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Battle of Vrbica

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Battle part of the first Serbian uprising
Battle of Vrbica
Part of theFirst Serbian Uprising

View of Venčac mountain
Date14 March 1804
Location
ResultInconclusive
Belligerents
DahijeRevolutionary Serbia
Commanders and leaders
Kučuk-AlijaKarađorđe
Units involved
JanissariesKarađorđe's personal guard
Strength
500–60050 or 200
Casualties and losses
Unknown13+ dead, and wounded

TheBattle of Vrbica (Serbian:Бој на Врбици/Boj na Vrbici) was a clash between theDahije (renegade Janissaries) leader Kučuk-Alija and the Serbian rebel unit ofKarađorđe in March 1804 nearVrbica in the valley of theVenčac mountain.

Background

[edit]
See also:Battle of Rudnik (1804)

After thetakeover of Rudnik on 6 March,[1] supreme commander Karađorđe sent the Rudniknahija detachment ofArsenije Loma,Milić Drinčić andLazar Mutap to rest and then gather at Vrbica for the takeover ofJagodina, andMilan Obrenović, thestarešina (chief) of the Rudniknahija, was sent to further arm the Rudniknahija and then to also gather at Vrbica.[2] Karađorđe's troops rested atStragari and had three-days leave and then went to Vrbica where they awaited the others.[2] Jagodina was in the rebel plans, made at theOrašac Assembly on 14 February [O.S. 2 February] 1804.[2]

History

[edit]

The Dahije were alarmed by growing rebel numbers and operations and thus decided to send Kučuk-Alija, one of their four main leaders, with 500–600[3] or 600 men (dubbedhatlije, fromkabahat, "criminals") to aid Sali-aga at Rudnik and then to muster an army of mercenaries inArnautluk (Muslim Albanian-inhabited territories) to deal with the Serbian rebels.[2] In that way, the Dahije would attack the rebels from the south of the Pashalik and Belgrade.[4] Kučuk-Alija took the route towardsVenčac as it was the fastest to Rudnik.[5] On the way, Kučuk-Alija learnt fromknez Maksim fromGuberevac that Rudnik had been taken over and burnt down by the Serbs and that the Turks had left the town, and that Karađorđe was at Vrbica with a small number of men awaiting the rebel army.[2][a] With the quick taking of Rudnik, the rebels had saved themselves from being attacked from two sides.[1]

Karađorđe was with 50,[2] 100,[6] or around 200[7] men nearVrbica in the valley of theVenčac mountain.[2] Among his men werebuljubaša (captain)Petar Jokić, the leader of Karađorđe's personal guard,Janko Katić,[8] andGaja Pantelić.[9] Kučuk-Alija went on the Orašac road in the evening of 12 March [O.S. 1 March] 1804, while Karađorđe was at the other side of Vrbica, in a plain below the Venčac.[7] Serb lookouts saw Kučuk-Alija approaching with 500–600 cavalry on the Orašac road.[10]

Arriving in the area, Kučuk-Alija immediately attacked,[7] first the Serbian lookouts, then Karađorđe went and engaged.[10] The Dahije tried to encircle them,[11] but Karađorđe and his men went up theVenčac andBukulja mountains (Bukovička planina),[1] the Dahije unable or not wanting to pursue them;[12] it was risky, and the Dahije perhaps feared attacks from Serbcheta (bands) in the deep groves and forests.[10] The battle took an hour,[13] or was "short".[14] The rebels had 13 dead, and wounded.[1] Karađorđe's cargo horse with weapon tools and his personal fur coat was taken by the Dahije.[15]

As night fell, the Dahije camped at akonak (mansion) in Vrbica.[14] That night was chosen as the gathering for the Serb troops; Karađorđe sent men to the nearby roads to make sure that the people wouldn't go to Vrbica, as earlier decided, but to Venčac, which was safe.[14] Karađorđe sent part of his men to the Rudnik road, to possibly intercept the Dahije there, and went with the rest into Vrbica, to attack the resting Dahije.[14] Approaching Vrbica, they saw that it was empty; Kučuk-Alija had only rested his horses a while, then set out forKragujevac.[14] According to a local participant, included inMatija Nenadović'sMemoirs, someone alarmed that the Turks went on the Pločnik road, and a detachment hurried and captured an ambuscade, but learnt that it was a deception by "perhaps Maksim ... who escorted him [Kučuk-Alija] everywhere".[8] Karađorđe didn't know that Kučuk-Alija had been informed of the fall of Rudnik.[10]

In the night, and the next day, 15 March [O.S. 4 March] 1804, the rebel army gathered at Vrbica, with Milan and Loma and other commanders.[11] The larger part of the army was sent to pursue Kučuk-Alija towards Kragujevac, while the rest was sent into the Belgradenahija to rise up and gather more troops.[11] Karađorđe messagedVasa Čarapić to hold the road below theAvala mountain and the surroundings of Belgrade, while he went for theSmederevo area to join withĐuša Vulićević and then divided his troops to block Smederevo, and went with his personal guard (momci) toBatočina where Kučuk-Alija had sent Ganić with 250 Arnauts.[11]

Aftermath

[edit]
See also:Battles of Batočina and Jagodina

According to captain Petar Jokić, Karađorđe uttered "the Turks beat us here and there, let them, this is the first time".[16] Kučuk-Alija left Vrbica for Kragujevac, and on the way, stopped atŠljivovac where he captured three Serbs and cut them down.[6] Arriving at Kragujevac, he demonstrated Karađorđe's fur coat at the town square, saying that he had killed Karađorđe, and now "the villagers began to come with provisions".[6]

Theknez Maksim, who had informed and escorted Kučuk-Alija, was handed over to Karađorđe in 1805 and executed atVračar byJanko Katić.[2]

See also

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toFirst Serbian Uprising.

Annotations

[edit]
  1. ^
    K. Protić (1893) theorized that Kučuk-Alija perhaps wanted to join up with Alija Gušanac and hiskircali, who also defied the sultan, at Jagodina, gain followers and negotiate with the Serbs to recognize him as the pasha and in return fight alongside the Serbs against the Dahije and Janissaries.[7] The Serbs however, wanted no association with Turks.[7] Gušanac knew that there was not much to loot from the poor Serbrayah as there were from the Belgrade Dahije.[7]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdNovaković 1904, p. 116.
  2. ^abcdefghNenadović 1903, p. 70.
  3. ^Novaković 1904, p. 117,Protić 1893, p. 115
  4. ^Novaković 1904, p. 115.
  5. ^Novaković 1904, pp. 115–116.
  6. ^abcNovaković 1904, p. 117.
  7. ^abcdefProtić 1893, p. 115.
  8. ^abNovaković 1904, pp. 116–117.
  9. ^Milojević 1904, p. 168.
  10. ^abcdBatalaka 1898, p. 123.
  11. ^abcdNenadović 1903, p. 71.
  12. ^Nenadović 1903, p. 71,Protić 1893, pp. 115–116
  13. ^Nenadović 1903, pp. 70–71,Batalaka 1898, p. 123
  14. ^abcdeProtić 1893, p. 116.
  15. ^Nenadović 1903, p. 71,Protić 1893, p. 116
  16. ^Novaković 1904, p. 119.

Sources

[edit]
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