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Uprising in Banat

The Uprising in Banat[a] was a rebellion organized and led by Serbian Orthodox bishop Teodor of Vršac and Sava Temišvarac against the Ottomans in the Eyalet of Temeşvar. The uprising broke out in 1594, in the initial stage of the Long Turkish War, and was fought by local Serbs, numbering some 5,000, who managed to quickly take over several towns in the region before being crushed by the Ottoman army. The relics of Saint Sava were burnt by the Ottomans as a retaliation. Although short-lived, it inspired future rebellions.

Uprising in Banat
Part of Long Turkish War, Ottoman–Serbian wars

Map of the Uprising.
DateMarch-10 July 1594
Location
Eyalet of Temeşvar, Ottoman Empire (modern Banat region, Serbia and Romania)
Result Ottoman victory
Belligerents
Serb rebels
Austrian aid
Ottoman Empire
Commanders and leaders
Teodor of Vršac 
Sava Temišvarac
Velja Mironić
Đorđe Rac
Spahija Vukadin 
Koca Sinan Pasha
Mustafa Pasha
Ali Çavuş
Strength
5,000 20–30,000
Casualties and losses
1,000+

Background edit

Status of Serbs edit

Under Ottoman rule, Serbs experienced subjugation, oppression and suppression of their religion and culture. Under the Ottoman tax system of devshirme, male children from Serb families were taken by the state as part of taxes due to the imperial government. These children were forcbly converted to Islam and made to serve as janissaries.[1]

Ottoman crisis edit

The reign of Suleiman I has been described as the most famous period in Ottoman history.[2] At the end of his reign, however, the constant wars had taken its toll, damaging the economy.[2] The faulty economic policies that followed shook the economy and with that, the foundations of Ottoman society; state officials quickly became poor, their pay being worthless akçe, and corruption and bribes were common.[2] Mutiny struck throughout the Ottoman Empire, the rebellion of the capital troops in January 1593 assuring the government to seek out a new war of conquest to get out of the crisis.[2] The population (rayah, sr. raja) in the Sanjak of Çanad suffered in this period, since the 1560s.[3] Impoverished sipahi forced peasants to overwork themselves, and the sipahis imposed their own taxes on the peasants, despite laws preventing such actions.[4] Tax collectors, as well, abused their position, taking higher taxes.[4] Beys and vojvode (Christian chiefs) used the population's houses, tools, and animals, and ate free of charge, which was eventually prevented by government order.[4] A result of issues like these led to a massive migration of the population to Transylvania in 1583.[5] Records show the worsening of the population's status, and deteriorating economy (inflation).[5] It could be concluded from Ottoman sources that the main initiators and leaders of the uprising once belonged to the Christian layers in Ottoman military service.[5] After the Ottoman conquest of Gyula in 1566, these began to lose their privileges and became part of the lower class (raja); a part moved to Transylvania and the frontier parts of the empire, a part stayed, while a large number joined hajduk bands.[5]

The defeat of the Ottomans at the Battle of Sisak (22 June 1593) and the uncertain outcome of fighting in Upper Hungary in the beginning of the Long Turkish War (1593–1606) woke up internal problems and also jeopardized Ottoman rule in the vassal principalities of Transylvania, Wallachia, and Moldavia.[5] This also created conditions for the Serb uprising in Banat in 1594.[5]

Prelude edit

 
Uprising in Banat

Smaller groups of Ottoman Christian martolosi and some sipahi went rogue when Christian armies conquered Filek and Nógrád during the winter of 1593–94. They gathered in the frontier towards Transylvania (ruled by Ottoman vassal Sigismund Báthory), where numerous hajduk bands were active before the war, and received help from Đorđe Palotić, the Ban of Lugos, and Ferenc Geszti, one of the main Transylvanian commanders.[6] At the beginning the group raided merchant caravans, until their numbers grew and they started attacking lone towers and chardaks.[6] The raja approached only when the group arrived in their areas, while in several places they were forced to join as the rebels threatened to take their properties, and even death (which is contrary to stereotypes of the folk character of uprisal).[6]

In March, a group of rebels led by Petar Majzoš burnt down Vršac and robbed the population of neighbouring villages, then retreated to Transylvania.[6] At the end of March, the rebels attacked and sacked Bocșa and Margina. In this period, it seems, the bandit forays turned into an uprising.[6] The aims of the uprising were expressed by the Orthodox clergy, headed by the bishop of Vršac, Teodor.[6]

Uprising edit

 
The rebels sought help from Transylvanian Prince Sigismund Báthory.
 
Vršac Fortress

After the operations in the Vršac area, a large Ottoman ship convoy with war material was attacked on the Syrmian side of the Danube, most likely by Syrmian hajduks.[7][b] In April and May the rebels destroyed important Ottoman strongholds on the left waterside of the Danube, in southern Banat, and V. Krestić notes that these conflicts were perhaps where the rebels had the greatest success.[8] According to Ottoman chronicler Mustafa Selaniki, the rebellion began in Modava, led by an unnamed Christian (identified as the Serb "spahija Vukadin"), a ziamet-holder, who had a high rank in the sipahi organization; after losing his service and lands he went to Sigismund Báthory, from where he quickly returned with several officers who would help in the uprising and establish military organization.[8] In mid-May, Bishop Teodor led a mission which asked of aid from Sigismund Báthory, and in return they offered him the rule of the Serbian throne, however, Báthory insisted on submission to the Ottoman sultan and was unable to meet their demands.[9] The first large success of the rebels was the attack on Modava on the Danube, where they killed the Ottoman crew and set the city fortress on fire.[8] They then defeated the Ottoman security at the dock of Hram and crew of the wooden fortress (palanka) in Pančevo.[8] The Ottoman government sent out an army of 1,000 cavalry and infantry when news about the attacks reached Belgrade and Smederevo.[8] In the ensuing battle near Pančevo on 26 May 1594, the rebel leader Vukadin and 1,000 men were killed, an old Serbian record states that "Serbs and Turks fought ... many Serbs fell".[10]

Immediately after the retreat of Ottoman troops, the remnants of defeated rebels, and rebel groups who had previously devastated the place of Ohat, attacked Beçkerek (Zrenjanin), the rich town built by Grand Vizier Sokollu Mehmed Pasha (1506–1579) as his waqf (endowment).[11] A Western source claims that the rebels had before Ohat conquered Ineu and Világosvár.[12] At Zrenjanin, the rebels had the support of the local population, leading to a quick defeat of the Ottoman resistance.[11] The rebels sought to leave as soon as spoils were collected, however, the locals opposed as they feared Ottoman reprisal.[13] V. Krestić notes that the Ottomans believed that the rebellion would be easy to suppress, appointing a lesser official, emin-i nüzül (grain procurer) Ali Çavuş, who had up until then collected extraordinary war taxes, as commander of a detachment from the Sanjak of Smederevo.[11] The Ottoman detachment was destroyed near Zrenjanin, and Ali Çavuş was dismissed upon returning to Belgrade.[11] The rebels sacked Titel, and many Muslim-inhabited villages in the surroundings, killing many Muslims, and had a large part held prisoner in a church, forcing them to convert to Christianity, according to Mustafa Selaniki.[11][c] The Muslim population of neighbouring areas which were not caught up in the uprising withdrew to fortified cities.[11] Cut off to the south and east, the few Muslims of the Kanjiža area most likely took to Csanád and Segedin.[11]

Anticipating an Ottoman attack, the rebels asked for help from Transylvania and the Austrians.[11] Rebel requirements were sent from Vršac and Zrenjanin, which points to that there were two independent centres of the rebels.[11] In early June, Bathory summoned a meeting at Gyulafehérvár of his magnates regarding whether to support the Serb rebels; on 11 June the outcome was that they were not to break their subordinance to the Ottomans.[14] The Transylvanian connection did however not stop; Đorđe Palotić stole armament which he sent to the rebels, and encouraged them to continue to fight; he subsequently promised that Báthory would soon appear to them.[15] On 13 June from Vršac, Bishop Teodor, Ban Sava, and Velja Mironić promised, in the name of all their sipahi, knezes, and "all of Serbdom", to faithfully serve the Transylvanian ruler, in a letter to Mózes Székely, who held the frontier at that time.[16] Meanwhile, the Zrenjanin group sought protection from the Viennese court, their envoy Đorđe Rac arrived at Hatvan on 10 June, meeting with general Teuffenbach, and then also Archduke Matthias at Esztergom.[17] The Austrians sent two small detachments, one of which was killed off by Crimean Tatars on the way, while Transylvania's support came down to continued support in the form of officers and moral support.[18] Meanwhile, the war on the front switched noticeably in the favour of the Ottomans.[18] The arrival of Crimean Tatars led by Khan Ğazı II Giray forced the Christian armies to raise the sieges of Esztergom and Hatvan and retreat into Upper Hungary.[18] This led the Grand Vizier Koca Sinan Pasha to devote attention to Banat. He appointed Mehmed Pasha, the Beylerbey of Anatolia, the commander of an army (consisting of troops from the eyalets of Anatolia and Karaman, and also 3,000 Janissaries) that was planned to deal with the rebels in Zrenjanin.[18] As news arrived of spreading of the uprising in the Temeşvar (Timișoara) area, Mustafa Pasha, the Beylerbey of Temeşvar, was ordered to immediately head from Buda for Banat. No serious resistance was given by the rebels, defeated by 10 July 1594.[18]

Aftermath edit

Ottoman reprisal was daunting. After battles around Zrenjanin the army sacked and burnt villages all the way to the Mureș river (see also Pomorišje).[18] Many settlements were abandoned, and never rebuilt, as the population was either killed or taken slaves, or fled to Transylvania and the Habsburg part of Hungary.[19] The next year, Crimean Tatars wintered in the Eyalet of Temeşvar, which brought new pillage and slavery, and according to contemporary statements no living being could be seen for three days of walking.[18] The longer the war lasted, extraordinary war taxes rose.[18]

In 1596 a Serb uprising broke out in the eastern part of the Sanjak of Herzegovina, organized by the regional Orthodox leadership. It was short-lived, the defeated rebels being forced to capitulate due to lack of foreign support, having likewise requested help from the Christian European states.[20]

Burning of St. Sava's remains edit

 
The burning of Saint Sava's relics by the Ottomans. Painting by Stevan Aleksić (1912).

It remains unclear when St. Sava's remains were brought to Belgrade and incinerated. It was either during the uprising or a year after. In an act of retaliation, Grand Vizier Koca Sinan Pasha ordered the green flag of the Prophet Muhammed to be brought from Damascus to counter the Serb flag, as well as the sarcophagus and relics of Saint Sava located in the Mileševa monastery be brought by military convoy to Belgrade. Along the way, the Ottoman convoy had people killed in their path so that the rebels in the woods would hear of it. On 27 April, the Ottomans had the relics of Saint Sava publicly incinerated on a pyre on the Vračar plateau, and the ashes scattered, made to discourage the Serbs.

Archbishop Sava founded the Serbian Orthodox Church, Serbian ecclesiastical law and national literature, and has been compared to what Buddha is for Buddhism. He was canonized as a miracle-worker and his religious cult was assimilated into folk beliefs in Ottoman times. The veneration of his relics created tension between Serbs and the occupying Ottomans. In 1774, Sava was proclaimed the patron saint of all Serbs. In the 19th century the cult was revived in the context of nationalism with the prospect of independence from the Ottomans, "representing and reproducing powerful images of a national Golden Age, of national reconciliation and unification, and of martyrdom for the church and nation". After Serbia gained full independence, a cathedral dedicated to the saint was planned, part of modernization plans of Belgrade. Although the construction board for the church was established in 1895, the construction of the winning concept, based on Gračanica and Hagia Sophia, began in 1935. Construction stopped during World War II and the Communist rule, only to be restarted after permission in 1984; as of 2010, the exterior is finished and interior unfinished.[21] The site where Saint Sava's relics were burnt, the Vračar plateau, became the new grounds of the National Library of Serbia and the Church of Saint Sava dedicated to the saint, in the 20th century. From its location, the church dominates Belgrade's cityscape, and has become a national symbol.

Legacy edit

The size of the uprising is illustrated in a Serbian epic poem: "The whole land has rebelled, six hundred villages arose, everybody pointed his gun against the emperor".[22]

The coat of arms of Vršac, which was first recorded in 1804, includes a decapitated Turk head on a sabre above the Vršac Fortress, which is believed to signify Janko Halabura's duel victory in 1594.[23][24]

Bishop Teodor was canonized on 29 May 1994 as a hieromartyr (sveštenomučenik), with his feast day on 29 May [O.S. 16 May]. In 2009 the Vršac central square was named "St. Teodor of Vršac". On 28 October 2012, a memorial plaque was put up at the Church of the Holy Archangel Michael in Zrenjanin, honouring Teodor and the rebels.[25] A memorial cross and a red flag with the figure of Saint Sava was erected by the church.[26]

A historical drama play titled Enchanted Castle surrounding the Vršac Castle includes the character of Janko Halabura.[27]

Annotations edit

  1. ^
    It is known in historiography as the "Uprising of the Serbs in Banat" (Serbian: Устанак Срба у Банату/Ustanak Srba u Banatu),[28] "Serb uprising in Banat" (српски устанак у Банату),[29] and simply "Uprising in Banat" (устанак у Банату).[30]
  2. ^
    Although historiography has been divided on whether it was done by Sigismund Báthory or the Banat rebels, V. Krestić concludes that it was most likely Syrmian hajduks.[7] Numerous western sources claimed Báthory, while chronicler Cesare Campana who wrote his work immediately after the war wrote that it was Serbs; J. Tomić and later R. Samardžić opted for Campana and concluded that rebels from Banat systematically crossed into Syrmia with the aim of slowing down the advance of the Ottoman army.[31] V. Krestić notes that Báthory only left Ottoman service the next year, and it is unlikely that it was done by the Banat rebels, at that time hiding in the frontier towards Transylvania; Ottoman chronicler Mustafa Naima asserted that hajduk bands in Syrmia numbered up to 500 that year, which points that this was their act, especially since they plundered many places in Syrmia, burnt Zemun, and took tribute from millers in the environs visibly to the Belgrade Turks.[8]
  3. ^
    According to Western sources the Beylerbey of Temeşvar Hasan Pasha or Sofi Sinan Pasha set out with 5,000 or 11,000 soldiers. This is incorrect, since the Eyalet of Temeşvar troops under the command of Mustafa Pasha were at that time at the defence of Buda. Tarih-i Naima and Tarih-i Selaniki states that it was Ali Çavuş. Western sources claim that the army of Sofi Sinan Pasha was destroyed, and that the rebels then conquered Lipova, and another source claims that 25,000 Turks were killed by the rebels.[11]

References edit

  1. ^ Thomas, Raju; Frim, H Richard (2001). The South Slav Conflict: History, Religion, Ethnicity, and Nationalism. New York: Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781000525458.
  2. ^ a b c d Krestić 2003, p. 173.
  3. ^ Krestić 2003, pp. 173–174.
  4. ^ a b c Krestić 2003, p. 174.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Krestić 2003, p. 175.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Krestić 2003, p. 176.
  7. ^ a b Krestić 2003, pp. 176–177.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Krestić 2003, p. 177.
  9. ^ Krestić 2003, p. 176, Ivić 1929, pp. 198–201
  10. ^ Krestić 2003, p. 177, Samardžić 1993, p. 242
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Krestić 2003, p. 178.
  12. ^ Krestić 2003, p. 178, Ivić 1929, p. 202
  13. ^ Krestić 2003, p. 178, Ivić 1929, p. 202, Tomić 1899, p. 21
  14. ^ Samardžić 1993, pp. 244–245.
  15. ^ Samardžić 1993, p. 245.
  16. ^ Krestić 2003, p. 178, Samardžić 1993, p. 245
  17. ^ Krestić 2003, pp. 178–179.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h Krestić 2003, p. 179.
  19. ^ Krestić 2003, p. 179, Ivić 1929, p. 206
  20. ^ Samardžić 1993.
  21. ^ Bakić-Hayden 2010, Milanović 2010
  22. ^ Vinaver 1953, p. 17.
  23. ^ Rad vojvođanskih muzeja. Vol. 21–22. Vojvođanski muzej. 1973. p. 209.
  24. ^ "Hajduk Janko na grbu Vršca". Blic. 13 December 2008.
  25. ^ . CZIPM. Archived from the original on 2020-10-24. Retrieved 2017-02-03.
  26. ^ "Danas je Sveti Teodor Vršački". Zrenjanin.[permanent dead link]
  27. ^ . NP Sterija. Archived from the original on 2017-03-29. Retrieved 2017-02-03.
  28. ^ Krestić 2003, p. 173, Samardžić 1993, p. 235
  29. ^ Samardžić 1993, p. 239.
  30. ^ Samardžić 1993, pp. 255, 323.
  31. ^ Krestić 2003, pp. 176–177; Tomić 1899, pp. 19–20, Samardžić 1993, pp. 236–237

Sources edit

Books
  • Đurđev, B.; Čubrilović, V.; Tadić, J. (1960). Народни покрети и устанци крајем XVI и почетком XVII века. Vol. II. Belgrade. pp. 460–477. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Ekmečić, Milorad (2008). Дуго кретање између клања и орања (2nd ed.). Belgrade: Завод за уџбенике.
  • Ivić, Aleksa (1929). Историја Срба у Војводини. Novi Sad: Matica srpska.
  • Ivić, Aleksa (1914). Историја Срба у Угарској: од пада Смедерева до сеобе под Чарнојевићем (1459-1690). Zagreb: Привредникова.
  • Krestić, Vasilije (2003). "Устанак Срба у Банату 1594. године и Дуги Рат". Istorija Novog Kneževca i okoline. Novi Kneževac: Skupština opštine.
  • Samardžić, Radovan; Veselinović, Rajko L.; Popović, Toma (1993). Samardžić, Radovan (ed.). Историја српског народа: Срби под туђинском влашћу (1537–1699). Belgrade: Srpska književna zadruga.
    • Samardžić, Radovan (1993). "Дуги рат између Аустрије и Турске (1593–1606)". Историја српског народа III/1. Belgrade: Srpska književna zadruga. pp. 214–335.
  • Tomić, J. (1899). О устанку Срба у Банату 1594. године. Belgrade.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Vinaver, Vuk (1953). Прве устаничке борбе против Турака. Просвета. p. 17.
Journals
  • Bakić-Hayden, Milica (2010). (PDF). Serbian Studies. 24 (1). NASSS: 49–62. doi:10.1353/ser.2012.0015. S2CID 145778617. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-08-10. Retrieved 2017-01-31.
  • Milanović, Ljubomir (2010). (PDF). Serbian Studies. 24 (1). NASSS: 63–81. doi:10.1353/ser.2012.0018. S2CID 144270672. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-08-10. Retrieved 2017-01-31.
  • Sotirović, Vladislav B. (2011). "The Serbian Patriarchate of Peć in the Ottoman Empire: The First Phase (1557–94)" (PDF). Serbian Studies. 25 (2). NASSS: 143–169. doi:10.1353/ser.2011.0038. S2CID 143629322.
  • Vulović, Vladislav (1996). "Устанак Срба у Банату 1594. године". Рад музеја Војводине. 37–38. Novi Sad: Muzej Vojvodine: 255–262.

External links edit

  • . Beseda. Archived from the original on 2017-06-19. Retrieved 2017-02-03.

uprising, banat, confused, with, banat, rebellion, 1808, rebellion, organized, serbian, orthodox, bishop, teodor, vršac, sava, temišvarac, against, ottomans, eyalet, temeşvar, uprising, broke, 1594, initial, stage, long, turkish, fought, local, serbs, numberin. Not to be confused with Banat Rebellion 1808 The Uprising in Banat a was a rebellion organized and led by Serbian Orthodox bishop Teodor of Vrsac and Sava Temisvarac against the Ottomans in the Eyalet of Temesvar The uprising broke out in 1594 in the initial stage of the Long Turkish War and was fought by local Serbs numbering some 5 000 who managed to quickly take over several towns in the region before being crushed by the Ottoman army The relics of Saint Sava were burnt by the Ottomans as a retaliation Although short lived it inspired future rebellions Uprising in BanatPart of Long Turkish War Ottoman Serbian warsMap of the Uprising DateMarch 10 July 1594LocationEyalet of Temesvar Ottoman Empire modern Banat region Serbia and Romania ResultOttoman victoryBelligerentsSerb rebels Austrian aidOttoman EmpireCommanders and leadersTeodor of Vrsac Sava TemisvaracVelja MironicĐorđe RacSpahija Vukadin Koca Sinan PashaMustafa PashaAli CavusStrength5 00020 30 000Casualties and losses1 000 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Status of Serbs 1 2 Ottoman crisis 2 Prelude 3 Uprising 4 Aftermath 5 Burning of St Sava s remains 6 Legacy 7 Annotations 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksBackground editStatus of Serbs edit Under Ottoman rule Serbs experienced subjugation oppression and suppression of their religion and culture Under the Ottoman tax system of devshirme male children from Serb families were taken by the state as part of taxes due to the imperial government These children were forcbly converted to Islam and made to serve as janissaries 1 Ottoman crisis edit The reign of Suleiman I has been described as the most famous period in Ottoman history 2 At the end of his reign however the constant wars had taken its toll damaging the economy 2 The faulty economic policies that followed shook the economy and with that the foundations of Ottoman society state officials quickly became poor their pay being worthless akce and corruption and bribes were common 2 Mutiny struck throughout the Ottoman Empire the rebellion of the capital troops in January 1593 assuring the government to seek out a new war of conquest to get out of the crisis 2 The population rayah sr raja in the Sanjak of Canad suffered in this period since the 1560s 3 Impoverished sipahi forced peasants to overwork themselves and the sipahis imposed their own taxes on the peasants despite laws preventing such actions 4 Tax collectors as well abused their position taking higher taxes 4 Beys and vojvode Christian chiefs used the population s houses tools and animals and ate free of charge which was eventually prevented by government order 4 A result of issues like these led to a massive migration of the population to Transylvania in 1583 5 Records show the worsening of the population s status and deteriorating economy inflation 5 It could be concluded from Ottoman sources that the main initiators and leaders of the uprising once belonged to the Christian layers in Ottoman military service 5 After the Ottoman conquest of Gyula in 1566 these began to lose their privileges and became part of the lower class raja a part moved to Transylvania and the frontier parts of the empire a part stayed while a large number joined hajduk bands 5 The defeat of the Ottomans at the Battle of Sisak 22 June 1593 and the uncertain outcome of fighting in Upper Hungary in the beginning of the Long Turkish War 1593 1606 woke up internal problems and also jeopardized Ottoman rule in the vassal principalities of Transylvania Wallachia and Moldavia 5 This also created conditions for the Serb uprising in Banat in 1594 5 Prelude edit nbsp Uprising in Banat Smaller groups of Ottoman Christian martolosi and some sipahi went rogue when Christian armies conquered Filek and Nograd during the winter of 1593 94 They gathered in the frontier towards Transylvania ruled by Ottoman vassal Sigismund Bathory where numerous hajduk bands were active before the war and received help from Đorđe Palotic the Ban of Lugos and Ferenc Geszti one of the main Transylvanian commanders 6 At the beginning the group raided merchant caravans until their numbers grew and they started attacking lone towers and chardaks 6 The raja approached only when the group arrived in their areas while in several places they were forced to join as the rebels threatened to take their properties and even death which is contrary to stereotypes of the folk character of uprisal 6 In March a group of rebels led by Petar Majzos burnt down Vrsac and robbed the population of neighbouring villages then retreated to Transylvania 6 At the end of March the rebels attacked and sacked Bocșa and Margina In this period it seems the bandit forays turned into an uprising 6 The aims of the uprising were expressed by the Orthodox clergy headed by the bishop of Vrsac Teodor 6 Uprising edit nbsp The rebels sought help from Transylvanian Prince Sigismund Bathory nbsp Vrsac Fortress After the operations in the Vrsac area a large Ottoman ship convoy with war material was attacked on the Syrmian side of the Danube most likely by Syrmian hajduks 7 b In April and May the rebels destroyed important Ottoman strongholds on the left waterside of the Danube in southern Banat and V Krestic notes that these conflicts were perhaps where the rebels had the greatest success 8 According to Ottoman chronicler Mustafa Selaniki the rebellion began in Modava led by an unnamed Christian identified as the Serb spahija Vukadin a ziamet holder who had a high rank in the sipahi organization after losing his service and lands he went to Sigismund Bathory from where he quickly returned with several officers who would help in the uprising and establish military organization 8 In mid May Bishop Teodor led a mission which asked of aid from Sigismund Bathory and in return they offered him the rule of the Serbian throne however Bathory insisted on submission to the Ottoman sultan and was unable to meet their demands 9 The first large success of the rebels was the attack on Modava on the Danube where they killed the Ottoman crew and set the city fortress on fire 8 They then defeated the Ottoman security at the dock of Hram and crew of the wooden fortress palanka in Pancevo 8 The Ottoman government sent out an army of 1 000 cavalry and infantry when news about the attacks reached Belgrade and Smederevo 8 In the ensuing battle near Pancevo on 26 May 1594 the rebel leader Vukadin and 1 000 men were killed an old Serbian record states that Serbs and Turks fought many Serbs fell 10 Immediately after the retreat of Ottoman troops the remnants of defeated rebels and rebel groups who had previously devastated the place of Ohat attacked Beckerek Zrenjanin the rich town built by Grand Vizier Sokollu Mehmed Pasha 1506 1579 as his waqf endowment 11 A Western source claims that the rebels had before Ohat conquered Ineu and Vilagosvar 12 At Zrenjanin the rebels had the support of the local population leading to a quick defeat of the Ottoman resistance 11 The rebels sought to leave as soon as spoils were collected however the locals opposed as they feared Ottoman reprisal 13 V Krestic notes that the Ottomans believed that the rebellion would be easy to suppress appointing a lesser official emin i nuzul grain procurer Ali Cavus who had up until then collected extraordinary war taxes as commander of a detachment from the Sanjak of Smederevo 11 The Ottoman detachment was destroyed near Zrenjanin and Ali Cavus was dismissed upon returning to Belgrade 11 The rebels sacked Titel and many Muslim inhabited villages in the surroundings killing many Muslims and had a large part held prisoner in a church forcing them to convert to Christianity according to Mustafa Selaniki 11 c The Muslim population of neighbouring areas which were not caught up in the uprising withdrew to fortified cities 11 Cut off to the south and east the few Muslims of the Kanjiza area most likely took to Csanad and Segedin 11 Anticipating an Ottoman attack the rebels asked for help from Transylvania and the Austrians 11 Rebel requirements were sent from Vrsac and Zrenjanin which points to that there were two independent centres of the rebels 11 In early June Bathory summoned a meeting at Gyulafehervar of his magnates regarding whether to support the Serb rebels on 11 June the outcome was that they were not to break their subordinance to the Ottomans 14 The Transylvanian connection did however not stop Đorđe Palotic stole armament which he sent to the rebels and encouraged them to continue to fight he subsequently promised that Bathory would soon appear to them 15 On 13 June from Vrsac Bishop Teodor Ban Sava and Velja Mironic promised in the name of all their sipahi knezes and all of Serbdom to faithfully serve the Transylvanian ruler in a letter to Mozes Szekely who held the frontier at that time 16 Meanwhile the Zrenjanin group sought protection from the Viennese court their envoy Đorđe Rac arrived at Hatvan on 10 June meeting with general Teuffenbach and then also Archduke Matthias at Esztergom 17 The Austrians sent two small detachments one of which was killed off by Crimean Tatars on the way while Transylvania s support came down to continued support in the form of officers and moral support 18 Meanwhile the war on the front switched noticeably in the favour of the Ottomans 18 The arrival of Crimean Tatars led by Khan Gazi II Giray forced the Christian armies to raise the sieges of Esztergom and Hatvan and retreat into Upper Hungary 18 This led the Grand Vizier Koca Sinan Pasha to devote attention to Banat He appointed Mehmed Pasha the Beylerbey of Anatolia the commander of an army consisting of troops from the eyalets of Anatolia and Karaman and also 3 000 Janissaries that was planned to deal with the rebels in Zrenjanin 18 As news arrived of spreading of the uprising in the Temesvar Timișoara area Mustafa Pasha the Beylerbey of Temesvar was ordered to immediately head from Buda for Banat No serious resistance was given by the rebels defeated by 10 July 1594 18 Aftermath editOttoman reprisal was daunting After battles around Zrenjanin the army sacked and burnt villages all the way to the Mureș river see also Pomorisje 18 Many settlements were abandoned and never rebuilt as the population was either killed or taken slaves or fled to Transylvania and the Habsburg part of Hungary 19 The next year Crimean Tatars wintered in the Eyalet of Temesvar which brought new pillage and slavery and according to contemporary statements no living being could be seen for three days of walking 18 The longer the war lasted extraordinary war taxes rose 18 In 1596 a Serb uprising broke out in the eastern part of the Sanjak of Herzegovina organized by the regional Orthodox leadership It was short lived the defeated rebels being forced to capitulate due to lack of foreign support having likewise requested help from the Christian European states 20 Burning of St Sava s remains edit nbsp The burning of Saint Sava s relics by the Ottomans Painting by Stevan Aleksic 1912 It remains unclear when St Sava s remains were brought to Belgrade and incinerated It was either during the uprising or a year after In an act of retaliation Grand Vizier Koca Sinan Pasha ordered the green flag of the Prophet Muhammed to be brought from Damascus to counter the Serb flag as well as the sarcophagus and relics of Saint Sava located in the Mileseva monastery be brought by military convoy to Belgrade Along the way the Ottoman convoy had people killed in their path so that the rebels in the woods would hear of it On 27 April the Ottomans had the relics of Saint Sava publicly incinerated on a pyre on the Vracar plateau and the ashes scattered made to discourage the Serbs Archbishop Sava founded the Serbian Orthodox Church Serbian ecclesiastical law and national literature and has been compared to what Buddha is for Buddhism He was canonized as a miracle worker and his religious cult was assimilated into folk beliefs in Ottoman times The veneration of his relics created tension between Serbs and the occupying Ottomans In 1774 Sava was proclaimed the patron saint of all Serbs In the 19th century the cult was revived in the context of nationalism with the prospect of independence from the Ottomans representing and reproducing powerful images of a national Golden Age of national reconciliation and unification and of martyrdom for the church and nation After Serbia gained full independence a cathedral dedicated to the saint was planned part of modernization plans of Belgrade Although the construction board for the church was established in 1895 the construction of the winning concept based on Gracanica and Hagia Sophia began in 1935 Construction stopped during World War II and the Communist rule only to be restarted after permission in 1984 as of 2010 the exterior is finished and interior unfinished 21 The site where Saint Sava s relics were burnt the Vracar plateau became the new grounds of the National Library of Serbia and the Church of Saint Sava dedicated to the saint in the 20th century From its location the church dominates Belgrade s cityscape and has become a national symbol Legacy editThe size of the uprising is illustrated in a Serbian epic poem The whole land has rebelled six hundred villages arose everybody pointed his gun against the emperor 22 The coat of arms of Vrsac which was first recorded in 1804 includes a decapitated Turk head on a sabre above the Vrsac Fortress which is believed to signify Janko Halabura s duel victory in 1594 23 24 Bishop Teodor was canonized on 29 May 1994 as a hieromartyr svestenomucenik with his feast day on 29 May O S 16 May In 2009 the Vrsac central square was named St Teodor of Vrsac On 28 October 2012 a memorial plaque was put up at the Church of the Holy Archangel Michael in Zrenjanin honouring Teodor and the rebels 25 A memorial cross and a red flag with the figure of Saint Sava was erected by the church 26 A historical drama play titled Enchanted Castle surrounding the Vrsac Castle includes the character of Janko Halabura 27 Annotations edit It is known in historiography as the Uprising of the Serbs in Banat Serbian Ustanak Srba u Banatu Ustanak Srba u Banatu 28 Serb uprising in Banat srpski ustanak u Banatu 29 and simply Uprising in Banat ustanak u Banatu 30 Although historiography has been divided on whether it was done by Sigismund Bathory or the Banat rebels V Krestic concludes that it was most likely Syrmian hajduks 7 Numerous western sources claimed Bathory while chronicler Cesare Campana who wrote his work immediately after the war wrote that it was Serbs J Tomic and later R Samardzic opted for Campana and concluded that rebels from Banat systematically crossed into Syrmia with the aim of slowing down the advance of the Ottoman army 31 V Krestic notes that Bathory only left Ottoman service the next year and it is unlikely that it was done by the Banat rebels at that time hiding in the frontier towards Transylvania Ottoman chronicler Mustafa Naima asserted that hajduk bands in Syrmia numbered up to 500 that year which points that this was their act especially since they plundered many places in Syrmia burnt Zemun and took tribute from millers in the environs visibly to the Belgrade Turks 8 According to Western sources the Beylerbey of Temesvar Hasan Pasha or Sofi Sinan Pasha set out with 5 000 or 11 000 soldiers This is incorrect since the Eyalet of Temesvar troops under the command of Mustafa Pasha were at that time at the defence of Buda Tarih i Naima and Tarih i Selaniki states that it was Ali Cavus Western sources claim that the army of Sofi Sinan Pasha was destroyed and that the rebels then conquered Lipova and another source claims that 25 000 Turks were killed by the rebels 11 References edit Thomas Raju Frim H Richard 2001 The South Slav Conflict History Religion Ethnicity and Nationalism New York Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9781000525458 a b c d Krestic 2003 p 173 Krestic 2003 pp 173 174 a b c Krestic 2003 p 174 a b c d e f Krestic 2003 p 175 a b c d e f Krestic 2003 p 176 a b Krestic 2003 pp 176 177 a b c d e f Krestic 2003 p 177 Krestic 2003 p 176 Ivic 1929 pp 198 201 Krestic 2003 p 177 Samardzic 1993 p 242 a b c d e f g h i j Krestic 2003 p 178 Krestic 2003 p 178 Ivic 1929 p 202 Krestic 2003 p 178 Ivic 1929 p 202 Tomic 1899 p 21 Samardzic 1993 pp 244 245 Samardzic 1993 p 245 Krestic 2003 p 178 Samardzic 1993 p 245 Krestic 2003 pp 178 179 a b c d e f g h Krestic 2003 p 179 Krestic 2003 p 179 Ivic 1929 p 206 Samardzic 1993 Bakic Hayden 2010 Milanovic 2010 Vinaver 1953 p 17 Rad vojvođanskih muzeja Vol 21 22 Vojvođanski muzej 1973 p 209 Hajduk Janko na grbu Vrsca Blic 13 December 2008 SPOMEN OBELEZhЈE VELIKIM SRPSKIM ЈUNACIMA CZIPM Archived from the original on 2020 10 24 Retrieved 2017 02 03 Danas je Sveti Teodor Vrsacki Zrenjanin permanent dead link Boјana Ivanov Ђorђeviћ ZAChARANI ZAMAK NP Sterija Archived from the original on 2017 03 29 Retrieved 2017 02 03 Krestic 2003 p 173 Samardzic 1993 p 235 Samardzic 1993 p 239 Samardzic 1993 pp 255 323 Krestic 2003 pp 176 177 Tomic 1899 pp 19 20 Samardzic 1993 pp 236 237Sources editBooks Đurđev B Cubrilovic V Tadic J 1960 Narodni pokreti i ustanci kraјem XVI i pochetkom XVII veka Vol II Belgrade pp 460 477 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ekmecic Milorad 2008 Dugo kretaњe izmeђu klaњa i oraњa 2nd ed Belgrade Zavod za uџbenike Ivic Aleksa 1929 Istoriјa Srba u Voјvodini Novi Sad Matica srpska Ivic Aleksa 1914 Istoriјa Srba u Ugarskoј od pada Smedereva do seobe pod Charnoјeviћem 1459 1690 Zagreb Privrednikova Krestic Vasilije 2003 Ustanak Srba u Banatu 1594 godine i Dugi Rat Istorija Novog Knezevca i okoline Novi Knezevac Skupstina opstine Samardzic Radovan Veselinovic Rajko L Popovic Toma 1993 Samardzic Radovan ed Istoriјa srpskog naroda Srbi pod tuђinskom vlashћu 1537 1699 Belgrade Srpska knjizevna zadruga Samardzic Radovan 1993 Dugi rat izmeђu Austriјe i Turske 1593 1606 Istoriјa srpskog naroda III 1 Belgrade Srpska knjizevna zadruga pp 214 335 Tomic J 1899 O ustanku Srba u Banatu 1594 godine Belgrade a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Vinaver Vuk 1953 Prve ustanichke borbe protiv Turaka Prosveta p 17 Journals Bakic Hayden Milica 2010 Saint Sava and the power s of spiritual authority PDF Serbian Studies 24 1 NASSS 49 62 doi 10 1353 ser 2012 0015 S2CID 145778617 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 08 10 Retrieved 2017 01 31 Milanovic Ljubomir 2010 Materializing authority the church of Saint Sava in Belgrade and its architectural significance PDF Serbian Studies 24 1 NASSS 63 81 doi 10 1353 ser 2012 0018 S2CID 144270672 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 08 10 Retrieved 2017 01 31 Sotirovic Vladislav B 2011 The Serbian Patriarchate of Pec in the Ottoman Empire The First Phase 1557 94 PDF Serbian Studies 25 2 NASSS 143 169 doi 10 1353 ser 2011 0038 S2CID 143629322 Vulovic Vladislav 1996 Ustanak Srba u Banatu 1594 godine Rad muzeјa Voјvodine 37 38 Novi Sad Muzej Vojvodine 255 262 External links edit Sveti sveshtenomuchenik Teodor vrshachki Beseda Archived from the original on 2017 06 19 Retrieved 2017 02 03 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Uprising in Banat amp oldid 1217285812, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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