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Uskoks

The Uskoks (Croatian: Uskoci, pronounced [ǔsko̞t͡si], singular: Uskok; notes on naming) were irregular soldiers in Habsburg Croatia[2][3][4] that inhabited areas on the eastern Adriatic coast and surrounding territories during the Ottoman wars in Europe. Bands of Uskoks fought a guerrilla war against the Ottomans, and they formed small units and rowed swift boats. Since the uskoks were checked on land and were rarely paid their annual subsidy, they resorted to acts of piracy.

Uskoks / Uskoci
Stitch with Uskok-ships chasing a large ship.
Museum of Fortress Nehaj in Senj, Croatia.
LeadersNumerous; notable leaders include:
Dates of operation1520s–1618
HeadquartersMobile, two most famous:
Active regionsHabsburg–Ottoman frontiers
Size2,000 at most[when?][1]
Part ofVarious / Undetermined:
  • Croatian Habsburg soldiers
  • Military frontier soldiers
  • Piracy, irregular army
OpponentsPrimarily Ottoman Empire, but also Republic of Venice and others
During this defense of the Klis Fortress against an Ottoman invasion, an elite Croatian military faction of Uskoci was formed.

The exploits of the Uskoks contributed to a renewal of war between Venice and the Ottoman Empire (1570–1573). An extremely curious picture of contemporary manners is presented by the Venetian agents, whose reports on this war resemble a knightly chronicle of the Middle Ages. These chronicles contain information pertaining to single combats, tournaments and other chivalrous adventures.

Many of these troops served abroad. After a series of incidents that escalated into the Uskok War (1615–1618), the Uskok activity in their stronghold of Senj mostly ceased and were disbanded, but the usage of the term and their existence although more localized continued for a period of time.

Name edit

Etymologically, the word uskoci itself means "the ones who jumped in" ("the ones who ambushed") in South Slavic languages.[5] The Serbian Cyrillic transliteration is Ускоци, and Slovene is Uskoki. In other languages, the term became a loanword as well — German: Uskoken, Hungarian: Uszkókok, Italian: Uscocchi.

History edit

Early period edit

The Ottoman conquest of Bosnia and Herzegovina during the early years of the 16th century drove large numbers of ethnic Croats from their homes, which in the town of Klis prompted the formation of the Uskok military.[6] Large numbers of fugitives from Herzegovina, Dalmatia, and Bosnia fleeing the Ottomans, joined the ranks of the Uskok bands.[7][8] In 1522 the border territory of Senj was taken over by the Habsburgs under the authority of Archduke Ferdinand, forming a state-controlled Militärgrenze, or Military Frontier.[9] The Austrian Emperor Ferdinand I instituted a system of planting colonies of defenders along the Military Frontier. Moreover, the Uskoks were promised an annual subsidy in return for their services. Owing to its location, Klis Fortress was an important defensive position which stands on the route by which the Ottomans could penetrate the mountain barrier separating the coastal lowlands from around Split in Croatia, from Ottoman-held Bosnia.[6] Numerous refugees from Ottoman areas began settling along this territory, crossing the border to escape Ottoman attacks. Christian guerilla resistance in Ottoman-occupied areas of Dalmatia and Bosnia caused these people to flee and settle down, first at the fortress of Klis along the Military Frontier, then at Senj.[10] A body of these "uskoks" led by Croatian captain Petar Kružić used the base at Klis both to hold the Turks at bay, and to engage in marauding and piracy against coastal shipping.[6] Although nominally accepting the sovereignty of the Habsburg Emperor Ferdinand I,[Note 1] who obtained the Croatian crown in 1527, Kružić and his freebooting Uskoks were a law unto themselves.[6]

After Petar Kružić's death, and the lack of water supply, the defenders of Klis finally surrendered to the Ottomans in exchange for their freedom.[11] On March 12, 1537, the town and fortress was given up to the Ottomans, many of the citizens left the town while the Uskoks went to the city of Senj on the Adriatic coast, where they continued fighting the Ottomans.[11] They may have started to gather around Senj as early as 1520.[12] The Ottoman raids and destruction brought Senj natives together with those from the Habsburg lands, Dalmatians, Ragusans and Italians.[13] At Senj, the Klis Uskoks were soon joined by other refugees from Novi Vinodolski in northwestern Croatia, from Otočac on the Gacka River, and from other Croatian towns and villages.[when?][14]

The new Uskok stronghold, screened by mountains and forests, was unassailable by cavalry or artillery.[14] However, the fortress was admirably suitable to the lightly armed uskoks who were excellent in guerrilla warfare. The Martolos were employed by the Ottomans to discourage Uskok penetration of Turkish territory, which was not very profitable anyhow.[14] Since the uskoks were checked on land and were rarely paid their annual subsidy, they resorted to acts of piracy.[14] Large galleys could not anchor in the bay of Senj, which is shallow and exposed to sudden gales. So, the uskoks fitted out a fleet of swift boats, which were light enough to navigate the smallest creeks and inlets of the shores of Illyria. Moreover, these boats were helpful in providing the uskoks a temporary landing on shore. With these they were able to attack numerous commercial areas on the Adriatic. The uskoks saw their ranks swell as outlaws from all nations joined them. Eventually, the whole city of Senj lived from piracy. The expeditions were blessed in the local church and the monasteries of the Dominicans and the Franciscans received tithes from the loot.[15]

After the War of the Holy League in 1537 against the Ottoman Empire, a truce between Venice and the Ottomans was created in 1539.[16] This led to the evacuation of all Uskoks in Dalmatia in 1541 where they had been defending a Christian enclave in the mountains during the war.[17] Throughout the following years the Habsburgs were at arms with the Turks, giving the Uskoks the opportunity to repeatedly raid Bosnia and Dalmatia. The Uskoks were able to continue doing so up until 1547 when peace was established between the two, forcing the Uskoks to find other ways of making ends meet. As with other Slavic pirates, the Uskok territory was not suitable for any form of agriculture, forcing them to turn to piracy once more.

Ottoman invasion and Venice edit

 
Nehaj Fortress in Senj, built by Ivan Lenković in 1558.

Beginning as inland pirates, the Uskoci shortly turned to the seas once realizing the full potential of the geography of Senj. The land was protected by thick forests and mountains while the jagged cliffs near the seas prevented warships from entering. The seas in the Gulf of Quarnero were quite rough, which posed navigational hazards as further protection from their enemies.[18] Uskoks began their attacks upon Turkish ships with boats large enough to hold thirty to fifty men.[18]

After 1540, however, Venice, as mistress of the seas, guaranteed the safety of Ottoman merchant vessels, and provided them with an escort of galleys. The uskoks retaliated by ravaging the Venetian islands of Krk, Rab and Pag. Moreover, they utilized the Venetian territories in Dalmatia as a springboard in order to launch attacks against the Ottomans.

 
Another view of Nehaj in Senj

After 1561 the Uskoci attacked Christian shipping in Dubrovnik with numbers never exceeding 2000 men.[18] By 1573 the Uskoks caused considerable concern in Venice with frequent attacks once Venetian attempts of protection had proven to be ineffective. The following years led the reputation of the Uskoks to spread, becoming the resort of refugees and outlaws of all kinds from all nations.[19]

Meanwhile, the corsairs of Greece and North Africa were free to raid the unprotected southern shores of Italy. Venice was besieged with complaints from the Porte, the Vatican, and the Viceroy of Naples with his sovereign, the King of Spain. A Venetian appeal to Austria for help met with little success, and the offenses of the uskoks against the Venetians were outweighed by their attacks against the Ottomans. Minuccio Minucci, a Venetian envoy at Graz, states that a share of the uskoks' spoils of silk, velvet and jewels, went to the ladies of the Archducal Court of Graz, where important matters between Venice and Austria were negotiated.

From 1577 onwards, Venice endeavored to crush the pirates without offending Austria, enlisting Albanians in place of their Dalmatian crews, who feared reprisals at home. For a time the uskoks only ventured forth at night, during the winter season and even during stormy weather.

In 1592, following the fall of Bihać, a strong Ottoman army invaded further into Croatia hoping to capture Senj. Led by Telli Hasan Pasha, the beylerbey of Bosnia, the Ottomans managed to capture a number of uskok settlements, killing and enslaving the population. However, the army was routed and dispersed in the following year. Austria was involved in war with the Ottomans and the Venetian admiral Giovanni Bembo blockaded Trieste and Rijeka (Fiume), where the pirates forwarded their booty for sale. They also erected two forts to command the passages from Senj to the open sea. In 1600, the Prince of Senj was Mickael Radic. The Duke Micheal Radic, appointed as Prince of Senj on 1 December 1600 by King Rudolf in Graz. Prince Radic was Prince of Senj. Radic family is a Native noble family from Lika region; members of the family were Uskok military leaders at the headquarters in Senj.

 
Carniolan Uskoks in an engraving from Johann Weikhard von Valvasor's work The Glory of the Duchy of Carniola, 17th century.

A raid by the Uskoks upon Istria resulted in an agreement between Venice and Austria, and Count Joseph of Rabatta was appointed to act as commissioner to those in Senj as well as the chief negotiator with the Venetians. Rabatta came to Senj in 1600 with a strong bodyguard detail, and was very energetic. His time ruling over the Uskoks was brutal where many Uskoks were hung or sent to fight in the Turkish war,[20] revealing his favor towards the Venetian side. He soon lost all military support, giving the Uskoks the opportunity to overthrow his rule and was ultimately killed in January 1602, enabling Senj to return to its usual state, with the fugitive Uskoks returning to Senj where they resumed their acts of piracy.

 
An uskok drawing from the 19th century, from the Museum of the City of Zagreb

Up until 1611 the Uskoks were relatively undisturbed. Piracy was strictly forbidden at this point but it was tolerated in order to avoid payment of subsidies owed to those of Senj.[21] A Venetian squadron intercepted an Uskok fleet in the spring of 1613 in response to the complaints regarding Uskok activity and, as reported, sixty Uskoks were beheaded with their heads then displayed in St. Mark's Square.[21] In response to this offense the Uskok captured a galley of Venetians, slaughtered the crew, and used the blood of the victims to flavor their bread.[22]

The uskoks would conduct such acts up until 1615 when their piracy went so far as creating an open war between Venice and Austria. Venice, frustrated with the piracy, launched an attack after the Archduke Ferdinand of Styria refused to reprimand the Uskoks. A peace treaty was signed in autumn 1617 which arranged for the Uskoks to be disbanded, as well as their ships and fortresses be destroyed. An agreement between the Habsburgs and Venetians in 1618 expelled the Uskoks from Senj,[23] prompting migrations of Uskok families into the hinterland.

Uskok migrations edit

The pirates and their families were, accordingly, transported to the interior, where they gave their name to the "Uskoken Gebirge", a group of mountains on the borders of Carniola now called Žumberak. They were also settled in the nearby White Carniola and Kostel in what is now Slovenia. Their presence has also been traced near Učka in Istria, where such significant family names as Novlian (from Novi Vinodolski), Ottocian (from Otočac) and Clissan (from Klis, older orthography), were noted by Italian historian Carlo de Franceschi in 1879.[24]

Origin of Uskoks from Senj edit

Determining the exact national or ethnic composition of the Uskoks from Senj is extremely difficult since it is rarely recorded nationality of the Uskoks, (most commonly terms for Uskoks are "Croats", "Slavs", "Morlachs")[25] Venetians are described Uskoks as Croats, Habsburg sources also identify Uskoks as Croats. The observers and same Uskoks used terms national and ethnic identity as a way to describe the origin of Uskoks. They use terms Croat, Slav and Morlach to connect the Uskoks with the rest population of the islands, the coast and the hinterland, but also to show difference between those Uskoks which belonged to other nationalities, Vlachs, Italians, Albanians, Germans and others.[25] Venetian Republic at the end of the 16th century are concerned about the excellent relations between the Venetian Dalmatian peoples and Uskoks. According to them such relationships existed because of belonging to the same people.[26] There were many Albanians among Uskoks as well and many islanders from Krk, Pag, Rab and residents of other Dalmatian islands. All Uskoks were Catholics, while newcomers to Senj Orthodox or Muslims immediately became Catholics. Uskoks marrying women from Senj area and much less from area of Venetian and Turkish Dalmatia[27] The arrival and occurrence of the Uskoks cannot be identified with the migration of the Vlachs.[28]

Uskok Code edit

As a group whose central reason for being brought together was Christianity, the Uskoks' explanation for piracy and warfare rested in their religion. These people felt they were fighting a holy war against the Muslim enemy in defense of the boundaries of Christendom.[29] Seeing that these people were once refugees from Ottoman nations, they were given no choice but to leave in order to continue following the religion they had been their entire lives. The Uskok people established a code to follow, holding Senj honor and its values in a central place of that code. Honor is what they believed to be the most important quality that a hero could have, which all Uskoks strived to be. Other important aspects of the Uskok heroic honor were loyalty to their city, army, and band; honorable attention to every knight and obligation; readiness to lay down their lives or spill their blood in time of war; experience in warfare; ability to benefit their city; success and glory in duels with the Turks and other enemies of the Christian faith; and severity in punishing those who were disobedient or rebellious.[30] It was also made known the Uskok qualities that would cancel out one's honor: reluctance to shed one's own blood; failure to engage the enemy in battle; groundless boasting; avoidance of risks on the frontier; failure to take prisoners, trophies, or booty; meanness in rewards to comrades or spies; the absence of any general recognition of one's manliness; and the lack of battle scars or wounds.[30]

From these principles it is clear that the Uskoks admired the strength and arrogance of a hero and despised the weakness displayed by a coward. The importance of these principles was instilled in boys at a young age. Taught to take part in competitions, they would test their strength and dexterity through racing, fighting, and throwing stones at one another until blood ran.[30] Over time, this code would be broken, ignored, and overlooked as the Uskok attitude and motives would change.

Legacy edit

 
Kliški uskoci (front) at the funeral of Otto von Habsburg in Vienna

Today, a historical unit of uskoks called Kliški uskoci ("Uskoks of Klis" | "Historical Unit Kliški uskoci".) exists as a ceremonial regiment in honour of the national legacy of uskoks in Croatia. The unit of Klis Uskoks is founded by Croatian war veterans. After the Croatian War for Independence, the former soldiers wanted to revitalize the historical and cultural heritage of Klis, the town whose bloody history gave much inspiration during the war. The veterans participate in historical and cultural events to renew the memory of the Uskoks of Klis. They were among the six historic Croatian military units represented at the funeral of Otto von Habsburg in July 2011.[31]

One Special Forces unit of Special Operations Command of Croatian Armed Forces is called Commando Uskok Company (Komando uskočka satnija).

Notable uskoci edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In 1527, the Croatian nobles elected Ferdinand I, Archduke of Austria as their king, and confirmed the succession to him and his heirs. In return for the throne Archduke Ferdinand promised to respect the historic rights, freedoms, laws and customs the Croats had when united with the Hungarian kingdom and to defend Croatia from Ottoman invasion. (R. W. SETON -WATSON:The southern Slav question and the Habsburg Monarchy page 18)

References edit

  1. ^ Croatia: A History, Ivo Goldstein, p. 40, 1999
  2. ^ Fine 2006, pp. 216–219
  3. ^ Singleton 1989, p. 61
  4. ^ Council of Europe 2003, p. 247
  5. ^ "[Projekat Rastko] Bosko Suvajdzic: Hajduci i uskoci u narodnoj poeziji - Istorijske pretpostavke za nastanak i razvoj hajduckog pokreta [2003]". www.rastko.rs. Retrieved 2020-04-08.
  6. ^ a b c d Singleton 1989, pp. 60–61
  7. ^ Goffman 2002, p. 190
  8. ^ Davies 1996, p. 561
  9. ^ Bracewell 1992, p. 40
  10. ^ Longworth 1979, p. 148
  11. ^ a b Listeš 1998, pp. 1–169
  12. ^ Bracewell 1992, p. 3
  13. ^ Bracewell 1992, p. 51
  14. ^ a b c d Setton 1984, p. 608
  15. ^ Lane 1973, p. 387
  16. ^ Bracewell 1992, p. 305
  17. ^ Rothenberg 1961, p. 148
  18. ^ a b c Rothenberg 1961, p. 149
  19. ^ Rothenberg 1961, p. 150
  20. ^ Longworth 1979, p. 152
  21. ^ a b Rothenberg 1961, p. 153
  22. ^ Rothenberg 1961, p. 154
  23. ^ Bracewell 1992, p. 306
  24. ^ De Franceschi, Carlo (1879). L'Istria: note storiche (in Italian). Parenzo. p. 330.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  25. ^ a b Bracewell, Catherine Wendy (2015-12-18). The Uskoks of Senj: Piracy, Banditry, and Holy War in the Sixteenth-Century Adriatic. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-1-5017-0284-6.
  26. ^ Bracewell, Catherine Wendy (2015-12-18). The Uskoks of Senj: Piracy, Banditry, and Holy War in the Sixteenth-Century Adriatic. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-1-5017-0284-6.
  27. ^ Gligor Stanojević, Senjski uskoci, 1977, http://fliphtml5.com/klqi/zqeo/basic#page=29,33,35
  28. ^ University Study of Pedagogy and History, The origin and military activity of the Uskoks, Hrvoje Sopta, 2017.https://repozitorij.ffos.hr/islandora/object/ffos%3A2247/datastream/PDF/view #page=4-5
  29. ^ Bracewell 1992, p. 155
  30. ^ a b c Bracewell 1992, p. 163
  31. ^ Archduke Karl von Habsburg honored Kliški uskoci

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Uskoks". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

Bibliography edit

  • Bracewell, Catherine Wendy (1992). The Uskoks of Senj: Piracy, Banditry, and Holy War in the Sixteenth-Century Adriatic. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
  • Council of Europe (2003). Parliamentary Assembly - Working papers - 2003 Ordinary Session January 2003 - Volume I - Documents 9519, 9568 & 9576-9639. Strasbourg: Council of Europe Publishing. ISBN 92-871-5135-0.
  • Clissold, Von Stephen (1966). A short history of the Yugoslav peoples. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-04676-9.
  • Davies, Norman (1996). Europe: a history. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198201717.
  • Fine, John Van Antwerp (2006). When ethnicity did not matter in the Balkans. Michigan: The University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0-472-11414-X.
  • Goffman, Daniel (2002). The Ottoman Empire and early modern Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-45280-5.
  • Lane, Frederic Chapin (1973). Venice, a maritime republic. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-1460-X.
  • Listeš, Srećko (1998). Klis: prošlost, toponimi, govor (in Croatian). Klis: Hrvatsko društvo Trpimir. ISBN 9789539675132.
  • Longworth, Philip (1979). "The Senj Oskoks Reconsidered". Slavonic and East European Review: 348–368.
  • Rothenberg, Gunther E. (1961). "Venice and The Uskoks of Senj: 1537-1618". The Journal of Modern History. 33 (2): 148–156. doi:10.1086/238780. S2CID 144221514.
  • Setton, Kenneth Meyer (1984). The Papacy and the Levant, 1204–1571: The Sixteenth Century, Vol. IV. Philadelphia: The American Philosophical Society. ISBN 0-87169-162-0.
  • Singleton, Frederick Bernard (1989). A short history of the Yugoslav peoples. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-27485-0.

Further reading edit

  • See Minuccio Minucci, Historia degli Uscochi (Venice, 1603); enlarged by Paolo Sarpi, and translated into French as a supplement to Amelot de la Houssaye's Histoire du gouvernement de Venise (Amsterdam, 1/05). Minucci was one of the Venetian envoys at Graz.
  • See also the conciser narratives in C. de Franceschi's L'Istria, chap. 37 (Parenzo, 1879); and T. G. Jackson's Dalmatia, the Quarnero and Istria, chap. 27 (Oxford, 1887).
  • Wendy Bracewell also published a study of the Uskok women in a collection titled "Žene u Hrvatskoj" in 2004
  • Historical Unit Kliški uskoci - About Uskoks

External links edit

  • Historical Unit Kliški uskoci
  • Simon, Ruth. . University of Virginia Library. Archived from the original on 2007-12-14.
  • Musulin, Nedjeljko (2009-11-04). "Kliška tvrđava, najveći muzej na otvorenome, pristupačnija turistima - Kliški uskoci opet čuvaju puteve do Dalmacije" [Klis fortress, the largest museum in the open, more accessible to tourists - Uskoci of Klis guard the roads of Dalmatia once again] (PDF). Vjesnik (in Croatian). Retrieved 2011-03-13.
  • West, Rebecca. "Black Lamb, Grey Falcon. Section on Uskoks and the Dalmatian coast". The Atlantic.

uskoks, uskok, redirects, here, croatian, enforcement, institution, uskok, uskoci, redirects, here, other, uses, uskoci, disambiguation, croatian, uskoci, pronounced, ǔsko, singular, uskok, notes, naming, were, irregular, soldiers, habsburg, croatia, that, inh. Uskok redirects here For the Croatian law enforcement institution see USKOK Uskoci redirects here For other uses see Uskoci disambiguation The Uskoks Croatian Uskoci pronounced ǔsko t si singular Uskok notes on naming were irregular soldiers in Habsburg Croatia 2 3 4 that inhabited areas on the eastern Adriatic coast and surrounding territories during the Ottoman wars in Europe Bands of Uskoks fought a guerrilla war against the Ottomans and they formed small units and rowed swift boats Since the uskoks were checked on land and were rarely paid their annual subsidy they resorted to acts of piracy Uskoks UskociStitch with Uskok ships chasing a large ship Museum of Fortress Nehaj in Senj Croatia LeadersNumerous notable leaders include Petar Kruzic Klis Ivan Lenkovic Senj Dates of operation1520s 1618HeadquartersMobile two most famous Klis Fortress in Klis origin Nehaj Fortress in Senj later Active regionsHabsburg Ottoman frontiersSize2 000 at most when 1 Part ofVarious Undetermined Croatian Habsburg soldiers Military frontier soldiers Piracy irregular armyOpponentsPrimarily Ottoman Empire but also Republic of Venice and others During this defense of the Klis Fortress against an Ottoman invasion an elite Croatian military faction of Uskoci was formed The exploits of the Uskoks contributed to a renewal of war between Venice and the Ottoman Empire 1570 1573 An extremely curious picture of contemporary manners is presented by the Venetian agents whose reports on this war resemble a knightly chronicle of the Middle Ages These chronicles contain information pertaining to single combats tournaments and other chivalrous adventures Many of these troops served abroad After a series of incidents that escalated into the Uskok War 1615 1618 the Uskok activity in their stronghold of Senj mostly ceased and were disbanded but the usage of the term and their existence although more localized continued for a period of time Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Early period 2 2 Ottoman invasion and Venice 3 Uskok migrations 4 Origin of Uskoks from Senj 5 Uskok Code 6 Legacy 7 Notable uskoci 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 External linksName editEtymologically the word uskoci itself means the ones who jumped in the ones who ambushed in South Slavic languages 5 The Serbian Cyrillic transliteration is Uskoci and Slovene is Uskoki In other languages the term became a loanword as well German Uskoken Hungarian Uszkokok Italian Uscocchi History editEarly period edit The Ottoman conquest of Bosnia and Herzegovina during the early years of the 16th century drove large numbers of ethnic Croats from their homes which in the town of Klis prompted the formation of the Uskok military 6 Large numbers of fugitives from Herzegovina Dalmatia and Bosnia fleeing the Ottomans joined the ranks of the Uskok bands 7 8 In 1522 the border territory of Senj was taken over by the Habsburgs under the authority of Archduke Ferdinand forming a state controlled Militargrenze or Military Frontier 9 The Austrian Emperor Ferdinand I instituted a system of planting colonies of defenders along the Military Frontier Moreover the Uskoks were promised an annual subsidy in return for their services Owing to its location Klis Fortress was an important defensive position which stands on the route by which the Ottomans could penetrate the mountain barrier separating the coastal lowlands from around Split in Croatia from Ottoman held Bosnia 6 Numerous refugees from Ottoman areas began settling along this territory crossing the border to escape Ottoman attacks Christian guerilla resistance in Ottoman occupied areas of Dalmatia and Bosnia caused these people to flee and settle down first at the fortress of Klis along the Military Frontier then at Senj 10 A body of these uskoks led by Croatian captain Petar Kruzic used the base at Klis both to hold the Turks at bay and to engage in marauding and piracy against coastal shipping 6 Although nominally accepting the sovereignty of the Habsburg Emperor Ferdinand I Note 1 who obtained the Croatian crown in 1527 Kruzic and his freebooting Uskoks were a law unto themselves 6 After Petar Kruzic s death and the lack of water supply the defenders of Klis finally surrendered to the Ottomans in exchange for their freedom 11 On March 12 1537 the town and fortress was given up to the Ottomans many of the citizens left the town while the Uskoks went to the city of Senj on the Adriatic coast where they continued fighting the Ottomans 11 They may have started to gather around Senj as early as 1520 12 The Ottoman raids and destruction brought Senj natives together with those from the Habsburg lands Dalmatians Ragusans and Italians 13 At Senj the Klis Uskoks were soon joined by other refugees from Novi Vinodolski in northwestern Croatia from Otocac on the Gacka River and from other Croatian towns and villages when 14 The new Uskok stronghold screened by mountains and forests was unassailable by cavalry or artillery 14 However the fortress was admirably suitable to the lightly armed uskoks who were excellent in guerrilla warfare The Martolos were employed by the Ottomans to discourage Uskok penetration of Turkish territory which was not very profitable anyhow 14 Since the uskoks were checked on land and were rarely paid their annual subsidy they resorted to acts of piracy 14 Large galleys could not anchor in the bay of Senj which is shallow and exposed to sudden gales So the uskoks fitted out a fleet of swift boats which were light enough to navigate the smallest creeks and inlets of the shores of Illyria Moreover these boats were helpful in providing the uskoks a temporary landing on shore With these they were able to attack numerous commercial areas on the Adriatic The uskoks saw their ranks swell as outlaws from all nations joined them Eventually the whole city of Senj lived from piracy The expeditions were blessed in the local church and the monasteries of the Dominicans and the Franciscans received tithes from the loot 15 After the War of the Holy League in 1537 against the Ottoman Empire a truce between Venice and the Ottomans was created in 1539 16 This led to the evacuation of all Uskoks in Dalmatia in 1541 where they had been defending a Christian enclave in the mountains during the war 17 Throughout the following years the Habsburgs were at arms with the Turks giving the Uskoks the opportunity to repeatedly raid Bosnia and Dalmatia The Uskoks were able to continue doing so up until 1547 when peace was established between the two forcing the Uskoks to find other ways of making ends meet As with other Slavic pirates the Uskok territory was not suitable for any form of agriculture forcing them to turn to piracy once more Ottoman invasion and Venice edit nbsp Nehaj Fortress in Senj built by Ivan Lenkovic in 1558 Beginning as inland pirates the Uskoci shortly turned to the seas once realizing the full potential of the geography of Senj The land was protected by thick forests and mountains while the jagged cliffs near the seas prevented warships from entering The seas in the Gulf of Quarnero were quite rough which posed navigational hazards as further protection from their enemies 18 Uskoks began their attacks upon Turkish ships with boats large enough to hold thirty to fifty men 18 After 1540 however Venice as mistress of the seas guaranteed the safety of Ottoman merchant vessels and provided them with an escort of galleys The uskoks retaliated by ravaging the Venetian islands of Krk Rab and Pag Moreover they utilized the Venetian territories in Dalmatia as a springboard in order to launch attacks against the Ottomans nbsp Another view of Nehaj in Senj After 1561 the Uskoci attacked Christian shipping in Dubrovnik with numbers never exceeding 2000 men 18 By 1573 the Uskoks caused considerable concern in Venice with frequent attacks once Venetian attempts of protection had proven to be ineffective The following years led the reputation of the Uskoks to spread becoming the resort of refugees and outlaws of all kinds from all nations 19 Meanwhile the corsairs of Greece and North Africa were free to raid the unprotected southern shores of Italy Venice was besieged with complaints from the Porte the Vatican and the Viceroy of Naples with his sovereign the King of Spain A Venetian appeal to Austria for help met with little success and the offenses of the uskoks against the Venetians were outweighed by their attacks against the Ottomans Minuccio Minucci a Venetian envoy at Graz states that a share of the uskoks spoils of silk velvet and jewels went to the ladies of the Archducal Court of Graz where important matters between Venice and Austria were negotiated From 1577 onwards Venice endeavored to crush the pirates without offending Austria enlisting Albanians in place of their Dalmatian crews who feared reprisals at home For a time the uskoks only ventured forth at night during the winter season and even during stormy weather In 1592 following the fall of Bihac a strong Ottoman army invaded further into Croatia hoping to capture Senj Led by Telli Hasan Pasha the beylerbey of Bosnia the Ottomans managed to capture a number of uskok settlements killing and enslaving the population However the army was routed and dispersed in the following year Austria was involved in war with the Ottomans and the Venetian admiral Giovanni Bembo blockaded Trieste and Rijeka Fiume where the pirates forwarded their booty for sale They also erected two forts to command the passages from Senj to the open sea In 1600 the Prince of Senj was Mickael Radic The Duke Micheal Radic appointed as Prince of Senj on 1 December 1600 by King Rudolf in Graz Prince Radic was Prince of Senj Radic family is a Native noble family from Lika region members of the family were Uskok military leaders at the headquarters in Senj nbsp Carniolan Uskoks in an engraving from Johann Weikhard von Valvasor s work The Glory of the Duchy of Carniola 17th century A raid by the Uskoks upon Istria resulted in an agreement between Venice and Austria and Count Joseph of Rabatta was appointed to act as commissioner to those in Senj as well as the chief negotiator with the Venetians Rabatta came to Senj in 1600 with a strong bodyguard detail and was very energetic His time ruling over the Uskoks was brutal where many Uskoks were hung or sent to fight in the Turkish war 20 revealing his favor towards the Venetian side He soon lost all military support giving the Uskoks the opportunity to overthrow his rule and was ultimately killed in January 1602 enabling Senj to return to its usual state with the fugitive Uskoks returning to Senj where they resumed their acts of piracy nbsp An uskok drawing from the 19th century from the Museum of the City of Zagreb Up until 1611 the Uskoks were relatively undisturbed Piracy was strictly forbidden at this point but it was tolerated in order to avoid payment of subsidies owed to those of Senj 21 A Venetian squadron intercepted an Uskok fleet in the spring of 1613 in response to the complaints regarding Uskok activity and as reported sixty Uskoks were beheaded with their heads then displayed in St Mark s Square 21 In response to this offense the Uskok captured a galley of Venetians slaughtered the crew and used the blood of the victims to flavor their bread 22 The uskoks would conduct such acts up until 1615 when their piracy went so far as creating an open war between Venice and Austria Venice frustrated with the piracy launched an attack after the Archduke Ferdinand of Styria refused to reprimand the Uskoks A peace treaty was signed in autumn 1617 which arranged for the Uskoks to be disbanded as well as their ships and fortresses be destroyed An agreement between the Habsburgs and Venetians in 1618 expelled the Uskoks from Senj 23 prompting migrations of Uskok families into the hinterland Uskok migrations editThe pirates and their families were accordingly transported to the interior where they gave their name to the Uskoken Gebirge a group of mountains on the borders of Carniola now called Zumberak They were also settled in the nearby White Carniola and Kostel in what is now Slovenia Their presence has also been traced near Ucka in Istria where such significant family names as Novlian from Novi Vinodolski Ottocian from Otocac and Clissan from Klis older orthography were noted by Italian historian Carlo de Franceschi in 1879 24 Origin of Uskoks from Senj editDetermining the exact national or ethnic composition of the Uskoks from Senj is extremely difficult since it is rarely recorded nationality of the Uskoks most commonly terms for Uskoks are Croats Slavs Morlachs 25 Venetians are described Uskoks as Croats Habsburg sources also identify Uskoks as Croats The observers and same Uskoks used terms national and ethnic identity as a way to describe the origin of Uskoks They use terms Croat Slav and Morlach to connect the Uskoks with the rest population of the islands the coast and the hinterland but also to show difference between those Uskoks which belonged to other nationalities Vlachs Italians Albanians Germans and others 25 Venetian Republic at the end of the 16th century are concerned about the excellent relations between the Venetian Dalmatian peoples and Uskoks According to them such relationships existed because of belonging to the same people 26 There were many Albanians among Uskoks as well and many islanders from Krk Pag Rab and residents of other Dalmatian islands All Uskoks were Catholics while newcomers to Senj Orthodox or Muslims immediately became Catholics Uskoks marrying women from Senj area and much less from area of Venetian and Turkish Dalmatia 27 The arrival and occurrence of the Uskoks cannot be identified with the migration of the Vlachs 28 Uskok Code editAs a group whose central reason for being brought together was Christianity the Uskoks explanation for piracy and warfare rested in their religion These people felt they were fighting a holy war against the Muslim enemy in defense of the boundaries of Christendom 29 Seeing that these people were once refugees from Ottoman nations they were given no choice but to leave in order to continue following the religion they had been their entire lives The Uskok people established a code to follow holding Senj honor and its values in a central place of that code Honor is what they believed to be the most important quality that a hero could have which all Uskoks strived to be Other important aspects of the Uskok heroic honor were loyalty to their city army and band honorable attention to every knight and obligation readiness to lay down their lives or spill their blood in time of war experience in warfare ability to benefit their city success and glory in duels with the Turks and other enemies of the Christian faith and severity in punishing those who were disobedient or rebellious 30 It was also made known the Uskok qualities that would cancel out one s honor reluctance to shed one s own blood failure to engage the enemy in battle groundless boasting avoidance of risks on the frontier failure to take prisoners trophies or booty meanness in rewards to comrades or spies the absence of any general recognition of one s manliness and the lack of battle scars or wounds 30 From these principles it is clear that the Uskoks admired the strength and arrogance of a hero and despised the weakness displayed by a coward The importance of these principles was instilled in boys at a young age Taught to take part in competitions they would test their strength and dexterity through racing fighting and throwing stones at one another until blood ran 30 Over time this code would be broken ignored and overlooked as the Uskok attitude and motives would change Legacy edit nbsp Kliski uskoci front at the funeral of Otto von Habsburg in Vienna Today a historical unit of uskoks called Kliski uskoci Uskoks of Klis Historical Unit Kliski uskoci exists as a ceremonial regiment in honour of the national legacy of uskoks in Croatia The unit of Klis Uskoks is founded by Croatian war veterans After the Croatian War for Independence the former soldiers wanted to revitalize the historical and cultural heritage of Klis the town whose bloody history gave much inspiration during the war The veterans participate in historical and cultural events to renew the memory of the Uskoks of Klis They were among the six historic Croatian military units represented at the funeral of Otto von Habsburg in July 2011 31 One Special Forces unit of Special Operations Command of Croatian Armed Forces is called Commando Uskok Company Komando uskocka satnija Notable uskoci editPetar Kruzic Ivan Lenkovic Nikola Jurisic Petar Mrkonjic Ivo SenjaninSee also edit nbsp Croatia portal Hajduk MorlachsNotes edit In 1527 the Croatian nobles elected Ferdinand I Archduke of Austria as their king and confirmed the succession to him and his heirs In return for the throne Archduke Ferdinand promised to respect the historic rights freedoms laws and customs the Croats had when united with the Hungarian kingdom and to defend Croatia from Ottoman invasion R W SETON WATSON The southern Slav question and the Habsburg Monarchy page 18 References edit Croatia A History Ivo Goldstein p 40 1999 Fine 2006 pp 216 219 Singleton 1989 p 61 Council of Europe 2003 p 247 Projekat Rastko Bosko Suvajdzic Hajduci i uskoci u narodnoj poeziji Istorijske pretpostavke za nastanak i razvoj hajduckog pokreta 2003 www rastko rs Retrieved 2020 04 08 a b c d Singleton 1989 pp 60 61 Goffman 2002 p 190 Davies 1996 p 561 Bracewell 1992 p 40 Longworth 1979 p 148 a b Listes 1998 pp 1 169 Bracewell 1992 p 3 Bracewell 1992 p 51 a b c d Setton 1984 p 608 Lane 1973 p 387 Bracewell 1992 p 305 Rothenberg 1961 p 148 a b c Rothenberg 1961 p 149 Rothenberg 1961 p 150 Longworth 1979 p 152 a b Rothenberg 1961 p 153 Rothenberg 1961 p 154 Bracewell 1992 p 306 De Franceschi Carlo 1879 L Istria note storiche in Italian Parenzo p 330 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Bracewell Catherine Wendy 2015 12 18 The Uskoks of Senj Piracy Banditry and Holy War in the Sixteenth Century Adriatic Cornell University Press ISBN 978 1 5017 0284 6 Bracewell Catherine Wendy 2015 12 18 The Uskoks of Senj Piracy Banditry and Holy War in the Sixteenth Century Adriatic Cornell University Press ISBN 978 1 5017 0284 6 Gligor Stanojevic Senjski uskoci 1977 http fliphtml5 com klqi zqeo basic page 29 33 35 University Study of Pedagogy and History The origin and military activity of the Uskoks Hrvoje Sopta 2017 https repozitorij ffos hr islandora object ffos 3A2247 datastream PDF view page 4 5 Bracewell 1992 p 155 a b c Bracewell 1992 p 163 Archduke Karl von Habsburg honored Kliski uskoci nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Uskoks Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Bibliography editBracewell Catherine Wendy 1992 The Uskoks of Senj Piracy Banditry and Holy War in the Sixteenth Century Adriatic Ithaca NY Cornell University Press Council of Europe 2003 Parliamentary Assembly Working papers 2003 Ordinary Session January 2003 Volume I Documents 9519 9568 amp 9576 9639 Strasbourg Council of Europe Publishing ISBN 92 871 5135 0 Clissold Von Stephen 1966 A short history of the Yugoslav peoples Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 04676 9 Davies Norman 1996 Europe a history Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198201717 Fine John Van Antwerp 2006 When ethnicity did not matter in the Balkans Michigan The University of Michigan Press ISBN 0 472 11414 X Goffman Daniel 2002 The Ottoman Empire and early modern Europe Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 45280 5 Lane Frederic Chapin 1973 Venice a maritime republic Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 1460 X Listes Srecko 1998 Klis proslost toponimi govor in Croatian Klis Hrvatsko drustvo Trpimir ISBN 9789539675132 Longworth Philip 1979 The Senj Oskoks Reconsidered Slavonic and East European Review 348 368 Rothenberg Gunther E 1961 Venice and The Uskoks of Senj 1537 1618 The Journal of Modern History 33 2 148 156 doi 10 1086 238780 S2CID 144221514 Setton Kenneth Meyer 1984 The Papacy and the Levant 1204 1571 The Sixteenth Century Vol IV Philadelphia The American Philosophical Society ISBN 0 87169 162 0 Singleton Frederick Bernard 1989 A short history of the Yugoslav peoples Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 27485 0 Further reading editSee Minuccio Minucci Historia degli Uscochi Venice 1603 enlarged by Paolo Sarpi and translated into French as a supplement to Amelot de la Houssaye s Histoire du gouvernement de Venise Amsterdam 1 05 Minucci was one of the Venetian envoys at Graz See also the conciser narratives in C de Franceschi s L Istria chap 37 Parenzo 1879 and T G Jackson s Dalmatia the Quarnero and Istria chap 27 Oxford 1887 Wendy Bracewell also published a study of the Uskok women in a collection titled Zene u Hrvatskoj in 2004 Historical Unit Kliski uskoci About UskoksExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Uskoks Historical Unit Kliski uskoci Simon Ruth The Uskok Problem and Habsburg Venetian and Ottoman Relations at the Turn of the Seventeenth Century University of Virginia Library Archived from the original on 2007 12 14 Musulin Nedjeljko 2009 11 04 Kliska tvrđava najveci muzej na otvorenome pristupacnija turistima Kliski uskoci opet cuvaju puteve do Dalmacije Klis fortress the largest museum in the open more accessible to tourists Uskoci of Klis guard the roads of Dalmatia once again PDF Vjesnik in Croatian Retrieved 2011 03 13 West Rebecca Black Lamb Grey Falcon Section on Uskoks and the Dalmatian coast The Atlantic Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Uskoks amp oldid 1217784636, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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