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Uskoks

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Uskoci
LeadersNumerous,Petar Kružić,Ivan Lenković,Stojan Janković,Janko Mitrović, Ivo Senjanin
Dates of operationMainly from early 16th-18th century
HeadquartersMobile, two most famous:
Active regionsDepending on history period and Ottoman advance, but mainly in:
Part ofVarious / Undetermined:
  • Croatian Habsburg soldiers
  • Military frontier soldiers
  • Piracy, irregular army
OpponentsPrimarily Ottoman Empire, but also Republic of Venice and others
Petar Kružić
Ivan Lenković, ruler of Senj and Military Frontier commander
Carniolan Uskoks in a engraving from Janez Vajkard Valvasor's monograph The Glory of the Duchy of Carniola, 17th century.

The Uskoci (Serbo-Croatian pronunciation: [ˈuskɔtsi], meaning "Uskoks"; singular: Uskok) were Croatian Habsburg[1][2][3] soldiers that inhabited the areas of the eastern Adriatic and the surrounding territories during the Ottoman wars in Europe. Etymologically, the word uskok itself means "the ones who jumped in" ("the ones who ambushed") in Croatian. Bands of Uskoks fought a fairly successful guerrilla war against the Ottomans, and they formed small units and rowed swift boats. Since the uskoks were checked on land and were rarely paid their annual subsidy, they resorted to acts of piracy.

The exploits of the uskoks contributed to a renewal of war between Venice and the Ottoman Empire (1571 - 1573). An extremely curious picture of contemporary manners is presented by the Venetian agents, whose reports on this war resemble a knightly chronicle of the Middle Ages. These chronicles contain information pertaining to single combats, tournaments and other chivalrous adventures.

Many of these troops served abroad. At the Battle of Lepanto in 1571, for example, a Dalmatian squadron assisted the allied fleets of Spain, Venice, Austria and the Papal States to crush the Ottoman navy.

History

Early period

Klis Fortress (16th century)

During the early years of the 16th century, the Ottoman conquest of Bosnia and Herzegovina drove large numbers of Croats from their homes which prompted the formation of the uskoci. Also, large numbers Serbian[4][5] refugees fleeing Ottoman persecution, joined the ranks of the Uskok bands.A body of these "uskoks" established itself in the Klis Fortress near Split, waged war against the Ottomans, led by Croatian capitan Petar Kružić. Klis, however, became untenable, and the uskoks withdrew to Senj, on the Croatian coast. There, in accordance with the Austrian system of planting colonies of defenders along the Military Frontier, they were welcomed by Emperor Ferdinand I. Moreover, the uskoks were promised an annual subsidy in return for their services.

Their new stronghold, screened by mountains and forests, was unassailable by cavalry or artillery. However, the fortress was admirably suitable to the lightly-armed uskoks who were excellent in guerilla warfare. The Ottomans, on their part, organized a body of equally effective troops of Orthodox Vlachs and Serbs called the Martelossi needed for defence purposes and reprisals. Since the uskoks were checked on land and were rarely paid their annual subsidy, they resorted to acts of piracy.

Large galleys could not anchor in the bay of Senj, which is shallow and exposed to sudden gales. So, the uskoks fitted out a fleet of swift boats, which were light enough to navigate the smallest creeks and inlets of the shores of Illyria. Moreover, these boats were helpful in providing the uskoks a temporary landing on shore. With these they were able to attack numerous commercial areas on the Adriatic. Eventually, the uskoks saw their ranks swell as outlaws from all nations joined them. These outlaws also included people from areas such as Novi Vinodolski, Otočac and other towns in what is today Croatia.

Ottoman invasion and Venice

Fortress Nehaj in Senj built by Ivan Lenković in 1558

After 1540, however, Venice, as mistress of the seas, guaranteed the safety of Ottoman merchant vessels, and provided them with an escort of galleys. The uskoks retaliated by ravaging the Venetian islands of Krk, Rab and Pag. Moreover, they utilized the Venetian territories in Dalmatia as a springboard in order to launch attacks against the Ottomans. Meanwhile, the corsairs of Greece and Africa were free to raid the unprotected southern shores of Italy. Venice was besieged with complaints from the Porte, the Vatican, and the Viceroy of Naples with his sovereign, the King of Spain. A Venetian appeal to Austria for help met with little success, and the offenses of the uskoks against the Venetians were outweighed by their attacks against the Ottomans. Minuccio Minucci, a Venetian envoy at Graz, states that a share of the uskoks' spoils of silk, velvet and jewels, went to the ladies of the Archducal Court of Graz, where important matters between Venice and Austria were negotiated.

From 1577 onwards, Venice endeavored to crush the pirates without offending Austria, enlisting Albanians in place of their Dalmatian crews, who feared reprisals at home. For a time the uskoks only ventured forth at night, during the winter season and even during stormy weather.

In 1592, a strong Ottoman army invaded Croatia hoping to capture Senj. Led by Telli Hasan Pasha, the beylerbey of Bosnia, the Ottomans managed to capture a number of uskok settlements, killing and enslaving the population. However, the army was routed and dispersed in the following year. Austria was involved in war with the Ottomans and the Venetian admiral Giovanni Bembo blockaded Trieste and Rijeka (Fiume), where the pirates forwarded their booty for sale. They also erected two forts to command the passages from Senj to the open sea.

In 1602, a raid by the uskoks upon Istria resulted in an agreement between Venice and Austria, and the dispatch to Senj of the energetic commissioner Rabatta with a strong bodyguard. All these measures, however, provided very little results. Rabatta was eventually murdered, and the fugitive uskoks returned to Senj where they resumed their acts of piracy. The uskoks would conduct such acts up until 1615 when their piracy went so far as creating an open war between Venice and Austria. Venice, frustrated with the piracy, launched an attack after the Archduke Ferdinand of Styria refused to reprimand the uskoks. A peace treaty was signed at Madrid in autumn 1617 which arranged for the uskoks be disbanded, as well as their ships and fortresses be destroyed. The pirates and their families were, accordingly, transported to the interior of Croatia, where they gave their name to the "Uskoken Gebirge", a group of mountains on the borders of Carniola now called Žumberak/Gorjanci, as well as White Carniola and Kostel in what is now Slovenia. Their presence has also been traced near Učka in Istria, where such significant family names as Novlian (from Novi Vinodolski), Ottocian (from Otočac) and Clissan (from Klis, older orthography), were noted by Franceschi in 1879.

However, the Austrian Military Sea Frontier authority survived, and Uskok activity resumed in later years, almost causing another war between Habsburg and Venice in 1707.

Notable uskoci

See also

References

  1. ^ Fine (2006), pp. 216-219.
  2. ^ Singleton (1989), p. 61.
  3. ^ Council of Europe (2003), p. 247.
  4. ^ Norman Davies (1996), p. 561.
  5. ^ Goffman (2002), p. 190.
  • Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)

Bibliography

  • Fine, John Van Antwerp (2006). When ethnicity did not matter in the Balkans. Michigan: The University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0-472-11414-X.
  • Singleton, Frederick Bernard (1989). A short history of the Yugoslav peoples. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-27485-0.
  • Council of Europe (2003). Parliamentary Assembly - Working papers - 2003 Ordinary Session January 2003 - Volume I - Documents 9519, 9568 & 9576-9639. Strasbourg: Council of Europe Publishing. ISBN 0-521-27485-0, 92-871-5135-0. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: invalid character (help)
  • Goffman, Daniel (2002). The Ottoman Empire and early modern Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-45908-7, 0-521-45280-5. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: invalid character (help)

Further reading

  • See Minuccio Minucci, Historia degli Uscochi (Venice, 1603); enlarged by Paolo Sarpi, and translated into French as a supplement to Amelot de la Houssaye's Histoire du gouvernement de Venise (Amsterdam, 1/05). Minucci was one of the Venetian envoys at Graz.
  • See also the conciser narratives in C. de Franceschi's L'Istria, chap. 37 (Parenzo, 1879); and T. G. Jackson's Dalmatia, the Quarnero and Istria, chap. 27 (Oxford, 1887).
  • Catherine Wendy Bracewell's The Uskoks of Senj: Piracy, Banditry and Holy War in the Sixteenth-Century Adriatic is the most comprehensive contemporary source on Uskoks.
  • Wendy Bracewell also published a study of the Uskok women in a collection titled "Žene u Hrvatskoj" in 2004

External links