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Vilajet Bosna
Bosna Vilâyeti
Province of Bosnia
Blank.png
1580–1864 Flag of Bosnia (1831-1832).svg
Location of Province of Bosnia
Ottoman Province of Bosnia in 1606
Capital Sarajevo (1580-1583),
Banja Luka (1583-1686),
Travnik (1686-1851),
Sarajevo (1851-1864)
Language(s) Bosnian, Croatian, Serbian
Religion Islam
Government Monarchy
King
 - 1580-1588 Sokollu Mehmet Bey
 - 1861-1864 Şerif Topal Osman Paşa
History
 - Established 1580
 - Disestablished 1864
Currency Akçe
History of
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Coat of Arms of the King Tvrtko I of Bosnia
This article is part of a series
Early History
Roman era
Slavic peoples
Monarchy
Bosnian Kingdom
Ottoman era
(Bosnia Province)
(Herzegovina Province)
Austro-Hungarian era
(Austro-Hungarian condominium of Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Yugoslavia
Kingdom of Yugoslavia
World War II
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
(Socialist Republic of
Bosnia and Herzegovina
)
Contemporary
War in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Bosnia and Herzegovina

Bosnia and Herzegovina Portal
 v • d • e 

The Province of Bosnia or Pashaluk of Bosnia (Bosnian: Vilajet Bosna, Turkish: Bosna Vilâyeti or Bosna Paşalığı) was a key Ottoman province, the westernmost one, mostly based on the territory of the present-day state of Bosnia and Herzegovina as well as most of Slavonia, Lika and Dalmatia in present-day Croatia.

Contents

[edit] History

During the Ottoman times it was both a single sanjak, and after 1580 a pashaluk divided into several sanjaks.

In the mid-17th century, at the peak of its size, the Bosnian pashaluk covered all of today's Bosnia and Herzegovina as well as most of Slavonia, Lika and Dalmatia in present-day Croatia. It encompassed eight sanjaks and 29 captaincies (military outposts):

However, the Ottoman wars in Europe continued and the province significantly decreased in territory during the same century. After the Treaty of Karlowitz, the province was down to four sanjaks (three of them diminished in size as well) and twelve captaincies. Before the Treaty of Passarowitz, another 28 military captaincies were formed, more than half of them along the frontier. This kind of intensive military administration corresponded to the Austrian Military Frontier on the other side of the same border.

In 1833, territory of Herzegovina region was separated from the Pashaluk of Bosnia and was turned into the separate Pashaluk of Herzegovina, whose vizier was Ali-paša Rizvanbegović. After his death in 1851, pashaluks of Bosnia and Herzegovina were merged into new entity known as Bosnia and Herzegovina.

[edit] Capitals

Province of Bosnia's first center was Travnik between 1580 and 1833 and again between 1839/40 and 1851. Other centers were Banja Luka (Banyaluka or Banaluka) between 1553 and 1638 [1], and Sarajevo (Saray Bosna) between 1833 and 1839/40 and again from 1851 to 1878.[2][3]

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.worldstatesmen.org/Bosnia.html
  2. ^ Aličić, Ahmed S. Uređenje bosanskog ejaleta od 1789. do 1878., Orijentalni Institut u Sarajevu, Sarajevo, 1983, p 35.
  3. ^ Šabanović, H. Bosanski pašaluk, ND BiH, Sarajevo, 1959.






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