fbpx
Wikipedia

Tetovo

Tetovo (Macedonian: Тетово, [ˈtɛtɔvɔ] , Albanian: Tetovë/Tetova, Turkish: Kalkandelen) is a city in the northwestern part of North Macedonia, built on the foothills of Šar Mountain and divided by the Pena River. The municipality of Tetovo covers an area of 1,080 km2 (417 sq mi) at 468 meters (1,535 ft) above sea level, with a population of 63,176.[1] The city of Tetovo is the seat of Tetovo Municipality.

Tetovo
Тетово (Macedonian)
Tetovë (Albanian)
From top: View over Tetovo, Isa Beg Hammam, Arabati Baba Teḱe, Painted Mosque, Church of St Cyril and Methodius, Popova Šapka, Urban Tetovo, Baltepe Fortress, Tetovo centre.
Location in Northwestern North Macedonia.
Tetovo
Location within Republic of North Macedonia
Tetovo
Tetovo (Balkans)
Coordinates: 42°00′N 20°58′E / 42.000°N 20.967°E / 42.000; 20.967
Country North Macedonia
Region Polog
Municipality Tetovo
Government
 • MayorBilal Kasami (Besa Movement)
Area
 • Total1,068 km2 (412 sq mi)
Elevation
468 m (1,535 ft)
Population
 (2021)[citation needed]
 • Total63,176
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
1200
Area code+389 044
Car platesTE
ClimateCfb
Websitetetovo.gov.mk
.

Tetovo was founded in the 14th century on the place of the ancient town of Oaeneon.[2]

In the 15th c. AD, Tetovo came under Ottoman rule for about five centuries. After its conquest by the Ottomans, most of city's population converted to Islam and many Ottoman-style structures were built, such as the Šarena Džamija and the Arabati Baba Teḱe, which still stand as two of North Macedonia's most significant landmarks of its Ottoman period. During this period, the town belonged to the Vilayet of Kosovo, became a firearm and cannon foundry, and was renamed Kalkandelen (meaning Shield Penetrator); as a result, the town attracted many workers and grew to a city. Following the World Wars, Tetovo became a part of Yugoslavia and, later, the Republic of Macedonia.[3]

South East European University, North Macedonia's third largest university after Skopje and Bitola, is located in Tetovo.[4] Tetovo is also home to the State University of Tetovo.

Name Edit

In early antiquity, Tetovo was first mentioned as Oaeneum (Ωαινέον in Ancient Greek).[5][6][7][failed verification] The region was referred to as Htetovo in a Serbian Charter.[8] During the Ottoman rule the name of the town was Kalkandelen.

History Edit

Prehistory Edit

There have been archaeological discoveries near Tetovo which date back to the Bronze Age (2200-1200BC). In North Macedonia, the oldest artefact, a Mycenae sword from the Bronze Age, was found outside Tetovo.[4][9]

Early antiquity Edit

 
'One-Eyed' Bridge. One of Tetovo's remaining stone bridges

The early inhabitants of Oaeneum were the Penestae,[5][7] an Illyrian tribe that controlled the regions of Oaeneum, Draudacum (Gostivar), Uskana (Kicevo), Divra (Debar) and the main outlets towards Styberra (Prilep) in northern Pelagonia.[7] Remote though it was, the territory of the Penestae had strategic importance. It provided one of the few passages from Illyria to Macedonia and Dardania to Macedonia via Oaeneum-Draudacum-Uskana-Styberra. In the period of 800–550 BC, the Dardani broke into Pelagonia via Tetovo and Gostivar and pushed the Phrygian Bridges there into the northern hills.[7] It is probable that they overran Lyncus, Eordaea and Edessa.[7]

In 171 BC, Gentius was allied with the Romans against the Macedonians, and together in 170 BC, the Romans led by Appius Claudius were on the verge of victory. However, Gentius in 169 BC changed sides and allied himself with Perseus of Macedon and led his army to a victory over the Romans in Uskana via Oaeneum.[6] In 169 BC, Oaeneum fell into the hands of the Romans again. The Penestae were generally allied with the Romans. After the conquest of Uskana, Perseus marched his army towards Oaeneum. The location of the town was a good one, and in particular there was a pass there to the Labeatae, Gentius' kingdom.[6] One of Perseus' men familiar with the area said there was no point in taking Oaeneum unless he controlled Draudacum. Perseus took Draudacum with ease. However, when Perseus reached Oaeneum, it could not be taken without a full-scale assault.[6] Its strength lay in having rather more men of military age than other places, in the fortified walls of the town, and in being enclosed on one side be a river and on the other by a mountain which was very high and difficult of access.[6] These factors gave the townspeople some hope of resisting. Perseus invested the town and began constructing a ramp on the upper side of the city; its height would bring him up over the city walls. As soon as the ramp reached the city wall, the assault began and led to Perseus capturing Oaeneum.[10] The town was plundered[11] and the adult males were slaughtered.[6]

Roman period Edit

Oaeneum remained with in Illyricum until Diocletian's reform and Oaeneum became a part of Epirus Nova in the 4th century AD.[12]

 
Tetovo's old market square, known as Gorna Čaršija

Christianity spread to Oaeneum during the later period of Roman invasion and reached the region relatively early. St Paul preached the Gospel in the region.[13] In the 2nd to the 4th centuries, the main language to spread the Christian religion was Latin.[14]

Middle Ages Edit

In the 13th and 14th centuries, Byzantine control was punctuated by periods of Bulgarian and Serbian rule. Konstantin Asen ruled as Tsar of the Bulgarian Empire from 1257 to 1277. Later the region was overrun and taken by Serbian Tsar Stefan Dušan. In a document dated between 1348 and 1353, Dušan restored the Lešok Monastery and gifted the monastery entire Albanian-populated villages, as well as the Nanov Dol highlands.[15][16] Stefan Dušan also forbade agricultural and livestock activity in the Nanov Dol highlands for state pasture tax collectors, Albanians and Vlachs.[16][17]

The initial Ottoman occupation did not last as Skanderbeg and his Albanian force with aid from Tetovo, took on the Ottoman forces led by Ibrahim Pasha in the Battle of Polog. Skanderbeg slayed Ibrahim Pasha, who was an old friend of his during his time with the Ottomans. Tetovo came under Albanian control. In August 1462, After Skanderbeg defeated Ottoman forces under Hasan bey in Mokra, Isuf bey went to move against Skanderbeg. Isuf bey marched out with 18,000 troops to Skopje. From there, he marched onto Polog near Tetovo. Skanderbeg attacked and annihilated Isuf's force and the Pasha fled, leaving his army behind to be reduced.[18]

Ottoman Period Edit

 
Tetovo 1913, one year after independence from the Ottoman Empire

During the Ottoman period, the town was known as Kalkandelen, which means Shield Penetrator, in honor of the local weapon-smiths.[4]

During the early 19th century, Abdurrahman Pasha, a prominent Albanian landowner, beautified the city of Tetovo, refurbishing many estates including the notable landmarks such as the Colored Mosque, the Teke and the Baltepe fortress.[19] In the 19th century, the Russian diplomat Ivan Jastrebov spoke highly of Tetovo's climate, liking the mild snowy winters, sunny and comfortably warm summers. The traveler Ami Bue described Tetovo as a very clean city.[20]

 
Šarena Džamija, built in the early 15th century

In the Ottoman Empire, Tetovo came under the Vilayet of Kosovo and was orientated towards Albanians and the Albanian struggle for independence from Ottoman rule.[4] In 1843, the Uprising of Dervish Cara led to Albanians revolting against the Sultan due their disagreement with the Tanzimat reforms. Tetovo was liberated by Dervish Cara from January 1844 until September 1844, where Omar Pasha defeated the rebel forces and Tetovo remained within the Ottoman Empire.[citation needed]

Albanian diplomat Mid'hat Frashëri , in his work "Pjesa kombiare" writes that due to the pressure of Turkey, Greece and Serbia, a part of the Albanian population lost their mother tongue. "The people of Gjinokastra speak Greek and in Tetovo and Prizren [they speak] Turkish and Slavic".[21]

During the World Wars Edit

 
The Albanian National Meeting in the city of Tetovo, 1944(center left, Xhem Hasa and center right, Mefail Shehu)

During the breakup of the Ottoman Empire, Tetovo came under Albanian control by forces led by Hasan Prishtina. From a period between 1913 and 1915, during the Balkan war, the Serbian Army captured Tetovo and the entire region of what is today North Macedonia became known as "South Serbia" as part of the Kingdom of Serbia.[citation needed]

During World War I, a rift occurred between Bulgaria and Serbia. The Bulgarian army started making way through the area and annexed Tetovo and the rest of the Macedonia region.[22] At the end of the war Serbia regained control of the region. Within the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, Tetovo was part of the Vardar Banovina from 1929 to 1941.

In 1941, the Vardar Banovina ceased to exist as a result of the Axis occupation of Yugoslavia. Tetovo once again came under Albanian rule. The Balli Kombëtar ruled Tetovo with military and financial aid from the Axis powers. The Albanian national flag was raised in Tetovo, the Albanian Franc was introduced as the official currency as well as the official language and education facilities in Albanian.[citation needed]

 
Tetovo Gorna Čaršija

Against the background of a large-scale offensive operations of the Bulgarian army aimed at Nis, Skopje and Pristina,[23][24] the city was the last to be seized by the Macedonian partisans on November 19, 1944. Several Macedonian partisan shock brigades fought for control of the city with German forces and the Balli Kombëtar. Part of the fighters were ethnic Macedonians that split from ELAS to form the First Macedonian Shock Brigade.[25] According to Macedonian veterans from the 8th Veles Shock Brigade who participated in the fighting, the operation in Tetovo was well-planned and the enemy resistance was weakened due to the inevitability of the German defeat and the good organization and equipment of the partisans.[26]

After the Germans had been driven out, the communist authorities ordered the collection of weapons but this order was not well received.[27] In Tetovo, the remaining Ballists tried to retain their control after the Yugoslav Partisans announced victory.[28] As result an armed uprising of massive proportions broke in the area led by the Balli Kombëtar, which aimed to resist the incorporation of the region into communist Yugoslavia. It was only in July 1945 that the Yugoslav Partisans were able to push down the uprising and re-establish their control.

SFR Yugoslavia Edit

 
The house of Halim bey Dëralla. Confiscated under the socialist Yugoslav regime and turned into a healthcare facility

The town became part of the Socialist Republic of Macedonia. The early years of Socialist Yugoslavia were turbulent for Tetovo's Albanian population. Many were subjected to repression, causing many to emigrate.[4] Those who remained demonstrated periodically but violently against the socialist Yugoslav regime, notably in the Yucel Incident of 1957[4] and the Tetovo Incident of 1968.[4] Many of these protest were led by Mehmet Gega, a notable Albanian rights activist who was sentenced to ten years in prison. In the 1968 demonstrations, The Tetovar Albanians demanded for the attachment of the Albanian areas of Socialist Republic of Macedonia to Kosovo and their joint reconstitution as a seventh republic of Yugoslavia.[29] The authorities rejected this demand and instead authorised the revision of syllabuses and textbooks in order to curb what it called ‘‘The penetration of Albanian nationalistic, irredentist and counter-revolutionary tendencies through printed textbooks and other literature.’’ In 1974, a new federal constitution was ratified which eased the tension of the local Albanians.[29] The government of Yugoslavia viewed these demonstrations as the first stage in an Albanian plot aimed at eventually separating these areas, and joining them with neighboring Albania. SR Macedonia imposed harder prison sentences than the authorities in Kosovo.[30]

 
Tetovo's Old Mosque, demolished during socialist Yugoslavia

Tetovo under Josip Broz Tito's Yugoslavia went through major changes. Many Yugoslav Brutalist styled apartments were built around the city centre of Tetovo as well as concrete roads. New suburbs such as the Hajdućka suburb were formed to help accommodate the rising number of Macedonians moving to the city.[31] Some of the city's historic buildings, such as the Old Mosque, were demolished by the authorities.

When troubles in neighbouring Kosovo began in 1981, Tetovo had to be put under control of paramilitary police due to the rioting and show of sympathy with the Kosovar Albanians. The same happened again in 1989.[4]

Break up of Yugoslavia Edit

 
The Bektashi Teḱe, Arabati Baba Teḱe

When it became obvious in 1990 that Yugoslavia was about to fall, over 2,000 ethnic Albanians marched through Tetovo demanding secession from the Socialist Republic of Macedonia and unity with Albania. Self-determination of an ethnic minority within a state was not a right under the Socialist Republic of Macedonia's constitution,[4] and protesting their lack of representation under the constitution of a new Republic of Macedonia, the Albanians of Macedonia boycotted the referendum on independence from Yugoslavia and were thus excluded from almost any representation in the new government.[4] Tetovo became headquarters of the new Albanian political parties, which were regarded as unconstitutional by the Republic of Macedonia. Tensions worsened, Tetovo, along with the city of Gostivar, took in and sheltered several thousands of Bosnian Muslim refugees from 1992 until the end of the Bosnian war.[32] Prior to the NATO bombing of Serb forces in Kosovo, Tetovo became the rear supply base for the Kosovo Liberation Army,[4] and then later home to over 100,000 Kosovar refugees from the Kosovo war.[32] In 1997, Alajdin Demiri, the mayor of Tetovo, was jailed for raising the double headed eagle flag of Albania from Tetovo town hall, and by 2000 the outbreak of hostilities in Tanusevci had spilled into the towns of Tetovo and Gostivar.[4] In 2001, ethnic Albanians launched an insurgency, with Tetovo being the main backdrop of the war. Fortunately, the Ohrid Agreement was established, allowing peace to return to the city again.

Present-day Edit

 
Church of St. Nicholas in Tetovo
 
Šarena Džamija Park

In economic terms Tetovo is one of the most developing cities in North Macedonia with some multinational companies (Ecolog International, Mercure Tetovo, Renova, Kipper) being located in this town. Despite the interest of private companies in Tetovo, the city is neglected by the government. Tetovo suffers from urban sprawl. Due to the lack of government regulations, the city has no system for building permits, and many houses and buildings have been built unsafely and randomly along footpaths, roads and in parks. Air pollution levels are among the highest in Europe.[33]

The tallest building in the city is Mercure Tetovo measuring about 80 meters in height.

Tetovo is one of the educational centres in North Macedonia hosting two universities South East European University (Public Private Non-profitable) and State University of Tetovo (Public University). The prior one has educational leadership in the region, whereat the Bologna Process is applicable since its establishment, has the best campus in the region of South East Europe and is trend with international developments in education. More than 20,000 students get their education and degrees in Tetovo.

In addition, Tetovo is a centre of ethnic Albanian politics. Most Albanian political parties on North Macedonia (Democratic Party of Albanians (DPA), Democratic Union for Integration (DUI) and the Party for Democratic Prosperity (PDP)) have their main seats there.

Tetovo has one of the highest crime rates in North Macedonia, second only to the much larger capital Skopje. The city was home to 1,229 criminal acts in the first half of 2009.[34]

On 6 July 2014, violent protests occurred in the town where about 600 youths hurled stones Sunday at police outside the headquarters of the Democratic Union for Integration, an ethnic Albanian junior partner in parliament. The protesters were disillusioned and frustrated with their political representatives Ali Ahmeti and Menduh Thaçi and the political parties. Police dispersed the crowd by force. There was no violence reported at any other protests in the country.[35]

On September 8, 2021, at least fourteen people were killed in an explosion at a COVID-19 center.[36]

Culture Edit

 
The Painted Mosque.

Tetovo has been under many different empires; from the Mycenae and Illyrians, to the Romans, Byzantines and Ottomans, giving the city a vast range of diverse cultures. The museum of Tetovo, established in 1950, contains history of Tetovo and is situated in the Memorial House of Central Committee of the Communist Party of Macedonia.

Landmarks Edit

Tetovo Municipality is home to 15 sites designated as Cultural Heritage by the Ministry of Culture, of which 14 are within the city limits of Tetovo. Nine of these are historic homes.[37]

The main attractions of Tetovo are its historic areas and structures. The Šarena Mosque ("The Painted Mosque") is located near the Pena River in the old part of town. The mosque was built in 1438 and rebuilt in 1833 by Abdurrahman Pasha, the son of Rexhep Pasha. It is one of the most important cultural and historical structures of Tetovo and represents the style of early Ottoman architecture. The painted mosque continues to be an important monument to the residents of Tetovo, and is the main tourist attraction for many foreign visitors.

Sitting directly across the Pena River from the Šarena Mosque is Tetovo's Ottoman-era hamam, known as the Čifte Hamam or Bey's Hamam. It was built in the late 15th/early 16th century. Declared a monument of cultural heritage,[38] it houses the Tetovo Art Gallery.[39] The building was renovated between 2012 and 2015.[40]

 
The Čifte Hamam next to the Pena River in Tetovo

The Tetovo Fortress, located on the top of the Baltepe Hill, above Tetovo was built in 1820 from Abdurrahman Pasha. The Baltepes had a series of tunnels from all the main Ottoman houses in the town leading to the fortress. The thinking behind the tunnel system was to enable the defenders of the fortress to escape behind enemy lines if the fortress was besieged, allowing the besiegers themselves to be encircled. The last tunnel collapsed in the 1960s and since excavation started, two of the tunnels, to Selce and Lavce, have been found. Many local stories and myths, such as "The Tale of the Water Pump", are set at Baltepe as they focus on the three-year stay of Abdurrahman Pasha of Tetovo in the fortress of Baltepe, located on the "cold and dark" Shar Mountains. The old settlement of Oaeneum is believed to be located around where the fortress of Baltepe resides.

 
The Baltepe Fortress

The Arabati Baba Teḱe originally built in 1538 around the türbe of Sersem Ali Baba, an Ottoman dervish. In 1799, a waqf provided by Rexhep Pasha established the current grounds of the tekke. The finest surviving Bektashi monastery in Europe, the sprawling complex features flowered lawns, prayer rooms, dining halls, lodgings and a great marble fountain inside a wooden pavilion.

The Alim Bey House is an historic estate in Tetovo. Along with the Saraj in Resen, it is among the more prominent examples of lodgings built by wealthy Ottoman pashas and beys in North Macedonia that were constructed in Western-inspired architecture. The Alim Bey House is an asymmetrical estate built in the neo-Baroque style with decorated façades, ornate friezes, and the use of various geometric shapes including a hexagonal tower. The three-story home is a protected monument of cultural heritage.[41] The building functioned as a hospital until 1993. Renovation works funded by Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Macedonia occurred in 2016.[42]

The Museum of the Tetovo Region is housed within the historic Goce Stojčevski house. The museum was established in 1950, originally situated in the Arabati Baba Tekke complex. It contains archaeological, ethnological, historical, and art exhibits.[43] The house is where Macedonian partisan Goce Stojčevski - Ambarče was born in 1919.

 
Popova Šapka Ski Resort

Other notable historical features from the Ottoman period in Tetovo are The Saat Mosque ("The Clock Mosque") as the name implies it used to have a clock in its minaret, and the Kumluk Mosque ("The Sandy Mosque"), an old mosque in the upper bazaar area of Tetovo. The name is derived from the reddish-yellow exterior of the mosque.

An example of Byzantine culture outside of Tetovo Municipality is the Monastery of Lešok. The monastery is 8 km (5 mi) northeast of Tetovo. In its complex are the churches of St. Athanasius of Alexandria and the Holy Mother of God Church. The Church of the Holy Virgin, built in 1326, is an excellent example of Byzantine style and architectural tradition.

Popova Šapka is a ski resort located in the Šar Mountains. Despite being around seven kilometres (4.3 miles) from the city, it is generally associated with Tetovo. Popova Šapka attracts many tourists in winter due it being one of the popular ski resorts in the former Yugoslavia. Aside from hosting recreational and competitive skiing competitions, Popova Šapka has many villas and restaurants to accommodate visitors. The rise in hotels was because the cable car that took people from Tetovo to Popova Šapka was destroyed during the 2001 Macedonia conflict. Therefore, people stay at Popova Šapka overnight before returning to Tetovo.

There are three stone bridges in Tetovo and each cross the Pena river; one of these, which connects Goce Stojčeski Street one block downstream of the Šarena Mosque, is listed as an Object of Cultural Heritage.[37] The bridges are some of the oldest structures in Tetovo. Most of the old heritage buildings are situated in the old town, near the centre of Tetovo. Tetovo has many old buildings and monuments however, they are endangered of being demolished by people building unpermitted buildings

Cuisine Edit

Tetovo is home of the dish Tavče Gravče, known locally in Tetovo as Tavë me Groshë. During Socialist Yugoslavia, the dish was known around the country as Tetovski Gravče, in reference to the city of Tetovo, where the dish originates. Although different varieties of the meal are made around Balkans, the traditional Tetovo tavče gravče is cooked and served in a terracotta pot.

Most cuisines in Tetovo have a strong Ottoman influence or foundation such as Ajvar, Sujuk and Gevrek. Tetovo is known for its barbecue restaurants, Qebaptorë, where Ćevapi and Pljeskavica (including Shar Pljeskavica" (Šarska pljeskavica), stuffed with kashkaval cheese). Byrektorës, pastry restaurants, are also common in Tetovo and produce Burek. Ëmbëltore, sweet shops, produce locally made traditional sweets such as Lukum, Tulumba, Kataif and Baklava. Boza is also fermented in Tetovo and is a common beverage consumed.

The cuisines in Tetovo have a unique taste and flavour due to the local agricultural products used to make the cuisines. In North Macedonia, Tetovo Kashkaval cheese is the most popular as it is made naturally from sheep's milk from the Šar Mountains. During the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, apples from Tetovo were popular in Belgrade and were known as Tetovo Jabuka.

Albanians from the Macedonian region of Polog, a conurbation of villages between Tetovo and Gostivar, specialised in confectionary, ice-cream and general hospitality businesses like cafes and grills around Yugoslavia.[44] It was even stereotyped in Yugoslavia.[44]

Sports Edit

 
Ecolog Arena.

The most popular sport in Tetovo is Football. Tetovo is represented by four clubs of which three play in the Macedonian First League. FK Shkëndija, supported by the majority of the Albanians living in Tetovo. FK Renova, mainly supported by Albanians but has significant Macedonian support, and are based in Džepčište. FK Teteks is the team supported by the Macedonians living in Tetovo. FK Ljuboten is another football club based in Tetovo and is the oldest football club in North Macedonia.[45]

FK Drita currently play in the Treta Liga, however, they are in located in the outskirts of Tetovo in a village named Bogovinje. FK Vrapčište currently plays in the Treta Liga, however, they are in located in the outskirts of Tetovo in the village named Vrapčište.

Wrestling, karate and volleyball are also fairly popular sports in Tetovo. Wrestling plays an important part of the sports culture in Tetovo. Highlanders from the villages of the Šar Mountains brought with them their traditional wrestling culture into the city and established wrestling clubs of the freestyle. Traditional wrestling competitions are always held once a year at Popova Šapka in the Šar Mountain during the summer. Few volleyball teams are active in the volleyball league of North Macedonia: Škendija, Bami Kor Medika, etc.

Demographics Edit

Between the years 1348-1353, Albanians are mentioned by Serbian Tsar Stefan Dušan as farmers and soldiers in the district of Tetovo.[46]

Ottoman statistics from 1452 for the nahiya of Tetovo recorded 146 Christian and 60 Muslim households. In 1453, the population consisted of 153 Christian and 56 Muslim families.[47] The 1455 defter recorded Albanian presence.[48] The 1467 Ottoman defter records of Tetovo attests that the Muslim neighborhood of Tetovo was inhabited by 6 heads of families with mixed anthroponyms of Islamic Albanian character, while the Christian quarter of Tetovo was characterized with Slavic-Christian and Albanian-Christian names, with some cases of Slavicisation.[49]

In 1468, Tetovo had 180 Christian and 41 Muslim families.[50] In 1545 there were 99 Christian and 101 Muslim families (38 were islamicised) in Tetovo, and in 1568 there were 108 Christian and 329 Muslim (184 islamicised).[47]

By the 19th century, when the population of Tetovo began to increase with settlement from the surrounding villages, the French traveler Ami Boue noted that the population had reached about 4,500 people, which are Bulgarians and Albanians.[51] The total population of the Pashalik of Tetovo is 30,000–40,000 and consists of Bulgarians who are Eastern Orthodox and of Albanian who are Muslims.[52] According to British diplomat and traveller Aubrey Herbert, and English traveller Austen Henry Layard, the majority of the inhabitants of Tetovo were Albanian.[53][54] Turkish sources cite that three-quarters of the population of Tetovo during the Ottoman period were Albanian.[55]

According to the statistics of the Bulgarian ethnographer Vasil Kanchov in 1900 the population of Tetovo was 19,200 consisting of 8,500 Bulgarians, 9,000 Turks, 500 Arnauts and 1,200 Romani.[56] Kanchov wrote that many Albanians declared themselves as Turks. In Tetovo the population that declared itself Turkish "was of Albanian blood", but it "had been Turkified after the Ottoman invasion, including Skanderbeg", referring to Islamization.[21]

In 1916, under the Kingdom of Bulgaria, the Bulgarian registries had recorded that Tetovo had a population of 22,000. Two-thirds of this population was listed as Albanian and one-third consisted of Bulgarian and Serbian.[57]

According to the 1942 Albanian census, Tetovo was inhabited by 10,252 Muslim Albanians, 3,496 Bulgarians and 2,136 Serbs.[58]

Under Kingdom of Yugoslavia, a crackdown on Albanians forced many from Tetovo to immigrate to the US and Canada, while thousands of Serbs were encouraged to move into the town to develop the mining and hydro-electric industries.[4] Orthodox churches were built, skiing and pony trekking started in the Sar Mountains and White Russian settlers arrived;[4]

As of 2021, the city of Tetovo has 63,176 inhabitants and the ethnic composition was the following:[59]

  • Albanians – 41,356 (65.5%)
  • Macedonians – 14,116 (22.3%)
  • Persons for whom data are taken from administrative sources - 3,326 (5.3%)
  • Roma – 1,877 (3.0%)
  • Turks – 1,745 (2.8%)
  • Serbs – 248 (0.4%)
  • Bosniaks – 188 (0.3%)
  • others – 290 (0.5%)
City of Tetovo population according to ethnic group 1948–2021[60][61]
Ethnic
group
census 1948 census 1953 census 1961 census 1971 census 1981 census 1994 census 2002 census 2021
Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number %
Macedonians .. .. 7,575 37.5 11,631 45,9 14,415 40.3 17,817 38.3 19,439 38.6 18,555 35.1 14,116 22.3
Albanians .. .. 7,155 35.4 6,435 25.4 15,388 43.1 21,741 46.7 25,128 49.9 28,897 54.7 41,356 65.5
Turks .. .. 4,470 22.1 5,864 23.1 3,543 9.9 2,757 5.9 2,073 4.1 1,878 3.6 1,745 2.8
Romani .. .. 227 1.1 0 0.0 823 2.3 1,709 3.7 2,260 4.5 2,352 4.5 1,877 3.0
Vlachs .. .. 11 0.1 0 0.0 0 0.0 4 0.0 18 0.0 13 0.0 10 0.0
Serbs .. .. 481 2.4 839 3.3 920 2.6 877 1.9 830 1.7 587 1.1 248 0.4
Bosniaks .. .. 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 156 0.3 188 0.3
Others .. .. 290 1.4 588 2.3 656 1.8 1,618 3.5 596 1.2 477 0.9 290 0.5
PWDTFAS* 3,326 5.3
Total 17,132 20,209 25,357 35,745 46,523 50,344 52,915 63,176
  • PWDTFAS-Persons for whom data are taken from administrative sources

Notable people from Tetovo Edit

Honorary citizens Edit

International relations Edit

Twin towns – Sister cities Edit

Tetovo is twinned with:

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "2002 Census results" (PDF).
  2. ^ Thammy Evans, Philip Briggs, Bradt Travel Guides, 2019, North Macedonia, ISBN 1784770841, p. 164.
  3. ^ Trankova, Dimana (2011). . Balkan Traveller. Archived from the original on 2 October 2011.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Evans, Thammy (2012). Macedonia. Bradt Travel Guides Ltd, IDC House, The Vale, Chalfront St Peter, Bucks SL9 9RZ, England: The Globe Pequot Press Inc. pp. 238–239. ISBN 978-1-84162-395-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  5. ^ a b Smith, William (2012). Dictionary of Greek and Roman geography, Volume 2. p. 457. Retrieved 26 February 2013.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Livy (2012). Rome's Mediterranean Empire : Books 41-45 and the Periochae: Books 41-45. great Clarendon street Oxford ox2 6dp: Oxford University Press. p. 113. ISBN 978-0-19-283340-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  7. ^ a b c d e Hammond, N. G. L. (1988). A History of Macedonia Volume III: 336-167 B.C. great clarendon street oxford ox2 6dp: oxford university press. ISBN 978-0-19-814815-9. Retrieved 26 February 2013.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  8. ^ Balkanološki institut (Srpska akademija nauka i umetnosti), Srpska akademija nauka i umetnosti (2008). Balcanica. p. 62.
  9. ^ Hawkes, C.F.C (29 January 2018). The European Community in Later Prehistory: Studies in Honour of C. F. C. Hawkes. routledge library editions archaeology. ISBN 9781315515519. Retrieved 8 December 2018.
  10. ^ Pritchett, William Kendrick (2012). The Greek State at War: Part V. Berkeley and Los Angeles, California: University of California Press. p. 437. ISBN 978-0-520-07374-6.
  11. ^ Venning, Timothy (2012). A Chronology of the Roman Empire. the tower building 11 York road London se1 7nx: continuum international publishing group. p. 148. ISBN 9781441154781.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  12. ^ VICKERS, MIRANDA (1988). Between Serb and Albanian A History of Kosovo. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-814815-9. Retrieved 26 February 2013.
  13. ^ Schnabel, Sckhard. Paul the Missionary: Realities, Strategies, and Methods. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2008. p. 113.
  14. ^ Lloshi p. 92
  15. ^ Iseni, Bashkim (25 January 2008). La question nationale en Europe du Sud-Est : genèse, émergence et développement de l'indentité nationale albanaise au Kosovo et en Macédoine. Bern: P. Lang. p. 77. ISBN 978-3039113200.
  16. ^ a b Koprivica, Marija. "Hrisovulja kralja Stefana Dušana Htetovskom manastiru, Stari srpski arhiv 13 (2014), 143-179". Archive of Serbia.
  17. ^ Gashi, Skender (2014). Emrat e Shqiptareve ne Shek. XIII-XV ne driten e burimeve kishtare Serbe. Prishtina: Shtepia Botuese "Tenda". p. 35.
  18. ^ Franco p. 329.
  19. ^ Dankoff, Robert (2001). An Ottoman Mentality: The World of Evliya Çelebi. Koninklijke Brill. pp. 55–. ISBN 90-04-13715-7.
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 January 2014.
  21. ^ a b Salajdin SALIHI. "DISA SHËNIME PËR SHQIPTARËT ORTODOKSË TË REKËS SË EPËRME". FILOLOGJIA - International Journal of Human Sciences 19:85-90.
  22. ^ . Tetova1. Archived from the original on 21 December 2014. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  23. ^ Noel Malcolm, Kosovo: A Short History, New York University Press, 1998, pp. 310-313, ISBN 0814755984.
  24. ^ Livanios, Dimitris, 'The Difficult Withdrawal: Britain and the Bulgarian Army in Yugoslav and Greek Macedonia, September–December 1944', The Macedonian Question: Britain and the Southern Balkans 1939-1949, Oxford Historical Monographs (Oxford, 2008; online edn, Oxford Academic, 1 May 2008), https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199237685.003.0004, accessed 5 September 2022.
  25. ^ "19 ноември 1944, ослободување на Тетово од фашистичкиот окупатор". Kajgana.com (in Macedonian). Retrieved 4 September 2022. На денешен ден, 19 ноември, во 1944 година, Тетово е ослободено во Втората светска војна од страна на Третата, Тринаесеттата, Четиринаесеттата и Деветнаесеттата македонска бригада, како последен ослободен град на територијата на Македонија. [On this day, November 19, 1944, Tetovo was liberated in the Second World War by the Third, Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Nineteenth Macedonian Brigades, as the last liberated city on the territory of Macedonia.] а во Егејскиот дел на Македонија биле формирани Костурско-леринскиот баталјон, Воденскиот македонски баталјон и потоа Првата егејска бригада, која зела учество во борбите за ослободување на Тетовско и Гостиварско. [and in the Aegean part of Macedonia, the Kostur-Lerin Battalion, the Voden Macedonian Battalion and then the First Aegean Brigade, which took part in the battles for the liberation of Tetovo and Gostivar, were formed.]
  26. ^ "ТЕТОВО ПО 15 ГОДИНИ ПОВТОРНО ГО ОДБЕЛЕЖА ДЕНОТ НА ОСЛОБОДУВАЊЕТО ОД ФАШИСТИЧКАТА ОКУПАЦИЈА". 19 November 2019. Retrieved 4 September 2022. Јас како борец на Осмата велешка ударна бригада директно учествував во ослободувањето на Тетово. Тоа беше добро осмислена акција на Народно-ослободителната војска. Градот го нападнавме од неколку страни. Отпорот на балистите и на фашистите, кои тогаш го држеа Тетово, беше многу слаб. Видоа дека војната е изгубена и дека ние сме добро организирана и вооружена воена сила и затоа не дадоа некој поголем отпор, туку побегнаа од градот. Ослободувањето на Тетово има и една друга димензија. Тетово беше последен град во Македонија кој беше ослободен од фашистичкиот окупатор и од домашните предавници, па неговото ослободување воедно значеше и ослободување на цела Македонија", се сеќава д-р Никола Стојановски, претседател на Сојузот на борците на Македонија. [As a fighter of the Eighth Veles Shock Brigade, I directly participated in the liberation of Tetovo. It was a well thought out action of the People's Liberation Army. We attacked the city from several sides. The resistance of the Balli Kombetar and the fascists, who then held Tetovo, was very weak. They saw that the war was lost and that we were a well-organized and well-armed military force, and therefore they did not put up any major resistance, but fled the city. The liberation of Tetovo has another dimension. Tetovo was the last town in Macedonia to be freed from the fascist occupier.]
  27. ^ P. Ramet, Sabrina (2006). The Three Yugoslavias: State-building and Legitimation, 1918–2005. Indiana University Press. p. 156. ISBN 0253346568.
  28. ^ "Zemra Shqiptare". zemrashqiptare.net. Retrieved 5 September 2022.
  29. ^ a b Ramet, Sabrina P. (1997). Whose Democracy?: Nationalism, Religion, and the Doctrine of Collective Rights in Post-1989 Eastern Europe. 4720 Boston Way, Lanham, Maryland 20706: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. p. 78. ISBN 0-8476-8324-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  30. ^ Poulton, Hugh (2000). Who are the Macedonians?. 38 King Street, London WC2E 8JT: C. Hurst & Co. p. 126. ISBN 1-85065-534-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  31. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 July 2011. Retrieved 5 November 2010.
  32. ^ a b John Sparrow. "International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies". Retrieved 10 March 2011.
  33. ^ Van Mead, Nick (13 February 2017). "Tipping point: revealing the cities where exercise does more harm than good". The Guardian. Retrieved 13 February 2017.
  34. ^ . macedoniaonline.eu. Archived from the original on 15 February 2019. Retrieved 6 August 2009.
  35. ^ . Archived from the original on 20 July 2014. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  36. ^ "UZNEMIRUJUĆI SNIMCI - STRADALO NAJMANJE 14 OSOBA: Detalji tragedije u Tetovu, požaru u kovid bolnici prethodila eksplozija (VIDEO)".
  37. ^ a b "СПИСОК НА ЗАШТИТЕНИ ДОБРА". kultura.gov.mk (DOC) (in Macedonian). Ministry of Culture. 31 December 2012. p. 36. from the original on 27 April 2021.
  38. ^ [http://arhiva.kultura.gov.mk/images/stories/dokumenti/obrasci/NACIONALEN_REGISTAR_NA_OBJEKTI_KOI_SE_ZASTITENO_KULT_NASLEDSTVO_31122012.doc Список на заштитени добра. Состојба до 31.12.2012. Скопје: Управа за заштита на културното наследство.
  39. ^
  40. ^ "Стариот амам во Тетово ќе биде заштитен со четири фази на активности". MKD.mk. 1 September 2015.
  41. ^ . Republic of Macedonia Ministry of Culture. Archived from the original on 20 March 2016.
  42. ^ "Конзервација, реставрација и конструктивно зајакнување на Алимбеговата куќа во Тетово". Kanal 5. 18 August 2016.
  43. ^ "Музеј на тетовскиот крај". Nova Makedonija ]. 18 December 2021.
  44. ^ a b Archer, Rory (10 February 2023). "Albanian labor migration, the Yugoslav private sector and its Cold War context". Labor History (Article). Taylor & Francis Group. 64 (4): 36. doi:10.1080/0023656X.2023.2180625.
  45. ^ "Ljuboten".
  46. ^ Iseni, Bashkim (25 January 2008). La question nationale en Europe du Sud-Est : genèse, émergence et développement de l'indentité nationale albanaise au Kosovo et en Macédoine. Bern: P. Lang. p. 77. ISBN 978-3039113200.
  47. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 January 2009. Retrieved 5 November 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  48. ^ Madgearu, Alexandru (2008). The Wars of the Balkan Peninsula: Their Medieval Origins. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. p. 27. ISBN 978-0-8108-5846-6.
  49. ^ Iljaz, Rexha (2011). "VENDBANIMET DHE POPULLSIA ALBANE GJATË MESJETËS NË HAPËSIRËN E MAQEDONISË SË SOTME (Sipas burimeve sllave dhe osmane)". Gjurmime Albanologjike - Seria e Shkencave Historike. Prishtina Institute for Albanology (41–42): 12–13.
  50. ^ . Archived from the original on 28 September 2007.
  51. ^ La Turquie d'Europe; observations sur la geographie, la géologie, l'histoire naturelle, etc. (Paris, 1840), p. 306-307.
  52. ^ Ami Boue
  53. ^ Herbert, Aubrey (15 June 2011). Albania's Greatest Friend: Aubrey Herbert and the Making of Modern Albania. Diaries and Papers 1904 – 1923. I.B Tauris. ISBN 978-1-84885-444-4.
  54. ^ Gawrych, George (26 December 2006). The Crescent and the Eagle: Ottoman Rule, Islam and the Albanians, 1874-1913. I.B Tauris. ISBN 1-84511-2873.
  55. ^ Merkezi, Türkiye Diyanet Vakfı İslam Araştırmaları. ".:: İslâm Ansiklopedisi ::". www.tdvia.org.
  56. ^ В. Кѫнчовъ, Македония. Етнография и статистика. (I изд. Бълг. Книжовно Д-во, София, 1900; II фототипно изд. "Проф. М. Дринов", София, 1996), ISBN 954430424X, стр. 210
  57. ^ . Tetova1. Archived from the original on 21 December 2014. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  58. ^ "Ethnic/Religious composition of Dibër and Tetovë prefectures".
  59. ^ . makstat.stat.gov.mk. Archived from the original on 25 December 2022. Retrieved 26 April 2023.[dead link]
  60. ^ . Archived from the original on 14 October 2013.
  61. ^ "Total resident population of the Republic of North Macedonia by ethnic affiliation, by settlement, Census 2021". PxWeb. Retrieved 4 July 2023.
  62. ^ Besar Rexhaili. "Ramush Haradinaj Qytetar ndrei i Tetoves". Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  63. ^ Enisa Bajrami. . Archived from the original on 29 March 2013. Retrieved 1 February 2013.
  64. ^ tetova.gov.mk. "Mesic: Tetovo is a home to people with different cultural backgrounds". Archived from the original on 21 February 2013. Retrieved 1 February 2013.
  65. ^ South East European University. "Ferid Murad, Honoured Guest of the SEEU Graduation Ceremony". Retrieved 1 February 2013.
  66. ^ Тетово се збратимува со турскиот град Коња 12 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine -Утрински весник

External links Edit

  • Komuna e Tetoves - Општина Тетово - Municipality of Tetovo

tetovo, macedonian, Тетово, ˈtɛtɔvɔ, albanian, tetovë, tetova, turkish, kalkandelen, city, northwestern, part, north, macedonia, built, foothills, Šar, mountain, divided, pena, river, municipality, covers, area, meters, above, level, with, population, city, se. Tetovo Macedonian Tetovo ˈtɛtɔvɔ Albanian Tetove Tetova Turkish Kalkandelen is a city in the northwestern part of North Macedonia built on the foothills of Sar Mountain and divided by the Pena River The municipality of Tetovo covers an area of 1 080 km2 417 sq mi at 468 meters 1 535 ft above sea level with a population of 63 176 1 The city of Tetovo is the seat of Tetovo Municipality Tetovo Tetovo Macedonian Tetove Albanian CityFrom top View over Tetovo Isa Beg Hammam Arabati Baba Teḱe Painted Mosque Church of St Cyril and Methodius Popova Sapka Urban Tetovo Baltepe Fortress Tetovo centre FlagCoat of armsLocation in Northwestern North Macedonia TetovoLocation within Republic of North MacedoniaShow map of North MacedoniaTetovoTetovo Balkans Show map of BalkansCoordinates 42 00 N 20 58 E 42 000 N 20 967 E 42 000 20 967Country North MacedoniaRegionPologMunicipalityTetovoGovernment MayorBilal Kasami Besa Movement Area Total1 068 km2 412 sq mi Elevation468 m 1 535 ft Population 2021 citation needed Total63 176Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code1200Area code 389 044Car platesTEClimateCfbWebsitetetovo gov mk Tetovo was founded in the 14th century on the place of the ancient town of Oaeneon 2 In the 15th c AD Tetovo came under Ottoman rule for about five centuries After its conquest by the Ottomans most of city s population converted to Islam and many Ottoman style structures were built such as the Sarena Dzamija and the Arabati Baba Teḱe which still stand as two of North Macedonia s most significant landmarks of its Ottoman period During this period the town belonged to the Vilayet of Kosovo became a firearm and cannon foundry and was renamed Kalkandelen meaning Shield Penetrator as a result the town attracted many workers and grew to a city Following the World Wars Tetovo became a part of Yugoslavia and later the Republic of Macedonia 3 South East European University North Macedonia s third largest university after Skopje and Bitola is located in Tetovo 4 Tetovo is also home to the State University of Tetovo Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Prehistory 2 2 Early antiquity 2 3 Roman period 2 4 Middle Ages 2 5 Ottoman Period 2 6 During the World Wars 2 7 SFR Yugoslavia 2 8 Break up of Yugoslavia 2 9 Present day 3 Culture 3 1 Landmarks 3 2 Cuisine 4 Sports 5 Demographics 6 Notable people from Tetovo 6 1 Honorary citizens 7 International relations 7 1 Twin towns Sister cities 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksName EditIn early antiquity Tetovo was first mentioned as Oaeneum Waineon in Ancient Greek 5 6 7 failed verification The region was referred to as Htetovo in a Serbian Charter 8 During the Ottoman rule the name of the town was Kalkandelen History EditPrehistory Edit There have been archaeological discoveries near Tetovo which date back to the Bronze Age 2200 1200BC In North Macedonia the oldest artefact a Mycenae sword from the Bronze Age was found outside Tetovo 4 9 Early antiquity Edit This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp One Eyed Bridge One of Tetovo s remaining stone bridgesThe early inhabitants of Oaeneum were the Penestae 5 7 an Illyrian tribe that controlled the regions of Oaeneum Draudacum Gostivar Uskana Kicevo Divra Debar and the main outlets towards Styberra Prilep in northern Pelagonia 7 Remote though it was the territory of the Penestae had strategic importance It provided one of the few passages from Illyria to Macedonia and Dardania to Macedonia via Oaeneum Draudacum Uskana Styberra In the period of 800 550 BC the Dardani broke into Pelagonia via Tetovo and Gostivar and pushed the Phrygian Bridges there into the northern hills 7 It is probable that they overran Lyncus Eordaea and Edessa 7 In 171 BC Gentius was allied with the Romans against the Macedonians and together in 170 BC the Romans led by Appius Claudius were on the verge of victory However Gentius in 169 BC changed sides and allied himself with Perseus of Macedon and led his army to a victory over the Romans in Uskana via Oaeneum 6 In 169 BC Oaeneum fell into the hands of the Romans again The Penestae were generally allied with the Romans After the conquest of Uskana Perseus marched his army towards Oaeneum The location of the town was a good one and in particular there was a pass there to the Labeatae Gentius kingdom 6 One of Perseus men familiar with the area said there was no point in taking Oaeneum unless he controlled Draudacum Perseus took Draudacum with ease However when Perseus reached Oaeneum it could not be taken without a full scale assault 6 Its strength lay in having rather more men of military age than other places in the fortified walls of the town and in being enclosed on one side be a river and on the other by a mountain which was very high and difficult of access 6 These factors gave the townspeople some hope of resisting Perseus invested the town and began constructing a ramp on the upper side of the city its height would bring him up over the city walls As soon as the ramp reached the city wall the assault began and led to Perseus capturing Oaeneum 10 The town was plundered 11 and the adult males were slaughtered 6 Roman period Edit This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Oaeneum remained with in Illyricum until Diocletian s reform and Oaeneum became a part of Epirus Nova in the 4th century AD 12 nbsp Tetovo s old market square known as Gorna CarsijaChristianity spread to Oaeneum during the later period of Roman invasion and reached the region relatively early St Paul preached the Gospel in the region 13 In the 2nd to the 4th centuries the main language to spread the Christian religion was Latin 14 Middle Ages Edit In the 13th and 14th centuries Byzantine control was punctuated by periods of Bulgarian and Serbian rule Konstantin Asen ruled as Tsar of the Bulgarian Empire from 1257 to 1277 Later the region was overrun and taken by Serbian Tsar Stefan Dusan In a document dated between 1348 and 1353 Dusan restored the Lesok Monastery and gifted the monastery entire Albanian populated villages as well as the Nanov Dol highlands 15 16 Stefan Dusan also forbade agricultural and livestock activity in the Nanov Dol highlands for state pasture tax collectors Albanians and Vlachs 16 17 The initial Ottoman occupation did not last as Skanderbeg and his Albanian force with aid from Tetovo took on the Ottoman forces led by Ibrahim Pasha in the Battle of Polog Skanderbeg slayed Ibrahim Pasha who was an old friend of his during his time with the Ottomans Tetovo came under Albanian control In August 1462 After Skanderbeg defeated Ottoman forces under Hasan bey in Mokra Isuf bey went to move against Skanderbeg Isuf bey marched out with 18 000 troops to Skopje From there he marched onto Polog near Tetovo Skanderbeg attacked and annihilated Isuf s force and the Pasha fled leaving his army behind to be reduced 18 Ottoman Period Edit nbsp Tetovo 1913 one year after independence from the Ottoman EmpireDuring the Ottoman period the town was known as Kalkandelen which means Shield Penetrator in honor of the local weapon smiths 4 During the early 19th century Abdurrahman Pasha a prominent Albanian landowner beautified the city of Tetovo refurbishing many estates including the notable landmarks such as the Colored Mosque the Teke and the Baltepe fortress 19 In the 19th century the Russian diplomat Ivan Jastrebov spoke highly of Tetovo s climate liking the mild snowy winters sunny and comfortably warm summers The traveler Ami Bue described Tetovo as a very clean city 20 nbsp Sarena Dzamija built in the early 15th centuryIn the Ottoman Empire Tetovo came under the Vilayet of Kosovo and was orientated towards Albanians and the Albanian struggle for independence from Ottoman rule 4 In 1843 the Uprising of Dervish Cara led to Albanians revolting against the Sultan due their disagreement with the Tanzimat reforms Tetovo was liberated by Dervish Cara from January 1844 until September 1844 where Omar Pasha defeated the rebel forces and Tetovo remained within the Ottoman Empire citation needed Albanian diplomat Mid hat Frasheri in his work Pjesa kombiare writes that due to the pressure of Turkey Greece and Serbia a part of the Albanian population lost their mother tongue The people of Gjinokastra speak Greek and in Tetovo and Prizren they speak Turkish and Slavic 21 During the World Wars Edit nbsp The Albanian National Meeting in the city of Tetovo 1944 center left Xhem Hasa and center right Mefail Shehu During the breakup of the Ottoman Empire Tetovo came under Albanian control by forces led by Hasan Prishtina From a period between 1913 and 1915 during the Balkan war the Serbian Army captured Tetovo and the entire region of what is today North Macedonia became known as South Serbia as part of the Kingdom of Serbia citation needed During World War I a rift occurred between Bulgaria and Serbia The Bulgarian army started making way through the area and annexed Tetovo and the rest of the Macedonia region 22 At the end of the war Serbia regained control of the region Within the Kingdom of Yugoslavia Tetovo was part of the Vardar Banovina from 1929 to 1941 In 1941 the Vardar Banovina ceased to exist as a result of the Axis occupation of Yugoslavia Tetovo once again came under Albanian rule The Balli Kombetar ruled Tetovo with military and financial aid from the Axis powers The Albanian national flag was raised in Tetovo the Albanian Franc was introduced as the official currency as well as the official language and education facilities in Albanian citation needed nbsp Tetovo Gorna CarsijaAgainst the background of a large scale offensive operations of the Bulgarian army aimed at Nis Skopje and Pristina 23 24 the city was the last to be seized by the Macedonian partisans on November 19 1944 Several Macedonian partisan shock brigades fought for control of the city with German forces and the Balli Kombetar Part of the fighters were ethnic Macedonians that split from ELAS to form the First Macedonian Shock Brigade 25 According to Macedonian veterans from the 8th Veles Shock Brigade who participated in the fighting the operation in Tetovo was well planned and the enemy resistance was weakened due to the inevitability of the German defeat and the good organization and equipment of the partisans 26 After the Germans had been driven out the communist authorities ordered the collection of weapons but this order was not well received 27 In Tetovo the remaining Ballists tried to retain their control after the Yugoslav Partisans announced victory 28 As result an armed uprising of massive proportions broke in the area led by the Balli Kombetar which aimed to resist the incorporation of the region into communist Yugoslavia It was only in July 1945 that the Yugoslav Partisans were able to push down the uprising and re establish their control SFR Yugoslavia Edit nbsp The house of Halim bey Deralla Confiscated under the socialist Yugoslav regime and turned into a healthcare facilityThe town became part of the Socialist Republic of Macedonia The early years of Socialist Yugoslavia were turbulent for Tetovo s Albanian population Many were subjected to repression causing many to emigrate 4 Those who remained demonstrated periodically but violently against the socialist Yugoslav regime notably in the Yucel Incident of 1957 4 and the Tetovo Incident of 1968 4 Many of these protest were led by Mehmet Gega a notable Albanian rights activist who was sentenced to ten years in prison In the 1968 demonstrations The Tetovar Albanians demanded for the attachment of the Albanian areas of Socialist Republic of Macedonia to Kosovo and their joint reconstitution as a seventh republic of Yugoslavia 29 The authorities rejected this demand and instead authorised the revision of syllabuses and textbooks in order to curb what it called The penetration of Albanian nationalistic irredentist and counter revolutionary tendencies through printed textbooks and other literature In 1974 a new federal constitution was ratified which eased the tension of the local Albanians 29 The government of Yugoslavia viewed these demonstrations as the first stage in an Albanian plot aimed at eventually separating these areas and joining them with neighboring Albania SR Macedonia imposed harder prison sentences than the authorities in Kosovo 30 nbsp Tetovo s Old Mosque demolished during socialist YugoslaviaTetovo under Josip Broz Tito s Yugoslavia went through major changes Many Yugoslav Brutalist styled apartments were built around the city centre of Tetovo as well as concrete roads New suburbs such as the Hajducka suburb were formed to help accommodate the rising number of Macedonians moving to the city 31 Some of the city s historic buildings such as the Old Mosque were demolished by the authorities When troubles in neighbouring Kosovo began in 1981 Tetovo had to be put under control of paramilitary police due to the rioting and show of sympathy with the Kosovar Albanians The same happened again in 1989 4 Break up of Yugoslavia Edit nbsp The Bektashi Teḱe Arabati Baba TeḱeWhen it became obvious in 1990 that Yugoslavia was about to fall over 2 000 ethnic Albanians marched through Tetovo demanding secession from the Socialist Republic of Macedonia and unity with Albania Self determination of an ethnic minority within a state was not a right under the Socialist Republic of Macedonia s constitution 4 and protesting their lack of representation under the constitution of a new Republic of Macedonia the Albanians of Macedonia boycotted the referendum on independence from Yugoslavia and were thus excluded from almost any representation in the new government 4 Tetovo became headquarters of the new Albanian political parties which were regarded as unconstitutional by the Republic of Macedonia Tensions worsened Tetovo along with the city of Gostivar took in and sheltered several thousands of Bosnian Muslim refugees from 1992 until the end of the Bosnian war 32 Prior to the NATO bombing of Serb forces in Kosovo Tetovo became the rear supply base for the Kosovo Liberation Army 4 and then later home to over 100 000 Kosovar refugees from the Kosovo war 32 In 1997 Alajdin Demiri the mayor of Tetovo was jailed for raising the double headed eagle flag of Albania from Tetovo town hall and by 2000 the outbreak of hostilities in Tanusevci had spilled into the towns of Tetovo and Gostivar 4 In 2001 ethnic Albanians launched an insurgency with Tetovo being the main backdrop of the war Fortunately the Ohrid Agreement was established allowing peace to return to the city again Present day Edit nbsp Church of St Nicholas in Tetovo nbsp Sarena Dzamija ParkIn economic terms Tetovo is one of the most developing cities in North Macedonia with some multinational companies Ecolog International Mercure Tetovo Renova Kipper being located in this town Despite the interest of private companies in Tetovo the city is neglected by the government Tetovo suffers from urban sprawl Due to the lack of government regulations the city has no system for building permits and many houses and buildings have been built unsafely and randomly along footpaths roads and in parks Air pollution levels are among the highest in Europe 33 The tallest building in the city is Mercure Tetovo measuring about 80 meters in height Tetovo is one of the educational centres in North Macedonia hosting two universities South East European University Public Private Non profitable and State University of Tetovo Public University The prior one has educational leadership in the region whereat the Bologna Process is applicable since its establishment has the best campus in the region of South East Europe and is trend with international developments in education More than 20 000 students get their education and degrees in Tetovo In addition Tetovo is a centre of ethnic Albanian politics Most Albanian political parties on North Macedonia Democratic Party of Albanians DPA Democratic Union for Integration DUI and the Party for Democratic Prosperity PDP have their main seats there Tetovo has one of the highest crime rates in North Macedonia second only to the much larger capital Skopje The city was home to 1 229 criminal acts in the first half of 2009 34 On 6 July 2014 violent protests occurred in the town where about 600 youths hurled stones Sunday at police outside the headquarters of the Democratic Union for Integration an ethnic Albanian junior partner in parliament The protesters were disillusioned and frustrated with their political representatives Ali Ahmeti and Menduh Thaci and the political parties Police dispersed the crowd by force There was no violence reported at any other protests in the country 35 On September 8 2021 at least fourteen people were killed in an explosion at a COVID 19 center 36 Culture Edit nbsp The Painted Mosque Tetovo has been under many different empires from the Mycenae and Illyrians to the Romans Byzantines and Ottomans giving the city a vast range of diverse cultures The museum of Tetovo established in 1950 contains history of Tetovo and is situated in the Memorial House of Central Committee of the Communist Party of Macedonia Landmarks Edit Tetovo Municipality is home to 15 sites designated as Cultural Heritage by the Ministry of Culture of which 14 are within the city limits of Tetovo Nine of these are historic homes 37 The main attractions of Tetovo are its historic areas and structures The Sarena Mosque The Painted Mosque is located near the Pena River in the old part of town The mosque was built in 1438 and rebuilt in 1833 by Abdurrahman Pasha the son of Rexhep Pasha It is one of the most important cultural and historical structures of Tetovo and represents the style of early Ottoman architecture The painted mosque continues to be an important monument to the residents of Tetovo and is the main tourist attraction for many foreign visitors Sitting directly across the Pena River from the Sarena Mosque is Tetovo s Ottoman era hamam known as the Cifte Hamam or Bey s Hamam It was built in the late 15th early 16th century Declared a monument of cultural heritage 38 it houses the Tetovo Art Gallery 39 The building was renovated between 2012 and 2015 40 nbsp The Cifte Hamam next to the Pena River in TetovoThe Tetovo Fortress located on the top of the Baltepe Hill above Tetovo was built in 1820 from Abdurrahman Pasha The Baltepes had a series of tunnels from all the main Ottoman houses in the town leading to the fortress The thinking behind the tunnel system was to enable the defenders of the fortress to escape behind enemy lines if the fortress was besieged allowing the besiegers themselves to be encircled The last tunnel collapsed in the 1960s and since excavation started two of the tunnels to Selce and Lavce have been found Many local stories and myths such as The Tale of the Water Pump are set at Baltepe as they focus on the three year stay of Abdurrahman Pasha of Tetovo in the fortress of Baltepe located on the cold and dark Shar Mountains The old settlement of Oaeneum is believed to be located around where the fortress of Baltepe resides nbsp The Baltepe FortressThe Arabati Baba Teḱe originally built in 1538 around the turbe of Sersem Ali Baba an Ottoman dervish In 1799 a waqf provided by Rexhep Pasha established the current grounds of the tekke The finest surviving Bektashi monastery in Europe the sprawling complex features flowered lawns prayer rooms dining halls lodgings and a great marble fountain inside a wooden pavilion The Alim Bey House is an historic estate in Tetovo Along with the Saraj in Resen it is among the more prominent examples of lodgings built by wealthy Ottoman pashas and beys in North Macedonia that were constructed in Western inspired architecture The Alim Bey House is an asymmetrical estate built in the neo Baroque style with decorated facades ornate friezes and the use of various geometric shapes including a hexagonal tower The three story home is a protected monument of cultural heritage 41 The building functioned as a hospital until 1993 Renovation works funded by Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Macedonia occurred in 2016 42 The Museum of the Tetovo Region is housed within the historic Goce Stojcevski house The museum was established in 1950 originally situated in the Arabati Baba Tekke complex It contains archaeological ethnological historical and art exhibits 43 The house is where Macedonian partisan Goce Stojcevski Ambarce was born in 1919 nbsp Popova Sapka Ski ResortOther notable historical features from the Ottoman period in Tetovo are The Saat Mosque The Clock Mosque as the name implies it used to have a clock in its minaret and the Kumluk Mosque The Sandy Mosque an old mosque in the upper bazaar area of Tetovo The name is derived from the reddish yellow exterior of the mosque An example of Byzantine culture outside of Tetovo Municipality is the Monastery of Lesok The monastery is 8 km 5 mi northeast of Tetovo In its complex are the churches of St Athanasius of Alexandria and the Holy Mother of God Church The Church of the Holy Virgin built in 1326 is an excellent example of Byzantine style and architectural tradition Popova Sapka is a ski resort located in the Sar Mountains Despite being around seven kilometres 4 3 miles from the city it is generally associated with Tetovo Popova Sapka attracts many tourists in winter due it being one of the popular ski resorts in the former Yugoslavia Aside from hosting recreational and competitive skiing competitions Popova Sapka has many villas and restaurants to accommodate visitors The rise in hotels was because the cable car that took people from Tetovo to Popova Sapka was destroyed during the 2001 Macedonia conflict Therefore people stay at Popova Sapka overnight before returning to Tetovo There are three stone bridges in Tetovo and each cross the Pena river one of these which connects Goce Stojceski Street one block downstream of the Sarena Mosque is listed as an Object of Cultural Heritage 37 The bridges are some of the oldest structures in Tetovo Most of the old heritage buildings are situated in the old town near the centre of Tetovo Tetovo has many old buildings and monuments however they are endangered of being demolished by people building unpermitted buildings Cuisine Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Tetovo is home of the dish Tavce Gravce known locally in Tetovo as Tave me Groshe During Socialist Yugoslavia the dish was known around the country as Tetovski Gravce in reference to the city of Tetovo where the dish originates Although different varieties of the meal are made around Balkans the traditional Tetovo tavce gravce is cooked and served in a terracotta pot Most cuisines in Tetovo have a strong Ottoman influence or foundation such as Ajvar Sujuk and Gevrek Tetovo is known for its barbecue restaurants Qebaptore where Cevapi and Pljeskavica including Shar Pljeskavica Sarska pljeskavica stuffed with kashkaval cheese Byrektores pastry restaurants are also common in Tetovo and produce Burek Embeltore sweet shops produce locally made traditional sweets such as Lukum Tulumba Kataif and Baklava Boza is also fermented in Tetovo and is a common beverage consumed The cuisines in Tetovo have a unique taste and flavour due to the local agricultural products used to make the cuisines In North Macedonia Tetovo Kashkaval cheese is the most popular as it is made naturally from sheep s milk from the Sar Mountains During the Kingdom of Yugoslavia apples from Tetovo were popular in Belgrade and were known as Tetovo Jabuka Albanians from the Macedonian region of Polog a conurbation of villages between Tetovo and Gostivar specialised in confectionary ice cream and general hospitality businesses like cafes and grills around Yugoslavia 44 It was even stereotyped in Yugoslavia 44 Sports Edit nbsp Ecolog Arena The most popular sport in Tetovo is Football Tetovo is represented by four clubs of which three play in the Macedonian First League FK Shkendija supported by the majority of the Albanians living in Tetovo FK Renova mainly supported by Albanians but has significant Macedonian support and are based in Dzepciste FK Teteks is the team supported by the Macedonians living in Tetovo FK Ljuboten is another football club based in Tetovo and is the oldest football club in North Macedonia 45 FK Drita currently play in the Treta Liga however they are in located in the outskirts of Tetovo in a village named Bogovinje FK Vrapciste currently plays in the Treta Liga however they are in located in the outskirts of Tetovo in the village named Vrapciste Wrestling karate and volleyball are also fairly popular sports in Tetovo Wrestling plays an important part of the sports culture in Tetovo Highlanders from the villages of the Sar Mountains brought with them their traditional wrestling culture into the city and established wrestling clubs of the freestyle Traditional wrestling competitions are always held once a year at Popova Sapka in the Sar Mountain during the summer Few volleyball teams are active in the volleyball league of North Macedonia Skendija Bami Kor Medika etc Demographics EditBetween the years 1348 1353 Albanians are mentioned by Serbian Tsar Stefan Dusan as farmers and soldiers in the district of Tetovo 46 Ottoman statistics from 1452 for the nahiya of Tetovo recorded 146 Christian and 60 Muslim households In 1453 the population consisted of 153 Christian and 56 Muslim families 47 The 1455 defter recorded Albanian presence 48 The 1467 Ottoman defter records of Tetovo attests that the Muslim neighborhood of Tetovo was inhabited by 6 heads of families with mixed anthroponyms of Islamic Albanian character while the Christian quarter of Tetovo was characterized with Slavic Christian and Albanian Christian names with some cases of Slavicisation 49 In 1468 Tetovo had 180 Christian and 41 Muslim families 50 In 1545 there were 99 Christian and 101 Muslim families 38 were islamicised in Tetovo and in 1568 there were 108 Christian and 329 Muslim 184 islamicised 47 By the 19th century when the population of Tetovo began to increase with settlement from the surrounding villages the French traveler Ami Boue noted that the population had reached about 4 500 people which are Bulgarians and Albanians 51 The total population of the Pashalik of Tetovo is 30 000 40 000 and consists of Bulgarians who are Eastern Orthodox and of Albanian who are Muslims 52 1 According to British diplomat and traveller Aubrey Herbert and English traveller Austen Henry Layard the majority of the inhabitants of Tetovo were Albanian 53 54 Turkish sources cite that three quarters of the population of Tetovo during the Ottoman period were Albanian 55 According to the statistics of the Bulgarian ethnographer Vasil Kanchov in 1900 the population of Tetovo was 19 200 consisting of 8 500 Bulgarians 9 000 Turks 500 Arnauts and 1 200 Romani 56 Kanchov wrote that many Albanians declared themselves as Turks In Tetovo the population that declared itself Turkish was of Albanian blood but it had been Turkified after the Ottoman invasion including Skanderbeg referring to Islamization 21 In 1916 under the Kingdom of Bulgaria the Bulgarian registries had recorded that Tetovo had a population of 22 000 Two thirds of this population was listed as Albanian and one third consisted of Bulgarian and Serbian 57 According to the 1942 Albanian census Tetovo was inhabited by 10 252 Muslim Albanians 3 496 Bulgarians and 2 136 Serbs 58 Under Kingdom of Yugoslavia a crackdown on Albanians forced many from Tetovo to immigrate to the US and Canada while thousands of Serbs were encouraged to move into the town to develop the mining and hydro electric industries 4 Orthodox churches were built skiing and pony trekking started in the Sar Mountains and White Russian settlers arrived 4 As of 2021 the city of Tetovo has 63 176 inhabitants and the ethnic composition was the following 59 Albanians 41 356 65 5 Macedonians 14 116 22 3 Persons for whom data are taken from administrative sources 3 326 5 3 Roma 1 877 3 0 Turks 1 745 2 8 Serbs 248 0 4 Bosniaks 188 0 3 others 290 0 5 City of Tetovo population according to ethnic group 1948 2021 60 61 Ethnicgroup census 1948 census 1953 census 1961 census 1971 census 1981 census 1994 census 2002 census 2021Number Number Number Number Number Number Number Number Macedonians 7 575 37 5 11 631 45 9 14 415 40 3 17 817 38 3 19 439 38 6 18 555 35 1 14 116 22 3Albanians 7 155 35 4 6 435 25 4 15 388 43 1 21 741 46 7 25 128 49 9 28 897 54 7 41 356 65 5Turks 4 470 22 1 5 864 23 1 3 543 9 9 2 757 5 9 2 073 4 1 1 878 3 6 1 745 2 8Romani 227 1 1 0 0 0 823 2 3 1 709 3 7 2 260 4 5 2 352 4 5 1 877 3 0Vlachs 11 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 18 0 0 13 0 0 10 0 0Serbs 481 2 4 839 3 3 920 2 6 877 1 9 830 1 7 587 1 1 248 0 4Bosniaks 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 156 0 3 188 0 3Others 290 1 4 588 2 3 656 1 8 1 618 3 5 596 1 2 477 0 9 290 0 5PWDTFAS 3 326 5 3Total 17 132 20 209 25 357 35 745 46 523 50 344 52 915 63 176PWDTFAS Persons for whom data are taken from administrative sourcesNotable people from Tetovo EditMain article List of people from Tetovo Honorary citizens Edit Ramush Haradinaj 62 Tanja Fajon 63 Stjepan Mesic 64 Ferid Murad 65 Blerim DzemailiInternational relations EditTwin towns Sister cities Edit See also List of twin towns and sister cities in North Macedonia Tetovo is twinned with nbsp Prizren Kosovo nbsp Kukes Albania nbsp Sterling Heights Michigan United States nbsp Konya Turkey 66 nbsp Dorog HungarySee also Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tetovo Gymnasium Kiril Pejcinoviḱ Polog Statistical Region Tetovo MunicipalityReferences Edit 2002 Census results PDF Thammy Evans Philip Briggs Bradt Travel Guides 2019 North Macedonia ISBN 1784770841 p 164 Trankova Dimana 2011 Tito Teto and Some Troubled Tourism Await You in Tetovo Macedonia Balkan Traveller Archived from the original on 2 October 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Evans Thammy 2012 Macedonia Bradt Travel Guides Ltd IDC House The Vale Chalfront St Peter Bucks SL9 9RZ England The Globe Pequot Press Inc pp 238 239 ISBN 978 1 84162 395 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link a b Smith William 2012 Dictionary of Greek and Roman geography Volume 2 p 457 Retrieved 26 February 2013 a b c d e f Livy 2012 Rome s Mediterranean Empire Books 41 45 and the Periochae Books 41 45 great Clarendon street Oxford ox2 6dp Oxford University Press p 113 ISBN 978 0 19 283340 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link a b c d e Hammond N G L 1988 A History of Macedonia Volume III 336 167 B C great clarendon street oxford ox2 6dp oxford university press ISBN 978 0 19 814815 9 Retrieved 26 February 2013 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Balkanoloski institut Srpska akademija nauka i umetnosti Srpska akademija nauka i umetnosti 2008 Balcanica p 62 Hawkes C F C 29 January 2018 The European Community in Later Prehistory Studies in Honour of C F C Hawkes routledge library editions archaeology ISBN 9781315515519 Retrieved 8 December 2018 Pritchett William Kendrick 2012 The Greek State at War Part V Berkeley and Los Angeles California University of California Press p 437 ISBN 978 0 520 07374 6 Venning Timothy 2012 A Chronology of the Roman Empire the tower building 11 York road London se1 7nx continuum international publishing group p 148 ISBN 9781441154781 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link VICKERS MIRANDA 1988 Between Serb and Albanian A History of Kosovo Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 19 814815 9 Retrieved 26 February 2013 Schnabel Sckhard Paul the Missionary Realities Strategies and Methods Downers Grove IL InterVarsity Press 2008 p 113 Lloshi p 92 Iseni Bashkim 25 January 2008 La question nationale en Europe du Sud Est genese emergence et developpement de l indentite nationale albanaise au Kosovo et en Macedoine Bern P Lang p 77 ISBN 978 3039113200 a b Koprivica Marija Hrisovulja kralja Stefana Dusana Htetovskom manastiru Stari srpski arhiv 13 2014 143 179 Archive of Serbia Gashi Skender 2014 Emrat e Shqiptareve ne Shek XIII XV ne driten e burimeve kishtare Serbe Prishtina Shtepia Botuese Tenda p 35 Franco p 329 Dankoff Robert 2001 An Ottoman Mentality The World of Evliya Celebi Koninklijke Brill pp 55 ISBN 90 04 13715 7 City of Tetovo Archived from the original on 7 January 2014 a b Salajdin SALIHI DISA SHENIME PER SHQIPTARET ORTODOKSE TE REKES SE EPERME FILOLOGJIA International Journal of Human Sciences 19 85 90 Te dhena nga regjistrimi i popullsise se Tetoves ne vitin 1916 FOTO Tetova1 Archived from the original on 21 December 2014 Retrieved 26 September 2014 Noel Malcolm Kosovo A Short History New York University Press 1998 pp 310 313 ISBN 0814755984 Livanios Dimitris The Difficult Withdrawal Britain and the Bulgarian Army in Yugoslav and Greek Macedonia September December 1944 The Macedonian Question Britain and the Southern Balkans 1939 1949 Oxford Historical Monographs Oxford 2008 online edn Oxford Academic 1 May 2008 https doi org 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199237685 003 0004 accessed 5 September 2022 19 noemvri 1944 osloboduvaњe na Tetovo od fashistichkiot okupator Kajgana com in Macedonian Retrieved 4 September 2022 Na deneshen den 19 noemvri vo 1944 godina Tetovo e oslobodeno vo Vtorata svetska voјna od strana na Tretata Trinaesettata Chetirinaesettata i Devetnaesettata makedonska brigada kako posleden osloboden grad na teritoriјata na Makedoniјa On this day November 19 1944 Tetovo was liberated in the Second World War by the Third Thirteenth Fourteenth and Nineteenth Macedonian Brigades as the last liberated city on the territory of Macedonia a vo Egeјskiot del na Makedoniјa bile formirani Kostursko lerinskiot batalјon Vodenskiot makedonski batalјon i potoa Prvata egeјska brigada koјa zela uchestvo vo borbite za osloboduvaњe na Tetovsko i Gostivarsko and in the Aegean part of Macedonia the Kostur Lerin Battalion the Voden Macedonian Battalion and then the First Aegean Brigade which took part in the battles for the liberation of Tetovo and Gostivar were formed TETOVO PO 15 GODINI POVTORNO GO ODBELEZhA DENOT NA OSLOBODUVAЊETO OD FAShISTIChKATA OKUPACIЈA 19 November 2019 Retrieved 4 September 2022 Јas kako borec na Osmata veleshka udarna brigada direktno uchestvuvav vo osloboduvaњeto na Tetovo Toa beshe dobro osmislena akciјa na Narodno osloboditelnata voјska Gradot go napadnavme od nekolku strani Otporot na balistite i na fashistite koi togash go drzhea Tetovo beshe mnogu slab Vidoa deka voјnata e izgubena i deka nie sme dobro organizirana i vooruzhena voena sila i zatoa ne dadoa nekoј pogolem otpor tuku pobegnaa od gradot Osloboduvaњeto na Tetovo ima i edna druga dimenziјa Tetovo beshe posleden grad vo Makedoniјa koј beshe osloboden od fashistichkiot okupator i od domashnite predavnici pa negovoto osloboduvaњe voedno znacheshe i osloboduvaњe na cela Makedoniјa se seќava d r Nikola Stoјanovski pretsedatel na Soјuzot na borcite na Makedoniјa As a fighter of the Eighth Veles Shock Brigade I directly participated in the liberation of Tetovo It was a well thought out action of the People s Liberation Army We attacked the city from several sides The resistance of the Balli Kombetar and the fascists who then held Tetovo was very weak They saw that the war was lost and that we were a well organized and well armed military force and therefore they did not put up any major resistance but fled the city The liberation of Tetovo has another dimension Tetovo was the last town in Macedonia to be freed from the fascist occupier P Ramet Sabrina 2006 The Three Yugoslavias State building and Legitimation 1918 2005 Indiana University Press p 156 ISBN 0253346568 Zemra Shqiptare zemrashqiptare net Retrieved 5 September 2022 a b Ramet Sabrina P 1997 Whose Democracy Nationalism Religion and the Doctrine of Collective Rights in Post 1989 Eastern Europe 4720 Boston Way Lanham Maryland 20706 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers Inc p 78 ISBN 0 8476 8324 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Poulton Hugh 2000 Who are the Macedonians 38 King Street London WC2E 8JT C Hurst amp Co p 126 ISBN 1 85065 534 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Investigation of Environmental Pollution by Molecular Aabsorption Spectroscopy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 7 July 2011 Retrieved 5 November 2010 a b John Sparrow International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies Retrieved 10 March 2011 Van Mead Nick 13 February 2017 Tipping point revealing the cities where exercise does more harm than good The Guardian Retrieved 13 February 2017 MINA Breaking News Skopje with highest crime rate macedoniaonline eu Archived from the original on 15 February 2019 Retrieved 6 August 2009 SKOPJE Macedonia Ethnic Albanians protest court ruling on slayings Nation World NewsObserver com Archived from the original on 20 July 2014 Retrieved 7 July 2014 UZNEMIRUJUCI SNIMCI STRADALO NAJMANJE 14 OSOBA Detalji tragedije u Tetovu pozaru u kovid bolnici prethodila eksplozija VIDEO a b SPISOK NA ZAShTITENI DOBRA kultura gov mk DOC in Macedonian Ministry of Culture 31 December 2012 p 36 Archived from the original on 27 April 2021 http arhiva kultura gov mk images stories dokumenti obrasci NACIONALEN REGISTAR NA OBJEKTI KOI SE ZASTITENO KULT NASLEDSTVO 31122012 doc Spisok na zashtiteni dobra Sostoјba do 31 12 2012 Skopјe Uprava za zashtita na kulturnoto nasledstvo Vizuelna umetnichka galeriјa Tetovo Stariot amam vo Tetovo ќe bide zashtiten so chetiri fazi na aktivnosti MKD mk 1 September 2015 Alimbegova kuќa Republic of Macedonia Ministry of Culture Archived from the original on 20 March 2016 Konzervaciјa restavraciјa i konstruktivno zaјaknuvaњe na Alimbegovata kuќa vo Tetovo Kanal 5 18 August 2016 Muzeј na tetovskiot kraј Nova Makedonija 18 December 2021 a b Archer Rory 10 February 2023 Albanian labor migration the Yugoslav private sector and its Cold War context Labor History Article Taylor amp Francis Group 64 4 36 doi 10 1080 0023656X 2023 2180625 Ljuboten Iseni Bashkim 25 January 2008 La question nationale en Europe du Sud Est genese emergence et developpement de l indentite nationale albanaise au Kosovo et en Macedoine Bern P Lang p 77 ISBN 978 3039113200 a b Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 8 January 2009 Retrieved 5 November 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Madgearu Alexandru 2008 The Wars of the Balkan Peninsula Their Medieval Origins Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers Inc p 27 ISBN 978 0 8108 5846 6 Iljaz Rexha 2011 VENDBANIMET DHE POPULLSIA ALBANE GJATE MESJETES NE HAPESIREN E MAQEDONISE SE SOTME Sipas burimeve sllave dhe osmane Gjurmime Albanologjike Seria e Shkencave Historike Prishtina Institute for Albanology 41 42 12 13 Sostavot na naselenieto vo Tetovskata nahiјa vo XV vek Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 La Turquie d Europe observations sur la geographie la geologie l histoire naturelle etc Paris 1840 p 306 307 Ami Boue Herbert Aubrey 15 June 2011 Albania s Greatest Friend Aubrey Herbert and the Making of Modern Albania Diaries and Papers 1904 1923 I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 84885 444 4 Gawrych George 26 December 2006 The Crescent and the Eagle Ottoman Rule Islam and the Albanians 1874 1913 I B Tauris ISBN 1 84511 2873 Merkezi Turkiye Diyanet Vakfi Islam Arastirmalari Islam Ansiklopedisi www tdvia org V Kѫnchov Makedoniya Etnografiya i statistika I izd Blg Knizhovno D vo Sofiya 1900 II fototipno izd Prof M Drinov Sofiya 1996 ISBN 954430424X str 210 Te dhena nga regjistrimi i popullsise se Tetoves ne vitin 1916 FOTO Tetova1 Archived from the original on 21 December 2014 Retrieved 26 September 2014 Ethnic Religious composition of Diber and Tetove prefectures Archived makstat stat gov mk Archived from the original on 25 December 2022 Retrieved 26 April 2023 dead link Censuses of population 1948 2002 Archived from the original on 14 October 2013 Total resident population of the Republic of North Macedonia by ethnic affiliation by settlement Census 2021 PxWeb Retrieved 4 July 2023 Besar Rexhaili Ramush Haradinaj Qytetar ndrei i Tetoves Retrieved 4 February 2013 Enisa Bajrami Tanja Fajon visited Tetova Archived from the original on 29 March 2013 Retrieved 1 February 2013 tetova gov mk Mesic Tetovo is a home to people with different cultural backgrounds Archived from the original on 21 February 2013 Retrieved 1 February 2013 South East European University Ferid Murad Honoured Guest of the SEEU Graduation Ceremony Retrieved 1 February 2013 Tetovo se zbratimuva so turskiot grad Koњa Archived 12 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Utrinski vesnikExternal links Edit nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Tetovo Komuna e Tetoves Opshtina Tetovo Municipality of Tetovo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tetovo amp oldid 1179287909, 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.