- Source: Ottoman conquest of Bosnia and Herzegovina
The Ottoman conquest of Bosnia and Herzegovina was a process that started roughly in 1386, when the first Ottoman attacks on the Kingdom of Bosnia took place. In 1451, more than 65 years after its initial attacks, the Ottoman Empire officially established the Bosansko Krajište (Bosnian Frontier), an interim borderland military administrative unit, an Ottoman frontier, in parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 1463, the Kingdom fell to the Ottomans, and this territory came under its firm control. Herzegovina gradually fell to the Ottomans by 1482. It took another century for the western parts of today's Bosnia to succumb to Ottoman attacks, ending with the capture of Bihać in 1592.
Origins and etymology
The entire territory that is today known as Bosnia and Herzegovina was not conquered by the Ottoman Empire at once in a single battle, but it took the Ottoman Empire several decades to conquer it.
Military units of the Ottoman Empire made many raids into feudal principalities in the western Balkans at the end of the 14th century, some of them into territory of today's Bosnia and Herzegovina, long before the conquest of the Bosnian Kingdom. The first Ottoman raids led by Timurtash-Pasha happened in the eastern parts of Bosnia in 1384. The Battle of Bileća in 1388 was the first battle of the Ottoman army on the territory of today's Bosnia and Herzegovina.
It soon won important victories against the regional feudal lords in the Battle of Marica (1371) and Battle of Kosovo (1389).
In 1392, the Ottomans established the Skopsko Krajište after the capture of Skopje, the capital of the Serbian Empire between 1346-1371; the term krajište (крајиште) had originally served as an administrative unit of the Serbian Empire or Despotate to designate border regions where the emperor or despot had not established solid and firm control due to raids from hostile neighboring provinces. The militarized territories that would later receive the name Bosansko Krajište (lit. Bosnian Frontierland) were thus governed by the same Ottoman administration, based in Skopje.
War with the Bosnian Kingdom
After the death of King Tvrtko I in 1391, the Bosnian Kingdom went into decline. In the 1410s, local noblemen Hrvoje Vukčić of the House of Hrvatinić, Sandalj Hranić of the House of Kosača and Pavle Radenović of the House of Pavlović controlled large swaths of territory once controlled by Tvrtko, and effectively controlled the Kingdom by aligning themselves with competing branches of the House of Kotromanić. In 1413, a conflict escalated between Hrvoje and Sandalj while the latter was helping Stefan Lazarević fight the Ottomans in Serbia; subsequently, Hrvoje allied himself with the Ottomans, who invaded Bosnia in May 1414, which prompted a subsequent invasion by the troops of the Kingdom of Hungary. In a major battle in August 1415 that took place either near Doboj or in the Lašva Valley, the Ottomans won a major victory, upsetting the balance of power in the region.
The first permanent presence of Ottoman armies in Bosnia was established in 1414, after the region near Donji Vakuf (known as Bosnian Skoplje in medieval times) was captured. In period between 1414 and 1418, the Ottoman Empire conquered Foča, Pljevlja, Čajniče and Nevesinje. During the same year Višegrad and Sokol were captured too.
In 1415, Sandalj Hranić, who controlled today's eastern Herzegovina, became an Ottoman vassal.
Isa-Beg Isaković organized in 1455 one of the first Ottoman censuses in the western Balkans.
By the end of this period, in the 1460s, the territory of the Kingdom of Bosnia was significantly reduced, with the Ottoman Empire controlling the entirety of today's eastern Bosnia, as far north as Šamac, and Herceg Stjepan under control of all of today's Herzegovina as far north as Glamoč.
Sanjaks
The Ottoman conquest of the Kingdom of Bosnia ended in 1463 with the death of King Stjepan Tomašević.
The Siege of Jajce ensued shortly thereafter in which the Kingdom of Hungary retook the Jajce Fortress. The victory was hailed at Matthias Corvinus's court as a restoration of the Kingdom of Bosnia, then under Hungarian sovereignty. The Hungarians formed the Banate of Jajce after that.
Isa-beg became the first sanjakbey of the Bosnian Sanjak in 1464.
After taking the Kingdom of Bosnia in 1463, Mahmud Pasha also invaded Herzegovina and besieged Blagaj after which Herceg Stjepan conceded a truce that required ceding all of his lands north of Blagaj to the Ottomans.
The Ottoman territory in Bosnia continued to be expanded into newly-established sanjaks: the Sanjak of Herzegovina was formed in the 1470, subordinated to the beglerbey of Rumelia like the Bosnian sanjak. In 1480, the Sanjak of Zvornik was formed but subordinated to the Beglerbey of Budim.
Even though the Bosnian Kingdom fell, there were several fortresses that resisted much longer – the last fortress in Herzegovina fell in 1481. The House of Kosača maintained the Duchy of Saint Sava as an Ottoman vassal state until 1482.
In 1481, after the death of Mehmed II, Matthias Corvinus invaded Bosnia again and reached Vrhbosna (Sarajevo), but all of those gains were undone within a year.
In the 1530s, the Kingdom of Hungary had remained in control of the forts on the south bank of the Sava and Jajce. Jajce Fortress was finally taken by the Ottomans in 1527.
The House of Berislavić controlled the region of Usora in the north until it in turn succumbed in the 1530s.
Parts of southwestern Bosnia were sectioned into the Sanjak of Klis, which was formed in 1537 subordinated to the Eyalet of Rumelia.
Aftermath
The Eyalet of Bosnia was established in 1580.
It took until 1592 and the fall of Bihać to reach the westernmost frontiers of what is modern Bosnia, and the modern western border of Bosnia to be established. After that, the territory of today's Bosnia and Herzegovina remained under largely undisturbed Ottoman rule until 1689 and the Great Turkish War.
See also
Ottoman Bosnia and Herzegovina
Pashaluk of Herzegovina
References
Further reading
Bataković, Dušan T. (1996). The Serbs of Bosnia & Herzegovina: History and Politics. Dialogue Association. ISBN 978-2-911527-10-4.
Sugar, Peter (1993) [1977]. Southeastern Europe under Ottoman rule, 1354-1804. University of Washington Press. p. 64. ISBN 0-295-96033-7. 2. Hazim Šabanović studied this phenomenon in his numerous works dealing with Bosnia.
Bosansko krajište 1448-1463, Godišnjak Istoriskog društva Bosne i Hercegovine
Krajište Isa-bega Ishakovića, Zbirni katastarski popis iz 1455. godine, vol. 2. Bosansko Krajište, Hazim Šabanović, Institute of Oriental Studies, Sarajevo, 1964.
Ibrahimagić, Omer (1998). Constitutional development of Bosnia and Herzegovina (PDF). Sarajevo: Vijeće kongresa bošnjačkih intelektualaca. ISBN 9958-47-030-6.
Bosanski pašaluk, postanak i upravna podjela, Hazim Šabanović, Sarajevo, 1982
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kesultanan Utsmaniyah
- Penaklukan Bosnia dan Herzegovina oleh Utsmaniyah
- Balkan
- Islam di Eropa
- Banat Bosnia
- Pertempuran Kosovo
- Eyalet Habesh
- Wazir Agung
- Ottoman conquest of Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Ottoman Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Islam in Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Culture of Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Bosnia vilayet
- Herzegovina
- Bosnia Eyalet
- Austro-Hungarian rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina
- History of Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Bosanska Krajina