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Siege of Scutari
Part of the First Balkan War

Clockwise from top left: Flags of Great Powers on Shkodër fortress; Ottoman troops defending Shkodra; Montenegrin flag flying over the Shkoder fortress; Captured flag standard of Montenegrin forces proudly displayed by Turkish and Albanian troops; Albanian guerillas shooting from a tree; Albanian officers posing with captured Montenegrin ammunition
Date28 October 1912 – 23 April 1913[1]
Location
Result Status quo ante bellum[2]
Essad Pasha Toptani signed the final surrender protocol on April 23, 1913.[1]
A Peace treaty signed by Essad Pasha and King Nikola, returned Shkodër to the Albanian Principality.[3]
Belligerents
 Ottoman Empire
Albanian Volunteers
 Montenegro
 Serbia
Commanders and leaders
Ottoman Empire Hasan Rıza Pasha
Ottoman Empire Essad Pasha Surrendered[4]
Kingdom of Montenegro King Nikola
Kingdom of Montenegro Crown Prince Danilo
Kingdom of Montenegro Radomir Vešović
Strength
20,000[5] 40,000[5]
Casualties and losses
Unknown 8,000 killed and wounded [6]

The siege of Scutari, also referred to as the siege of Shkodër [3] (Albanian: Rrethimi i Shkodrës, Serbian: Опсада Скадра), known in Turkish as İşkodra Müdafaası [7] (in Turkish) or İşkodra Savunması ,[8] took place from 28 October 1912 to 23 April 1913 when the army of Kingdom of Montenegro defeated the forces of the Ottoman Empire and invaded Shkodër.

Prelude

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In 1912, the Balkan League consisting of Serbia, Montenegro, Greece and Bulgaria had jointly declared war against the Ottoman Empire. Montenegro mobilized its troops and prepared to attack the Ottoman forces in Albania directly to the south. Behind the invasion, however, stood Montenegro's intention to expand its border at the expense of territories with an overwhelming majority of Albanians. Montenegro considered itself the successor of Zeta, a medieval Slavic realm, with Shkodër as its capital. With the transition of power from the last feudal lords Balšići or Balsha to Venetians, and eventually Ottomans, who established a city as an administrative center of the region, the "lost capital" became a symbol of oppression for the Montenegrins.[citation needed][9]

Start of the war

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On 8 October 1912, Turkish General Hasan Riza Pasha announced that Montenegro had declared war on the Ottoman Empire in order to erase 600 years of oppression by the "Turkish foot", as the enemy claimed, and that its troops were crossing the border between Montenegro and Albania. Two hours after the news, the Montenegrin troops, as expected, approached Scutari. As much as 70% of the Turkish army in the interior of the Balkans was composed of Muslim Albanians conscripted during the freedom struggle from the Ottoman Empire. At noon, Hasan Riza Pasha gathered all his commanders in his headquarters and told them:

The city will soon be surrounded, but this city will not fall into the hands of Montenegrins. Shkodra is our fate or our grave, but not our shame. Today we have five thousand troops, but over 20 thousand others are coming to our assistance. As of today begins an uphill battle, that none of us knows how long it will last

— Hasan Riza Pasha, during the organisation of the defence of Scutari, [10]

The siege

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The siege of Scutari was initiated by the Montenegrins on 28 October 1912. The initial attack was carried out by the Montenegrin army under the command of Prince Danilo and encountered stiff resistance. As the conflict settled into siege warfare, the Montenegrins were supported by reinforcements from their Serbian allies.

The combined Turkish and Albanian defenders of Scutari were led by Hasan Riza Pasha and his lieutenant, Essad Pasha. After the siege had continued for approximately three months, differences between the two Ottoman leaders boiled over on 30 January 1913, when Essad Pasha had two of his Albanian servants ambush and kill Riza Pasha.[3] The ambush occurred as Riza Pasha left Essad's house after a dinner engagement and put Essad Pasha in total control of the Turkish forces at Scutari.[11] Differences between the two men centered about the continued defense of the city. Riza Pasha desired to continue the fight against the Montenegrins and Serbs while Essad Pasha was a proponent of ending the siege by means of secret negotiations conducted with the counsel of the Russians. Essad Pasha's plan was to deliver Scutari to the Montenegrins and Serbs as the price for their support in his attempt to proclaim himself King of Albania.[11][12]

The siege, however, continued and even escalated in February when King Nikola of Montenegro received a delegation of Malësian chieftains who stated their allegiance to him and volunteered to join the Montenegrin forces with 3,000 of their own soldiers. Shortly thereafter, the Malësian chieftains joined the war by assisting in the attack of the Jubani — Daut-age tower.[13][a]

On 21 April 1913 approximately six months after the start of the siege, Essad Pasha offered an official proposal to surrender the city to Montenegrin General Vukotic. On 23 April, Essad Pasha's proposal was accepted and he was allowed to leave the city with full military honors and all of his troops and equipment, except the heavy guns. He also received a sum of £10,000 sterling from the Montenegrin King.[14]

Essad Pasha surrendered Scutari to Montenegro only after its destiny had been decided, meaning after the Great Powers had forced Serbia to retreat and after it was obvious that the Great Powers would not allow Montenegro to keep Scutari. At the same time, Essad Pasha managed to get the support of Serbia and Montenegro for the new Kingdom of Albania, which would gain Scutari indirectly by the Great Powers.[10]

Aftermath

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The capture of Scutari by Montenegro and Serbia removed the only obstacle to a Serbian advance into Ottoman Albania. By November 1912, Albania had declared independence but was yet to be recognized by anyone. The Serbian army eventually occupied most of northern and central Albania, stopping north of the town of Vlorë. The Serbians also managed to trap the remains of the Army of Vardar in what was left of Albania proper, but were unable to force them to surrender.[15]

When the war was over, however, the Great Powers did not award Scutari to the Kingdom of Montenegro, rather in accordance with the London Conference of Ambassadors compelled the Montenegrins to evacuate the city in May 1913. The Montenegrin army's withdrawal was hastened by a small naval flotilla of British and Italian gunboats that moved up the Bojana River and across the Adriatic coastline. An international peace keeping force (Scutari detachment) from five countries including Austria-Hungary, Great Britain, France, Italy and Germany was deployed in the city and kept until the start of World War I.[16]

The International reaction to the ultimate settlement was somewhat mixed. Austria-Hungary's Foreign Minister, Count Leopold Berchtold, demanded that Scutari be evacuated by the Great Powers within 48 hours.[17] The Kingdom of Italy supported Austria-Hungary and sent a part of the peace force.[citation needed] The Russian Empire supported Montenegro in its efforts to keep Scutari.[citation needed]

And finally as cultural outcomes of the siege, Albanian novelist Ndoc Nikaj wrote an historical novel titled Shkodra e rrethueme ("Shkodra under siege") in 1913[18] while Bosnian Serb poet Aleksa Šantić wrote To Essad Pasha (Serbian: Esad Paši), inspired by the siege of Scutari.[19]

See also

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Notes

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Footnotes

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  1. ^ On that occasion, the Malësians requested that they be allowed to join with the Montenegrin army in the capture of Shkodra.[13]

Citations

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  1. ^ a b Erickson 2003, p. 312.
  2. ^ Somel (2003), p. lxvi.
  3. ^ a b c Vickers 1999, p. 71.
  4. ^ Erickson 2003, p. 237.
  5. ^ a b Vachkov (2012), pp. 138–141.
  6. ^ Clodfelter (2002), p. 384.
  7. ^ Nafiz and Kocaman (1933).
  8. ^ Tarih and Başkanlığı (1987).
  9. ^ Bojović (1990).
  10. ^ a b Uli (1995), pp. 34–40.
  11. ^ a b Uli (1995), p. 26.
  12. ^ Pearson (2004), p. 38.
  13. ^ a b Dašić (1998), p. 321.
  14. ^ Pearson (2004), p. 41.
  15. ^ Vlora (1973).
  16. ^ Balla (2005).
  17. ^ NYT 1913.
  18. ^ Elsie (2005), p. 89.
  19. ^ Šantić (1913).

References

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Primary sources

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Website sources

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