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. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 79
Page 296
... Italian position : Italy was appealing whenever possible to Albanian nationalism , which aimed at independence and self - government , but doing so in order to persuade people to accept their status as de facto colonial subjects ...
... Italian position : Italy was appealing whenever possible to Albanian nationalism , which aimed at independence and self - government , but doing so in order to persuade people to accept their status as de facto colonial subjects ...
Page 301
... Italian military intelligence service was equally indus- trious , and in Peć ( one of the main centres of the Party ) sixty out of the ninety members were arrested during that year . Albanians were still a tiny minority in the Party ...
... Italian military intelligence service was equally indus- trious , and in Peć ( one of the main centres of the Party ) sixty out of the ninety members were arrested during that year . Albanians were still a tiny minority in the Party ...
Page 304
... Italy's capitulation on the evening of 8 September 1943. Just after midnight an order was sent from Rome , directing the Italian troops to withdraw towards the ports of Albania and Montenegro . The commander of all Italian forces in ...
... Italy's capitulation on the evening of 8 September 1943. Just after midnight an order was sent from Rome , directing the Italian troops to withdraw towards the ports of Albania and Montenegro . The commander of all Italian forces in ...
Contents
places names and peoples | 1 |
Serbs Albanians and Vlachs | 22 |
850s1380s | 41 |
Copyright | |
16 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
akēes 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 Durrės Dušan ethnic evidence force Frashėri German Gjakova Greek Gypsies Hasan Prishtina historians Hoxha Hungarian Illyrian Islam Istanbul Italian Janjevo Jireček kaēaks Kaēanik Kėlmendi Kosova gjatė shekujve Kosovo Albanians Kostić language later Lazar leaders League Lėvizja Macedonia Malėsi 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 Trepēa Turkish vilayet villages Vlachs Vuēitėrn Vuk Branković Western Kosovo writers Young Turks Yugoslav Yugoslavia Zamputi