gotiations with the Patriarchate of Constantinople, requesting for a
Serb to  be the metropolitan in Prizren and for Serbian archpriests to  take
over bishopric  chairs in Skoplje, Veles, Debar,  Bitolj and Ohrid. However,
negotiations with the ecumenical patriarch were not successful.  The Serbian
government  had, nevertheless, begun to prepare a monastic  progeny for high
ecclesiastical  duties  in  Turkey.  The  monks  selected  accepted  Turkish
subjugation and went to study theology in Constantinople. 7
     1 D. Mikic, Nastojanje  Srba 1885. godine da  saradjuju  sa Arbanasima,
posebno preko Marka Miljanova, Obelezja, 4 (1982), pp. 89-102.
     2 V. Popovic, Istocno pitanje, p. 182.
     3 P. Kostic, Prosvetno-kulturni zivot pravoslavnih Srba u Prizrenu, pp.
70-73.
     4 S. Jovanovic,  Vlada  Aleksandra Obrenovica, I, Beograd  1929, p. 98;
Dj.  Mikic,  Delatnost  "Drustva  Sv.  Save"  na  Kosovu  (1886-1912),  Nasa
proslost, VII-IX (1973-1974), pp. 61-87.
     5  Spomenica  Stojana Novakovica,  Beograd  1921,  pp.  171-173;  daily
reports on the position  of Serbs and the  political situation in the Kosovo
vilayet were  sent from Serbian consulates  in  Skoplje  and  Pristina until
1912. Several thousand  documents of  which  only a part have been published
were  stored at  the Archive  of the Serbian Foreign Ministry: Arhiv Srbije,
Beograd,  Ministarstvo  inostranih  dela,  Prosvetno-politicko  i  politicko
odeljenje  1878-1912;  Prepiska  o  Arbanaskim  nasiljima  u  Staroj  Srbiji
1888-1889, Beograd 1889; V. Corovic, Diplomatska prepiska Kraljevine Srbije,
I, Beograd 1933; B. Perunicic,  Pisma srpskih konzula iz Pristine 1890-1900,
Beograd 1985;  ibid., Svedocanstvo o Kosovu  1901-1912, Beograd 1988; ibid.,
Zulumi aga i begova u kosovskom  vilajetu,  Beograd 1988;  Zaduzbine Kosova,
Prizren  - Beograd, 1987, (edited by R. Samardzic) pp. 607-738; Milan Rakic,
Konzulska pisma 1905-1911, Beograd 1985 (ed. by A. Mitrovic).
     6 J.  M.  Jovanovic, Nusic  kao konzul,  Srpski knjizevni glasnik, LIII
(1938), 259- 269; M. M. Rajic, Konzulska pisma 1905-1911, pp. 8-23.
     7 Istorija srpskog naroda, VI/1, p. 302.
        Flaring of Anarchy
     Already the first reports from the consulate in Skoplje showed that the
position  of  Serbs  was  harder than  it  had  been  supposed  in  Belgrade
diplomatic  circles. In  fall  1887, the government was informed of  anarchy
flaring on the stretch from  Pristina and Prizren to the Montenegrin border.
ethnic  Albanians controlled  the  roads,  attacked passengers and  assailed
Serbs in villages. Prior Rafailo of Decani sent the following message to the
consul:  "Sir! Old  Serbia is lost!  The Christians  are  being  killed like
animals; there are  victims  of  death every  day;  we  are  like  prisoners
deprived of freedom - no one dares to move."1
     The waning power of the Turkish authorities strengthened the  obstinacy
of ethnic Albanians. Their clans clashed in  blood feuds. When the conflicts
came to  inter-tribal bloodshed, they ended by  agreements  confirmed by the
bessa, not valid  for  Christian  Serbs.  Incursions into Serbian  territory
continued with increasing anarchy. Serbian garrisons were  reinforced at the
frontier.  Serbian  notes  sent  to  the  Porte demanding  an end  to  these
incursions  remained unreplied.  Stojan Novakovic believed "that the Turkish
authorities  themselves  feared  the  Albanians;  they  were never  able  to
undertake decisive measures against them; particularly the small authorities
who  carry out their orders in the rear lines, thus  frequently  good orders
sent by older authorities remain without consequences".2
     In an elaborate annual report on the position of the Serbian population
in Serbia, 1888, Rector of the Prizren Seminary Petar Kostic underscored the
danger of anarchy  and violence upon the Serbs spreading.  Certain villages,
unable to  defend  themselves,  sought  protection  from  outlaws and  their
companies, paying in return high  annual  monetary  compensations  and often
working  for free (kuluk). Similar to the ancient  endowments, Visoki Decani
and the Pec Patriarchate which hired  local  Albanian clans for considerable
material compensation and gifts in kind to protect them against bandits from
other regions,  the villages too  soon felt the  bitter side  attending this
protection - various additional  expenditures. Without  license and  special
monetary payments,  local protectors  would not approve weddings. Protecting
villages soon became such  a lucrative business that the  raiding  companies
frequently  battled  over who would  guard  Serbian  villages.  Most  of the
Serbian villages, however, could not afford continual protection. A frequent
occurrence, stated Kostic, was "for one family to  bury two of its  deceased
killed by the rage of Albanians, at the same time".3
     Again,  like  many times  before,  Serbian  shrines  bore  the brunt of
Albanian bandits. A dispute  between  two Albanian clans over the  estate of
the Decani monastery ended in an armed clash with many killed on both sides.
The dispute arose over who would use the arrogated monastic land,  cut  down
the  trees in the Decani forests and benefit from the  bans. The authorities
would not get involved, while the monastic fraternity was compelled to  feed
and  provide  for  both tribal armies. When the energetic  Prior  Rafailo of
Decani attempted  to  oppose them,  he was thrown out of  the monastery  and
arrested     by     Turkish     authorities    who    interned    him     in
Constantinople.4
     The  beginning  of  activity  undertaken  by  the  Serbian consulate in
Pristina (1889) coincided with  a  period of great pressure exerted upon the
Serbs and open  hostility toward everything that was Serbian. The opening of
the consulate itself was interpreted by the  ethnic Albanians as a policy of
provocation  and  an intolerable  attempt to supervise their activities. The
seat of the Kosovo  vilayet was moved to Skoplje  in 1888, thus the  Serbian
consulate  remained a  solitary  diplomat watchtower in a weakly  supervised
district.
     Reports  from  Pristina  were filled  with  information on  innumerable
atrocities  -  murders,  arsons,  blackmail,  abduction  of   women,  rapes,
cattle-raids  and  so on.  A  petition  sent by  the  Serbian consul  to the
district  chief received an answered that  Albanian tyrants were shielded by
the vali of Kosovo himself: "Evil comes by itself, emanating form disharmony
originating in Skoplje. I  send  all the  guilty  Albanians to Skoplje  from
where  they  are  soon discharged  with arms."5 Marinkovic warned
that  the ethnic  Albanians  were  systematically assailing  certain Serbian
villages, urging  them to move  by threats and murders. A common slogan was:
"Go  to Serbia - there is no  survival for you here." It was the  hardest in
the  Pec nahi. Reports demonstrate that  ethnic Albanians  forcibly  invaded
Serbian  houses. On  their way  to the Serbian frontier, the  refugees  were
fleeced as a rule. Seven families of  73 members on their way to Serbia from
a village  near  Pec were  robbed of  both their cattle  and movables by the
ethnic Albanians.6
     The anarchy soon took on the form of a movement to drive out the Serbs.
The  Russian  consul  to  Prizren, Teodosie  Lisevich,  upon  evaluating the
anarchy in Kosovo and Metohia, concluded  that the ethnic Albanians aimed to
squeeze in between Serbia  and Montenegro and thus deprive Old Serbia of its
Serbian  character.  Albanian  terror  spread toward the  Novi Pazar sanjak,
where the inhabitants were almost all Orthodox and Islamized Serbs. In April
and May 1889  alone, around  700 persons  fled Kosovo and Metohia to Serbia.
All refugees  gave warnings that the remaining Serbs would also be compelled
to seek salvation  by flight.7  All these events were followed by
the decreasing number of Serbs who owned estates. The Turks imposed taxes so
high, thus compelling  the Serbs to sell their estates at reduced prices, or
they  were left without them on  account of Albanian outlaws using the right
to adopt abandoned  lands, upon  which the  Turkish  authorities looked with
affinity.8
     The culmination of anti-Serbian  disposition  was the murder of  consul
Luka   Marinkovic  in  Pristina  in  June,  1890.  The   Serbian  government
maintained,  upon  information  received  from  Serbs  in Pristina,  that an
Albanian conspiracy was  responsible,  but the Porte tried  to  present  the
murder  as  a  display of  Muslim  intolerance toward  Christian foreigners.
Serbia  demanded of  the  Porte  to undertake  drastic  measures against the
ethnic Albanians, and  the Russian  ambassador to Constantinople, supporting
the Serbian demands, warned the Turkish officials that anarchy would  spread
to  such dimensions  that  any  step  taken  toward  pacification  would  be
difficult  to  effect.  But the  Porte  had not the  slightest intention  to
intercept the  unbridling ethnic  Albanians.  Pressured by the  Serbian  and
Russian  diplomacies, the murderers  of the  Serbian consul,  muhadjirs from
Prokuplje, were  severely punished, but the inspirators of the assassination
were never found. The Serbs who appeared as witnesses  at  the trial fled to
Serbia fearing vengeance.9
     The situation in Kosovo did not change much after  the arrival  of  the
new consul Todor P.  Stankovic.  The consulate was no longer  the  target of
attack, instead,  reports  sent  to  Belgrade  brought  new  black lists  of
numerous atrocities. Stating forbidding numbers of terror committed upon the
Serbs, Stankovic underscored  that due  to the  flaring  of anarchy and weak
connections with agents in regions remote from Pristina, he had been able to
discover  only about  an eighth  of the committed crimes. He warned that the
Turkish authorities in the  Pristina  sanjak extended  scarcely more  than a
degree  from the city districts. Since  he had lived  in Metohia  before the
Eastern crisis, Stankovic took to comparing figures of the population census
at the beginning of the  seventies with those of the nineties and reached  a
figure pointing to three quarters of the total population inhabiting the Pec
nahi being  driven  out by ethnic Albanians.10 Following accounts
related by some  Serbs from  Pec in 1907, twenty years earlier around 20,000
Serbs moved to Serbia and Montenegro before  the Albanian  terror, while 300
Albanian families from Malissia  were  settled in there place by Pec notable
Hadji Mula Zeka.11
     The Serbian  emissary to the Porte endeavored through diplomatic  means
to protect the  Serbian populace in Old  Serbia. However, it was all futile.
He met with  no  compassion  in  Yildiz, the sultan's  court, nor  with  the
Turkish ministers. Having scrutinized the situation, Stojan Novakovic warned
the government in May, 1891, that the  sultan, and perhaps  the Porte, "were
working on destroying  our element and strengthening the  Albanian one. This
activity began right after the war during  the Albanian League and  has  not
been ceased since."12
     Some progress  to bridle the Albanian anarchy in Kosovo and Metohia was
made through intermediation of the  Russian  diplomacy in 1892. It requested
of the Porte  to curb  the  anarchy, secure public safety and protection for
the Christians. When the European press took more interest  in events taking
place in Old  Serbia, news  of violence committed upon the Serbs reached the
European public. The Porte ordered the authorities in the vilayet to end all
pursuit of the  rayah, punish the bandits and stop the killings among ethnic
Albanians on account of blood feuds.13
     Official Serbia, torn asunder by internal dissension and impeded by its
political duties to Austria-Hungary, was  unable to aid its compatriots in a
more decisive manner. Activities on national affairs evolved solely  through
diplomatic legations, often owing to the personal initiative of an official.
     Unable  as  diplomatic representatives of  a  small  country to  effect
anything more  tangible for their  people, the  Serbian consuls  wielded all
their  faculties  to  promote  education.  The  extent  of  lawlessness  and
increasing  distrust toward  everything that  was Serbian  resulted in  some
schools closing down, and the  hindering and impeding  of efforts undertaken
to promote education. Todor Stankovic earned great merits as a consul in the
opening new schools  in  Kosovo and parrying Bulgarian propaganda. Branislav
Nusic, a  renown Serbian comedist, who worked several years at the consulate
in  Pristina,  helped open  the first Serbian bookstore and  renovate  of  a
primary and secondary school in Pristina. The promotion of education in 1893
was regarded as a considerable success in Serbia, since through the  Serbian
schools  Serbian  nationality  was indirectly recognized,  presented in  all
regulations  as  rum  millet,  i.e. a  religious category belonging  to  the
Constantinople  Patriarchate. The  success was  even more  greater since the
Bulgarian  Exarchate,  and  under  its  influence the  Turkish  authorities,
continually strove to  present the Serbian schools as  Bulgarian.  Under the
imperial irada of 1893 and the regulation on education of 1896, the Serbs in
Kosovo  and  Metohia  could freely open schools and  thus indirectly acquire
recognition of their nationality.14 However, insurmountable lists
of oppression upon the Serbs  often exceeding all known ways of torture with
their   brutalities,  continued  to  arrive  in  the  seat  of  the  Serbian
government. Within  only  six months  Nusic reported on  the devastation  of
eight Serbian churches and the persecution of priests.15
     Extremely dissatisfied and disturbed  by  the development  of political
conditions and the  position of Serbs in Old Serbia, the Serbian Ministry of
Foreign  Affairs  considered  the possibility of  wielding  a more favorable
influence  on the  educational  and national development of  Old Serbians by
reorganizing  the  network  of  consulates  and  uniting  national  actions.
Slobodan Jovanovic, one of the greatest Serbian historians and lawyers, then
young  official  at  the Ministry, was sent  in 1894  on  a  tour  to  visit
consulates in Turkey, while  Branislav Nusic,  the vice-consul in  Pristina,
obtained approval to travel through the region between Prizren and Scutari.
     Jovanovic informed that there was little the consul could do to protect
the  people  from  Albanian violence; that  it was isolated  and continually
under surveillance; and  proposed a  move to Mitrovica, which had a railroad
track  and livelier merchants contacts. But,  consequential to  the  serious
violence and the helplessness of the Serbian consul before the  authorities,
he  observed growing disagreements  and quarrels among the  people and  that
some  citizens  of Pristina  strive  to  adapt  to  the hard  conditions  by
cooperating with Turkish authorities.16 Traveling through Metohia
and north Albania,  Nusic noted that  the Serbs in Pec and the vicinity were
extremely estranged; the breach was so deep that they  informed against each
other to the authorities.
     Disharmony among  the  Serbs,  as  an  expression  of  an  insufferable
political situation  and  continual living  under extraordinary  conditions,
dangerously  undermined their ability of a joint resistance against Albanian
terror and the abuse  of Turkish authorities. Nusic wrote on  it in his book
on  the life of Serbs in  Kosovo: "Public life in Turkey is a bad example of
citizenry virtues  since it is regulated by laws that are  bad, or very good
but not enforced, or even worse,  enforced upon people whose prejudices  and
vices are stronger than law. While the law applies to one, it fails to apply
for  another [...]. Conditions  like  these  compel  the people to  contrive
conditions for peace and survival.  Thus upon encountering  these people one
often comes  across  reservation  and dishonesty,  traits not  indigenous to
these  people.  Frequently  betrayed  and  exposed,  more  often  innocently
destroyed,  it  has  became  distrustful and  will rarely reveal  its  inner
feelings."17
     The Serbs were not very successful in  courts either. A qadi boasted in
1891 of having solved two cases out of one thousand, for a period of over 18
years,  in favor  of the Serbs. When the litigants were  Serbs, he made  his
decision according to which side gave him a bigger bribe. 18
     1 B. Perunicic, Zulumi aga i begova u kosovskom vilajetu, pp. 48-50..
     2 Ibid., p. 52.
     3 Ibid., p. 62.
     4 D.  T.  Batakovic, Memoari  Save  Decanca  o  visokim Decanima  1890.
godine, Mesovita gradja, XV (1986), pp. 117-136.
     5 B. Perunicic, Pisma srpskih konzula iz Pristine 1890-1900, p. 30.
     6 Ibid., pp. 40-41, 67-73.
     7 B. Perunicic, Zulumi ago i begova u kosovskom vilajetu, pp. 69-78.
     8 D. Mikic, Drustvene i ekonomske prilike kosovskih Srba, p. 42.
     9  B.  Perunicic,  Pisma srpskih  konzula  iz  Pristine  1890-1900,  J.
Popovic, op. cit., Pp. 251-153.
     10 B. Perunicic,  Pisma  srpskih  konzula  iz Pristine  1890-1900,  pp.
94-97.
     11  B.  Mikic,  Nastojanje  Srba  na  otvaranju  ruskog  ili  engleskog
konzulata u Peci 1908. godine, Obelezja, 1 (1977), p. 154.
     12 Istina o Kosovu, Beograd 1988 (M. Vojvodic).
     13 Ibid.
     14 Istorija srpskog naroda, VI/1, p. 301.
     15  Zaduzbine Kosova, pp. 631-636; B. Perunicic, Pisma  srpskih konzula
iz Pristine, pp. 152-188, 190-191.
     16  R.   Ljusic,  Izvestaj  Slobodana  Jovanovica   o  poseti   srpskim
konzulatima u Turskoj  iz 1894. godine, Istorijski glasnik, 1-2 (1987),  pp.
193-215.
     17 B. Nusic, Opis zemlje i naroda, Beograd 1986 , pp. 88.
     18 "Velika Srbija", No 51, Beograd, 8/20. XII 1891.
        Religious, Educational and Economic Conditions
     Serbian national gatherings in Turkey were possible only under the wing
of the church.  Since plans for  restoring the Pec Patriarchate could not be
realized,  Serbia and Montenegro undertook  a  joint action in the mid-90's,
demanding  for  the  bishopric  chairs  in  the  Raska-Prizren  and  Skoplje
Eparchies to  be  occupied  by  metropolitans  of Serbian  nationality.  The
transition  of  these  two Eparchies to  the rule  of Serbian  metropolitans
through ecclesiastical institutions, would strengthen national and political
activity in Old Serbia.
     Following  the   death  of   Greek  Metropolitan   Melentije,  a  Serb,
Archsyncellus   Dionisije   Petrovic   (1896-1900)   was   consecrated   the
Raska-Prizren bishop with  the joint effort of the governments of Serbia and
Montenegro, bolstered by the  Russian diplomacy in  Constantinople. Carrying
out  orders from the Serbian government, the new metropolitan  implemented a
wide reorganization in ecclesiastical  and educational  institutions, opened
new schools, renewed teaching  staff, created new church-school communities,
and, in  keeping  with  the  orders of the  Serbian  government,  united the
activities  on  national affairs.1  Serbia  endeavored to  open a
consulate in  Prizren  to enable facile communication with the metropolitan.
Due to great resistance from ethnic Albanians who threatened to burn Serbian
towns  and sent  critical protests  to the  Porte, the consulate  was  never
opened.2
     The  national,  ecclesiastical  and  educational  activity  pursued  by
Dionisije  and  his successor  Nicifor Peric (1901-1911) reflected mostly in
the opening of new schools and invigorating the educational autonomy  of the
Serbs. Turkish  administrators and Austro-Hungarian diplomats regarded  them
as  agents  of "Great Serbian propaganda" and tried to  obstruct every  move
they  made.  The Turkish authorities were determined to limit  the religious
and legal  rights  of Serbs in Old  Serbia. Considering schools  seedbeds of
national  propaganda, Turkish authorities endeavored to impose a  compulsory
study of the Turkish language and to implement a rigorous supervision of the
curriculum and teachers in Serbian schools.3
     The metropolitans also clashed with the administration of church-school
communities,  who,  being  unused  to  central church  governing, showed  no
appreciation for measures  undertaken by  the former, thus giving  cause for
misunderstandings and mutual suspicion. The harshest conflict occurred  when
the  administration of the  Visoki Decani  monastery was deferred to Russian
monks  from  Mt.  Athos.  With  the  principle  agreement  from the  Serbian
government,  Metropolitan   Nicifor   negotiated   in  1903  to  defer   the
administration of Decani to  the monks  of the Russian  skits  St. John  the
Eloquent on Mt. Athos. The Russian monks were  brought to protect  the Serbs
in  Metohia from  Albanian  oppression,  to  restore  monastic life  in  the
impoverished monasteries and  to bar Austro-Hungarian influence and Catholic
propaganda.  As  far as the protection of Serbs  was concerned,  the Russian
diplomacy  was  expected to provide  assistance  aside to the  monks of  Mt.
Athos. The agreement concluded in 1903 without instructions from the Serbian
government caused many misunderstandings. The Russian monks usurped power of
the  monastery.  The  metropolitan  and  Serbian  government  endeavored  to
supplement the agreement and  limit their  administration, causing  a breach
between the Serbs of Metohia, those who were followers and those who opposed
the Russian monks.  A  dispute  between the  Russian and Serbian  government
entailed.  Dissension  and  quarrels   resulting  from  the   Decani   issue
considerably affected national activity in Metohia.4
     After  the Eastern  crisis  the Serbian  farmers  were  faced  with new
troubles. Emigration to Serbia and the settlement of the muhadjirs disturbed
relations in villages. The muhadjirs  and various other  tyrants, unhampered
by the Turkish authorities, assailed Serbian estates, committing brutalities
of all  sorts. Toward  the end of  the eighties,  when economic pressure had
become too hard  to bear, entire  villages were  preparing for emigration to
Serbia, particularly in the Ibarski Kolasin. The Turkish authorities replied
to  complaints lodged by the Serbs: "If you cannot  take  it,  seek better",
thus encouraging emigration.5
     Even  though there  were no principle  differences  between Serbian and
Albanian chiflik  farmers, the  Muslim  and  Catholic ethnic Albanians  were
nevertheless in a better situation. Overall lawlessness, assails and murders
compelled many Serbs to  turn  from previously  free  heirs  or herdsmen  to
chiflik farmers. Unlike the Serbs, ethnic Albanians  were unreliable  serfs,
being  used to robbery and  seizure, and the  feudal lords dared  not pursue
them.   Halil  Pasha   Mahmudbegovic  complained  of  their  obstinacy   and
recalcitrance  to  the  Serbian consul:  "[...] while we  still own  Serbian
chiflik farmers  you could say we  are lords of the  chifliks, but when they
move  out, and the ethnic Albanians take their places, then we are no longer
lords of the chifliks. When an Albanian settles on a chiflik, he is peaceful
2-3 years, and  gives a quarter to his master; but as soon as he builds  his
tower, he becomes a greater lord than the real lord."6
     Collection of  the land tithe was leased. The leasees  fined the  Serbs
without limits, while their complaints remained unanswered. Common hostility
toward the  Serbs had  spread among  Albanian  feudal lords.  To expand  and
reinforce their estates, they assisted the  settlement  of  Albanian chiflik
farmers  in  spite of  sporadic  conflicts.  In certain  regions  of Kosovo,
overbearing beys and agas succeeded, through oppression, to  compel  compact
Serbian  villages  to massive emigrations.  In a village near Pec, the  agas
drove  out even  those Serbs who owned land. In the vicinity of  Prizren, by
terrorizing  Serbian chiflik  farmers for twenty years,  ethnic Albanians of
the Kabash clan succeeded  in decreasing the number  of Serbian houses  of a
single  village from 40 to  nine. In the sanjak of Pristina, particularly in
Lipljan and Gracanica, where the inhabitants  were solely Serbs, until 1904,
feudal   lords   drove  away   the  Serbs   and   settled  Albanian  chiflik
farmers.7
     Serbian   town-dwellers,   mostly   merchants   and  craftsmen,   lived
comparatively  safely  in  towns.  The  main  obstacle  for expanding  their
businesses was the regard  of the Muslim trade district. With the renewal of
Muslim fanaticism in 1897, ethnic Albanians and Muslims began the boycott of
Serbian  goods, lasting  intermittently  until 1912. Upon the  initiative of
Metropolitan  Nicifor, Rector  of  the  Prizren  Seminary, and  a  series of
notable  Serbs in Prizren, an idea was initiated to found a Serbian monetary
bureau to  revive staggering  businesses. With financial  support  from  the
Belgrade  capital,  the  Serbian  government, the  consulate in Pristina and
support  from  Russian consuls  in Prizren and Mitrovica, the first monetary
bureaus sprang up.  In  Prizren in  1901 the  "St. George  Church Fund"  was
founded to aid operations of the Serbian trade district. In subsequent years
similar  funds or  societies  in Pristina  were founded ("St. Nikola  Church
Fund"), in  Mitrovica  (St. Sava Church  Fund) in  Fenzovic ("St. Tzar  Uros
Church Fund"),  and  many merchant-guild societies  were founded in Gnjilane
and Vucitrn.  With their unification around 1912  the  first  Serbian  banks
emerged in Kosovo. 8
     1  N. Raznatovic, Rod vlade Crne Gore i Srbije na postavljanju  srpskih
mitropolita u Prizrenu i Skoplju 1890-1902. godine, Istorijski zapisi, XXII,
2  (1965),  pp.  218-275;  Istorija  srpskog  naroda,  VI/1,   pp.  303-305;
Archimandrite Firmilijan Drazic was appointed  administrator of  the Skoplje
metropolitan in 1897, and as Serbian metropolitan, in 1902.
     2  D.  T.  Batakovic,  Pokusaji otvaranja  srpskog konzulata u Pristini
1898-1900, Istorijski casopis, XXXI (1984), pp. 249-250.
     3 Istorija srpskog naroda, VI/1, pp. 305-307.
     4  D.  T.  Batakovic,  Decansko pitanje,  Beograd  1989  (with  earlier
literature).
     5 D.  Mikic, Drustveno-politicki razvoj kosovskih Srba u XIX  veku, pp.
247-248.
     6 T. P. Stankovic, Putne beleske po Staroj Srbiji 1871-1898, p. 105.
     7 D.  Mikic,  Drustveno-politicki razvoj kosovskih Srba u XIX veku, pp.
250-251.
     8  B.  Hrabak, Poceci bankarstva na  Kosovu,  Istorijski  glasnik,  1-2
(1982), pp. 57-83.
        The Decline in Population
     Violence  and emigrations caused a continual decline of Serbs in Kosovo
and Metohia  since the Eastern crisis  until  liberation in 1912,  despite a
high  birthrate.  In  his  book  Kosovo,  Opis zemlje  i naroda  (Kosovo,  A
Description  of the  Country  and People), (1902),  B.  Nusic expounded  the
reason for  emigration  most clearly:  "Following  the Serbian-Turkish  war,
emigrations of  broad  dimensions took  place  for two  reasons.  The ethnic
Albanians, citizens of Kosovo, took to avenge themselves upon the Serbs, who
were  their  rayah,  on account  of the  war.  While going  to the  war  and
returning from it, they set fire  to Serbian homes, raided their cattle  and
to  Serbia,  the frontier of which was now  closer, thus facilitating  their
flight. On the other hand, the bulk of ethnic  Albanians who were driven out
stayed  in  Kosovo, there being  the closest to the lands they  abandoned in
Serbia. These newcomers, known as muhadjirs, inundated Kosovo and drove  out
the Serbs  from  their  lands  to make  space for themselves.[...] Thus  the
ethnic Albanians simultaneously flooded  Serbian  villages  from two  sides:
from the mountains, by descending toward the  Sitnica, and from  the Serbian
borders.  Today,  one  could  hardly  finger  out  villages  void  of ethnic
Albanians,  whereas countless of villages  inhabited by  Serbs  existed just
until  recently. The latter have retained their Serbian  names  but there is
not a single Serbian house in them."1
     An unreliable,  but indicative  Turkish  state  census, listed  shortly
before  the Eastern  crisis  in  1873,  exhibits  the  following ethnic  and
religious picture: in the Pristina, Vucitrn and Gnjilane kazas  (districts),
there  were  19,564 Christian  and  34,759 Muslim male  tax-heads. The Serbs
numbered the  most in  the  Gnjilane kaza: 11,607  to 12,544 Muslims. In the
Vucitrn  kaza there were  250  Christian  toward 800 Muslim  heads,  in  the
Pristina 400  to  3,000, in  Gnjilane 400 to 250. Of  7,850  male Muslims in
Pristina,  one half spoke  Turkish, the other  Albanian. In  Pec,  of  9,105
persons  one  third  spoke  Serbian,  the  second  Turkish  and   the  third
Albanian.2
     A list of Serbian  homes in  the Raska-Prizren Eparchy composed in 1899
by Metropolitan Dionisije, amounts to 8,323 Serbian village houses and 3,035
houses in the towns of Kosovo and Metohia,  which  comes to  113,580 persons
with  the  average  number  of  10 persons  per  family. In comparison  with
official  information from the  Serbian government  that from 1890  to  1900
around  60,000  Serbs  emigrated  from Kosovo,  Metohia and  the neighboring
regions to Serbia, statistics show that the number of Serbs in villages  had
declined  by  at  least a third  since  the Eastern  crisis. Serbian  houses
remained  most  numbered in towns,  where they were  comparatively protected
from  violence: in Prizren (982), Pristina  (531), Pec (461), Gnjilane (407)
and  Orahovac (176), and the  least  in the  small towns Djakovica (70)  and
Fenzovic (20).3
     Statistics of the population  of the  European  vilayet  of the Ottoman
Empire carried out in Vienna in 1903, based on official Turkish censuses and
research  conducted by  consular  departments,  shows  the  following ethnic
disposition in Kosovo and Metohia:4 
 |  | Pec sanjak | Pristina sanjak | Prizren sanjak | 
 | Orthodox Serbs | 23,750 | 73,400 | 14,200 | 
 | Catholic Serbs | - | 6,600 | - | 
 | Muslim Serbs | 13,250 | 43,000 | 13,000 | 
 | Muslim Albanians | 96,250 | 73,500 | 45,300 | 
 | Catholic Albanians | 9,300 | 50 | 5,000 | 
 | Orthodox Albanians | - | - | 900 | 
 | Tzintzars (Romanians) | 300 | 270 | 2,000 | 
 | Turks | 250 | 3,000 | 6,400 | 
 | Jews | 50 | 350 | 100 | 
 | Gypsies | 1,350 | 8,530 | 4,300 | 
 
     According  to  Austro-Hungarian  statistics,  the immediate  region  of
Kosovo and Metohia was composed of 111,350 Orthodox, 69,250 Muslim and 6,600
Catholics  Serbs,  totaling  187,200.  Albanian  Muslims  numbered  215,050,
Catholics 14,350, and Orthodox  900,  totally 230,300. The  Austro-Hungarian
statistics should not be wholely trusted, considering the political interest
of  the Dual Monarchy for ethnic Albanians,  and the time of its collection:
at the beginning of the reform action in Old Serbia and Macedonia.
     The most  complete statistic of the population of Kosovo and Metohia is
the  census composed by  the  Serbian  consulate in  Pristina in 1905. Three
sanjaks were  encompassed  in  the  census: the  Pristina,  Prizren and  Pec
sanjaks.  The  total  number  of  Orthodox Serbs in  this  particular census
amounted to 10,346 homes with 206,920 inhabitants. Official  data,  sent  by
officials of the Raska-Prizren  Eparchy to the consulate, totaled to  10,164
homes.5  |  | homes | inhabitants | 
 | Orthodox Serbs | 10,346 | 206,920 | 
 | Muslim Serbs who became Albanians | 15,600 | 390,010 | 
 | Catholic Serbs | 108 | 1,750 | 
 | Muslim Serbs from Bosnia | 50 | 1,200 | 
 | Protestant Serbs | - | 1 | 
 | Catholic Albanians | 260 | 1,560 | 
 | Albanians | 1,000 | 20,000 | 
 | Turks | 270 | 3,230 | 
 | Jews | 50 | 300 | 
 
     Shortly before the liberation of Kosovo in 1912,  according to research
conducted  by Ivan Kosancic, the  number of Serbian houses in the  Pristina,
Pec and Prizren sanjaks were the following:6  | sanjak | in towns | in villages | total | 
 | Pristina | 1,531 | 12,517 | 14,048 | 
 | Pec | 643 | 3,238 | 3,026 | 
 | Prizren | 982 | 1,148 | 2,400 | 
 
     The stated statistics show a relative increase in the number of Serbian
homes. It is  hard to suppose their number increased in the  first decade of
the  20th century,  since the  entire  documentation preserved points  to an
increase of emigrations to Serbia. The  increasing  number of Serbian  homes
noted by the consulate in Pristina, and subsequently by Kosancic, would more
likely refer to disintegration of family groups, when from one family group,
comprised of 20-30 members, several new hearths were created.
     The man  of most authority concerning ethnic relations in Old Serbia is
Jovan Cvijic.  In 1911  he published the results  of  his  research: in  the
Pristina sanjak  there were 14,048, in  the  Pec  sanjak  3,826,  and in the
Prizren sanjak 2,400  Serbian  houses,  with around  200,000 inhabitants. If
this data  were compared with the  statistics from the  first  half  of  the
century,  indicating  the existence  of  about 400,000 Serbs  in  Kosovo and
Metohia, then Cvijic's  evaluation that  from  1878  to 1912, around 150,000
persons moved to Serbia, is quite convincing.7
     1 B. Nusic, Kosovo, Opis zemlje i naroda, pp. 76-77.
     2   V.  Nikolic-Stojancevic,  Leskovac  i  oslobodjeni  predeli  Srbije
1877-1878, Leskovac 1975, p. 10
     3 S Novakovic, Balkanska pitanja, Beograd 1906, pp. 515-527; Prepiska o
arbanaskim nasiljima u Staroj Srbiji, Beograd 1899, pp. 136.
     4 Haus.  Hof, und Staatsarchiv - Wien, Politisches Archiv, XII, k. 272,
Nationalitaten  und Religions-karte der Vilajete  Kosovo, Salonika, Scutari,
Janina, und Monastir; cf also P. Barti, op. cit., pp. 52-64.
     5  B.  Perunicic, Svedocanstvo o Kosovu  1901-1913,  pp.  246-248;  the
consul increased the final number  by 20%,  (not taken  into account in  the
above  table),  believing   the  information  provided  by   parish  regents
inaccurate, since the latter reduced the number of  parishoners for the sake
of their income.
     6 I.  Kosancic,  Novopazarski  sandzak,  Beograd 1912, 16-18;  Istorija
srpskog naroda, VI/1, p. 266.
     7 J.  Cvijic, Osnove  za  geografiju  i  geologiju Makedonije  i  Stare
Srbije,  III, Beograd 1911; ibid., Balkanski rat i Srbija, Beograd 1912; cf.
J.  Dedijer, Stara Srbija. Geografska i etnografska slika, Srpski  knjizevni
glasnik, XXIX (1912), pp. 674-699.
        PART TWO: THEOCRACY, NATIONALISM, IMPERIALISM
        ANARCHY AND GENOCIDE UPON THE SERBS
     This  era was  marked by  anarchy in Kosovo and  Metohia. Following the
great Eastern crisis (1878), anarchy encroached  the bases  of state policy,
and its driving  force  became  genocide  upon the Serbs. Developing  into a
movement, the purpose of which was to exterminate a people, Albanian anarchy
was  adjusted by  circumstances, lead by political motives, tribal, economic
or personal gains, displaying itself in various ways.  Muslim fundamentalism
and  religious  fanaticism were  interwoven  with feelings  of national  and
tribal belonging. Wavering between lucrative raids, blackmail, abduction and
radical  solutions by  murder or  the routing of entire families, the policy
conceived to exterminate the Serbian people was never  doubted. But it never
could be carried out  to  the end,  since  every attempt of massive physical
destruction or collective pursuit was threatened by subsequent international
clashes  and  the military  interference of neighboring Christian countries.
Thus the ethnic  Albanians  applied  the  method of  persistent violence day
after  day  which, being radicalized  in periods  of  crises, lead to a sure
completion of their purpose  -  the extermination  of  Serbs  in  the Kosovo
vilayet.  The decisive turning point came with the Greek-Turkish war (1897).
Recognized  as  an  announcement of  the approaching disintegration  of  the
Ottoman  Empire on the  Balkans,  it moved an avalanche of Albanian violence
upon the Serbs.
     Following  the Kurds'  brutal massacre of  the  Armenians, the European
public, appalled by the  barbaric  methods  of  Sultan Abdul Hamid's policy,
rightfully  named  him  "the  bloody Sultan". The Kurds of  the  Asia  Minor
expanses  seemed  to have proved their act in  the  same role as the  ethnic
Albanians had  in the  European  provinces of the Ottoman Empire. The  Greek
Insurrection on Crete in 1896 anticipated a new danger for the safety of the
empire. News on the massacre of Muslim followers upset conservative Albanian
circles  in  Kosovo. At councils,  held in  the houses  of notables  and  in
mosques, they confirmed their readiness for vengeance.1
     Pressured by the Great Powers, the Sultan announced a  program  of  new
reforms in 1896, anticipating equality  for Muslims and Christians under the
law  and  the  introduction  of  Christians  to administrative  bodies.  The
announcement  of  the  reforms exacerbated Muslim  ethnic  Albanians in  Old
Serbia and Macedonia.  Their  leaders,  pashas and  beys,  tribal chiefs and
standard bearers strove  to maintain the  possession of specially privileged
positions in the structure of  the  feudal society and to sustain  political
supremacy in their regions. The  Albanian  migr s  and notables  of southern
Albania,  used  the announcement  of  reforms to renew the idea of autonomy.
Feudal circles of Kosovo sent a delegation to Constantinople, headed by Mula
Zeka  of  Pec,  expressing  readiness  to defend in  arms its homeland  from
external threat and requested for the reforms  not to be implemented  in Old
Serbia. Beys in Pristina  refused to give any  consideration to the reforms,
due to  the "Serbian  threat".  The Sultan accepted  their requests  without
hesitating.2
     The  declaration  of  war upon Crete  was  threatened by  the  possible
involvement  of  Bulgaria,  Serbia and  Montenegro in the  crisis. The Great
Powers,  especially  parties  holding  most  direct  interest  - Russia  and
Austria-Hungary, warned the Balkan state not  even to  think of warfare with
the Turks. The beginning of the Greek-Turkish war in April 1897, accelerated
negotiations between the two powers.  The Dual Monarchy and Russia concluded
a  secret agreement in  May  to preserve the status  quo  on  the Peninsula.
Several months subsequently  Austria-Hungary came  to  terms with  Italy for
joint influence in Albania.3
     The 1897 war with Greece  was a test of Albanian loyalty to the sultan.
Around  10,000  Albanian  volunteers  enlisted  in  the  Turkish  army.  The
declaratio