<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0">
   <teiHeader>
      <fileDesc>
         <titleStmt>
            <title>Economic Measures in the Activities of the Serbian Chetnik Organisation in the
               Kosovo and Bitola <hi rend="italic">Vilayets</hi>, 1904–1908: A Case Study</title>
            <author>
               <forename>Uroš</forename>
               <surname>Šešum</surname>
               <roleName>PhD, Associate Professor</roleName>
               <affiliation>University of Belgrade, Faculty of Philosophy, Department of
                  History</affiliation>
               <address>
                  <addrLine>Čika Ljubina 18-20</addrLine>
                  <addrLine>11000 Belgrade, Serbia</addrLine>
               </address>
               <email>uros.sesum@f.bg.ac.rs</email>
            </author>
            <author>
               <forename>Miroslav</forename>
               <surname>Radivojević</surname>
               <roleName>PhD, Senior Research Associate</roleName>
               <affiliation>University of Belgrade, Faculty of Philosophy, Department of
                  History</affiliation>
               <email>miroslav.radivojevic@f.bg.ac.rs</email>
               <email>mirrad88@gmail.com</email>
            </author>
         </titleStmt>
         <editionStmt>
            <edition><date>2026-04-16</date></edition>
         </editionStmt>
         <publicationStmt>
            <publisher>
               <orgName xml:lang="sl">Inštitut za novejšo zgodovino</orgName>
               <orgName xml:lang="en">Institute of Contemporary History</orgName>
               <address>
                  <addrLine>Privoz 11</addrLine>
                  <addrLine>SI-1000 Ljubljana</addrLine>
               </address>
            </publisher>
            <pubPlace>http://ojs.inz.si/pnz/article/view/5349</pubPlace>
            <date>2026</date>
            <availability status="free">
               <licence>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/</licence>
            </availability>
         </publicationStmt>
         <seriesStmt>
            <title xml:lang="sl">Prispevki za novejšo zgodovino</title>
            <title xml:lang="en">Contributions to Contemporary History</title>
            <biblScope unit="volume">66</biblScope>
            <biblScope unit="issue">1</biblScope>
            <idno type="ISSN">2463-7807</idno>
         </seriesStmt>
         <sourceDesc>
            <p>No source, born digital.</p>
         </sourceDesc>
      </fileDesc>
      <encodingDesc>
         <projectDesc xml:lang="en">
            <p>Contributions to Contemporary History is one of the central Slovenian scientific
               historiographic journals, dedicated to publishing articles from the field of
               contemporary history (the 19th and 20th century).</p>
            <p>The journal is published three times per year in Slovenian and in the following
               foreign languages: English, German, Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian, Italian, Slovak and
               Czech. The articles are all published with abstracts in English and Slovenian as well
               as summaries in English.</p>
         </projectDesc>
         <projectDesc xml:lang="sl">
            <p>Prispevki za novejšo zgodovino je ena osrednjih slovenskih znanstvenih
               zgodovinopisnih revij, ki objavlja teme s področja novejše zgodovine (19. in 20.
               stoletje).</p>
            <p>Revija izide trikrat letno v slovenskem jeziku in v naslednjih tujih jezikih:
               angleščina, nemščina, srbščina, hrvaščina, bosanščina, italijanščina, slovaščina in
               češčina. Članki izhajajo z izvlečki v angleščini in slovenščini ter povzetki v
               angleščini.</p>
         </projectDesc>
      </encodingDesc>
      <profileDesc>
         <langUsage>
            <language ident="sl"/>
            <language ident="en"/>
         </langUsage>
         <textClass>
            <keywords xml:lang="en">
               <term>Ottoman Empire</term>
               <term>Serbia</term>
               <term>Bulgaria</term>
               <term>Macedonia</term>
               <term>Old Serbia</term>
               <term>Chetniks</term>
               <term>comitadji, Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organisation (IMRO)</term>
               <term>Bulgarian Exarchate</term>
            </keywords>
            <keywords xml:lang="sl">
               <term>Osmansko cesarstvo</term>
               <term>Srbija</term>
               <term>Bolgarija</term>
               <term>Makedonija</term>
               <term>Stara Srbija</term>
               <term>četniki</term>
               <term>komiti</term>
               <term>Notranja makedonsko-odrinska revolucionarna organizacija (NMORO), Bolgarska
                  ekzarhija</term>
            </keywords>
         </textClass>
      </profileDesc>
      <revisionDesc>
         <listChange>
            <change><date>2026-04-24T10:14:22Z</date>
               <name>Mihael Ojsteršek</name>
               <desc>Pretvorba iz DOCX v TEI, dodatno označevanje</desc>
            </change>
         </listChange>
      </revisionDesc>
   </teiHeader>
   <text>
      <front>
         <docAuthor>Uroš Šešum,<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn2" n="*">
               <hi rend="bold">PhD, Associate Professor, University of Belgrade, Faculty of
                  Philosophy, Department of History, Čika Ljubina 18-20, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia,
                     <ref target="mailto:uros.sesum@f.bg.ac.rs">uros.sesum@f.bg.ac.rs</ref>; ORCID:
                  0009-0007-7158-441X</hi></note></docAuthor>
         <docAuthor>Miroslav Radivojević<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn3" n="**">
               <hi rend="bold">PhD, Senior Research Associate; University of Belgrade, Faculty of
                  Philosophy, Department of History, <ref
                     target="mailto:miroslav.radivojevic@f.bg.ac.rs"
                     >miroslav.radivojevic@f.bg.ac.rs</ref>, <ref target="mailto:mirrad88@gmail.com"
                     >mirrad88@gmail.com</ref>; ORCID: 0000-0002-2218-7254</hi></note>
         </docAuthor>
         <docImprint>
            <idno type="cobissType">Cobiss tip: 1.01</idno>
            <idno type="DOI">https://doi.org/10.51663/pnz.66.1.04</idno>
         </docImprint>
         <div type="abstract" xml:lang="sl">
            <head>IZVLEČEK</head>
            <head>EKONOMSKI UKREPI V DELOVANJU SRBSKE ČETNIŠKE ORGANIZACIJE V KOSOVSKEM IN BITOLSKEM
                  <hi rend="italic">VILAJETU</hi> 1904–1908: ŠTUDIJA PRIMERA</head>
            <p style="text-align: justify;"><hi rend="italic">Ekonomske metode so imele pomožno, a
                  hkrati zelo pomembno vlogo v boju, ki so ga vodile gverilske enote Srbske četniške
                  organizacije (SCO) v vilajetih Kosovo in Bitola Osmanskega cesarstva za dosego
                  nacionalnih ciljev. Po zgledu in izkušnjah konkurenčnih komitskih organizacij
                  (Makedonske revolucionarne organizacije – MRO; Bolgarsko-makedonsko-odrinske
                  revolucionarne organizacije – BMORO; Tajne makedonsko-odrinske revolucionarne
                  organizacije – TMORO; Notranje makedonsko-odrinske revolucionarne organizacije –
                  NMORO) je tudi srbska revolucionarna struktura v Osmanskem cesarstvu uporabljala
                  ekonomske ukrepe kot sredstvo za pridobivanje pravoslavnega prebivalstva
                  Bitolskega in Kosovskega vilajeta v svoje vrste. Ker so se izvajale z namenom
                  uresničevanja nacionalnih in državnih interesov Kraljevine Srbije, je navedene
                  dejavnosti mogoče opredeliti kot obliko ekonomskega nacionalizma.</hi></p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;"><hi rend="italic">Ključne besede: Osmansko cesarstvo,
                  Srbija, Bolgarija, Makedonija, Stara Srbija, četniki, komiti, Notranja
                  makedonsko-odrinska revolucionarna organizacija (NMORO), Bolgarska
               ekzarhija</hi></p>
         </div>
         <div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">
            <head>ABSTRACT</head>
            <p style="text-align: justify;"><hi rend="italic">Economic methods played a
                  supplementary yet highly significant role in the struggle conducted by the
                  guerrilla units of the Serbian Chetnik Organisation (SCO) in the Kosovo and Bitola
                  (Monastir) </hi>vilayets<hi rend="italic"> of the Ottoman Empire, aiding in the
                  achievement of national objectives. Following the example and experience of the
                  rival </hi>comitadji<hi rend="italic"> organisations (Macedonian Revolutionary
                  Organisation – MRO; Bulgarian-Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Organisation –
                  BMARO; Secret Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Organisation – SMARO; Internal
                  Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Organisation – IMARO), the Serbian
                  revolutionary structure in the Ottoman Empire similarly employed economic measures
                  as a means of attracting the Orthodox population of the Bitola and Kosovo
                  </hi>vilayets<hi rend="italic"> into its ranks. Since these activities were
                  conducted to promote the national and state interests of the Kingdom of Serbia,
                  they can be characterised as a form of economic nationalism.</hi></p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;"><hi rend="italic">Keywords: Ottoman Empire, Serbia,
                  Bulgaria, Macedonia, Old Serbia, Chetniks, </hi>comitadji<hi rend="italic">,
                  Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organisation (IMRO), </hi><hi rend="italic"
                  >Bulgarian Exarchate</hi><hi rend="italic">.</hi></p>
         </div>
      </front>
      <body>
         <div>
            <head>Introduction</head>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The purpose of this article is to explore a largely
               overlooked subject: economic nationalism in the struggle of the Serbian Chetnik
               Organisation (SCO) within the Ottoman Empire at the beginning of the 20th century.
               While this topic has been discussed within a broader set of studies, it has not been
               examined as a standalone, fully developed issue. Therefore, the authors aim to
               identify the methods of material incentives and pressure used in the struggle by the
               Serbian guerrilla units (<hi rend="italic">chetas</hi>) and the Macedonian
               Revolutionary Organisation (MRO), and to assess how and to what extent these methods
               were employed.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn4" n="1"> In this paper, the various
                  organisations will be referred to by the name and acronym valid at the time of
                  mention. Although the <hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi> and Chetniks are
                  essentially synonymous, for simplicity, the former term will denote members of the
                  MRO/BMARO/SMARO/IMARO, while the latter will refer to Serbian guerrilla units. To
                  prevent confusion, villages recognising the Patriarchate and receiving the Chetnik
                  Organisation will be described as Serbian, while those under the Exarchate or
                  linked to the <hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi> will be classified as
                  Bulgarian.</note> The article seeks to find and describe concrete examples of
               these methods being applied on both sides – the SCO and the MRO – since actions taken
               by one often triggered similar responses from the other. This methodological approach
               was also adopted because the MRO, as the older organisation with an established
               structure, held a monopoly on such actions and possessed a significant advantage
               until 1904. In preparing the article, the traditional historiographical method was
               employed. The authors conducted the necessary research, primarily through examining
               published archival materials<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn5" n="2"> The acts related
                  to the Serbian Chetnik action were mainly published in the collection of Serbian
                  diplomatic materials <hi rend="italic">Dokumenti o spoljnoj politici Kraljevine
                     Srbije 1903–1914</hi>. Within this collection of documents, a subset of four
                  volumes was also created, containing solely the acts connected to the Serbian
                  Chetnik action and organisation.</note> and, to a lesser extent, unpublished
               sources and available literature. The findings were subjected to critique, analysis,
               and synthesis in the written text. The article is structured according to a combined
               thematic-chronological principle. Geographically, it covers parts of two major
               administrative units of the Ottoman Empire – the Kosovo and Bitola<note place="foot"
                  xml:id="ftn6" n="3"> The official Ottoman Turkish name for the Bitola <hi
                     rend="italic">vilayet</hi> was Monastir, but the Slavic and more widely
                  recognised form Bitola is used in this article.</note>
               <hi rend="italic">vilayets</hi>.</p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">In the Ottoman Empire during the 19th century, several
               administrative reforms were implemented. Starting in 1864, the largest administrative
               units, the <hi rend="italic">eyalets</hi>, were gradually replaced by <hi
                  rend="italic">vilayets</hi>. Ultimately, the 1867 Vilayet Law (<hi rend="italic"
                  >Vilayet-i Umumiye Nizamnamesi</hi>) decreed that <hi rend="italic">vilayets</hi>
               would become the first-level administrative division across the Empire. The structure
               of lower administrative units remained unchanged, so <hi rend="italic">vilayets</hi>,
               like the former <hi rend="italic">eyalets</hi>, were divided into <hi rend="italic"
                  >sanjaks</hi>, which were further subdivided into <hi rend="italic">kazas</hi>.
                  <hi rend="italic">Kazas</hi> were typically divided into <hi rend="italic"
                  >nahiyes</hi>. During the second half of the 19th century, the Ottoman Empire
               frequently experienced changes in the administrative affiliation of <hi rend="italic"
                  >kazas</hi> and <hi rend="italic">sanjaks</hi> to neighbouring <hi rend="italic"
                  >vilayets</hi>, as well as the abolition, renaming, and reorganisation of <hi
                  rend="italic">vilayets</hi>. At the beginning of the 20th century, the Empire’s
               European territories were divided into the <hi rend="italic">vilayets</hi> of Kosovo,
               Bitola (Monastir), Salonica, Scutari, Janina, and Adrianople. Between 1904 and 1908,
               the Kosovo <hi rend="italic">vilayet</hi> included the <hi rend="italic">sanjaks</hi>
               of Pljevlja, Sjenica, Peć, Prizren, Priština, and Skopje (with key centres: Skopje,
               Veles, Kumanovo, Kriva Palanka, Kratovo, Štip, Kočani, and Radoviš). The Bitola <hi
                  rend="italic">vilayet</hi> encompassed the <hi rend="italic">sanjaks</hi> of
               Bitola (including towns like Bitola, Prilep, Kičevo, and Ohrid), Debar, Serfiğe,
               Elbasan, and Korçë (Görice).<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn7" n="4"> Miloš Jagodić,
                     <hi rend="italic">Srpsko-albanski odnosi u Kosovskom vilajetu 1878–1912</hi>
                  (Belgrade: Zavod za udžbenike, 2009), 7-8. Uroš Šešum, <hi rend="italic">Srpska
                     četnička akcija (1897–1908). Oružana diplomatija</hi> (Novi Sad: Matica srpska,
                  2019), 17-18. Aleksandar M. Savić, “Od ejaleta i vilajeta do nahije –
                  administrativna podela južnih srpskih krajeva (1834–1879),” in Suzana Rajić, Uroš
                  Šešum, and Aleksandar M. Savić<hi rend="italic">, </hi>eds., <hi rend="italic"
                     >Novooslobođeni krajevi Srbije 1833–1878–1913</hi> (Belgrade: Centar za srpske
                  studije, 2025), 27–53. Milena Gostović, <hi rend="italic">Kosovski vilajet
                     1879–1900. Godišnji izveštaji (salname)</hi> (Novi Sad: Matica srpska,
                  2021).</note></p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">Claims on Ottoman territories in the Balkans by Serbia,
               Bulgaria, and Greece were based on the former extent of the Serbian and Bulgarian
               Empires and Byzantium, as well as on the fact that a significant portion of the
               population in all the <hi rend="italic">vilayets</hi>, except for the Scutari <hi
                  rend="italic">vilayet</hi>, consisted of Orthodox communities, including Slavic,
               Greek, Aromanian, and Albanian groups. At the end of the 19th and the beginning of
               the 20th century, the territorial claims of the three Balkan states overlapped in the
               areas east and west of the Vardar River valley. All three rivals referred to this
               region as Macedonia; however, under this term, they did not always encompass the same
               territory. Thus, the geographical term “Macedonia”, which originally covered the
               hinterland of Thessaloniki and the Aegean coast, was interpreted more narrowly or
               broadly by each of the claimants. In Greek eyes, Macedonia encompassed the area from
               Thessaloniki in the south to the Šar Mountains in the north (including the
               Thessaloniki, Bitola, and Skopje <hi rend="italic">sanjaks</hi> of the Kosovo <hi
                  rend="italic">vilayet</hi>, along with two <hi rend="italic">kazas</hi> of Prizren
               south of the Šar Mountains). Bulgaria, by contrast, understood Macedonia as
               encompassing the region from the Rila, Rhodope, and Osogovo mountains in the east to
               the Šar Mountains and the Karadag mountain range in the north, the watersheds of the
               Devoll and Bistrica rivers, the Grammos and Olympus mountains in the west, and the
               Aegean Sea in the south. The Serbian perception of the territory that formed the
               heart of the medieval Serbian state evolved throughout the 19th and into the early
               20th century, along with the understanding of the concept of Macedonia. The central
               part of the former Serbian state had already begun to be called Old Serbia in the
               first half of the 19th century. Among the Serbian political and cultural elite, there
               was no disagreement regarding the northern boundary of this term, which matched the
               southern borders of the Principality/Kingdom of Serbia. However, the perception of
               the southern boundary of Old Serbia in relation to Macedonia changed over time. By
               the final decades of the 19th century, the view had become established that Macedonia
               extended northwards to the Šar Mountains. However, its northern part, roughly
               corresponding to the southern borders of present-day North Macedonia, was regarded as
               ethnically Serbian, and the term Serbian Macedonia was accordingly used to refer to
               it. In the early years of the 20th century, the Serbian scholar Jovan Cvijić,
               followed by the political elite, gradually extended the boundaries of the term Old
               Serbia first to the southern limits of the <hi rend="italic">Sanjak</hi> of Skopje,
               that is, to the borders of the Kosovo <hi rend="italic">vilayet</hi>. In 1907, the
               Serbian Ministry of Foreign Affairs finally codified the Serbian conception of Old
               Serbia. From that point onward, in addition to the Kosovo <hi rend="italic"
                  >vilayet</hi>, the north-western parts of the Bitola <hi rend="italic"
                  >vilayet</hi> were officially included according to the Serbian government’s
               position (the <hi rend="italic">kazas</hi> of Rakalar/Reka, part of the Sanjak of
               Dibra, and parts of the Sanjak of Bitola: the <hi rend="italic">kazas</hi> of Prilep,
               Kičevo, and Ohrid). As a result, while Bulgarians and Greeks regarded the Bitola and
               Salonica <hi rend="italic">vilayets</hi>, as well as the territory of the Kosovo <hi
                  rend="italic">vilayet</hi> up to the Serbian-Ottoman border and the Šar Mountains
               in the north, as Macedonia, the Serbs challenged the northern boundaries of the
               contemporary geopolitical concept of Macedonia. They narrowed it to align with the
               borders of Old Serbia, in accordance with their interests. From the Serbian point of
               view, until 1907, the Chetnik operations took place across the territory of Old
               Serbia and Macedonia, but following the codification of terminology, they were
               confined solely within the boundaries of Old Serbia.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn8"
                  n="5"> Žarko Ilić, “Srpska zemlja na jugu – između istorije i etnografije, teorije
                  i prakse,“ in Suzana Rajić and Žarko Ilić, eds., <hi rend="italic">Kralj Milan
                     Obrenović, oslobodilac i reformator. Zasluge i poricanja. Tematski zbornik
                     radova</hi> (Beograd: Istraživačko-izdavački centar “Stari Vlah”, 2025), 42–56.
                  Šešum, <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija</hi>, 31–33, 237–48. For the
                  geographical understanding of the concepts of Old Serbia and Macedonia in the
                  modern era, see: Žarko Ilić, <hi rend="italic">Geografska percepcija srpske zemlje
                     i centralnog Balkana u novom veku – ime, prostor granica</hi> (Beograd: Huk
                  izdavaštvo, in print).</note></p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">Regarding the chronological framework, several markers
               must be established. The crucial event for understanding the nature of the national
               guerrilla struggles, which also had economic dimensions, is the establishment of the
               Bulgarian Exarchate in 1870, which gave rise to opposing national propaganda. To
               better understand the topic, the authors of the article briefly outline the processes
               that began with this event. The second point, and the <hi rend="italic">terminus a
                  quo</hi> of the study, is the year 1897, when the terror of the Bulgarian
               Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Organisation (BMARO) against Serbian and Greek
               “propaganda” began, while at the same time the first organised recruitment of people
               originating from Old Serbia and Macedonia was recorded in Belgrade for potential use
               in armed <hi rend="italic">chetas</hi> in the Ottoman Empire. The most significant
               period of struggle between the opposing sides began in 1904, with the establishment
               of the organisational structure for Serbian Chetnik action on the ground, whereas the
               Young Turk Revolution (1908) brought the armed confrontation to an end. The last two
               years are therefore taken as the chronological limits for analysing the economic
               methods of struggle employed by the two organisations.</p>
            <milestone unit="section" n="***"/>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">Economic nationalism can be defined as the deliberate
               integration of economic policies, incentives, pressures, and everyday practices to
               align the economy with national identity and interests. It functions both as an
               ideological project and a subtle cultural mechanism for nation-building in
               multi-ethnic or imperial contexts. Stefan Berger has demonstrated, through his
               research on the overlooked link between explicit economic nationalism – as
               state-directed protectionism or resource control – and more diffuse forms of
               “economic nationness”, that this phenomenon bridges top-down strategies with
               grassroots responses. “Economic nationness” refers to the subtle, culturally embedded
               ways in which economic activities, such as boycotts of rival traders, ethnically
               preferential credit networks, or restrictions on seasonal workers from opposing
               national groups, become infused with national significance and help reproduce
               national boundaries in everyday life. Eric Storm’s global history of nationalism
               further places it within transnational developments, from early liberal-emancipatory
               forms to exclusionary and identity-driven variants shaped by industrialisation,
               migration, and state rivalries. Helga Schulz’s work on the history and culture of
               economic nationalism in East Central Europe emphasises its role as a developmental
               strategy for peripheral elites, while Marvin Suess highlights the inherent
               “nationalist dilemma” of reconciling romantic national ideals with pragmatic
               engagement in the global economy.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn9" n="6"> Stefan
                  Berger and Thomas Fetzer<hi rend="italic">, </hi>eds., <hi rend="italic"
                     >Nationalism and the Economy: Explorations into a Neglected Relationship</hi>
                  (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2019), 1–18, 43–63. Stefan Berger
                  and Eric Storm, eds., <hi rend="italic">Writing the History of Nationalism</hi>
                  (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2019), 1–18. Helga Schultz and Eduard Kubů, eds.,
                     <hi rend="italic">History and Culture of Economic Nationalism in East Central
                     Europe</hi> (Berlin: Berliner Wissenschafts-Verlag, 2006), 7–30. Marvin
                     Suesse<hi rend="italic">, The Nationalist Dilemma: A Global History of Economic
                     Nationalism, 1776–Present</hi> (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2023),
                  1–11. Eric Storm, <hi rend="italic">Nationalism: A World History</hi> (Princeton:
                  Princeton University Press, 2024), 1–10, 60–172.</note></p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">In this study, the concept is operationalised through
               concrete measures of the Serbian Chetnik Organisation and its rival, the Macedonian
               Revolutionary Organisation, in the Kosovo and Bitola <hi rend="italic">vilayets</hi>
               between 1904 and 1908. These two administrative units provide an exceptionally
               suitable “laboratory” for studying economic nationalism because they formed a
               volatile frontier of overlapping Serbian and Bulgarian claims within the Ottoman
               millet system, offering analytical variation and leverage. The regional diversity
               allows testing the relative effectiveness of incentives versus coercive measures
               under varying local rural economic conditions. Situated in the broader Ottoman and
               Balkan context, these <hi rend="italic">vilayets</hi> exemplify how imperial
               religious frameworks, above all the Patriarchate versus the Exarchate, enabled
               economic instruments to fuel national competition. This parallels East Central
               European patterns of peripheral nation-building (Schultz and Kubu), the global
               nationalist dilemma of ideology versus economic reality (Suesse), and the
               transnational transformations of nationalism analysed by Storm and Berger. In the
               Serbian Chetnik Actions, this took the form of diffuse “economic nationness”, as
               conceptualised by Berger. Everyday economic practices, such as selective boycotts,
               preferential aid and credit networks, selective seizure and restitution of
                  livestock,<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn10" n="7"> Arson attacks, though violent,
                  can be interpreted as an extreme and coercive expression of economic nationness,
                  since they directly destroyed the material foundations of rival group livelihoods
                  in order to force a change in national-religious affiliation.</note> preferential
               support for selected traders and communities, and favourable or restrictive treatment
               of seasonal migrant labourers, effectively tied material interests to Serbian
               national affiliation and proved highly successful in expanding the Serbian sphere
               among the Orthodox population.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn11" n="8"> Berger and
                  Storm, <hi rend="italic">Writing the History of Nationalism</hi>, 1–18. Berger and
                  Fetzer, Nationalism and the Economy, 1–18, 43–63. Schultz and Kubů, <hi
                     rend="italic">History and Culture of Economic Nationalism</hi>, 7–30. Suesse,
                     <hi rend="italic">The Nationalist Dilemma</hi>, 1–37. Storm, <hi rend="italic"
                     >Nationalism: A World History</hi>, 1–10, 133–72. </note>
            </p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The study contributes to a comparative understanding of
               how economic nationalism functioned at the intersection of empires, migrations, and
               rival propagandas in rural areas in the early twentieth century.</p>
         </div>
         <div>
            <head>From Members of the <hi rend="italic">Millet</hi> to Members of the
               Organisation</head>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The struggle for the use of the Slavic language in
               religious services and for bishops of the same ethnic affiliation as the faithful in
               predominantly Bulgarian regions of the Ottoman Empire, under the spiritual authority
               of the Ecumenical Patriarchate – which was under Greek dominance and influenced
               politically by the Hellenic Kingdom – led to the establishment of the Bulgarian
               Exarchate as a separate religious community (millet) in 1870. According to the
               Sultan’s <hi rend="italic">firman</hi> establishing the Exarchate, the church
               consisted of 15 dioceses in which the Christian population was almost entirely
               Bulgarian or Slavic.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn12" n="9"> At its founding by the
                     <hi rend="italic">firman</hi>, the Exarchate's structure included, in addition
                  to the undoubtedly Bulgarian-populated territories, the western dioceses – Niš,
                  Pirot, Veles, Samokov, and Kyustendil. These areas were inhabited either entirely
                  or predominantly by believers who were Serbs or Slavs without a distinct Serbian
                  or Bulgarian national or ethnic identity. Uroš Šešum, “Pretpostavke srpske
                  crkveno-prosvetne politike u Skopskoj, Veleško-debarskoj, Pelagonijskoj i
                  Prespanskoj eparhiji i njeni rezultati 1887–1889,” in Rajić and Ilić, <hi
                     rend="italic">Kralj Milan Obrenović</hi>, 60–68.</note> For the other dioceses
               with a significant presence of Orthodox non-Slavic inhabitants, the <hi rend="italic"
                  >firman</hi> stated that they would become part of the Exarchate if all or
               two-thirds of the Orthodox believers decided to join.<note place="foot"
                  xml:id="ftn13" n="10"> These are the dioceses of Skopje, Pelagonia, and
                  Ohrid-Prespa.</note> The Ecumenical Patriarchate declared the Exarchate a
               schismatic church in 1872. Despite the majority’s support for the Exarchate, the
               diocesan structure of the Ecumenical Patriarchate continued to operate alongside in
               all dioceses in Macedonia and Old Serbia: Skopje, Prespa, Pelagonia, Veles and Debar.
               This meant that within the same area, there were two dioceses, each following the
               believers’ choice of one or the other religious community (<hi rend="italic"
                  >millet</hi>). The term “<hi rend="italic">millet</hi>”, literally translated from
               Arabic, means “nation”, which soon led Bulgaria, Greece, and later Serbia to
               associate <hi rend="italic">millet</hi> affiliation with national identity. This
               became particularly evident after the establishment of the Bulgarian autonomous
               state, i.e. the expansion and gaining of independence by Serbia at the Congress of
               Berlin in 1878. Many co-nationals from all three Balkan states continued to live in
               the Ottoman Empire, and their liberation alongside the restoration of the medieval
               empires became a shared goal. In this context, Macedonia was a point of contention,
               as all claimed it. As mentioned, alongside the Patriarchist – Rum <hi rend="italic"
                  >millet</hi> (Roman/Eastern Orthodox Christian), the Bulgarian <hi rend="italic"
                  >millet</hi> also existed within the Ottoman Empire, but a separate Serbian <hi
                  rend="italic">millet</hi> was never established. For this reason, the Serbs
               conducted their national propaganda in Macedonia within the framework of the
               Patriarchist. The Principality of Bulgaria, meanwhile, utilised its formal advantage
               to encompass the entire Slavic Christian population within its nation through
               church-school autonomy, which fell under the jurisdiction of the <hi rend="italic"
                  >millet</hi>. From the mid-1880s, Serbia responded by establishing consulates,
               expanding its educational network, and negotiating with the Ecumenical Patriarchate
               over the appointment of bishops of Serbian nationality in areas chiefly inhabited by
               Serbs, as well as in regions where the patriarchists were Slavs without a strong
               national identity. By the turn of the century, it succeeded in this endeavour by
               securing the appointment of the Serb Firmilian Dražić as bishop of Skopje.<note
                  place="foot" xml:id="ftn14" n="11"> Kamel S. Abu Jaber, “The Millet System in
                  Nineteenth Century Ottoman Empire,” <hi rend="italic">The Muslim World</hi> 57/3
                  (July 1967): 212–23. Douglas Dakin, <hi rend="italic">The Greek Struggle in
                     Macedonia 1897–1913</hi> (Thessaloniki: Institute for Balkan Studies, 1966),
                  14-15. Miloš Jagodić, “Nufusko pitanje. Problem zvaničnog priznavanja srpske
                  nacije u Turskoj 1894–1910,” <hi rend="italic">Istorijski časopis</hi> 57 (2008):
                  343–53. Suzana Rajić, <hi rend="italic">Aleksandar Obrenović. Vladar na prelazu
                     vekova. Sukobljeni svetovi</hi> (Beograd: Srpska književna zadruga, 2014), 221,
                  224, 273–77. Suzana Rajić, <hi rend="italic">Vladan Đorđević. Biografija pouzdanog
                     obrenovićevca</hi> (Beograd: Zavod za udžbenike, 2007), 129–35, 146–58.
                  Stanford J. Shaw and Ezel Kural Shaw, <hi rend="italic">History of Ottoman Empire
                     and Modern Turkey. Volume II: Reform, Revolution, and Republic: The Rise of
                     Modern Turkey, 1808–1975</hi> (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1977),
                  123–28. Šešum, <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija, </hi>16–21, 31–37.
               </note></p>
            <milestone unit="section" n="***"/>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The transformation of the church-educational struggle
               into an action involving armed bands and revolutionary organisations of Serbs,
               Greeks, and Bulgarians within the Ottoman Empire occurred at the end of the
               nineteenth and the beginning of the twentieth century. The first step in this process
               was the foundation of the Macedonian Revolutionary Organisation (MRO) in Thessaloniki
               in 1894 (from 1896, known as the Bulgarian-Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary
               Organisation – BMARO; from 1902, the Secret Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary
               Organisation – SMARO; from 1905, the Internal Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary
               Organisation – IMARO). In addition to pursuing Macedonia’s autonomy and acting
               against the Ottoman authorities, its statutes already included measures to suppress
               Serbian and Greek “propaganda”. Accepting logistical and financial support from the
               Principality of Bulgaria, the Committee, with occasional confrontations, mainly acted
               in the interest of the Bulgarian state. Once Macedonian autonomy was achieved through
               the actions of the Exarchists, it would, as in the case of Eastern Rumelia (1885),
               lead to its annexation by the state that supported and often directed the
               revolutionary network. From 1897 onwards, the organisation used assassinations of
               prominent pro-Serbian leaders, priests, educators, and some wavering individuals
               within its own ranks as a method of struggle. As a result, the Serbian government saw
               it as an extended arm of Bulgaria within the Ottoman Empire.</p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">In the same year, due to the activities of the <hi
                  rend="italic">comitadji</hi> and Greek organisations in Old Serbia and Macedonia,
               as well as the potential for a war between Greece and Turkey, the official
               authorities in Belgrade began covertly organising the <hi rend="italic">cheta</hi>
               leaders and their men for possible deployment to the field. Although the Serbian
               government in 1897 abandoned plans to send pro-Serbian or Serbian-oriented <hi
                  rend="italic">chetas</hi> into the Ottoman Empire in the subsequent years
               (1898–1901), authorities received outlaws who had taken refuge in Serbia during
               seasons unsuitable for <hi rend="italic">cheta</hi> operations, offering them
               material support and shelter. However, they did not themselves form <hi rend="italic"
                  >chetas</hi> from outlaws who were Ottoman subjects, nor did they influence their
               activities in Turkey.</p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">During the same period, up to 1901, certain regions such
               as Drimkol, Skopska Crna Gora, and Azot<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn15" n="12">
                  These are three mountainous micro-regions where communities that identified
                  themselves as Serbian formed the majority. In all three cases, almost the entire
                  remaining Slavic Orthodox population of the administrative units they belonged to
                  in 1901 were part of the Exarchist community and <hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi>
                  organisation. The three Drimkol Serbian-identified villages represented the only
                  small Serbian enclave in the <hi rend="italic">Kaza</hi> of Ohrid, Bitola <hi
                     rend="italic">Vilayet</hi>. The same was true of the Serbian community in Azot,
                  in the <hi rend="italic">Kaza</hi> of Veles, which from 1901 was part of the
                  Kosovo <hi rend="italic">Vilayet</hi>, <hi rend="italic">Sanjak</hi> of Skopje. In
                  the 19th and early 20th centuries, the mountainous region of Skopska Crna Gora,
                  north of Skopje, was part of the Skopje <hi rend="italic">kaza</hi> and <hi
                     rend="italic">sanjak</hi> within the Kosovo <hi rend="italic">Vilayet</hi>. The
                  Serbian community there, which was the majority in the Exarchist villages of
                  Skopska Crna Gora (excluding a few peripheral villages), along with a few
                  Serbian-identified villages in the mountainous micro-region of Tavor, formed an
                  enclave relative to the Exarchist and Muslim villages across the rest of the <hi
                     rend="italic">Kaza</hi> of Skopje. Uroš Šešum, “O broju Srba u Južnoj Staroj
                  Srbiji 1903–1908. Godine,” <hi rend="italic">Vardarski zbornik</hi> 10 (2015):
                  156, 162, 167.</note> saw the formation of spontaneously organised <hi
                  rend="italic">chetas</hi> to defend Serbian-aligned villages against the <hi
                  rend="italic">comitadji</hi>. These activities were initially unplanned and lacked
               coordination. However, from 1901 onwards, the Head of the Department for National
               Policy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of Serbia began to directly
               oversee and guide the Chetnik actions in Old Serbia and Macedonia. Following a brief
               period of cooperation and negotiations for joint action with BMARO and its various
               factions, the Serbian Chetnik Organisation, founded a year earlier, began operating
               independently from 1904, functioning as a citizens’ association. Initially, this was
               as a means of self-defence against a renewed wave of terror by the <hi rend="italic"
                  >comitadji</hi>,<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn16" n="13"> The period preceding the
                  open war started in the second half of 1904, marked by SMARO's failure to
                  eliminate the Serbian-aligned core in the Kumanovo and Kičevo regions through
                  terror and <hi rend="italic">cheta</hi> attacks, and lasted until spring 1905.
                  During this time, both organisations, taking advantage of a temporary weakness,
                  avoided full-scale conflict at all points. </note> and later aimed at expanding
               the network of Serbian-identified settlements, thus creating and consolidating the
               Serbian sphere of interest in the two <hi rend="italic">vilayets</hi>.<note
                  place="foot" xml:id="ftn17" n="14"> Vladimir Ilić, <hi rend="italic">Srpska
                     četnička akcija 1903–1912</hi> (Beograd: Ecolibri, 2006), 14–47. Jovan M.
                  Jovanović, <hi rend="italic">Južna Srbija od kraja XVIII veka do oslobođenja</hi>
                  (Beograd: TANESI, 1990), 143–65. Predrag Pejčić, <hi rend="italic">Četnički pokret
                     u Kraljevini Srbiji 1903–1918 </hi>(Kragujevac: Pogledi, 2007), 25–50. Uroš
                  Šešum, “Društvo protiv Srba 1897–1902. Metodi i mere bugarske diplomatije,
                  Egzarhije i Bugarsko-makedonsko odrinske revolucionarne organizacije protiv
                  širenja srpskog uticaja u Južnoj Staroj Srbiji i Makedoniji 1897–1902,” <hi
                     rend="italic">Srpske studije</hi> 4 (2013): 79–100. Šešum, <hi rend="italic"
                     >Srpska četnička akcija</hi>, 37–166. </note></p>
         </div>
         <div>
            <head>Structure, Support and Action</head>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">Some signs of economic nationalism were already visible
               in the organisational structure of the Serbian Chetnik Organisation, which, in many
               ways was essentially a copy of the <hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi> organisation.
               Similar to its rival and simultaneously model organisation, the basic unit of the SCO
               was the village committee. It held certain judicial functions: resolving minor
               property disputes, inheritance issues, delinquency, moral offences, matters
               concerning stray livestock, compensation for damage caused by poorly supervised
               livestock to neighbours, and so forth. An important component of the village
               committee was the treasury, into which funds from fines for various offences – such
               as losing a rifle or being involved in a civil dispute – were deposited, along with
               small monthly contributions. These funds served as a mutual aid, a “black fund”, from
               which, in cases of peasant arrests, support was provided for imprisonment, bribery of
               Ottoman officials, legal fees, and aid to the poor and the families of the
               deceased.</p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">Some of the funds in these cases also originated from
               the Mountain Headquarters,<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn18" n="15"> Mountain
                  Headquarters represented the command bodies with operational and strategic
                  authority over the Serbian <hi rend="italic">chetas</hi> in the Ottoman Empire.
                  The first of the two Mountain Headquarters was established on Mount Kozjak, near
                  the Serbian–Ottoman border, in Ottoman territory in February 1905. Initially, it
                  was headed by a Serbian Army lieutenant, assisted by two non-commissioned
                  officers. The Kozjak Headquarters was tasked with directing Chetnik operations
                  east of the Vardar River by coordinating the units and their commanders, the <hi
                     rend="italic">vojvodas</hi>. In April 1905, an identical command, also led by a
                  Serbian Army lieutenant, was established on Mount Babuna, with the same
                  responsibilities and duties in the area west of the Vardar River. From 1905 to
                  1908, the two Mountain Headquarters, commanded by Serbian Army officers and
                  directly assisted by several Serbian non-commissioned officers, and occasionally
                  officers, effectively carried out Chetnik operations within their respective
                  areas, in mutual coordination and following directives from the Serbian Ministry
                  of Foreign Affairs. Besides military authority, the heads of the staffs, by virtue
                  of their control over the <hi rend="italic">vojvodas</hi>, also held the highest
                  organisational powers on the ground. According to their areas of operation, the
                  staff based in Kozjak was referred to as the Mountain Staff of Eastern Povardarie,
                  while that in Babuna was called the Western Povardarie staff. Šešum, <hi
                     rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija</hi>, 166–70, 200–02, 223, 248–52, 259–61,
                  269–96, 316–18, 323–24, 336, 344–57. Šešum, “Srpska četnička organizacija u Staroj
                  Srbiji 1903–1908. Terenska organizacija,” <hi rend="italic">Srpske studije</hi> 2
                  (2011): 247–49.</note> Serbian consulates, and higher levels of the organisation
               (committees). Expenditure was controlled by the regional <hi rend="italic"
                  >vojvodas</hi> (leaders of the guerrilla units),<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn19"
                  n="16"> The <hi rend="italic">vojvoda</hi> of each <hi rend="italic">cheta</hi>
                  had a defined geographical area of operation. Besides his main combat
                  responsibilities, he also served as a representative of the local revolutionary
                  authority. Because he was in charge of a specific district, he was known as a
                  regional <hi rend="italic">vojvoda</hi>.</note> who, with their own <hi
                  rend="italic">chetas</hi>, defended the population even against fines imposed by
               local Muslim notables.</p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The organisation sent medical supplies and doctors to
               the field, who treated its members. For more serious cases, free beds were provided
               in hospitals and sanatoriums in Serbia. Within the jurisdiction of the church-school
               funds, credit institutions were established. Through these, peasants could obtain
               low-interest loans, which kept them connected to the movement, while the SCO’s funds
                  expanded.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn20" n="17"> In the last decade of the 19th
                  century, within the Serbian leadership, there was an initiative to settle
                  craftsmen and merchants from Serbia in Skopje, thereby financially strengthening
                  the Serbian core. The start of brewery construction in 1891 was a step in this
                  direction. The measures planned in Skopje would have represented the first step
                  towards establishing a Serbian bank and/or other credit institutions. This idea
                  was reconsidered in 1907. The bank was meant to buy Turkish and Albanian land for
                  the benefit of the Serbian action, as well as to bolster the crafts and trade of
                  the population aligned with the Patriarchate. – Ljiljana Aleksić-Pejković and
                  Vasilije Krestić, eds., <hi rend="italic">Dokumenti o spoljnoj politici Kraljevine
                     Srbije 1903–1914. Organizacija srpska odbrana (1903–1905) iz fondova Arhiva
                     Srbije,</hi> (DSPKS), <hi rend="italic">knj. II, Dodatak 1</hi> (Beograd:
                  Srpska akademija nauka i umetnosti, 2008), No. 263. Mihailo Vojvodić, <hi
                     rend="italic">Stojan Novaković i Vladimir Karić</hi> (Beograd: Clio, 2003), 83,
                  85-86, 115, 141. Nikolay Simeonov, “Struktura, metodi i zhertvi na srabskata
                  vaorazhena propaganda v Makedonia (1904–1908),” <hi rend="italic">Anamneza</hi>
                  I/2 (2006), accesed on 10 February 2026, <ref
                     target="http://anamnesis.info/broi2/Simeonov.pdf"
                     >http://anamnesis.info/broi2/Simeonov.pdf</ref>.</note> Aid also came from
               Serbia for building or repairing churches and schools, as well as for provisioning
               them. Books, most often collections of Serbian epic folk poems, were also given to
               peasants. The organisation provided assistance to displaced persons, prominent
               individuals, distinguished fighters, their immediate relatives, and, when necessary,
               helped them find employment or allocated land to them in Serbia.<note place="foot"
                  xml:id="ftn21" n="18"> DSPKS, II-d1, No. 389, 395, 403; II-d2, No. 14, 16, 82,
                  110, 121, 243, Zapisnici sednica; II-d3, No. 65, 131, 156, 164, 182, 188, 242,
                  267, 277, 282–84, 286, 310, Zapisnici sednica Centralnog odbora, Prilog IV; III-d,
                  No. 24, 43, 51, 56, 64, 85. Biljana Vučetić, “Sećanja Antonija Todorovića na
                  revolucionarnu akciju srpskog naroda u Turskoj 1904–1914. godine,” <hi
                     rend="italic">Mešovita građa – Miscellanea</hi> 28 (2007), 286. Uroš Šešum,
                  “Srpska četnička organizacija,” 249, 250, 252-253, 255-256. </note></p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The way the rival MRO/BMARO/SMARO/IMARO operated
               involved collecting the so-called “<hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi> tax” or forced
               loan, as well as providing supplies at the expense of the rural population.
               Well-documented cases date back to 1902, when <hi rend="italic">vojvodas</hi> forced
               peasants to pay the levy and enrol in the <hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi>. In return
               for providing the “tax” and fighters to the organisation, the village received
                  rifles.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn22" n="19"> Državni arhiv Srbije (DAS),
                  Konzulat u Bitolju (KB), Političko-prosvetno odeljenje (PP), 1902, r. 108; DSPKS,
                  II-d1, No. 2.</note> By the end of April 1904, the SMARO <hi rend="italic"
                  >chetas</hi> in the Kriva Reka basin, between Kumanovo and Kratovo, demanded sums
               of money from the (Serbian) Patriarchist villages far exceeding those required of
               Exarchate villages. Initially, the population was subjected to extortion to prevent
               harassment, and from early 1905, in addition to money, acceptance of the exarch’s
               religious authority was also demanded. The pressure was accompanied by threats of
               burning villages and killing the most prominent pro-Serbian leaders of Kriva
                  Reka.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn23" n="20"> DAS, KB, PP, 1905, r. 13. Šešum,
                     <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija</hi>, 122.</note></p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The SCO founders recognised that collecting taxes,
               forced loans, or any other burdens on the peasants could be counterproductive for
               expanding their influence. Financing was almost entirely sourced from the Serbian
               state budget and from voluntary contributions from the homeland and Serbs in
               Austro-Hungary, the Ottoman Empire, and Montenegro. The only material obligation of
               the population, according to the Organisation’s policy, was to provide bread and
               shelter for the <hi rend="italic">chetas</hi>. Meat, lard, and other provisions were
               purchased from the peasants at market prices. Loans of money, food, or goods from
               villagers or the local village committee treasury were available only when
               transportation to the field was difficult, with the obligation for repayment or
               reimbursement of expenses by the <hi rend="italic">cheta</hi> committees or
               individuals. In addition to weapons and ammunition, the Organisation supplied the
               village <hi rend="italic">chetas</hi> with medical supplies, tobacco, clothing,
               footwear, and other equipment.</p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">In cases of abuse or disregard of the established
               practice, appropriate measures were implemented. In the spring of 1907, the SCO
               Executive Committee in Vranje prohibited teachers, who often held important positions
               in the village organisation, from collecting taxes for the school fund. Throughout
               the year and at the beginning of the following year, a thorough investigation of
               actions in Eastern Povardarie was also conducted. Due to the collection of unlawful
               levies, in the form of the <hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi> tax, which in fact
               constituted an abuse; funds allegedly aimed at helping prisoners,<note place="foot"
                  xml:id="ftn24" n="21"> Information that money was being collected for a
                  “self-styled fund” had emerged in the previous year, which parts of the Chetnik
                  organisational structure regarded as something that should be punished. DSPKS,
                  II-d2, No. 217. Ilić, <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija</hi>, 100.</note>
               extortion, embezzlement, and other irregularities, the accused <hi rend="italic"
                  >cheta</hi> leaders were removed from the field: vojvodas Krsta Kovačević, Jovan
               Dolgač, Spasa Garda, Đorđe Sokolović, Stevan Nedić, and Cene Marković, as well as the
               head of the Mountain Headquarters of Eastern Povardarie, Mihailo Ristić Džervinac.
               The confiscated money was either returned to its owners or directed towards the
               purpose for which it had been collected, prisoners, thereby enhancing the
               Organisation’s reputation.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn25" n="22"> DAS, KB, PP,
                  1902, r. 14; 1905, r. 13; DSPKS, II-d1, No. 49, 299, 363, 416, 448, 452; II-d1,
                  No. 16, 32, 35, 50, 59, 60, 63, 73; II-d3, No. 7, 9, 23, 25, 37, 51, 58, 75, 82,
                  85, 110-11, 121, 126, 148, 158, 162, 176, 180, 208, 229-30, 242, 268, 275, 278–80,
                  292-93, 307, 313, Zapisnici sednica Centralnog odbora, Prilog IV; III-d, No. 30,
                  39, 66, 75-76, 99, 100, 185, prilog II. Vučetić, “Sećanja Antonija Todorovića,”
                  283, 292–94. Šešum, <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija</hi>, 332-33, 335–37.
                  Šešum, “Srpska četnička organizacija,” 252.</note>
            </p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">Irregularities also occurred in Western Povardarie,
               where between 1905 and 1906, the Chetnik village committees apparently collected
               money for their treasuries from the peasants, based on the financial state of each
               household. With variations in levies and uneven burdens within or between villages,
               funds were sometimes not collected at the end of each month as planned. It is very
               likely that this involved an “armed fund”, since the SCO, before 1907, could not
               establish a reliable channel for transferring rifles to areas across the Vardar.
               Correspondence about the possibility of compensating for the lack of money in that
               district through taxation or drawing from village treasuries arose again in the early
               months of 1908.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn26" n="23"> DSPKS, II-d2, No. 127;
                  II-d3, No. 278; III-d, No. 41, 52, </note></p>
         </div>
         <div>
            <head>Seasonal Workers</head>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">As the conflict escalated, methods of economic pressure
               on the population to join one of the groups intensified, especially when combined
               with physical coercion. Most inhabitants of the western regions of present-day North
               Macedonia, due to infertile soil and Albanian pressure, were compelled to work
               seasonally in Balkan countries – Serbia, Bulgaria, Greece, and Romania. Consequently,
               they became a valuable recruitment base for the <hi rend="italic">chetas</hi>, and
               there were also ways to pressure their families in the home villages to shift their
               allegiance to a particular <hi rend="italic">millet</hi>. The clash of national
               propaganda put seasonal workers (<hi rend="italic">pečalbari</hi>), members of rival
               factions, at risk of having their hospitality withdrawn, which would have resulted in
               significant material losses. With the suspension of seasonal work, they found
               themselves unable to feed their families.</p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The pressure was applied to the <hi rend="italic"
                  >pečalbari</hi> even before the outbreak of mutual armed actions. At the beginning
               of June 1901, the Serbian Consulate in Bitola requested that surveillance measures be
               taken against a certain Spira Kone Hadži Mitre from Prilep while he was in the
               territory of the Kingdom of Serbia for trading purposes. In his hometown, he
               reportedly discouraged peasants from visiting the Serbian bookstore and caused other
               “troubles”. In addition to his main activity, during his journey, Hadži Mitre
               allegedly intended to collect contributions from seasonal workers from Prilep in
               Serbia, for BMARO activities.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn27" n="24"> DAS, KB, PP,
                  1901, r. 77.</note> The following year, the police authorities took measures
               against the <hi rend="italic">pečalbari</hi> from the villages of Galičnik and
               Tresonče near Mavrovo. In their home region, they were “obstructing” the Serbian
               propaganda efforts, hosting an Exarchist priest in their homes, and sending their
               children to the Bulgarian school. The Consulate in Bitola requested that, if they did
               not shift their stance, the authorities prevent them from remaining in Serbia any
               longer. In contrast, the attitude of several <hi rend="italic">pečalbari</hi> from
               the village of Slepče, near Prilep, was viewed positively.<note place="foot"
                  xml:id="ftn28" n="25"> Ibid., 1902, r. 64, 97.</note>
            </p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">A significantly increased pressure arose as armed
               clashes intensified between the Serbian and the comitadji <hi rend="italic"
                  >chetas</hi>. <hi rend="italic">Pečalbari</hi> from the Kriva Reka and Ovče Polje
               areas, who mostly worked in Sofia, were forced in late 1905 by the <hi rend="italic"
                  >comitadji</hi> organisation and the Bulgarian government to withdraw their
               villages from the Serbian armed-band network and return them to the Exarchate. Around
               200 of them faced threats of execution, expulsion, or heavy fines. As a result,
               twelve villages in these regions temporarily came under the control of the <hi
                  rend="italic">comitadji</hi> organisation and the Exarchate. The following year,
               Bulgaria intensified its economic pressure: at the border, <hi rend="italic"
                  >pečalbari</hi> were stopped and required to present a certificate from an
               Exarchate priest confirming their affiliation. Border guards sometimes beat, maimed,
               or robbed the seasonal workers. These measures somewhat increased the influence of
               IMARO in the Kriva Palanka area. In response, the SCO requested that all Exarchate
               followers working temporarily in Serbia be expelled and that <hi rend="italic"
                  >pečalbari</hi> from villages aligned with the Patriarchate be employed
                  instead.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn29" n="26"> A characteristic case involved
                  five seasonal labourers from the Skopje <hi rend="italic">kaza</hi>. Due to an
                  alleged dispute with the local <hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi> committee, they
                  applied in March 1906 for employment in Belgrade. Three of them clearly stated
                  that they no longer wished to go to Bulgaria for seasonal work because of the
                  levies imposed by IMARO. At the urging of the secret police of the Central
                  Committee of the SCO, they were granted employment on the construction of the
                  sewerage system. DSPKS, II-d2, No. 48.</note> The <hi rend="italic">vojvodas</hi>,
               for their part, were instructed to inform the inhabitants of loyal settlements that,
               instead of going to Bulgaria, they could seek seasonal work in Serbia.<note
                  place="foot" xml:id="ftn30" n="27"> Šešum, <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička
                     akcija</hi>, 208-09, 259. DSPKS, II-d2, No. 63.</note></p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">In Belgrade, where lists containing information on <hi
                  rend="italic">pečalbari</hi> were received from the field, pressure was exerted on
               those from the Exarchate-aligned Kičevo region, where most peasants went to Serbia
               for seasonal work, to influence their relatives and neighbours to align themselves
               with the Patriarchate and the SCO. Several letters attesting to this practice have
               been preserved. One of these letters was sent to their native village of Orlanci by
               certain Stevan, Todor, and Silan. Writing from Belgrade in 1905, they warned their
               closest family members to accept a Serb Patriarchate rather than the Bulgarian
               Exarchate priest, as they had previously done. Otherwise, they cautioned, “neither
               the house nor its people will remain alive”, and they themselves would be “devoured
               by the fish in the Sava and the Danube”.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn31" n="28">
                  DAS, KB, PP, 1905, r. 9; DSPKS, II-d1, No. 176.</note> Pressure by the Serbian
               authorities was also exerted in 1906 on bakers from the Kičevo region, described as
               the “greatest Bulgarophiles” from Kozičino, as well as on a certain hired goods
               carrier, Tasa Veljanov from Tuin. This action, however, did not succeed, owing to the
               greater strength of the <hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi>, who carried out brutal
               executions of village leaders or priests supporting the Serbian side, thereby
               maintaining or expanding the Exarchate network through fear in the Kičevo
                  region.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn32" n="29"> DSPKS, II-d2, No. 95, 229.
                  Simeonov, “Struktura, metodi i zhertvi na srabskata vaorazhena propaganda.” Šešum,
                     <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija</hi>, 232.</note>
            </p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The return of many villages and the gaining of new ones,
               as a result of the SCO’s actions at the turn of 1906–1907, triggered a new wave of
               terror against <hi rend="italic">pečalbari</hi> in Bulgaria. Contemporary reports
               from 1907 state that seasonal workers in Bulgaria were arrested, mistreated, or
               robbed if they failed to comply or refused to bring their villages back under the
               Exarchate. The Bulgarian official and semi-official press, however, despite its own
               treatment of <hi rend="italic">pečalbari</hi>, used the alleged “mistreatment” of
               Exarchist workers in Serbia in the spring of the following year for propaganda
               purposes and to inflame public opinion.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn33" n="30">
                  DSPKS, II-d2, No. 186-87, 217, 225, 235, 257, 267; II-d3, No. 229. Šešum, <hi
                     rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija</hi>, 303, 350.</note></p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">Convictions about allegiance, such as in the cases of
               the Exarchate and Bulgaria, also existed on the Serbian (Patriarshist) side. From the
               SCO and the organs of church-school autonomy, peasants received certificates of
               affiliation, which enabled them to travel for work through the established band
               channels and secured them safe employment in Serbia. The practical example of this is
               shown by certain Đorđe, Ljubomir, Mihailo, and Tatomir, who signed as “Old Serbians”
               and urged their relatives to receive “Priest Krste”. After doing so, they were to
               obtain a certificate from the municipality and the bishop confirming that a “Serbian
               priest” had visited them, and to send it to Serbia.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn34"
                  n="31"> DSPKS, II-d1, No. 207. </note> It also happened that individuals
               temporarily accepted a Patriarchate priest to obtain the necessary certificates, only
               to later return to the Exarchate. Eight <hi rend="italic">pečalbari</hi> from Kruševo
               in Belgrade did exactly this in 1905. About twenty of their fellow villagers, who had
               been expelled from Serbia and were further radicalised as a result, applied pressure
               on Serbian-aligned families and their priest to join the Exarchate. They also issued
               threats to the Serbian consul in Bitola. </p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">There were also examples of different cases. Some <hi
                  rend="italic">pečalbari</hi> from Labuništa near Ohrid provided various services
               to the <hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi>, but in order to hide this and obtain
               certificates of affiliation, they received a Patriarchate priest. Such conduct did
               not escape the notice of the Serbian diplomatic, educational, and ecclesiastical
               networks, and Belgrade was duly informed. In November 1905, during an incursion in
               the region of the Rabetinska River near Kičevo, Chetniks pursued “Bulgarophiles”,
               among them a certain Dragutin, the owner of a burek shop in Belgrade, where his
               brothers were also staying at the time. A characteristic case occurred in 1908 in
               Užice, where Pano Pendo Petrušev(ić) was arrested. Formerly a local <hi rend="italic"
                  >vojvoda</hi> in Oraovac near Veles and a prominent opponent of the Chetnik
               Organisation in the Klepa area, he had been sentenced to death by a Turkish court and
               was working on the railway line in Užice. He was identified through a letter to his
               relatives, in which he stated that they should not think he had “become” a Serb
               merely because he was working in Serbia. He planned to travel soon to Sofia to lead
               an IMARO <hi rend="italic">cheta</hi>.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn35" n="32"> DAS,
                  KB, PP, 1905, r. 9; DSPKS, I-3/II, 1112; II-d1, No. 397; II-d3, No. 13; III-d, No.
                  63. Šešum, “Srpska četnička organizacija,” 253.</note></p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">Abuse also occurred on the other side. Certain
               individuals exploited the restrictive stance of the Serbian state authorities towards
                  <hi rend="italic">pečalbari</hi> from Exarchate villages, extorting money from
               them for protection or issuing false certificates of affiliation to the Patriarchate
                  <hi rend="italic">millet</hi>. Alongside the usurer and fraudster Janaćko
               Anđelković, the dismissed commissioner of the organisation Srpska braća, a teacher
               from Kičevo was also involved. A certain Stojmen, a “dismissed” Chetnik, also
               misrepresented himself and collected contributions from Macedonian <hi rend="italic"
                  >pečalbari</hi> in Austria-Hungary, allegedly on behalf of the SCO.<note
                  place="foot" xml:id="ftn36" n="33"> DSPKS, II-d3, No. 55, 218.</note> Workers from
               Old Serbia and Macedonia, therefore, were an extremely vulnerable group, subject to
               pressure from revolutionary organisations at multiple levels, as well as various
               forms of abuse.</p>
         </div>
         <div>
            <head>Fires and Livestock</head>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The burning of houses, barns, haystacks, and crops was
               employed by both sides, significantly worsening the economic plight of the peasantry.
               Such measures were intended as warnings to individuals, parts of villages, or entire
               settlements to side with one of the organisations, aiming to prevent such reprisals
               from happening again. As early as 1901, BMARO <hi rend="italic">chetas</hi>, aiming
               to intimidate, set fire to the house of the Serbian schoolteacher Anđelko Krstić in
               the mentioned village of Labuništa. In 1902, for failing to pay the mentioned forced
               loan, <hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi> agents burned peasants’ barns or other
               economic buildings as a form of coercion. They would then demand the money again. If
               refused a second time, they set fire to houses and even killed peasants. The death
               penalty also awaited anyone who sought protection from the Ottoman authorities. At
               the turn of 1905–1906, during the rival struggle for wavering settlements in the
               regions of Kriva Reka and Ovče Polje, the <hi rend="italic">kazas</hi> of Kriva
               Palanka and Kumanovo – strategically vital for the organisations in the Kosovo <hi
                  rend="italic">Vilayet</hi> – faced violence. In addition to the murders of
               prominent individuals, Chetniks and <hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi> mutually burned
               houses and even entire quarters in the villages of Stepance, Jačince, Strezovce,
               Koince, Makreš, Veternica, Orah, Skačkovce, Murgaš, Pelince, Čelopek, and
                  Cvilance.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn37" n="34"> DAS, KB, PP, 1902, r. 14; 1905,
                  r. 13; DSPKS, II-d1, No. 381-82, 386, 452-53, 458. Pejčić, <hi rend="italic"
                     >Četnički pokret</hi>, 74-75. Simeonov, “Struktura, metodi i zhertvi na
                  srabskata vaorazhena propaganda.” Šešum, <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička
                     akcija</hi>, 209-10.</note>
            </p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">In the second half of 1906, <hi rend="italic"
                  >comitadji</hi> bands near Kumanovo, with the aim of intimidation, burned nine
               houses in Štalkovica, five in Dovezence, and four in Beljakovce. It is known that in
               the first case, the affected inhabitants received financial aid from the Serbian
               Consulate in Skopje and the Circle of Serbian Sisters through the collection of
               voluntary contributions. This timely material support helped maintain these villages’
               allegiance to the SCO. There was also retaliation; in October, Vojvoda Đorđe
               Skopljanče set fire to the Exarchate quarter in Beljakovac. The spiral of violence
               continued in December, with the <hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi> burning two barns in
               Dovezence and one livestock shed in Jačince, while the Chetniks responded by setting
               fire to thirteen houses and three barns in Kanarevo and Mlado Nagoričane. Due to the
               unfavourable foreign-policy situation, the threat of war with Bulgaria, and the
               unpopularity of such actions, the Serbian state leadership repeatedly ordered a halt
               to arson and killings in the following year. Instead, the focus shifted to blockading
               settlements and taking hostages as “milder” methods of coercion.</p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">Such conduct continued until the end of 1907. A new wave
               of arson, as a form of retaliation for a change in <hi rend="italic">millet</hi>
               allegiance, erupted in the first half of November, affecting the Exarchate village of
               Stracin near Kratovo (18 houses) and the Patriarchate villages of Gradec and Kiselica
               near Kriva Palanka. Neither the renewed burning of Stracin, in which eleven houses
               were destroyed, nor the burning of the “disloyal” Gradec in May of the following
               year, succeeded in bringing these settlements over to the SCO. On the contrary, these
               acts merely added fuel to the flames. The outbreak of war between Serbia and Bulgaria
               was even expected, prompting the authorities in Belgrade to demand the cessation of
               all offensive activities and to punish the responsible <hi rend="italic"
                  >vojvodas</hi>.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn38" n="35"> DSPKS, II-d2, No. 181,
                  187, 214, 217, 239, 256, 263; II-d3, No. 11-12, 16, 184, 198, 231-32, 277; III-d,
                  No. 87, 93-94, 96–98, 102-03, 105–07, 109, 110, 113, 123. Ilić, <hi rend="italic"
                     >Srpska četnička akcija</hi>, 102. Simeonov, “Struktura, metodi i zhertvi na
                  srabskata vaorazhena propaganda.” Šešum, <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička
                     akcija</hi>, 270–73, 293, 297–303, 322-23, 325, 349–53.</note>
            </p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The destruction of property as a method of economic
               pressure to enforce a specific national affiliation was also used in Western
               Povardarie. It is documented that, at the end of 1904, the <hi rend="italic"
                  >comitadji</hi> burned the hay belonging to a certain Tale Stanković from Vrbjani.
               In September of the following year, the <hi rend="italic">cheta</hi> of Trajko from
               Brvnik set fire to twelve houses in the village of Makovo near Prilep, in retaliation
               for its acceptance of the SCO and the Rum <hi rend="italic">millet</hi>. Eight days
               later, the comitadji set alight two houses belonging to declared Serbs in Karbunica
               near Kičevo, which led the village to capitulate and adopt an Exarchate affiliation.
               By the end of 1905, Serbian <hi rend="italic">chetas</hi> in Western Povardarie
               ceased chasing the <hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi> and instead concentrated on
               protecting settlements from arson. They failed to do so in the village of Omorani
               near Veles, where the house of the village schoolteacher was burned. The <hi
                  rend="italic">comitadji</hi> fared much worse in August 1906 when they attempted
               to burn alive the priest of the village of Krapa. The well-armed villagers repelled
               the attack, and the remaining fighters fell into a Chetnik ambush; the burning of
               Father Tasa’s house and one other dwelling, together with two barns, was the only
               outcome of the action. In Drimkol, during the summer of 1906, Chetniks under the
               leadership of Vasilije Trbić set fire to several haystacks and a livestock shed in
               the Exarchate village of Vevčani.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn39" n="36"> DAS, KB,
                  PP, 1905, r. 13; DSPKS, II-d2, No. 148, 150. Ilić, <hi rend="italic">Srpska
                     četnička akcija</hi>, 94. Šešum, <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija</hi>,
                  222-23, 230, 234-35, 263-264.</note></p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">This was not the end. The turn of the year brought a
               renewed escalation of mutual arson attacks. In December 1906, the <hi rend="italic"
                  >comitadji</hi> set fire to several houses and agricultural buildings in Stepanci,
               a village in the Veles region that had recently come under the Patriarchate’s
               influence. Three months later, in the same area, Rudnik suffered at the hands of the
                  <hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi>: no fewer than twenty-five houses and eighteen
               agricultural buildings were burned. In the period that followed, buildings in Košino,
               Smilovac (ten houses and sixteen agricultural buildings), and Nikodim were likewise
               not spared from retaliatory <hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi> raids. Assistance to
               Rudnik and Smilovac, and possibly other settlements, as in the previously mentioned
               case of Štalkovica, was provided by the Society of Serbian Brethren and the Circle of
               Serbian Sisters. On the other side, during their attack on Izvor in April 1907, the
               Chetniks burned several houses and outbuildings. That action, combined with taking
               hostages, led the villagers to accept the Patriarchate. Even new orders from Belgrade
               to prevent killings and arson could not be fully enforced under the turbulent ground
               conditions. At the end of the following month, the Chetniks burned three houses in
               Oreovac but also succeeded in preventing the <hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi> from
               setting fire to the nearly captured village of Krstec. The destruction by fire of an
               entire quarter, comprising nine houses and several agricultural buildings, also took
               place during what was regarded as the most significant victory of the entire Chetnik
               campaign. “The Serbian trumpet sounded, Drenovo village was aflame”, as recorded in
               the original version of the song <hi rend="italic">Sprem’te se, sprem’te, četnici
                  (Get Ready, Get Ready, Chetniks)</hi>.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn40" n="37">
                  DSPKS, II-d3, No. 98, 102, 106-07, 170, 186, 212, 225-26, 231. Ilić, <hi
                     rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija</hi>, 119. Pejčić, <hi rend="italic"
                     >Četnički pokret</hi>, 82–84. Simeonov, “Struktura, metodi i zhertvi na
                  srabskata vaorazhena propaganda.” Šešum, <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička
                     akcija</hi>, 290-291, 293, 303, 305, 307–11, 314, 332-33.</note></p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The confiscation of both small and large livestock was
               also used as a means of applying pressure to induce a change of allegiance. Serbian
                  <hi rend="italic">chetas</hi> often seized animals, returning them once a village
               had declared for their side. This happened, for example, with more than 250 sheep
               from the Kumanovo village of Koince, as well as six sheep and two oxen in Kanarevo,
               near Kriva Palanka, during the winter of 1905–1906. A year later, Vojvoda Skopljanče,
               as a reprisal for the theft of sheep from Serbian villages, once again took around
               300 sheep from Kanarevo, among other places. When the inhabitants of the village of
               Podrži Konj in the same region joined the SCO, 214 sheep and lambs were returned to
               them. Sheep were also seized in Gradec (80), Psača (40), and Orah (150). During these
               operations, certain <hi rend="italic">vojvodas</hi> committed abuses; even after
               villages had changed their allegiance, they failed to return the livestock to its
               rightful owners. In some cases, Exarchist villages were deliberately raided for
               theft, with the animals subsequently sold for personal gain. As a result of such
               misconduct, in August 1906, the organisation dismissed a Chetnik named Sima
               Stevanović, had him imprisoned, and demanded the “most severe punishment”. For the
               same reason, the following year Vojvoda Spasa Garda and the head of the Mountain
               Headquarters, Džervinac, were removed from their positions. The latter had sold no
               fewer than 268 head of small livestock, four horses, and two she-donkeys.<note
                  place="foot" xml:id="ftn41" n="38"> DAS, KB, PP, 1905, r. 13; DSPKS, II-d1, No.
                  356; II-d2, No. 16, 142, 181, 243; II-d3, No. 9, 23, 26, 51, 58, 230, 292.
                  Simeonov, “Struktura, metodi i zhertvi na srabskata vaorazhena propaganda.” Šešum,
                     <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija</hi>, 270–72.</note></p>
         </div>
         <div>
            <head>The Perilous Trade</head>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">A significant instrument of economic struggle to attain
               national objectives was the boycott of goods made by members of the rival group. This
               was also meant to worsen the material conditions of the rural population in specific
               regions, thereby forcing them to declare allegiance to a particular <hi rend="italic"
                  >millet</hi> and revolutionary organisation. Once the SCO had built a strong
               network in the Kumanovo region, it almost immediately began to implement the boycott
               as a form of “honourable economic struggle”. From 1905, peasants from Patriarchist
               villages, making up about two-thirds of the total Christian population of the Ottoman
               Kumanovo <hi rend="italic">Kaza</hi>, were instructed not to buy goods from Exarchate
               traders and craftsmen in the town. Disobedience was met with prescribed penalties:
               the first breach required payment of one gold coin (lira); the second resulted in
               corporal punishment; and a third offence carried a death sentence. The effects were
               soon felt. Many Exarchate traders and craftsmen in Kumanovo were forced to close
               their shops, while their Patriarchist counterparts, initially only a third of the
               total in these trades, found themselves in urgent need of additional labour on market
               days. About thirty Exarchate households, under pressure from the boycott, even
               petitioned the Ottoman authorities for permission to convert to Uniatism!? Methods of
               economic pressure against Bulgarian traders were also employed in Skopje, where, from
               March 1907, the Patriarchists ceased purchasing their products.<note place="foot"
                  xml:id="ftn42" n="39"> DSPKS, II-d1, No. 183; II-d3, No. 96, 200. Vučetić,
                  “Sećanja Antonija Todorovića,” 281-82, 288. Stanislav Krakov, <hi rend="italic"
                     >Plamen četništva </hi>(Beograd: KIZ “Hipnos”, 1990), 182. Simeonov,
                  “Struktura, metodi i zhertvi na srabskata vaorazhena propaganda.” Šešum, “Srpska
                  četnička organizacija,” 253.</note>
            </p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The opposing side, it must be noted, also provided
               reasons for enforcing boycotts. Reliable historical sources indicate that, during
               1904, the inhabitants of the pro-Serbian region of Poreče were barred from attending
               the market in Prilep and threatened with punishment if they travelled to Skopje
               unless they agreed to bring their villages under the jurisdiction of the Exarchate.
               Their difficulties are exemplified by the case of a certain <hi rend="italic"
                  >comitadji</hi>, Vasil, who, unlike his comrades, encouraged the peasants of
               Poreče in autumn 1905 not to fear but to attend the market in Skopje. In response to
               the actions of the SCO and the strengthening of its position, an economic boycott of
               Patriarchist peasants, craftsmen, and traders was imposed in Kratovo and Kriva
               Palanka regions. During August and September 1905, this measure was enforced by the
                  <hi rend="italic">comitadji vojvodas</hi> Damjan Gruev and Jordan Spasov. A
               similar practice was applied in Veles, where Exarchists refused to sell bread and
               other provisions to the Serbian-aligned population and institutions.<note
                  place="foot" xml:id="ftn43" n="40"> DSPKS, II-d1, No. 53–54. Vučetić, “Sećanja
                  Antonija Todorovića,” 282. Šešum, <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija</hi>,
                  205.</note>
            </p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">In the mountainous regions, where the SMARO/IMARO had no
               bands at its disposal, such as the Babuna district around Prilep, even harsher
               measures were employed. Between 1904 and 1906, the city-based Bulgarian committee
               carried out physical attacks on inhabitants of Serbian-aligned villages who attended
               the town market or were returning from it. Some victims sustained serious injuries,
               and four murders were recorded, one of which involved a boy. To illustrate the
               subsequent spiral of violence, one can cite an example of the SCO’s response. During
               a wedding in Sarandinovo, when guests arrived to collect the bride from the partially
               Exarchate-aligned village of Krivogaštani, Serbian <hi rend="italic">chetas</hi>
               captured ten supporters of the committee and subsequently executed them. Following
               this, attacks on Serbian peasants travelling to the Prilep market temporarily
                  ceased.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn44" n="41"> DSPKS, I-3/II, 1108–13; II-d2,
                  No. 125, 127. Ilić, <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija</hi>, 103, 104.
                  Šešum, <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija</hi>, 226.</note>
            </p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">Violence was not the only issue. The opposing side,
               mainly in Prilep, practised a boycott of goods sold to the Serbian population. To
               ease the difficult situation faced by the Patriarchists, the SCO brought a merchant,
               Stevan Sekulić, from Prizren to the town and helped him open a shop. Serbian peasants
               from the Prilep area and Poreče traded there. Sekulić’s safety was also considered: a
               Turkish man, described as “a well-known villain”, was employed as his bodyguard and
               constant companion. He openly threatened that, for “master Stevan”, he would kill at
               least ten Bulgarian-aligned merchants. The measure proved effective. Sekulić kept his
               shop in Prilep until the outbreak of the Young Turk Revolution.<note place="foot"
                  xml:id="ftn45" n="42"> DSPKS, II-d1, No. 47. Vučetić, “Sećanja Antonija
                  Todorovića,” 282.</note> Besides shops aligned with the Serbian side, the <hi
                  rend="italic">vojvodas</hi> advised peasants from Patriarchist villages that, when
               travelling to Prilep, Kičevo, Skopje, or other towns, to stay with Serbian
               innkeepers. One such host, in the Skopje village of Sopište, during the Bulgarian
               terror at the beginning of 1907, paid for his loyalty with his life and that of his
               closest family members.<note place="foot" xml:id="ftn46" n="43"> DSPKS, II-d2, No.
                  127; II-d3, No. 28. Simeonov, “Struktura, metodi i zhertvi na srabskata vaorazhena
                  propaganda.” Šešum, <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija</hi>, 303,
                  348.</note></p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The expansion of the SCO and the incorporation of
               several settlements around Prilep during 1906 prompted IMARO to launch a new wave of
               terror, during which two individuals were killed, and an attempt was made on the life
               of another prominent Serb. The newly aligned communities on the Serbian side could
               not access Prilep, which they were economically dependent on. This provoked a severe
               retaliatory action by the Chetniks. Among other measures, near the mountain peak of
               Zlatovrh, they set up an ambush and captured Exarchate-aligned villagers returning
               from the market in Prilep. Those whose innocence was established were released, while
               the remainder, around ten individuals, were executed.</p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The following year, as mentioned, the Chetniks cleverly
               attacked and seized the village of Izvor, the final location needed to establish
               complete control over the communication route between Prilep and Veles. This allowed
               them to impose an economic blockade on the Exarchate population in both locations,
               thereby applying pressure to join the Patriarchate. Economic pressure measures in
               Eastern Povardarje at the end of 1906 similarly involved restricting movement.
               Chetniks blocked certain villages, cutting off their trade links with nearby towns
               and forcing them to return to the Patriarchate. The final phase, after completing the
               network in the rural areas of Eastern and Western Povardarje, was intended as an
               economic strike against the towns. Through organised peasants, the boycott of the
               Exarchate and the promotion of the material success of Patriarchate traders and
               craftsmen under the leadership of the SCO aimed to influence a change of allegiance
               and to win over, primarily, the two “Bulgarian” towns of Skopje and Veles.<note
                  place="foot" xml:id="ftn47" n="44"> DSPKS, II-d2, No. 231, 235, 243, 263; II-d3,
                  No. 226; III-d, No. 43. Ilić, <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija</hi>,
                  103–04. Simeonov, “Struktura, metodi i zhertvi na srabskata vaorazhena
                  propaganda.” Šešum, <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija</hi>, 282-83,
                  290-91.</note>
            </p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">Before the establishment of the Serbian Chetnik
               Organisation and during its first two years of activity, the Exarchate-aligned
               committee group – traditionally stronger and dominant in the towns – managed to
               coerce some Serbian-aligned villages around Skopje, Kumanovo, Kriva Palanka, Veles,
               and Prilep into accepting the religious authority of the Bulgarian Exarchate and the
               committee organisation by closing the town markets to them. Simultaneously, villages
               under the Exarchate were warned that switching allegiance to the Serbs would lead to
               an economic boycott. The expansion of the SCO into more villages around these towns
               allowed it, through orders to peasants to boycott Exarchate traders and craftsmen, to
               encourage the latter to abandon the Exarchate and align with the Patriarchate’s
               religious authority and the Serbian side. Consequently, measures of economic boycott
               were used as pressure on both buyers and sellers, with each organisation exercising
               influence over one or the other depending on which group it controlled.</p>
         </div>
         <div>
            <head>Conclusion</head>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The Serbian Chetnik Organisation, along with its rival,
               the Macedonian Revolutionary Organisation, employed measures that can be
               characterised as a form of economic nationalism, depending on their strength and
               resources. Unlike the <hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi>, who aimed to be as
               economically independent from Bulgaria as possible by levying taxes on the population
               for revolutionary purposes, the SCO did not, except in cases of abuse or to procure
               arms in specific settlements, demand money from the local population. This gave it a
               significant advantage over its opponent. Furthermore, it long avoided killing the
               leaders of Exarchate-aligned villages to force their neighbours to abandon the
               committee and join the SCO. Instead of murder, it more frequently seized livestock,
               returning it only if the villagers switched allegiance, or burnt economic buildings
               and houses.</p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The pressure on seasonal workers (<hi rend="italic"
                  >pečalbari</hi>), who supported their families in the Kosovo and Bitola vilayets
               by working in Serbia and Bulgaria, was exerted by the authorities of both states.
               This measure forced the seasonal labourers to choose between the risk of death by
               starvation or retaliation from the national-revolutionary bands, and, depending on
               which danger was more immediate, it met with varying degrees of success. Economic
               boycott also served as a tool of coercion. The <hi rend="italic">comitadji</hi>,
               aligned with the Exarchate, forbade merchants and craftsmen from selling goods to
               peasants from Serbian-aligned settlements, while the Serbian side prohibited peasants
               from purchasing from Exarchate traders and artisans. The effectiveness of these
               measures also varied according to the balance of power on the ground.</p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">In the struggle between Serbia and Bulgaria to build the
               broadest possible base of supporters for Serbian and Bulgarian national allegiance
               among Orthodox Slavs in the Ottoman Empire at the beginning of the twentieth century,
               every available method was employed, including economic measures. Economic pressure
               constituted an important instrument in this struggle, and this study aims to examine
               it as thoroughly as possible. </p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The height of the mutual (by then national, struggle
               between opposing groups within the Ottoman Empire was reached with the Young Turk
               Revolution of 1908. At that time, the new authorities recognised all revolutionary
               organisations and granted amnesty to those involved in armed actions. Alongside the
               end of physical violence, economic pressure on the population to support one side or
               the other also ceased. From that point until the end of Ottoman rule in the region,
               inhabitants were free to choose their church/national affiliation and political
               alignment.</p>
         </div>
         <div>
            <head>Acknowledgement</head>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">The realisation of this research was financially
               supported by the Ministry of Science, Technological Development and Innovation of the
               Republic of Serbia as part of the funding of scientific research at the University of
               Belgrade – Faculty of Philosophy (contract number 451-03-33/2026-03/200163).</p>
         </div>
      </body>
      <back>
         <div type="bibliogr">
            <head>Sources and Literature</head>
            <list>
               <head>Archival sources</head>
               <item>DAS – Državni arhiv Srbije: <list>
                     <item>MID – Ministarstvo inostranih dela Kraljevine Srbije: <list>
                           <item> KB – Konzulat u Bitolju: <list>
                                 <item> PP – Političko-prosvetno odeljenje.</item>
                              </list></item>
                        </list></item>
                  </list></item>
            </list>
            <listBibl>
               <head>Literature</head>
               <bibl>Abu Jaber, Kamel S. “The Millet System in Nineteenth Century Ottoman Empire.”
                     <hi rend="italic">The Muslim World</hi> 57/3 (July 1967): 212–23. </bibl>
               <bibl>Berger, Stefan and Thomas Fetzer, eds. <hi rend="italic">Nationalism and the
                     Economy: Explorations into a Neglected Relationship</hi>. Budapest: Central
                  European University Press, 2019.</bibl>
               <bibl>Berger, Stefan and Storm Eric, eds. <hi rend="italic">Writing the History of
                     Nationalism</hi>. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2019.</bibl>
               <bibl>Dakin, Douglas. <hi rend="italic">The Greek Struggle in Macedonia
                     1897–1913</hi>. Thessaloniki: Institute for Balkan Studies, 1966. </bibl>
               <bibl>Gostović, Milena. <hi rend="italic">Kosovski vilajet 1879–1900. Godišnji
                     izveštaji (salname)</hi>. Novi Sad: Matica srpska, 2021. (Serbian
                  Cyrillic)</bibl>
               <bibl>Ilić, Vladimir. <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija 1903–1912</hi>.
                  Beograd: Ecolibri, 2006. (Serbian Cyrillic) </bibl>
               <bibl>Ilić, Žarko. <hi rend="italic">Geografska percepcija srpske zemlje i centralnog
                     Balkana u novom veku – ime, prostor granica</hi>. Beograd: Huk izdavaštvo, in
                  print. (Serbian Cyrillic)</bibl>
               <bibl>Ilić, Žarko. “Srpska zemlja na jugu – između istorije i etnografije, teorije i
                  prakse.” In <hi rend="italic">Kralj Milan Obrenović, oslobodilac i reformator.
                     Zasluge i poricanja. Tematski zbornik radova</hi>. Edited by Suzana Rajić and
                  Žarko Ilić, 41–57. Beograd: Istraživačko-izdavački centar “Stari Vlah,” 2025.
                  (Serbian Cyrillic)</bibl>
               <bibl>Jagodić, Miloš. “Nufusko pitanje. Problem zvaničnog priznavanja srpske nacije u
                  Turskoj 1894–1910.” <hi rend="italic">Istorijski časopis</hi> 57 (2008): 343–53.
                  (Serbian Cyrillic) </bibl>
               <bibl>Jagodić, Miloš. <hi rend="italic">Srpsko-albanski odnosi u Kosovskom vilajetu
                     1878–1912</hi>. Belgrade: Zavod za udžbenike. (Serbian Cyrillic)</bibl>
               <bibl>Jovanović, Jovan M. <hi rend="italic">Južna Srbija od kraja XVIII veka do
                     oslobođenja</hi>. Beograd: TANESI, 1990. (Serbian Cyrillic) </bibl>
               <bibl>Pejčić, Predrag. <hi rend="italic">Četnički pokret u Kraljevini Srbiji
                     1903–1918.</hi> Kragujevac: Pogledi, 2007. (Serbian Cyrillic) </bibl>
               <bibl>Rajić, Suzana<hi rend="italic">. Aleksandar Obrenović. Vladar na prelazu
                     vekova. Sukobljeni svetovi</hi>. Beograd: Srpska književna zadruga, 2014.
                  (Serbian Cyrillic)</bibl>
               <bibl>Rajić, Suzana. <hi rend="italic">Vladan Đorđević. Biografija pouzdanog
                     obrenovićevca</hi>. Beograd: Zavod za udžbenike, 2007. (Serbian
                  Cyrillic)</bibl>
               <bibl>Savić, Aleksandar M. “Od ejaleta i vilajeta do nahije – administrativna podela
                  južnih srpskih krajeva (1834–1879).” In <hi rend="italic">Novooslobođeni krajevi
                     Srbije 1833–1878–1913</hi>. Edited by Suzana Rajić, Uroš Šešum, and Aleksandar
                  M. Savić, 27–57. Belgrade: Centar za srpske studije, 2025. (Serbian Cyrillic) </bibl>
               <bibl>Schultz, Helga and Eduard Kubů, eds. <hi rend="italic">History and Culture of
                     Economic Nationalism in East Central Europe</hi>. Berlin: Berliner
                  Wissenschafts-Verlag, 2006.</bibl>
               <bibl>Shaw, Stanford J. and Ezel Kural Shaw. <hi rend="italic">History of Ottoman
                     Empire and Modern Turkey. Volume II: Reform, Revolution, and Republic: The Rise
                     of Modern Turkey, 1808–1975</hi>. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1977. </bibl>
               <bibl>Simeonov, Nikolay. “Struktura, metodi i zhertvi na srabskata vaorazhena
                  propaganda v Makedonia (1904–1908).” <hi rend="italic">Anamneza </hi>I/2 (2006).
                  Accessed: 10 February 2026. <ref target="http://anamnesis.info/broi2/Simeonov.pdf"
                     >http://anamnesis.info/broi2/Simeonov.pdf</ref>. (Bulgarian Cyrillic) </bibl>
               <bibl>Storm, Eric. <hi rend="italic">Nationalism: A World History.</hi> Princeton:
                  Princeton University Press, 2024.</bibl>
               <bibl>Suesse, Marvin. <hi rend="italic">The Nationalist Dilemma: A Global History of
                     Economic Nationalism, 1776–Present.</hi> Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
                  2023.</bibl>
               <bibl>Šešum, Uroš. <hi rend="italic">Srpska četnička akcija (1897–1908). Oružana
                     diplomatija</hi>. Novi Sad: Matica srpska, 2019. (Serbian Cyrillic) </bibl>
               <bibl>Šešum, Uroš. “Srpska četnička organizacija u Staroj Srbiji 1903–1908. Terenska
                  organizacija.” <hi rend="italic">Srpske studije</hi> 2 (2011): 239–58. (Serbian
                  Cyrillic) </bibl>
               <bibl>Šešum, Uroš. “Društvo protiv Srba 1897–1902. Metodi i mere bugarske
                  diplomatije, Egzarhije i Bugarsko-makedonsko odrinske revolucionarne organizacije
                  protiv širenja srpskog uticaja u Južnoj Staroj Srbiji i Makedoniji 1897–1902.” <hi
                     rend="italic">Srpske studije</hi> 4 (2013): 73–103. (Serbian Cyrillic) </bibl>
               <bibl>Šešum, Uroš. “O broju Srba u Južnoj Staroj Srbiji 1903–1908. Godine.” <hi
                     rend="italic">Vardarski zbornik</hi> 10 (2015): 147–70. (Serbian Cyrillic) </bibl>
               <bibl>Šešum, Uroš. “Pretpostavke srpske crkveno-prosvetne politike u Skopskoj,
                  Veleško-debarskoj, Pelagonijskoj i Prespanskoj eparhiji i njeni rezultati
                  1887–1889.” In <hi rend="italic">Kralj Milan Obrenović, oslobodilac i reformator.
                     Zasluge i poricanja. Tematski zbornik radova</hi>. Edited by Suzana Rajić and
                  Žarko Ilić, 59–84. Beograd: Istraživačko-izdavački centar “Stari Vlah”, 2025.
                  (Serbian Cyrillic) <hi rend="italic">, </hi></bibl>
               <bibl>Vojvodić, Mihailo. <hi rend="italic">Stojan Novaković i Vladimir Karić</hi>.
                  Beograd: Clio, 2003. (Serbian Cyrillic)</bibl>
            </listBibl>
            <listBibl>
               <head>Published sources</head>
               <bibl><hi rend="italic">Dokumenti o spoljnoj politici Kraljevine Srbije 1903–1914. Iz
                     fondova Arhiva Srbije i Arhiva Jugoslavije, knj. I, Sveska 3/II (1/14. april –
                     30. juni/13. juli 1905. godine).</hi> Edited by Ljiljana Aleksić-Pejković.
                  Beograd: Srpska akademija nauka i umetnosti, 2014. (Serbian Cyrillic)</bibl>
               <bibl><hi rend="italic">Dokumenti o spoljnoj politici Kraljevine Srbije 1903–1914.
                     Organizacija srpska odbrana (1903–1905) iz fondova Arhiva Srbije</hi>, knj. II,
                  Dodatak 1. Edited by Ljiljana Aleksić-Pejković, and Vasilije Krestić. Beograd:
                  Srpska akademija nauka i umetnosti, 2008. (Serbian Cyrillic)</bibl>
               <bibl><hi rend="italic">Dokumenti o spoljnoj politici Kraljevine Srbije 1903–1914.
                     Organizacija srpska odbrana 1906. iz fondova Arhiva Srbije, knj. II, Dodatak
                     2</hi>. Edited by Ljiljana Aleksić-Pejković, and Života Anić. Beograd: Srpska
                  akademija nauka i umetnosti, 2007. (Serbian Cyrillic)</bibl>
               <bibl><hi rend="italic">Dokumenti o spoljnoj politici Kraljevine Srbije 1903–1914.
                     Organizacija srpska odbrana 1907. iz fondova Arhiva Srbije, knj. II, Dodatak
                     3</hi>. Edited by Ljiljana Aleksić-Pejković, and Života Anić. Beograd: Srpska
                  akademija nauka i umetnosti, 2008. (Serbian Cyrillic)</bibl>
               <bibl><hi rend="italic">Dokumenti o spoljnoj politici Kraljevine Srbije 1903–1914.
                     Organizacija srpska odbrana 1908. iz fondova Arhiva Srbije</hi>, knj. III,
                  Dodatak. Edited by Ljiljana Aleksić-Pejković. Beograd: Srpska akademija nauka i
                  umetnosti, 2011. (Serbian Cyrillic)</bibl>
               <bibl>Krakov, Stanislav. <hi rend="italic">Plamen četništva</hi>. Beograd: KIZ
                  “Hipnos,“ 1990. (Serbian Cyrillic) </bibl>
               <bibl>Vučetić, Biljana. “Sećanja Antonija Todorovića na revolucionarnu akciju srpskog
                  naroda u Turskoj 1904–1914. godine.” <hi rend="italic">Mešovita građa –
                     Miscellanea</hi> 28 (2007): 256–305. (Serbian Cyrillic) </bibl>
               <bibl style="text-align: center;">Uroš Šešum, Miroslav Radivojević</bibl>
            </listBibl>
         </div>
         <div type="summary">
            <docAuthor>Uroš Šešum</docAuthor>
            <docAuthor>Miroslav Radivojević</docAuthor>
            <head>EKONOMSKI UKREPI V DELOVANJU SRBSKE ČETNIŠKE ORGANIZACIJE V KOSOVSKEM IN BITOLSKEM
                  <hi rend="italic">VILAJETU</hi> 1904–1908: ŠTUDIJA PRIMERA</head>
            <head>POVZETEK</head>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">Boj za pridobitev Slovаnоv, pravoslavnih podanikov
               Osmanskega cesarstva, za nacionalne cilje Srbije in Bolgarije se je začel v zadnjih
               desetletjih 19. stoletja. Bolgarija je od leta 1878, ob ponovnem vzpostavljanju kot
               (avtonomna) država, imela prednost, saj je v Osmanskem cesarstvu od leta 1870
               obstajala priznana verska organizacija – Bolgarska ekzarhija, medtem ko je srbska
               stran morala delovati prek institucij Vaseljenske patriarhije. Boj za naklonjenost
               pravoslavnih Slovanov se je do zadnjega desetletja 19. stoletja kazal predvsem skozi
               tekmovanje za dominacijo preko izobraževanja, z odpiranjem šol s srbskim ali
               bolgarskim poukom. Boj je dobil agresivno obliko leta 1897 proti Srbom in slovanskim
               patriarhistom v Bitolskem in Solunskem vilajetu ter južnem delu Kosovskega vilajeta.
               Takrat je MRO, revolucionarna organizacija, ki se je od ustanovitve leta 1894
               načeloma borila za avtonomijo Makedonije in edrenskega območja, vendar je uporabljala
               logistično in finančno pomoč Bolgarije ter združevala ekzarhiste, nastopala predvsem
               proti izobraževalnemu gibanju Srbov in Grkov, ki ga je označevala kot nacionalno
               propagando.</p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">Do leta 1904 je srbska stran končno ustanovila Srbsko
               četniško organizacijo v srbskih naseljih južnega dela Kosovskega in Bitolskega
               vilajeta, po vzoru tekmovalne organizacije (TMORO). Od pomladi 1905 sta si ti dve
               organizaciji odprto nasprotovali in si z uporabo groženj, umorov, uničenja premoženja
               ter različnimi oblikami ekonomskega pritiska na pravoslavno slovansko prebivalstvo
               prizadevali, da vasi in mestne četrti zadržijo v svojih vrstah ali jih prevzamejo od
               druge organizacije. Glavna naloga čet obeh organizacij je bila, da porazijo, uničijo
               ali preženejo nasprotnike ter v svojo organizacijsko in versko strukturo vključijo
               vasi in mestne četrti, poseljene s pravoslavnimi Slovani. Pravzaprav je šlo za boj za
               omejevanje interesnih sfer Srbije in Bolgarije v Osmanskem cesarstvu oziroma za
               dominacijo nad čim širšim območjem.</p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">Tako ena kot druga organizacija, odvisno od moči in
               zmogljivosti, je uporabljala ukrepe, ki jih je mogoče označiti kot oblike ekonomskega
               nacionalizma. Za razliko od komitske organizacije, ki je z obdavčevanjem prebivalcev
               za revolucionarne cilje poskušala biti čim bolj ekonomsko neodvisna od Bolgarije,
               četniška organizacija, razen v primerih zlorab ali za nabavo orožja v posameznih
               naseljih, ni zahtevala denarja od prebivalstva. To ji je dajalo prednost pred
               nasprotnikom. Prav tako se je dolgo časa izogibala umorom vodij ekzarhističnih
               naselij, da bi s tem prisilila njihove sosede, da zapustijo komitsko stran in se
               pridružijo Srbski četniški organizaciji. Namesto umorov so pogosteje uporabljali
               zaplembo živine, pogojujoč njeno vrnitev s prehodom k Srbom, ali požig gospodarskih
               stavb in hiš.</p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">Pritisk na sezonske delavce (pečalbare), ki so
               preživljali družine v Kosovskem in Bitolskem vilajetu z delom v Srbiji in Bolgariji,
               so izvajale oblasti obeh držav. To sredstvo je sezonske delavce prisililo, da so
               izbirali med tveganjem smrti zaradi lakote ali maščevanjem nacionalno-revolucionarnih
               čet, in je glede na prevlado ene ali druge nevarnosti imelo manj ali več uspeha.
               Ekonomski bojkot je prav tako predstavljal sredstvo pritiska. Komitska, ekzarhistična
               stran je prepovedovala trgovcem in obrtnikom, da prodajajo blago kmetom v srbskih
               naseljih, srbska stran pa je prepovedala, da kmetje kupujejo pri trgovcih in
               obrtnikih ekzarhistov. Ti ukrepi so bili bolj ali manj uspešni, odvisno od razmerja
               moči na terenu.</p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">V boju Srbije in Bolgarije za vzpostavitev čim širše
               baze privržencev za srbsko in bolgarsko nacionalno opredelitev med pravoslavnimi
               Slovani v Osmanskem cesarstvu na začetku 20. stoletja so bila torej uporabljena vsa
               razpoložljiva sredstva, vključno z ekonomskimi. Ekonomski pritisk je predstavljal
               pomembno orodje v tem boju, pričujoči prispevek pa predstavlja poskus, da se ta čim
               celoviteje osvetli.</p>
            <p style="text-align: justify;">Vrh medsebojnega, do takrat nacionalnega boja med
               nasprotnimi skupinami v Osmanskem cesarstvu je bil dosežen z mladoturško revolucijo
               leta 1908. Takrat so nove oblasti priznale vse revolucionarne organizacije in
               podelile amnestijo udeležencem oboroženih akcij. Poleg prenehanja fizičnega nasilja
               je prenehal tudi ekonomski pritisk na prebivalstvo, da se opredeli za eno ali drugo
               skupino. Od tega trenutka do konca osmanske oblasti v regiji so prebivalci svobodno
               izbirali cerkveno/nacionalno pripadnost in politično usmeritev.</p>
         </div>
      </back>
   </text>
</TEI>
