more volatile In late 1809 he shot and wounded one of his commanders Petar Jokic sr for making a poor military decision in the vicinity of Cuprija 12 44 nbsp nbsp A map of Revolutionary Serbia in 1809 left and 1813 right In 1810 Dobrnjac mutinied against Karađorđe and nearly succeeded in dislodging him He was joined in his revolt by Milenko Stojkovic 67 In June 1810 Russian troops entered Serbia for a second time distributing weapons and supplies to Karađorđe and his followers Field Marshal Mikhail Kutuzov took part in planning joint actions against both the Ottomans and the mutineers 64 By the following year Dobrnjac and Stojkovic were defeated 67 Karađorđe attempted to placate the mutineers In January 1811 he established the People s Governing Council Serbian Praviteljstvujusci Sovjet a cabinet consisting of members who supported Karađorđe as well as those who opposed him 68 It consisted of twelve members one for each of the nahije districts of rebel Serbia 58 Karađorđe appointed Stojkovic as the Minister of Foreign Affairs Nenadovic as the Minister of the Interior and Dobrnjac as the Minister of Justice Also inducted into Karađorđe s cabinet were Mladen Milovanovic as the Minister of War Dositej Obradovic as the Minister of Education and Sima Markovic as the Minister of Finance Dobrnjac and Stojkovic refused to accept the posts that were offered to them fearing that their acceptance would legitimize Karađorđe and undermine their own position Karađorđe accused them of insubordination and exiled them to Wallachia replacing them with loyalists 68 The Governing Council soon recognized Karađorđe as Serbia s hereditary leader and pledged allegiance to his lawful heirs 58 Defeat Edit In mid 1812 Russia and the Ottoman Empire signed the Treaty of Bucharest bringing the Russo Ottoman War to a close For his efforts Karađorđe received the Order of Saint Anna from the Russians The Governing Council scrambled to take an oath of loyalty to Russia in the hope that this would garner them further protection to no avail 69 The Russian Emperor Alexander was aware of Napoleon s plans to invade Russia and desperately sought to return as many Russian soldiers as possible in order to repel the attack 64 70 As part of the Treaty of Bucharest the Russians and Ottomans agreed that Serbian fortifications built after 1804 were to be destroyed while cities and forts from which the Ottomans had been expelled over the course of the uprising were to be reoccupied and garrisoned by Ottoman troops In exchange the Ottomans agreed to declare a general amnesty for former rebels as well as to grant the Serbs of the Pashalik of Belgrade some degree of autonomy As part of the agreement the Russians agreed to withdraw their forces from Serbia as well as from Wallachia and Moldavia The Russians encouraged Karađorđe and his followers to negotiate directly with the Porte regarding the minutiae of the handover of cities and fortifications to the Ottomans Trepidation filled the rebel camp once it became clear that there was nothing to prevent the Ottomans from exacting reprisals against the Pashalik s Serb population after the Russians withdrew Karađorđe thus refused to abide by the terms of the Treaty of Bucharest and fighting continued 71 Deprived of foreign assistance the rebels were quickly routed by the Ottomans whose units were manned primarily by Albanians and Bosnian Muslims 66 72 In early October Karađorđe fled to the Austrian Empire 73 He was joined by around 100 000 other Serbs fleeing the Ottoman advance including 50 000 from Belgrade and its environs alone 74 Belgrade fell later that month 66 75 The city s fall marked the end of the First Serbian Uprising 71 The Ottomans singled out men and boys over the age of 15 for execution and sold women and children into slavery Torture was used extensively and executions were particularly brutal 66 Men were roasted alive hanged by their feet over smoking straw until they asphyxiated castrated crushed with stones and bastinadoed one eyewitness wrote Their women and children were raped and sometimes taken by force to harems Outside Stambul Gate in Belgrade there were always on view the corpses of impaled Serbs being gnawed by packs of dogs 76 77 Another account relays how infants and toddlers were boiled alive 78 In one day alone 1 800 women and children were sold into slavery at a Belgrade market 79 Churches across the city were destroyed and mosques that had been converted into churches following the city s capture in 1806 were returned to their original use 57 Others were deliberately torched by the Ottomans for the purpose of inflicting suffering on the city s inhabitants In one instance several dozen Serb refugees seeking shelter in a mosque were burned alive inside 78 In late October 1813 Hurshid Pasha declared a general amnesty for the rebels that had survived though Karađorđe and some senior Orthodox clerics were specifically exempted 66 Many rebel leaders agreed to lay down their arms the most notable of these being Milos Obrenovic the rebel commander in Uzice 80 A large number of Serb refugees subsequently returned to their homes as did many of the Muslims that had been displaced in the fighting 30 Exile return to Serbia and death Edit nbsp The Assassination of Karadjordje Mor Than 1863 National Museum of SerbiaUpon crossing the Danube Karađorđe and his followers were arrested by the Austrian authorities They were initially detained at the Petrovaradin Fortress in Novi Sad and later transferred to a prison in Graz The Ottomans demanded that Karađorđe and the other rebel leaders be extradited to face punishment The Austrians refused and instead turned them over to the Russians 81 Karađorđe spent a year in Austrian custody before being allowed to go to Russia 22 Like many of the other rebel leaders he settled in Bessarabia 81 He attempted to adjust to civilian life commissioning a portrait of himself by the painter Vladimir Borovikovsky 82 In April 1815 Obrenovic orchestrated another anti Ottoman rebellion in Serbia which came to be known as the Second Serbian Uprising Unlike Karađorđe s revolt the Second Serbian Uprising ended relatively quickly and resulted in a rebel victory In November 1815 the Ottomans accepted Obrenovic s demands for wide ranging autonomy The terms that they agreed to were identical to those rejected by Karađorđe in 1807 80 nbsp Karađorđe s sarcophagus in the Church of Saint George TopolaThe Russians prohibited Karađorđe from returning to the Balkans to take part in the Second Serbian Uprising Karađorđe objected and traveled to Saint Petersburg to plead his case but was arrested and detained 22 Upon his release he joined the Filiki Eteria a Greek nationalist secret society that intended to launch a pan Balkan uprising against the Ottomans The Filiki Eteria promised Karađorđe a position of military leadership in the planned uprising and offered to smuggle him into the Pashalik of Belgrade Karađorđe secretly entered the Pashalik on 24 July O S 12 July 1817 crossing the Danube together with his servant Naum Krnar He then contacted his kum Vujica Vulicevic who offered him an abode in the oak forest of Radovanje Grove near Velika Plana Unbeknownst to Karađorđe Vulicevic was on Obrenovic s payroll After escorting Karađorđe and his servant to a tent in the forest Vulicevic informed Obrenovic of Karađorđe s whereabouts through a courier Shortly thereafter he received a letter from Obrenovic telling him that Karađorde was to be killed 81 Vulicevic enlisted one of his close confidantes Nikola Novakovic to take Karađorđe s life The following morning just before sunrise Novakovic snuck into Karađorđe s tent and axed him to death while he slept He then went to the riverside and shot Krnar with a rifle as he was gathering water Karađorđe s lifeless body was beheaded 83 His severed head was taken to Belgrade and presented to Marashli Ali Pasha 83 who had been appointed the governor of the Pashalik two years prior 80 Ali Pasha had the head flayed stuffed and sent to the Sultan himself 83 Obrenovic feared that Karađorđe s return would prompt the Ottomans to renege on the agreement reached by the Porte and Obrenovic s followers in November 1815 84 By extension Karađorđe s murder precluded the Serbs of the Pashalik from taking part in the Balkan wide rebellion that the Filiki Eteria had been planning 85 In Constantinople Karađorđe s head was impaled on a stake and left on public display for a week His body was buried on Serbian soil but his skull ended up in the hands of a Constantinople museum It was stolen some years later and buried in Greece 86 Legacy Edit nbsp Karađorđe s statue in front of the Church of Saint SavaKarađorđe s descendants adopted the surname Karađorđevic in his honour 87 His murder resulted in a violent decades long feud between his descendants and those of Obrenovic with the Serbian throne changing hands several times 85 88 The feud came to an abrupt end in June 1903 when rebellious Royal Serbian Army officers killed the Obrenovic king Alexander and his wife Queen Draga thereby rendering the Obrenovic line extinct Karađorđe s grandson Peter Karađorđevic then ascended the throne 89 90 In order to tie himself to his grandfather s legacy Peter commissioned a bronze crown cast from a piece of Karađorđe s first cannon 91 In addition the Order of Karađorđe s Star was introduced as Serbia s highest state decoration 92 93 The first feature length film to emerge from Serbia and the Balkans whose plot revolves around Karađorđe and his actions before during and after the First Serbian Uprising was released in 1911 94 Work soon began on the construction of the Church of Saint George a Karađorđevic dynasty mausoleum at Oplenac near Topola 86 In 1913 a monument to Karađorđe was unveiled at Kalemegdan Park 95 During the Austro Hungarian occupation of Serbia the monument was torn down by the Austro Hungarian Army and destroyed 96 In November 1918 Peter ascended the throne of the newly established Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes which was later renamed Yugoslavia 97 Karađorđe s head was repatriated from Greece in 1923 and reunited with the rest of his body His remains were buried in a white marble sarcophagus within the church in 1930 86 The Karađorđevic dynasty ruled Yugoslavia until 1941 when its members were forced into exile by Germany s invasion and occupation of the country 98 The monarchy was abolished by Josip Broz Tito s communist government in 1945 99 Misha Glenny a journalist specializing in the Balkans believes that the First Serbian Uprising marked the beginning of modern history on the Balkan peninsula 100 The uprising kindled the flame of ethno religious nationalism among the Christians of Southeastern Europe and inspired the subsequent Greek War of Independence 101 Karađorđe s struggle against the Ottomans also had an important influence on the Bosnian Muslim revolutionary Husein Gradascevic who instigated the Great Bosnian Uprising 102 Karađorđe is viewed in a negative light by some modern Bosniaks In 2011 the chief Mufti of the Islamic Community of Serbia Muamer Zukorlic filed a petition to rename a street in Sjenica named after Karađorđe Zukorlic alleged that Karađorđe and his followers had indiscriminately targeted the town s residents in 1809 a notion disputed by Serbian historians 103 The historian Ivo Banac surmises that there would be no Bosnian Muslims today had Karađorđe extended his uprising west of the Drina 104 nbsp The Life and Deeds of the Immortal Leader Karađorđe was the first feature film released in the Balkans Karađorđe s exploits were popularized across Europe by the linguist and folklorist Vuk Karadzic who recorded and published the ballads of the blind gusle player and epic poet Filip Visnjic many of which pertained to the First Serbian Uprising 105 Karađorđe is referenced in a number of works of 19th century fiction While he was still alive the Hungarian dramatist Istvan Balog hu wrote a stage play about him titled Black George which premiered in August 1812 106 Several years later the Russian poet Alexander Pushkin penned a ballad about Karađorđe titled The Song of George the Black 107 The Irish poet George Croly also wrote a ballad about him Karađorđe is mentioned in Honore de Balzac s 1842 novel A Start in Life as the grandfather of one of the book s main characters 108 The Montenegrin prince bishop and poet Petar II Petrovic Njegos dedicated his 1847 epic poem The Mountain Wreath to the ashes of the Father of Serbia a reference to Karađorđe 109 110 The surname Karamazov used in the Russian writer Fyodor Dostoyevsky s 1880 novel The Brothers Karamazov is believed to have partially been inspired by Karađorđe whose exploits popularized the use of the prefix kara to mean black within Russia 111 Karađorđe s likeness was featured on the obverse of five million dinar banknotes issued by the National Bank of Yugoslavia in 1993 and 1994 112 The anniversary of the First Serbian Uprising s commencement 15 February is celebrated annually in Serbia through a public holiday known as Statehood Day first introduced in July 2001 113 A monument to Karađorđe stands in front of Belgrade s Church of Saint Sava within the eponymous Karađorđe s Park 114 Descendants EditKarađorđeb 1768 d 1817reigned 1804 1813Alexisb 1801 d 1830Alexander Karađorđevicb 1806 d 1885reigned 1842 1858Georgeb 1827 d 1884Peter Ib 1844 d 1921reigned 1903 1921Arsenb 1859 d 1938Alexisb 1859 d 1920Bojidarb 1862 d 1908Georgeb 1887 d 1972Alexander Ib 1888 d 1934reigned 1921 1934Paul Karađorđevicb 1893 d 1976ruled 1934 1941 as prince regent Peter IIb 1923 d 1970reigned 1934 1945Tomislavb 1928 d 2000Andrewb 1929 d 1990Alexanderb 1924 d 2016Nicholasb 1928 d 1954Alexander Karađorđevicb 1945Nicholasb 1958Georgeb 1984Michaelb 1985Karl Vladimir b 1964Dimitri Mihailob 1965Dimitrib 1958Michaelb 1958Sergiusb 1963Dusanb 1977Peterb 1980Philipb 1982Alexanderb 1982Stefanb 2018See also EditList of Serbian RevolutionariesFootnotes Edit The year of his birth is uncertain though most historians believe it to have been 1768 2 According to the historian Michael Broers the story is likely apocryphal 13 The historian Michael Boro Petrovich disagrees saying it is no legend that the event occurred 12 According to the author and diplomat Duncan Wilson rumours that Karađorđe had killed his own father had spread throughout Sumadija by 1804 14 Boluk bashi was equivalent to the rank of captain 19 The Serbs referred to all Muslims in the Pashalik as Turks though most of them were Bosnian Muslims Albanians or non Turkish Muslims from other parts of the Ottoman Empire 32 Among the old heraldic symbols was the double headed white eagle used by the Nemanjic dynasty 41 Citations Edit a b Johnson 2014 p 158 Stojancevic 1982 p 23 Mackenzie 1996a p 211 Jelavich amp Jelavich 2000 p 29 a b Mackenzie 1996b p 137 a b Petrovich 1976 p 30 a b c Berend 2003 p 123 Anscombe 2014 p 163 Petrovich 1976 p 63 Stojancevic 1982 p 23 Banac 1984 p 45 Roberts 2007 p 118 Morrison 2008 p 21 a b c Stojancevic 1982 p 23 a b c d e f g Jelavich amp Jelavich 2000 p 29 Roberts 2007 p 486 a b c d e Petrovich 1976 p 49 Broers 2010 pp 177 178 a b Wilson 1970 p 38 Judah 2000 p 50 Singleton 1985 p 76 Palmer 1970 p 32 Skrivanic 1982 p 311 a b Skrivanic 1982 p 310 a b c Singleton 1985 p 77 a b c d Singleton 1985 p 78 a b c d e Rehm 1992 p 392 a b c Jelavich amp Jelavich 2000 pp 27 28 a b Fotic 2009 p 308 a b Pavlowitch 2002 p 29 a b c d Jelavich amp Jelavich 2000 p 30 Petrovich 1976 p 26 Jelavich amp Jelavich 2000 p 31 Pavlowitch 2002 p 28 a b Judah 2000 p 87 Jelavich amp Jelavich 2000 p 29 Berend 2003 p 123 a b Judah 2000 p 51 Glenny 2012 p 11 a b Singleton 1985 p 79 Judah 2000 p 52 Pavlowitch 2002 p 28 Sperber 2017 p 168 Castellan 1992 p 238 Judah 2000 pp 51 52 a b Broers 2010 p 179 Lampe 2000 p 49 Pavlowitch 2002 p 31 Banac 1984 p 142 Judah 2000 p 61 Singleton 1985 p 83 a b Stojancevic 1982 p 39 Esdaile 2007 p 251 Broers 2010 p 178 Reinhartz 2006 p 87 a b Malcolm 1998 p 179 a b Castellan 1992 p 239 Petrovich 1976 p 40 Vucinich 1982 p 97 Jelavich amp Jelavich 2000 p 32 Vucinich 1982 p 180 a b Lebel 2007 p 70 Vovchenko 2016 p 299 Ristovic 2016 p 26 a b Hall 1995 p 67 a b c Singleton 1985 p 80 Petrovich 1976 p 51 Lampe 2000 p 48 a b c d Vucinich 1982 p 141 Judah 2000 pp 279 280 Petrovich 1976 p 68 a b c Jelavich amp Jelavich 2000 p 34 Singleton 1985 p 81 a b c d e Singleton 1985 p 82 a b Petrovich 1976 p 47 a b Petrovich 1976 pp 73 74 Petrovich 1976 p 76 Judah 2000 p 53 a b Jelavich amp Jelavich 2000 p 35 Pavlowitch 2002 p 30 Petrovich 1976 p 80 Ninic 1989 p 93 Castellan 1992 p 242 Petrovich 1976 p 84 Glenny 2012 p 19 a b Vovchenko 2016 pp 301 302 Petrovich 1976 p 81 Castellan 1992 p 243 Judah 2000 p 53 a b c Jelavich amp Jelavich 2000 p 36 a b c Petrovich 1976 p 110 Segesten 2011 p 142 p 158 note 5 a b c Petrovich 1976 p 111 Singleton 1985 p 86 a b Jelavich amp Jelavich 2000 p 37 a b c Jovanovic 1989 pp 70 72 Norris 2008 p 30 Judah 2000 pp 53 56 Singleton 1985 p 98 Pavlowitch 2002 p 73 Banac 1984 p 143 Banac 1984 p 150 Todic 2014 p 450 Norris 2008 p 111 Calic 2019 p 376 Knezevic 2018 p 286 Pavlowitch 2002 p 111 Pavlowitch 2002 pp 137 139 Pavlowitch 2002 pp 157 158 Glenny 2012 p 2 Jelavich amp Jelavich 2000 p 68 Turhan 2014 p 206 Barlovac 11 May 2011 Banac 1996 p 132 Wilson 1970 pp 110 111 Gyore 2007 pp 77 78 Shaw 1993 p 163 Goldsworthy 1998 p 24 Djilas 1966 p 332 Wachtel 1998 p 45 Martinsen 2003 p 57 Zivancevic Sekerus 2014 p 46 Saric 2012 pp 38 39 Norris 2008 p 195 References EditAnscombe Frederick F 2014 State Faith and Nation in Ottoman and Post Ottoman Lands Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 10704 216 2 Banac Ivo 1984 The National Question in Yugoslavia Origins History Politics Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 9493 2 Banac Ivo 1996 The Muslims of Bosnia Herzegovina From Religious Community to Statehood 1919 1992 In Pinson Mark ed The Muslims of Bosnia Herzegovina Their Historic Development from the Middle Ages to the Dissolution of Yugoslavia Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 129 154 ISBN 978 0 932885 12 8 Barlovac Bojana 11 May 2011 Mufti Probes Old Serbian Crimes Against Muslims Retrieved 14 October 2017 Berend Tibor Ivan 2003 History Derailed Central and Eastern Europe in the Long Nineteenth Century Los Angeles California University of California Press ISBN 978 0 52023 299 0 Broers Michael 2010 Napoleon s Other War Bandits Rebels and Their Pursuers in the Age of Revolution Oxford England Peter Lang ISBN 978 1 906165 11 6 Calic Marie Janine 2019 The Great Cauldron A History of Southeastern Europe Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 67498 392 2 Castellan Georges 1992 History of the Balkans From Mohammed the Conqueror to Stalin Boulder Colorado East European Monographs ISBN 978 0 88033 222 4 Djilas Milovan 1966 Njegos Poet Prince Bishop Translated by Michael B Petrovich New York Harcourt Brace amp World OCLC 263622545 Esdaile Charles J 2007 Napoleon s Wars An International History 1803 1815 London England Allen Lane ISBN 978 0 14311 628 8 Fotic Aleksandar 2009 Karađorđe In Agoston Gabor Masters Bruce Alan eds Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire New York Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 0 8160 6259 1 Glenny Misha 2012 The Balkans 1804 2012 London England Granta Books ISBN 978 1 77089 273 6 Goldsworthy Vesna 1998 Inventing Ruritania The Imperialism of the Imagination New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 30007 312 6 Gyore Zoltan 2007 Karađorđe Among the Hungarians Hungarian and Serb Theatre Collaboration in the Early 19th Century In Pan Montojo Juan Pedersen Frederik eds Communities in European History Representations Jurisdictions Conflicts Pisa Italy Pisa University Press pp 65 84 ISBN 978 8 88492 462 9 Hall Brian 1995 Impossible Country A Journey Through the Last Days of Yugoslavia New York Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 024923 1 Jelavich Charles Jelavich Barbara 2000 The Establishment of the Balkan National States 1804 1920 Vol 8 4th ed Seattle Washington University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0 29580 360 9 Johnson Michael D 2014 Karađorde Petrovic In Hall Richard C ed War in the Balkans An Encyclopedic History from the Fall of the Ottoman Empire to the Breakup of Yugoslavia Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO pp 159 160 ISBN 978 1 61069 031 7 Jovanovic Miodrag 1989 Oplenac Hram svetog Đorđa i mauzolej Karađorđevica Oplenac The Cathedral of Saint George and the Karađorđevic Mausoleum in Serbo Croatian Belgrade Yugoslavia Centar za kulturu Dusan Petrovic Sane ISBN 978 8 67213 009 6 Judah Tim 2000 1997 The Serbs History Myth and the Destruction of Yugoslavia 2nd ed New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 08507 5 Knezevic Jovana 2018 The Transformation of the Serbian National Capital Through War and Occupation In Wouters Nico van Ypersele Laurence eds Nations Identities and the First World War Shifting Loyalties to the Fatherland New York City Bloomsbury pp 277 296 ISBN 978 1 35003 644 4 Lampe John R 2000 1996 Yugoslavia as History Twice There Was a Country 2nd ed Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 77401 7 Lebel G eni 2007 Until the Final Solution The Jews in Belgrade 1521 1942 New Haven Connecticut Avotaynu ISBN 978 1 88622 333 2 Mackenzie David 1996a Violent Solutions Revolutions Nationalism and Secret Societies in Europe to 1918 Lanham Maryland University Press of America ISBN 978 0 76180 399 7 Mackenzie David 1996b The Serbian Warrior Myth and Serbia s Liberation 1804 1815 PDF Journal of the North American Society for Serbian Studies Bloomington Indiana Slavica Publishers 10 2 133 149 ISSN 0742 3330 Archived from the original PDF on 10 August 2017 Retrieved 1 August 2017 Malcolm Noel 1998 Kosovo A Short History London England Pan Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 66613 5 Martinsen Deborah A 2003 Surprised by Shame Dostoevsky s Liars and Narrative Exposure Columbus Ohio Ohio State University Press ISBN 978 0 81420 921 9 Morrison Kenneth 2008 Montenegro A Modern History New York I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 84511 710 8 Ninic Ivan 1989 Migrations in Balkan History Belgrade Yugoslavia Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts ISBN 978 8 67179 006 2 Norris David A 2008 Belgrade A Cultural History Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 970452 1 Palmer Alan Warwick 1970 The Lands Between A History of East Central Europe Since the Congress of Vienna London England Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 02594 620 0 Pavlowitch Stevan K 2002 Serbia The History of an Idea New York New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 6708 5 Petrovich Michael Boro 1976 A History of Modern Serbia 1804 1918 Vol 2 New York Harcourt Brace Jovanovich ISBN 978 0 15140 950 1 Rehm Brendon A 1992 Karageorge In Dupuy Trevor Nevitt Johnson Curt Bongard David L eds The Harper Encyclopedia of Military Biography New York Harper Collins p 392 ISBN 978 0 78580 437 6 Reinhartz Dennis 2006 The Genocide of the Yugoslav Gypsies In Kenrick Donald ed The Last Chapter Hertfordshire England University of Hertfordshire Press pp 87 96 ISBN 978 1 90280 649 5 Ristovic Milan 2016 The Jews of Serbia 1804 1918 From Princely Protection to Formal Emancipation In Catalan Tullia Dogo Marco eds The Jews and the Nation States of Southeastern Europe from the 19th Century to the Great Depression Combining Viewpoints on a Controversial Story Cambridge Scholars Publishing pp 23 50 ISBN 978 1 4438 9662 7 Roberts Elizabeth 2007 Realm of the Black Mountain A History of Montenegro Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 80144 601 6 Saric Liljana 2012 Collective Memory and Media Genres Serbian Statehood Day 2002 2010 In Saric Liljana Gammelgaard Karen Hauge Kjetil Ra eds Transforming National Holidays Identity Discourse in the West and South Slavic Countries 1985 2010 Philadelphia Pennsylvania John Benjamins Publishing Company pp 35 56 ISBN 978 9 02720 638 1 Segesten Anamaria Dutceac 2011 Myth Identity and Conflict A Comparative Analysis of Romanian and Serbian Textbooks Lanham Maryland Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 4867 9 Shaw Joseph Thomas 1993 Pushkin s Poetics of the Unexpected The Non Rhymed Lines in the Rhymed Poetry and the Rhymed Lines in the Non Rhymed Poetry Bloomington Indiana Slavica Publishers ISBN 978 0 89357 245 7 Singleton Frederick Bernard 1985 A Short History of the Yugoslav Peoples New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 27485 2 Skrivanic Gavro 1982 The Armed Forces in Karadjordje s Serbia In Vucinich Wayne S ed The First Serbian Uprising 1804 1813 War and Society in East Central Europe New York Columbia University Press pp 303 340 ISBN 978 0 930888 15 2 Sperber Jonathan 2017 Revolutionary Europe 1780 1850 London England Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 35180 745 6 Stojancevic Vladimir 1982 Karadjordje and Serbia in His Time In Vucinich Wayne S ed The First Serbian Uprising 1804 1813 War and Society in East Central Europe New York Columbia University Press pp 23 40 ISBN 978 0 930888 15 2 Todic Katarina 2014 In the Name of Father and Son Remembering the First World War in Serbia In Burgschwenter Joachim Egger Matthias Barth Scalmani Gunda eds Other Fronts Other Wars First World War Studies on the Eve of the Centennial Leiden Netherlands BRILL pp 437 463 ISBN 978 90 04 27951 3 Turhan Fatma Sel 2014 The Ottoman Empire and the Bosnian Uprising Janissaries Modernisation and Rebellion in the Nineteenth Century New York I B Tauris ISBN 978 0 85773 676 5 Vovchenko Denis 2016 Containing Balkan Nationalism Imperial Russia and Ottoman Christians 1856 1914 Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19027 668 3 Vucinich Wayne S 1982 The Serbian Insurgents and the Russo Turkish War of 1809 1812 In Vucinich Wayne S ed The First Serbian Uprising 1804 1813 War and Society in East Central Europe New York Columbia University Press pp 141 194 ISBN 978 0 930888 15 2 Wachtel Andrew Baruch 1998 Making a Nation Breaking a Nation Literature and Cultural Politics in Yugoslavia Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 80473 181 2 Wilson Duncan 1970 The Life and Times of Vuk Stefanovic Karadzic 1787 1864 Literacy Literature and National Independence in Serbia Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 821480 9 Zivancevic Sekerus Ivana 2014 Banknote Imagery of Serbia In Zimmermann Tanja ed Balkan Memories Media Constructions of National and Transnational History Bielefeld Germany transcript Verlag pp 41 48 ISBN 978 3 83941 712 6 KarađorđeKarađorđevicBorn 14 November 1768 Died 25 July 1817Regnal titlesPreceded byTitle created Grand Vozd of Serbia14 February 1804 21 September 1813 Succeeded byMilos Obrenovic Ias Prince of SerbiaPolitical officesPreceded byJakov Nenadovic President of the Administering Council22 January 1811 3 October 1813 Succeeded byPetar Nikolajevic Moler Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Karađorđe amp oldid 1178351060, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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