fbpx
Wikipedia

Serbian Chetnik Organization

The Serbian Revolutionary Organization (Serbian: Српска револуционарна организација / Srpska revolucionarna organizacija) or Serbian Chetnik Organization (Српска четничка организација / Srpska četnička organizacija) was a revolutionary organization with the aim of liberation of Old Serbia (Kosovo and Macedonia) from the Ottoman Empire (in the vilayets of Kosovo, Manastir and Salonika). Its Central Committee (Централни одбор / Centralni odbor) was established in 1902, while the Serbian Committee (Српски комитет / Srpski komitet) was established in September 1903 in Belgrade, by the combined Central Boards of Belgrade, Vranje, Skopje and Bitola. Its armed wing was activated in 1904.[1] Among the architects were members of the Saint Sava society, Army Staff and Ministry of Foreign Affairs. It operated during the Struggle for Macedonia (Борба за Македонију / Borba za Makedoniju), a series of social, political, cultural and military conflicts in the region of Macedonia; its operations are known as Serb Action in Macedonia (Српска акција у Македонији / Srpska akcija u Makedoniji).[2]

Serbian Chetnik Organization
DisbandedDetachments organized into the Serbian Army; Chetniks in the Balkan Wars
Roleguerrilla warfare
Nickname(s)Chetniks
Motto(s)
  • "Freedom or Death" (Слобода или смрт / Sloboda ili smrt)
  • "Long live freedom" (Живела слобода / Živela sloboda)
  • "With faith in God" (С вером у Бога / S verom u Boga)
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Jovan Babunski
Gligor Sokolović
Kosta Pećanac
Ilija Trifunović-Birčanin
Vojin Popović

Coincidentally, the Circle of Serbian Sisters or Kolo Srpskih Sestara, was also being formed in Belgrade in 1903. Although known for its charitable work, the Circle also helped the Chetnik Organization in the Ottoman-held territories of Old Serbia and Macedonia) by sending food and medical supplies, doctors and nurses to aid the wounded and stricken as Kosovo Maiden did in Medieval Serbia.

The Chetnik central committee had initially funded individual, and small groups of hajduks (brigands), who were either self-organized or part of the Bulgarian revolutionary organizations in Macedonia (Supreme Macedonian-Adrianople Committee or Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization). These sought to protect the Slavic Christian population from zulum (atrocities, persecution). With the failed negotiations of a joint Serbian-Bulgarian action, and growing nationalism within the Bulgarian committees, the Serbian committee decided to fully organize their own armed groups. The Central Committee sent the first two bands into Macedonia in 1904, which were exposed early and completely destroyed. The second wave proved more successful; however, hostility between the Bulgarian Committee and the Serbian Committee began. Serb Chetniks thus fought the Ottomans, and Bulgarian and Albanian bands. Prominent guerrilla fighters include Jovan Babunski, Gligor Sokolović, Ilija Trifunović-Birčanin, Mihailo Ristić-Džervinac, Jovan Grković-Gapon, Vasilije Trbić, Garda Spasa, Borivoje Jovanović-Brana, Ilija Jovanović-Pčinjski, Jovan Stanojković-Dovezenski, Micko Krstić, Lazar Kujundžić, Cene Marković, Miša Aleksić-Marinko, Doksim Mihailović, Kosta Milovanović-Pećanac, Vojin Popović-Vuk, Savatije Milošević and Petko Ilić. After the proclamation of the Young Turk revolution in 1908 and the proclamation of the constitution, all of the brigands in Macedonia, including the Serbian Chetniks, put down their weapons; however, guerilla fighting soon continued, later merging into the Balkan Wars.

Background

The Serbian–Ottoman War (1876–1878) and Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878) against the Ottomans motivated liberation movements among the people in Kosovo and Metohija and Macedonia (known at the time as "Old Serbia" or "southern Serbia").[3] Serbia sought to liberate the Kosovo Vilayet (sanjaks of Niš, Prizren, Skopje and Novi Pazar).[4] The Serbian Army was joined by southern Serbs who made up special volunteer detachments, a large number being from Macedonia, who wanted to liberate their home regions and unify them with Serbia.[3][5] These volunteers were infiltrated into the Kumanovo and Kriva Palanka districts.[6] When peace was signed between the Serbs and Ottomans, these groups conducted independent guerrilla fighting under the Serbian flag, which they carried and flew far south of the demarcation line.[3] The Serbian advance in Old Serbia (1877–78) was followed with uprisings for the Serbian cause in the region, including a notable one that broke out in the counties of Kumanovo, Kriva Palanka, and Kratovo.[5] On 20 January, the Kumanovo Uprising broke out, spanning four months and ending with Ottoman suppression. The Ottomans retaliated against the Serb population in the Ottoman Empire.[7] Because of the terror against the unprotected rayah (lower class, Christians), many left for the mountains, fled across the border into Serbia, from where they raided their home regions in order to revenge the atrocities carried out by the Ottomans.[7]

After the war, the Serbian military government sent armament and aid to rebels in Kosovo and Macedonia.[8] Christian rebel bands were formed all over the region.[8] Many of those bands, privately funded and aided by the government, were established in Serbia and crossed into Ottoman territory.[8] In that way, Micko Krstić formed a rebel band in 1879 in Niš, with the help of Nikola Rašić and the military government in Vranje.[8] On 14 October 1880, an uprising broke out in the Kičevo-Poreče region, known as the "Brsjak Revolt".[7] Serbia secretly and very carefully aided the Christians in the Ottoman areas, such as in the Brsjak Revolt, however, by 1881, the aid was stopped by the intervention of the government.[9] The Ottoman army succeeded in suppressing the rebellion in the winter of 1880–81, and many of the leaders were exiled.[10]

In 1886, the Association of Serbo-Macedonians was established.

Prelude

The anti-Serb organization Society Against Serbs, established by Dame Gruev in 1897,[11] had up until 1902 murdered at least 43 persons, and wounded 52 persons, who were owners of Serbian schools, teachers, Serbian Orthodox clergy, and other notable Serbs in the Ottoman Empire.[12]

In May 1899, Golub Janić sent a detachment of 10 to 15 men to Macedonia.[13]

Organization

Serbian Chetnik Organization
SuccessorChetniks
Formation1902—September 1903
TypeRevolutionary organization
PurposeLiberation of Old Serbia and Macedonia from the Ottoman Empire
Location
Key people
  • Dr. Milorad Gođevac
  • Vasa Jovanović
  • Žika Rafajlović
  • Luka Ćelović
  • Gen. Jovan Atanacković
Main organ
Central Committee (Serbian Committee)
Affiliations
Budget
50,000 dinars (1903)

The Central Committee (of Belgrade) was established in 1902 by Milorad Gođevac, Luka Ćelović, Vasa Jovanović, Žika Rafajlović, Nikola Spasić and Ljuba Kovačević.[14] Captain Rafajlović had up until then independently organized armed bands in Old Serbia. The seat of the board was in the house of Ćelović. The organization was initially funded by Ćelović who donated 50,000 dinars yearly, which at that time was a very large sum. The Committee chose Dr. Gođevac as President. It had initially funded individual, and small groups of hajduks (brigands), who were either self-organized or part of the Bulgarian revolutionary organizations in Macedonia (Supreme Macedonian-Adrianople Committee or Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization).

The Serbian Committee (Српски комитет)[a] was established in September 1903 in Belgrade, by the combined Central Boards of Belgrade, Vranje, Skopje and Bitola. The fighters sought to protect the Slavic Christian population from zulum (atrocities, persecution), and carried out assassinations of known persecutors. With the failed negotiations of a joint Serbian-Bulgarian action, and growing nationalism within the Bulgarian committees, the Serbian committee decided to fully organize their own armed groups. It's armed wing was thus officially activated in 1904. Among the architects were members of the Society of Saint Sava, Army Staff and Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

In the beginning, and also at times at the end, the Serbian Chetniks had strict orders of defence and protection, and not any offensive; Ottoman government and the Great Powers agreed that the Chetniks did not carry out crimes and massacres, though the great armed conflicts could not be without violence.[15]

Central Boards

Central Board Members
Central Board of Belgrade (Central Board) Jovan Atanacković (president), Milorad Gođevac, Ljubomir Davidović, Ljubomir Jovanović, Jaša Prodanović, Dimitrije Ćirković, Luka Ćelović, Golub Janić, Nikola Spasić and Milutin Stepanović.
Central Board of Vranje Founded by Žika Rafajlović, Sima Zlatičanin, Velimir Karić, Toma Đurđević; other members incl. Ljuba Čupa, Jovan Nenadović, Dragiša Đurić, Ljuba Vulović, Petar Pešić, Dušan Tufegdžić and others.
Central Board of Skopje Bogdan Radenković, Mihailo Šuškalović and Mihailo Mančić.
Central Board of Bitola Jovan Ćirković, Lazar Kujundžić, Savatije Milošević, Aleksa Jovanović Kodža and David Dimitrijević.

Macedonia and Old Serbia

Inside Macedonia and Old Serbia the Chief of the Mountainous Headquarters held the highest position followed by regional voivodes and village voivodes. In every village the organization was composed so that every resident was a member of the organization and had to, without exception, follow all orders that the organization gave him. All disputes were to be solved within the village and the Turkish court was not to be involved under any circumstances. Smaller disputes were to be solved between the villagers themselves, sometimes with the help of the village voivode or chief, bigger disputes were to be solved by the regional voivode and some really large ones were to be solved by the chief of the mountainous headquarters. Every village had a chief with two helpers, a village voivode under whose command were all armed villagers and a treasurer who would collect a small monthly membership fee as well as all the fines charged by all of the mentioned institutions.[16]

History

1902

The Central Committee (of Belgrade) was established in 1902 by Milorad Gođevac, Luka Ćelović, Vasa Jovanović, Žika Rafajlović, Nikola Spasić and Ljuba Kovačević.[14] Captain Rafajlović had up until then independently organized armed bands in Old Serbia. The seat of the board was in the house of Ćelović. The organization was initially funded by Ćelović who donated 50,000 dinars yearly, which at that time was a very large sum. The Committee chose Dr. Gođevac as President. It had initially funded individual, and small groups of hajduks (brigands), who were either self-organized or part of the Bulgarian revolutionary organizations in Macedonia (Supreme Macedonian-Adrianople Committee or Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization).

1903

Milorad Gođevac, Luka Ćelović and Vasilije Jovanović formed the first armed band in Belgrade on May 29, 1903. The band, which had 8 soldiers, was commanded by Ilija Slave, a Serb from Macedonia who was a kaldrmdžija (cobblestone paver).[17]

The "Serbian Committee" was established in September 1903 in Belgrade, by the combined Central Boards of Belgrade, Vranje, Skopje and Bitola. The fighters sought to protect the Slavic Christian population from zulum (atrocities, persecution), and carried out assassinations of known persecutors. With the failed negotiations of a joint Serbian–Bulgarian action, and growing nationalism within the Bulgarian committees, the Serbian committee decided to fully organize their own armed groups. It's armed wing was thus officially activated in 1904. Among the architects were members of the Society of Saint Sava, Army Staff and Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

April–May 1904

On Đurđevdan (23 April) 1904, Bulgarian students travelled to Belgrade to hold a congress.[18] This was after negotiations between the Bulgarian and Serbian committees about a joint Serb-Bulgarian uprising had failed after more than 50 meetings in a period of 4–5 months.[19] The Bulgarian students and the Serbian side constantly stressed the need for Serb–Bulgarian brotherhood.[18] After the students had left, it was unearthed that most of these were in fact members of the Bulgarian committee, who sought to find their companions and lead them back to Bulgaria.[18] Three of them were wholly assigned to persuade Gligor Sokolović to return to Bulgaria, but he refused.[18] They also met with Stojan Donski.[18]

On 25 April, two bands (četa) of some 20 fighters under voivodes Anđelko Aleksić and Đorđe Cvetković swore oath in a ceremony of the Serbian Chetnik Committee (Dr. Milorad Gođevac, Vasa Jovanović, Žika Rafailović, Luka Ćelović and General Jovan Atanacković), with prota Nikola Stefanović holding the prayers.[20] The Committee had prepared the formation of the first bands for a number of months.[20] The Chetniks were sent for Poreče, and on 8 May they headed out from Vranje, to Buštranje, which was divided between Serbia and Turkey.[21] Vasilije Trbić, who guided them, told them that the best way was to go through the Kozjak and then down to the Vardar.[22] The two voivodes however, wanted the fastest route, through the Kumanovo plains and then to Četirac.[22] They managed to enter Turkish territory but were subsequently exposed in the plain Albanian and Turkish villages, and the Ottomans closed in on them from all sides, and they decided to stay on the Šuplji Kamen, which gave them little defence instead of meeting the army on the plains; in broad daylight, the Ottoman military easily poured bombs over the hill and killed all 24 of the Chetniks.[23] According to Serbian state documents, the death toll was 24 Chetniks, a zaptı (Ottoman gendarmerie), and three Ottoman soldiers.[24] Serbian deputy Ristić, according to the document, named Žika Rafajlović as the organizer of the band, and that "such adventures and thoughtless treacherous actions should be stopped".[24]

July–August 1904

After receiving the news in Belgrade, the Chetnik activity did not stop; four new bands were prepared for crossing the border.[25] Veljko Mandarčević, from the Skopje field (Macedonian-Andrianopolitan Volunteer Corps), became the voivode of a band that moved into Skopska Crna Gora.[25] The more experienced and bold Gligor Sokolović became the voivode of a band that would fight in the Prilep region (Prilepska četa).[25][26] Rista Cvetković-Sušički, a former friend and voivode of Zafirov, was sent for Poreče where Micko Krstić impatiently waited for him with the band.[25] Poreče was a source for the rebels; every villager was a martyr and hero, and although Poreče was small, it beat off all attacks, and from it, troops entered all sides, as an effectuation for the struggle.[25] The fourth band was firstly sent to Drimkol, Ohrid, its voivodes being Đorđe Cvetković and Vasilije Trbić.[25]

On the night of 19 July, the four bands crossed the border.[25] They went a secure route which had been put forward by Trbić and Anđelko.[25] They did not rush, and spent days in Kozjak and villages of the Pčinja.[25] They went fast and lightly in the night, and carefully descended towards the Vardar transition.[25] In the village of Živinj, in the middle of the junction, they encountered Bulgarian Voivode Bobev; the meeting at first was sudden and unpleasant, but quickly became friendly and festive.[25] Voivode Bobev assured them that he was happy that they would fight together, and took the bands to the village of Lisičja, where they would cross over the Vardar.[25] Only Sokolović suspected a fraud, but went reluctantly.[25] A sudden Ottoman chase urged them to abandon the route on the river coast of Pčinja, and to cross Vardar at one of its confluences, as they had intended at first.[25] On the night of 31 July, in the village of Lisičja, to no avail, a large Bulgarian ambush waited for Bobev to lead the Serbs to their hands – to terminate the Serbian Chetnik Movement.[27]

In the village of Solpa, they dried their clothes on the warm summer morning, and rested in the boxwood shrubs and ate wet bread.[27] Bobev, who was not allowed to leave them as part of the ambush, was still with them.[27] On the next day, 2 August, the bands crossed through Drenovo, and climbed the Šipočar mountain in a long line, where they would rest and drink fragrant milk of the Vlachs.[27] For three days they freely stayed in the mountain and watched the horizon, and routinely looked out, and then climbed to the higher Dautica mountain.[27]

Sokolović, troubled and bothered by Bobev's presence, did not want to go further and took his band towards Babuna.[27] The three bands that stayed, followed by Bobev, descended into Belica.[27] There they found a number of Bulgarian bands, led by Voivode Banča, who told them to call on Micko, a lord of Poreče.[27] The Serbs awaited him, not sensing a deceit.[27] But Trbić, who had always sought the background in things, found out from a drunk Bulgarian friend, whom he had been drinking with for an hour, that there was a plot against them.[27] Trbić told a villager assistant to report to Micko not to come.[27] After learning this, the band of Trbić and Đorđe Cvetković turned to Demir-Hisar.[27] Mandarčević and Sušički stayed in Belica, ready for betrayal.[27] In the mountain village of Slansko they found yet another Bulgarian band, of Voivode Đurčin, who kindly, but with the intent to follow them, sent with them two followers to Cer, in Demir-Hisar.[27]

In the meantime, in Belgrade, there was still hope that the Serbs and Bulgarians would work together in Macedonia; however, in Macedonian villages, there began massacres. On the night of 6 August, Bulgarian major Atanas Babata and his band entered the Serbian village of Kokošinje, where they were searching for people that were condemned to death by the Bulgarian Committee. The Bulgarian band demanded that the village priests and teachers renounce their Serbian identity, but they refused, and they massacred over 53 people. A servant of one of the teachers, who had managed to hide, set out to find the band of Jovan Dovezenski, who he had heard was crossing the border. The teacher's servant found another Serbian band, that of Jovan Pešić-Strelac, which had learnt of the massacre, but also of that of Jordan Spasev, who had killed members of the notable Dunković family on 11 August.[28]

The Serbian Chetniks in Poreče and Demir-Hisar, constantly followed by Bulgarians, did not know of the massacres.[29] The hungry and tired band of Đorđe Cvetković arrived at the village of Gornji Divjaci, where they were hosted by the villagers who had brought cheese and rakija.[29] They rested in sheets of sheep skin, and the village children came with bread and listened to their stories.[29] Cvetković, Trbić and Stevan Ćela rested in the house of the village leader, and ate several meals.[29] In the next morning, Trbić walked through the yard and went down some stairs, and saw an Ottoman jandarma whom he shot, who was then buried in the forest.[29] The rest ended and the band assembled and walked the river across the mountain.[29] They arrived at the village of Cer the next day where they also found Bulgarians, and the Bulgarian voivodes Hristo Uzunov and Georgi Sugarev joined their company.[29]

In the mountainous village of Mramorac, where Petar Chaulev had set up camp in the forest, Trbić band were told that the Bulgarian Committee had prohibited them to go to Drimkol.[30] On the same day, 14 August, the Bulgarians had killed Serbian priest Stavro Krstić, which the Chetniks later learnt from the villagers.[b] Far from the other bands, without help, tricked and surrounded, the band understood their situation.[30] Chaulev informed them of their disarmament and the Bulgarian Committee's verdict of crime against the Bulgarian organization.[30] They were only shouted at, as they were saved by some ethnic Serb voivodes in the Bulgarian bands: Tase and Dejan from Prisovjan and Cvetko from Jablanica in Debar, who were bound by oath to the Bulgarian Committee, but nevertheless openly defended the Serbian Chetniks, and friends, whom they had wintered together with in Belgrade.[30] They awaited Dame Gruev, the second leader of the Bulgarian Committee after Sarafov, who would arrive from Bitola.[30] Gruev and his escort arrived as village priests on a night.[30] Trbić knew Gruev from the Kruševo Uprising and from an encounter in Serava.[30] Trbić used their acquaintance and memories, reminding Gruev of the common revolutionary fight and his childhood, when Gruev was a cadet of the Society of Saint Sava in Belgrade, and an apprentice in the printing house of Pero Todorović, which was called Smiljevo after Gruev's birthplace.[30]

1906–07

In 1906 and 1907, the Serbian Chetniks had most success.[15]

Young Turk Revolution

When the Young Turk Revolution broke out (1907–1908), and there was a temporary peace in Macedonia, the Young Turks gave Serbs more rights. Several members of the Organization joined the Serb Democratic League.

Operations and events

  • The wounding of Ilija Slave (June, 1903)
  • Fight at Djuriški monastery (early september, 1903)
  • The assassination of Šefir-beg (January 21, 1904)
  • Fight on Šuplji Kamen (May 27, 1904)[31]
  • Fight in Slatine (October 5, 1904)[31]
  • Kokošinje massacre (August 6, 1904)
  • Rudar massacre (August 11, 1904)
  • Murder of priest Stavro Krstić (August 14, 1904)
  • Murder of priest Taško (January 15, 1905)[32]
  • Fight in Tabanovce (27 March 1905)[32]
  • Lynching of Chetniks in Kumanovo (March 28, 1905)[32]
  • Fight in Velika Hoča (25 May 1905)
  • Fight on Čelopek (16 April 1905)[33]
  • Fight on Vuksan (30 April 1905)[34]
  • Fight on Kitka (30 April 1905)[35][34]
  • Fight on Orešje/Oreške livade (10 May 1905)[33]
  • Fight in Petraljica (31 May 1905)[35]
  • Fight on Mukos (June 20, 1905)[34]
  • Fight on Movnatac (August 18, 1905)[34]
  • Fight on Paklište (February 1, 1906)
  • Fight on Čelopek (7 February 1906)[36]
  • Fight in Drenovac (March 9, 1906)
  • Fight in Nikodim (April 1906)
  • Fight in Berovo (May 13, 1906)
  • Fight in Štalkovica (May 20, 1906)
  • Fight in Kriva Brda (May 12, 1906)
  • Fight in Bajlovac (July 16, 1906)
  • Fight in Bailovce/Bajlovac (16/23 July 1906)
  • Fight in Vladinovace (July 1906)
  • Fight in Vrbnički Vis (July 29, 1906)
  • Fight on Kurtov Kamen (August 12, 1906)
  • Fights in Maleš (1906)[36]
  • Fight on Kurtov Kamen (1907)
  • Fight in Nebregovo (1907)
  • Fight in Drenovo (1907)
  • Fight on Paklište (1907/8)

Operations temporarily stopped during the Young Turk Revolution (1908), and until the Young Turk coup (1910), after which oppression against Christians intensified.

Chief of staff

Chiefs of the Mountainous Headquarters[b]

Left side of the Vardar or Predvardarje

Right side of the Vardar or Prekovardarje

Armament

 
Martini-Henry rifle.
 
Berdan II rifle.

In 1904–05, the Chetniks were supplied with:

  • Mauser-Koka rifle, known as brzometka (pl. brzometke) or kokinka (pl. kokinke).
  • Martini-Henry rifle, known as martinka (pl. martinci, martinke).
  • Berdan rifle (I and II[43]), known as brzometka (pl. brzometke)[44] or berdanka (pl. berdanci, berdanke)
  • various revolvers, also known as altipatlak (Turkish "six-shooter")
  • hand-thrown bombs

Culture

The members of the organization were known by their nom de guerre (четничко име, "Chetnik name").[45] The descendants of Jovan Stanojković "Dovezenski" and Jovan Stojković "Babunski" are surnamed with their Chetnik names (Dovezenski and Babunski, respectively).[45]

Cryptography

From the start of the organization, cryptographic words, and later numbers, were used. For instance, Božija kuća ("God's house") was used for Serbia, while "Gospodin u Božijoj kući" ("Mister in God's house") was used for the President of the Executive Board in Vranje. Common uses were: štap ("rod") for rifle, jabuke ("apples") for bombs, kafa ("coffee") for gunpowder, šećer ("sugar") for poison, golemiot ("great one") or starac ("elder") for the Chief of the Mountain Headquarters, brabonjci ("sheep-feces") for Turks, Smirana for Skopje, Venecija for Vranje, Jerusalim for Bitola, Berlin for Belgrade, Neptun for Poreče, etc.[46]

Legacy

The organization continued its existence and also played a role during the Balkan Wars, as well as during World War I.[47] During the First Balkan War, Chetniks were used as a vanguard to soften up the enemy forward of advancing armies, for attacks on communications behind enemy lines, as field gendarmerie and to establish basic administration in occupied areas.[48]

Gallery

See also

Annotations

  1. ^
    The Serbian Committee was the main body of the Serbian Revolutionary Organization, established through the combination of the four Serbian Central Boards (Belgrade, Vranje, Skopje and Bitola). It was also known as the Central Revolutionary Secret Board (Централни револуционарни тајни одбор), or Central Board of the Serbian Chetnik Organisation (Централни одбор српске четничке организације).
  2. ^
    There were two main headquarters of the military organization, the Mountainous Headquarters of Predvardarje ("before the Vardar"), in Skopje, and the Mountainous Headquarters of Prekovardarje (Прековардарје, "over the Vardar"). The supreme commander of each headquarters was titled Chief of the Mountainous Headquarters (шеф горског штаба); the first was titled "... of Predvardarje", or "... on the right side of the Vardar" (на десној страни Вардара) or "... for the right shore of Vardar" (за десну обалу Вардара); the second was titled "... of Prekovardarje", or "... on the left side of the Vardar" (на левој страни Вардара) or "... for the left shore of Vardar" (за леву обалу Вардара).[49]

References

  1. ^ Vučetić, Biljana (2015). "Some considerations on the emergence of the Serbian Chetnik Movement in Macedonia during the last period of Ottoman rule". Zapisi. Podgorica: Istorijski institut Crne Gore. 3/4: 111–128.
  2. ^ "Заборављене српске војводе: Четништво је настало у борбама са Турцима, затим са Бугарима, Шиптарима и Аустријанцима (видео)". 28 August 2017.
  3. ^ a b c Jovanović 1937, p. 236.
  4. ^ Sima M. Cirkovic (2008). The Serbs. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 224–. ISBN 978-1-4051-4291-5.
  5. ^ a b Georgevitch 1918, pp. 181–182
  6. ^ Vojni muzej Jugoslovenske narodne armije (1968). Fourteen Centuries of Struggle for Freedom. Belgrade: Military Museum. p. xliv.
  7. ^ a b c Jovanović 1937, p. 237.
  8. ^ a b c d Hadži-Vasiljević 1928, p. 8.
  9. ^ Матица српска (Matica Srpska) (1992). Zbornik Matice srpske za istoriju, 45–48 (in Serbian). Novi Sad: Матица српска. p. 55.

    Србија је тајно и врло опрезно помагала акције хришћана у Турској (Брсјачка буна), али је на интервенције владе та помоћ престала ... 1881

  10. ^ Lazar Koliševski (1962). Aspekti na makedonskoto prašanje (in Macedonian). Kultura. p. 499.

    Сето ова движење во Западна Македонија е познато во историјата под името „Брсјачка буна". Турската војска успеа во зимата 1880–1881 година да ја задуши буната и многу нејзини водачи да ги испрати на заточение.

  11. ^ Đurić & Mijović 1993, p. 63.
  12. ^ Hadži Vasiljević 1928, p. 14.
  13. ^ Oswald Ashton Wentworth Dilke; Margaret S. Dilke (1984). Recollections of the National Liberation Struggles in Macedonia: At the End of the 19th and the Beginning of the 20th Centuries. Mosaic Publications. p. 46. For this purpose in May 1899, by their order, the people's deputy Golub Janic from Belgrade organized and sent to Macedonia a detachment of 10–15 men, while Serbian agents in Macedonia informed the Turkish authorities that it was a ...
  14. ^ a b Milja Milosavljević; Rebeka Levi (2006). Kod dva bela goluba. IP Signature. p. 102. ISBN 9788683745616. Године 1902. основан је Главни одбор четничке орга- низације у који су ушли доктор Милорад Гођевац, Лука Ћ.е- ловић, Васа Јовановић, Жика Рафаиловић, Никола Спасић и Љуба Ковачевић.
  15. ^ a b Dedijer 2008, p. 631

    српска акција [...] Српска четничка акщуа имала је на

    — више успеха 1906. и 1907
  16. ^ Trbić, Vasilije (1996). Мемоари, Сећања и доживљаји војводе велешког (in Serbian). Belgrade: Kultura. p. 83. ISBN 8678010134.
  17. ^ Krakov 1930, p. 80
  18. ^ a b c d e Krakov, p. 147
  19. ^ Krakov, p. 146
  20. ^ a b Krakov, p. 150
  21. ^ Krakov, p. 154
  22. ^ a b Krakov, p. 155
  23. ^ Krakov, pp. 161–164
  24. ^ a b Viktor Novak (2008). Revue historique. Vol. 57. p. 359. Жика Рафаиловић
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Krakov, p. 166
  26. ^ Živković 1998
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Krakov, p. 167
  28. ^ Krakov 1990, pp. 168–172.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g Krakov, p. 172
  30. ^ a b c d e f g h Krakov, p. 173
  31. ^ a b Ilić, Vladimir (March 4, 2003). "Srpski četnici na početku dvadesetog veka (6): Pogibija na šupljem kamenu". Glas Javnosti.
  32. ^ a b c Ilić, Vladimir (March 5, 2003). "Srpski četnici na početku dvadesetog veka (7): Ubistvo popa Taška". Glas Javnosti.
  33. ^ a b Ilić, Vladimir (March 6, 2003). "Srpski četnici na početku dvadesetog veka (8): Borba na Čelopeku". Glas Javnosti.
  34. ^ a b c d Ilić, Vladimir (March 9, 2003). "Srpski četnici na početku dvadesetog veka (11): Borbe na Vuksanu i Kitki". Glas Javnosti.
  35. ^ a b Ranković & April 1939, p. 182.
  36. ^ a b Ilić, Vladimir (March 11, 2003). "Srpski četnici na početku dvadesetog veka (13): Ludost vojvode Ivaniševića". Glas Javnosti.
  37. ^ Jovanović 1937, p. 297.
  38. ^ Rudić, Milkić & Institute of History 2013, p. 85.
  39. ^ Jovanović 1937, p. 293.
  40. ^ Blažarić 2006, p. 9.
  41. ^ Dedijer & Anić 2008, p. 595, "Ра]ковиЬ Сретен, први шеф горског штаба за десну обалу Вардара (Прековардар]е) 1905"
  42. ^ Dedijer & Anić 2008, p. ?, "Радосавл>евиЬ Панта, поручник, шеф горског штаба (Прековардарје) крај 1905."
  43. ^ брзометка бр. 1 ... брзометка бр. 2
  44. ^ Đurić & Mijović 1993, p. 72

    Пред сам полазак молио је Гођевца да му набави три брзометке, какве је онда наша војска тек била добила.

  45. ^ a b Recueil de Vardar. Akademija. 2006. p. 99.
  46. ^ "Srpski četnici na početku dvadesetog veka (4) Srbiju zvali "Božija kuća"".
  47. ^ Roberts(1973), p. 21
  48. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 117.
  49. ^ Macedonian Review. Vol. 7. Kulturen Zhivot. 1977. This can be best seen from the reports which had been handed over by the "cheta" bodies, voivodas (marshals) and the Headquarters. So, under the command of the Skopje Gorski (highland) Headquarters (Eastern Povardarie) there was a Headquarters "cheta" – of Kumanovo, Dolnapalanka and Goren Polog (Lower Palanka and Upper Polog). 16 Under the command of the Western Povardarie was Headquarters of the so called "Prekuvardarski gorski shtab". The Mountain Headquarters of across the River Vardar had a Veles "cheta" then Prilep First, Prilep Second, Gorna-Palanka, Dolno Porech and the Kichevo ones. Also, under the direct management of the Main Board in Skopje there was a "cheta" which operated in the region of Skopska Crna Gora. 17 The number of the "cheta" fighters, was relatively small, as it was still the winter period, when the ...

Sources

Books
  • Bajić, Jovo (1998). Srpska revolucionarna organizacija: komitsko četovanje u staroj Srbiji i Makedoniji 1903–1912. Duška. ISBN 978-86-7745-024-3.
  • Blažarić, Pavle (2006). Božica Mladenović (ed.). Memoari (in Serbian). Institut za srpsku kulturu. ISBN 9788682797500.
  • Dedijer, Vladimir; Anić, Života (2008). Dokumenti o spoljnoj politici Kraljevine Srbije: dodat. 1–3. SANU. Odeljenje istorijskih nauka.
  • Dedijer, Vladimir; Anić, Života; Samardžić, Radovan (2006). Dokumenti o spoljnoj politici Kraljevine Srbije: sv. 2 15. SANU, Odeljenje istorijskih nauka. ISBN 9788670254169.
  • Đurić, Veljko Đ.; Mijović, Miličko (1993). Ilustrovana istorija četničkog pokreta (in Serbian). Narodna knj.
  • Hadži-Vasiljević, Jovan (1928). Četnička akcija u Staroj Srbiji i Maćedoniji (in Serbian). Belgrade: Sv. Sava.
  • Ilić, Vladimir (2006). Српска четничка акција 1903–1912 (in Serbian). Belgrade: Ecolibri. ISBN 978-86-7905-044-1.
  • Ivanić, Ivan (1910). Maćedonija i maćedondži (in Serbian). Vol. 2. Štampa Savića i Komp.
  • Ivetić, Velimir J. (2013). "Политичка улога министара војних Краљевине Србије од 1903. до 1914. године". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Jovanović, J. M. (1938). Borba za narodno ujedinjenje 1903–1908. Izdavačko i knjižarsko preduzeće G. Kon.
  • Jovanović, Aleksa (1937). Spomenica dvadesetogodišnjice oslobodjenja Južne Srbije, 1912–1937 (in Serbian). Južna Srbija.
  • Krakov, Stanislav (1990) [1930]. Plamen četništva (in Serbian). Belgrade: Hipnos.
  • Mitropan, Petar (1933). Прилози за историју штампе у Старој Србији и Македонији 1871–1912 (in Serbian). Skopje.
  • Nušić, Branislav (1966). Sabrana dela (in Serbian). Vol. 22. Belgrade: NIP "Jež".
  • Pavlović, Momčilo (2007) [September 14–16, 2006]. Gerila na Balkanu (in Serbian). Institute for Disarmament and Peace Studies.
  • Paunović, Marinko (1998). Srbi: biografije znamenitih: A-Š (in Serbian). Belgrade: Emka. ISBN 9788685205040.
  • Pećanac, Kosta (1997) [1933]. Četnička akcija 1903–1912. Belgrade: Hipnos.
  • Pejčić, Predrag (2007). Četnički pokret u Kraljevini Srbiji (in Serbian). Kragujevac.
  • Pešić, Miodrag D. (2000). Stari četnici (in Serbian). Kragujevac: Novi pogledi.
  • Rastović, Aleksandar (2011). Velika Britanija i makedonsko pitanje 1903-1908 godine. Istorijski institut. ISBN 978-86-7743-088-7.
  • Rudić, S.; Milkić, M.; Institute of History, B.I.B. (2013). The Balkan Wars 1912/1913 : New Views and Interpretations. Institute of History, Institute for Strategic Research. p. 85. ISBN 978-86-7743-103-7.
  • Simić, Stevan (2012) [1988]. Srpske Komite: Komitsko četovanje u Staroj Srbiji i Makedoniji 1903–1912 (in Serbian). Belgrade.
  • Simić, Stevan (1998). Bajić, Jovo (ed.). Srpska revolucionarna organizacije, komitsko četovanje u Staroj Srbiji i Makedoniji 1903–1912 (in Serbian). Belgrade: Duška.
  • Tomasevich, Jozo (1975). The Chetniks. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-0857-9.
  • Trbić, Vasilije (1996). Drašković, Aleksandar (ed.). Memoari (1898–1912) (in Serbian). Belgrade: Kultura.
  • Trifunović, Ilija Ž. (1933). Trnovitim stazama (in Serbian). Belgrade: GSSZZ.
  • Trifunović, Ilija Ž. (1930). Krv četnika (in Serbian). Belgrade: Planeta.
  • Krvave borbe srpskih četa po macedoniji i njihov rad od početka 1903 do danas. Iz Književnog pregleda, br. 1–20. Savić. 1912.
Journals
  • Rastović, Aleksandar (2008). "Велика Британија према српским акцијама у Македонији 1903–1907". Историјски часопис. 57: 355–374.
  • Rastović, Aleksandar (2010). "Macedonian issue in the British Parliament 1903–1908" (PDF). Istorijski časopis. 59: 365–386.[permanent dead link]
  • Jerinić, P. D. S. (2008). "Војводе из четничке акције у Старој Србији и Маћедонији 1903–1912". Добровољачки гласник. Belgrade. 32.
  • Šešum, Uroš (2016). "Четничка организација у Скопској Црној Гори 1903–1908. године" (PDF). ZMSI. Matica srpska. 93: 55–69.
  • Simijanović, J. (2008). (PDF). Baština. 25: 239–250. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-17.
  • Vučetić, Biljana (2006). "Српска револуционарна организација у Османском царству на почетку XX века". Историјски часопис. 53: 359–374.
  • Vučetić, Biljana (2007). "Сећања Антонија Тодоровића на револуционарну акцију српског народа у Турској 1904–1912. године". Мешовита грађа. 28: 265–305.
  • Vučetić, Biljana (2008). "Богдан Раденковић и Милан Ракић". Историјски часопис. 57: 413–426.
  • Vučetić, Biljana (2010). "Погледи на организацију Српске одбране у Македонији у 1906. години". Весник. Belgrade: Војни музеј. 37: 165–170.
Newspapers
  • Živ. J. Ranković (April 1939). "Četnička akcija [I]". Beogradske opštinske novine. No. 4.
  • Živ. J. Ranković (May 1939). "Četnička akcija [II]". Beogradske opštinske novine. No. 5.
  • Živković, Simo (December 1998). "Sakupi Se Jedna Četa Mala". Srpsko Nasleđe Istorijske Sveske. Belgrade: „GLAS“ d.d.o. (12).
  • Vesti Online (2011-12-18). "Prvi beogradski četnici". Belgrade.

serbian, chetnik, organization, world, guerilla, detachments, chetniks, serbian, revolutionary, organization, serbian, Српска, револуционарна, организација, srpska, revolucionarna, organizacija, Српска, четничка, организација, srpska, četnička, organizacija, r. For the World War II guerilla detachments see Chetniks The Serbian Revolutionary Organization Serbian Srpska revolucionarna organizaciјa Srpska revolucionarna organizacija or Serbian Chetnik Organization Srpska chetnichka organizaciјa Srpska cetnicka organizacija was a revolutionary organization with the aim of liberation of Old Serbia Kosovo and Macedonia from the Ottoman Empire in the vilayets of Kosovo Manastir and Salonika Its Central Committee Centralni odbor Centralni odbor was established in 1902 while the Serbian Committee Srpski komitet Srpski komitet was established in September 1903 in Belgrade by the combined Central Boards of Belgrade Vranje Skopje and Bitola Its armed wing was activated in 1904 1 Among the architects were members of the Saint Sava society Army Staff and Ministry of Foreign Affairs It operated during the Struggle for Macedonia Borba za Makedoniјu Borba za Makedoniju a series of social political cultural and military conflicts in the region of Macedonia its operations are known as Serb Action in Macedonia Srpska akciјa u Makedoniјi Srpska akcija u Makedoniji 2 Serbian Chetnik OrganizationDisbandedDetachments organized into the Serbian Army Chetniks in the Balkan WarsRoleguerrilla warfareNickname s ChetniksMotto s Freedom or Death Sloboda ili smrt Sloboda ili smrt Long live freedom Zhivela sloboda Zivela sloboda With faith in God S verom u Boga S verom u Boga CommandersNotablecommandersJovan BabunskiGligor SokolovicKosta PecanacIlija Trifunovic BircaninVojin Popovic Coincidentally the Circle of Serbian Sisters or Kolo Srpskih Sestara was also being formed in Belgrade in 1903 Although known for its charitable work the Circle also helped the Chetnik Organization in the Ottoman held territories of Old Serbia and Macedonia by sending food and medical supplies doctors and nurses to aid the wounded and stricken as Kosovo Maiden did in Medieval Serbia The Chetnik central committee had initially funded individual and small groups of hajduks brigands who were either self organized or part of the Bulgarian revolutionary organizations in Macedonia Supreme Macedonian Adrianople Committee or Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization These sought to protect the Slavic Christian population from zulum atrocities persecution With the failed negotiations of a joint Serbian Bulgarian action and growing nationalism within the Bulgarian committees the Serbian committee decided to fully organize their own armed groups The Central Committee sent the first two bands into Macedonia in 1904 which were exposed early and completely destroyed The second wave proved more successful however hostility between the Bulgarian Committee and the Serbian Committee began Serb Chetniks thus fought the Ottomans and Bulgarian and Albanian bands Prominent guerrilla fighters include Jovan Babunski Gligor Sokolovic Ilija Trifunovic Bircanin Mihailo Ristic Dzervinac Jovan Grkovic Gapon Vasilije Trbic Garda Spasa Borivoje Jovanovic Brana Ilija Jovanovic Pcinjski Jovan Stanojkovic Dovezenski Micko Krstic Lazar Kujundzic Cene Markovic Misa Aleksic Marinko Doksim Mihailovic Kosta Milovanovic Pecanac Vojin Popovic Vuk Savatije Milosevic and Petko Ilic After the proclamation of the Young Turk revolution in 1908 and the proclamation of the constitution all of the brigands in Macedonia including the Serbian Chetniks put down their weapons however guerilla fighting soon continued later merging into the Balkan Wars Contents 1 Background 2 Prelude 3 Organization 3 1 Central Boards 3 2 Macedonia and Old Serbia 4 History 4 1 1902 4 2 1903 4 3 April May 1904 4 4 July August 1904 4 5 1906 07 4 6 Young Turk Revolution 5 Operations and events 6 Chief of staff 7 Armament 8 Culture 8 1 Cryptography 9 Legacy 10 Gallery 11 See also 12 Annotations 13 References 14 SourcesBackground EditThe Serbian Ottoman War 1876 1878 and Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 against the Ottomans motivated liberation movements among the people in Kosovo and Metohija and Macedonia known at the time as Old Serbia or southern Serbia 3 Serbia sought to liberate the Kosovo Vilayet sanjaks of Nis Prizren Skopje and Novi Pazar 4 The Serbian Army was joined by southern Serbs who made up special volunteer detachments a large number being from Macedonia who wanted to liberate their home regions and unify them with Serbia 3 5 These volunteers were infiltrated into the Kumanovo and Kriva Palanka districts 6 When peace was signed between the Serbs and Ottomans these groups conducted independent guerrilla fighting under the Serbian flag which they carried and flew far south of the demarcation line 3 The Serbian advance in Old Serbia 1877 78 was followed with uprisings for the Serbian cause in the region including a notable one that broke out in the counties of Kumanovo Kriva Palanka and Kratovo 5 On 20 January the Kumanovo Uprising broke out spanning four months and ending with Ottoman suppression The Ottomans retaliated against the Serb population in the Ottoman Empire 7 Because of the terror against the unprotected rayah lower class Christians many left for the mountains fled across the border into Serbia from where they raided their home regions in order to revenge the atrocities carried out by the Ottomans 7 After the war the Serbian military government sent armament and aid to rebels in Kosovo and Macedonia 8 Christian rebel bands were formed all over the region 8 Many of those bands privately funded and aided by the government were established in Serbia and crossed into Ottoman territory 8 In that way Micko Krstic formed a rebel band in 1879 in Nis with the help of Nikola Rasic and the military government in Vranje 8 On 14 October 1880 an uprising broke out in the Kicevo Porece region known as the Brsjak Revolt 7 Serbia secretly and very carefully aided the Christians in the Ottoman areas such as in the Brsjak Revolt however by 1881 the aid was stopped by the intervention of the government 9 The Ottoman army succeeded in suppressing the rebellion in the winter of 1880 81 and many of the leaders were exiled 10 In 1886 the Association of Serbo Macedonians was established Prelude EditThe anti Serb organization Society Against Serbs established by Dame Gruev in 1897 11 had up until 1902 murdered at least 43 persons and wounded 52 persons who were owners of Serbian schools teachers Serbian Orthodox clergy and other notable Serbs in the Ottoman Empire 12 In May 1899 Golub Janic sent a detachment of 10 to 15 men to Macedonia 13 Organization EditSerbian Chetnik OrganizationSuccessorChetniksFormation1902 September 1903TypeRevolutionary organizationPurposeLiberation of Old Serbia and Macedonia from the Ottoman EmpireLocation Kingdom of Serbia Ottoman Empire Ottoman Macedonia Ottoman KosovoKey peopleDr Milorad Gođevac Vasa Jovanovic Zika Rafajlovic Luka Celovic Gen Jovan AtanackovicMain organCentral Committee Serbian Committee AffiliationsSociety of Saint Sava Army Staff unofficially Ministry of Foreign Affairs unofficially Budget50 000 dinars 1903 The Central Committee of Belgrade was established in 1902 by Milorad Gođevac Luka Celovic Vasa Jovanovic Zika Rafajlovic Nikola Spasic and Ljuba Kovacevic 14 Captain Rafajlovic had up until then independently organized armed bands in Old Serbia The seat of the board was in the house of Celovic The organization was initially funded by Celovic who donated 50 000 dinars yearly which at that time was a very large sum The Committee chose Dr Gođevac as President It had initially funded individual and small groups of hajduks brigands who were either self organized or part of the Bulgarian revolutionary organizations in Macedonia Supreme Macedonian Adrianople Committee or Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization The Serbian Committee Srpski komitet a was established in September 1903 in Belgrade by the combined Central Boards of Belgrade Vranje Skopje and Bitola The fighters sought to protect the Slavic Christian population from zulum atrocities persecution and carried out assassinations of known persecutors With the failed negotiations of a joint Serbian Bulgarian action and growing nationalism within the Bulgarian committees the Serbian committee decided to fully organize their own armed groups It s armed wing was thus officially activated in 1904 Among the architects were members of the Society of Saint Sava Army Staff and Ministry of Foreign Affairs In the beginning and also at times at the end the Serbian Chetniks had strict orders of defence and protection and not any offensive Ottoman government and the Great Powers agreed that the Chetniks did not carry out crimes and massacres though the great armed conflicts could not be without violence 15 Central Boards Edit Central Board MembersCentral Board of Belgrade Central Board Jovan Atanackovic president Milorad Gođevac Ljubomir Davidovic Ljubomir Jovanovic Jasa Prodanovic Dimitrije Cirkovic Luka Celovic Golub Janic Nikola Spasic and Milutin Stepanovic Central Board of Vranje Founded by Zika Rafajlovic Sima Zlaticanin Velimir Karic Toma Đurđevic other members incl Ljuba Cupa Jovan Nenadovic Dragisa Đuric Ljuba Vulovic Petar Pesic Dusan Tufegdzic and others Central Board of Skopje Bogdan Radenkovic Mihailo Suskalovic and Mihailo Mancic Central Board of Bitola Jovan Cirkovic Lazar Kujundzic Savatije Milosevic Aleksa Jovanovic Kodza and David Dimitrijevic Macedonia and Old Serbia Edit Inside Macedonia and Old Serbia the Chief of the Mountainous Headquarters held the highest position followed by regional voivodes and village voivodes In every village the organization was composed so that every resident was a member of the organization and had to without exception follow all orders that the organization gave him All disputes were to be solved within the village and the Turkish court was not to be involved under any circumstances Smaller disputes were to be solved between the villagers themselves sometimes with the help of the village voivode or chief bigger disputes were to be solved by the regional voivode and some really large ones were to be solved by the chief of the mountainous headquarters Every village had a chief with two helpers a village voivode under whose command were all armed villagers and a treasurer who would collect a small monthly membership fee as well as all the fines charged by all of the mentioned institutions 16 History Edit1902 Edit The Central Committee of Belgrade was established in 1902 by Milorad Gođevac Luka Celovic Vasa Jovanovic Zika Rafajlovic Nikola Spasic and Ljuba Kovacevic 14 Captain Rafajlovic had up until then independently organized armed bands in Old Serbia The seat of the board was in the house of Celovic The organization was initially funded by Celovic who donated 50 000 dinars yearly which at that time was a very large sum The Committee chose Dr Gođevac as President It had initially funded individual and small groups of hajduks brigands who were either self organized or part of the Bulgarian revolutionary organizations in Macedonia Supreme Macedonian Adrianople Committee or Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization 1903 Edit Milorad Gođevac Luka Celovic and Vasilije Jovanovic formed the first armed band in Belgrade on May 29 1903 The band which had 8 soldiers was commanded by Ilija Slave a Serb from Macedonia who was a kaldrmdzija cobblestone paver 17 The Serbian Committee was established in September 1903 in Belgrade by the combined Central Boards of Belgrade Vranje Skopje and Bitola The fighters sought to protect the Slavic Christian population from zulum atrocities persecution and carried out assassinations of known persecutors With the failed negotiations of a joint Serbian Bulgarian action and growing nationalism within the Bulgarian committees the Serbian committee decided to fully organize their own armed groups It s armed wing was thus officially activated in 1904 Among the architects were members of the Society of Saint Sava Army Staff and Ministry of Foreign Affairs April May 1904 Edit On Đurđevdan 23 April 1904 Bulgarian students travelled to Belgrade to hold a congress 18 This was after negotiations between the Bulgarian and Serbian committees about a joint Serb Bulgarian uprising had failed after more than 50 meetings in a period of 4 5 months 19 The Bulgarian students and the Serbian side constantly stressed the need for Serb Bulgarian brotherhood 18 After the students had left it was unearthed that most of these were in fact members of the Bulgarian committee who sought to find their companions and lead them back to Bulgaria 18 Three of them were wholly assigned to persuade Gligor Sokolovic to return to Bulgaria but he refused 18 They also met with Stojan Donski 18 On 25 April two bands ceta of some 20 fighters under voivodes Anđelko Aleksic and Đorđe Cvetkovic swore oath in a ceremony of the Serbian Chetnik Committee Dr Milorad Gođevac Vasa Jovanovic Zika Rafailovic Luka Celovic and General Jovan Atanackovic with prota Nikola Stefanovic holding the prayers 20 The Committee had prepared the formation of the first bands for a number of months 20 The Chetniks were sent for Porece and on 8 May they headed out from Vranje to Bustranje which was divided between Serbia and Turkey 21 Vasilije Trbic who guided them told them that the best way was to go through the Kozjak and then down to the Vardar 22 The two voivodes however wanted the fastest route through the Kumanovo plains and then to Cetirac 22 They managed to enter Turkish territory but were subsequently exposed in the plain Albanian and Turkish villages and the Ottomans closed in on them from all sides and they decided to stay on the Suplji Kamen which gave them little defence instead of meeting the army on the plains in broad daylight the Ottoman military easily poured bombs over the hill and killed all 24 of the Chetniks 23 According to Serbian state documents the death toll was 24 Chetniks a zapti Ottoman gendarmerie and three Ottoman soldiers 24 Serbian deputy Ristic according to the document named Zika Rafajlovic as the organizer of the band and that such adventures and thoughtless treacherous actions should be stopped 24 July August 1904 Edit After receiving the news in Belgrade the Chetnik activity did not stop four new bands were prepared for crossing the border 25 Veljko Mandarcevic from the Skopje field Macedonian Andrianopolitan Volunteer Corps became the voivode of a band that moved into Skopska Crna Gora 25 The more experienced and bold Gligor Sokolovic became the voivode of a band that would fight in the Prilep region Prilepska ceta 25 26 Rista Cvetkovic Susicki a former friend and voivode of Zafirov was sent for Porece where Micko Krstic impatiently waited for him with the band 25 Porece was a source for the rebels every villager was a martyr and hero and although Porece was small it beat off all attacks and from it troops entered all sides as an effectuation for the struggle 25 The fourth band was firstly sent to Drimkol Ohrid its voivodes being Đorđe Cvetkovic and Vasilije Trbic 25 On the night of 19 July the four bands crossed the border 25 They went a secure route which had been put forward by Trbic and Anđelko 25 They did not rush and spent days in Kozjak and villages of the Pcinja 25 They went fast and lightly in the night and carefully descended towards the Vardar transition 25 In the village of Zivinj in the middle of the junction they encountered Bulgarian Voivode Bobev the meeting at first was sudden and unpleasant but quickly became friendly and festive 25 Voivode Bobev assured them that he was happy that they would fight together and took the bands to the village of Lisicja where they would cross over the Vardar 25 Only Sokolovic suspected a fraud but went reluctantly 25 A sudden Ottoman chase urged them to abandon the route on the river coast of Pcinja and to cross Vardar at one of its confluences as they had intended at first 25 On the night of 31 July in the village of Lisicja to no avail a large Bulgarian ambush waited for Bobev to lead the Serbs to their hands to terminate the Serbian Chetnik Movement 27 In the village of Solpa they dried their clothes on the warm summer morning and rested in the boxwood shrubs and ate wet bread 27 Bobev who was not allowed to leave them as part of the ambush was still with them 27 On the next day 2 August the bands crossed through Drenovo and climbed the Sipocar mountain in a long line where they would rest and drink fragrant milk of the Vlachs 27 For three days they freely stayed in the mountain and watched the horizon and routinely looked out and then climbed to the higher Dautica mountain 27 Sokolovic troubled and bothered by Bobev s presence did not want to go further and took his band towards Babuna 27 The three bands that stayed followed by Bobev descended into Belica 27 There they found a number of Bulgarian bands led by Voivode Banca who told them to call on Micko a lord of Porece 27 The Serbs awaited him not sensing a deceit 27 But Trbic who had always sought the background in things found out from a drunk Bulgarian friend whom he had been drinking with for an hour that there was a plot against them 27 Trbic told a villager assistant to report to Micko not to come 27 After learning this the band of Trbic and Đorđe Cvetkovic turned to Demir Hisar 27 Mandarcevic and Susicki stayed in Belica ready for betrayal 27 In the mountain village of Slansko they found yet another Bulgarian band of Voivode Đurcin who kindly but with the intent to follow them sent with them two followers to Cer in Demir Hisar 27 In the meantime in Belgrade there was still hope that the Serbs and Bulgarians would work together in Macedonia however in Macedonian villages there began massacres On the night of 6 August Bulgarian major Atanas Babata and his band entered the Serbian village of Kokosinje where they were searching for people that were condemned to death by the Bulgarian Committee The Bulgarian band demanded that the village priests and teachers renounce their Serbian identity but they refused and they massacred over 53 people A servant of one of the teachers who had managed to hide set out to find the band of Jovan Dovezenski who he had heard was crossing the border The teacher s servant found another Serbian band that of Jovan Pesic Strelac which had learnt of the massacre but also of that of Jordan Spasev who had killed members of the notable Dunkovic family on 11 August 28 The Serbian Chetniks in Porece and Demir Hisar constantly followed by Bulgarians did not know of the massacres 29 The hungry and tired band of Đorđe Cvetkovic arrived at the village of Gornji Divjaci where they were hosted by the villagers who had brought cheese and rakija 29 They rested in sheets of sheep skin and the village children came with bread and listened to their stories 29 Cvetkovic Trbic and Stevan Cela rested in the house of the village leader and ate several meals 29 In the next morning Trbic walked through the yard and went down some stairs and saw an Ottoman jandarma whom he shot who was then buried in the forest 29 The rest ended and the band assembled and walked the river across the mountain 29 They arrived at the village of Cer the next day where they also found Bulgarians and the Bulgarian voivodes Hristo Uzunov and Georgi Sugarev joined their company 29 In the mountainous village of Mramorac where Petar Chaulev had set up camp in the forest Trbic band were told that the Bulgarian Committee had prohibited them to go to Drimkol 30 On the same day 14 August the Bulgarians had killed Serbian priest Stavro Krstic which the Chetniks later learnt from the villagers b Far from the other bands without help tricked and surrounded the band understood their situation 30 Chaulev informed them of their disarmament and the Bulgarian Committee s verdict of crime against the Bulgarian organization 30 They were only shouted at as they were saved by some ethnic Serb voivodes in the Bulgarian bands Tase and Dejan from Prisovjan and Cvetko from Jablanica in Debar who were bound by oath to the Bulgarian Committee but nevertheless openly defended the Serbian Chetniks and friends whom they had wintered together with in Belgrade 30 They awaited Dame Gruev the second leader of the Bulgarian Committee after Sarafov who would arrive from Bitola 30 Gruev and his escort arrived as village priests on a night 30 Trbic knew Gruev from the Krusevo Uprising and from an encounter in Serava 30 Trbic used their acquaintance and memories reminding Gruev of the common revolutionary fight and his childhood when Gruev was a cadet of the Society of Saint Sava in Belgrade and an apprentice in the printing house of Pero Todorovic which was called Smiljevo after Gruev s birthplace 30 1906 07 Edit In 1906 and 1907 the Serbian Chetniks had most success 15 Young Turk Revolution Edit When the Young Turk Revolution broke out 1907 1908 and there was a temporary peace in Macedonia the Young Turks gave Serbs more rights Several members of the Organization joined the Serb Democratic League Operations and events EditThe wounding of Ilija Slave June 1903 Fight at Djuriski monastery early september 1903 The assassination of Sefir beg January 21 1904 Fight on Suplji Kamen May 27 1904 31 Fight in Slatine October 5 1904 31 Kokosinje massacre August 6 1904 Rudar massacre August 11 1904 Murder of priest Stavro Krstic August 14 1904 Murder of priest Tasko January 15 1905 32 Fight in Tabanovce 27 March 1905 32 Lynching of Chetniks in Kumanovo March 28 1905 32 Fight in Velika Hoca 25 May 1905 Fight on Celopek 16 April 1905 33 Fight on Vuksan 30 April 1905 34 Fight on Kitka 30 April 1905 35 34 Fight on Oresje Oreske livade 10 May 1905 33 Fight in Petraljica 31 May 1905 35 Fight on Mukos June 20 1905 34 Fight on Movnatac August 18 1905 34 Fight on Pakliste February 1 1906 Fight on Celopek 7 February 1906 36 Fight in Drenovac March 9 1906 Fight in Nikodim April 1906 Fight in Berovo May 13 1906 Fight in Stalkovica May 20 1906 Fight in Kriva Brda May 12 1906 Fight in Bajlovac July 16 1906 Fight in Bailovce Bajlovac 16 23 July 1906 Fight in Vladinovace July 1906 Fight in Vrbnicki Vis July 29 1906 Fight on Kurtov Kamen August 12 1906 Fights in Males 1906 36 Fight on Kurtov Kamen 1907 Fight in Nebregovo 1907 Fight in Drenovo 1907 Fight on Pakliste 1907 8 Operations temporarily stopped during the Young Turk Revolution 1908 and until the Young Turk coup 1910 after which oppression against Christians intensified Chief of staff EditChiefs of the Mountainous Headquarters b Left side of the Vardar or Predvardarje Baceta until June 1905 37 Mihailo Dzervinac April 1907 Pavle Blazaric April Autumn 1907 Milivoje Colak Antic end of 1907 38 Vojislav Tankosic 1907 08 Right side of the Vardar or Prekovardarje Sreten Rajkovic Rudnicki 1905 39 40 41 Panta Radosavljevic end of 1905 42 Jovan Babunski 1907 Alimpije Marjanovic 1908 Armament Edit Martini Henry rifle Berdan II rifle In 1904 05 the Chetniks were supplied with Mauser Koka rifle known as brzometka pl brzometke or kokinka pl kokinke Martini Henry rifle known as martinka pl martinci martinke Berdan rifle I and II 43 known as brzometka pl brzometke 44 or berdanka pl berdanci berdanke various revolvers also known as altipatlak Turkish six shooter hand thrown bombsCulture EditThe members of the organization were known by their nom de guerre chetnichko ime Chetnik name 45 The descendants of Jovan Stanojkovic Dovezenski and Jovan Stojkovic Babunski are surnamed with their Chetnik names Dovezenski and Babunski respectively 45 Cryptography Edit From the start of the organization cryptographic words and later numbers were used For instance Bozija kuca God s house was used for Serbia while Gospodin u Bozijoj kuci Mister in God s house was used for the President of the Executive Board in Vranje Common uses were stap rod for rifle jabuke apples for bombs kafa coffee for gunpowder secer sugar for poison golemiot great one or starac elder for the Chief of the Mountain Headquarters brabonjci sheep feces for Turks Smirana for Skopje Venecija for Vranje Jerusalim for Bitola Berlin for Belgrade Neptun for Porece etc 46 Legacy EditThe organization continued its existence and also played a role during the Balkan Wars as well as during World War I 47 During the First Balkan War Chetniks were used as a vanguard to soften up the enemy forward of advancing armies for attacks on communications behind enemy lines as field gendarmerie and to establish basic administration in occupied areas 48 Gallery Edit Group photo July 1908 Most notable commanders July 1908 no 1 Most notable commanders July 1908 no 2 Chetniks in Skopje July 1908See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Serbian Chetnik Organization 1903 1918 Narodna Odbrana Serbian organization White Hand Serbian organization Young Bosnia Bosnian pan Yugoslav organization Hellenic Macedonian Committee Greek nationalist organization during the Macedonia struggle Hajduk Army of the Kingdom of SerbiaAnnotations Edit The Serbian Committee was the main body of the Serbian Revolutionary Organization established through the combination of the four Serbian Central Boards Belgrade Vranje Skopje and Bitola It was also known as the Central Revolutionary Secret Board Centralni revolucionarni taјni odbor or Central Board of the Serbian Chetnik Organisation Centralni odbor srpske chetnichke organizaciјe There were two main headquarters of the military organization the Mountainous Headquarters of Predvardarje before the Vardar in Skopje and the Mountainous Headquarters of Prekovardarje Prekovardarјe over the Vardar The supreme commander of each headquarters was titled Chief of the Mountainous Headquarters shef gorskog shtaba the first was titled of Predvardarje or on the right side of the Vardar na desnoј strani Vardara or for the right shore of Vardar za desnu obalu Vardara the second was titled of Prekovardarje or on the left side of the Vardar na levoј strani Vardara or for the left shore of Vardar za levu obalu Vardara 49 References Edit Vucetic Biljana 2015 Some considerations on the emergence of the Serbian Chetnik Movement in Macedonia during the last period of Ottoman rule Zapisi Podgorica Istorijski institut Crne Gore 3 4 111 128 Zaboravљene srpske voјvode Chetnishtvo јe nastalo u borbama sa Turcima zatim sa Bugarima Shiptarima i Austriјancima video 28 August 2017 a b c Jovanovic 1937 p 236 Sima M Cirkovic 2008 The Serbs John Wiley amp Sons pp 224 ISBN 978 1 4051 4291 5 a b Georgevitch 1918 pp 181 182harvnb error no target CITEREFGeorgevitch1918 help Vojni muzej Jugoslovenske narodne armije 1968 Fourteen Centuries of Struggle for Freedom Belgrade Military Museum p xliv a b c Jovanovic 1937 p 237 a b c d Hadzi Vasiljevic 1928 p 8 Matica srpska Matica Srpska 1992 Zbornik Matice srpske za istoriju 45 48 in Serbian Novi Sad Matica srpska p 55 Srbiјa јe taјno i vrlo oprezno pomagala akciјe hrishћana u Turskoј Brsјachka buna ali јe na intervenciјe vlade ta pomoћ prestala 1881 Lazar Kolisevski 1962 Aspekti na makedonskoto prasanje in Macedonian Kultura p 499 Seto ova dvizheњe vo Zapadna Makedoniјa e poznato vo istoriјata pod imeto Brsјachka buna Turskata voјska uspea vo zimata 1880 1881 godina da јa zadushi bunata i mnogu neјzini vodachi da gi isprati na zatochenie Đuric amp Mijovic 1993 p 63 Hadzi Vasiljevic 1928 p 14 sfn error no target CITEREFHadzi Vasiljevic1928 help Oswald Ashton Wentworth Dilke Margaret S Dilke 1984 Recollections of the National Liberation Struggles in Macedonia At the End of the 19th and the Beginning of the 20th Centuries Mosaic Publications p 46 For this purpose in May 1899 by their order the people s deputy Golub Janic from Belgrade organized and sent to Macedonia a detachment of 10 15 men while Serbian agents in Macedonia informed the Turkish authorities that it was a a b Milja Milosavljevic Rebeka Levi 2006 Kod dva bela goluba IP Signature p 102 ISBN 9788683745616 Godine 1902 osnovan јe Glavni odbor chetnichke orga nizaciјe u koјi su ushli doktor Milorad Goђevac Luka Ћ e loviћ Vasa Јovanoviћ Zhika Rafailoviћ Nikola Spasiћ i Љuba Kovacheviћ a b Dedijer 2008 p 631 srpska akciјa Srpska chetnichka akshua imala јe na vishe uspeha 1906 i 1907 Trbic Vasilije 1996 Memoari Seћaњa i dozhivљaјi voјvode veleshkog in Serbian Belgrade Kultura p 83 ISBN 8678010134 Krakov 1930 p 80harvnb error no target CITEREFKrakov1930 help a b c d e Krakov p 147 Krakov p 146 a b Krakov p 150 Krakov p 154 a b Krakov p 155 Krakov pp 161 164 a b Viktor Novak 2008 Revue historique Vol 57 p 359 Zhika Rafailoviћ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Krakov p 166 Zivkovic 1998 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Krakov p 167 Krakov 1990 pp 168 172 a b c d e f g Krakov p 172 a b c d e f g h Krakov p 173 a b Ilic Vladimir March 4 2003 Srpski cetnici na pocetku dvadesetog veka 6 Pogibija na supljem kamenu Glas Javnosti a b c Ilic Vladimir March 5 2003 Srpski cetnici na pocetku dvadesetog veka 7 Ubistvo popa Taska Glas Javnosti a b Ilic Vladimir March 6 2003 Srpski cetnici na pocetku dvadesetog veka 8 Borba na Celopeku Glas Javnosti a b c d Ilic Vladimir March 9 2003 Srpski cetnici na pocetku dvadesetog veka 11 Borbe na Vuksanu i Kitki Glas Javnosti a b Rankovic amp April 1939 p 182 sfn error no target CITEREFRankovicApril 1939 help a b Ilic Vladimir March 11 2003 Srpski cetnici na pocetku dvadesetog veka 13 Ludost vojvode Ivanisevica Glas Javnosti Jovanovic 1937 p 297 Rudic Milkic amp Institute of History 2013 p 85 Jovanovic 1937 p 293 Blazaric 2006 p 9 Dedijer amp Anic 2008 p 595 Ra kovi Sreten prvi shef gorskog shtaba za desnu obalu Vardara Prekovardar e 1905 Dedijer amp Anic 2008 p Radosavl gt evi Panta poruchnik shef gorskog shtaba Prekovardarјe kraј 1905 brzometka br 1 brzometka br 2 Đuric amp Mijovic 1993 p 72 Pred sam polazak molio јe Goђevca da mu nabavi tri brzometke kakve јe onda nasha voјska tek bila dobila a b Recueil de Vardar Akademija 2006 p 99 Srpski cetnici na pocetku dvadesetog veka 4 Srbiju zvali Bozija kuca Roberts 1973 p 21 Tomasevich 1975 p 117 Macedonian Review Vol 7 Kulturen Zhivot 1977 This can be best seen from the reports which had been handed over by the cheta bodies voivodas marshals and the Headquarters So under the command of the Skopje Gorski highland Headquarters Eastern Povardarie there was a Headquarters cheta of Kumanovo Dolnapalanka and Goren Polog Lower Palanka and Upper Polog 16 Under the command of the Western Povardarie was Headquarters of the so called Prekuvardarski gorski shtab The Mountain Headquarters of across the River Vardar had a Veles cheta then Prilep First Prilep Second Gorna Palanka Dolno Porech and the Kichevo ones Also under the direct management of the Main Board in Skopje there was a cheta which operated in the region of Skopska Crna Gora 17 The number of the cheta fighters was relatively small as it was still the winter period when the Sources EditBooksBajic Jovo 1998 Srpska revolucionarna organizacija komitsko cetovanje u staroj Srbiji i Makedoniji 1903 1912 Duska ISBN 978 86 7745 024 3 Blazaric Pavle 2006 Bozica Mladenovic ed Memoari in Serbian Institut za srpsku kulturu ISBN 9788682797500 Dedijer Vladimir Anic Zivota 2008 Dokumenti o spoljnoj politici Kraljevine Srbije dodat 1 3 SANU Odeljenje istorijskih nauka Dedijer Vladimir Anic Zivota Samardzic Radovan 2006 Dokumenti o spoljnoj politici Kraljevine Srbije sv 2 15 SANU Odeljenje istorijskih nauka ISBN 9788670254169 Đuric Veljko Đ Mijovic Milicko 1993 Ilustrovana istorija cetnickog pokreta in Serbian Narodna knj Hadzi Vasiljevic Jovan 1928 Cetnicka akcija u Staroj Srbiji i Macedoniji in Serbian Belgrade Sv Sava Ilic Vladimir 2006 Srpska chetnichka akciјa 1903 1912 in Serbian Belgrade Ecolibri ISBN 978 86 7905 044 1 Ivanic Ivan 1910 Macedonija i macedondzi in Serbian Vol 2 Stampa Savica i Komp Ivetic Velimir J 2013 Politichka uloga ministara voјnih Kraљevine Srbiјe od 1903 do 1914 godine a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Jovanovic J M 1938 Borba za narodno ujedinjenje 1903 1908 Izdavacko i knjizarsko preduzece G Kon Jovanovic Aleksa 1937 Spomenica dvadesetogodisnjice oslobodjenja Juzne Srbije 1912 1937 in Serbian Juzna Srbija Krakov Stanislav 1990 1930 Plamen cetnistva in Serbian Belgrade Hipnos Mitropan Petar 1933 Prilozi za istoriјu shtampe u Staroј Srbiјi i Makedoniјi 1871 1912 in Serbian Skopje Nusic Branislav 1966 Sabrana dela in Serbian Vol 22 Belgrade NIP Jez Pavlovic Momcilo 2007 September 14 16 2006 Gerila na Balkanu in Serbian Institute for Disarmament and Peace Studies Paunovic Marinko 1998 Srbi biografije znamenitih A S in Serbian Belgrade Emka ISBN 9788685205040 Pecanac Kosta 1997 1933 Cetnicka akcija 1903 1912 Belgrade Hipnos Pejcic Predrag 2007 Cetnicki pokret u Kraljevini Srbiji in Serbian Kragujevac Pesic Miodrag D 2000 Stari cetnici in Serbian Kragujevac Novi pogledi Rastovic Aleksandar 2011 Velika Britanija i makedonsko pitanje 1903 1908 godine Istorijski institut ISBN 978 86 7743 088 7 Rudic S Milkic M Institute of History B I B 2013 The Balkan Wars 1912 1913 New Views and Interpretations Institute of History Institute for Strategic Research p 85 ISBN 978 86 7743 103 7 Simic Stevan 2012 1988 Srpske Komite Komitsko cetovanje u Staroj Srbiji i Makedoniji 1903 1912 in Serbian Belgrade Simic Stevan 1998 Bajic Jovo ed Srpska revolucionarna organizacije komitsko cetovanje u Staroj Srbiji i Makedoniji 1903 1912 in Serbian Belgrade Duska Tomasevich Jozo 1975 The Chetniks Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 0857 9 Trbic Vasilije 1996 Draskovic Aleksandar ed Memoari 1898 1912 in Serbian Belgrade Kultura Trifunovic Ilija Z 1933 Trnovitim stazama in Serbian Belgrade GSSZZ Trifunovic Ilija Z 1930 Krv cetnika in Serbian Belgrade Planeta Krvave borbe srpskih ceta po macedoniji i njihov rad od pocetka 1903 do danas Iz Knjizevnog pregleda br 1 20 Savic 1912 JournalsRastovic Aleksandar 2008 Velika Britaniјa prema srpskim akciјama u Makedoniјi 1903 1907 Istoriјski chasopis 57 355 374 Rastovic Aleksandar 2010 Macedonian issue in the British Parliament 1903 1908 PDF Istorijski casopis 59 365 386 permanent dead link Jerinic P D S 2008 Voјvode iz chetnichke akciјe u Staroј Srbiјi i Maћedoniјi 1903 1912 Dobrovoљachki glasnik Belgrade 32 Sesum Uros 2016 Chetnichka organizaciјa u Skopskoј Crnoј Gori 1903 1908 godine PDF ZMSI Matica srpska 93 55 69 Simijanovic J 2008 Okolnosti na pocetku srpske cetnicke akcije neki pokusaji saradnje i sukobi cetnika i komita u Makedoniji PDF Bastina 25 239 250 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 17 Vucetic Biljana 2006 Srpska revolucionarna organizaciјa u Osmanskom carstvu na pochetku XX veka Istoriјski chasopis 53 359 374 Vucetic Biljana 2007 Seћaњa Antoniјa Todoroviћa na revolucionarnu akciјu srpskog naroda u Turskoј 1904 1912 godine Meshovita graђa 28 265 305 Vucetic Biljana 2008 Bogdan Radenkoviћ i Milan Rakiћ Istoriјski chasopis 57 413 426 Vucetic Biljana 2010 Pogledi na organizaciјu Srpske odbrane u Makedoniјi u 1906 godini Vesnik Belgrade Voјni muzeј 37 165 170 NewspapersZiv J Rankovic April 1939 Cetnicka akcija I Beogradske opstinske novine No 4 Ziv J Rankovic May 1939 Cetnicka akcija II Beogradske opstinske novine No 5 Zivkovic Simo December 1998 Sakupi Se Jedna Ceta Mala Srpsko Nasleđe Istorijske Sveske Belgrade GLAS d d o 12 Vesti Online 2011 12 18 Prvi beogradski cetnici Belgrade Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Serbian Chetnik Organization amp oldid 1141960612, 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.