n  of war  stirred Muslim fanaticism  among  the ethnic Albanians,
thus invigorating  identification with the  interests of the Ottoman Empire.
It was due to them that Turkish troops penetrated deep into  Thessaly,  with
Albanian volunteers exceeding in sacking Greek villages. Greece was defeated
but  Crete, with the  aid  of Great  Powers, was  on  its  way  of achieving
autonomy with the Greek prince as governor.
     Albanian volunteers from Kosovo and Metohia regarded the outcome of the
Crete  crisis as an announcement of new divisions in the Turkish  countries.
Like  many  times  before, they  blamed  the  Serbs  as  the  guilty  party,
suspecting  their conniving  with  the  authorities in Serbia. Following the
conclusion of the truce, the ethnic Albanians retained their arms, since the
Turks believed  they would  successfully defend the northern  borders of the
empire in case of  another war. Embittered by the failure  of their rumoring
Serbia's preparation to  war  with  Turkey, the ethnic Albanians then turned
upon the unprotected Serbian  populace more severely  than ever.4
The  Turkish  authorities  and Muslim clergy stirred  the  apprehensions  of
ethnic  Albanians  with  news  of imminent  war  with  Serbia.  In  such  an
atmosphere,  mass murders, robbery and violence spread  to broad dimensions.
The consulate in Pristina  reported that following the victory over  Greece,
ethnic Albanians  "have literally  become  enraged, perpetrating  atrocities
upon the Serbian  rayah they never dared do  before,  even  in their wildest
years."5
     Already next year, in 1898, the terror  grew to a  general movement  to
exterminate the Serbian rayah in Old Serbia. Reports from Serbian consulates
in Pristina and Skoplje indicate  that,  in its scope and  cruelty, this one
exceeded all previous  ones. The consul in  Pristina,  Svetislav  St. Simic,
warned that  the position "of  our [Serbian] people in  Kosovo  is no better
than the position of  the Armenians in Asia Minor in the years from 1894  to
1896".6 Lists of hundreds of  severe crimes  all pointed  to  the
fact  that the Serbs would soon disappear from Old Serbia unless  preventive
measures  were undertaken.  The  consuls  proposed for  people in the Kosovo
vilayet  to secretly arm for defense  against  the  tyrants. Frequent border
conflicts effected a strain in Serbian-Turkish relations.
     1  A large  number  of Albanians, especially those from Djakovica, took
part  in  the  Armenian massacre; see V.  Berard,  Politique du sultan. Pans
1897;  for  Albanian  agitation:  B.  Perunicic,  Pisma  srpskih konzula  iz
Pristine 1890-1900, pp. 198.
     2 D. Mikic, Drustvene i ekonomske prilike kosovskih Srba, pp. 44-45; D.
T. Batakovic, Osnove arbanaske prevlasti, p. 40.
     3 S. Skendi, op. cit., pp. 242-244.
     4 Ibid., pp. 199-202.
     5 B. Perunicic, Pisma srpskih  konzula iz Pristine 1890-1900, pp.  269;
Lists of violence, pp. 269-277, 293-299.
     6 Ibid., pp. 311.
        Serbia's Diplomatic Actions
     Political conditions in Serbia did not allow for any broader actions to
protect the  Serbs  in Turkey. Having returned to the  country,  King  Milan
undertook  to govern the foreign  policy. Requesting of the sultan religious
concessions  in  Macedonia, the  government  of  Vladan  Djordjevic waged  a
Turkophilic policy. The  foreign policy course pursued by King Milan, an old
Austrophilic, induced the Serbian government to  lose Russian support in the
Porte, gained in 1895-96, during  Stojan  Novakovic's  government.  Becoming
again the envoy to Constantinople, Novakovic proposed for the Serbian people
in Kosovo and Metohia  to be supplied with guns, and then the issue of their
protection  may be  raised.  When the proposition was not adopted,  he  then
proposed, to the government, at least diplomatic action with the Porte. With
the assistance of  consuls in  Pristina (Todor P. Stankovic, then  Svetislav
St. Simic) detailed lists of brutalities performed  by ethnic Albanians upon
the  Serbs  in 1897-1898 were  collected and submitted as a Serbian note  to
Turkish  Foreign Affairs Minister Tefvik Pasha.  Novakovic requested for the
Porte  to undertake energetic  measures to  terminate the  pogroms upon  the
Serbs   and    to   form    an    admixed   Turkish-Serbian    investigating
committee.1
     The note  dated May 26 contains  the  following statement:  "During the
past four  years the Royal [Serbian] government was compelled more than once
to  draw  the  attention of  the imperial  government, to  the disorder, and
incredible  and  innumerable  violent  deeds  continuously  performed by the
insubordinate and unruly Albanian populace on the Serbian-Turkish border, as
well  as on  the bordering sanjaks. These  crimes and attacks  are  directed
solely  toward  the  Christians of Serbian  nationality,  and it seems their
purpose  is  to  exterminate  the people  from  those  regions."2
Novakovic underscored that "The ethnic Albanians  are well-armed and certain
that no punishment awaits  them,  giving complete  liberty  to  their  cruel
instincts,  since  there  is  nothing  to   hinder  their   fanaticism   and
unrestrained hatred. Crimes and  robberies  are daily  occurrences,  and not
only do the perpetrators remain unpunished, they are not even pursued by the
authorities. The number  of fugitives  fleeing across the  border  for their
lives is enormous,  and  increases  everyday. According  to  data  the royal
government disposes of, more than four  hundred crimes were  perpetrated  in
the Pristina, Novi Pazar, Pec and Prizren sanjaks  within only a few months,
last summer  and  winter. They were: murder, arson, banditry, desecration of
churches,  rape,  abduction,  robbery, raiding  of whole  herds. This number
presents only several instances,  one fifth  at the  most,  of  what  really
happened, since most of the crimes are never discovered, since  the  victims
or  their  families dare  not complain."3 The  Porte delayed  its
reply so Novakovic requested to be received by the Turkish minister. He drew
the  minister's  attention  to  the  fact  that the  development  of  events
suggested  "that  everything is carried out under orders from Constantinople
and Yildiz, where a once extant  notion was to hoop another Muslim iron ring
around  Serbia,  like  the ones  once  made of the Cherkezes",  underscoring
certain  rumors "of  an idea  to  organize a  special  corps  named  Hamid's
Albanian army, like the well-known Kurd cavalier regiments".4
     At  the request of Serbia's envoy, the  Porte ordered  an investigation
committee at the  beginning of August, to check the  assertions  made in the
Serbian  notes. The party, headed by the sultan's adjutant, General Saadedin
Pasha,  visited  certain  areas  in  Kosovo  and  conducted   a  superficial
investigation: instead of seeking  the perpetrators, it  strove  to deny the
complaints.  The  Serbian delegate Todor P. Stankovic  was  not permitted to
participate  in the  operation. The investigation conducted  with  prejudice
produced  no  results. Russian diplomatic  officials,  whose attendance  was
requested  by  the  Serbian  populace,  were  not  permitted  to  watch  its
operation. Stankovic noted that only  the British consul to Scutari  checked
the assertions made  of the oppression,  and having  been convinced  in  the
truth of the  complaints lodged against  the  ethnic  Albanians, submitted a
report to his government.5
     The entire  investigation was  reduced to establishing inaccuracies  in
citing  the  names  of  victims,  perpetrators  and places mentioned in  the
Serbian notes. Appealing to information received from local authorities, the
Forte's  committee  maintained  that  "the attacks  ascribed to  the  ethnic
Albanians  are  either  unfounded  or  exaggerated",  and  finally   totally
dismissed   the   Serbian   assertions.   Novakovic  persistently  collected
additional  data  and  submitted  new  notes.  He  warned  that  the  ethnic
Albanians,  following  Saadedin  Pasha's  mission,  realizing  they  had  no
punishment to fear, continued performing their  vicious deeds upon the Serbs
with more enthusiasm.6
     Without  the  support  of  the Great  Powers, Serbia  could  accomplish
nothing. The attempt to request the intermediation of  their  ambassadors in
Constantinople  was thwarted  by Austria-Hungarian Foreign  Affairs Minister
Count Goluchowski, expounding that Russia would hinder any action benefiting
Serbia  on  account of  King Milan. The  Serbian premier proposed a military
demonstration on the Serbian-Turkish border,  but  the idea was abandoned at
Goluchowski request.7
     The diplomatic action was an  utter failure. The Porte closed the issue
with a protocolar apology. The Serbian premier, in his letter to  Novakovic,
somberly  concluded:  "The treatment of the Ottoman authorities, and Muslims
in  general, toward  Christians in the Kosovo vilayet can be observed by the
fact that  over  60,000 Serbs  fled  their  fatherlands  and  left  whatever
property they owned, to save their lives, from 1880 until today [June 1899].
This spring the ethnic Albanians  killed  many Serbs to arrogate their lands
and drive  them off,  in which they  have  succeeded considerably, incurring
thus the  flight  of several  hundred souls to Serbia  during  the last  few
months."8
     Not  having  met  with  understanding  in  Constantinople,  the Serbian
government  was preparing to internationalize the issue  of  protecting  its
compatriots in  Old Serbia.  Preparing for the Peace Conference in the Hague
(1899), a "blue book" titled Prepiska o Arbanaskim nasiljima u Staroj Srbiji
1898-1899 (Correspondence on Albanian violence in Old  Serbia 1898-1899) was
being  compiled, in which the  most important  acts from correspondence with
the Porte were published  in Serbian and French,  but were  not submitted to
the  European public.9  Serbian  refugees in Old  Serbia  sent  a
complaint  of  Albanian  oppression  to  the  Conference, in the form  of  a
memorandum, which  had previously been published in the Belgrade papers, but
not discussed in the Hague.10
     A French  contemporary,  while visiting Kosovo  and  Metohia, witnessed
Serbian sufferings  and protection given to the tyrants: "[...] whatever the
complaints  of  local  Slavs  and  charges brought by  the  Serbs,  whatever
reproaches  made by Russia, it is obvious  that neither  the sultan nor  the
Porte would ever get involved  against  the ethnic Albanians  nor would they
restore order in the Kosovo  vilayet. The ethnic  Albanians  in  this Slavic
country play  and will continue  to play  the  same  role  as  the Kurds  in
Armenia. The captives  of Islam and the servants of the lord [sultan] would,
under these two bases, enjoy impunity whatever their crimes."11
     Political commotion among the ethnic Albanians aggravated  the position
of the  Serbs  and violence  increased. At the end  of  1898, the autonomist
movement was revived, incited by the sultan's order to collect whatever arms
remained  from the previous war. Albanian chiefs feared new  reforms and the
possibility of the Great Powers introducing Christian rule, like they did in
Crete. In Pec,  at  the end of January, 1899, a large assembly of feudal and
tribal notables was held  to discuss  opposition to reforms and expansion of
tribal self-governing. Through influential beys, the Forte's attitude on the
necessity of joint defense was underscored in case of incursions from Serbia
and Montenegro.12
     The assembly was immediately with pogroms upon  the Serbs in Mitrovica.
In  Prizren  due of boycott  of Serbian  goods and  threats of massacre  the
Serbian downtown was closed. In April 1899, the ethnic Albanians set fire to
Serbian houses in the  Verici village  of the Pec  district.  Every day  the
consulate  received  black  news  sent  from  Podrimlje  and  villages  near
Pristina. Consul Simic ended one of a series  of lists on perpetrated crimes
with the following  words: "With  such anarchic, truely  barbaric conditions
here,  it is no wonder  the emigration of  our people,  from these areas  to
Serbia, is increasing."13
     1  Istorija  srpskog  naroda,  VI/1,  322-323;  M.  Vojvodic,  Srbija u
medjunarodnim odnosima krajem XIX veka i pocetkom XX veka, Beograd 1988, pp.
224-225.
     2  Prepiska o arbanaskim nasiljima  u Staroj Srbiji 1898-1899, Ministry
of Foreign Affairs, Beograd 1899, p. 15.
     3 Ibid., 16; in the note supplementation the number  of murders, church
raids, rapes and abductions, assaults, robberies and banditries (ibid.,  pp.
18-27).
     4 Ibid., p. 28.
     5  T.  P. Stankovic, Putne  beleske po  Staroj  Srbiji  1871-1898,  pp.
103-104.
     6 Prepiska o arbanaskim nasiljima u Staroj Srbiji 1898-1899, pp. 69-78,
87,  129 134-135;  S. Jovanovic, Vlada Aleksandra  Obrenovica,  II,  Beograd
1931, p. 76, cf. M. Vojvodic, op. cit., pp. 76-77.
     7 S. Jovanovic, op. cit., pp. 76-77.
     8  Prepiska  o  arbanaskim nasiljima  u  Staroj Srbiji  1898-1899,  pp.
135-136.
     9   Ibid.,  French  title:   Documents  diplomatiques,   Correspondance
concemant  les actes  de violence  et  de  brigandage des Albanais  dans  la
Vieille  Serbie  (Vilayet  de  Kosovo)  1898-1899,  Ministere  des  affaires
etrangeres,  Belgrade MDCCCXCIX,  pp.  1-145;  M.  Vojvodic,  op.  cit"  pp.
237-238.
     10 D.  T.  Batakovic,  Memorandum  Srba  iz Stare Srbije  i  Makedonije
Medjunarodnoj konferenciji mira u Hagu 1899. godine, Prilozi za knjizevnost,
jezik, istoriju i folklor vol. LII-LIV (1987-1988, pp. 177-183.
     11 V. Berard, La Macedoine, Paris 1900, pp. 138-139.
     12 M. Vojvodic. op. cit., pp. 225-226;  D. Mikic, Drustvene i ekonomske
prilike kosovskih Srba u XIX i pocetkom XX veka, pp. 46-47.
     13 B. Perunicic, Pisma srpskih konzula  iz Pristine  1890-1900, p. 407;
details on the violence: 387-489.
        Austria-Hungary and the Expansion of Anarchy
     During  the  final years of  the  19th  century, vital  stimuli  to the
expansion of  Albanian arrogance was given through intelligence  networks in
the  Kosovo  vilayet,  by  the  Austro-Hungarian  diplomacy.  Following  the
occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and the military occupation of part of
the  Novi  Pazar  sanjak,  which  could, under  the  decrees  of  the Berlin
Congress,   be  extended  to  just  beyond  Mitrovica",  the  Dual  Monarchy
continually  worked  on  deepening   the  chasm  between  Serbs  and  ethnic
Albanians. Having  experienced the  unification of Germany and  Italy to its
detriment, it  could not allow the  unification of the  Serbs, with the same
consequences.  The Kosovo vilayet, which  separated  two independent Serbian
states, became the key to solve the Balkan issue. With support from Germany,
Austria-Hungary made preparations to  take its decisive step over Old Serbia
in Germanic penetration to the East.
     Austria-Hungarian  influence  in  the  Kosovo  vilayet  gradually  grew
through  Catholic  missions in  north  Albania, Metohia  and  consulates  in
Prizren. Skoplje and Scutari.  Following  the exodus of Serbs in  1878-1881,
the abandoned Serbian estates in Metohia  were settled, with  the assistance
of Albanian beys,  by Albanian Catholics, the so-called Fandas, who  were to
become  the  main  bearers  of  Austria-Hungarian  propaganda  among   their
compatriots of  Muslim faith. A certain  increase of Catholic inhabitants in
Metohia  made  room  for the  opening of new ecclesiastical  and educational
institutions which became  centers  of  the  aggressive propaganda.  Greater
pressure emanating  from  Jesuit propaganda  was also  felt by  the  Serbian
clergy. Phanariote  Bishop  Melentije freely  allowed Catholic agitation  to
spread among  the Serbs of  the  Pec and Prizren sanjaks.1 At the
same time, the  European public was presented with publications interpreting
the historical evolution, the ethnic composition and political importance of
Kosovo with seemingly expert argumentation. In a study  of  the  Novi  Pazar
sanjak  in  Kosovo, Theodor  Ippen endeavored to  support his thesis  on the
ethnic  unity  of all  territories with  Bosnia, and  thus  indirectly  with
Austria-Hungary, on the  basis of historical evidence, therefore denying the
Serbs their  character, emphasizing the importance of national individuality
of ethnic Albanians in Kosovo.2
     The Balkan  policy of the highest political and military circles of the
Dual Monarchy regarded  the Albanian  populace as an element of  outstanding
importance.  Anticipating the  approaching  disintegration  of  the  Ottoman
Empire  in the  Peninsula, Austria-Hungary was preparing to establish  order
and impose its rule  as mandator in Europe, as it had already done in Bosnia
and  Herzegovina  in  1878. Penetration toward  the Vardar  valley  and  the
Salonika  Bay  imposed  the  formation  of  autonomous  Albania  under   its
protectorate.  An  Albanian state  like this  would  render  impossible  the
unification of Serbia and  Montenegro, and  would curb influence coming from
Italy.
     The  Foreign  Minister  of  the   Dual  Monarchy,   Count  Goluchowski,
considered  it  of immense  importance to Austro-Hungarian interest  for the
ethnic Albanians not to come under foreign influence,  and proposed, in case
the Ottoman  Empire should  collapse, that Austria-Hungary should  support a
separate  autonomy  for Albania, ruled  by  a  foreign prince  and under its
protectorate;  Serbia  would  then  have   to  satisfy  its  aspirations  by
concessions   made  in   the  Pristina  and  Skoplje  sanjaks.   The   joint
Austro-Hungarian Minister of  Finance Benjamin  Kallay, demanded to win over
the Muslim ethnic Albanians of the Kosovo  vilayet. He particularly stressed
the importance of propaganda to  encompass the Pristina and Skoplje sanjaks,
believing that if conflicts with Turkey  should  arise,  all territories  in
which ethnic  Albanians  were a minority  would  belong to  either Serbia or
Bulgaria.3
     In  the 1897  negotiations,  Russian  diplomats  were informed that  if
status quo  on  the  Balkan  Peninsula  were to  prove  untenable, the  Dual
Monarchy would demand  the  annexation  of  Bosnia  and Herzegovina and  the
division  of  Turkish  lands  in  Europe,  including  the  formation  of  an
independent  Albanian  state  between Janina  and  Scutari  Lake  under  its
protectorate.  Aspiring   toward  their  goal,   Austro-Hungarian  diplomacy
considered  the possibility  of  establishing a religious protectorate  over
Catholic ethnic Albanians which  would  then  acquire political  dimensions.
Since   the  close  of  the   19th  century,  Franciscans   infiltrated   by
Austria-Hungary had been checking the Italian and local Catholic clergy even
in Albania.4
     Wherever  there  were   bribable  and   ambitious  beys   in   Metohia,
Austria-Hungary built  strong bastions  by lavishly bestowing money. At  the
assembly in Pec, at the beginning of 1899, aside to  notables of Turkophilic
and autonomous  disposition,  those of pro-Austrian inclination appeared  as
well. A group of tribal  and feudal leaders, headed by  the  until  recently
sultan's favorite  Haxhi  Mulla  Zeka, and  Riza  Bey Krieziu of  Djakovica,
openly recommended  closer relations with the Dual Monarchy,  as a potential
protector of the ethnic Albanians and against neighboring Serbian states and
possible  reforms.  The   number  of  Austro-Hungarian  followers  grew   in
accordance  with  purchases  made  by  Austro-Hungarian  agents of  Albanian
notables.  According  to a Russian  paper  Novoe  Vremja,  about five to six
million crowns of  the  Dual Monarchy's  annual  budget  were set  aside for
Albanian    propaganda    and    the    payment    of    corrupt    Albanian
magnates.5
     Agitation  among  the  ethnic   Albanians  was  lead   through  several
directions. In Metohia, where  clan chiefs  quarreled over  domains,  agents
were infiltrated, while  Austro-Hungarian  propaganda was  observed to  have
spread owing to Bosnian Muslim religious heads. Catholic friars expounded to
Muslim  ethnic Albanians that  Serbia  and Montenegro were  outposts  on the
Peninsula and that the neighboring Monarchy was their sole protector. Vienna
papers,  reporting  on events taking  place in Old Serbia (particularly  the
Politische  Korrespondenz),  regularly  titled  their  news as  coming  from
Albania,  thus creating  the impression  that ethnic Albanians in the Kosovo
vilayet comprised the majority of the population and that it was practically
devoid of Serbs.6
     The dimension of Austro-Hungarian political agitation could not pass by
the Turkish authorities  unnoticed.  The district chief in  Pristina noticed
that  Albanian assails upon the Serbs were  encouraged by agitators  of  the
Dual  Monarchy.  The vali of  Kosovo, Hafis  Pasha,  attributed all Albanian
unrest in Metohia (especially in Prizren 1899, subsequently  in Skoplje), to
operations carried  out  by Austro-Hungarian  intelligence  services.  Their
purpose,  he  believed,   was  to  cause  widespread   unrest   to   provide
Austria-Hungary  with  an excuse to occupy the  Kosovo  vilayet.7
Even the sultan, when confronted with  a warning from the Russian ambassador
that Albanian anarchy was planned, since only Orthodox Serbs suffered,  "did
not   deny  the  presence  of  a  foreign  party   operating   through   its
agents".8 Suspicion as to the  motives of the  Albanian  movement
was also  spread  by  Young  Turk followers  of Albanian  origin,  who  gave
statements abroad that ethnic Albanians were disloyal to the sultan and were
waiting  for  the  opportunity  to  secede  from   Turkey.   Telegrams  were
immediately sent from Pristina,  Prizren  and  other  towns  in  Kosovo  and
Metohia, to the  padishah  with expressions of  unequivocal faithfulness and
loyalty.9
     Foreign witnesses also observed the fatal influence of Austro-Hungarian
propaganda  in Old  Serbia. A French scholar,  Victor Berard, an  expert  on
political  trends  in  the  Ottoman  Empire,  emphasized  "that  the mystery
concealing  the operation of  Austrian agents  and  their entire  propaganda
network raised, in the eyes of blinded ethnic Albanians, this major power to
even  greater  heights,  skillfully  interweaving them  in  the  dexterously
devised and  woven  network of their foreign policy".10 Bulgarian
historian  N. Marenin  observed that  aside  to all the skill of its agents,
Austro-Hungarian propaganda had succeeded with the ethnic Albanians owing to
large amounts of money paid annually to those most prominent and influential
among  them. Marenin  underscored that a  favorable  condition for  bringing
together  the  ethnic  Albanians  and  the Dual  Monarchy  was their  mutual
interest to  exterminate the  Serbian  populace in the area between the Drim
river and Mount Kopaonik, i.e. between Serbia and Albania.11
     Owing to the instigations of the Austro-Hungarian intelligence service,
total anarchy reigned in  Kosovo. Enboldened  by protection promised by  the
Dual Monarchy and the sultan's confidence, the ethnic Albanians, filled with
renewed  energy,  dashed to settle accounts with the Serbs.  During 1900 and
1902 the  crimes attained apocalyptic dimensions. The Pec nahi  suffered the
most since  Catholic  ethnic  Albanians  exceeded  in oppression. Blackmail,
robbery and murder  extremely affected the  Gnjilane and Pristina region. In
Prizren, the Serbs dared not appear downtown. Schools and churches also bore
the brunt of  oppression.  The pursuit of  Serbian priests  became frequent,
ethnic  Albanians regarded  all  distinguished national notables  as Serbian
spies and komitadjis. This anti-Serb disposition reached the point when even
certain Turkish officials,  in the army,  administration,  especially within
the circle  of  religious heads, openly appealed to the ethnic Albanians  to
clash with the  Serbs, arrogate  their  lands  and force  them  to  flee  to
Serbia.12
     Anarchy  attained such  dimensions that the Porte was compelled to send
new military  contingents. Brigadier General Shemsi Pasha was sent to Kosovo
to consolidate government  authority, collect  arms  and  capture the  major
violators. He frequently left Pristina to visit the vilayet, calm the ethnic
Albanians,  reconcile their quarreling chiefs and, though rarely, intervened
to  protect the Serbs. In Vucitrn  he  was compelled to  protect  the  Serbs
threatened by oppression in the Raznjane village. Raska-Prizren Metropolitan
Dionisije   escaped   assassination  twice,  and  so   moved  his  seat   to
Gnjilane.13
     A  direct  consequence  of Austro-Hungarian  influence  was  oppression
executed upon the Serbs of the Ibarski Kolasin, in summer 1901.  The Ibarski
Kolasin  was a  woody area with over forty villages  to the northwest of Old
Serbia, inhabited almost  entirely by Serbs who had preserved a certain kind
of self-government, choosing their own local knez (leader).14
     The extent of  oppression compelled the Serbs from all parts  of Kosovo
and Metohia to  appeal to  the  consulate in Pristina  in 1897, demanding  a
secret delivery of arms for protection against the tyrants. Stojan Novakovic
had proposed to arm the Serbian inhabitants gradually and organize  them for
defense  back in 1896: "ethnic  Albanians  were evildoers,  but they treated
with respect those houses in Old Serbia which they knew had weapons and male
heads."15 The consul in  Pristina supported Novakovic's proposal,
adding  that Albanian assails upon the  Serbs were  encouraged on account of
the   latter   having   no  arms,  while  these   deeds   left   the   Serbs
faithearted.16
     After the failure  of the diplomatic mission with  the Porte to protect
Serbian  inhabitants, the government of  Vladan Djordjevic  began, in spring
1899,  the  secret delivery of trophy  guns remaining from the  previous war
with Turkey, to Serbs inhabiting the northern regions of the Kosovo vilayet.
Since the  beginning of  1901,  exaggerated news of thousands of guns  being
smuggled to arm entire Serbian villages caused great  alarm among the ethnic
Albanians.  The Turkish authorities conducted searches  in the north regions
of Old  Serbia, and  only  at the beginning  of  July, owing  to information
procured by Albanian notable Isa Boljetinac, did they  discover that most of
the weapons were delivered to the Ibarski Kolasin.17
     Under the leadership of Isa Boljetinac,  the ethnic Albanians and Turks
searched  the Kolasin villages and forced the people to surrender their arms
under brutalities  unheard-of. Many  were  abused,  beaten and wounded;  one
Serbian was beaten up  and  succumbed to  wounds  inflicted. Several hundred
Serbs were shackled and taken to prisons in Mitrovica and Pristina. The arms
investigation incited ethnic  Albanians from other regions to set off toward
Kolasin and seek guns in the villages. From January to August alone,  around
six  hundred persons fled to Serbia. The disturbed public demanded energetic
action from the government. The  arms investigation ended only when Serbia's
demands  to  the  Porte  were supported by  Russia. Following  the energetic
intervention of  the  Russian  ambassador  to  Constantinople,  violence  in
Kolasin ceased, the arrested  Serbs were  set  free,  and Isa Boljetinac was
moved out  of Mitrovica.  However, Austro-Hungarian  delegates to  the Porte
claimed the pogroms in Kolasin were multiply exaggerated.18
     Austro-Hungarian consular officials in Kosovo saw the affair at Kolasin
as a sign of "great Serbian propaganda"  in Old Serbia. All  political moves
made  by  the  Serbian  government  in  the  Kosovo vilayet,  including  the
inauguration  of  new schools, and  financial  help  given  to  teachers and
monastic fraternities,  were  considered a  serious  injury to the political
interests  of the Dual Monarchy. When  Adem Zaim killed Hadji  Mulla Zeka in
Pec for  tribal  dissentions, at the  beginning  of  1902,  Austro-Hungarian
consuls announced that it was a Serbian conspiracy.19
     1  Istorija  srpskog  naroda,  VI/1,  p.302;  V.  Bovan, op.  cit.;  H.
Schwanda, Das  Protektorat  stereich-Ungarans uber die Katholiken Albanians,
Wien 1965; passim S. Skendi, op. cit., pp. 238-286.
     2 Theodor Ippen, Novi Pazar und Kosovo  (Das Alte Rascien), Wien  1892;
ibid,  Das  Religiose  Protektorat Osterreich-Ungarns  in  der  Turkei,  Die
Kultur, 3 (1901-1902), pp. 298-310;
     3 F. Hauptmann, Uloga zajednickog  ministarstva finansija  u formiranju
Austro-Ugarske   politike  prema  Albaniji   uoci   kretske  krize,   Radovi
Filozofskog  fakulteta  u Sarajevu,  IV  (1968),  pp.  35-45;  H.  Kapidzic,
Pripreme  za  austrougarsko  prodiranje  u  albansko  etnicko  podrucje   iz
Novopazarskog  sandzaka, Radovi Filozofskog fakulteta u Sarajevu, VI (1971),
pp. 415-430; cf. N.D. Schnadel, op. cit., pp. 54-74.
     4 B. Hrabak, Kultni protektorat  Austro-Ugarske nad  Arbanasima (1897),
Godisnjak  Arhiva Kosova, XXIII (1987),  p.  33-54; J. Sliskovic, Albanija i
Macedonia, Sarajevo 1904, p. 80; V. Stojancevic, Diplomatska trvenja konzula
velikih sila  u Skoplju no. tamosnje  Arbanase  katolike pocetkom  XX  veka,
Istorijski casopis, XVIII (1971), pp. 329-339.
     5 V. Stojancevic,  Austrougarsko-srpski sukob  u kosovskom  vilajetu na
pocetku  XX veka,  in: Jugoslovenski narodi pred Prvi svetski  rat,  Beograd
1967 pp. 847-876.
     6  D.  T.  Batakovic,  Pokusaj  otvaranja srpskog konzulata  u Prizrenu
1898-1900, pp. 256-257.
     7 V. Stojancevic, Prilike u zapadnoj polovini kosovskog vilajeta  prema
izvestajima  austrougarskog  konzula  u  Skoplju  1900.  i   1901.   godine,
Istorijski casopis, (XII-XIII) (1961-1962), p. 290-291.
     8 V. Corovic, Odnosi izmedju Srbije i Austro-Ugarske u XX veku, Beograd
1936, p. 15.
     9 B. Perunicic, Zulumi ago. i begova u kosovskom vilajetu, pp. 169-170.
     10 V. Berard,  La Turquie et I'Hellenisme contemporain, Paris 1900, pp.
291-292.
     11 N. Marenin, Albanija i Albanci, pp. 91-92; cited from P. Orlovic (S.
St. Simic), Stara Srbija i Arbanasi, Beograd 1904, pp. 21-22.
     12 Regarding the conference of the Serbian and Bulgarian rulers at Nis,
Austro-Hungarian agitators reported it was secretly being  held at Pristina.
Among  the Albanians  a  widespread conviction existed that a joint military
intervention of the  two countries was being prepared. The bessa was hastily
given and conference  on  Joint defense began. (M. Vojvodic, op.  cit.,  pp.
332-333).
     13 V. Stojancevic, Prilike u zapadnoj polovini kosovskog vilajeta prema
izvestajima  austrougarskog konzula  u Skoplju  1900. i  1901.  godine,  pp.
311-312.
     14  M.  Lutovac,  Ibarski  Kolasin, Antropogeografska istrazivanja, pp.
57-188.
     15 Spomenica Stojana Novakovica, p. 196.
     16 B.  Perunicic, Pisma srpskih  konzula  iz  Pristine  1890-1900,  pp.
345-346.
     17 M. Vojvodic,  op. cit., 334;  D.  T.  Batakovic,  Istraga  oruzja  u
Ibarskom  Kolasinu  1901, Kosovsko-Metohijski  zbornik  SANU  1  (1990), pp.
269-284
     18 Ibid., cf. S. Skendi, op. cit., pp. 201-202.
     19 V. Stojanovic, Austrougarsko-srpski  sukob  u kosovskom vilajetu, p.
865.
        Failure of Reforms
     Pogroms in the Ibarski Kolasin sobered the public and ruling circles of
Serbia.  In Belgrade, public meetings were organized where demands were made
for the government  to initiate the  issue  of  Serbian  nationality in  Old
Serbia and Macedonia. In disputes  announced on the issue of the survival of
Serbs in Old Serbia, Svetislav Simic was the most outstanding.
     In his discussion Pitanje o Staroj Srbiji (The  Question of Old Serbia)
Simic underscored the danger of Austro-Hungarian agitation  among the ethnic
Albanians and emphasized that the destiny of the Serbs and the Slav cause in
the Balkans would unfold in Kosovo.1
     The  balance  of  forces,  particularly  Austro-Hungarian  influence in
Serbia  and  Russia's failure to confront  its  agitation in Old Serbia with
more energy, tied the hands of the Serbian diplomacy in  its attempts  for a
more efficient protection of its  compatriots.  Following the  death of King
Milutin, Vienna's most  trusted friend in Serbia,  King Aleksandar Obrenovic
took the Russophil course in foreign policy, to calm tempers in the country.
At the same time, at the invitation of  the Serbian  government, a  group of
Albanian notables arrived in Belgrade from Fed and Djakovica, among whom was
the Pec leader  Mehmed Zaim. They were lavished with rich gifts in money and
arms and promised assistance if they helped to bring an end to violence upon
the Serbs.2
     The Serbian  government  initiated  the  issue  of  protecting Serbs in
Turkey in 1902,  and  in August, bolteresred by  the  Montenegrin diplomacy,
authorized its envoy in  Constantinople to make the following demands to the
Porte: 1)  regular and for all equal  application  of law; 2)  an end to the
policy of encouraging ethnic  Albanians. Propositions along  this  line were
for either disarmament of the ethnic Albanians or allowance for the Serbs to
carry  guns; for reinforcement  of  Turkish  garrisons wherever  there  were
Serbian-Albanian inhabitants admixed;  removal of  corrupt Turkish officials
and  assignment  of  conscientious  ones; inauguration of administrative and
judicial reforms with larger Serbian participation in the administration and
judiciary; implementation of  agrary reform.  Russia supported Serbia  since
none  of the bases  were touched regarding  the status quo  established with
Austria-Hungary in 1897.3
     To  forestall  the  reform   plan  of  the   Great  Powers,  especially
Austria-Hungary and Russia, which had the right to protect Christians in the
Ottoman Empire under article 23 of the Berlin Congress, the sultan announced
reforms  in November  1902. The reform  action of Turkey, headed by  Hussein
Hilmi Pasha as general inspector, anticipated a more rigorous application of
the  law,   regulation  of  agrary  duties,  dismission  of  unconscientious
officials and the  enlisting  of  Serbs in  the  Turkish gendarme.  Military
authorities undertook to capture the most wanted criminals.4
     The  dimension  of  lawlessness  and  Serbian  plight  shocked  foreign
Journalists. Victor Berard  wrote that  life in places between Pec,  Prizren
and  Pristina was marked with violence under the ethnic  Albanians,  arsons,
rapes, vengeance, and real tribal  warfare. Georges  Gaulis noticed that due
to  the  extent  of  oppression upon the Serbs,  Old Serbia was, along  with
Armenia, the most wretched country in the world. Bearing witness to Albanian
recalcitrance  and their motives,  he particularly stressed: "Those of Debar
kill to rob, those of Djakovica kill from shear fanaticism, those of Prizren
kill for their  evil instincts, and those  of  Tetovo  kill to try out their
carbines."5
     Following the Kolasin affair, Russia opened a consulate in Mitrovica to
follow  more  closely Austria-Hungary's influence over Albanian moves and to
protect the Serbs from violence. The Vienna legation exerted  influence upon
the Porte to  prolong its  inauguration. The  ethnic Albanians received  the
news  of the opening of the Russian consulate with open discontent and acute
opposition.  Isa Boljetinac threatened to  punish anyone who  dared rent his
house  to  the Russian consul and openly spoke  of forcibly routing him from
Kosovo.  Following  the  threats made  to its  staff, the Russian  diplomacy
demanded of  the  Ottoman  authorities to  arrest and  rout  the  leaders of
"Anti-Russian  demonstrations".  Isa  Boljetinac  agreed,  after  a  lengthy
persuasion from the authorities, to leave for Constantinople, "to visit" the
padishah.  The  St.  Petersburg  press underscored  the  importance  of  the
consulate opening in  Mitrovica,  where "at  the  central point between  Old
Serbia    and    Albania,   [Russian]    control    emerges   over    ethnic
Albanians".6
     The announcement  of the reform plan, more rigorous application of law,
acceptance  of  Serbs  in  the  gendarme service and  news  of  the  Russian
consulate  finally  opening in Mitrovica, instigated the ethnic Albanians to
rise.  At the beginning of 1903, a large assembly of tribal  chiefs was held
at  the Lucki  Most near Djakovica. The  ethnic Albanians  blamed solely the
Serbs for all the reforms. It was thus  decided  "to gradually kill the more
prominent Serbs of the Pec nahi one after another, and compel the  others to
flee to Serbia or to be Turkized."7
     The plans of the participants were to rout the Turkish authorities from
Pec,  kill the notable Serbs  and then  move  to  Mitrovica to confront  the
Russian consul. Severe persecution of the  Serbs  began immediately. In  the
Pec  nahi  alone ten  people were killed  within a few weeks.  Following the
meeting in  Drenica,  the  ethnic Albanians decided  to take to arms.  Armed
rebels raided  Vucitrn  on March  29,  ravaged  the  local  Serbian  church,
disarmed the Serbs accepted in the gendarme and set off to Mitrovica to rout
by force Russian Consul Grigorie Stepanovich Shtcherbin.8
     The Russian consul remained in  town  to supervise Turkish preparations
for  defense. Around 2,000 ethnic Albanians  attacked Mitrovica on March 30.
Following a decisive  resistance of Turkish forces, driven away by artillery
fire, the ethnic Albanians abandoned their plan to take  the  town. The next
day  a  Turkish  corporal, an  Albanian, shot  the Russian consul while  the
latter  was visiting the outskirts of town. The assassin claimed he shot the
consul in vengeance, denying affiliation to any movement, while the severely
wounded consul succumbed to his wounds ten days hence.
     The death  of the Russian  consul  demonstrated the  extent of Albanian
anarchy,  whereas  the  relation  of the  sultan and  of  the  high  ranking
officials of the  Porte  toward their bearers  was displayed in the stand to
which they  adhered. Diplomatic circles in Constantinople  expected decisive
measures  to  be  undertaken against  the  ethnic  Albanians. Abdulhamid  II
promised  he would send  military  reinforcements  to  restore order  in Old
Serbia and to  capture  the rebels,  but  "fearing court revolution from his
Albanian guards", he decided against the announced measures.9
     Simultaneously,  the sultan  advised the  Albanian leaders, who  feared
international conflicts for wounding and killing a  Russian consul, to  calm
down. Agents of the Dual Monarchy and  Catholic friars encouraged the ethnic
Albanians of  Mitrovica not to fear Russian  retribution and to persevere in
their opposition. The death  of the Russian consul was a national tragedy to
the  Serbs, who saw in him a  protector and a representative of a power they
expected would end this anarchy and violence. The train,  bearing the coffin
of  the deceased  consul, was accompanied by several thousand  Serbs,  while
funeral   services   were   held   in   churches   throughout   Kosovo   and
Metohia.10
     Anarchy  in  Old  Serbia  and disorder  in  Macedonia,  where  Bulgaria
introduced companies to  urge a rise  and  solve the problem of Macedonia to
its  benefit,  compelled Austria-Hungary  and  Russia,  being  the two  most
interested major parties, to demand the implementation of reforms. They
     announced their reform project in February 1903,  while a detailed plan
of the whole operation was designed at a meeting of the two tzars, Nikola II
and Franz  Joseph  I in Murzsteg, at the beginning of October. Expecting war
in the Far East,  Russia strove  to retain for a time, the status quo on the
Balkans. Austria-Hungary intended to consolidate its positions with a reform
action.   Shortly  before   the  meeting  in   Murzsteg,  Count  Goluchowski
elaborated, to the tzar, the plan to divide Turkish lands in Europe:
     make Romania as large as poss