d proclamations  in Pristina
and other towns for ethnic Albanians to quiet down and surrender arms;
     however, anti-Serbian agitation from tribal leaders drove many to  flee
and shelter in the  mountains. Realizing they  would not be persecuted after
surrendering  their arms,  ethnic Albanians in Drenica  and  the Pec  region
finally laid down their guns. Serbian officers kept repeating that the Serbs
were warring Turkey and  not the ethnic Albanians. In  the  newly  liberated
areas Serbia  established civil rule  and administration. Kosovo and Metohia
became  part of the Lab, Pristina and Prizren  district.  Montenegro divided
liberated Metohia into the Pec and Djakovica district.6
     The liberation of Old Serbia  was  not, however, the  final goal of the
Serbian armies.  The political and economical hoop  encircled around Serbia,
held  tight  by  Austria-Hungary  since the  .Kg War  (1906-1911),  and  the
annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina  induced Serbian  diplomacy  to resolve
the issue of its political and economic independence by gaining free exit to
the  Adriatic  Sea,  a  plan  similar to  one made by Ilija  Garasanin.  The
determination of  the  Serbian  government to  advance  toward the  Adriatic
coast,  to  an  ethnically Albanian area, was based  on the  evaluation that
ethnic  Albanians  were "not  a  people, but  tribes split  up and  mutually
estranged, without a common language, alphabet and religion". The government
was  supported by the  court,  by civil parties,  the army  and  the  widest
public.7
     While Montenegrin troops besieged  Scutari,  Serbian regiments from Old
Serbia  entered Albania and occupied its northern ports. In the  land of the
Mirdits, Serbian troops were greeted  cordially, whereas they were forced to
penetrate Dukadjin toward the Adriatic Sea with arms.8
     Reports of  Serbia's glorious victories  were received with  anxiety in
Vienna. Austro-Hungarian  diplomacy warned Serbia not  to  advance its  army
further  from Prizren.  To prevent Serbia's exit to  the  sea,  the Viennese
government  sent  special  emissaries  to Albania  to  spread  the  idea  of
autonomy,  and even called one of  the most  important Albanian leaders from
Constantinople,  Ismail  Kemal. Through the Viennese press,  he demanded  an
independent "Great Albania", encompassing the towns Bitolj, Janina, Skoplje,
Pristina and Prizren. Embarking an Austrian ship, Kemal set off to Valona to
proclaim independence of Albania. Gathering feudal  and tribal  leaders from
the southern regions to his side, on November 28, 1912, Kemal proclaimed the
formation  of an independent  Albanian state. The  provisional government in
Valona  was a toy in Vienna's hands devoid of any influence with the people.
All documents, including the  proclamation of independence, were written  in
the Turkish language; not one member of his cabinet knew how to write in the
Albanian  tongue. Ismail Kemal  consigned the  military formation to refugee
leaders from Old Serbia, Riza Bey Krieziu and Isa Boljetinac.9
     Kemal's government sent messages to Serbian troops to withdraw from the
territory of the new state. The Serbian army established civil rule north of
the  Durazzo-Elbasan-Struga line. The situation  in Albania was on the verge
of anarchy. The temporary government proclaimed an energetic severing of all
ties with Turkey. Subsequent to the Young Turk coup d'etat, the mid-Albanian
Muslim  populace was disposed to Albania remaining  within the  framework of
the Ottoman Empire. Rumors spread among the people that the Young Turks were
advancing with large armies  to reoccupy Albania. To the north, the Catholic
Mirdits  negotiated  with Montenegro  and  Serbia  on  the  creation  of  an
autonomous state.  The Mirdit mbret Bib  Doda  requested permission from the
Serbian army for  his fellow tribesmen to  loot the Muslims. Within the Mata
region, malcontents took  down the Albanian  flag and threatened to call the
Serbian army;
     in some places there was agitation to resist the Serbs. Ismail  Kemal's
government soon disintegrated. Disorder and  mutual conflicts  began  within
the first  months  following the  proclamation  of the independent  Albanian
state.10
     Austria-Hungary  considered the emergence of the  Serbian  army on  the
Adriatic Sea a serious injury to its interests. Belligerent military circles
in  Vienna  proposed  to  attack  Serbia  whose  northern  borders  remained
unguarded.   During   December   all   tokens   pointed   to   an   upcoming
Austro-Hungarian  -  Serbian  war. After  conferring  with  the  Russian and
Italian   diplomacy,  the  Serbian   government  pronounced   the  following
statement:
     "We do not desire to raise the issue of our emergence at sea ourselves,
but rather  to let  the matter  remain within the hands of the Great  Powers
when war ends  and  peace  is  concluded.  We should not disapprove  of  the
creation of autonomous Albania if Europe should agree to it. We only believe
that Albania will not abide by peace necessary to both the Balkan allies and
the whole of Europe. Our desire is to have a port on our territory -  yet we
leave  this  issue for the Great  Powers to resolve,  when they solve  other
matters that will unfold from peace."11
     The Austro-Hungarian  incursion on Serbia was prevented by a conference
of ambassadors of  the Great Powers convoked in London  toward  the close of
1912, at the initiative of the French and British diplomacy.
     Representatives of the Balkan states began peace negotiations with  the
Ottoman Empire. The conference  of ambassadors  argued the issue of Serbia's
emergence  at  sea and  the status of Albania, which  would then  enter into
regulations of peace with Turkey. While Russia supported Serbian demands for
Adriatic  ports,  Austria-Hungary's  intention  at  the  conference  was  to
struggle  for  a  larger  Albania.  France  and  Great Britain accepted  the
formation of Albania but feared Austro-Hungarian and Italian  superiority in
it.  Thus the very first day the conference opened, the  ambassadors reached
the  following  agreement:  "Autonomous  Albania guaranteed  and  controlled
exclusively by six powers under the sovereignty or suzerainty of the sultan.
The  exclusion  of  every  Turkish  element  from   the  administration   is
understood."   Ensuring  the  frontiers  of  Albania  and   Montenegro  were
"neighbored all the way", Serbia  was denied emergence to  the Adriatic Sea.
As compensation, it was given a free and neutral trade port  on the Albanian
coast,  to   which  Serbian  goods  would  arrive   by  railway  secured  by
international gendarmes  under European control.  Peace in Europe was saved,
but,  as  Poincares pointed  out:  "Serbia  paid the  highest  bill".12
The border issue presented a more serious problem. Since December
     1912.  several plans were in diplomatic emulation. Serbia  demanded the
borders to be drawn west of the Ohrid Lake and  the Crni Drim river, so that
Decani, Djakovica, Prizren, Debar and Ohrid would remain in its composition.
Montenegro demanded north Albania until the Maca river, with Scutari,  Medua
and Alessio. Greece demanded north  Epirus where the Albanian populace lived
admixed with the Greek one. Autonomous Albania was to have been  constituted
from the remaining areas. The Austro-Hungarian proposition, contrary to  the
Serbian one, suggested the creation  of Great Albania. The Monarchy demanded
that Djakovica, Debar, Korcca, Janina  and Struga belong to Albania, and "in
the first round" both Pec and  Prizren, as "compensational objects". It left
Struga, Ohrid  and Debar to Bulgaria if it  were  to  make any claims. Italy
supported  Montenegrin claims but  acutely  opposed  Greek  ones. Russia and
France  maintained a  medial  solution by which  Albania's  frontier  toward
Serbia  should  stretch  along  the watershed  of the Beli and the Crni Drim
rivers  to  Ohrid.  The  Albanian  delegation  demanded  the  formation   of
"ethnical" Albania, inclusive of the towns Pec, Mitrovica, Pristina, Skoplje
and Bitolj.13
     The standpoint of the  Serbian delegation  was most wholly revealed  by
the aide-memoir submitted to the ambassador conference on January 8,
     1913. It explicitly stated that Serbia was not opposed to the formation
of  autonomous  Albania,  but that its  whole  centuries-long  struggle  for
national  survival   under  Turkish  rule,   and  subsequently   for   state
independence from 1804 until  1912, would  prove to have  been senseless  if
those  regions  with  admixed  Serbian-Albanian  populaces,  where  forceful
Islamization, Albanization and  the routing  of Serbian inhabitants had been
urged on for centuries, were to  belong to Albania. Supporting its attitudes
with historical,  ethnographic,  cultural and ethical  rights,  the  Serbian
delegation underscored that Kosovo and Metohia, where the  towns Pec, Decani
and Djakovica lay, were since time immemorial the sacred land of the  Serbs,
and  that  under no condition would any Montenegrin  nor  Serbian government
consent to their belonging to someone else.14
     The Serbian  government was adamant in  its defense of Kosovo,  Metohia
and west Macedonia. The  entrance of either of these regions into autonomous
Albania   would  create   a   new  seedbed   of   conflicts  through   which
Austria-Hungary would  exert  pressure  upon  Serbia.  Stojan Novakovic, the
first delegate at the conference of ambassadors, believed that by "demanding
Prizren, Djakovica, Pec  for Albania, Austria-Hungary  desired  to renew the
barrier   between   Serbia   and   Montenegro,   between   Serbia   and  the
sea".15 Pasic kept underscoring that he would never abandon Debar
and Djakovica  whatever the decision of the Great Powers, and  that  "only a
stronger military force could rout the Serbian army from  these regions". In
a subsequent letter addressed to the Great Powers/Pasic underlined bitterly:
"The  lands and sanctity of Old Serbia are being taken away and given to one
who has been devastating them until today."16
     Serbia  was  forced  to withdraw  its troops from  the Adriatic  coast.
Austria-Hungary gave in to Russia's demands, so Debar and Djakovica remained
part  of  Serbia,  while its demand  to include Scutari in the new  Albanian
state  was accepted, though the town  was still  besieged by Montenegrin and
Serbian troops. The final agreement was reached on April 10, 1913, while the
structure of Albania continued to  be discussed in  the months to follow. At
the end  of July, the Austro-Hungarian - Italian proposition was accepted by
which Albania  was to become  a sovereign state with a hereditary prince. An
International Control Committee was  formed whose  duty was to organize life
in the country with the aid of Dutch  officers. As the  hereditary  Albanian
prince, among numerous  candidates, an Austro-Hungarian  was  chosen, German
Prince  Wilhelm  von Wied,  cousin of the  Romanian  queen,  interpreted  in
Belgrade  as another  attempt of Austria-Hungary  to close  the  hoop around
Serbia by way of Albania, Bulgaria and Romania.17
     1 Prvi balkanski rat, Beograd 1959,147-176; cf. D. Bogdanovic, Knjiga o
Kosovu, Ep. 165-176.
     2 C. Popovic, Rod  organizacije "Ujedinjenje ili  smrt"  - Pripreme  za
Balkanski rat, Nova Evropa, 1 (1927), pp. 313-315; M. Z. Jovanovic, Pukovnik
Apis,  Beograd 1957, pp. 649-651; Savremenici o Kosovu i Metohiji 1852-1912,
pp. 351-353, 381-383.
     3  Dj.  Mikic,  Albanci  i  Srbija  u  balkanskim  ratovima  1912-1913,
Istorijski glasnik, 1-2 (1986), p. 60;  more elaborate in: D. D.  Stankovic,
Nikola Pasic i stvaranje balkanske drzave, M. misao, 3 (1985), pp. 157-169.
     4 D. Mikic, Albanci i Srbija u balkanskim ratovima, p. 61.
     5 J. Tomic, Rat no. Kosovu i Staroj Srbiji 1912. godine, Novi Sad 1913.
     6 Prvi  balkanski rat, pp.  46-417,  464-469-496; D.  Mikic, Albanci  i
Srbija u balkanskim ratovima, p. 63.
     7 The only opposition came  from the leadership of the Socialdemocratic
party headed by Dimitrije Tucovic. Concerned only for their narrow party and
political interests, they used the entrance of the Serbian army into Albania
to settle their accounts  with  the government policy and civil parties (cf.
D. Tucovic, Srbija i Albanija, Beograd 1914).
     8  I. Balugdzic, Kad se stvarala Albanija, Srpski knjizevni glasnik, 52
(1937),  pp. 518-523;  D.  Djordjevic, Izlazak Srbije  na  Jadransko more  i
Konferencija ambasadora u Londonu 1912, Beograd 1956, pp. 11-12, 83-85.
     9 V.  Corovic, Odnosi izmedju Srbije  i  Austro-Ugarske u XX veku,  pp.
396-401; D. Djordjevic, op. cit., p. 86.
     10 Dj. Mikic, Albanci i Srbija u balkanskim ratovima, pp. 68-70.
     11 V. Corovic, Odnosi izmedju Srbije i  Austro-Ugarske u  XX  veku, pp.
410.
     12 D. Djordjevic, op. cit., pp. 133-134.
     13 Ibid., see M. Vojvodic, Skadarska kriza 1913, Beograd 1970.
     14 Dokumenti  o spoljnoj politici Kraljevine Srbije, VT/1,  136-142; D.
Bogdanovic, op. cit., pp. 172-173.
     15 Ibid., V/3, doc. 500.
     16 Ibid., VI/1, 260, 379, 380; D. Bogdanovic, op. cit., p. 173.
     17 D. Djordjevic, op. cit., pp. 141-143.
        Albanian Incursions into Serbia
     The situation in Albania and the border  area toward  Serbia was marked
by anarchy, disorders and conflicts during 1913 and the first  half of 1914.
The  commander of Scutari, Essad Pasha Toptani,  surrendered the town to the
Montenegrins on April 23,1913; in return, he was  enabled  to advance  south
with his army  and military equipment  and  take  part  in the  struggle for
power. Already three mutually conflicting governments existed in Albania. As
one of the most powerful landholders, Essad Pasha relied on the Muslim heads
of mid-Albania. By wielding his influence between Durazzo and Tirana, he saw
an opportunity  to candidate  himself for the still vacant Albanian  throne,
taking into consideration requests  of the  Albanian majority  that did  not
want a Christian ruler.  Already on May 5, 1913, he informed the Montenegrin
prince of  his intention to pronounce himself prince of Albania,  expressing
his wish to cooperate with the Balkan  allies. He told the Serbian  diplomat
in  Durazzo,  Zivojin  Balugdzic,  that  he wanted an agreement with Serbia.
Hesitant at first, the  Serbian government consented to cooperate with Essad
Pasha, evaluating that "his overall behavior displayed an  earnest  wish for
an  agreement with  Serbia,  which  he  regarded as the focus  for mustering
Balkan forces".1
     The second  Balkan  war was triggered off  by  Bulgaria in  July, 1913.
Dissatisfied with  its territorial  gains, it  prepared  to war  its  former
allies.  It sought  support  with Albania:  ethnic Albanians gathered around
Ismail  Kemal  were  promised  considerable  territorial  expansion if  they
advanced  onto  Serbia.  Thus Sofia  counted on  the  Albanian  insurrection
leading to  the proclamation  of autonomous Macedonia and its annexation  to
Bulgaria. Thus, somewhere  in  Macedonia, an Albanian-Bulgarian border would
have  been  established. Conditions  for  armed  incursions were  favorable:
around  20,000  ethnic  Albanians who  fled  Old Serbia and Macedonia  found
themselves on Albanian soil,  while  their leaders  Hasan Pristina  and  Isa
Boljetinac  sat in  the government  at Valona. Austro-Hungarian  and Italian
emissaries  and  agents, mostly the clergy  and  teachers, suppressed  Essad
Pasha's  influence and appealed to the ethnic Albanians  to rise against the
Serbs.2
     Individual  surprise attacks  on  the most  forward  Serbian units  and
border stations began already during the second Balkan war. In the meantime,
detailed  preparations  for a  large  incursion into  Serbia were  underway.
Shipments  of arms sent by the Viennese government kept arriving to Albania.
Bulgarian  komitadjis trained ethnic Albanians for guerrilla warfare.  Small
renegade groups were infiltrated into Serbian territory during May  and June
1913  to  check  their guerrilla skills. Informed of  the  preparations  for
attack,  the Serbian government sent  Bogdan  Radenkovic to try to influence
his former friends  among  the Albanian leadership, but he returned  without
accomplishing his task.3
     When  the  Serbian army was forced to withdraw to  the restriction line
behind the Crni Drim, a signal was given for a full force attack. At the end
of September 1913, around 10,000 ethnic  Albanians invaded Serbian territory
from two directions - west  Macedonia and toward Djakovica  and Prizren. The
initiator  of  the  attack was  Austria-Hungary.  Ismail Kemal  ordered  the
refugee  Albanian  leaders, Bairam Cur,  Isa  Boljetinac, Riza Bey  and Elez
Jusuf to attack  Serbia  with their parties, promising that with the  aid of
the  Dual  Monarchy and Italy,  all  conquered  territories  would belong to
Albania.  Essad Pasha refused to join them and warned Serbia not  to approve
of their action.4
     The infiltrated companies were headed by Albanian leaders and Bulgarian
officers  in  coaction  with  the  Bulgarian komitadjis. Weak Serbian border
troops  and several gendarmes units were  unable to withstand the attack. On
the  southern  stretch,  commanded  by  Bulgarian komitadjis,  the companies
managed to take Debar, Ohrid  and Struga and advance toward Gostivar. To the
north, Isa  Boljetinac,  Bairam  Cur and  Kiasim Lika took  Ljuma,  besieged
Prizren  and  shortly occupied Djakovica. At the  beginning of  October, two
divisions,  the  Troops  of new  regions, advanced from Skoplje  and, having
routed  the ethnic Albanians  from Serbian territory, crossed to  Albania to
continue their pursuit.5
     The Vienna press published elaborate articles on great victories gained
by the ethnic Albanians and demanded a revision of the borders. Ismail Kemal
demanded  an exclusion of those regions encircled  by  the insurrection from
the Serbian state and proposed a plebiscite that would be implemented by the
infiltrated companies.  When  the  incursion was  checked,  the Vienna press
spread rumors of  alleged reprisals  committed  by Serbian  troops  upon the
innocent  Albanian people.  Austro-Hungarian diplomacy endeavored  to  prove
that an  insurrection had broken out  within Serbian territory, subsequently
joined by ethnic Albanians from the other side of the frontier.6
     To emphasize his pro-Serbian orientation, Essad Pasha took advantage of
the commotion resulting from the incursion, and in Durazzo, on September 23,
proclaimed  himself Governor of Albania. Before  the  European public, which
blamed the external activities of the Serbian army for the incursion, Serbia
intended to compromise the  government in Valona by proving that two  of its
ministers,  Isa  Boljetinac  and  Hasan  Pristina,  were the organizers  and
leaders of the incursion. Again  the issue  was brought up that  the borders
determined  by  the London conference  of ambassadors  were  unfavorable for
Serbia, since the outlaw  seedbeds around  Debar  and Ljuma demanded  by the
Serbian delegation were seriously imperiling Serbian territory.7
     Wilhelm von Wied arrived  in Albania  in March 1914. Pressured  by  the
International Control Committee, Essad Pasha was compelled to enter a united
government,  but did  receive two of its most important spheres of activity,
the Ministry of War and  Internal Affairs. Discontent of the Muslim Albanian
populace  with  the  government  of  the  infidel  prince  culminated  in  a
pro-Turkish  uprising  lead  by  Hadji-Qamil  Feiza, a  Young  Turk  officer
originally  from  Elbasan. Incited  by Muslim  fanaticism  and the unsettled
agrarian issue, the  uprising caused  general anarchy. Austro-Hungarian  and
Young  Turk agents inflamed discontent among  the Muslim masses. Essad Pasha
first supported the uprising, but was forced to emigrate  to Italy  in  May,
1914, having been checked by the prince's followers.8
     Simultaneously,  with  the  aid of  Austro-Hungarian  secret  services,
Albanian leaders  Bairam Cur  and  Isa Boljetinac were preparing for another
incursion into  Serbia. At the end of  March,  1914, several hundred  ethnic
Albanians crossed the border, having  received news that an uprising against
the Serbs broke out in some villages near  Orahovac. The  uprising spread to
four  villages.  Cur  and  Boljetinac  planned  to  bring  members  of   the
International  Control  Committee to  the rebelling  areas, where  the local
ethnic Albanians would  express their wish  for Djakovica,  Pec, Prizren and
regions until the railway Urosevac (Ferizovic) - Mitrovica, to be annexed to
Albania, as promised by Austria-Hungary.  Tension at the  borderline did not
cease.9
     1  I.  Balugdzic,  op.  cit.,  521-522; D. Mikic,  Albanci  i  Srbija u
balkanskim  ratovima,  pp. 75;  more  elaborate documentation:  Dokumenti  o
spoljnoj politici Kraljevine Srbije, VI/2, Doc. No 75, 77, 80,  86, 93, 100,
105, 124, 130, 135.
     2  Dokumenti o spoljnoj politici Kraljevine Srbije, VI/3, Doc. No  194,
239, 253,
     3 B. Hrabak, Arbanaski upadi i pobune na Kosovu i u Makedoniji od kraja
1912. do kraja 1915. godine (Nacionalno nerazvijeni i nejedinstveni Arbanasi
kao orudje u rukama zainteresovanih sila), Vranje 1988, pp. 33-38.
     4 Dokumenti o spoljnoj politici  Kraljevine Srbije,  VT/3, Doc. No 406,
cf. Doc. No 347, 351, 359, 378, 379, 418.
     5  B. Hrabak,  Arbanaski upadi i pobune  na Kosovu  i u Makedoniji, pp.
52-64.
     6 Dokumenti o spoljnoj  politici Kraljevine Srbije, VI/3, Doc. No  407,
408, 409.
     7 B. Hrabak, Arbanaski upadi i pobune na Kosovu i u Makedoniji, pp. 57.
60-61.
     8 B.  Hrabak,  Muslimani  severne Albanije  uoci  izbijanja rata  1914,
Zbornik za istoriju Matice srpske, 22 (1980), pp. 52-53.
     9 B. Hrabak, Arbanaski upadi i pobune na Kosovu i u Makedoniji, p. 93.
        In World War One
     The direct  cause  leading to World  War  One was the  assassination of
Austro-Hungarian  heir  to the  throne,  Franz  Ferdinand, in  Sarajevo,  by
Serbian  students (on  St. Vitus'  Day, June 28th, 1914),  thus symbolically
marking  the  commencement in the  outcome of Austro-Hungarian  and  Serbian
confrontation. Serbia's  victories in the  Balkan wars proved its  military,
political and  economical  strength;  in the Yugoslav provinces  of the Dual
Monarchy,  national  movement  grew,  turning to Belgrade as  the pillar  of
national  and South-Slavic assemblage. War with  Serbia turned  over  from a
considerable delay  of punitive  expedition to a war to destroy the  Serbian
state.  The Viennese diplomacy found reliable allies first with Albania  and
then with Bulgaria.1
     The opening of the war found the borderline between  Serbia and Albania
unrestful  and unconsolidated. Essad Pasha, follower of Balkan  cooperation,
was in  emigration, while civil war raged in Albania. The insurgents, called
"Ottomans", demanded a  Muslim for  a ruler,  and  for  the  flag,  and  the
character of state administration  to  be Ottoman. Refugee  Albanian leaders
from  Kosovo, organizers of the previous incursion into Serbia, did not take
part in the uprising; they awaited the opportunity to incite a rebellion and
seize Kosovo, Metohia and west Macedonia from Serbia.
     Two days before  war  was declared to  Serbia,  consular  officials  in
Albania  received orders from  Vienna to assist the Albanian insurrection on
Serbian territory. Bairam  Cur, Hasan Pristina and Isa  Boljetinac  obtained
money, arms and ammunition from  Austro-Hungarian consuls to prepare for the
insurrection.   In   Constantinople,   a   contract   was    concluded   for
Austria-Hungary to finance and urge the insurrection, while  the Young Turks
would handle  the  propaganda, military organization and  operations  of the
insurrection.   Incursions   onto  Serbian   territory  and   the   Albanian
insurrection in Kosovo, Metohia  and Macedonia were to  have been  the basis
for   opening   another   front  against  Serbia,   which   had,  after  the
Austro-Hungarian  attack, distributed its troops along  the  border with the
Dual Monarchy. The at first small-scale attacks were recorded already at the
beginning of  August,  1914. Turkish  and  Austro-Hungarian  association was
growing closer,  thus sealing the destiny of Prince  Wilhelm von Wied. After
several unsuccessful attempts to  crush  the insurrection, abandoned by  his
volunteers, the prince left Albania for good  at the beginning of September,
1914.2
     Shortly before the war, Serbia strove to win over some of the chiefs of
mid  and  north  Albania   for  cooperation.  The  agents  cruised   Albania
endeavoring to make contact with  dissatisfied chiefs. It was soon disclosed
that  Albanian  tribal and  feudal  chiefs  were  inconstant,  bribable  and
unreliable, that they  easily changed  sides for money  and, being without a
clear political conception and  strong national awareness, cared most of all
about  their personal and tribal interests.  Internal political polarization
between  them  was determined by religious  affiliation which  ascended over
national feelings.3
     Incursions  into  Serbia,   though  mostly  skirmishes  with  bordering
stations and gendarmes never ceased  since the war began. Even though  small
in number  and always rapidly checked, they increasingly disturbed competent
circles in  Serbia. Informed of preparations for  new  incursions of broader
dimensions, on the delivery of arms to Albania and the arrival of Young Turk
and   Austro-Hungarian  officers  to   join   Albanian   companies   at  the
Serbian-Albanian borderline, the government  sought a way to neutralize  the
preparations for  the  insurrection. Military  circles proposed a preventive
military intervention.4
     With the departure of Prince von Wied, no one held power in Albania. At
an assembly, a  senate of rebelling  towns in mid  and north  Albania  chose
Essad  Pasha for  their  leader, while the  Serbian  government  immediately
appealed to him to  take over  rule.  Nikola Pasic  contracted  with  him an
agreement of friendship, aid and customs union, in Nis, mid-September, 1914.
Aided by Pasic's government, supplying him with  money and arms, Essad Pasha
mustered around 5,000 Albanian  volunteers,  crossed  over  to  Albania  and
entered Durazzo at the beginning of October  without strife.  He immediately
formed  a government and proclaimed himself  Premier of Albania and  Supreme
Army Commander.5
     At the beginning of November,  Turkey engaged at war on the side of the
Central Powers and declared Holy War (jihad) to the Entante and  its allies.
Essad Pasha was  considered an enemy to Islam, being a friend to Serbia, and
therefore,  an ally  of  the Entante. The declaration  of jihad caused a new
pro-Turkish insurrection  of Muslim-fundamentalist forces, this time against
Essad Pasha. The rapidly spreading insurgent masses were lead by  Young Turk
officers.  The  entire  movement  was  of   anti-Serbian  orientation;   the
insurgents demanded the restoration of Albania under the  sovereignty of the
Ottoman Empire, with  Kosovo,  Metohia and  west  Macedonia  included in its
composition.  Greece and  Italy  benefited from  the new  opportunities. The
Greeks took north Epirus,  while  Italian troops  first occupied  the island
Sasseno and then Valona.6
     Essad Pasha's position in Durazzo was  becoming increasingly uncertain.
Thus the  Premier appealed  to  the  Serbian  government  more than once for
military  intervention  in Albania. In December,  1914, Serbia  successfully
withstood an Austro-Hungarian offensive. The Serbian  government feared that
following  their  defeat  north,  the  Austro-Hungarian  state  and military
circles  would urge  the  ethnic Albanians  to  war  Serbia,  which  imposed
preventive military action as a solution.
     Incursions of  broader dimension announced Hasan Pristina's  attempt to
organize  an  insurrection  in  Serbia  in February, 1915,  with  a  company
numbering around 200 men.  Three  bordering  villages  on  Serbian territory
joined the insurgents, but in the first clash with a stronger Serbian  unit,
Hasan Pristina's company  was crushed  and  banished to Albania.7
Pro-Turkish insurgents  besieged Essad  Pasha in Durazzo and demanded of him
to  recognize  the  sultan's power  and  declare war to  Serbia.  Pasic thus
believed  it  was  best  to  intervene  immediately  rather  than  wait  for
Austro-Hungarian and  Young Turk officers to muster an Albanian army against
which a whole Serbian army would be forced to fight. When a Serbian diplomat
reported  at the  end  of May that Essad Pasha's position was desperate, and
since Albanian companies had then attacked the Serbian border at two places,
the Serbian government decided to move its army and take strategic positions
in  Albania.  Around  20,000  Serbian soldiers  invaded Albania  from  three
directions.  In only  ten days  the Serbian troops  crushed  the  rebellious
movement, took Elbasan and Tirana and liberated the besieged  Essad Pasha in
Durazzo.  A  special  Albanian regiment was  formed  from Serbian  troops in
Albania to implement thorough pacification in Albania and  consolidate Essad
Pasha's position.8 Essad  Pasha  did not  succeed in establishing
power  in all  the northern and  middle  regions  of Albania.  In the Mirdit
region, Isa Boljetinac, Bairam Cur and Hasan Pristina were  hiding, while in
the  Mat  region,  pasha's  relative Ahmed  Bey  Zogu strove  to come to  an
agreement with the  Serbian military authorities; at his personal request he
went to Nis for negotiations with Pasic.9
     Serbia's military  intervention met with general complaints  in  allied
circles,  especially  with  Italy,  whose  claims  to  the  Albanian  coast,
warranted by a  secret London  Treaty  (1915),  were thus jeopardized by the
entrance  of  Serbian  troops.  Pasic  replied  to  protests  sent  by  ally
diplomacies  that it was only  a  matter of temporary action and  the troops
would  withdraw after consolidating Essad  Pasha's regime. To secure Serbian
positions  in  Albania  after  the  war was  over,  the  Serbian  government
contracted  a  secret agreement in  June,  1914,  in Tirana, anticipating an
actual union between the two countries. Essad Pasha consented to rectify the
border to Serbia's advantage, and in return  received  warranty  of Serbia's
support for his choice of ruler to Albania.10
     The beginning of the German - Austro-Hungarian offensive against Serbia
in autumn, 1915,  Bulgaria's engagement in war on the side  of  the  Central
Powers  and  its  attack on Serbia,  forced the Serbian  army to war  on two
fronts and  withdraw to the interior  of  the country.  Bulgaria's incursion
into  Macedonia threatened to cut off  the  retreat  of the Serbian army  to
Greece. Its  retreat and Bulgaria's penetration into the depths of Macedonia
emboldened  ethnic  Albanians  in Kosovo, Metohia and  Macedonia. Masses  of
ethnic Albanians recruited into the Serbian army became  deserters, and many
joined   the   Bulgarians   who   gave  them  arms.  With   Austro-Hungarian
advance-guards, they attacked Serbian soldiers whom they awaited in the Ibar
valley.
     When the  Serbian  army  reached  Kosovo, followed  by  many  refugees,
various diversions  and surprise  attacks  on field trains were effected. In
many villages ethnic Albanians refused to provide food  for the refugees and
soldiers. In  Istok,  on  November  29, 1915, a company of  Serbian soldiers
lagging behind  was massacred. Near  the St. Marko monastery in the vicinity
of  Prizren, ethnic  Albanians of  the Kabash clan deceitfully  disarmed and
then killed 60 Serbian soldiers.  After the Serbian army retreated from Pec,
ethnic  Albanians   pillaged  many   Serbian   homes   and   sacked   shops.
Austro-Hungarian guards prevented them from entering the hospital in Pec, in
front of  which  they gathered  to  massacre the wounded soldiers. They  set
ambushes near Mitrovica, killed soldiers and looted refugees. Serious crimes
were committed in Suva Reka and other regions of Kosovo.11
     At  the end of November, after  the Bulgarians cut off all  connections
with Salonika, the  Serbian Supreme Command decided to withdraw  the army to
Albania  and make the necessary reorganizations there. The withdrawal of the
Serbian army through Albania, in winter 1915-1916, has  been retained as the
"Albanian Golgotha". With the  entrance  of  the Serbian army into  Albania,
Essad Pasha issued an announcement appealing to the Albanian people to  help
the amicable  army  and  sell their  food.  In regions  under  his immediate
control,  Albanian  gendarmes considerably helped to ease the  withdrawal of
the  starving  army,  inflicted  by  disease,  through  impassable mountains
covered  with snow. Essad Pasha's  gendarmes took care  of  overnight stays,
food supplies and guarded the roads.
     The  regions  to  which  Essad   Pasha's  authority  did  not  stretch,
particularly Ljuma, Mirdits, Drims and partly in Mati, the Serbian  army was
forced to clear with guns, on its way toward the  Adriatic Sea.  In Mirdits,
Mat and  other regions, Catholic friars called  to the  ethnic  Albanians to
confront the Serbian army in arms.  Rumors spread  that Prince  Wilhelm  von
Wied  was  arriving   from  Prizren  with  Austro-Hungarian  troops,  ethnic
Albanians  avoided  confrontation  with  large   military  formations;  they
preferred  to  wait in  ambush in  high  gorges  for  lagging  soldiers  and
refugees, and then and murder them.  The heaviest battles were  waged in the
Mirdits by a Combined Regiment of the  Serbian army that fell into ambush at
the gorge  of  the Fani river.  Around 800  ethnic  Albanians commanded by a
Catholic friar let  the army pass  through only after they were  given large
quantities of supplies from the field train.  In places where there  were no
armed assaults,  the  ethnic  Albanians  refused to rent rooms for overnight
stay and sell food.12
     General chaos encircled the withdrawal  of the Serbian army, with Essad
Pasha endeavoring  to restore order with  his gendarmes; but chaos and  fear
caught hold of his people and disobedience ensued. Still, most of his troops
protected  the Serbian  army  during  its retreat  and, whenever  necessary,
fought   together   with   it  against   Albanian   companies   that  joined
Austro-Hungarian and  Bulgarian troops. After much turmoil  and long marches
toward the  south,  the Serbian  army  was transferred by  allied ships from
Albania to Corfu. Squeezed in between Bulgarian and Austro-Hungarian troops,
Essad Pasha  was forced to submit to  the  Italians;  escorted by  a Serbian
emissary, with a thousand  most devoted followers, he crossed  over to Italy
by boat.13
     Kosovo and Metohia  were divided into two Austro-Hungarian occupational
zones: Metohia entered the General Government  "Montenegro", while a smaller
part  of  Kosovo  with  Kosovska Mitrovica and  Vucitrn became  part  of the
General Government "Serbia". The largest part of Kosovo  (Pristina, Prizren,
Gnjilane,  Urosevac,  Orahovac) was  included  in  the  composition  of  the
Bulgarian Military-Inspectional region "Macedonia".14
     In Metohia and  Kosovo, Austro-Hungarian authorities  aimed to win over
the Albanian and Muslim populace:  schools and the local administration were
conducted  in  the  Albanian  language.  Albanian inhabitants were obviously
privileged.  The  occupational authorities  of the Dual Monarchy immediately
established  contact  with  the  leaders. Many refugee chiefs returned  from
Albania, while  beys  from Kosovo  and former Turkish  officers from Sandzak
cooperated most closely with the new authorities. Hasan Pristina and Dervish
Bey handled the conscription of volunteers who  were assigned either  to the
Bosnia-Herzegovinian gendarmes or the Turkish corps fighting at the front in
Galicia.   A   bulk   of  Albanian   volunteers   entered  the   service  of
Austro-Hungarian military command in Kosovska  Mitrovica and served in small
posse  regiments. At the  beginning of 1917,  Dervish  Bey  was nominated as
commander of a distinct volunteer  battalion (a force of 400 men), comprised
mainly of ethnic Albanians.15
     The  Bulgarian occupation  of  Kosovo  has been  retained  by its great
oppression,  internment   of   civilians,  forced   Bulgarization,  and  the
persecution  and murder  of priests. The  former Raska-Prizren  Metropolitan
Nicifor, was interned in  Bulgaria and killed. Serbian priests  suffered the
most, being  persecuted and  murdered  on both occupational zones  by ethnic
Albanians  and Bulgarians. Bulgarian  authorities assigned  ethnic Albanians
and Turks to all village communities as chiefs, officials and gendarmes, who
helped  their  compatriots to raid  and plunder without  disturbance, to win
trials against Serbs in courts, and murders were often hushed up. In certain
villages,  Turks and  ethnic  Albanians  oppressed the  Serbs  of  Kosovo in
conjunction.16
     In the area between Juzna Morava and Kopaonik, a komitadji movement had
been  growing since 1916, under the leadership of Kosta Vojinovic-Kosovac of
Mitrovica,  which  at the  beginning of  1917 turned into  a  large national
insurrection  with  its  seat  at  Toplica.  ethnic  Albanians  took part in
persecuting  Serbian  komitadjis  in  the   Mitrovica  district.  The  armed
resistance was aided by many Serbs  from Kosovo. Attempts made  by insurgent
leaders to win over  ethnic  Albanians through negotiations failed. Albanian
companies  attacked the insurgents,  and in October, 1917, special  Albanian
and Turkish units were formed to fight them.17
     After  being transferred to  Corfu,  the Serbian army,  reorganized and
supplemented by volunteers, was disposed along the Salonika front along with
allied troops. Crossing over from Italy to Paris, with the aid of the French
diplomacy,  Essad  Pasha  arrived  at  Salonika and formed  a  new  Albanian
government  which acquired the status of  an emigrant ally cabinet, owing to
Serbian  and  French intermediation.  A special army  unit  was  formed from
around  1,000  gendarmes  (Essad  Pasha's  camp  and Albanian  archers), and
disposed in juxtaposition  to  the  Serbian Ohrid regiment  as  part  of the
French East Army. Premier Nikola Pasic's idea was to admix  the forces  with
Serbian    ones   and   direct    operations   toward   Kosovo   and   north
Albania.18
     In autumn, 1918, subsequent to the penetration of the Salonika Front, a
widespread   national   insurrection   developed   in   Serbia.   When   the
Austro-Hungarian   troops   abandoned   the   line   Skoplje-Pristina,   the
insurrection  spread  to Kosovo  and  Metohia.  French  and  Serbian  troops
commanded  by General Tranier emerged in Kosovo at the beginning of October,
liberating  Pristina,  Prizren, Gnjilane  and Mitrovica.  Serbian  komitadji
companies, lead  by Kosta  Milovanovic  Pecanac, met with  French  troops in
Mitrovica  and immediately set off to Pec. Serbian komitadjis surrounded the
town,  compelling  the  considerably  stronger  Austro-Hungarian  troops  to
surrender;  then  the French  cavalry  trotted  into town. Divisions of  the
second  Serbian army also  arrived  in  Kosovo  and  established  civil  and
temporary martial law.19
     After the arrival of Serbian and French units, the Albanian people bore
themselves  coldly and with reserve. When the  bodies of troops continued to
advance  toward  Montenegro,  ethnic  Albanians  began  to  assail  solitary
soldiers  at the  end  of October. The  reason was the  injunction  given by
Serbian military authorities  to  collect all state  property  left from the
Bulgarian administration. Obtaining supplies from communities with arms left
behind, the ethnic Albanians  began  to assail Serbian  civil  and  military
authorities,  while  the  injunction  to   surrender  arms  met  with  heavy
resistance.  Community seats, villages  and  small  military  garrisons were
attacked,  while during November entire villages in Dr