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Battle of Drlupa

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Battle of the First Serbian Uprising
Battle of Drlupa
Part of the First Serbian uprising
Date24 February 1804
LocationDrlupa (Sopot)
Sanjak of Smederevo, Ottoman Empire
(today Serbia)
Result Serbian victory
Belligerents
Dahijas
Commanders and leaders
Ottoman Empire Aganlija (WIA)
Strength
100–300 Ottoman Empire 400
Casualties and losses
Unknown Ottoman Empire 36 dead, 14 wounded
Serbian Revolution
First Serbian Uprising:

Second Serbian Uprising:

The Battle of Drlupa was fought on 24 February 1804 between the Serbian Revolutionaries under Karađorđe and the Dahije (renegade Janissaries) under Aganlija.

Battle

in February 1804, Aganlija and 400 Janissaries went to meet up with Karađorđe to negotiate, but in reality to attack the Serb rebels. Karađorđe's entourage was made up of prominent people and the most prominent commanders, while Aganlija's entourage was made up of twenty-something chosen Turk elders, while the armies of both sides were behind them at half a rifle distance. According to Gavrilo Kovačević, Aganlija had 60 Janissaries and 200 Turks with him, and arrived at Sibnica below the Kosmaj (a village directly by Drlupa), where he met with the band of Karađorđe to discuss peace. The Serbs, however, immediately attacked. It ended in Serbian victory and is viewed as having been a signal for a general uprising against the Ottomans. Aganlija was wounded in the foot, Stanoje Glavaš in the head, while Panta from the Kragujevac nahija and Jovan Đaurović from Baroševac were killed.

After the battle, the rebels went throughout Šumadija, and Karađorđe established firm cooperation with the rebels commanders in the nahije of Belgrade. The Dahije requested aid from the neighboring pashas, but all refused except Pasvanoglu. Aganlija returned humiliated to Belgrade, which greatly excited the common folk (rayah), from which the rebels drew more volunteers, surprising the Ottomans who sought to suppress the uprising.

References

  1. Jović & Atanacković 1983.
  2. Novaković 1954, p. 115.
  3. Novaković 1954, p. 116.
  4. ^ Đurić & Samardžić 1980, p. 101.
  5. Đorđević 1967.
  6. Vukićević 1912.
  7. Novaković 1954, p. 128.

Sources

Wars and battles involving Serbs
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