| Bosnia Eyalet | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eyalet of the Ottoman Empire | |||||||||
| 1580–1867 | |||||||||
Flag | |||||||||
The Bosnia Eyalet in 1683 | |||||||||
| Capital | Bosna-Saray (1520–1533) Banja Luka (1553–1639) Bosna-Saray (1639–1699) Travnik (1699–1832) | ||||||||
| Population | |||||||||
• 1732[1] | 340,000 | ||||||||
• 1787[1] | 600,000 | ||||||||
| History | |||||||||
• Established | 1580 | ||||||||
• Disestablished | 1867 | ||||||||
| |||||||||
| Today part of | Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia Serbia Montenegro | ||||||||
TheEyalet of Bosnia[3] (Ottoman Turkish:ایالت بوسنه,romanized: Eyālet-i Bōsnâ;[4][1]Turkish:Bosna Eyaleti;[4]Serbo-Croatian:Bosanski pašaluk), was aneyalet (administrative division, also known as abeylerbeylik) of theOttoman Empire, mostly based on the territory of the present-day state ofBosnia and Herzegovina. Prior to theGreat Turkish War, it had also included most ofSlavonia,Lika, andDalmatia in present-dayCroatia. Its reported area in 1853 was 52,530 square kilometres (20,281 sq mi).[5]
After the execution ofKing Stephen Tomašević in 1463, the central part of theKingdom of Bosnia was transformed into thesanjak of Bosnia. TheDuchy of Herzegovina was added in 1483.
In 1580,Ferhad Pasha Sokolović became the first governor of the Bosnia Eyalet, asbeylerbey (also referred to as "pasha").[6] The Bosnia Eyalet (or Pashaluk) included theSanjak of Bosnia (central province),Sanjak of Herzegovina,Sanjak of Viçitrina,Sanjak of Prizren,Sanjak of Klis,Sanjak of Krka, andSanjak of Pakrac.[6]

TheOttoman wars in Europe continued throughout the period, and the province reached its territorial peak in 1683.
TheGreat Turkish War that ended inOttoman defeat in 1699 led to a significant decrease in the territory of the Eyalet, losing all theSlavonian sanjaks ("Požeški sandžak" and "Pakrački sandžak"), the sanjak of Lika and big parts of the Dalmatian coast from the sanjaks of Klisa and Herzegovina. The Eyalet lost three sanjaks and suppressed one (the sanjak of Bihać): after theTreaty of Karlowitz, the province was down to four sanjaks (three of them diminished in size as well) and twelve captaincies. Before theTreaty of Passarowitz, another 28 military captaincies were formed, more than half of them along the frontier. This kind of intensive military administration corresponded to the AustrianMilitary Frontier on the other side of the same border. In 1703 the seat of the pasha was moved from Sarajevo toTravnik, because Sarajevo had been destroyed by fire in the war; it wouldn't be moved back until 1850.[7]


At the beginning of the 19th century, Bosnia was one of the least developed and more autonomous provinces of the Empire.[8] In 1831, Bosnian kapudanHusein Gradaščević, after meeting inTuzla with Bosnian aristocrats from 20 January to 5 February for preparations, finally occupiedTravnik, demanding autonomy and the end of military reforms in Bosnia.[1] Ultimately, exploiting the rivalries between beys and kapudans, the grand vizier succeeded in detaching the Herzegovinian forces, led byAli-paša Rizvanbegović, from Gradaščević's.[1] The revolt was crushed, and in 1833, a neweyalet of Herzegovina was created from the southern part of the eyalet of Bosnia and given to Ali-paša Rizvanbegović as a reward for his contribution in crushing the uprising.[1] This new entity lasted only for a few years: after Rizvanbegović's death, it was reintegrated into the Bosnia eyalet.
It was one of the first Ottoman provinces to become avilayet after an administrative reform in 1865, and by 1867 it had been reformed into theBosnia Vilayet.[9]
Administrative division of the eyalet of Bosnia before 1699 were as follows:[10]
| At the beginning of the 19th century, Bosnia was composed of 7 sanjaks:[8] |
Bosnia Eyalet's capital city moved several times:
Part ofa series on the |
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| History of Bosnia and Herzegovina |
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... босанског ејалета именован је Ферхад-паша Соколовић (1580 — 1588) који је дотле био санџак-бег босански (1574 — 1580). Поред босанског санмака под власт босанског беглербега подвргнуто је још девет санџака који су дотле били у саставу румелиског или будим- ског ејалета. Уз босански санџак који је сада постао централна облает босанског пашалука овоме су ејалету одмах припојени сан- џаци: херцеговачки, вучитрнски, призренски, клишки, крчки и па- крачки, који су тада били издвојени из румелиског ејатета, и зворнички и пожешки, који су били издвсјени избудмскогејалета.Тако се босански беглербеглук, ејалет или пашалук у почетку свога оп- стојања састојао од десет санџака.
Od druge polovice XVI stoljeca Klis kao da gubi vaznost u poredbi s Livnom. Otada pocinje sandzak-beg kliski stanovati u Livnu. Sama gradska posada u Klisu jos je jaka, broji do 400 ratnika.