- Kosovo Province, Ottoman Empire
The Province of Kosovo (Vilayet of Kosovo) ( _sq. Vilajeti i Kosovës; Macedonian: Покраина на Косово, "Pokraina na Kosovo"; Serbian: Косовски вилајет, "Kosovski vilajet"; Turkish: "Kosova Vilayeti") was a "
vilayet " of theOttoman Empire in theBalkan Peninsula only roughly corresponding to the current region ofKosovo . It was created from the formerRumelia Province as part of an Ottoman administrative reform law of1864 . As a result of theBalkan Wars of 1912-1913, the province was split between Montenegro, Serbia, andAlbania .Name
The name Kosovo was used for the first time in this form for Kosovo Field, in which there were two to three main cities.
Robert Elsie : [http://www.elsie.de/pdf/articles/A2007CelebiKosovaAlbanica.pdf nga udhëpërshkrimi (Sejahatnameja) i Evlija Çelebiut] from original Book 5, Bagdat307, foliot 167a-169a, Evlija Çeleb.] . This area was part of Rumelia and it was a geographical name after the Battle of Kosovo. In 1912 the name Kosovo had been extended to mean the area of today's Kosovo and the Sandjak of Novi Pazar, Sandjak of Niš and some parts of Greater Dibra.At the time, Kosovo was often spelled with a double "s" (Kossovo) in English so as to render the sound clearly to English speakers as /s/ rather than /z/. Since first forming a part of the
Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes , followed by the three incarnations ofYugoslavia and now under UN administration whilst withinSerbia 's borders, the common English spelling has been a transliteration of the Serbian Cyrillic /Косово/, ie. with a single "s." The traditional name in both Albanian and Turkish is "Kosova". [ [http://86.1911encyclopedia.org/K/KO/KOSSOVO.htm The 1911 edition Encyclopaedia - Love to Know] ]History
The Province of Kosovo was an area much larger than today's
Kosovo ; not only was today's province incorporated into the Ottoman administered district, but also parts of north-western Macedonia including the capital city,Skopje (then Üsküb). Just as Skopje is larger thanPriština today (Kosovo's administrative seat), it was significantly larger then too, although the population in both towns was several times smaller. Skopje was the provincial capital of Kosovo Province as a Turkish vilayet. Kosovo also encompassed sections of theSandžak region cutting into present-dayCentral Serbia andMontenegro along with theKukës municipality and surrounding region in present-day northernAlbania .The province's boundaries shifted as a the Ottoman Empire lost territory to neighboring states in the Treaty of Berlin following the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878 and parts were also internally transferred to Monastir Province and from Salonica Province. In 1878, the
Sanjak of Novi Pazar , a subdivision of the Province of Kosovo, fell under Austro-Hungarian military occupation in accord with the Berlin treaty. There it would remain until 1908.Population
The population of the province had a mixed
Serb and Albanian population, with the latter becoming strong majority in the later stage of existenceFact|date=February 2008. Most were adherents ofIslam , with significance presence of Eastern Orthodoxy and some Roman Catholicism.ubdivisions
The province was subdivided into the following
sanjak s (Albanian town names in "italics"):
*Üsküb (Skopje) including the towns ofSkopje ,Kumanovo ;Kačanik ("Kaçanik");Štip ;Kratovo ; andKočani .
*Prizren including the towns ofPrizren ("Pirzerin") andTetovo ("Kalkandelen") ( _sq. Tetovë).
*İpek (Peć) including the towns ofPeć (İpek), (Albanian: "Pejë");Ðakovica ("Yakova") (Albanian: "Gjakovë");Gusinje ,Berane , andTrgovište .
*Priştine (Priština) including the towns ofPriština ("Priştine"), (Albanian: "Prishtinë" );Kosovska Mitrovica *("Mitroviça") (Albanian: "Mitrovicë" );Vučitrn (Velçetrin) (Albanian: "Vushtrri"),Gnjilane ("Gjilan"), andPreševo (Preşova) (Albanian: "Preshevë").
*Yenipazar (Novi Pazar) including the towns ofNovi Pazar ,Sjenica (Seniçe),Kolašin ("Kolaşin"),Nova Varoš (Yeni Varoş) , andPrijepolje (Akova).Governors
List of the governors of the province:
* . until 1893 : Ibrahim Edem Pasha
*1894-1899 : Hafiz Mehmed Pasha
*1900-1902 : Reshad Bey Pasha
*1903-1904 : Shakir Pasha Numan
*1905-1907 : Mehmed Shefket Pasha
*.. . . . 1908 : Hadi Pasha
*1909-1910 : Mazhar Bey Pasha
*.. . . . 1911 : Halil Bey Pasha
*.. . . . 1912 : Ghalib PashaReferences
Literature
* "Sûreti defter-i sancak-i Arvanid," H. Inalcik, Ankara 1954. (Turkish)
* "Sûreti defter-i esami vilayeti Dibra," f. 124-176, Başbakanlık Arşivi, maliyeden müdever, nr.508. (Turkish)
* [http://kulturserver-hamburg.de/home/shkodra/phoenix_10/phoenix_10_art09.html Regjistri turk i vitit 1485*] - Prof. As. Dr.David Luka (Albanian)
* A.F. Gilferding, "Putovanje po Hercegovini, Bosni i Staroj Srbiji," Sarajevo, 1972, 241-245 (Serbian)External links
* [http://terkepek.adatbank.transindex.ro/kepek/netre/95.gifMap]
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