- First Serbian Uprising
The First Serbian Uprising was a
Serbia n nationalrevolution which lasted for nine years and approx. nine months (1804-1813), during which Serbia perceived itself as an independent state for the first time after 400 years of Ottoman and short-lasting Austrian occupations. Revolutionary Serbia responded to the OttomanSlaughter of the knezes by establishing its separategovernment ("Praviteljstvujušči Sovjet"), Serbian Prince,Parliament ("Zbor") andGreat School of Belgrade. Even though it was brutally crushed by theOttomans in 1813, this revolution sparked theSecond Serbian Uprising in 1815, which resulted with the creation of modernSerbia , as it gained semi-independence fromOttoman Empire in 1817 (formally in 1829).Background
After the defeat of the
Ottoman Empire in the Turkish-Austrian war of 1791, Serbs living under Turkish rule began to realize the potential for success in an uprising against the Ottomans.Seeing the growing displeasure, the Sultan
Selim III proclaimedferman s in 1793 and 1796 which gave more rights to Serbs. Among other things, taxes were to be collected by local Serbian rulers called "knezes" ("local dukes"), freedom of trade and religion were granted, and, most importantly, theJanissary corps were to leaveBelgrade Pashaluk .However, on
January 30 ,1799 , the Turkish court allowed the Janissaries to return. They and their leaders, thedahia s, showed little respect towards any authority, even the central Turkish government. After killingVizier Hadži-Mustafa ofBelgrade in1801 , they started to rule Serbia on their own. Recently-granted rights were suspended, and dahias exerted unlimited rule over Belgrade Pashaluk.Tax es were drastically increased, land was seized, forced labour ("čitlučenje") was introduced, and many citizens fled the Janissaries in fear.The Uprising begins
Serb leaders began to conspire about starting an uprising against the dahias. When the dahias found out about this, they captured and killed many of the Serbian leaders on
February 4 ,1804 in an event known today as "Seča knezova" (Massacre of Serbian knights ). This mistake by the Janissaries incited the uprising, as it angered the people and the leaders had nothing to lose.On
February 14 ,1804 , in the smallŠumadija village of Orašac, the Serbs gathered and decided to undertake an uprising.Karađorđe Petrović was elected as the leader of the uprising, which started immediately. That afternoon, a Turkish inn (caravanserai ) in Orašac was burned and its residents fled or were killed. Similar actions were undertaken in surrounding villages and then spread further. Soon the citiesValjevo andPožarevac were liberated, and thesiege ofBelgrade started.When he was informed about the uprising, Selim III started to negotiate with the rebels. Dahias escaped from Belgrade, but they were captured and killed on the island of
Ada Kaleh in theDanube . Eventually, the negotiations failed, and the Sultan organised a military campaign against the uprising.The first major battle of the uprising was the
Battle of Ivankovac in 1805, where Karađorđe defeated the Turkish army and forced it to retreat towardNiš . The second major battle of the uprising wasBattle of Mišar in 1806, in which the rebels defeated an Ottoman army from Bosnia led byKulin Captain . At the same time, the rebels led byPetar Dobrnjac defeated another army sent from the southeast in theBattle of Deligrad . In December 1806, the rebels besieged Belgrade, which was liberated in the beginning of 1807.The outcome
In 1805 the Serbian rebels organized a basic government for administering Serbia during the combat.Rule was divided between the Narodna Skupština (People's assembly), the
Praviteljstvujušči Sovjet (Ruling Council), andKarađorđe himself. Land was returned, forced labour was abolished, andtax es were reduced. The young state was modernised and by 1808 theGreat School was founded, regarded as the foundation of theUniversity of Belgrade .Some of the leaders of the uprising later abused their privileges for personal gain, such as the reintroduction of forced labour in some places. There was dissent between Karađorđe and other leaders; Karađorđe wanted absolute power, while his voivods wanted to limit it. After the Russo-Turkish War of 1806-12 ended, the Ottoman Empire exploited these circumstances and reconquered Serbia in 1813.
Though ultimately unsuccessful, the First Serbian Uprising paved the way for the
Second Serbian Uprising of 1815, which eventually succeeded in securing Serbian autonomy.Battles
*
Battle of Ivankovac
*Battle of Mišar
*Battle of Deligrad
* Siege of Belgrade
*Battle of Čegar People
*
Karađorđe
*Tanasko Rajić
*Ilija Birčanin
*Jakov Nenadović
*Mateja Nenadović
*Milenko Stojković
*Hajduk Veljko Petrović
*Petar Dobrnjac
*Stanoje Glavaš
*Vuk Stefanović Karadžić *
Dahia s:
**Aganlija
**Kučuk-Alija
**Mula Jusuf
**Mehmed-Aga
**Mus-Aga External links
* [http://web.archive.org/web/20040501004449/http://www.serbia.sr.gov.yu/news/2003-12/18/332508.html Program of celebration of 200th anniversary of the uprising]
See also
*
History of the Serbian-Turkish wars
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