(Redirected from Pashaluk of Belgrade)
Sanjak of Smederevo (Pashaluk of Belgrade) in 1791
The 'Sanjak of Smederevo' (
Serbian: ''Smederevski sandžak'' or ''Смедеревски санџак'',
Turkish: ''Semendire Sancağı''), also known as the 'Pashaluk of Belgrade', was an
Ottoman administrative unit (
sanjak), that existed between the
15th and the outset of the
19th centuries. It was located in the territory of present day
Central Serbia,
Serbia.
History
The Sanjak of Smederevo was formed after the fall of the
Serbian Despotate in 1459, and its administrative seat was
Smederevo. After the
Ottoman Empire conquered
Belgrade in 1521, the administrative seat of the Sanjak was moved to this city.
The Sanjak was occupied by the
Habsburg Monarchy from 1718–1739 but, with the
Treaty of Belgrade, the area was ceded to the Ottoman Empire. Belgrade, the center of the region while under Austrian rule, was neglected under the Ottomans and Smederevo (Semendire) was the administrative center. Nevertheless, Belgrade eventually became the seat of a
pasha with the title of
vizier and the Sanjak began to be referred to as the Pashaluk of Belgrade, although it was still called the Sanjak of Smederevo in official documents.
From 1789–1791, Belgrade was again under Austrian rule and, at the beginning of the 19th century, the
First Serbian Uprising started in the Sanjak. The Serb rebels, led by
Karađorđe Petrović, managed to expel the Ottomans from the Sanjak for a significant time, which eventually led to the creation of modern
Serbia.
External links
★
Map of the Sanjak
★
Map showing the Sanjak in relation to the rest of Serbia