Kosovo: A Short HistoryOverskrifter: Orientation: places, names and peoples. Origins: Serbs, Albanians and Vlachs. Medieval Kosovo before Prince Lazar: 850-1380. The Battle and the Myth. The Last Years of Medieval Serbian Kosovo: 1389-1455. Early Ottoman Kosovo: 1450-1580. War, Rebellion and Religious Life: 1580-1680. The Austrian Invasion and the "Great Migration" of the Serbs: 1689-1690. Recovery and Decline: 1690-1817. Reform and Resistance: 1817-1878. Kosovo's Other Minorities: Vlachs, Gypsies, Turks, Jews and Circassians. From the League of Prizren to Young Turk Revolution: 1878-1908. The Great Rebellions, the Serbian Conquest and the First World War, 1908-1918. Kacaks and Colonists: 1918-1941. Occupied Kosovo in the Second World War: 1941-1945. Kosovo under Tito: 1945-1980. Kosovo after the Death of Tito: 1981-1997. |
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Page 113
... Albanian names , and many of these involve an Albanian - named father and a Slav Orthodox - named son ( ' Radislav ... speaking Albanians . A simpler explanation , surely , would be that the small Albanian minority in Janjevo was ...
... Albanian names , and many of these involve an Albanian - named father and a Slav Orthodox - named son ( ' Radislav ... speaking Albanians . A simpler explanation , surely , would be that the small Albanian minority in Janjevo was ...
Page 196
... Albanian- speakers lost the use of the Serbian language and identified themselves with other Albanian - speaking Muslims , and yet it still insists that they be regarded as Serbs . On those grounds any Englishman called Beau- champ or ...
... Albanian- speakers lost the use of the Serbian language and identified themselves with other Albanian - speaking Muslims , and yet it still insists that they be regarded as Serbs . On those grounds any Englishman called Beau- champ or ...
Page 268
... Albanian ; and the mayor's office in each Albanian - inhabited town bore a poster prohibiting people from speaking any language except Serbian . “ The official Yugoslav position was not without its ambiguities . On the one hand it tried ...
... Albanian ; and the mayor's office in each Albanian - inhabited town bore a poster prohibiting people from speaking any language except Serbian . “ The official Yugoslav position was not without its ambiguities . On the one hand it tried ...
Contents
places names and peoples | 1 |
Serbs Albanians and Vlachs | 22 |
850s1380s | 41 |
Copyright | |
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akçes Albanian population Albanian-speaking Archbishop Arsenije ASCPF SOCG Austrian Balkans battle Belgrade Bogdani Bosnia Branković Bulgarian Byzantine campaign Catholic century Christian clans Communist Djuradj Dukagjin Durrës Dušan ethnic evidence force Frashëri German Gjakova Greek Gypsies Hasan Prishtina historians Hoxha Hungarian Illyrian Islam Istanbul Italian Janjevo Jireček kaçaks Kaçanik Këlmendi Kosova gjatë shekujve Kosovo Albanians Kostić language later Lazar leaders League Lëvizja Macedonia Malësi Mazarek Medieval Balkans Mehmet military Miloš Mirdita Mitrovica Montenegro mountains Murat Muslim Muslim Albanians names Niš northern Albania Novi Pazar Novo Brdo official Ottoman Empire Ottoman rule pasha Patriarch Peć period political priests Prishtina Prizren Pulaha Ragusan Rascian region revolt Rizaj sancak Sandžak sent Serbian Orthodox Serbs Shkodra Skanderbeg Skopje Slav soldiers Stefan Sultan taxes territory town tradition Trepça Turkish vilayet villages Vlachs Vuçitërn Vuk Branković Western Kosovo writers Young Turks Yugoslav Yugoslavia Zamputi