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Siege of Novo Brdo (1440–1441)

Siege of Novo Brdo
Part of the Ottoman wars in Europe and Serbian-Ottoman Wars

Remnants of the Novo Brdo Fortress
DateOctober 1440 – 27 June 1441
Location42°36′54″N 21°25′02″E / 42.61500°N 21.41722°E / 42.61500; 21.41722
Result Ottoman victory
Belligerents
Ottoman Empire Serbian Despotate
Republic of Ragusa
Commanders and leaders
Murad II
Hadım Şehabeddin
Đurađ Branković
Voivode Prijezda
Casualties and losses
Unknown heavy casualties of the population of Novo Brdo

The siege of Novo Brdo was a military blockade of Novo Brdo, an important fortified mining town in the Serbian Despotate, by the forces of the Ottoman Empire. The siege began in 1440 and lasted until the capture of the fortress on 27 June 1441. During the siege, the Serbian garrison was supported by the local community of citizens of the Republic of Ragusa.

Background edit

Novo Brdo was one of the largest cities in the Balkans,[1][2] and because of its rich gold and silver mines it was the most important non-coastal city in the Balkans in the 14th and 15th centuries.[3] The Ottomans besieged it without success in 1412 and in 1427[4] using cannons they'd constructed for the 1422 siege of Constantinople.[5]

In 1439 Ottoman forces led by Sultan Murad II attacked the Serbian Despotate. Serbian Despot Đurađ Branković fled to Hungary to seek support for the defense of his realm, organized by his son Grgur. During the siege of Smederevo (the Despotate's capital city) in 1439, Murad II ordered the marcher-lord Ishak-Beg, who was returning from Mecca, to join forces with Hadım Şehabeddin and besiege Novo Brdo.

On 6 August 1439 the Ottoman forces under Ishak-Beg defeated Serbian forces near Novo Brdo.[6] The Ottomans captured Smederevo on 18 August 1439, reducing the territory of the Serbian Despotate to Zeta and a region around Novo Brdo. The forces under Murad II joined Ishak-Beg to attack Novo Brdo, but its garrison successfully repelled their attacks. The Ottomans realized that it would be difficult to capture the well-defended Novo Brdo, so Murad II ordered for retreat and a stay in Skopje during the winter. Before they did so, they robbed caravans of Ragusan merchants,[7] while Murad II went to Adrianople.[8]

The Ottomans allowed Grgur Branković to govern his father's former estates in southern Serbia, as an Ottoman vassal.[9]

Siege edit

 
The layout of the Novo Brdo Fortress

In 1440, after the failure at Belgrade,[10][11] the Ottoman forces commanded by the beylerbey (the Lord of Lords) of Rumelia Eyalet, Hadım Şehabeddin,[12][13] again besieged Novo Brdo.[6]

The garrisoned Serbian forces were also supported by citizens of the Republic of Ragusa,[14] Ragusa having instructed their subjects in Novo Brdo to help defend the town. Ragusans, who were predominantly merchants, were practically forced to resist the Ottomans because otherwise their property in Novo Brdo would be confiscated, like it was in the case of Ragusan merchants who happened to be outside of the town when the siege began and refused to return to it.[15]

Despot Đurađ Branković and his wife traveled from Hungary to Zeta, accompanied with several hundred cavalry and Albanian vojvoda Petar Spani.[16] They first went to Zagreb, to Đurađ's sister Katarina who was the wife of Ulrich II, Count of Celje.[17] Then Branković arrived at Ragusa (Dubrovnik) at the end of July 1440 and after several days he continued his journey toward his coastal towns of Budva and Bar[18] which became the new capital of the remaining part of his despotate. In the period between 1 July 1440 and his arrival at Bar, the Ottoman forces defeated some military units from Novo Brdo in a battle near Makreš (a village near modern-day Gnjilane).[19][20]

In August 1440 Branković arrived at Bar where he stayed until the end of the winter 1440–41.[9] There he tried to mobilize forces to recapture the territory of the Serbian Despotate he lost to the Ottomans.[9] At the same time, Branković maintained communication with the garrison in Novo Brdo[21] and his son Grgur, who at the time was an Ottoman governor. That was one of the main reasons why the Ottomans, probably justifiably, accused Grgur of treason and dismissed him from his governorship in April 1441. On 8 May 1441, both Grgur and his brother Stefan were blinded, based on the order of Sultan Murad II.[22][23] Branković faced another disappointment in Zeta where he found out that the Crnojevići rebelled against vojvoda Komnen, the governor of Zeta.[9][22] Branković left Zeta in April 1441[24] and resided in Ragusa for a while. This angered the Ottomans who requested, through their envoy Agub, that Ragusa should hand over Branković. Ragusans refused this request and explained in a letter to Ishak-Beg and Hadım Şehabeddin that Ragusa has not accepted Branković because he was an enemy of the sultan but because it was a free city that accepts anybody who seeks shelter in it. They also emphasized that Branković being in Ragusa is the best guarantee that he would not undertake any action against the Ottomans.[25] Ragusans wanted to send their diplomats to Hadım Şehabeddin and requested his written guarantee for their safe conduct. On 13 June 1441 Hadım Şehabeddin, who was in Vučitrn at the time, issued the requested guarantee to the Ragusans.[25]

During the siege of Novo Brdo its population suffered heavy casualties.[26] On 27 June 1441[A] Novo Brdo surrendered to the Ottoman forces, who then robbed and burned the captured town.[27][11]

Aftermath edit

Đurađ Branković received the news about the fall of Novo Brdo when he was in Zeta. Stephen Vukčić, who was an Ottoman vassal at that time, used the weak position of the Serbian Despot and tried to capture Zeta. After he successfully penetrated into Zeta highlands, the Venetian Republic captured Zeta's coastal cities and regions based on agreement with Despot Branković that they will protect his possessions from falling under Ottoman control.[28] Branković realized that he lost all of his territory and power base which supplied him with troops necessary to secure his suzerainty, so he moved to his estates in Hungary. Eventually, Zeta fell under control of the local tribes, with the Crnojevići noble family trying to assert their dominance.[9] The Ottomans made significant efforts to again raise Novo Brdo and gave substantial privileges to people who settled in it and worked in its mines[29] while its Serb citizens were awarded with trading privileges.[30] Within the next three years the Ottomans re-established the mint in Novo Brdo[31] which began to strike akçe for the first time.[32]

In 1444, during the Crusader Long Campaign, Novo Brdo was recaptured from the Ottomans and again became a part of the reestablished Serbian Despotate until it finally fell to Ottoman control on 1 June 1455.[1] Among the survivors of the siege was Dimitrije Kantakouzenos.[33] In 1455, the Ottomans forced the besieged to surrender because they used heavy artillery. All men of any distinguished rank or importance were decapitated under orders of sultan Mehmed II. An estimated 320 boys were taken to become janissaries (devşirme). Approximately 700 girls and young women were given to Ottoman soldiers and their commanders.[34] The siege and its aftermath were described in Memoirs of a janissary, written in 1490—1501 by Novo Brdo resident Konstantin Mihailović, who was one of the boys taken. In 1455 the last voivode of Serbian despot in Novo Brdo was Lješ Spanović.[35]

Notes edit

  1. ^
    Some Ottoman chronicles gives 1439 as year of Ottoman capture of Novo Brdo, while scholarly consensus accept the other primary sources and Serbian chronicles which set 1441 as a date of the fall of Novo Brdo.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Setton 1978, p. 58.
  2. ^ Singleton, Frederick Bernard (1970). Yugoslavia; the country and its people. Queen Anne Press. p. 92. ISBN 9780362000481. In the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries the settlement of Novo Brdo, near Pristina, was described as "the largest and finest city in all the Balkans".
  3. ^ Babinger 1992, p. 126.
  4. ^ Panić-Surep, Milorad (1965). Yugoslavia: Cultural Monuments of Serbia. Turistička štampa. p. 149.[better source needed]
  5. ^ Lēv, Yaacov (1997). War and Society in the Eastern Mediterranean: 7th - 15th Centuries. BRILL. p. 354. ISBN 90-04-10032-6.
  6. ^ a b Jefferson 2012, p. 165.
  7. ^ Glasnik Muzeja Kosova i Metohije. Muzej. 1956. p. 263. Posle toga, uvidevái da ce im biti tesko da osvoje bógate i dobro branjeno Novo Brdo, Turci presreéu karavane Dubravcana i pljaëkaju ih i zauzimaju vazne prilaze ka Novom Brdu. Тек 1440 godine Turci su ponovo napali Novo Brdo i posle ...
  8. ^ Šolajić, Dragutin (1954). Ratna prošlost Beograda. Beogradske novine. p. 47. Мурат је са осталом војском кренуо у помоћ Исак-бегу под Ново Брдо. Међутим, јуначка посада Новог Брда одолевала ...
  9. ^ a b c d e Fine 1994, p. 531.
  10. ^ Setton, Kenneth M.; Hazard, Harry W.; Zacour, Norman P., eds. (1989). A History of the Crusades, Volume VI: The Impact of the Crusades on Europe. Madison and London: University of Wisconsin Press. p. 287. ISBN 0-299-10740-X. Following his unsuccessful attempt on Belgrade in 1440, Murad had taken Novo Brdo with its valuable silver mines in 1441, while Turkish raiding parties plundered as far as Belgrade before being defeated by Hunyadi, who pursued them to ...
  11. ^ a b Vojni muzej JNA (1957). Vesnik. Belgrade. p. 223. Tek 1440 godine Turci su ponovo napali Novo Brdo i posle jednogodisnje opsade uspeli su da ga zauzmu 21 juna 1441 godine ... Posle toga Novo Brdo su opljaökali i popalild.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  12. ^ Angold, Michael (17 August 2006). The Cambridge History of Christianity: Volume 5, Eastern Christianity. Cambridge University Press. p. 163. ISBN 978-0-521-81113-2. Şihabeddin Pasha was the commander of the Ottoman armies which conquered Novo Brdo in 1441.
  13. ^ Imber, Colin (1990). The Ottoman empire: 1300–1481. Isis. p. 119. ISBN 978-975-428-015-9. Serbian annals record, in July, 1441, §ihabeddin Pasha captured Novo Brdo, the centre of the silver-mining district of southern Serbia.
  14. ^ Sedlar, Jean W (1 March 2011). East Central Europe in the Middle Ages, 1000-1500. University of Washington Press. p. 384. ISBN 978-0-295-80064-6. In 1441 it participated in the defense of Novo Brdo in Bosnia, the principal source of Serbian silver; and twice it gave asylum to the Serbian Despot George Brankovic when Turkish pressure forced him into exile. In 1444 Dubrovnik's fleet ...
  15. ^ Božić 1952, p. 83.
  16. ^ Glas. SANU. 1983. p. 72.
  17. ^ Slavisticheskiĭ sbornik. Matica. 1989. p. 100. ... жене Улриха Целског, а потом у Бар (Зету је jош сачувао од Турака).
  18. ^ Povijest Bosne i Hercegovine: od najstarijih vremena do godine 1463. Hrvatsko kulturno društvo Napredak. 1998. p. 497. ISBN 978-9958-840-00-5.
  19. ^ Novaković, Stojan (1966). Iz srpske istorije. Matica srpska. p. 184.
  20. ^ Mijatović, Čedomilj (1907). Despot Đurađ Branković. p. 295. Негде између 1-ог јула и доласка Деспотова у Бар Новобpдска се војска тукла с турском код Макреша.
  21. ^ Božić 1952, p. 86.
  22. ^ a b SKA (1929). Godišnjak. Vol. 38. SKA. p. 286.
  23. ^ Новаковић, Стојан (1972). Из српске историје. Matica srpska. p. 201. .. и како их је 8. маја ослепио, а потом како је јуна те године Хадом-паша узео Ново Брдо и све српске градове.
  24. ^ Odjeljenje društvenih nauka. Društvo za nauku i umjetnost Crne Gore. 1975.
  25. ^ a b Božić 1952, p. 88.
  26. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 104.
  27. ^ Setton, Kenneth M.; Hazard, Harry W.; Zacour, Norman P. (1 June 1990). A History of the Crusades: The Impact of the Crusades on Europe. Univ of Wisconsin Press. p. 267. ISBN 978-0-299-10744-4. The Ottoman conquest of Novo Brdo, a center of silver production, took place on June 27, 1441; see JireSek, Geschichte der Serben, II, 178.
  28. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 134.
  29. ^ Hercegovine, Istorisko društvo Bosne i (1954). Godišnjak. p. 72.
  30. ^ Božić 1952, p. 87.
  31. ^ Hillenbrand, Carole (2000). Studies in Honour of Clifford Edmund Bosworth, Volume II: The Sultan's Turret: Studies in Persian and Turkish Culture. Brill. p. 117. ISBN 978-90-04-11075-5.
  32. ^ Balkan studies. Édition de lA̕cadémie bulgare des sciences. 1988. p. 111. The mint at Novo brdo (in Turkish "Novar"), was the first to start striking Ottoman akçe — as early as 1441, when Murad Il's military commander, the eunuch Sibab ed-Din pasa captured the town, which had the greatest silver deposits and the ...
  33. ^ Holton, Milne; Mihailovich, Vasa D. (1988). Serbian poetry from the beginnings to the present. p. 32. ISBN 9789999034739. As a child, Dimitrije Kantakuzin experienced the siege of Novo Brdo by the Turks, which lasted for two years after the fall of Smederevo, until 1441. He saw the town fall to the Turks, and the citizens rise up again and resist. And, in 1455, when ...
  34. ^ Dusan T. Batakovic, "Kosovo and Metohija Under the Turkish Rule" (in English)
  35. ^ SANU 1980, p. 57.

Sources edit


siege, novo, brdo, 1440, 1441, siege, novo, brdopart, ottoman, wars, europe, serbian, ottoman, warsremnants, novo, brdo, fortressdateoctober, 1440, june, 1441locationnovo, brdo, serbian, despotate42, 61500, 41722, 61500, 41722resultottoman, victorybelligerents. Siege of Novo BrdoPart of the Ottoman wars in Europe and Serbian Ottoman WarsRemnants of the Novo Brdo FortressDateOctober 1440 27 June 1441LocationNovo Brdo Serbian Despotate42 36 54 N 21 25 02 E 42 61500 N 21 41722 E 42 61500 21 41722ResultOttoman victoryBelligerentsOttoman EmpireSerbian DespotateRepublic of RagusaCommanders and leadersMurad IIHadim SehabeddinĐurađ BrankovicVoivode PrijezdaCasualties and lossesUnknownheavy casualties of the population of Novo Brdo The siege of Novo Brdo was a military blockade of Novo Brdo an important fortified mining town in the Serbian Despotate by the forces of the Ottoman Empire The siege began in 1440 and lasted until the capture of the fortress on 27 June 1441 During the siege the Serbian garrison was supported by the local community of citizens of the Republic of Ragusa Contents 1 Background 2 Siege 3 Aftermath 4 Notes 5 References 6 SourcesBackground editNovo Brdo was one of the largest cities in the Balkans 1 2 and because of its rich gold and silver mines it was the most important non coastal city in the Balkans in the 14th and 15th centuries 3 The Ottomans besieged it without success in 1412 and in 1427 4 using cannons they d constructed for the 1422 siege of Constantinople 5 In 1439 Ottoman forces led by Sultan Murad II attacked the Serbian Despotate Serbian Despot Đurađ Brankovic fled to Hungary to seek support for the defense of his realm organized by his son Grgur During the siege of Smederevo the Despotate s capital city in 1439 Murad II ordered the marcher lord Ishak Beg who was returning from Mecca to join forces with Hadim Sehabeddin and besiege Novo Brdo On 6 August 1439 the Ottoman forces under Ishak Beg defeated Serbian forces near Novo Brdo 6 The Ottomans captured Smederevo on 18 August 1439 reducing the territory of the Serbian Despotate to Zeta and a region around Novo Brdo The forces under Murad II joined Ishak Beg to attack Novo Brdo but its garrison successfully repelled their attacks The Ottomans realized that it would be difficult to capture the well defended Novo Brdo so Murad II ordered for retreat and a stay in Skopje during the winter Before they did so they robbed caravans of Ragusan merchants 7 while Murad II went to Adrianople 8 The Ottomans allowed Grgur Brankovic to govern his father s former estates in southern Serbia as an Ottoman vassal 9 Siege edit nbsp The layout of the Novo Brdo Fortress In 1440 after the failure at Belgrade 10 11 the Ottoman forces commanded by the beylerbey the Lord of Lords of Rumelia Eyalet Hadim Sehabeddin 12 13 again besieged Novo Brdo 6 The garrisoned Serbian forces were also supported by citizens of the Republic of Ragusa 14 Ragusa having instructed their subjects in Novo Brdo to help defend the town Ragusans who were predominantly merchants were practically forced to resist the Ottomans because otherwise their property in Novo Brdo would be confiscated like it was in the case of Ragusan merchants who happened to be outside of the town when the siege began and refused to return to it 15 Despot Đurađ Brankovic and his wife traveled from Hungary to Zeta accompanied with several hundred cavalry and Albanian vojvoda Petar Spani 16 They first went to Zagreb to Đurađ s sister Katarina who was the wife of Ulrich II Count of Celje 17 Then Brankovic arrived at Ragusa Dubrovnik at the end of July 1440 and after several days he continued his journey toward his coastal towns of Budva and Bar 18 which became the new capital of the remaining part of his despotate In the period between 1 July 1440 and his arrival at Bar the Ottoman forces defeated some military units from Novo Brdo in a battle near Makres a village near modern day Gnjilane 19 20 In August 1440 Brankovic arrived at Bar where he stayed until the end of the winter 1440 41 9 There he tried to mobilize forces to recapture the territory of the Serbian Despotate he lost to the Ottomans 9 At the same time Brankovic maintained communication with the garrison in Novo Brdo 21 and his son Grgur who at the time was an Ottoman governor That was one of the main reasons why the Ottomans probably justifiably accused Grgur of treason and dismissed him from his governorship in April 1441 On 8 May 1441 both Grgur and his brother Stefan were blinded based on the order of Sultan Murad II 22 23 Brankovic faced another disappointment in Zeta where he found out that the Crnojevici rebelled against vojvoda Komnen the governor of Zeta 9 22 Brankovic left Zeta in April 1441 24 and resided in Ragusa for a while This angered the Ottomans who requested through their envoy Agub that Ragusa should hand over Brankovic Ragusans refused this request and explained in a letter to Ishak Beg and Hadim Sehabeddin that Ragusa has not accepted Brankovic because he was an enemy of the sultan but because it was a free city that accepts anybody who seeks shelter in it They also emphasized that Brankovic being in Ragusa is the best guarantee that he would not undertake any action against the Ottomans 25 Ragusans wanted to send their diplomats to Hadim Sehabeddin and requested his written guarantee for their safe conduct On 13 June 1441 Hadim Sehabeddin who was in Vucitrn at the time issued the requested guarantee to the Ragusans 25 During the siege of Novo Brdo its population suffered heavy casualties 26 On 27 June 1441 A Novo Brdo surrendered to the Ottoman forces who then robbed and burned the captured town 27 11 Aftermath editĐurađ Brankovic received the news about the fall of Novo Brdo when he was in Zeta Stephen Vukcic who was an Ottoman vassal at that time used the weak position of the Serbian Despot and tried to capture Zeta After he successfully penetrated into Zeta highlands the Venetian Republic captured Zeta s coastal cities and regions based on agreement with Despot Brankovic that they will protect his possessions from falling under Ottoman control 28 Brankovic realized that he lost all of his territory and power base which supplied him with troops necessary to secure his suzerainty so he moved to his estates in Hungary Eventually Zeta fell under control of the local tribes with the Crnojevici noble family trying to assert their dominance 9 The Ottomans made significant efforts to again raise Novo Brdo and gave substantial privileges to people who settled in it and worked in its mines 29 while its Serb citizens were awarded with trading privileges 30 Within the next three years the Ottomans re established the mint in Novo Brdo 31 which began to strike akce for the first time 32 In 1444 during the Crusader Long Campaign Novo Brdo was recaptured from the Ottomans and again became a part of the reestablished Serbian Despotate until it finally fell to Ottoman control on 1 June 1455 1 Among the survivors of the siege was Dimitrije Kantakouzenos 33 In 1455 the Ottomans forced the besieged to surrender because they used heavy artillery All men of any distinguished rank or importance were decapitated under orders of sultan Mehmed II An estimated 320 boys were taken to become janissaries devsirme Approximately 700 girls and young women were given to Ottoman soldiers and their commanders 34 The siege and its aftermath were described in Memoirs of a janissary written in 1490 1501 by Novo Brdo resident Konstantin Mihailovic who was one of the boys taken In 1455 the last voivode of Serbian despot in Novo Brdo was Ljes Spanovic 35 Notes edit Some Ottoman chronicles gives 1439 as year of Ottoman capture of Novo Brdo while scholarly consensus accept the other primary sources and Serbian chronicles which set 1441 as a date of the fall of Novo Brdo References edit a b Setton 1978 p 58 Singleton Frederick Bernard 1970 Yugoslavia the country and its people Queen Anne Press p 92 ISBN 9780362000481 In the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries the settlement of Novo Brdo near Pristina was described as the largest and finest city in all the Balkans Babinger 1992 p 126 Panic Surep Milorad 1965 Yugoslavia Cultural Monuments of Serbia Turisticka stampa p 149 better source needed Lev Yaacov 1997 War and Society in the Eastern Mediterranean 7th 15th Centuries BRILL p 354 ISBN 90 04 10032 6 a b Jefferson 2012 p 165 Glasnik Muzeja Kosova i Metohije Muzej 1956 p 263 Posle toga uvidevai da ce im biti tesko da osvoje bogate i dobro branjeno Novo Brdo Turci presreeu karavane Dubravcana i pljaekaju ih i zauzimaju vazne prilaze ka Novom Brdu Tek 1440 godine Turci su ponovo napali Novo Brdo i posle Solajic Dragutin 1954 Ratna proslost Beograda Beogradske novine p 47 Murat јe sa ostalom voјskom krenuo u pomoћ Isak begu pod Novo Brdo Meђutim јunachka posada Novog Brda odolevala a b c d e Fine 1994 p 531 Setton Kenneth M Hazard Harry W Zacour Norman P eds 1989 A History of the Crusades Volume VI The Impact of the Crusades on Europe Madison and London University of Wisconsin Press p 287 ISBN 0 299 10740 X Following his unsuccessful attempt on Belgrade in 1440 Murad had taken Novo Brdo with its valuable silver mines in 1441 while Turkish raiding parties plundered as far as Belgrade before being defeated by Hunyadi who pursued them to a b Vojni muzej JNA 1957 Vesnik Belgrade p 223 Tek 1440 godine Turci su ponovo napali Novo Brdo i posle jednogodisnje opsade uspeli su da ga zauzmu 21 juna 1441 godine Posle toga Novo Brdo su opljaokali i popalild a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Angold Michael 17 August 2006 The Cambridge History of Christianity Volume 5 Eastern Christianity Cambridge University Press p 163 ISBN 978 0 521 81113 2 Sihabeddin Pasha was the commander of the Ottoman armies which conquered Novo Brdo in 1441 Imber Colin 1990 The Ottoman empire 1300 1481 Isis p 119 ISBN 978 975 428 015 9 Serbian annals record in July 1441 ihabeddin Pasha captured Novo Brdo the centre of the silver mining district of southern Serbia Sedlar Jean W 1 March 2011 East Central Europe in the Middle Ages 1000 1500 University of Washington Press p 384 ISBN 978 0 295 80064 6 In 1441 it participated in the defense of Novo Brdo in Bosnia the principal source of Serbian silver and twice it gave asylum to the Serbian Despot George Brankovic when Turkish pressure forced him into exile In 1444 Dubrovnik s fleet Bozic 1952 p 83 Glas SANU 1983 p 72 Slavisticheskiĭ sbornik Matica 1989 p 100 zhene Ulriha Celskog a potom u Bar Zetu јe josh sachuvao od Turaka Povijest Bosne i Hercegovine od najstarijih vremena do godine 1463 Hrvatsko kulturno drustvo Napredak 1998 p 497 ISBN 978 9958 840 00 5 Novakovic Stojan 1966 Iz srpske istorije Matica srpska p 184 Mijatovic Cedomilj 1907 Despot Đurađ Brankovic p 295 Negde izmeђu 1 og јula i dolaska Despotova u Bar Novobpdska se voјska tukla s turskom kod Makresha Bozic 1952 p 86 a b SKA 1929 Godisnjak Vol 38 SKA p 286 Novakoviћ Stoјan 1972 Iz srpske istoriјe Matica srpska p 201 i kako ih јe 8 maјa oslepio a potom kako јe јuna te godine Hadom pasha uzeo Novo Brdo i sve srpske gradove Odjeljenje drustvenih nauka Drustvo za nauku i umjetnost Crne Gore 1975 a b Bozic 1952 p 88 Cirkovic 2004 p 104 Setton Kenneth M Hazard Harry W Zacour Norman P 1 June 1990 A History of the Crusades The Impact of the Crusades on Europe Univ of Wisconsin Press p 267 ISBN 978 0 299 10744 4 The Ottoman conquest of Novo Brdo a center of silver production took place on June 27 1441 see JireSek Geschichte der Serben II 178 Cirkovic 2004 p 134 Hercegovine Istorisko drustvo Bosne i 1954 Godisnjak p 72 Bozic 1952 p 87 Hillenbrand Carole 2000 Studies in Honour of Clifford Edmund Bosworth Volume II The Sultan s Turret Studies in Persian and Turkish Culture Brill p 117 ISBN 978 90 04 11075 5 Balkan studies Edition de lA cademie bulgare des sciences 1988 p 111 The mint at Novo brdo in Turkish Novar was the first to start striking Ottoman akce as early as 1441 when Murad Il s military commander the eunuch Sibab ed Din pasa captured the town which had the greatest silver deposits and the Holton Milne Mihailovich Vasa D 1988 Serbian poetry from the beginnings to the present p 32 ISBN 9789999034739 As a child Dimitrije Kantakuzin experienced the siege of Novo Brdo by the Turks which lasted for two years after the fall of Smederevo until 1441 He saw the town fall to the Turks and the citizens rise up again and resist And in 1455 when Dusan T Batakovic Kosovo and Metohija Under the Turkish Rule in English SANU 1980 p 57 Sources editBabinger Franz 1992 Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 01078 1 Bozic Ivan 1952 Dubrovnik i Turska u XIV i XV veku Nauchna kњiga Cirkovic Sima 2004 The Serbs Malden Blackwell Publishing ISBN 9781405142915 Fine John V A Jr 1994 1987 The Late Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press ISBN 0 472 08260 4 Jefferson John 2012 The Holy Wars of King Wladislas and Sultan Murad The Ottoman Christian Conflict from 1438 1444 BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 21904 5 SANU 1980 Glas Setton Kenneth M 1978 The Papacy and the Levant 1204 1571 Volume II The Fifteenth Century Philadelphia The American Philosophical Society ISBN 0 87169 127 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Siege of Novo Brdo 1440 1441 amp oldid 1178875944, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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