- Turkish Croatia
Turkish Croatia was the name used between the 16th and 19th centuries for the northwest territory of Bosnia, today known as
Bosanska Krajina (Bosnian Frontier).In the European literature of the 18th and 19th century, the name Turkish Croatia was used to refer to the territories enclosed by the Sava, Una, and Vrbas rivers, or precisely, westwards from Vrbas river, eastwards from Una, southwards from Sava, northwards from
Završje (on older maps, Završje is a part of "Croazia Turca, Croatia Turcica, Türkisch Kroatien, Török Horvátország") [ [http://pandi.adatbank.transindex.ro/index.php?kezd=1840&kat=&ev=&action=&mutato=&kezdoev=&vegzoev=&kezdohon
] ] [ [http://cronologia.leonardo.it/umanita/slavi/cap105.htm, Slavi - la genesi del mondo - storia delle civilta'] ] [ [http://www.biskupija-banjaluka.org/obespravljeni/italiano/VIII_pog.htm Diocese of Banja Luka] ] [ [http://www.novaetvetera.it/articolo.php?id=73&idg=12 _ Nova et Vetera - Periodico cattolico 1/2001] ] [Augusto Kaznačić: "Bosnia, Hercegovina e Croazia-Turca : notizie riunite e tradotte / da Augusto Kaznačić", Printed at fratelli Battara in Zadar, 1862 ] .The name 'Turkish Croatia' was given to the area by the Ottoman Turks and accepted by
Austria n, Italian, and German cartographers. In 1860 , theVlach population of the area wanted that name abolished in favor of a new name:Bosanska Krajina (Bosnian Frontier). Bosanska Krajina first appears on maps in1869 .Historically important towns in northwest Bosnia include
Banja Luka ,Jajce ,Ključ , andBihać .History
In the
6th century , northwestern Bosnia was part of the Roman province ofDalmatia . It fell under the jurisdiction of theEastern Roman Empire . Shortly thereafter,Eurasian Avars and their Slavic subjects from northern Europe invaded Dalmatia and settled in what is nowTurkish Bosnia and Herzegovina .In the
7th century the SlavicCroats were invited by Roman emperorHeraclitus to drive the Avars out of Dalmatia. After several years of war, the Croats defeated most of the Avars and their subjects, and assimilated the rest. The Croats established two states in theBalkans : the Croatia ofDalmatia -Illyricum , and thePannonia n Croatia. Northwestern Bosnia became part of Pannonian Croatia, while most of the rest of Bosnia-Herzegovina was included in Dalmatian-Illyricum Croatia.Northwestern Bosnia, along with the rest of Pannonian Croatia, soon fell to the
Franks . During this time many Croats wereChristianized . The Croats scored several victories against the Franks; as a result, the Franks relinquished their claims on Pannonian Croatia. In the10th century , Pannonian Croatia joined with other Croatian lands in an independent Croatian kingdom. Northwest Bosnia remained part of Pannonian Croatia until 1102 , when Croatia joined theKingdom of Hungary .Croatian prince
Juraj Mikuličić , fearing the advancing Ottoman army, erected a fortress inBužim , near Bihać. Aglagolitic inscription on a tablet dating from the end of the15th century , found in Bužim (now inZagreb ), in theCroatian language , writes of Prince Mikuličić and the brave defenders of Bužim. The tablet records: "U nu vrime va vsei hrvatskoj zemlji boljega covika ne bise..." (translation: "At that time there was not a better man in the whole Croatian land ...").In 1520 , Croatian Ban and "defender of Croatia" Bishop
Petar Berislavić was killed in a Turkish ambush near the Devil's Mountain in the Bihać area "... and Turks murdered Croatian Ban, Peter the bishop, near Bihać in the Devil's Mount, in the Devil's Grotto. And they severed his head. And the Bihać citizen Pavao Medosic found his head and his body, and brought them in Bihac."The former Bosnian kingdom became a Turkish
sanjak shortly after 1463 . In1521 Sultan Beyzaid II appointed his grandsonGazi Husrev-beg as governor of the Sanjak of Bosnia. Husrev-beg's father was anIslamized Croat from Bosnia and his mother was of Turkish origin. Husrev-beg, a brilliant military strategist, desired to expand his Bosnian Sanjak and focused his attacks on the territory that would become Turkish Croatia. He gained much territory, beginning by conqueringUdbina . In January of1528 Jajce ,Banja Luka andKljuč fell, followed byKrbava andLika in the spring of that year.In the 15th century, Croatia became part of the
Austria nHabsburg Empire . The Austrians focused on Croatia and Bosnia to halt Turkish incursions. Ferdinand I of Austria erected fortresses atSenj andKlis which were manned by the infamous CroatianUskoks . He entrusted the defense of the Empire to his uncleCharles of Styria . Charles and the Croatian bands cooperated closely and in 1579 Charles erected the new fortified city ofKarlovac . In 1580 the Turks responded by declaring theBosnian Pashaluk which unified all the Sanjaks, including territory in modern day Croatia.In the 16th century, Bihać was the capital of Croatia. In 1592 the Turkish army of about 20,000 under
Hasan-pasa Predojević , an Ottomanvizier and Islamized Croat, attacked and forcefully occupied Bihac. Records show that nearly 2,000 people died in defense of Bihac, and an estimated 800 Christian Croat children from Bihac were sent into servitude inTurkey , to be educated in Islam and becomeYenicari . Hasan-pasa Predojevic pressed into Croatia to the town ofSisak near Zagreb in 1593 but was defeated in battle and killed.The
Ottoman Empire lost the war of 1683-1697 to Austria, and was required by theTreaty of Karlowitz to cedeSlavonia and parts of Hungary to theHabsburg Empire . The western and northern borders of Bosnia became the boundary between the Ottoman and Austrian empires.Demographic changes in Turkish Croatia
When Turkish troops marched on this part of Bosnia, they incorporated the assistance of Vlachs, mostly from
Montenegro and NorthernAlbania . Most of the Vlachs were ofSerbian Orthodox confession and are believed to be the ancestors of the majority of today's BosnianSerbs living between the Una, Sava, and Vrbas rivers. The Vlachs were non-Slavic nomads, Protoromans and romanized BalkanCelts andIllyrians , who accepted theOrthodox faith. There were alsoCatholic Vlachs who settled in northwest Bosnia and central Croatia and became Croatized after the 16th century.Most of the Vlachs fought on the Turkish side until the decline of the Ottoman Empire. Austrians also utilized the assistance of the Vlachs and Serbs and settled them along the present day Croatian-Bosnian border. Their enclaves in present day Croatia and Bosnia roughly follow the borders of the Turkish and Austrian empires set at the
Treaty of Karlowitz .According to Venetian patrician
Sanudius , the author of "Diario ", Turks had taken 600,000 men and women into slavery from Croatian lands as of 1533.During the frequent wars between the Austrian and Ottoman Empires, Croats in northwestern Bosnia, mostly Catholic in confession, left in large numbers for Croatia and Catholic lands in the Habsburg Empire. When the Treaty of Karlowitz was decided, the border between Austria and the Ottoman Empire was made roughly into the border of Croatia and
Bosnia and Herzegovina today. Islamized Slavs who had been left in Croatia moved to the Bosnian pashaluk, and Christian Croats in the Bosnian pashaluk populated Croatia,Slovenia , and other lands in the Habsburg Empire. There were frequent recorded cases of Christians in "Turkish Croatia" who converted toIslam . "Turkish Croatia" was depopulated of Catholics but subsequently repopulated by Vlachs and Serbs of Orthodox faith.In 1696 , during the Habsburg-Turkish war (
1683 -1699 ), more than 100,000 Bosnian Catholics (Croats) had fled the Turkish oppression, crossed the Una and Sava rivers and found refuge in Croatia, according to theFranciscan Andrija Siprasic's testimony.Also, after these wars, most numbers of Muslim believers retreated and moved to live in these areas after 1683, from former Ottoman possessions in Croatia and Hungary.
Also, big part of local Catholic Croats converted to Orthodox Christianity, due to several reasons. Many cases have been recorded of Catholics being converted to Orthodoxy in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Bosnia; it is clear that the spread of the Orthodox Church did not happen by conversion alone. In the areas where Orthodoxy made its most striking gains, especially in northern Bosnia, the same period saw a large influx of settlers from Orthodox lands. It was evidently deliberate policy on the part of the Ottomans to fill up territory which had been depopulated, either by war or by plague. There are signs in the earliest
defters (Turkish tax records) of groups ofChristian herdsman, identifiable as Vlachs, being settled in devastated areas of easternHerzegovina . In the defters of the1470s and1480s they can be seen spreading into central and north-central Bosnia, in the regions roundVisoko andMaglaj ; soon after 1476 , for example, roughly 800 Vlach families were settled in the Maglaj district, accompanied by two Orthodox priests. The number of Vlachs in north-central and north-east Bosnia continued to grow over the next fifty years, and they began to spread into north-west Bosnia as well.Also, Roman Catholic Croats were potential internal enemy (because of fiend Catholic neighbourhood of Ottomans), and even more, because Catholic Croats were from the both sides of Ottoman-Habsburg border. Second reason was, that Orthodox Christianity hasn't been treated as a threat to Ottoman Empire: thanks to Ottoman
millet system, Orthodox Christianity became a kind of state religion (on a level below the Muslim religion). Also, there was no strong dangerous Orthodox country in the neighbourhood on the Balkans, whose believers in Ottoman Empire might pose as possible ally to them. Finally, because of being pressured community, Catholics have, in order to remain loyal to Christianity, but to evade further pressures from Muslim rulers (but also from Orthodox clergy, who put pressure on Ottoman authorities, to impose taxes to Catholics), converted from Catholicism to Orthodoxy. [Draganović, Krunoslav. Masovni prijelazi katolika na pravoslavlje hrvatskog govornog područja u vrijeme vladavine Turaka, Mostar, 1991. ] [Marko Babić: Draganovićeva istraživanja o brojnim prelascima katolika na pravoslavlje, Hrvatska revija br. 42, 1992. ] [Krunoslav Draganović: Massenuebertritte v. Katholiken zur "Orthodoxie" im kroatischen Sprachgebiet zur Zeit der Tuerkenherrschaft, Rome, 1937] .In the area between Banja Luka and Mrkonjić Grad, many Catholics converted to Orthodoxy, from reasons related to introduction of reformed calendary of pope
Gregory XIII in 1582 . [ [http://www.biskupija-banjaluka.org/osnovnipodaci.htm Bishopric of Banja Luka] Basic data (referring to dr. Berislav Gavranović, Povijest franjevačkog samostana Petrićevac i franjevačkih župa u Bos. Krajini, Sarajevo, 1959, p. 125-126)]During the wars of the early sixteenth century, more areas of northern Bosnia became depopulated as Catholics fled into Habsburg territory. Since it was particularly important for the Ottomans not to leave land empty close to the military border, there were large new influxes of Vlach settlers from Herzegovina and
Serbia . Further movements into this area took place throughout the sixteenth century; plague, as well as war, left demographic gaps which needed to be filled.Those who had moved into northern and western Bosnia could not practise the tradition of long-distance
transhumance . The evidence of sixteenth-century Ottoman decrees on the Vlachs of Bosnia and Herzegovina indicates that the majority of Vlachs were now sedentary, but their way of life still centered on stock-breeding and shepherding.Giovanni Lovrich noted in the1770s that the CroatianMorlachs all had flocks of 200, 300 or 600 sheep, and when he asked why they were so reluctant to till the soil, they replied: "Our ancestors didn't do it, so neither shall we."Terminology
As early as 1530 , when the Habsburg official and Slovene monk,
Benedict Kuripesic traveled through Bosnia, he was able to report that the country was inhabited by three peoples - the Turks, who ruled "with great tyranny" over the Christians; "the old Bosnians, who are of theRoman Catholic faith"; and "Serbs, who call themselves Vlachs ... They came from Smederovo and Belgrade". So important was the Vlach element in the creation of this Bosnian Orthodox population that, three centuries later, the term "Vlach" was still being used in Bosnia to mean "member of theOrthodox Church ."Some writers, especially Serbians, have argued that the term "Vlach" was used to mean simply "shepherd" and did not imply any ethnic or linguistic difference, so that most of these people were really just Serbian shepherds. This view is rejected by the leading modern expert on Vlachs in the early Ottoman Balkans, who insists that they were regarded as a distinct population. Fact|date=May 2007
The Vlachs usually learned and spoke the language of the country where they resided. Vlachs in Bosnia learned Bosniac, Croat or Serb).
Eventually the Vlachs and Serbs of the Orthodox confession became the dominant majority in "Turkish Croatia". The name was changed to "
Bosnian Krajina " in 1869 upon the insistence of the Serbian and Valachian populace.See also
*
Bosanska Krajina
*History of Bosnia and Herzegovina
*History of Croatia References
External links
* [http://www.bihac.org/historija.html History of Bihac , In Bosnian]
* [http://81.1911encyclopedia.org/B/BO/BOSNIA_AND_HERZEGOVINA.htm 1911 Encyclopedia - Turkish Croatia ( under Bosnia and Herzegovina)]
* [http://www.farsarotul.org/nl16_1.htm Noel Malcolm : Serbs and Vlachs in Bosnia]
* [http://hercegbosna.org/engleski/otto.html Herceg Bosna : Ottoman Bosnia]
* [http://hrcak.srce.hr/index.php?show=clanak&id_clanak_jezik=32632 Hrvatski geografski glasnik Fuerst-Bjeliš, Zupanc: Images of the Croatian Borderlands: Selected Examples of Early Modern Cartography] (short intro) and pdflink| [http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/32632 whole article] |1.25 MB (see map p. 16)
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