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History of the Balkans - Rise of Independence

History of the Balkans - Rise of Independence: Encyclopedia II - History of the Balkans - Rise of Independence

The Ottoman (Turkish) Empire was losing influence, status and territory throughout the 19th century, known as the 'sick man of Europe'; and the future division of the Ottoman empire was proving a source of great friction between the 'Great Powers'. It was a multi-national empire and the subject peoples of this Empire did not want their fate to be decided by other world powers as the Ottoman dynasty collapsed. Towards the end of the 19th century Serbs, Bulgarians, Romanians and Magyars began to demand the right to set up their own independent states ...

See also:

History of the Balkans, History of the Balkans - Early history, History of the Balkans - Chalcolithic cultures, History of the Balkans - Hallstatt, History of the Balkans - Indo-Europeanization, History of the Balkans - Classical antiquity, History of the Balkans - Odrysian empire, History of the Balkans - Dacian kingdom, History of the Balkans - Greek city-states and their colonies, History of the Balkans - Empire of Macedon, History of the Balkans - Illyrian kingdoms, History of the Balkans - The Roman conquests, History of the Balkans - Christianity during the Daco-Roman era, History of the Balkans - The Dark Ages and the Great Migrations, History of the Balkans - Nomadic peoples, History of the Balkans - Slavs, History of the Balkans - Magyars, History of the Balkans - Bulgars and Bulgarians, History of the Balkans - Vlachs Romanians Aromanians Morlachs Istro-Romanians, History of the Balkans - Balkan linguistic union, History of the Balkans - Middle Ages and the Early Modern period, History of the Balkans - Genoa colonies in lower Danube, History of the Balkans - Fourth Crusade in the Balkans, History of the Balkans - Battle of Nicopolis, History of the Balkans - Eastern Roman Empire, History of the Balkans - Ottoman Empire, History of the Balkans - East-West Schism, History of the Balkans - Habsburg Empire, History of the Balkans - Rise of Independence, History of the Balkans - 1804 First Serbian Uprising and 1815 Second Serbian Uprising, History of the Balkans - 1821 revolt in Greece and Romania, History of the Balkans - 1829 Adrianople peace, History of the Balkans - 1831 Bosnian Rebellion, History of the Balkans - 1848 Revolution, History of the Balkans - Russian defeat in Crimea: the Balkan implications, History of the Balkans - Desire of Independence, History of the Balkans - April uprising, History of the Balkans - 1877 War, History of the Balkans - Secularisation in Balkans, History of the Balkans - Orthodoxy, History of the Balkans - The Pig War, History of the Balkans - Balkan Wars, History of the Balkans - First Balkan War, History of the Balkans - Second Balkan War, History of the Balkans - The Balkans in modern times, History of the Balkans - World War I in the Balkans, History of the Balkans - Consequences of World War I, History of the Balkans - World War II in Balkans, History of the Balkans - Consequences of World War II, History of the Balkans - Balkans during the Cold War, History of the Balkans - Post-Communism, History of the Balkans - Current state and perspectives

History of the Balkans, History of the Balkans - 1804 First Serbian Uprising and 1815 Second Serbian Uprising, History of the Balkans - 1821 revolt in Greece and Romania, History of the Balkans - 1829 Adrianople peace, History of the Balkans - 1831 Bosnian Rebellion, History of the Balkans - 1848 Revolution, History of the Balkans - 1877 War, History of the Balkans - April uprising, History of the Balkans - Balkan Wars, History of the Balkans - Balkan linguistic union, History of the Balkans - Balkans during the Cold War, History of the Balkans - Battle of Nicopolis, History of the Balkans - Bulgars and Bulgarians, History of the Balkans - Chalcolithic cultures, History of the Balkans - Christianity during the Daco-Roman era, History of the Balkans - Classical antiquity, History of the Balkans - Consequences of World War I, History of the Balkans - Consequences of World War II, History of the Balkans - Current state and perspectives, History of the Balkans - Dacian kingdom, History of the Balkans - Desire of Independence, History of the Balkans - Early history, History of the Balkans - East-West Schism, History of the Balkans - Eastern Roman Empire, History of the Balkans - Empire of Macedon, History of the Balkans - First Balkan War, History of the Balkans - Fourth Crusade in the Balkans, History of the Balkans - Genoa colonies in lower Danube, History of the Balkans - Greek city-states and their colonies, History of the Balkans - Habsburg Empire, History of the Balkans - Hallstatt, History of the Balkans - Illyrian kingdoms, History of the Balkans - Indo-Europeanization, History of the Balkans - Magyars, History of the Balkans - Middle Ages and the Early Modern period, History of the Balkans - Nomadic peoples, History of the Balkans - Odrysian empire, History of the Balkans - Orthodoxy, History of the Balkans - Ottoman Empire, History of the Balkans - Post-Communism, History of the Balkans - Rise of Independence, History of the Balkans - Russian defeat in Crimea: the Balkan implications, History of the Balkans - Second Balkan War, History of the Balkans - Secularisation in Balkans, History of the Balkans - Slavs, History of the Balkans - The Balkans in modern times, History of the Balkans - The Dark Ages and the Great Migrations, History of the Balkans - The Pig War, History of the Balkans - The Roman conquests, History of the Balkans - Vlachs Romanians Aromanians Morlachs Istro-Romanians, History of the Balkans - World War I in the Balkans, History of the Balkans - World War II in Balkans, History of Albania, History of Bosnia and Herzegovina, History of Bulgaria, History of Croatia, History of Greece, History of the Republic of Macedonia, History of Romania, History of Serbia and Montenegro, History of Slovenia, History of Turkey, History of Yugoslavia, History of Europe, Historical regions of the Balkan Peninsula

History of the Balkans: Encyclopedia II - History of the Balkans - Rise of Independence



History of the Balkans - Rise of Independence

The Ottoman (Turkish) Empire was losing influence, status and territory throughout the 19th century, known as the 'sick man of Europe'; and the future division of the Ottoman empire was proving a source of great friction between the 'Great Powers'. It was a multi-national empire and the subject peoples of this Empire did not want their fate to be decided by other world powers as the Ottoman dynasty collapsed. Towards the end of the 19th century Serbs, Bulgarians, Romanians and Magyars began to demand the right to set up their own independent states ruled by people of their own nationality, culture and religion.

History of the Balkans - 1804 First Serbian Uprising and 1815 Second Serbian Uprising

First Serbian Uprising was an uprising at the beginning of the 19th century in which Serbs living in Belgrade Pashaluk in the Ottoman Empire, led by Karadjordje, managed to liberate the Pashaluk for a significant time, which eventually led to the creation of modern Serbia.Though ultimately unsuccessful, this first Serbian Uprising paved the way for the Second Serbian Uprising of 1815, which eventually succeeded in Serbia.

History of the Balkans - 1821 revolt in Greece and Romania

  • In 1821 the Greek revolution, striving to create an independent Greece, broke out on Romanian ground, supported by the princes of Moldavia and Muntenia.
  • A secret Greek nationalist organisation called the Friendly Society (Filiki Eteria) was formed in Odessa during 1814. On March 25 (now Greek Independence Day) 1821 of the (Michael Liebel April]], 1821 of the Gregorian Calendar the Orthodox Metropolitan Germanos of Patras proclaimed the national uprising. Simultaneous risings were planned across Greece, including in Macedonia, Crete and Cyprus. The revolt began in March 1821 when Alexandros Ypsilantis, the leader of the Etairists, crossed the Prut River into Turkish-held Moldavia with a small force of troops. With the initial advantage of surprise, and aided by Ottoman inefficiency, the Greeks succeeded in liberating the Peloponnese and some other areas. Saint Gregory V, the Patriarch of Constantinople was martyred by the Turks in 1821 in reaction to the Greek War of Independence.

On January 22, 1822, Korinth, the key to the isthmus, passed into the Greeks' hands, and only four fortresses--Nauplia, Patras, Koron, and Modhon--still held out within it against Greek investment. Not a Turk survived in the Peloponnesos beyond their walls, for the slaughter at Tripolitza was only the most terrible instance of what happened wherever a Muslim colony was found. In Peloponnesos, at any rate, the revolution had been grimly successful.

In 1832 A Greco-Turkish settlement was finally determined by the European powers at a conference in London; they adopted a London protocol (February 3, 1830), declaring Greece an independent monarchical state under their protection. (Greece has lost 50000 people and Ottomans 15000, Russia 10000 and Egypt 5000)

  • Also in 1821 the uprising was supported by the Wallachian uprising of 1821.

The movement, which was started about the same time by the ennobled peasant, Tudor Vladimirescu, for the emancipation of the lower classes, soon acquired, therefore, an anti-Greek tendency. Vladimirescu was assassinated at the instigation of the Greeks; the latter were completely checked by the Turks, who, grown suspicious after the Greek rising and confronted with the energetic attitude of the Romanian nobility, consented in 1822 to the nomination of two native boyards, Jonitza Sturdza and Gregory Ghica, recommended by their countrymen, as princes of Moldavia and Wallachia. The iniquitous system of 'the throne to the highest bidder' had come to an end. The Phanariote regime in Romania (Wallachia and Modavia) ended after the uprising of 1821 Tudor Vladimirescu

  • Relations between Greece and Turkey have been marked by mutual hostility ever since Greece won its independence from the Ottoman Empire in 1832.

See:

  • Alexander Ypsilanti
  • Filiki Eteria

History of the Balkans - 1829 Adrianople peace

The 1829 Treaty of Adrianople (called also Treaty of Edirne), was settled between Russia and the Ottoman Empire. Turkey gave Russia access to the mouths of the Danube and additional territory on the Black Sea, opened the Dardanelles to all commercial vessels, commerce is liberated for cereals, live stocks and wood, granted autonomy to Serbia, promised autonomy for Greece, and allowed Russia to occupy Moldavia and Walachia until Turkey had paid a large indemnity.

History of the Balkans - 1831 Bosnian Rebellion

The Ottoman Sultans attempted to implement various economic reforms in the early 19th century in order to address the grave issues mostly caused by the border wars. The reforms, however, were usually met with resistance by the military captaincies of Bosnia. The most famous of these insurrections was the one by captain Husein Gradaščević in 1831. Gradaščević felt that giving autonomy to the eastern lands of Serbia, Greece and Albania would weaken the link between Bosnia and the Ottoman Empire. He raised a full-scale rebellion in the province, joined by thousands of native Bosnian soldiers who believed in captain's prudence and courage, calling him Zmaj od Bosne (the Bosnian dragon). Despite winning several notable victories, notably at the famous Kosovo polje, the rebels were eventually defeated in a battle near Sarajevo in 1832 after Gradaščević was betrayed by Herzegovinian nobility. Husein-kapetan was banned from ever entering the country again, and was eventually poisoned in Istanbul. Bosnia and Herzegovina would remain part of the Ottoman empire until 1878. Before it was formally occupied by Austria-Hungary, the region was de facto independent for several months.

History of the Balkans - 1848 Revolution

In the Austrian Empire -- Germans, Czechs, Italians, Poles, Serbs, Croats, Slovaks, Romanians, and Hungarians, pushed for self-determination. On the meeting of the peoples of the Empire that was held in Bratislava (then Pressburg), many nationalities including Serbs pleaded for the acknowledgement of their nation, education in their language, and their separate region. Lajos Kossuth, the leader of Hungary, told them that "the only nation that exists in the Hungarian Kingdom is the Magyar nation" and that "the rebels should be punished by sword". The frustration of revolutionary impulses throughout the empire led to increased national tensions in the next 25 years.

The European revolution of 1848 eroded relations between the Serbs and their neighbors and between Hungarians and their neighbors. As part of their revolutionary program, the Hungarians threatened to Magyarize the Serbs in Vojvodina. Some Serbs there declared their independence from Hungary and proclaimed an autonomous Vojvodina; others rallied behind the Austrian-Croatian invasion of Hungary. The Serbs nearly declared war, but Russians and Turkish diplomacy restrained them.

See:

  • The Revolutions of 1848 in the Habsburg areas
  • Nicolae Balcescu
  • Lajos Kossuth
  • Avram Iancu

History of the Balkans - Russian defeat in Crimea: the Balkan implications

The Crimean War was provoked by Russian tsar Nicholas I's continuing pressure on the dying Ottoman Empire, and by Russia's claims to be the protector of the Orthodox Christian subjects of the Ottoman sultan. Britain and France became involved in order to block Russian expansion and prevent Russians from acquiring control of the Turkish Straits and eastern Mediterranean. Russia was defeated in the Crimean War (1853-1856). The peace Congress in Paris (February-March 1856) decided that Wallachia and Moldavia, which had been under Ottoman suverainty, were now placed under the collective guarantee of the seven powers that signed the Paris peace treaty. These powers then declared that local assemblies be convened to decide on the future organisation of the two principalities. The Treaty of Paris also stipulated: the retrocession to Moldavia of Southern Bessarabia, which had been annexed in 1812 by Russia (the Cahul, Bolgrad and Ismail counties); freedom of sailing on the Danube; the establishment of the European Commission of the Danube; the neutral status of the Black Sea. The result was the union of Wallachia and Moldavia. see also:

  • Crimean War

History of the Balkans - Desire of Independence

G.S. Rakovski, Etienne Caradgea et Hagi Dimitar

History of the Balkans - April uprising

The rise of nationalism in the Balkans found its expression in Bulgaria in the Bulgarian revival movement. Unlike Greece and Serbia, the nationalist movement in Bulgaria did not concentrate initially on armed resistance against the Ottomans but on peaceful struggle for cultural and religious autonomy, the result of which was the establishment of the Bulgarian Exarchate on February 28, 1870. A large-scale armed struggle movement started to develop as late as the beginning of the 1870s with the establishment of the Internal Revolutionary Organisation and the Bulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee, as well as the active envolvement of Vasil Levski in both organisations. The struggle reached its peak with the April Uprising which broke out in April, 1876 in several Bulgarian districts in Moesia, Thrace and Macedonia. The barbaric suppression of the uprising led to the Conference of Constantinople and eventually to the Russo-Turkish War, 1877-78, which led to establishment of an autonomous Bulgarian principality north of the Balkan mountains.

History of the Balkans - 1877 War

In early 1877, Russia came to the rescue of beleaguered Serbian and Russian volunteer forces when it went to war with the Ottoman Empire. Within one year, Russian troops were nearing Constantinople, and the Ottomans surrendered. Russia's nationalist diplomats and generals persuaded Alexander II to press the Ottomans into signing the Treaty of San Stefano in March 1878, creating an enlarged, independent Bulgaria that stretched into the south-western Balkans. When Britain threatened to declare war over the terms of the Treaty of San Stefano, an exhausted Russia backed down. At the Congress of Berlin in July 1878, Russia agreed to the creation of a smaller Bulgaria. See: Russian history, 1855-1892

  • On 4 April/ 16 April 1877, Romania and Russia signed a treaty at Bucharest under which Russian troops were allowed to pass through Romanian territory. About 120,000 soldiers were massed in the south of the country to defend against an eventual attack of the Ottoman forces from south of Danube. On 12 April/24 April 1877, Russia declared war on the Ottoman Empire and its troops entered Romania.

In 1877, following the Russian-Romanian-Turkish war, Romania was recognized independent by Treaty of Berlin, 1878 and acquired Dobruja, though she was forced to surrender southern Bessarabia to Russia.

In February 1878 the Russian army had almost reached Constantinople, but disturbed the city might fall, the British sent a fleet to warn off the Russians. The presence of the British fleet combined with the fact that the Russians had suffered such enormous losses (by some estimates about 200,000 men) caused Russia to settle for the Treaty of San Stefano (March 3), by which Turkey recognized the independence of Romania, Serbia and Montenegro and the autonomy of Bulgaria. Alarmed by the extension of Russian power into the Balkans and apprehensive of the eventual fall of Constantinople to the Russians, the Great Powers modified the provisions of the treaty in the Congress of Berlin.

See :Russo-Turkish War, 1877-78

After 1877, Magyar dominance faced challenges from the local majorities of Romanians in Transylvania and in the eastern Banat, of Slovaks in today's Slovakia, of Croats and Serbs in the crownlands of Croatia and of Dalmatia (today's Croatia), in Bosnia and Herzegovina and in the provinces known as the Vojvodina (today's northern Serbia). The Romanians and the Serbs also looked to union with their fellow-nationalists in the newly-founded states of Romania (1877 - ) and Serbia, respectively.

see : Austria-Hungary

History of the Balkans - Secularisation in Balkans

The law of monastery estates, secularizing monastic assets (1863). Probably more than a quarter of Romania's farmland was controlled by untaxed Greek Orthodox "Dedicated Monasteries," which supported Greek monks in shrines like Mount Athos and Jerusalem but were a substantial drain on state revenues. Cuza got his parliament's backing to expropriate these lands, with the backing of the parliament. He offered compensation to the Greek Orthodox Church, but the Patriarch refused to negotiate. This was a mistake: after several years, the Romanian government withdrew its offer and no compensation was ever paid. State revenues thereby increased without adding any domestic tax burden.

History of the Balkans - Orthodoxy

In hierarchical Christian churches, especially Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox churches, autocephaly is the status of a hierarchical church whose head bishop does not report to any higher-ranking bishop. In 1922 August, the ecumenical patriarch in Constantinople recognized the Autocephalous Albanian Orthodox Church. An independent Bulgarian Church was established in 1870 but was almost immediately declared schismatic by the Patriarch of Constantinople. The schism was lifted and its patriarchal dignity was restored as late as 1945. 1879 the Patriarchate of Constantinople recognized the Serbian church as autocephalous The Romanian Orthodox Church has been fully Autocephalous since 1885. The Church of Greece, has been autocephalous since 1833. In July 17, 1967 the Holy Synod proclaimed the Macedonian Orthodox Church as autocephalous. No other Orthodox Church has, however, recognised its autocephaly as yet.

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Rise of Independence", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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