fbpx
Wikipedia

Sandžak

Sandžak (/ˈsænæk/; Serbo-Croatian: Sandžak / Санџак, pronounced [sǎndʒak]; Albanian: Sanxhaku; Ottoman Turkish: سنجاق, romanized: Sancak), also known as Sanjak, is a historical[1][2][3] geo-political region in Serbia and Montenegro.[4] The name Sandžak derives from the Sanjak of Novi Pazar, a former Ottoman administrative district founded in 1865. Serbs usually refer to the region by its medieval name of Raška.

Sandžak
Sandžak / Санџак
Map of Sandžak region
CountriesSerbia and Montenegro
Largest cityNovi Pazar
Area
 • Total8,686 km2 (3,354 sq mi)
Population
 • Estimate 
(2011)
390,737
 • Density45.33/km2 (117.4/sq mi)

Between 1878 and 1909 the region was placed under Austro-Hungarian occupation, following which it was ceded back to the Ottoman Empire. In 1912 the region was divided between the kingdoms of Montenegro and Serbia. The most populous city in the region is Novi Pazar in Serbia.

Etymology

Sandžak is the transcription of Turkish sancak (sanjak, "province");[5] the Sanjak of Novi Pazar, known in Serbo-Croatian as Novopazarski sandžak. In Serbian, the region is known by its pre-Ottoman name, Raška.

Geography

Sandžak stretches from the southeastern border of Bosnia and Herzegovina[6] to the borders with Kosovo[7][8][9] and Albania[9] at an area of around 8,500 square kilometers. Six municipalities of Sandžak are in Serbia (Novi Pazar, Sjenica, Tutin, Prijepolje, Nova Varoš, and Priboj[10]), and five in Montenegro (Pljevlja, Bijelo Polje, Berane, Rožaje, and Plav[11]). Sometimes the Montenegrin municipality of Andrijevica is also regarded as part of Sandžak.

The most populated municipality in the region is Novi Pazar (100,410),[12] while other large municipalities are: Pljevlja (31,060),[13] and Priboj (27,133).[12] In Serbia, the municipalities of Novi Pazar and Tutin are part of the Raška District,[14] while the municipalities of Sjenica, Prijepolje, Nova Varoš, and Priboj, are part of the Zlatibor District.[14]

History

Ottoman rule

The Serbian Despotate was conquered by the Ottoman Empire in 1455. During the Ottoman era, many inhabitants converted to Islam. The conversions were caused by number of factors, mainly economic as Muslims paid lower taxes.[15] The Muslims were also privileged compared to Christians, who were unable to work in the administration or testify in court against Muslims.[16] The second factor that contributed to the Islamisation were migrations. A large demographic shift occurred after the Great Turkish War. The Turks drove the mostly Slavic-speaking Christian Orthodox population northwards, while Muslims were driven to the Ottoman territory. The land abandoned by the Serbs was settled by populations from neighbouring areas who either were or became Muslim in Sandžak. Large migrations occurred throughout the 18th and 19th century. The third factor of Islamisation was the geographical location of Sandžak, which allowed it to become a trade centre, facilitating conversions amongst merchants.[17] The tribal migrations to Sandžak had contributed a large role to its history and identity along with culture.[18][19]

 
Sanjak of Novi Pazar in 1878.

The second half of the 19th century was very important in terms of shaping the current ethnic and political situation in Sandžak. Austria-Hungary supported Sandžak's separation from the Ottoman Empire, or at least its autonomy within it. The reason was to prevent Serbia and Montenegro from unifying, and allow Austria-Hungary's further expansion to the Balkans. Per these plans, Sandžak was seen as part of Bosnia and Herzegovina, while its Muslim population played a significant role giving Austrian-Hungarians a pretext of protecting the Muslim minority from the Christian Orthodox Serbs.[20]

Administratively, it was part of the Sanjak of Bosnia until 1790, when it become a separated Sanjak of Novi Pazar.[citation needed] However, in 1867, it become a part of the Bosnia Vilayet that consisted of seven sanjaks, including the Sanjak of Novi Pazar. This led to Sandžak Muslims identifying themselves with other Slavic Muslims in Bosnia.[21]

A mixture of Slavic and Albanian speakers made up the Muslim population of Sandžak at the end of the nineteenth century. Albanian speakers gradually migrated or were relocated to Kosovo and Macedonia, leaving a primarily Slavic-speaking population in the rest of the region (except in a southeastern corner of Sandžak that ended up as a part of Kosovo).[22]

Some members of the Shkreli (known as Škrijelj/Serbian: Шкријељ) and Kelmendi beginning around 1700 migrated into the lower Pešter and Sandžak regions.The Kelmendi chief had converted to Islam, and promised to convert his people to. A total of 251 Kelmendi households (1,987 people) were resettled in the Pešter area on that occasion, however five years later part the exiled Kelmendi managed to fight their way back to their homeland, and in 1711 they sent out a large raiding force to bring back some other from Pešter too.[23] The remaining Kelmendi and Shkreli converted to Islam and became Slavophones by the 20th century, and as of today they now self-identify as part of the Bosniak ethnicity, although in the Pešter plateau they partly utilized the Albanian language until the middle of the 20th century particuarily in the villages of Ugao, Boroštica, Doliće and Gradac.[24] Starting in the 18th century many people originating from the Hoti tribe have migrated to and live in Sandžak, mainly in the Tutin area, but also in Sjenica.[25]

In October 1912, Sandžak was captured by Serbian and Montenegrin troops in the First Balkan War, and its territory was divided between Serbia and Montenegro.[26] Many Slavic Muslims and Albanian inhabitants of Sandžak emigrated to Turkey as muhajirs. There are numerous colonies of Sandžak Bosniaks in Turkey, in and around Edirne, Istanbul, Adapazarı, Bursa, and Samsun, among other places. During World War I, Sandžak was occupied by Austria-Hungary between 1915 and 1918, as it had been previously between 1878 and 1908. Following World War I, it was included in the newly formed Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. It was a link between the Muslims in the West in Bosnia and Herzegovina and those in the East in Kosovo and Macedonia. Sandžak was the only region in Serbia populated by the Slavic Muslims.[20] The Sandžak Muslims suffered from the loss of their economic status since the decline of the Ottoman Empire, and during the agrarian reform carried out in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. This led to the Muslim emigrations to the Ottoman Empire.[27]

World War I

At the time of the First Balkan War, General Živković ordered the slaughter of 950 Albanian and Turkish notables at Sjenica after ten thousand Albanians delayed the advance of Serbian troops.[citation needed]

In 1919, an Albanian revolt, which later came to be known as the Plav rebellion rose up in the Rožaje, Plav and Gusinje districts, fighting against the inclusion of Sandžak in the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes.[28][29][30] As a result, during the Serbian army's second occupation of Rožaje, which took place in 1918-1919, seven hundred Albanian citizens were slaughtered in Rožaje. In 1919, Serb forces attacked Albanian populations in Plav and Gusinje, which had appealed to the British government for protection. About 450 local civilians were killed after the uprising was quelled.[31] These events resulted in a large influx of Albanians migrating to Albania.[32][33]

World War II

 
Sandžak in 1941

In World War II, Sandžak was the battleground of several factions. In 1941, the region was partitioned between the Italian Montenegrin protectorate, the Italian protectorate over the Kingdom of Albania and the Territory of the Military Commander in Serbia.[34] The Muslim population was in general anti-Partisan.[35] They were organized in small formations known in historiography as the Sandžak Muslim militia. These formations depending on their location and regional politics were affiliated to Albanian nationalist groups linked to Balli Kombëtar in central and south Sandžak or to Muslim Ustaše groups in the north. Many Orthodox Serbs organized in the Serbian nationalist Chetniks. The stance of these factions towards the Nazi forces ranged from armed resistance to open collaboration. Smaller groups of both Orthodox Serbs and Muslims organized after 1943 in the Yugoslav partisan Anti-Fascist Council of the People's Liberation of Sandžak. Each faction sought the inclusion of Sandzak in the post-war situation in separate states. Albanian militia fought for inclusion in Greater Albania and Ustaše formations wanted at least part of Sandzak to join the Bosnian Muslims of the Independent State of Croatia. Within the Yugoslavs, Muslims, Serbs and Montenegrins adopted different strategies. Muslims wanted either unification with Bosnia under a federal Yugoslavia or the establishment of an autonomous Sandžak region. Serbs and Montenegrins wanted the area to either pass entirely to Serbia or to Montenegro.[36]

The formal partition of Sandžak between Italian and German spheres of influence was largely ignored as local politics shaped control over the area. Prijepolje which formally was within the Italian area of rule in Montenegro was in fact under the NDH-affiliated Sulejman Pačariz, while Novi Pazar in the German sphere was led by the Albanian nationalist Aqif Bluta. Clashes between Albanians and Serbs in south Sandžak began in April 1941. In other cities of Sandžak similar battles between different factions played out. Otto von Erdmannsdorf, the special envoy of Germany to Sandžak mentioned in his correspondence that up to 100,000 Albanians from Sandžak wanted to be moved from Serbia under the jurisdiction of Albania.[37] The Italian and German forces considered to enact population exchange from Sandžak to Kosovo to stop interethnic violence between Serbs and Albanians. Peter Pfeiffer, diplomat of the Foreign Office of Germany warned that relocation plans would cause a great rift between the German army and Albanians and they were abandoned. In November 1941 as clashes continued Albanians defeated the Chetniks in the battle of Novi Pazar. The battle was followed by reprisals against the Serbs of Novi Pazar. In 1943, Chetnik forces based in Montenegro conducted a series of ethnic cleansing operations against Muslims in the Bihor region of modern-day Serbia. In May 1943, an estimated 5400 Albanian men, women and children in Bihor were massacred by Chetnik forces under Pavle Đurišić.[38] In a reaction, the notables of the region then published a memorandum and declared themselves to be Albanians. The memorandum was sent to Prime Minister Ekrem Libohova whom they asked to intervene so the region could be united to the Albanian kingdom.[39] It has been estimated that 9,000 Muslims were killed in total by the Chetniks and affiliated groups during the war in Sandžak.[40] The Jewish community of Novi Pazar was initially not harassed because the city didn't have any considerable concentration of German forces, but on March 2, 1942 the city's Jews were rounded up by the German army and killed in extermination camps (the men in Bubanj and the women and children in Sajmište).[41][42]

1943 year saw the creation of the SS-police "self-defence" regiment Sandžak, being formed by joining three battalions of Albanian collaborationist troops with one battalion of the Sandžak Muslim militia.[43][44] At one point around 2,000 members of the SS regiment operated in Sjenica.[45] Its leader was Sulejman Pačariz,[46] an Islamic cleric of Albanian origin.[47]

 
Area under jurisdiction of the National Anti-Fascist Council of the People's Liberation of Sandžak (ZAVNOS), 1945

The Anti-Fascist Council of People's Liberation of Sandžak (AVNOS) had been founded on 20 November 1943 in Pljevlja.[48] In January 1944, the Land Assembly of Montenegro and the Bay of Kotor claimed Sandžak as part of a future Montenegrin federal unit. However, in March, the Communist Party opposed this, insisting that Sandžak's representatives at AVNOJ should decide on the matter.[49] In February 1945, the Presidency of the AVNOJ made a decision to oppose the Sandžak's autonomy. The AVNOJ explained that the Sandžak did not have a national basis for an autonomy and opposed crumbling of the Serbian and Montenegrin totality.[50] On 29 March 1945 in Novi Pazar, the AVNOS accepted the decision of the AVNOJ and divided itself between Serbia and Montenegro.[51] Sandžak was divided based on the 1912 demarcation line.[50]

Yugoslav era

Economically, Sandžak remained undeveloped. It had a small amount of crude and low-revenue industry. Freight was transported by trucks over poor roads. Schools for business students, which remained poor in general education, were opened for working-class youth. The Sandžak had no faculty, not even a department or any school of higher education.[27]

Sandžak saw a process of industrialisation, during which factories were opened in several cities, including Novi Pazar, Prijepolje, Priboj, Ivangrad, while the coal mines were opened in the Prijepolje area. The urbanisation caused a major social and economic shift. Many people left villages for towns. The national composition of the urban centres was changed to the disadvantage of the Muslims, as most of those who inhabited the cities were Serbs. The Muslims continued to lose their economic status, continuing the trend inherited from the time of the collapse of the Ottoman Empire and the agrarian reform in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.[27] The emigration of the Muslims to Turkey also continued, caused by the general underdevelopment of the region, disagreement with the communist authorities and the mistrust with the Serbs and Montenegrins, but also due to the nationalisation and expropriation of property. Serbs from Sandžak also moved to the wealthier regions of the central Serbia or to Belgrade or Vojvodina, while the Muslims moved to Bosnia and Herzegovina as well.[52]

Modern period

With the democratic changes in Serbia in 2000, the ethnic Bosniaks were enabled to start participating in the political life in Serbia and Montenegro, including Rasim Ljajić, an ethnic Bosniak, who was a minister in the Government of Serbia and Montenegro, and Rifat Rastoder, who is the Deputy President of the Parliament of Montenegro. Census data shows a general emigration of all nationalities from this underdeveloped region.[citation needed]

Demographics

Historical

The population of the sanjak of Novi Pazar was ethnically and religiously diverse. In 1878-81, Muslim Slav muhacirs (refugees) from areas which became part of Montenegro, settled in the sanjak. As Ottoman institutions only registered religious affiliation, official Ottoman statistics about ethnicity do not exist. Austrian, Bulgarian and Serbian consulates in the area produced their own ethnographic estimations about the sanjak. In general, three main groups lived in the region: Orthodox Serbs, Muslim Albanians and Muslim Slavs (noted in contemporary sources as Bosnian or Herzegovinian Muslims). Small communities of Romani, Turks and Jews lived mainly in towns. The Bulgarian foreign ministry compiled a report in 1901-02. The five kazas (districs) of the sanjak of the Novi Pazar at that time were: Akova, Sjenica, Kolašin, Novi Pazar and Novi Varoš. According to the Bulgarian report, in the kaza of Akova there were 47 Albanian villages which had 1,266 households. Serbs lived in 11 villages which had 216 households.[53] The town of Akova (Bijelo Polje) had 100 Albanian and Serb households. There were also mixed villages - inhabited by both Serbs and Albanians - which had 115 households with 575 inhabitants. The kaza of Sjenica was inhabited mainly by Orthodox Serbs (69 villages with 624 households) and Bosnian Muslims (46 villages with 655 households). Seventeen villages had a population of both Orthodox Serbs and Bosnian Muslims. Albanians (505 households) lived exclusively in the town of Sjenica. The kaza of Novi Pazar had 1,749 households in 244 Serb villages and 896 households in 81 Albanian villages. Nine villages inhabited by both Serbs and Albanians had 173 households. The town of Novi Pazar had a total of 1,749 Serb and Albanian households with 8,745 inhabitants.[54] The kaza of Kolašin had 27 Albanian villages with 732 households and 5 Serb villages with 75 households. The administrative centre of the kaza, Šahovići, had 25 Albanian households. The kaza of Novi Varoš, according the Bulgarian report, had 19 Serbian villages with 298 households and "one Bosnian village with 200 houses".[55] Novi Varoš had 725 Serb and some Albanian households.[56]

The last official registration of the population of the sanjak of Novi Pazar before the Balkan Wars was conducted in 1910. The 1910 Ottoman census recorded 52,833 Muslims and 27,814 Orthodox Serbs. About 65% of the population were Muslims and 35% Serbian Orthodox. The majority of the Muslim population were Albanians.[57]

The last Yugoslav pre-war census of 1931 counted in Bijelo Polje, Prijepolje, Nova Varoš, Pljevlja, Priboj, Sjenica and Štavica a total population of 204,068. They were mostly counted as Orthodox Serbs or Montenegrins (56.48%) and Bosnian Muslims (43.09%).[36]

Contemporary

Sandžak is a very ethnically diverse region. Most Bosniaks declared themselves ethnic Muslims in 1991 census. By the 2002-2003 census, however, most of them declared themselves Bosniaks. There is still a significant minority that identify as Muslims (by ethnicity). There are still some Albanian villages (Boroštica, Doliće and Ugao) in the Pešter region.[58] There were a larger presence of Albanians in Sandžak in the past, however due to various factors such as migration, assimilation, along with mixing, many identify as Bosniaks instead.[18][59][60] Catholic Albanian groups which settled in Tutin and Pešter in the early 18th century were converted to Islam in that period. Their descendants make up the large majority of the population of Tutin and the Pešter plateau.[61]

The Slavic dialect of Gusinje and Plav (sometimes considered part of Sandžak) shows very high structural influence from Albanian. Its uniqueness in terms of language contact between Albanian and Slavic is explained by the fact that most Slavic-speakers in today's Plav and Gusinje are of Albanian origin.[62]

The total population of the municipalities of Sandžak in Serbia and Montenegro is around 385,666. A plurality of people in Sandžak identify as Bosniaks. They form 49.05% (189,186) of the region's population. Serbs form 33.5% (129,198), Montenegrins 6.90% (26,604), ethnic Muslims 6.19% (23,893), and Albanians 1.05% (4,062). About 12,724 (3.3%) people belong to smaller communities or have chosen to not declare an ethnic identity.

Municipality Ethnicity (2011 census) Total
Bosniaks % Serbs % Montenegrins % Muslims % Albanians % others %
Novi Pazar (Serbia) 77,443 77.13 16,234 16.17 44 0.04 4,102 4.08 202 0.20 2,385 2.38 100,410
Bijelo Polje (Montenegro) 12,592 27.34 16,562 35.96 8,808 19.13 5,985 13.00 57 0.12 2,047 4.45 46,051
Prijepolje (Serbia) 12,792 34.52 19,496 52.61 16 0.04 3,543 9.56 18 0.05 1,194 3.22 37,059
Berane (Montenegro) 6,021 17.72 14,592 42.95 8,838 26.02 1,957 5.76 70 0.21 2,492 7.34 33,970
Tutin (Serbia) 28,041 90.00 1,090 3.50 16 0.05 1,092 3.51 29 0.09 887 2.85 31,155
Pljevlja (Montenegro) 2,128 6.91 17,569 57.07 7,494 24.34 1,739 5.65 17 0.06 1,839 5.97 30,786
Priboj (Serbia) 3,811 14.05 20,582 75.86 119 0.44 1,944 7.16 3 0.01 674 2.48 27,133
Sjenica (Serbia) 19,498 73.88 5,264 19.94 15 0.06 1,234 4.68 29 0.11 352 1.33 26,392
Rožaje (Montenegro) 19,269 83.91 822 3.58 401 1.75 1,044 4.55 1,158 5.04 270 1.17 22,964
Nova Varoš (Serbia) 788 4.73 14,899 89.55 31 0.19 526 3.16 3 0.02 391 2.35 16,638
Plav (Montenegro) 6,803 51.90 2,098 16.00 822 6.27 727 5.55 2,475 18.88 183 1.40 13,108
Sandžak 189,186 49.05 129,198 33.50 26,604 6.90 23,893 6.19 4,061 1.05 12,724 3.30 385,666

Gallery

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Stjepanović, Dejan (2012). "Regions and Territorial Autonomy in Southeastern Europe". In Gagnon, Alain-G.; Keating, Michael (eds.). Political autonomy and divided societies: Imagining democratic alternatives in complex settings. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 194. ISBN 9780230364257.
  2. ^ Roth, Clémentine (2018). Why Narratives of History Matter: Serbian and Croatian Political Discourses on European Integration. Nomos publishing house. p. 268. ISBN 9783845291000.
  3. ^ Duda, Jacek (2011). "Islamic community in Serbia - the Sandžak case". In Górak-Sosnowska, Katarzyna (ed.). Muslims in Poland and Eastern Europe: Widening the European Discourse on Islam. University of Warsaw: Faculty of Oriental Studies. p. 327. ISBN 9788390322957.
  4. ^ Karen Dawisha; Bruce Parrott (13 June 1997). Politics, Power and the Struggle for Democracy in South-East Europe. Cambridge University Press. pp. 175–. ISBN 978-0-521-59733-3.
  5. ^ "Dictionary.com - Sanjak entry".
  6. ^ "Position of the Municipality of Priboj".
  7. ^ "Geographic position of Municipality of Tutin". 19 March 2016.
  8. ^ "Geographic position of Municipality of Rožaje".
  9. ^ a b "Profile of Municipality of Plav" (PDF).
  10. ^ "Territorial organisation of Republic of Serbia".
  11. ^ "Territorial organization of Montenegro" (PDF).
  12. ^ a b "2011 Census of Population, Households and Dwellings in the Republic of Serbia" (PDF).
  13. ^ "2011 Census of Population, Households and Dwellings in Montenegro" (PDF).
  14. ^ a b "Government of Republic of Serbia - Administrative Okrugs (Regions)".
  15. ^ Górak-Sosnowska 2011, p. 328.
  16. ^ Todorović 2012, p. 13.
  17. ^ Górak-Sosnowska 2011, p. 328–329.
  18. ^ a b Memoirs of the American Folklore Society. University of Texas Press. 1954.
  19. ^ Elsie, Robert (2015-04-24). The Tribes of Albania: History, Society and Culture. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-0-85772-586-8.
  20. ^ a b Górak-Sosnowska 2011, p. 329.
  21. ^ Todorović 2012, p. 11.
  22. ^ Dragostinova, Theodora; Hashamova, Yana (2016-08-20). Beyond Mosque, Church, and State: Alternative Narratives of the Nation in the Balkans. Central European University Press. ISBN 978-963-386-135-6.
  23. ^ Elsie 2015, p. 32.
  24. ^ Robert Elsie (30 May 2015). The Tribes of Albania: History, Society and Culture. I.B.Tauris. p. 81. ISBN 978-1-78453-401-1.
  25. ^ Biber, Ahmet. "HISTORIJAT RODOVA NA PODRUČJU BJELIMIĆA". Fondacija "Lijepa riječ".
  26. ^ "The Austrian Occupation of Novibazar, 1878–1909". Mount HolyOak. Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  27. ^ a b c Hadžišehović, Butler & Risaluddin 2003, p. 132.
  28. ^ Morrison 2018, p. 56.
  29. ^ Giuseppe Motta, Less than Nations: Central-Eastern European Minorities after WWI, Volume 1 , Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2013, p. 11
  30. ^ Klaus Roth, Ulf Brunnbauer, Region, Regional Identity and Regionalism in Southeastern Europe, Part 1, LIT Verlag Münster, 2008, p. 221
  31. ^ Morrison 2018, p. 21.
  32. ^ Mulaj, Klejda (2008-02-22). Politics of Ethnic Cleansing: Nation-State Building and Provision of In/Security in Twentieth-Century Balkans. Lexington Books. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-7391-4667-5.
  33. ^ Banac, Ivo (2015-06-09). The National Question in Yugoslavia: Origins, History, Politics. Cornell University Press. pp. 298 snippet view. ISBN 978-1-5017-0194-8.
  34. ^ Zaugg 2021, p. 45.
  35. ^ Banac 1988, p. 100.
  36. ^ a b Banac 1988, p. 101
  37. ^ Zaugg 2021, p. 58.
  38. ^ Kaba, Hamit (2013). "RAPORTI I STAVRO SKËNDIT DREJTUAR OSS' NË WASHINGTON D.C "SHQIPËRIA NËN PUSHTIMIN GJERMAN". STAMBOLL, 1944". Studime Historike (3–04): 275.
  39. ^ Džogović, Fehim (2020). "NEKOLIKO DOKUMENATA IZ DRŽAVNOG ARHIVA ALBANIJE U TIRANI O ČETNIČKOM GENOCIDU NAD MUSLIMANIMA BIHORA JANUARA 1943". ALMANAH - Časopis za proučavanje, prezentaciju I zaštitu kulturno-istorijske baštine Bošnjaka/Muslimana (in Bosnian) (85–86): 329–341. ISSN 0354-5342.
  40. ^ Jancar-Webster 2010, p. 70.
  41. ^ Greble 2011, p. 115.
  42. ^ Mojzes 2011, p. 94.
  43. ^ Glišić, Venceslav (1970). Teror i zločini nacističke Nemačke u Srbiji 1941-1944. Rad. p. 215. Легију „Кремплер", састављени од три батаљона албанских квислиншких трупа и муслиманске фашистичке милиције у Санџаку.
  44. ^ Muñoz 2001, p. 293.
  45. ^ Simpozijum seoski dani Sretena Vukosavljevića. Opštinska zajednica obrazovanja. 1978. p. 160. Немци су тада на подручју Сјенице имали ... и око 2000 СС добровољачка легија Кремплер
  46. ^ "The Moslem Militia and Legion of the Sandjak" in Axis Europa Magazine, Vol. II/III (No. 9), July–August–September 1996, pp.3-14.
  47. ^ Prcela, John; Guldescu, Stanko (1995). Operation Slaughterhouse. Dorrance Publishing Company.
  48. ^ Jelić & Strugar 1985, p. 82, 134.
  49. ^ Banac 1988, p. 101.
  50. ^ a b Banac 1988, p. 102.
  51. ^ Jelić & Strugar 1985, p. 144.
  52. ^ Hadžišehović, Butler & Risaluddin 2003, p. 133.
  53. ^ Bartl 1968, p. 63:Die Kaza Bjelopolje ( Akova ) zählte 11 serbische Dörfer mit 216 Häusern, 2 gemischt serbisch - albanische Dörfer mit 25 Häusern und 47 albanische Dörfer mit 1 266 Häusern . Bjelopolje selbst hatte etwa 100 albanische und serbische.
  54. ^ Bartl 1968, p. 63:Die Stadt Novi Bazar hatte 1 749 serbische und albanische Häuser.
  55. ^ Bartl 1968, p. 63:Die Kaza Novi Varoš zählte 19 serbische Dörfer mit 298 Häusern und 1 „ bosnisches Dorf mit 200 Häusern .
  56. ^ Bartl 1968, p. 63
  57. ^ Bartl 1968, p. 64:Die Bevölkerung des Sancak Novi Bazar war zu etwa 65% islamisiert. Der muslimische Bevölkerung santeil bestand zum grössten Teil aus Albanern.
  58. ^ Andrea Pieroni, Maria Elena Giusti, & Cassandra L. Quave (2011). "Cross-cultural ethnobiology in the Western Balkans: medical ethnobotany and ethnozoology among Albanians and Serbs in the Pešter Plateau, Sandžak, South-Western Serbia." Human Ecology. 39. (3): 335. "The current population of the Albanian villages is partly "bosniakicised", since in the last two generations a number of Albanian males began to intermarry with (Muslim) Bosniak women of Pešter. This is one of the reasons why locals in Ugao were declared to be "Bosniaks" in the last census of 2002, or, in Boroštica, to be simply "Muslims", and in both cases abandoning the previous ethnic label of "Albanians", which these villages used in the census conducted during "Yugoslavian" times. A number of our informants confirmed that the self-attribution "Albanian" was purposely abandoned in order to avoid problems following the Yugoslav Wars and associated violent incursions of Serbian para-military forces in the area. The oldest generation of the villagers however are still fluent in a dialect of Ghegh Albanian, which appears to have been neglected by European linguists thus far. Additionally, the presence of an Albanian minority in this area has never been brought to the attention of international stakeholders by either the former Yugoslav or the current Serbian authorities."
  59. ^ Banac, Ivo (2015-06-09). The National Question in Yugoslavia: Origins, History, Politics. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-1-5017-0194-8.
  60. ^ Malcolm, Noel (1998). Kosovo : a short history. Internet Archive. London : Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-333-66612-8.
  61. ^ Velović Popović, Bojana M. (2021). "Морфолошке одлике глаголских облика говора Тутина, Новог Пазара и Сјенице" [Morphological features of verb forms in speech from Tutin, Novi Pazar and Sjenica] (PDF). Српски дијалектолошки зборник (68): 197–199.
  62. ^ Matthew C., Curtis (2012). Slavic-Albanian Language Contact, Convergence, and Coexistence. The Ohio State University. p. 140.

Sources

  • Bartl, Peter (1968). Die albanischen Muslime zur Zeit der nationalen Unabhängigkeitsbewegung (1878-1912). Otto Harrassowitz Verlag.
  • Banac, Ivo (1988). With Stalin Against Tito: Cominformist Splits in Yugoslav Communism. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. ISBN 0801421861.
  • Górak-Sosnowska, Katarzyna (2011). Muslims in Poland and Eastern Europe: Widening the European Discourse on Islam. Warszaw: Faculty of Oriental Studies, University of Warszaw. ISBN 978-8390322957.
  • Greble, Emily (2011). Sarajevo, 1941–1945: Muslims, Christians, and Jews in Hitler's Europe. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0801461217.
  • Greble, Emily (2021). Muslims and the Making of Modern Europe. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0197538807.
  • Hadžišehović, Munevera; Butler, Thomas J.; Risaluddin, Saba (2003). A Muslim Woman in Tito's Yugoslavia. College Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 1585443042.
  • Jelić, Ivan; Strugar, Novak (1985). War and revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941-1945. Belgrade: Socialist Thought and Practice.
  • Mojzes, Paul (2011). Balkan Genocides: Holocaust and Ethnic Cleansing in the Twentieth Century. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1442206632.
  • Morrison, Kenneth (2018). Nationalism, Identity and Statehood in Post-Yugoslav Montenegro. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9781474235204.
  • Jancar-Webster, Barbara (2010). "Women in the Yugoslav National Liberation Movement". In Ramet, Sabrina (ed.). Gender Politics in the Western Balkans: Women and Society in Yugoslavia and the Yugoslav Successor States. Penn State Press. ISBN 978-0271043067.
  • John D. Treadway (1983). The Falcon and the Eagle: Montenegro and Austria-Hungary, 1908-1914. Purdue University Press. ISBN 978-1-55753-146-9.
  • Zaugg, Franziska Anna (2021). Rekrutierungen für die Waffen-SS in Südosteuropa: Ideen, Ideale und Realitäten einer Vielvölkerarmee. De Gruyter. ISBN 978-3110730777.

External links

  • Novi Pazar
  • Bosniak National Council in Serbia
  • Community of the Sandžak diaspora

Coordinates: 43°09′47″N 19°46′30″E / 43.16306°N 19.77500°E / 43.16306; 19.77500

sandžak, this, article, about, geopolitical, region, serbia, montenegro, districts, ottoman, empire, sanjak, this, article, section, contains, close, paraphrasing, more, free, copyrighted, sources, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, improve, this. This article is about a geopolitical region in Serbia and Montenegro For districts of the Ottoman Empire see Sanjak This article or section contains close paraphrasing of one or more non free copyrighted sources Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please improve this article by re writing it in your own words May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sandzak ˈ s ae n dʒ ae k Serbo Croatian Sandzak Sanџak pronounced sǎndʒak Albanian Sanxhaku Ottoman Turkish سنجاق romanized Sancak also known as Sanjak is a historical 1 2 3 geo political region in Serbia and Montenegro 4 The name Sandzak derives from the Sanjak of Novi Pazar a former Ottoman administrative district founded in 1865 Serbs usually refer to the region by its medieval name of Raska Sandzak Sandzak SanџakGeographical regionMap of Sandzak regionCountriesSerbia and MontenegroLargest cityNovi PazarArea Total8 686 km2 3 354 sq mi Population Estimate 2011 390 737 Density45 33 km2 117 4 sq mi Between 1878 and 1909 the region was placed under Austro Hungarian occupation following which it was ceded back to the Ottoman Empire In 1912 the region was divided between the kingdoms of Montenegro and Serbia The most populous city in the region is Novi Pazar in Serbia Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 3 History 3 1 Ottoman rule 3 2 World War I 3 3 World War II 3 4 Yugoslav era 3 5 Modern period 4 Demographics 4 1 Historical 4 2 Contemporary 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Sources 8 External linksEtymology EditSandzak is the transcription of Turkish sancak sanjak province 5 the Sanjak of Novi Pazar known in Serbo Croatian as Novopazarski sandzak In Serbian the region is known by its pre Ottoman name Raska Geography EditSandzak stretches from the southeastern border of Bosnia and Herzegovina 6 to the borders with Kosovo 7 8 9 and Albania 9 at an area of around 8 500 square kilometers Six municipalities of Sandzak are in Serbia Novi Pazar Sjenica Tutin Prijepolje Nova Varos and Priboj 10 and five in Montenegro Pljevlja Bijelo Polje Berane Rozaje and Plav 11 Sometimes the Montenegrin municipality of Andrijevica is also regarded as part of Sandzak The most populated municipality in the region is Novi Pazar 100 410 12 while other large municipalities are Pljevlja 31 060 13 and Priboj 27 133 12 In Serbia the municipalities of Novi Pazar and Tutin are part of the Raska District 14 while the municipalities of Sjenica Prijepolje Nova Varos and Priboj are part of the Zlatibor District 14 History EditSee also Sanjak of Novi Pazar Ottoman rule Edit The Serbian Despotate was conquered by the Ottoman Empire in 1455 During the Ottoman era many inhabitants converted to Islam The conversions were caused by number of factors mainly economic as Muslims paid lower taxes 15 The Muslims were also privileged compared to Christians who were unable to work in the administration or testify in court against Muslims 16 The second factor that contributed to the Islamisation were migrations A large demographic shift occurred after the Great Turkish War The Turks drove the mostly Slavic speaking Christian Orthodox population northwards while Muslims were driven to the Ottoman territory The land abandoned by the Serbs was settled by populations from neighbouring areas who either were or became Muslim in Sandzak Large migrations occurred throughout the 18th and 19th century The third factor of Islamisation was the geographical location of Sandzak which allowed it to become a trade centre facilitating conversions amongst merchants 17 The tribal migrations to Sandzak had contributed a large role to its history and identity along with culture 18 19 Sanjak of Novi Pazar in 1878 The second half of the 19th century was very important in terms of shaping the current ethnic and political situation in Sandzak Austria Hungary supported Sandzak s separation from the Ottoman Empire or at least its autonomy within it The reason was to prevent Serbia and Montenegro from unifying and allow Austria Hungary s further expansion to the Balkans Per these plans Sandzak was seen as part of Bosnia and Herzegovina while its Muslim population played a significant role giving Austrian Hungarians a pretext of protecting the Muslim minority from the Christian Orthodox Serbs 20 Administratively it was part of the Sanjak of Bosnia until 1790 when it become a separated Sanjak of Novi Pazar citation needed However in 1867 it become a part of the Bosnia Vilayet that consisted of seven sanjaks including the Sanjak of Novi Pazar This led to Sandzak Muslims identifying themselves with other Slavic Muslims in Bosnia 21 A mixture of Slavic and Albanian speakers made up the Muslim population of Sandzak at the end of the nineteenth century Albanian speakers gradually migrated or were relocated to Kosovo and Macedonia leaving a primarily Slavic speaking population in the rest of the region except in a southeastern corner of Sandzak that ended up as a part of Kosovo 22 Some members of the Shkreli known as Skrijelj Serbian Shkriјeљ and Kelmendi beginning around 1700 migrated into the lower Pester and Sandzak regions The Kelmendi chief had converted to Islam and promised to convert his people to A total of 251 Kelmendi households 1 987 people were resettled in the Pester area on that occasion however five years later part the exiled Kelmendi managed to fight their way back to their homeland and in 1711 they sent out a large raiding force to bring back some other from Pester too 23 The remaining Kelmendi and Shkreli converted to Islam and became Slavophones by the 20th century and as of today they now self identify as part of the Bosniak ethnicity although in the Pester plateau they partly utilized the Albanian language until the middle of the 20th century particuarily in the villages of Ugao Borostica Dolice and Gradac 24 Starting in the 18th century many people originating from the Hoti tribe have migrated to and live in Sandzak mainly in the Tutin area but also in Sjenica 25 In October 1912 Sandzak was captured by Serbian and Montenegrin troops in the First Balkan War and its territory was divided between Serbia and Montenegro 26 Many Slavic Muslims and Albanian inhabitants of Sandzak emigrated to Turkey as muhajirs There are numerous colonies of Sandzak Bosniaks in Turkey in and around Edirne Istanbul Adapazari Bursa and Samsun among other places During World War I Sandzak was occupied by Austria Hungary between 1915 and 1918 as it had been previously between 1878 and 1908 Following World War I it was included in the newly formed Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes It was a link between the Muslims in the West in Bosnia and Herzegovina and those in the East in Kosovo and Macedonia Sandzak was the only region in Serbia populated by the Slavic Muslims 20 The Sandzak Muslims suffered from the loss of their economic status since the decline of the Ottoman Empire and during the agrarian reform carried out in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia This led to the Muslim emigrations to the Ottoman Empire 27 World War I Edit At the time of the First Balkan War General Zivkovic ordered the slaughter of 950 Albanian and Turkish notables at Sjenica after ten thousand Albanians delayed the advance of Serbian troops citation needed In 1919 an Albanian revolt which later came to be known as the Plav rebellion rose up in the Rozaje Plav and Gusinje districts fighting against the inclusion of Sandzak in the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes 28 29 30 As a result during the Serbian army s second occupation of Rozaje which took place in 1918 1919 seven hundred Albanian citizens were slaughtered in Rozaje In 1919 Serb forces attacked Albanian populations in Plav and Gusinje which had appealed to the British government for protection About 450 local civilians were killed after the uprising was quelled 31 These events resulted in a large influx of Albanians migrating to Albania 32 33 World War II Edit Sandzak in 1941 In World War II Sandzak was the battleground of several factions In 1941 the region was partitioned between the Italian Montenegrin protectorate the Italian protectorate over the Kingdom of Albania and the Territory of the Military Commander in Serbia 34 The Muslim population was in general anti Partisan 35 They were organized in small formations known in historiography as the Sandzak Muslim militia These formations depending on their location and regional politics were affiliated to Albanian nationalist groups linked to Balli Kombetar in central and south Sandzak or to Muslim Ustase groups in the north Many Orthodox Serbs organized in the Serbian nationalist Chetniks The stance of these factions towards the Nazi forces ranged from armed resistance to open collaboration Smaller groups of both Orthodox Serbs and Muslims organized after 1943 in the Yugoslav partisan Anti Fascist Council of the People s Liberation of Sandzak Each faction sought the inclusion of Sandzak in the post war situation in separate states Albanian militia fought for inclusion in Greater Albania and Ustase formations wanted at least part of Sandzak to join the Bosnian Muslims of the Independent State of Croatia Within the Yugoslavs Muslims Serbs and Montenegrins adopted different strategies Muslims wanted either unification with Bosnia under a federal Yugoslavia or the establishment of an autonomous Sandzak region Serbs and Montenegrins wanted the area to either pass entirely to Serbia or to Montenegro 36 The formal partition of Sandzak between Italian and German spheres of influence was largely ignored as local politics shaped control over the area Prijepolje which formally was within the Italian area of rule in Montenegro was in fact under the NDH affiliated Sulejman Pacariz while Novi Pazar in the German sphere was led by the Albanian nationalist Aqif Bluta Clashes between Albanians and Serbs in south Sandzak began in April 1941 In other cities of Sandzak similar battles between different factions played out Otto von Erdmannsdorf the special envoy of Germany to Sandzak mentioned in his correspondence that up to 100 000 Albanians from Sandzak wanted to be moved from Serbia under the jurisdiction of Albania 37 The Italian and German forces considered to enact population exchange from Sandzak to Kosovo to stop interethnic violence between Serbs and Albanians Peter Pfeiffer diplomat of the Foreign Office of Germany warned that relocation plans would cause a great rift between the German army and Albanians and they were abandoned In November 1941 as clashes continued Albanians defeated the Chetniks in the battle of Novi Pazar The battle was followed by reprisals against the Serbs of Novi Pazar In 1943 Chetnik forces based in Montenegro conducted a series of ethnic cleansing operations against Muslims in the Bihor region of modern day Serbia In May 1943 an estimated 5400 Albanian men women and children in Bihor were massacred by Chetnik forces under Pavle Đurisic 38 In a reaction the notables of the region then published a memorandum and declared themselves to be Albanians The memorandum was sent to Prime Minister Ekrem Libohova whom they asked to intervene so the region could be united to the Albanian kingdom 39 It has been estimated that 9 000 Muslims were killed in total by the Chetniks and affiliated groups during the war in Sandzak 40 The Jewish community of Novi Pazar was initially not harassed because the city didn t have any considerable concentration of German forces but on March 2 1942 the city s Jews were rounded up by the German army and killed in extermination camps the men in Bubanj and the women and children in Sajmiste 41 42 1943 year saw the creation of the SS police self defence regiment Sandzak being formed by joining three battalions of Albanian collaborationist troops with one battalion of the Sandzak Muslim militia 43 44 At one point around 2 000 members of the SS regiment operated in Sjenica 45 Its leader was Sulejman Pacariz 46 an Islamic cleric of Albanian origin 47 Area under jurisdiction of the National Anti Fascist Council of the People s Liberation of Sandzak ZAVNOS 1945 The Anti Fascist Council of People s Liberation of Sandzak AVNOS had been founded on 20 November 1943 in Pljevlja 48 In January 1944 the Land Assembly of Montenegro and the Bay of Kotor claimed Sandzak as part of a future Montenegrin federal unit However in March the Communist Party opposed this insisting that Sandzak s representatives at AVNOJ should decide on the matter 49 In February 1945 the Presidency of the AVNOJ made a decision to oppose the Sandzak s autonomy The AVNOJ explained that the Sandzak did not have a national basis for an autonomy and opposed crumbling of the Serbian and Montenegrin totality 50 On 29 March 1945 in Novi Pazar the AVNOS accepted the decision of the AVNOJ and divided itself between Serbia and Montenegro 51 Sandzak was divided based on the 1912 demarcation line 50 Yugoslav era Edit Economically Sandzak remained undeveloped It had a small amount of crude and low revenue industry Freight was transported by trucks over poor roads Schools for business students which remained poor in general education were opened for working class youth The Sandzak had no faculty not even a department or any school of higher education 27 Sandzak saw a process of industrialisation during which factories were opened in several cities including Novi Pazar Prijepolje Priboj Ivangrad while the coal mines were opened in the Prijepolje area The urbanisation caused a major social and economic shift Many people left villages for towns The national composition of the urban centres was changed to the disadvantage of the Muslims as most of those who inhabited the cities were Serbs The Muslims continued to lose their economic status continuing the trend inherited from the time of the collapse of the Ottoman Empire and the agrarian reform in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia 27 The emigration of the Muslims to Turkey also continued caused by the general underdevelopment of the region disagreement with the communist authorities and the mistrust with the Serbs and Montenegrins but also due to the nationalisation and expropriation of property Serbs from Sandzak also moved to the wealthier regions of the central Serbia or to Belgrade or Vojvodina while the Muslims moved to Bosnia and Herzegovina as well 52 Modern period Edit With the democratic changes in Serbia in 2000 the ethnic Bosniaks were enabled to start participating in the political life in Serbia and Montenegro including Rasim Ljajic an ethnic Bosniak who was a minister in the Government of Serbia and Montenegro and Rifat Rastoder who is the Deputy President of the Parliament of Montenegro Census data shows a general emigration of all nationalities from this underdeveloped region citation needed Demographics EditHistorical Edit The population of the sanjak of Novi Pazar was ethnically and religiously diverse In 1878 81 Muslim Slav muhacirs refugees from areas which became part of Montenegro settled in the sanjak As Ottoman institutions only registered religious affiliation official Ottoman statistics about ethnicity do not exist Austrian Bulgarian and Serbian consulates in the area produced their own ethnographic estimations about the sanjak In general three main groups lived in the region Orthodox Serbs Muslim Albanians and Muslim Slavs noted in contemporary sources as Bosnian or Herzegovinian Muslims Small communities of Romani Turks and Jews lived mainly in towns The Bulgarian foreign ministry compiled a report in 1901 02 The five kazas districs of the sanjak of the Novi Pazar at that time were Akova Sjenica Kolasin Novi Pazar and Novi Varos According to the Bulgarian report in the kaza of Akova there were 47 Albanian villages which had 1 266 households Serbs lived in 11 villages which had 216 households 53 The town of Akova Bijelo Polje had 100 Albanian and Serb households There were also mixed villages inhabited by both Serbs and Albanians which had 115 households with 575 inhabitants The kaza of Sjenica was inhabited mainly by Orthodox Serbs 69 villages with 624 households and Bosnian Muslims 46 villages with 655 households Seventeen villages had a population of both Orthodox Serbs and Bosnian Muslims Albanians 505 households lived exclusively in the town of Sjenica The kaza of Novi Pazar had 1 749 households in 244 Serb villages and 896 households in 81 Albanian villages Nine villages inhabited by both Serbs and Albanians had 173 households The town of Novi Pazar had a total of 1 749 Serb and Albanian households with 8 745 inhabitants 54 The kaza of Kolasin had 27 Albanian villages with 732 households and 5 Serb villages with 75 households The administrative centre of the kaza Sahovici had 25 Albanian households The kaza of Novi Varos according the Bulgarian report had 19 Serbian villages with 298 households and one Bosnian village with 200 houses 55 Novi Varos had 725 Serb and some Albanian households 56 The last official registration of the population of the sanjak of Novi Pazar before the Balkan Wars was conducted in 1910 The 1910 Ottoman census recorded 52 833 Muslims and 27 814 Orthodox Serbs About 65 of the population were Muslims and 35 Serbian Orthodox The majority of the Muslim population were Albanians 57 The last Yugoslav pre war census of 1931 counted in Bijelo Polje Prijepolje Nova Varos Pljevlja Priboj Sjenica and Stavica a total population of 204 068 They were mostly counted as Orthodox Serbs or Montenegrins 56 48 and Bosnian Muslims 43 09 36 Contemporary Edit Sandzak is a very ethnically diverse region Most Bosniaks declared themselves ethnic Muslims in 1991 census By the 2002 2003 census however most of them declared themselves Bosniaks There is still a significant minority that identify as Muslims by ethnicity There are still some Albanian villages Borostica Dolice and Ugao in the Pester region 58 There were a larger presence of Albanians in Sandzak in the past however due to various factors such as migration assimilation along with mixing many identify as Bosniaks instead 18 59 60 Catholic Albanian groups which settled in Tutin and Pester in the early 18th century were converted to Islam in that period Their descendants make up the large majority of the population of Tutin and the Pester plateau 61 The Slavic dialect of Gusinje and Plav sometimes considered part of Sandzak shows very high structural influence from Albanian Its uniqueness in terms of language contact between Albanian and Slavic is explained by the fact that most Slavic speakers in today s Plav and Gusinje are of Albanian origin 62 The total population of the municipalities of Sandzak in Serbia and Montenegro is around 385 666 A plurality of people in Sandzak identify as Bosniaks They form 49 05 189 186 of the region s population Serbs form 33 5 129 198 Montenegrins 6 90 26 604 ethnic Muslims 6 19 23 893 and Albanians 1 05 4 062 About 12 724 3 3 people belong to smaller communities or have chosen to not declare an ethnic identity Municipality Ethnicity 2011 census TotalBosniaks Serbs Montenegrins Muslims Albanians others Novi Pazar Serbia 77 443 77 13 16 234 16 17 44 0 04 4 102 4 08 202 0 20 2 385 2 38 100 410Bijelo Polje Montenegro 12 592 27 34 16 562 35 96 8 808 19 13 5 985 13 00 57 0 12 2 047 4 45 46 051Prijepolje Serbia 12 792 34 52 19 496 52 61 16 0 04 3 543 9 56 18 0 05 1 194 3 22 37 059Berane Montenegro 6 021 17 72 14 592 42 95 8 838 26 02 1 957 5 76 70 0 21 2 492 7 34 33 970Tutin Serbia 28 041 90 00 1 090 3 50 16 0 05 1 092 3 51 29 0 09 887 2 85 31 155Pljevlja Montenegro 2 128 6 91 17 569 57 07 7 494 24 34 1 739 5 65 17 0 06 1 839 5 97 30 786Priboj Serbia 3 811 14 05 20 582 75 86 119 0 44 1 944 7 16 3 0 01 674 2 48 27 133Sjenica Serbia 19 498 73 88 5 264 19 94 15 0 06 1 234 4 68 29 0 11 352 1 33 26 392Rozaje Montenegro 19 269 83 91 822 3 58 401 1 75 1 044 4 55 1 158 5 04 270 1 17 22 964Nova Varos Serbia 788 4 73 14 899 89 55 31 0 19 526 3 16 3 0 02 391 2 35 16 638Plav Montenegro 6 803 51 90 2 098 16 00 822 6 27 727 5 55 2 475 18 88 183 1 40 13 108Sandzak 189 186 49 05 129 198 33 50 26 604 6 90 23 893 6 19 4 061 1 05 12 724 3 30 385 666 Ethnic map of Sandzak including Plav and Andrijevica according to the 2002 census in Serbia and 2003 census in Montenegro Note map shows the ethnic majority populations within the municipalities Ethnic map of Sandzak excluding Plav and Andrijevica according to the 2002 census in Serbia and 2003 census in Montenegro Note map shows the ethnic majority populations within the settlementsGallery Edit Church of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul Ras near Novi Pazar 8 9th century Stari Ras fortress near Novi Pazar 8th century Đurđevi Stupovi monastery near Novi Pazar 12th century White Angel fresco from Mileseva monastery near Prijepolje c 1235 Sopocani monastery 13th century Husein pasha s mosque Pljevlja Novi Pazar A wall built during the Ottoman period in Novi Pazar Nova Varos in 1930 s Kucanska Mosque Rozaje from 1830 Nova Varos Centre in 2004See also EditBosniaks Bosniaks of Serbia Bosniaks of Montenegro Geography of Serbia Geography of MontenegroReferences EditNotes Edit Stjepanovic Dejan 2012 Regions and Territorial Autonomy in Southeastern Europe In Gagnon Alain G Keating Michael eds Political autonomy and divided societies Imagining democratic alternatives in complex settings Palgrave Macmillan p 194 ISBN 9780230364257 Roth Clementine 2018 Why Narratives of History Matter Serbian and Croatian Political Discourses on European Integration Nomos publishing house p 268 ISBN 9783845291000 Duda Jacek 2011 Islamic community in Serbia the Sandzak case In Gorak Sosnowska Katarzyna ed Muslims in Poland and Eastern Europe Widening the European Discourse on Islam University of Warsaw Faculty of Oriental Studies p 327 ISBN 9788390322957 Karen Dawisha Bruce Parrott 13 June 1997 Politics Power and the Struggle for Democracy in South East Europe Cambridge University Press pp 175 ISBN 978 0 521 59733 3 Dictionary com Sanjak entry Position of the Municipality of Priboj Geographic position of Municipality of Tutin 19 March 2016 Geographic position of Municipality of Rozaje a b Profile of Municipality of Plav PDF Territorial organisation of Republic of Serbia Territorial organization of Montenegro PDF a b 2011 Census of Population Households and Dwellings in the Republic of Serbia PDF 2011 Census of Population Households and Dwellings in Montenegro PDF a b Government of Republic of Serbia Administrative Okrugs Regions Gorak Sosnowska 2011 p 328 Todorovic 2012 p 13 sfn error no target CITEREFTodorovic2012 help Gorak Sosnowska 2011 p 328 329 a b Memoirs of the American Folklore Society University of Texas Press 1954 Elsie Robert 2015 04 24 The Tribes of Albania History Society and Culture Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 0 85772 586 8 a b Gorak Sosnowska 2011 p 329 Todorovic 2012 p 11 sfn error no target CITEREFTodorovic2012 help Dragostinova Theodora Hashamova Yana 2016 08 20 Beyond Mosque Church and State Alternative Narratives of the Nation in the Balkans Central European University Press ISBN 978 963 386 135 6 Elsie 2015 p 32 Robert Elsie 30 May 2015 The Tribes of Albania History Society and Culture I B Tauris p 81 ISBN 978 1 78453 401 1 Biber Ahmet HISTORIJAT RODOVA NA PODRUCJU BJELIMICA Fondacija Lijepa rijec The Austrian Occupation of Novibazar 1878 1909 Mount HolyOak Retrieved 24 March 2012 a b c Hadzisehovic Butler amp Risaluddin 2003 p 132 Morrison 2018 p 56 Giuseppe Motta Less than Nations Central Eastern European Minorities after WWI Volume 1 Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2013 p 11 Klaus Roth Ulf Brunnbauer Region Regional Identity and Regionalism in Southeastern Europe Part 1 LIT Verlag Munster 2008 p 221 Morrison 2018 p 21 Mulaj Klejda 2008 02 22 Politics of Ethnic Cleansing Nation State Building and Provision of In Security in Twentieth Century Balkans Lexington Books p 33 ISBN 978 0 7391 4667 5 Banac Ivo 2015 06 09 The National Question in Yugoslavia Origins History Politics Cornell University Press pp 298 snippet view ISBN 978 1 5017 0194 8 Zaugg 2021 p 45 Banac 1988 p 100 a b Banac 1988 p 101 Zaugg 2021 p 58 Kaba Hamit 2013 RAPORTI I STAVRO SKENDIT DREJTUAR OSS NE WASHINGTON D C SHQIPERIA NEN PUSHTIMIN GJERMAN STAMBOLL 1944 Studime Historike 3 04 275 Dzogovic Fehim 2020 NEKOLIKO DOKUMENATA IZ DRZAVNOG ARHIVA ALBANIJE U TIRANI O CETNICKOM GENOCIDU NAD MUSLIMANIMA BIHORA JANUARA 1943 ALMANAH Casopis za proucavanje prezentaciju I zastitu kulturno istorijske bastine Bosnjaka Muslimana in Bosnian 85 86 329 341 ISSN 0354 5342 Jancar Webster 2010 p 70 Greble 2011 p 115 Mojzes 2011 p 94 Glisic Venceslav 1970 Teror i zlocini nacisticke Nemacke u Srbiji 1941 1944 Rad p 215 Legiјu Krempler sastavљeni od tri bataљona albanskih kvislinshkih trupa i muslimanske fashistichke miliciјe u Sanџaku Munoz 2001 p 293 sfn error no target CITEREFMunoz2001 help Simpozijum seoski dani Sretena Vukosavljevica Opstinska zajednica obrazovanja 1978 p 160 Nemci su tada na podruchјu Sјenice imali i oko 2000 SS dobrovoљachka legiјa Krempler The Moslem Militia and Legion of the Sandjak in Axis Europa Magazine Vol II III No 9 July August September 1996 pp 3 14 Prcela John Guldescu Stanko 1995 Operation Slaughterhouse Dorrance Publishing Company Jelic amp Strugar 1985 p 82 134 Banac 1988 p 101 a b Banac 1988 p 102 Jelic amp Strugar 1985 p 144 Hadzisehovic Butler amp Risaluddin 2003 p 133 Bartl 1968 p 63 Die Kaza Bjelopolje Akova zahlte 11 serbische Dorfer mit 216 Hausern 2 gemischt serbisch albanische Dorfer mit 25 Hausern und 47 albanische Dorfer mit 1 266 Hausern Bjelopolje selbst hatte etwa 100 albanische und serbische Bartl 1968 p 63 Die Stadt Novi Bazar hatte 1 749 serbische und albanische Hauser Bartl 1968 p 63 Die Kaza Novi Varos zahlte 19 serbische Dorfer mit 298 Hausern und 1 bosnisches Dorf mit 200 Hausern Bartl 1968 p 63 Bartl 1968 p 64 Die Bevolkerung des Sancak Novi Bazar war zu etwa 65 islamisiert Der muslimische Bevolkerung santeil bestand zum grossten Teil aus Albanern Andrea Pieroni Maria Elena Giusti amp Cassandra L Quave 2011 Cross cultural ethnobiology in the Western Balkans medical ethnobotany and ethnozoology among Albanians and Serbs in the Pester Plateau Sandzak South Western Serbia Human Ecology 39 3 335 The current population of the Albanian villages is partly bosniakicised since in the last two generations a number of Albanian males began to intermarry with Muslim Bosniak women of Pester This is one of the reasons why locals in Ugao were declared to be Bosniaks in the last census of 2002 or in Borostica to be simply Muslims and in both cases abandoning the previous ethnic label of Albanians which these villages used in the census conducted during Yugoslavian times A number of our informants confirmed that the self attribution Albanian was purposely abandoned in order to avoid problems following the Yugoslav Wars and associated violent incursions of Serbian para military forces in the area The oldest generation of the villagers however are still fluent in a dialect of Ghegh Albanian which appears to have been neglected by European linguists thus far Additionally the presence of an Albanian minority in this area has never been brought to the attention of international stakeholders by either the former Yugoslav or the current Serbian authorities Banac Ivo 2015 06 09 The National Question in Yugoslavia Origins History Politics Cornell University Press ISBN 978 1 5017 0194 8 Malcolm Noel 1998 Kosovo a short history Internet Archive London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 66612 8 Velovic Popovic Bojana M 2021 Morfoloshke odlike glagolskih oblika govora Tutina Novog Pazara i Sјenice Morphological features of verb forms in speech from Tutin Novi Pazar and Sjenica PDF Srpski diјalektoloshki zbornik 68 197 199 Matthew C Curtis 2012 Slavic Albanian Language Contact Convergence and Coexistence The Ohio State University p 140 Sources Edit Bartl Peter 1968 Die albanischen Muslime zur Zeit der nationalen Unabhangigkeitsbewegung 1878 1912 Otto Harrassowitz Verlag Banac Ivo 1988 With Stalin Against Tito Cominformist Splits in Yugoslav Communism Ithaca NY Cornell University Press ISBN 0801421861 Gorak Sosnowska Katarzyna 2011 Muslims in Poland and Eastern Europe Widening the European Discourse on Islam Warszaw Faculty of Oriental Studies University of Warszaw ISBN 978 8390322957 Greble Emily 2011 Sarajevo 1941 1945 Muslims Christians and Jews in Hitler s Europe Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0801461217 Greble Emily 2021 Muslims and the Making of Modern Europe Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0197538807 Hadzisehovic Munevera Butler Thomas J Risaluddin Saba 2003 A Muslim Woman in Tito s Yugoslavia College Station TX Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 1585443042 Jelic Ivan Strugar Novak 1985 War and revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 Belgrade Socialist Thought and Practice Mojzes Paul 2011 Balkan Genocides Holocaust and Ethnic Cleansing in the Twentieth Century Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1442206632 Morrison Kenneth 2018 Nationalism Identity and Statehood in Post Yugoslav Montenegro Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781474235204 Jancar Webster Barbara 2010 Women in the Yugoslav National Liberation Movement In Ramet Sabrina ed Gender Politics in the Western Balkans Women and Society in Yugoslavia and the Yugoslav Successor States Penn State Press ISBN 978 0271043067 John D Treadway 1983 The Falcon and the Eagle Montenegro and Austria Hungary 1908 1914 Purdue University Press ISBN 978 1 55753 146 9 Zaugg Franziska Anna 2021 Rekrutierungen fur die Waffen SS in Sudosteuropa Ideen Ideale und Realitaten einer Vielvolkerarmee De Gruyter ISBN 978 3110730777 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sandzak News from Sandzak sandzaknews net Novi Pazar Info about Sandzak Bosniak National Council in Serbia Community of the Sandzak diaspora Centre for Bosniak Study amp Bosnjacka rijec magazine Coordinates 43 09 47 N 19 46 30 E 43 16306 N 19 77500 E 43 16306 19 77500 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sandzak amp oldid 1130346589, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.