here a community school
aiming  to prevent  Greek  propaganda  was established in  1836.  Hilferding
recorded that the male school had 200 pupils in  1857. Other important seats
of scholastic life were at Pristina (150 pupils in 1865) and Pec (150 pupils
in  1866),  in which Serbian  teachers from different regions (Srem, Serbia,
Croatia) lectured according to secular programs from Serbia. Special schools
were  opened for  female  children.  The  highest degree  of  education  was
provided by an extensive school at Prizren, a kind of high school, though of
lower level.3
     A  number of talented  pupils from  Kosovo and Metohia aspiring  to the
teaching vocation, were being prepared in  Serbia  from the beginning of the
sixties, owing to  scholarships received from wealthy  Prizren merchant Sima
Andrejevic  Igumanov  (1804-1882). Their  number  greatly  increased already
after 1868,  when  in Belgrade, at  the proposition of  Serbian Metropolitan
Mihailo, an  Educational Board was  formed for  schools and  teachers in Old
Serbia, Macedonia, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Under the patronage of the Board,
works on the  improvement  of teaching conditions soon  produced significant
results. New schools  were opened and old ones given financial  support, and
the curriculum contained better programs. The tasks of teachers  educated in
Serbia were not solely  to  educate, but were,  above all, aimed to maintain
national awareness  of  the  people,  prevent  conversions  and prepare  the
progeny to carry on the duties of national enlightenment.
     The  turning point  in  the  educational life of  Serbs in the  Ottoman
Empire,  was  marked  by  the Bogoslovija (Seminary), founded in  Prizren in
1871.  Even though some suggestions  for  its inauguration were directed  at
Pec,  the  prevailing attitude in  Belgrade  was that  Prizren was the  most
favorable place, being the center of economical life for Serbs in Old Serbia
and  seat of  the vilayet. Sima  Andrejevic  Igumanov lived  in Prizren, the
contemporaneously greatest benefactor who bequeathed his  riches obtained by
trades in Russia, to the people. He was a Russian subject and was thus able,
with assistance from the Russian  consulate  at Prizren, to obtain a license
from the Turkish authorities to found a Seminary. It soon became the seat of
the overall spiritual and educational life and the stronghold for  political
work  on national affairs.  More  important was the fact that for the  first
time,  contact had been established with the  government in  Belgrade,  able
thus to exert  immediate influence on  national  operations amongst Serbs in
Old Serbia.
     From  its  inauguration in  1871,  until the  liberation  in 1912,  the
Seminary  worked according to instructions given by  the Serbian government.
At  the beginning, its operation was under the jurisdiction  of the Ministry
for  Education  and  Religious  Affairs, and then  the Ministry for  Foreign
Affairs.  All expenses of the Seminary were  paid by the Serbian government,
but important  means for its maintenance came from various funds  founded by
the church and from the endowment of Sima Igumanov. The first  rector of the
Theological college  was a monk from Decani, Sava Decanac, a graduate of the
Spiritual Academy in Kiev.4
     Owing to  the  Bogoslovija,  primary schools  operated  in  all  larger
settlements in Metohia and Kosovo until 1912, and graduated theologians from
Prizren  became teachers  and  priests  all  over the  Ottoman Empire,  from
Macedonia  to Bosnia. According to  incomplete  data,  around  480  students
graduated    from   the   Seminary    (subsequently    transformed    to   a
theological-teaching school) until 1912, among  whom 196  were  from Metohia
and Kosovo.
     The inauguration of the Seminary in  Prizren proved to be  a secure dam
against  any attempts  undertaken  by  the  Constantinople  Patriarchate  to
Hellenize the Serbian populace through Tzintzar oases in Metohia and against
the  aims  of  the  Bulgarian Exarchate (1870) to  build  strongholds in the
Gnjilane region. Until the Serbian consulate was opened in Pristina in 1889,
the Seminary was the center of Serbian political life in Metohia and Kosovo.
From  Belgrade,  by way of  the School, books, journals  and newspapers were
delivered,  for  expanding  liberational  ideas and  consolidating  national
awareness. From the beginning of its operations, the Turkish authorities and
ethnic  Albanians  suspected  the  School  of being  the  center of  Serbian
national  action,  thus  political contacts with Belgrade were  carried  out
through the Russian consulate in Prizren  which  secured the transmission of
confidential mail.5
     In Prizren (seat of the vilayet from  1868-1874),  from 1871, until the
abolition of the vilayet, the paper Prizren was published in  two languages,
Turkish and Serbian, in which official  news, laws, orders, new regulations,
verdicts over violators, and columns on events taking place in Turkey and in
other  countries  were  published.  The  Serbian section  of the  paper  was
editored by Ilija Stavric, rector of the Seminary, and texts were translated
into  Serbian by  a  distinguished  national worker  and  subsequent Serbian
consul  to Pristina, Todor  P.  Stankovic.  In Pristina,  where  the  Kosovo
vilayet was  formed in 1877,  a similar vilayet paper Kosovo was instigated,
also in the Serbian  and Turkish  language. When  the  seat  of  the  Kosovo
vilayet was moved to Skoplje in 1888, the paper resumed its publication only
in Turkish.6
     1 See most important works: P.  Kostic, Crkveni zivot pravoslavnih Srba
u Prizrenu i njegovoj okolini u  XIX veku, (with writer's memories), Beograd
1928; idem, Prosvetno-kulturni zivot pravoslavnih Srba u Prizrenu i njegovoj
okolini  u  XIX veku i  pocetkom XX veka, (with writer's  memories), Skoplje
1933; J.  K.  Djilas, Srpske  skole  na  Kosovu  od 1856.  do  1912. godine,
Pristina 1969.
     2 J. Popovic, Zivot Srba na Kosovu 1812-1912, pp. 222-226.
     3 The most distingushed teachers during the sixties were Nikola Musulin
and  Milan  Novicic in Prizren,  Milan  D. Kovacevic  in Pristina,  and Sava
Decanac in Pec.
     4 J. K. Djilas, op. cit., pp. 53-104.
     5 Spomenica Sezdesetogodisnjice prizrenske Bogoslovske uciteljske Skole
1871-1921, Beograd 1925, pp. 133-160; J. K. Djilas, op. cit., pp. 105-110.
     6 T. P. Stankovic, Putne beleske po Staroj Srbiji 1871-1897, pp. 67-72;
H. Kalesi - H.J. Kornrumpf, op. cit., pp. 117-122.
        The Economy
     The essence  of Serbian economy in Metohia  and Kosovo lay in  the town
and  village handicrafts  and trades. Centers of  Serbian society in Metohia
and  Kosovo  were the  towns Prizren, Pristina  and Pec, and during the last
quarter of the century - Mitrovica. In Prizren, a large town on an important
crossroad toward  Scutari and  Salonika, trade and craftsmanships flourished
in   the   preceding   centuries.  The   local   Serbs  called   it   "small
Constantinople", since most of the trade and crafts  traditionally  belonged
to Serbian citizens.
     According  to available  sources,  life  in Serbian towns evolved under
irregular circumstances during the entire 19th century. The perpetual shifts
of  anarchy,  wars  and  uprisings, and continual peril upon one's  life and
property, compelled the small-in-number Serbian citizens  in Kosovo to adapt
to  the existing conditions  with haste. Using bribes and tips, common means
with bribable government  representatives,  they  somewhat  expanded  narrow
economic  frameworks,  and  discovered,  always  coinciding  with  momentous
political conditions, new  opportunities for  work and ways to protect their
estates  and families.  Life  in  the Serbian  towns of  Kosovo and  Metohia
continued parallel  to the Turkish  and  Albanian ones dictating  the terms.
Even  though  corroded  by  irregular  conditions,   Serbian  tradesmen  and
craftsmen, gathered in  church-school communities  and  parishes,  united in
times of  hardship, succeeded in organizing their  lives.  Acted  as a unity
toward the  authorities  and tyrants,  they often  quarreled  when  settling
matters  in  local  communities.  The  obstinacy  with which  they  resisted
temptations to move to Serbia -  a land that soon trod  the path of national
and economic emancipation by European standards - proves that among the best
national representatives, a high degree of awareness existed on the need for
survival on Kosovo grounds.
     Anachronic  methods of  trade,  insecurity on  roads and competition of
cheap European goods impeded the development  of trade and handicrafts among
Serbs.  The  Muslims  forbade the  Christians to  deal  in crafts  of  wider
significance, for instance,  the gunsmiths', leather dealers', and even  the
barbers' trade. Beside  the Muslims, who were  mostly Turks,  the Tzintzars,
Jews and Catholic Slavs of Janjevo were also in the handicraft business. Yet
the  Serbs did very well in all the permitted trades. A larger part of their
produces  satisfied  their domestic needs and provided for nearby bazaars in
Old Serbia and Macedonia.  Only  a smaller portion of  handicraft  produces,
particularly  of  the  goldsmiths',  leather  dealers'  and  tailors'  guild
(especially  in Prizren, Pristina and  Pec), were vended on larger  markets.
Costly  decorative pieces of  silver and gold, as well as saffian, had their
buyers on markets in  Salonika, Constantinople and other Levant  towns. Bulk
traders of  Prizren, Vucitrn and Pristina  sold various articles in  Serbia,
mostly produces  of different guilds, and  purchased larger  livestock.  The
Vucitrn  tradesmen  of  the Camilovic  family  had successful  dealings with
Sarajevo, while merchants from Pec and Pristina  traded with  other towns in
Bosnia. Enterprising Prizren tradesmen held warehouses with leather and wool
in  Belgrade  from  where  their  goods were  delivered  to Pest, Vienna and
Constantinople.1
     The  dynamic  development  of  enterprises   accomplished   by  Serbian
merchants   in  the  mid-19th  century  provoked  religious  intolerance  in
conservative competitive circles - tradesmen of Muslim faith. The commercial
successes of Serbs also disturbed the Turkish authorities, who reckoned them
to be signs of national rising. As a result, in 1859 and 1863, Serbian shops
were burnt in Prizren,  Pec  and  Pristina, which incurred a sudden economic
downfall in these  towns. Hadji Serafim Ristic recorded that  when  the army
occupied Prizren in  1860,  12 shops  were  burnt, and in  Pristina,  at two
strokes, 90  shops  belonging  to reputable merchants  blazed,  with  values
amounting to  almost a million coins.2 Yet,  commerce remained in
Christian hands in Prizren, according to  the attestation of Austrian Consul
J. G. von Hahn.3 A new  commercial swing came with the opening of
the railway track from Mitrovica to Salonika in 1873-1874, while handicrafts
recorded a decrease in sales  due to competition  from cheap European  goods
brought  to Kosovo  by  Jewish  merchants  from Salonika. Nevertheless,  the
revival of handicrafts and trade  among the Serbs  in the  mid-19th century,
despite  irregular  conditions,  considerably  influenced  the  slowdown  of
emigration to  Serbia.  In towns, contrary to the villages, a certain amount
of legal security existed and a possibility for developing ventures.
     The  position of  Serbs  living in  villages  was  incomparably harder.
ethnic Albanians of Muslim faith  organized raiding parties and  mercilessly
sacked Serbian villages. Being Muslims, being privileged  in every way, they
united into  compact communities of  blood brotherhoods or  tribes, socially
homogeneous, maintaining their clans by terrorizing the Serbs, seizing their
lands  or exacting taxes. By curbing Serbian  farmers from certain  regions,
they  made space for the settlement of  their fellow tribesmen living in the
indigent  plateaus  of north Albania. Unused  to life in the plains and hard
work in the fields, the  ethnic Albanians who settled from the hilly regions
rather picked up guns than hoes.4
     There  was no public safety  on  the roads of Kosovo and Metohia during
the  19th century. Passageways were controlled by bands of outlaws or tribal
companies,  thus  roads could  be passed only  with military  escorts of the
Turkish police or with protection from Albanian  clans supervising  parts of
tribal territory, lurking  about for an opportunity to  fleece merchants and
passengers.
     The Serbian peasant could not hope to be  protected even in the fields,
where  he  could  be  assaulted  at  any moment  by a  wandering  outlaw, or
blackmailed,  and  if he resisted, killed. Being the rayah, the Serbs had no
right to  carry weapons, and when  they  contrived  to obtain them, they had
nowhere to hide from  the  vengeance of the  Albanian  clan  with which they
clashed. The haiduk tradition, characteristic of Serbs living in all regions
under Turkish  domain,  had no effect in the plains  of  Kosovo and Metohia.
Haiduk  activity  occurring  from  time  to  time  on  the  ranges of  Mount
Prokletije, in the vicinity  of the Decani and Pec  monasteries, took  place
with the assistance  and  protection of Serbs from Montenegro,  but still it
could not be sustained.  In times of  peace, rule in towns was maintained by
Turkish military garrisons. Passage through roads depended upon  the will of
numerous  Albanian clan  companies until  1912. Villages inhabited by ethnic
Albanians and situated  along the  roads of Metohia  where interspersed with
high stone towers,  small fortresses from where passengers were attacked and
where concealment lay from members of other companies.
     Both day and night,  Serbian  homes,  made of glued  mud,  were open to
attack by individuals or bands of outlaws  without fear of sanctions. French
travel writer Ami Boue  recorded that  his escort terrorized and  robbed the
inhabitants of a Serbian village.  When the  host opposed the assailant with
an  axe,  the   latter  threatened  to   notify  Pristina,  from  where  the
"janissaries"  and the  tax collector would pop out. Under such threats, the
head of the  Serbian home  was  compelled  to comply to  the demands of  the
assailant, and even to part with him on "friendly" terms.5
     During  the   second  and  third  decade  of  the  19th  century,  when
independent pashas reigned, the  position of  Serbian  village populaces was
extremely  difficult.  Agrarian-legal  relations  depended  not  on  Turkish
regulations but on physical force. Feudal lords  forced  free farmers to the
position of chiflik farmers, especially in Drenica, and the Pec, Vucitrn and
Pristina nahis. Many free farmers fled to  Serbia,  while  Islamization  and
Albanization  decreased  the  resistance  of Serbian villages toward chiflik
labor. The seized estates were returned to  some of the Serbs in 1832, owing
to  the  merit of Grand Vizier Reshid Pasha.  The  vizier  then attempted to
permanently settle agrarian-legal relations in Rumelia with  a decree issued
in Vucitrn, but in practice it was all different. Agas and subpashas settled
in villages to control  the division of incomes of Serbian chiflik laborers.
Fearing sanctions, the Serbs were forbidden to collect income from the lands
they tilled unless given permission.
     By the Hattisherif of Gulhane, the chiflik-sahibi system was legalized;
private ownership of land was recognized legally. The chiflik-laboring Serbs
tilled  the lands of their  lords  and gave  them part  of their income.  In
Kosovo  and Metohia,  until  the  Tanzimat  reforms, the  transformation  of
sipahiliks to  chifliks was executed  by force.  Chiflik-laboring  was  most
expressed in  districts where  Serbs  and  ethnic Albanians  lived  admixed.
Landowners were mostly Muslim ethnic  Albanians  and  Turks, free farmers  -
ethnic  Albanians, and chiflik-laborers mainly Serbs with a small portion of
Catholic ethnic Albanians.6
     Pressure exerted upon the  Serbian chiflik  inhabitants following  1839
was so great that when a large Christian uprising was prepared in Bosnia and
Rumelia, serious  thought  was given  to rising. When the plans to rise were
divulged, the position of farmers  grew worse. Muslims in Prizren routed the
tax collector in 1841, but Christian Serbs were compelled  to pay. Having no
one  to seek  protection from, the Serbs of  the Vucitrn and Pristina  nahis
addressed the government in Belgrade in 1842, requesting help.  Weighed down
by high taxes, which in some areas amounted to half of their  total incomes,
Serbian farmers  became  impoverished.  Economic  pressure did  not  exclude
violent deeds which became  daily  events at the end of  the fifth and sixth
decade. Blackmail, fleecing, arrogation of incomes and estates were followed
by countless  acts  of  violence  over  Serbian  inhabitants  under Albanian
raiding  bands.  Only a  part  of  these  oppressive acts were  divulged  by
archimandrite  of  the  Decani  monastery,  Hadji  Serafim  Ristic,  in  his
complaints to the sultan, Serbian Prince and Russian ruler.7
     1 D. Mikic, Drustvene i ekonomske prilike kosovskih Srba, pp. 235-260.
     2    Savremenici   o   Kosovu   i   Metohiji   1852-1912,   D.   Mikic,
Drustveno-politicki razvoj kosovskih Srba, pp. 236-237.
     3 J. G. Hahn, Putovanje kroz porecinu Drina i Vardara, 130.
     4 T. P. Stankovic, op. cit., pp. 131-138.
     5 D. Mikic, Drustvene i ekonomske prilike kosovskih Srba, p. 90.
     6 D.  Mikic, Drustveno-politicki razvoj  kosovskih  Srba,  pp.  236-239
(with earlier bibliography).
     7 Savremenici o Kosovu i Metohiji 1852-1912, pp. 22-52. 104
        PART TWO: THEOCRACY, NATIONALISM, IMPERIALISM
        ENTERING THE SPHERE OF EUROPEAN INTEREST
     The Albanian national movement was born during the great Eastern crisis
(1875-1878). The basis  for  its gathering contained  the  direct denial  of
liberatory aims of  Serbian states and of the  political and national rights
of the  Serbs  in Kosovo  and Metohia. Bound, in its matrix  course, to  the
Islam concept of  tribal autonomy within the framework of the Ottoman state,
the  Albanian  movement  radiated  a  peculiar intolerance  toward  European
comprehensions  of  society. The  movement for autonomy was,  to the  Muslim
masses of Kosovo and  Metohia, synonymous to the preservation of  tribal and
feudal privileges; to the conservation of the  anachronous regime  in  which
the Serbs had no place.
     The outcome of the Eastern  crisis brought Kosovo and Metohia under the
direct influence of Great Powers. Subsequent to the occupation of Bosnia and
Herzegovina  and the entrance  of  Austro-Hungarian troops  in  the northern
parts of the Kosovo vilayet, the  remote Turkish province became  the key of
dominion on the Peninsula. In Vienna, strong argumentation  underscored that
the  Ottomans conquered the Balkan Peninsula only after the battle of Kosovo
in 1389.
     The   formation  of   oppositional   power   blocks  in   Europe,  with
Austria-Hungary and Russia as  their main  exponents  in  the  Balkans,  was
conducive to a clearer refraction of their  mutual conflicting  interests in
Kosovo,   Metohia  and   Macedonia   than   in  other   Ottoman   provinces.
Internationalization of the  problem of Old Serbia, which intercepted German
penetration  to  the  east, heavily  affected  the  local  Serbian populace.
Russia's influence on political issues in the Balkans, since the Congress of
Berlin until the Young Turk Revolution (1908), was  diminishing despite aims
for  its  restoration and consolidation. Austro-Hungarian  supremacy on  the
Balkans, destroyed in World War I, was based on mercilessly checking Serbian
national interests  and  liberatory aims (Bosnia and Herzegovina, Novi Pazar
sanjak, Old  Serbia,  Macedonia). Favorizing  the  ethnic  Albanians and the
conservative regime  of Abdulhamid II, the Dual  Monarchy  made the Serbs of
Kosovo and Metohia victims of a policy aiming  to a total expulsion of Serbs
in  areas between  the Una river and the Vardar river basin, mid Hungary and
the Adriatic Sea.
        Eastern Crisis and the Serbian-Turkish Wars
     The  great Eastern crisis inaugurated the issue on the  survival of the
Ottoman Empire in the Balkans. Uprisings in Bosnia and Herzegovina compelled
the Porte, fearing interference  from the Great Powers, to issue a firman of
reforms for the whole Empire. The following year a reform  plan, designed by
Austria-Hungarian Foreign Affairs Minister Count Gyula Andrassi, was imposed
upon the Porte  to  prevent  Russian  intervention.  Serbia and  Montenegro,
emboldened  by  successful  insurrections  and the  rebellion  in  Bulgaria,
prepared  for  a liberation  war and  the  unification of the Serbs. Crucial
support was expected from  Russia, but a somewhat larger response  came only
from Slavophile  circles  which sent  around  3,000  volunteers  to  Serbia.
Heading  a Serbian army (subsequently the entire army), entirely devoid of a
trained military cadre, was  Russian General  Mihail Grigorievich Chernaiev.
With the  agreement  in Reichstadt  (1876)  and the  military  convention in
Budapest (1877),  Russia  negotiated with Austria-Hungary:  with free action
and  the declaration of war to Turkey the  Dual  Monarchy would be  able  to
occupy  Bosnia and  Herzegovina at the appropriate time. The destiny of  the
liberation movement was thereby settled beforehand.
     The beginning of the uprising in Herzegovina and Bosnia in 1875 revived
the  hopes  of Serbs in  Kosovo  and Metohia that the time of liberation was
drawing  near.  Harbingers  voicing the approaching liberation were seen  in
dreams, interpreted by portents and extraordinary occurrences, while Serbian
merchants demanded the payment of their dues before deadlines.1
     Unfamiliar passengers seen in various parts of Metohia and  Kosovo were
regarded as Serbian Prince  Milan in disguise, observing the battlefields of
the upcoming combats. Shortly before the war, emissaries did actually arrive
from Serbia. In Nis in 1874, a secret committee was formed with the task  of
preparing an uprising against the  Turks. Before  the commencement of war, a
general of the Serbian army, Franz Zach, sent Todor P. Stankovic, member  of
the  Nis  committee  and  an authority on the  local situation to Kosovo, to
confer  with  notables  in Pristina,  Vucitrn, Gnjilane  and Prizren on  the
upcoming war. The report was submitted to General  Chernaiev who disapproved
of the Serbs rising in Kosovo, expounding that Russia had not yet decided to
engage in war. Several notables from Kosovo  did,  however, arrive in Serbia
with  the  desire  to  obtain  detailed instructions for the  Joint  action.
Aksentije  Hadzi  Arsic,  a  merchant from Pristina, contacted  the  Russian
diplomacy in Belgrade,  endeavoring, with its assistance  in Constantinople,
subsequently in Odessa, to organize a  course for transferring volunteers to
Serbia.2
     When  the war began  in  June  1876,  masses of Serbs from  Kosovo  and
Metohia  crossed over  to Serbian territory, and with Macedonian volunteers,
fought within the composition of the Serbian army. Numerous refugees fleeing
Albanian terror sought shelter in Serbia. Serbs  in Prizren and other places
were called to join the Ottoman army in the composition of irregular  troops
(bashibazouk)  and  war with Serbia. Most of them saved themselves by paying
high ransoms.
     The ethnic Albanians  and Turks received the  declaration of war  vexed
and  anxious.  Around  35,000  (72 units  with 550 men)  Albanian volunteers
responded  to  the  sultan's call  to  defend  their homeland. The first  to
advance to  the  front  towards  Serbia were ethnic  Albanians  of the Ljuma
mountainous  region.  On their way toward  the border, at  the  beginning of
July, around  3,000 of them descended to Prizren, sacking  the Serbian town.
The  Albanian volunteers took  every advantage to pillage  regions lying  on
their way. Again  Kosovo  and  Metohia  became  a battleground where  ethnic
Albanians  settled their  accounts  with the  Serbs,  blaming them  for  the
outbreak of war.
     Serbia and Montenegro fought with unequal success. The Montenegrins won
two  great victories  whereas  the poorly  armed and  insufficiently trained
Serbian troops suffered defeats.  Serbia  soon  agreed to a truce and then a
peace treaty with Turkey on a status quo basis. In Constantinople the insane
Murad V was deposed and Abdulhamid II proclaimed sultan. At the end of 1876,
the Constitution was  proclaimed, warranting freedom  of religion and  civil
equality for all subjects of the Ottoman Empire.
     Yet, nothing changed in Kosovo and Metohia. Terror  upon the Serbs  did
not abate. At the end of December 1876, the church-school community  of  Pec
complained to the pasha of Prizren that fifty Serbs were killed in the  town
and its vicinity from May to December. Complaints of oppression were sent to
the grand vizier  and Russian and  Austro-Hungarian  consuls in  Prizren. An
English  Committee  received  refugees  returning   from  Serbia  to  Kosovo
following the unsuccessful war.3
     A conference of ambassadors of the Great Powers disputed the destiny of
the Ottoman Empire in Constantinople, at the  beginning of  January in 1877.
The destiny of Serbs in other Balkan provinces except in Bosnia and Bulgaria
was not mentioned.  Thus a  "Committee for  the Liberation of Old Serbia and
Macedonia"  was founded in Belgrade presided by Archimandrite Sava  Decanac.
National notables composed a petition at the end of February with  a hundred
signatures,  thus authorizing the Board was able to represent them  with the
Great Powers. The petition demanded that  all countries in which Serbs lived
be  annexed to Serbia  so  as to  sustain their  faith  and  nationality. An
alternate demand was to  found a Serbian Exarchate, following the example of
the  Bulgarian  one,  with its seat  at  Pec,  and  encompassing  Bosnia and
Herzegovina.4
     Russia's entrance to  war  with Turkey in April 1877,  which Serbia and
Montenegro were to  join,  had delayed the submission  of the petition, but,
nonetheless,  the  Committee  resumed  its  work.  Shortly  before  Serbia's
repeated engagement in war, the Serbian prince and the Russian tzar received
news from Kosovo on the slave-like treatment of the Turkish authorities upon
the Christians.
     At Russia's demand, after lengthy hesitation, Serbia entered war at the
end  of December, 1877, but  only after  Russia's  conquest of Plevna, which
sent off  an unfavorable echo to the  ruling  Russian circles.  A  favorable
condition  for  a move to liberate Skoplje and emerge in Kosovo  was missed.
The  Kosovo ethnic Albanians  advanced  once more  toward  the  border.  The
regular Turkish  troops were engaged at the  front with the  Russians, while
ethnic  Albanians  comprised the main force against the Serbs. Anxiety among
them  was   higher  than  military  enthusiasm.  Fear  of  Russian   victory
("Moskovits") and of its allies wrought commotion upon the ethnic Albanians,
anxious about their future religious and tribal rights. Life  in a Christian
and Slavic state was inconceivable for the majority  of ethnic Albanians; in
combats with the Serbian army they put up stubborn resistance, especially in
struggles for Prokuplje and Kursumlija.
     But the Serbs were advancing steadily. Liberating Nis, Leskovac, Vranje
and Prokuplje, the Serbian army emerged in  Kosovo. Not  knowing that Russia
and Turkey had agreed  to  a  truce, the voluntary regiment of Major Radomir
Putnik took Gnjilane, while the advance guard of the Serbian army, under the
command of  Lieutenant  Milos  Sandic, reached the Gracanica monastery  near
Pristina toward the end of January 1878. On January 25, a solemn liturgy was
performed in Gracanica to honor the victory  of  the Serbian army and Prince
Milan,  and  a commemoration was held  for  the  heroes  of Kosovo  in 1389.
However, the concluded truce  was  inclusive of the  Serbian army. The units
were compelled to withdraw from Kosovo.5
     According to the Peace  Treaty between Russia  and  Turkey concluded in
San  Stefano  on  March  3rd, 1878, a  bulk of  the  liberated  territories,
including  those  liberated  by the Serbian army, were alloted  to Bulgaria.
prince Milan informed the Russian  supreme command  that  "the Serbian  army
will not abandon  Nis even if it  were  attacked by  the Russian army". As a
compensation,  Serbia's  border was  extended to  Mitrovica  on Kosovo.  Old
Serbia  remained under  Ottoman  rule.  By  the  agreement,  the  Porte  was
obligated to issue a special regl ment organique for Albania.6
     The Committee of Sava Decanac then expanded its actions. Signatures for
petitions  were collected and sent to the Serbian  prince, Russian  tzar and
delegates of the European powers. All the petitions demanded  the annexation
of Old Serbia and Macedonia to  Serbia. The news that the Congress of Berlin
had  been  convoyed  for the  revision of  the  San Stefano Peace Treaty was
received by the Serbs in  Kosovo and Metohia as a possibility of emphasizing
again the  demands  for  annexation to  Serbia.  Delegates of the  Pristina,
Prizren,  Djakovica,  Pec  and  Vucitrn  regions  sent  a  petition  to  the
participants of  the  Congress with 272 signatures, stamped  with 126 county
and monastic seals. On June 28,  the Serbs  of  Gnjilane, Skoplje and Tetovo
sent  to the  Russian  tzar  and British delegate in Berlin  an appeal  with
nearly 400 signatures. A similar authorized appeal was sent  to  the Serbian
knez.  In  a memorandum submitted  to Russian  Tzar Alexander  II,  national
representatives complained of unbearable  violence and the inferior position
of the Orthodox people.7
     Sava Decanac set off to Berlin  with  a petition signed by around 2,000
national  representatives  - priests,  serfs,  merchants  and craftsmen.  He
submitted the petition to the German Chancellor Prince Otto von Bismarck who
promised  that the  participants of  the  Congress  would  be told about the
demands. Archimandrite  Sava wrote a general appeal to  every other delegate
of the  Great Powers, demanding the annexation to Serbia,  or, at  least, if
possible, the restoration of the Pec Patriarchate. His memorandum dated June
3, 1878, reads: "This nation has been enduring sufferings unheard-of because
it was left to the mercy of Turkish  and Albanian renegades.  Now, since the
position of  all the peoples  of the Balkan  Peninsula has  improved,  is it
right that we should remain shackled to tyranny, is it right that  we should
further endure butchery from the Turks,  that our homes  should be burnt  by
ethnic Albanians, is it right that we should be subject  to deeds worse than
those committed upon animals in Europe. Considering we  took part in the war
for liberation, considering we rebelled against exploitation, considering we
expressed our desires for freedom and unification with our  brothers; if the
old  system  is restored,  Muslim  fanaticism will  be  without limit,  more
brutal, we will be forced to endure sufferings never experienced  before. We
raise our voices once more to the European  assembly, asking  for mercy, not
to leave us to  this  gory  and  cruel  bondage. If it is unable to grant us
freedom, let at least autonomy and personal safety be secured."8
     Austria-Hungarian and Russian  rivalry  for dominance  over the Balkans
was not favorable to Serbia's requests. Delegates from Serbia and Montenegro
delegates  were  not permitted  to take  part in the Congress.  The  Serbian
government,  relying upon Austria-Hungary,  requested of  Gyula Andrsssi the
annexation  of  the Gnjilane  region,  beside the  Nis sanjak.  Minister  of
Foreign Affairs Jovan  Ristic, in a  memoir submitted to participants of the
Congress, underscored that if Old  Serbia were to remain under Turkish rule,
the Serbs  would be left to the merciless  revenge  of Muslims, which  would
bring   Serbia   to   an   unenviable   position   and    only   incur   new
troubles.9 Even though  both countries  acquired independence  at
the Congress of  Berlin, the  decision that  Old Serbia was to  remain under
Turkish rule was received  with great disappointment by the  Serbs in Kosovo
Metohia.    Liberation    from    the    Turkish    yoke     was     delayed
indefinitely.10
     The decisions  of  the Congress  of  Berlin caused great  discontent in
Serbia. In a public proclamation, announced after the Congress, Prince Milan
underscored: "Within a brief time of  six weeks, you penetrated to Kosovo at
the speed of  lightning, where the victorious song of Serbia was sung at the
gloomy church of  Gracanica five  hundred years later.  [...] Your brilliant
leap  needed  only  a step further and victorious Serbian banners would have
unfurled  in  Pristina,  Skoplje  and  Prizren,  the  old  capitals  of  the
Nemajices,  but alas, a truce concluded on January 19,  [31] this same year,
forestalled and stopped you."11
     Fighting along with  Serbia  against the Turks, Montenegro tried to win
over the  Catholic Mirdits.  In  1874 the  Serbian agency  in Constantinople
contacted the Mirdit  captain  Marko,  cousin  of Bib  Doda. In mid-1876 the
Mirdits were  ready to engage in war against the Turks if Montenegrin Prince
Nikola warranted, in  writing, that  he  would  recognize their independence
after the war. Receiving from Belgrade the reply "we accept completely", the
Montenegrin Prince made his promise. Even though of anti-Slavic disposition,
the.  Mirdit Prince  Prenk  Bib  Doda entered  into  conflict  with  Turkish
authorities well rewarded.12
     In the second  war  with the Turks, Montenegro came  into conflict with
north  Albanian  Catholic  tribes,  the Grudas  and Hotis,  and waged  major
battles  with  the  Muslim bashibazouks.  ethnic Albanians  and  Muslims  of
Serbian  origin, on the stretch from Ulcinj on the Adriatic Sea to Plav  and
Gusinje  in the  mountainous region  toward north Albania, severely  clashed
with  Montenegrin  forces.  At  the  Congress   of   Berlin,  aside  to  the
independence  granted  it,   Montenegro's  territorial  expansion  had  been
confirmed: among other territories, Plav and Gusinje had been alloted to it,
with strong resistance incurring from the Albanian populace. 13
     1  V. Topic,  Istocno  pitanje,  Sarajevo  1966  ,  pp. 168-170.  J. H.
Vasiljevic, Pokret Srba i Bugara u Turskoj posle srpsko-turskih ratova 1876.
1877-1878.  godine  i  njegove  posledice  (1878-1882),  Beograd  1908,  pp.
266-274.
     2 D. Mikic, Srbi Kosova u istocnoj krizi 1875-1878, Obelezja, 5 (1982),
pp. 98-111;  ibid., Kosovo  prema  radu Berlinskog  kongresa i  realizovanju
njegovih odluka, Pristina 1980, pp. 243.
     3 D.  Mikic, Drustveno-politicki razvoj  kosovskih Srba u XIX veku, pp.
243-345.
     4 Ibid.
     5  V. Stojancevic, Prvo oslobodjenje  Kosova od strane  srpske vojske u
ratu 1877-1878, in: Srbija u zavrsnoj fazi velike istocne krize (1877-1878),
Beograd, 1980, pp. 462-468; J. Popovic, op. cit., pp. 230-233; Savremenici o
Kosovu i Metohiji 1852-1912, pp. 286-292.
     6 D. Mikic, Albansko  pitanje  i albansko-srpske veze  u  XIX  veku (do
1912), M. misao, 3 (1985), p. 143.
     7  J.  Hadzi-Vasiljevic, Pokret Srba i  Bugara  u  Turskoj, pp.  17-36;
Srbija  1878,  Documents (edited  by  M.  Vojvodic,  D.  R. Zivojinovic,  A.
Mitrovic, R. Samardzic), Beograd 1978, pp. 322-327.
     8 Srbija 1878, 503; Istorija srpskog naroda, VI/1, pp. 291-292.
     9  "In  provinces located on  this side of the  rivers [Drina and Lim],
events  have created  an entirely new situation. The  Princedom [Serbia] was
compelled  to take  up  arms  for  the  second  time, and due  to  continual
advancements, the region of its action covered almost all of Old Serbia. How
was it to withdraw from  the region and leave its populace to the revenge of
Musloman without the land sinking again to another horrifying state by which
no one would gain? The best way to secure the  benefits of  eternal peace in
the  region would be to  satisfy  the  legitimate wishes  of the people,  to
liberate and conjoin it to mother Serbia. "(Srbija 1878, pp. 449.)
     10 Istorija srpskog naroda, VI/1, pp. 291-292.
     11  B.  Perunicic,  Zulumi aga i  begova u  kosovskom vilajetu, Beograd
1989, p. 43.
     12  D.  Mikic,  Prizrenska  liga  i  austrougarska  okupacija  Bosne  i
Hercegovine  i  zaposedanje  novopazarskog  sandzaka   (1878-1879.  godine),
Balcanica, IX (1978), p. 294; D.  Bogdanovic, Knjiga o Kosovu, 137-138; more
elaborate  in:  B.  Hrabak,  Katolicki  Arbanasi  za  vreme   istocne  krize
(1875-1878), Istorijski zapisi, XXXV, 1-2 (1978), pp. 5-59.
     13  N. Raznatovic, Crna  Gora  i  Berlinski kongres,  Cetinje  1979; D.
Bogdanovic, Knjiga o Kosovu, pp. 141.
        The Albanian League
     Military  operations  during  the  1877-1878  war  brought  demographic
disturbances in Old Serbia.  From 1875, a surge  of refugees from Kosovo and
the neighboring areas  crossed over to Serbian  territory. At  the bordering
regions of Serbia,  stretching between Mount Kopaonik and Jastrebac,  around
200,000 Serbs  sought shelter from the terror of ethnic Albanians, Turks and
Cherkezes.
     The triumph of the Serbian army  and  the liberation of southern Serbia
caused  a  contrary  migratory  process.  In  the spaces from  Prokuplje  to
Leskovac  and  Vranje,  during  the  19th century, the ethnic Albanians  had
settled, and, like their compatriots in Kosovo and Metohia, had supremacy in
political relations, occupying frontal positions in the governing apparatus.
When Serbian units  liberated the Nis  sanjak,  withdrawing  ahead  of them,
together with the defeated  bashibazouks, were Albanian inhabitants  of that
region.  In accordance with the  consecrated Turkish traditions, in case  of
defeat, Muslims were  called to leave  the  lost territories with  the army.
From  Toplica  and  southern  Pomoravlje,  around  30,000  ethnic  Albanians
retreated with  the Turkish troops,  seeking refuge  on the plains of Kosovo
and Metohia. These refugees (muhadjirs), looking for space to settle, bereft
of their belongings and lands, began to  take vengeance  upon  local Serbian
inhabitants, to plunder  property  and arrogate  lands.  The  administrative
authorities existed  only nominally,  since power was held by  local  ethnic
Albanians  who  also  attacked the  Serbian  inhabitants.1  In  a
complaint  lodged  to  Prince  Milan,  the  Serbs  of  Gnjilane  stated that
following the retreat of the Serbian army from Kosovo, acts of violence were
tripled: "The exasperated ethnic Albanians broke into our houses and estates
on the day the Serbian army withdrew  from Gnjilane, devastating everything,
fleecing us to our bare  skin!  And, alas,  there is more! Every day one our
brothers is killed, either secretly or in public."2
     The ethnic Albanians were disturbed by the military fiasco, the arrival
of muhadjirs  and  decisions brought by the  San  Stefano  Peace Treaty. The
penetration  of the Serbian army caused panic and the flight  of many ethnic
Albanians further into Ottoman territory, toward Djakovica and Pec. Albanian
leaders considered  the  expansion of Serbia  and  Montenegro,  particularly
their evident  aspirations to  acquiring Old  Serbia,  perilous  to Albanian
interests. Tribal  chiefs from  Pec,  Djakovica,  Gusinje, Ljuma, Debar  and
Tetovo conferred upon whether to accept, in peace, their in  war lost lands,
which they  believed were "Albanian" territories, or  to  resist in arms the
alteration  of  former frontiers, despite the Forte's standpoint. Toward the
end of April, precautionary measures were undertaken in Djakovica in case of
another  Serbian, Montenegrin or Russo - Bulgarian  offensive and to protect
the supplies of arms, ammunition and food.3
     The news of the Berlin Congress being convoked accelerated the national
assemblage  of  ethnic  Albanians.  Even in the  preceding decades, Albanian
 migr s  in Italy,  Bulgaria  and Romania  pledged  for the educatio