First Balkan Alliance
The First Balkan Alliance (Serbian: Први балкански савез/Prvi balkanski savez) was a system of agreements concluded by the Principality of Serbia in the period of 1866–68 to unite the nations of the Balkans in a common struggle against the Ottoman Empire.[1] The plans for forging this alliance were based on the organization of a major general uprising, as opposed to individual uprisings by the various ethnic groups in Ottoman territory. According to the plans, the Albanians would begin the uprising, followed by Serb and Greek volunteers and finally and simultaneously by the regular armies of Serbia and Greece.[2] According to the plans and agreements, after a successful war against the Ottomans, the Balkan nations would establish a united federation.[3]
Type | Military alliance |
---|---|
Context | Anti-Ottoman Empire |
Drafted | 1866 |
Signed |
|
Negotiators | Ilija Garašanin |
Parties |
|
This alliance was conceived as part of one of various proposals for a Balkan federation, planned as a buffer zone between East and West.[4] Members of the First Balkan Alliance were Serbia, Montenegro, Bulgarian revolutionary committees, the Croatian People's Party, Greece and Romania.[5][6] The major role in establishing of the First Balkan Alliance was played by Serbia, under Prince Mihailo Obrenović and Prime Minister Ilija Garašanin.
Background
In the middle of the 19th century, most of the territory of Balkans was still part of the Ottoman Empire, with several newly established independent or autonomous entities like Serbia, Greece, Bulgaria and Montenegro. All of them struggled to expand their influence and territory at Ottoman expense. Their intention was strongly opposed by Austria who opposed development of Balkan nations and revolutions in the Ottoman provinces of Europe (Rumelia).[7] Austria's position was based on its own expansionistic plans on the Balkans and on fear that a strong Slavic state would attract Slavic citizens of the Austrian Empire. After defeat in the war against France in 1859 and against Prussia in 1866, the influence of Austria weakened.
Napoleon III was the champion of the idea of Balkan nationalism and fostered Serbia and Greece to build alliances and undermine Ottoman influence in the region.[8] France planned to resolve the Balkan Eastern Question through gathering of all Balkan Slavic people, including Bulgarians, around Serbia as their pillar.[9] This was not only informally suggested by French diplomats since 1861, but also formally proposed in Saint Petersburg in 1867.[10] The establishment of Balkan alliances was supported and aided by Russia because it corresponded with its policy of promoting Balkan unity.[11]
Alliance agreements
The establishment of the Balkan alliance was campaigned by Prince Mihailo Obrenović of Serbia.[12] To establish the First Balkan Alliance, the Principality of Serbia signed a series of contracts in the period 1866–68. The first contract was signed with Montenegro in 1866. The next contract was signed in autumn of 1866 with the People's Party in Croatia-Slavonia led by Catholic bishop Josip Juraj Strossmayer. This contract was followed by contract with Bulgarian Revolutionary Secret Society in 1867,[8] with Greece in 1867 and with Romania in 1868.[13]
Montenegro
The agreement between Serbia and Montenegro was signed on 5 October 1866 in Cetinje.[14] According to the agreement, Serbia and Montenegro would act as an unified Serb country.[15]
Bulgarian societies
Contemporary Bulgarian leaders maintained friendly relations with the Serbian government and Serbia was regarded as a brother state, which was acting as a protector of its Slavic brethren. However, in the second half of 1866, Serbia failed to contact any serious Bulgarian political party.[16] Nevertheless, in 1867, a Bulgarian society, active in Bucharest took the initiative. That was the so-called "Benevolent Society". This Society was urged on by the Russian diplomats to approach the Serbian state with a draft-agreement. The document was titled "Programme for Serbo-Bulgarian (Bulgaro-Serbian) political relations and the cordial relationships between them". The Bulgarian side proposed the founding of a Serbo-Bulgarian (Bulgaro-Serbian) dual state, headed by the Serbian Prince. This state was to be named Yugoslav Tsardom and was to have a common government, legislation, army etc. The draft defined also the territories that would constitute Bulgaria as follows: Bulgaria (Moesia), Thrace and Macedonia and per the Serbian newspaper, Vidov Dan (No. 38, March 29, 1862), the Bulgarian-Serbian frontier extended from the Danube in North, along the Timok and South Morava Rivers and then along the Black Drin River to the Lake Ohrid.[17] Garašanin accepted the Bulgarian proposal in a letter from June 1867, but he diplomatically refused to sign the document, fearing how representative this organisation had been.[18] On the other hand, the establishment of the Balkan alliance concerned other Bulgarian organisations, which perceived it as an of implementation Garašanin's twenty-year-old Načertanije.[19][20]
Macedonia
The Serbian government planned to organize an uprising of the population of Macedonia and for that reason established a network of agents in western Macedonia, Stojan Vezenkov being most notable among these.[21]
Greece
A military alliance treaty between the Kingdom of Greece and the Principality of Serbia was signed on 26 August 1867. The treaty had been negotiated by Greek minister Zanos and Serbian ministers Ristić, Petronijević and Garašanin.[22]
Romania
At the beginning of February 1868 the last of alliance agreements was signed with Romania.[23] This agreement was mostly about trade relations.[24] It confirmed that most of the Balkan countries were more ready to negotiate improvement of commercial relations than to accept firmer obligations.[25]
Croatia and Slavonia
The government of Serbia maintained close relations with the People's Party in Croatia-Slavonia, a neo-Illyrian party led by Catholic bishop Josip Juraj Strossmayer.[26] Garašanin struggled for the idea of Yugoslavia (dominated by Serbia) and supported cooperation with Croats.
Matija Mrazović was in charge of the foreign affairs of the People's Party. In his correspondence with Strossmayer he frequently discussed the contract between Serbian government and People's Party, without explaining its character or its date. This contract was apparently signed in Autumn of 1866. The most important purpose of this contract and its main objective was the capture of Ottoman Bosnia by Serbia, as the first step in the creation of an independent south Slavic state. Mrazović believed that Serbia could not survive as an independent state if Austria-Hungary would capture Bosnia and Herzegovina from Ottomans. The People's Party actively participated in the preparation of Serbian capture of Ottoman Bosnia. On 29 December 1867 Mrazović informed the Government of Serbia that it can count on thousand Croats employed in a factory near Sarajevo.[27]
In 1868 Prince Mihailo gave up war against the Ottoman Empire and instead intended to sign a treaty with Austria, despite Garašanin's Yugoslavist ideas.[28] Mrazović could not accept the thought that Serbia gave up its agreed action in Bosnia and saw this as a rejection of an important precondition for survival of Serbia.[29]
Albanians
Garašanin believed that Albanians would be the biggest obstacle in case of general anti-Ottoman uprising in the Balkans, so he tried to establish cooperation with Albanian leaders.[30] Already in 1844 Garašanin established relations with Catholic Albanians (Mirdita).[31] Thanks to Mirdita's Catholic priest Gaspar Krasniqi, with whom Garašanin began communication in 1846, Garašanin signed an agreement about united activities with Mirdita chieftain Bib Doda in 1849.[32] Garašanin believed that Albania should be established as an independent state.[33] The eventual Albanian state was to encompass territories between rivers Drin (Drim) and Aoös (Vojuša).[34]
In 1864 Garašanin sent captain Ljubomir Ivanović to northern Albania. Ivanović closely cooperated with Gaspar Krasniqi until the middle of 1865 when Krasniqi was expelled to Istanbul (the Ottoman capital) by the Ottomans, because of his participation in the unrests aimed against Mirdita chieftain Bib Doda.[35][36] Ivanović had to send his reports to Garašanin through another Catholic priest, Jozef (Franc) Mauri,[37] a Slovene Franciscan.[38] Garašanin believed that it would be easier to establish cooperation with the Catholics in Albania (than Muslims), thus appointed Mauri as his envoy to the leaders of Mirdita tribe.[39] Mauri explained to Mirdita chieftains that Serbia had no intention to forcefully convert Mirdita to Orthodox Christianity, but instead to help them to enjoy all rights they would have i.e. in Austro-Hungarian Empire.[40] Besides Mauri who was active in Albania, the Serbian government engaged another envoy, Naum Sido, to actively work on gaining Albanian support for the Alliance.[41] Sido was an Orthodox Albanian merchant from Debar (in western Macedonia)[42][43] who frequently travelled to Istanbul. In 1866 an uprising erupted in the Čemernik region near Elbasan, when Albanians refused to pay taxes and attacked Ottoman officials.[44]
Xhelal Pasha, a member of the Albanian noble Zogu family planned to organize an anti-Ottoman uprising in Albania and through Sido he informed the Russian ambassador in Istanbul about his plans. Sido worked for Nikolay Pavlovich Ignatyev, Russian ambassador in Istanbul who helped Garašanin to establish cooperation with Xhelal Pasha.[45] Xhelal Pasha had great hopes to forge alliance with Serbia and refused the position of governor of Kurdistan offered to him by the Ottomans.[46] Being under the pressure of the Ottoman police and facing substantial personal debts, Xhelal Pasha had to accept offered position in Anatolia and his task to suppress some revolt of highlander tribes. Because of this transfer the Serbian government lost contact with him.[47]
The repressive policy of Ismail Pasha, Ottoman vali of the Sanjak of Scutari, additionally inspired northern Albanian tribes to participate in Serbia's anti-Ottoman activities. He imprisoned Miraši-Asi and Prek Staku, the chieftains of Hoti and Kelmendi tribes, who decided to cooperate with Serbia and accepted Mauri's idea as soon as they were released from the prison of Skadar.[48] The chieftains of the northern Albanian tribes were so impatient to revolt against Ottomans that a sole visit of Serbian agent Vezenković sparked premature revolts.[49] When Vezenković returned to Belgrade he urged the Serbian government to begin with the Albanian insurrection explaining that 10,000 Albanian rebels were prepared to revolt.[50] At the end of 1867 a large Albanian revolt aimed against introduction of new taxes erupted in the regions of Peć, Prizren and Đakovica.[51]
Collapse and aftermath
After the murder of Prince Mihailo Obrenović in 1868, he was succeeded by his 13-year-old grandnephew Milan Obrenović. Without Mihailo's strong direction, the Balkan alliance network collapsed.[52] In the following years only Montenegro was ready to renew already agreed measures, which resulted with a new alliance agreement in 1876.[53]
Although this alliance was not successful, it was an indicator of a more aggressive period of Balkan nationalisms after the Berlin Congress (1878).[54]
References
- Petković 1996, p. 43: "Први балкански савез је систем уговора из 1866–1868, који је закључила Србија ради окупљања балканских народа за борбу против Турске."
- Istorijski institut u Beogradu (1992). Posebna izdanja. 27. Izdanje Istorijskog Instituta. p. 133.
.. треба предупрећивати појединачне устанке и заједнички договорити дан ошцтег устанка; устанак ће почети Арнаути, за њима ће кренути Српски и Грчки добровољци, а затим истовремено Србија и Грчка.
- Srejović, Gavrilović & Ćirković 1981, p. 439: "..а после успешног рата би се створила велика заједничка држава"
- Király & Rothenberg 1979, p. 207: "The First Balkan Alliance of 1866–68 was based on a combination of the first and third options: protection from European interference and aggression against the Ottomans."
- Ljušić 2005, p. 1862 "Савез су чиниле Србија, Црна Гора, бу- гарски револуционарни комитети, хрватска Народна странка, Грчка и Румунија (1866–1868)."
- Popov 2000, p. 138: "Склапањем уговора са Црном Гором (1866), споразума са хрватском Народном ... Грчком (1867) и војне конвенције (1868), као и уговора о савезу са Румунијом (1868) створен је Први балкански савез."
- Reid 2000, p. 309
- Reid 2000, p. 309.
- Popović 1940, p. 111: "Француски план за решење источног питања на Балкану узимао је Србију као стожер око кога је требало да се окупе сви балкански словенски народи, дакле и Бугари."
- Popović 1940, p. 111: "То се види не само индиректно из споменутих наговештених планова њених дипломата из 1861 него и из једног формалног предлога који је она ставила у Петрограду 1867."
- Jelavich 2004, p. 153: "In line with its policy of promoting Balkan unity, the Russian government encouraged and aided in the formation of these alliances. "
- Crampton 1987, p. 16.
- Jelavich 2004, p. 153.
- Popović 2010: "Уговор између Србије и Црне Горе, први те врсте, потписан је на Цетињу 23. септембра/5. октобра 1866. "
- Škerović 1952, p. xvi : "Другим речима, Србија и Црна Гора имале су да наступају кзо 1единствена српска држава"
- Вучковић 1963, p. 279
- Ethnic Mapping on the Balkans (1840–1925): a Brief Comparative Summary of Concepts and Methods of Visualization, Demeter, Gábor and al. (2015) In: (Re)Discovering the Sources of Bulgarian and Hungarian History. Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia; Budapest, p. 85.
- Papadrianos, Ioannis: “The First Balkan Alliance (1860–1868) and the Bulgarians,” Balkan Studies, 42 (2001): pp. 15–20.
- Crampton 1987, p. 16: "...a Balkan alliance, which alarmed both Bulgarians and Turks with its implications of Serbian expansionism as expounded two decades previously, in Garasanin's Nacertanie, the Serbian equivalent of Greek Megali Idea."
- SANU 1993, p. 172: "The result of Nacertumje's implementation was the establishment of the first Balkan alliance (1866–1868)..."
- IZNI 1969, pp. v, 56: "У западној Македонији радило је више агената, али је нај- важнији био Стојан Везенко, из Крушева"
- Istorijski institut u Beogradu (1992). Posebna izdanja. 27. Izdanje Istorijskog Instituta. p. 133.
- Vučinić 1996, p. 70
- Jerotijević & Radojević 2007, p. 26: "Уговор између Србије и Румуније потписан је 1868. године, али се углавном односио на трговинске односе."
- Stolić 2003, p. 75: "Последњи споразум постигнут је са Румунијом 1868. и он је показао да је већина балканских земаља била спремнија да преговара о унапређењу трговине него да се везује неким чвршћим обавезама."
- SANU 1993, p. 172: "... close relations with the neo-lllyrian, National party (Narodnastranka) in Croatia-Slavonia led by Bishop Josip Juraj Strossmayer."
- Vera Ciliga, Narodna stranka i južnoslavensko pitanje (1866–70), Historijski zbornik, XVII, Zagreb, 1964, pp. 86, 87
- Institut 1992, p. 204
- Vera Ciliga, Narodna stranka i južnoslavensko pitanje (1866–70), Historijski zbornik, XVII, Zagreb, 1964, p. 86
- Slijepčević 1983, p. 172
- SANU 1985, p. 127: "Гарашанин је рачунао на сарадњу са католичким Албанцима и он још 1844. успоставља везу с њима."
- SANU 1985, p. 127: "...а од 1846 је у вези са мирдитским опатом Гаспаром Красником, захваљујући коме је дошло и до споразума о заједничкој акцији са мирдитским кнезом Боб Додом 1849. године."
- Stojančević 1990, p. 242 : Дубље проучавање арбанашких прилика учврстило Гарашанина у мишљењу да је боље створити од Албаније независну државу.
- Stojančević 1991, p. 336: "У складу са овом оријентацијом, он је 1866/67. године предложив да Грцима припадне Крит, Епир и Тесалија, а Србији — Босна, Херцеговина и Стара Србија до Дрима и Искра, оставивши, сада, могућност стварања албанске државе између Дрима и Војуше."
- Јакшић & Вучковић 1963, p. 241
- Институт 1963, p. 241 :"... је Гарашанин у прошлости везу преко мири- дитског опата Гаспара Красника. Она је прекинута средином 1865, када ..."
- Jovanović 1977, p. 107: Један од њих је био католички свештених из Горице Јозеф (Франц) Маури.
- Slijepčević 1983, p. 172
- Slijepčević 1983, p. 173: "Илија Гарашанин је, вели Гргур Јакшић, знао да је у Арбанији много лакше радити са католицима, због чега је центар ових акција увек био у Миридитима, него ... Франц Маури је дошао у Београд и поднео писмени извештај."
- Slijepčević 1983, p. 173
- Instituti 1924, p. 169
- Poplazarov 1977, p. 181: "... трговец Наум Сидо, православен Албанец од Дебар "
- Instituti 1924, p. 169
- Akademija 1977, p. 130 : "Godine 1866. izbio je ustanak u Cermeniku u okolini Elbasana, kada su Albanci otkazali turskim vlastima plaćanje dažbina i izvršili napade na turske organe vlasti. "
- Slijepčević 1983, pp. 173, 174: "Везе између Џелал-паше и Гарашанина одржавао је Наум Сидо, који је био и човек грофа Игњатијева. "
- Istorijski 1963, p. 280
- Matica 1968, p. 14:".. напусти Цари- град и оде у Малу Азију да се бори против некаквог устанка брдских племена."
- Stojančević 1990, p. 54
- MacKenzie 1985, p. 321: "The visit of Vezenkovic, a Serbian agent, to that area in the spring of 1867 sparked premature uprisings. Some 10,000 tribesmen were ready to revolt, he informed Ristic."
- MacKenzie 1985, p. 321
- Maletić & Berisha 1973, p. 154: "Крајем 1867. избија велики револт Албанаца у области Пећи, Призрена и Ђаковице против увођења новог пореза "
- Jelavich 2004, p. 153: "Without strong direction the alliance network collapsed"
- Vučinić 1996: "Међутим, од свих ранијих савезника једино је Црна Гора била спремна да очува такав статус, што је резултирало закључењем новог Уговора о савезу 1876."
- Society 1997, p. 8: The First Balkan Alliance of 1866–68, although unsuccessful, could be taken as an indicator. After Berlin, Balkan nationalisms entered a more aggressive phase of ...
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Further reading
- Stavrianos, L. S. "The First Balkan Alliance System, 1860–1876," Journal of Central European Affairs, II (October 1942), 267-290
- Sotirović, Vladislav B. (2008). "Serbia's Diplomatic Preparations for the Creation of the First Balkan Alliance, 1861-64". Serbian Studies: Journal of the North American Society for Serbian Studies. 22 (1): 65–82. doi:10.1353/ser.2011.0008.