Gazi Husrev-beg

Gazi Husrev-beg (Ottoman- 'غازى خسرو بیگ' Ghāzī Khuṣrow Beg; Modern Turkish: Gazi Hüsrev Bey) (1480–1541) was a Bosniak bey in the Ottoman Empire during the first half of the 16th century. He was an effective military strategist, and the greatest donor and builder of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Biography

He was born in Serres, Greece, to a Bosniak father (convert from Trebinje region)[1] and a Turkish mother, who was the daughter of the Sultan. Thus, Gazi Husrev-Beg was Sultan Beyazid II's grandson. A brilliant strategist and politician, in 1521 he became the governor of the Ottoman province of Bosnia.

In less than 3 years, Gazi Husrev-Beg conquered the fortresses of Knin, Skradin, and Ostrovica. With such results, he was appointed the governor of the Ottoman province of Bosnia on September 15, 1521, becoming one of Sultan Suleiman I's most trusted men.

What followed was a relentless campaign of conquering. The fortified towns of Greben, Sokol, Jezero, Vinac, Vrbaški Grad, Livač, Kamatin, Bočac, Udbina, Vrana, Modruč, and Požega all fell at the hands of Gazi-Husrev Beg.

Gazi Husrev-beg also founded the vakuf, which was active until the 20th century.[2]

Gazi Husrev-beg and his forces were struggling against a power vacuum in Montenegro after the death of his ally Skanderbeg Crnojević in 1528. in 1541 during an uprising of nobility in Montenegro, he set out to protect the Muslim Crnojevićs and the local populace. After fighting many battles and maintaining order in the region although ultimately victorious he was killed fighting renegade Christians in a small Montenegrin village Mokro in Drobnjaci, Montenegro. Legend says that he was a big man, so his warriors could not take him back, but to take apart his intestines, and buried them on small hill called The hodža's peak - Hodžina glavica. Because "hodža" means Imam or Muslim priest in Bosnian, its real connection to Gazi Husrev-Beg's place of rest is unclear.

That part of Montenegro, and Montenegrin clan that lives there has a name "Drobnjak" (drob = intestines). His body was taken back to Sarajevo, where it remains to this day in a tomb in the courtyard of his mosque. Above it is written, "May the mercy and generosity of god fall upon him every day".

References

  1. ^ Malcolm, Noel (1996). Bosnia: A Short History. London: Papermac. p. 67. ISBN 0-333-66215-6. 
  2. ^ Malcolm, Noel (1996). Bosnia: A Short History. London: Papermac. p. 68. ISBN 0-333-66215-6.