Skopska Crna Gora

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File:Karadaku.png
Skopska Crna Gora location

Skopska Crna Gora or Karadak Mountains (Macedonian and Template:Langx, Script error: No such module "IPA".; Template:Langx), often called simply Crna Gora (Macedonian and Template:Langx; Template:Langx), is a mountain range and ethnographic region in North Macedonia, Kosovo and Serbia. The highest peak is Ramno Script error: No such module "convert". in Macedonia.[1] The largest town on the mountain is Kučevište in North Macedonia.[1][2]

Name

Skopska Crna Gora is also known as Karadak (from earlier Template:Langx – "Black Mountain"; Macedonian and Template:Langx; Template:Langx), which appeared after the Ottoman conquest of the region.[3]

Geography

File:Kalaja e Pogragjës.JPG
Pogragja Castle (Gjilan), in the northernmost point of the Skopska Crna Gora region

Skopska Crna Gora extends from the Kaçanik Gorge to the west - to Template:Ill and the Gorge of Končulj in the east. In the north, it stretches from Binačka Morava to Aračinovo in the south. The relief structure is fragmented due to the rivers of the region which descend from high points and carry eroded material. Additionally, the geological composition of the region is complicated as there are new sediments in the west, Mesozoic layers in the middle and old Palaeozoic layers in the east. The most important rivers are Letnica, Golemareka, Karadak, Pasjani, Lashtica, and Llapushnica. 31% of the region consists of arable land, whereas 11% consists of pastures and meadows. Due to the lack of nutrition available, the keeping of livestock is limited. Skopska Crna Gora consists of high mountain peaks ranging from 700–1,650m. The mountains covers around Template:Cvt and consist of around 50,000 inhabitants, with a density of about 120 per km.[4]

Municipalities that lie in the region include:

Kosovo:

Kaçanik, Viti, Elez Han, Gjilan, Ranilug, Parteš, Klokot

Serbia:

Bujanovac, Preševo

North Macedonia:

Čučer-Sandevo, Lipkovo, Aračinovo, Butel, Gazi Baba

History

Middle Ages

It is not known since when this area is called by its current name, however it was first mentioned in the 13th century when the Tsar Konstantin Tih left the villages in his endowment. The name was mentioned again in 1300, in the charter of King Milutin in the Church of Saint George in Skopje. After the Ottoman conquest of Skopje, the name was translated into Kara-Dag, which is used until this day.[3]

Ottoman period

During the Ottoman period the region remained out of the reach of the regular Ottoman civil administration.[5] The Kosovar part of the region was turned into a nahiya by the Ottomans and was named Karatonlu, while the Macedonian part was turned into a Kaza and was named Karadak.[6] In this period many Albanian Clans (vllazni) settled in the region, thus around 8-10% of the Albanian population belonged to the Berisha tribe,[7] while descendants of the Krasniqi tribe settled in the villages of Gošince, Slupčane, Alaševce and Runica.[8] There are also members of the Mirdita and Sopi tribes which settled in the region.

The Ottoman defter recorded statistics for the Kaza of Karadak in 1831. There were 4,282 males, of which 2,722 were Muslims, 1452 Christians, and 108 Roma gypsies. The general population is therefore estimated to have consisted of 8,564 people, including 5,444 Muslim Albanians, 2,904 Christians (mainly Albanians and Bulgarians) and 216 Roma gypsies.[9]

Following Tanzimat reforms in 1839 and the sacking of local pashas, Albanians from Skopska Crna Gora and Šar, led by Dervish Cara, revolted in Aračinovo.[10] In January 1844 the rebels captured Gostivar and Tetovo. In February 1844 the rebels attacked and captured the whole region, including the towns of Skopje, Kumanovo, Preševo, Bujanovac, Vranje and Leskovac.[11] A National Council led by Dervish Cara was created, but the revolt was ultimately suppressed by the Ottomans, led by Hayredin Pasha in the summer of 1844.

During the mid-1800s, Catholic Albanians were expelled by Ottoman authorities.[12]

During the Albanian revolt of 1910, Albanian fighters from Skopska Crna Gora under the command of Idriz Seferi rebelled against the Ottomans and managed to defeat them in the Battle of Kaçanik.[13][14] In 1912, the Albanians rebelled again and managed to capture Skopje.[15][16]

Modern history

The region became part of the Kingdom of Serbia after the First Balkan War. Following this the region became a battleground between the Serbian forces supported by Chetniks and Albanian Kachaks under Idriz Seferi and Ajet Sopi Bllata as well as the Macedonian IMRO insurgents.[17][18] The region was occupied by the Kingdom of Bulgaria during the First World War and became part of the newly established Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes after it ended.

During the Interwar period many Serb colonizers settled in the region[19][20]

After the Invasion of Yugoslavia in 1941 the region was given to the Kingdom of Bulgaria, which resulted in Albanian resistance led by Mulla Idriz Gjilani.[21][22] The Karadak Uprising was later mostly quelled by Bulgaria and the Yugoslav partisan forces after the Stracin–Kumanovo and Kosovo Operation, but low intense fighting under the command of Hasan Ali Remniku continued until 1951.

During the Yugoslav Wars, Serb separatists supported by the FR Yugoslavia sought to create a Serbian breakaway State named "Karadak republic" in the region.[23]

From 1998 to 1999, during the Kosovo War the "Karadak Operational Zone" (which also included large parts of the Anamorava region) of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) remained inactive, thus the region saw less fighting than other parts of Kosovo.[24] From 1999 to 2001, during the insurgency in the Preševo Valley and the insurgency in Macedonia the Serbian and Macedonian parts of the region became major strongholds of the Albanian insurgent organizations National Liberation Army (NLA) and Liberation Army of Preševo, Medveđa and Bujanovac (LAPMB).

Culture

The ethnic Albanians of Skopska Crna Gora have a dialect of their own, which in itself is a north-eastern extremity of central Gheg Albanian. The dialect borders on the verge of north-eastern Gheg Albanian.[25]

The Macedonian and Serbian populations of the region speak the Skopska Crna Gora dialect, a subdialect of Torlakian.

Notable people

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See also

References

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  3. a b С. Томић, Скопска Црна Гора, Српски етнолошки зборник 3, Београд 1905, 409—417.
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  10. La Question Nationale En Europe Du Sud-Est: Genese, Emergence Et Développement de L'Identite Nationale Albanaise Au Kosovo Et En Macedoine Author Bashkim Iseni Publisher Peter Lang, 2008 Template:ISBN, Template:ISBN p.174
  11. Albanische Geschichte: Stand und Perspektiven der Forschung Volume 140 of Südosteuropäische Arbeiten Authors Oliver Jens Schmitt, Eva Anne Frantz Editors Oliver Jens Schmitt, Eva Anne Frantz Publisher Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag, 2009 Template:ISBN, Template:ISBN p. 168
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  13. Elsie 2012, p. 403
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  15. Pearsons 2004, p. 24
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  17. Monografia wikimedia.org
  18. Trotsky 1980, p. 117
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Sources

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