Tasa Konević
Tasa Konević | |
---|---|
Nickname(s) | Priest Tasa (pop Tasa) |
Born | 1872 Krapa, Ottoman Empire (close to Makedonski Brod, now North Macedonia) |
Died | 1916 |
Allegiance |
|
Years of service | 1903–1916 |
Unit | Krapa band |
Battles / wars | Macedonian Struggle |
Tasa Konević Apostolović (Template:Lang-sr[a]; d. 1916) was an Orthodox priest and Macedonian Serb Chetnik from Krapa in Poreče. He was the son of a local Serb chief, Kone Apostolović, who was the leader of the Prilep Serbs at the end of the 19th century, and one of the richest in the village. Priest Tasa was the protector of Serbdom in Poreče and led the local guerrilla organization. He participated in the Ilinden Uprising (July–August 1903), orchestrated by the Bulgarian-organized Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO), with a Serb band. After the Kokošinje slaughters (July–October 1904) and IMRO attacks on Macedonian Serbs, he organized the village self-defense units and joined Gligor Sokolović and his neighbour Trenko Rujanović, of the Serbian Chetnik Organization. Tasa defended and administrated the village throughout the Macedonian Struggle. An important event was the attack on Krapa by combined bands of the IMRO, which ended in a fight on Kurt's Stone won by the Serbian bands. Tasa was murdered in 1916, in the Derviš fields massacre when the occupying Bulgarian Army executed 104 Serb leaders from Poreče.[1]
Annotations
- ^ Name: His most used name is Tasa Konević (Таса Коневић), also spelled Tase (Тасе Коневић). Konević is a patronymic, from his father, Kone Apostolović. Tase's family name in Serbian is Apostolović (Апостоловић).
See also
References
- ^ Trbić 1996, pp. 82–92
Sources
- Društvo "Sveti Sava" (2009). "BRATSTVO XIII" (PDF) (in Serbian). Belgrade. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-24.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - Trbić, Vasilije (1996). Memoari: 1898-1912 (in Serbian). Kultura. ISBN 9788678010132.
- 20th-century Serbian people
- 1916 deaths
- Serbian rebels
- Serbian Orthodox clergy
- Executed Serbian people
- Executed Macedonian people
- 20th-century executions by Bulgaria
- People executed by military occupation forces
- 1872 births
- People from Makedonski Brod Municipality
- Chetniks of the Macedonian Struggle
- Serbian military personnel of the Balkan Wars
- Serbian military personnel of World War I
- Serbian military personnel killed in World War I
- Armed priests
- Executed revolutionaries
- Serbs of North Macedonia