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TIMUR and the OTTOMANS, 1336 TO 1483
In January 1366, Pope Urban V declared a Crusade to save Europe from Islam and the Turks. Responding to this, Count Amadeo VI of Savoy (in northwest of Italy) took a fleet of twenty ships (galleys) to the Dardanelles, overran Gelibolu temporarily, captured some ports on the Black Sea and laid siege to Varna. The Catholic king of Hungary, Louis I, joined the crusade. Christian rulers from Bosnia and Serbia joined in a coalition with Louis and began a drive to push the Ottomans back to Asia. The new Ottoman ruler, Murad, sent the coalition force fleeing back, and this encouraged Murad to expand farther into Christian territory -- into the Balkans.
The Balkans were lands that had been a part of the Roman Empire ruled by Constantinople. Christians in the Balkans were of the Eastern Orthodox faith. As in Constantinople, in the Balkans fear of domination by Catholics was prevalent. Local clergy and populations in the Balkans were unenthusiastic about help from the Catholics. On the other hand, some local rulers in the Balkans accepted military help from the West in exchange for a promise to recognize the supremacy of Catholicism.
Among the Serbs, in the Balkans, various noblemen, or princes, were vying for power. There were wars among the Serbs in the 1360s. In 1371 the Ottomans defeated a Serb and Hungarian force on the Maritsa River in Bulgaria, a little northwest of Edirne, a battle known to modern Turks as the "Rout of the Serbs." The Turkish army withdrew. Christians continued fighting Christians, some lords sought protection by allying themselves with the Turks, agreeing to vassalage. In 1372 the Bulgar tsar of Tirnova, John Sisman, also swore homage to the Ottoman sultan and sent to Murad his daughter as a bride.
By 1373, Murad had conquered most of Macedonia. In 1375 Serbia's despotic ruler began paying the Ottomans tribute in money and in young men drafted for service with the Ottomans. The exact nature of this service is not easily ascertained. Murad took the Macedonian city of Monastir (Bitola), the Serbian town of Naisus (Nis) and the Bulgarian town of Sofia. In 1387 in Asia Minor, Murad had defeated a coalition of princes, at the battle of Konia, and had extended Ottoman rule there. And in 1389 he and his army crushed another collection of Balkan nobles at Kosovo. This was 34 years after the great Serbian empire of Tsar Dusan had disintegrated. It was 18 years after the battle on the River Maritsa, which had a greater impact on the Serbs than did the Battle of Kosovo. And following the Battle of Kosovo, a Serbian power survived in the area. Queen Milica, the widowed mother of the fourteen or fifteen year-old prince Stefan Lazarevic, protected herself from the aggressions of Sigismund of Hungary, who saw an opportunity to expand. She bargained with the Turks, gaining their protection in exchange for vassalage. [note]
According to Serb folklore the Battle of Kosovo destroyed the great medieval Serbian empire and Serbs were immediately placed under Turkish rule. At Kosovo a Serb patriot is said to have assassinated Murad, but to no avail as Murad's son took power. The story of the Serb patriot would be an inspiration for Serb youths in 1914 in their plan to assassinate Archduke Ferdinand of Austro-Hungary.
Tensions existed between local rulers and their subjects. The Ottoman Turks were known to give the Orthodox Christian clergy freedom to lead their flock. The Turks were known to declare land that had belonged to feudal lords as publicly owned, to free peasants from the dues they had had to pay to the lords, to free them from forced labor (the Corvée) for the lords and, instead, to give the peasants autonomy and an easily paid tax (called the plow tax). Fear of rule by Catholics, and dislike of feudal oppression in the Balkans was making it easier for the Ottoman Turks to conquer there.
Rather than imposing an utterly alien system upon peoples of the Balkans, the Ottomans maintained many of the features of local culture -- much as conquerors had done for more than two thousand years. There was not at this time in the Balkans, moreover, the national identity that would develop centuries later.
Meanwhile ethnic Albanians with Serb orthodox names were in Kosovo. But most of the towns and villages had Serb, not Albanian, names, suggesting that Albanians in Kosovo were a minority.
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Copyright © 2009 by Frank E. Smitha. All rights reserved.