Sokol Baci

Sokol Baci Ivezaj /
Sokol Baci
Born 1837
Gruda, Sanjak of Scutari, Ottoman Empire (now Montenegro)
Died 1920
Shkodër, Albania
Allegiance  Ottoman Empire (before 1870s–1877)
Albanian League (1878-1884)[1]
 Principality of Montenegro(1884–1913)
Northern Albanian (Malissor) tribes (1837-1920)
Years of service 1870s–1913
Rank Commander (bajraktar)
Brigadier-general (Montenegro)[2]
Commands held Gruda clan
Ottoman Empire Abdul Hamid's Albanian guard (before 1876)
Scutari (1913–)
Battles/wars Albanian Revolt of 1911

Sokol Baci[a] (1837–1920) [3] was the chief of the Gruda, a northern Albanian tribe in the vicinity of Podgorica (now Montenegro). Originally, he had served the Ottoman sultan in his personal guard, but switched sides after he was maltreated, and fought the Ottoman forces in the Sanjak of Scutari. After his clan was defeated and subjugated, he was exiled and sought refuge in Montenegro, even though he had earlier fought against them in the 1870s, and lived in Podgorica beginning in approximately 1884. Prince Nicholas I of Montenegro recognized his status and employed him. He was one of the leaders of the Albanian Revolt of 1911, alongside chiefs such as Ded Gjo Luli, Mehmet Shpëndi, Mirash Luca and Luigj Gurakuqi. In 1912, the entire tribes of Gruda and Hoti, along with major portions of the Kastrati, Shkreli, and Klimenti tribes, backed Montenegro during the Balkan Wars. In 1913, he was appointed commander of Scutari by King Nicholas I of Montenegro, where he lived until his death in 1920.

Life

Early life

Sokol Baci Ivezaj was the son of Bac, hence his most commonly used name is (Sokol Baci), and he belonged to the Precaj family of the Ivezaj brotherhood in Gruda.[4] The Ivezaj brotherhood claimed they were descendants of Iveza, a son of a certain Vuksan Gela (also spelled Vuksan Gelja), who allegedly came from Suma, below Shkodër.[5]

As a youth, Sokol was taken by the Ottoman authorities to be trained and raised in Istanbul. Due to his intelligence and athletic abilities, Sokol was selected to attend the military academy at the University of Sorbonne in Paris, France. As a result of the many battles he fought for the Ottomans, he was eventually selected, along with five other young men of high standing, for the personal bodyguard of the Sultan. In 1877, during the Serbo-Turkish and Russo-Turkish Wars, while on leave at home, the order came for the disarming of the northern Albanian tribes.[6] The Gruda refused to obey, and refusing to be a traitor to his people, he led his clan in battle against Ottoman forces.[6] He managed to behead two high Ottoman officers, however, the clan was defeated, and he was forced to flee.[7]

Sokol Baci in his middle years.

He became a fugitive and outlaw, in exile in Montenegro, against whom he had earlier fought against in the 1870s.[7] He took refuge with his wife's tribe in Zatrijebač, which had been annexed by the Principality of Montenegro after the Montenegrin–Ottoman War. On September 21, 1879, Sokol Baci, along with the other chiefs of the Hoti and Gruda, submitted a memorandum to the Great Powers requesting that their land not be ceded to Montenegro.[1] Prince Nicholas of Montenegro recognized him, gave him a house and land, and employed him in the Montenegrin government for northern Albanian affairs. After 1883, Prince Nicholas' diplomacy with the Malissori mainly went through Sokol Baci.[2] A Montenegrin document, dated November 1891, with a list of Herzegovinian and Albanian leaders, showed that Sokol Baci received the largest payment from the Montenegrin government: 540 florins and 967 measures of flour annually for his service.[2] In mid-July 1902, Sokol Baci gave a list to Prince Nicholas of Malissori chieftains and their escorts, who were given 1,190 florins on the Prince's order.[2] Sokol Baci financed the building of a Catholic church in Podgorica in 1904. That Church was destroyed during the World War II bombing of Podgorica in May 1944.[3] Sokol Baci returned briefly to Gruda upon the Young Turk regime's accession to the Ottoman government in 1908, but problems arose and he returned to Podgorica.

Sokol Baci (1902)

1911–13

Among the leaders of the Albanian Revolt of 1911, who had turned their weapons and clans on the Ottomans, was "... the intelligent Sokol Baci"[8] (from Gruda).[2] Other leaders included: Mirash Luca (from Kastrati);[2] Ded Gjo Luli (from Hoti);[2] Ton Nika (from Shkreli);[2] Mehmet Shpendi (from Shala);[2] Ljub Mark Gjeloshi, Mirash Pali and Franjo Pali (from Selce)[2] and also intellectual Luigj Gurakuqi, among others.[8] A previously classified intelligence document from the British Foreign Affairs indicates that Sokol Baci along with Ded Gjo Luli and Mirash Luca were the principal instigators of the Albanian Revolt of 1911. It describes Sokol Baci as "a man of some culture and very considerable intelligence". During the Albanian Revolt of 1911 "he organized with considerable skill the service of supplies to the insurgents".[9] To Sokol, much respected by the tribesmen, Nikola entrusted the task of inducing the Albanian Catholics to migrate in numbers into Montenegro, promising them that if they would revolt against the Turks their wives and children should have shelter and protection till their land was freed from the Turks, and that they should receive sufficient arms and ammunition. Nikola himself promised independence to the tribesmen. Sokol was a simple-minded old fellow. Bitterly did he and his family repent later of the way they had let themselves be made cat's paws of.[10]

Copy of the Grece Memorandum (1911) with Sokol Baci as the lead signatory
Memorial plaque of the Gërçe Memorandum, in Gërçe, Albania

On June 24, 1911, the Ottoman minister to Montenegro, Saddridin Bey, came to negotiate with the Malissori, and promised an extension of the armistice and an increase of compensation money; Sokol Baci, however, urged the Malissori to not surrender, saying, "Where is the European guarantee?".[11] In 1912, the tribes of Gruda and Hoti were allied with Montenegro, while support also came from the greater parts of the Kastrati and Shkreli tribes, as well as a part of the Klimenti tribe.[12]

1912 dawned ominously. Montenegro worked ceaselessly to rouse the Maltsors, promising them that they should receive sufficient arms and, this time, gain freedom. It is pathetic to note that the luckless Albanians at first believed that the Serbs and Montenegrins spoke truth when they said the war was in order to liberate their brethren. That whole districts of solid Albanian population would be seized, did not occur to them. Later, they found their mistake.[10] During her war correspondence in the Winter of 1913, Edith Durham details her conversation with Sokol Baci and his son, Kole Sokoli, who stated that they were fighting to free Albania from the Ottomans.[13] After the Montenegrin conquest of Scutari (1913), Nicholas I appointed Sokol Baci the commander (vojvoda) and brigadier of Scutari. When congratulated on his appointment, Sokol replied, "He who does not see through the screen, may his eyes fall out!" On May 26, 1913, 130 leaders of the Gruda, Hoti, Kelmendi, Kastrati and Shkreli sent a petition to Cecil Burney in Shkodër against the incorporation of their territories into Montenegro.[14] Sokol broke ties with Nicholas I and lived in Shkodër for the remainder of his life. On November 14, 1918, Luigj Gurakuqi, Anton Harapi and Gjergj Fishta led the leaders of the Hoti and Gruda on a march from Montenegro to Shkodër, where they submitted a memorandum to the French Colonel, Bardy de Fourton. The memorandum was addressed to the Ministers of Foreign Affairs in Washington, London, Paris and Rome requesting that Hoti and Gruda be united with Albania. The Memorandum was signed by the Chiefs of Gruda, including Sokol's closest cousins, Dede Nika Ivezaj, Zef Martini Ivezaj, Mirash Hasi Ivezaj and Marash Pllumi Ivezaj.[15]

Legacy

English traveller and albanophile, Edith Durham, was on very close terms with Sokol Baci. In her book The Struggle for Scutari, she explained:

Sokol Baci, for whom, though he is now blamed alike by Montenegrin and Albanian, I have both esteem and respect. He acted as best he knew, according to his dim lights, and believed that he was acting for the good of his country. A burly figure, in full Albanian dress, and with great white mustachios like walrus tusks. Chief of the Gruda tribe, in his young days he was one of Abdul Hamid's famous Albanian guard, but he left it owing to the way the Turks maltreated his country, and fell, therefore, upon evil times. After the war of 1876-77 he sided with the party which wished for free Albania, and in consequence was forced to flee for his life. Hunted like wild beasts, he and his wife took refuge with his wife's tribe, Triepshi, which was then annexed by Montenegro as part of the spoils of war, searched for by both Montenegrins and Turks. Finally, King Nikola, recognizing his value as an influential chieftain, gave him a house and land and employed him largely for Albanian affairs. Sokol served him with doglike fidelity and touching faith, but never forgot his ancestral home across the border. When the Young Turk regime started, he hoped to return to it, but a short visit showed him that was impossible, and he returned to Podgoritza, to play an important part in the drama of the next few years. Poor Sokol! he was used as a cat's-paw. But I believe that he acted in perfect good faith."[16]

Annotations

  1. ^ His full name which he gave to captain Lazović was: Sokol Bac Precaj Ivezić Vuksanović (Vuksangeljović) Gruda.[4] Another source wrote his name as Sokol Rac Grcaj Vezirić Vuksangeljović.[17] Other spellings of his short name include Sokol Baca (Сокол Баца), Sokol Baco,[2] Sokol Batzi, etc. In Austrian documents, he is known as Nikola Bacci.[18] The word sokol means "falcon" in Slavic languages.[19]

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sokol Baci.

References

  1. 1 2 AMAE ,CPC ,Konsullata e Frances në Shkoder vëll. 21 ,fl.350r-351v.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Vladimir Stojančević (1990). Srbija i Albanci u XIX i početkom XX veka: ciklus predavanja 10-25. novembar 1987. Srpska akademija nauka i umetnosti. pp. 165–6, 183. Sokol Baco
  3. 1 2 Burzan, Danilo. Podgoricki Toponimi i Znamenja. Podgorica.
  4. 1 2 Anali Pravnog fakulteta u Beogradu. Pravni fakultet. 1955. p. 448. Пуно име грудског главара који је давао одговоре капетану Лазо- вићу гласи: Сокол Бац Прецај Ивезић Вуксановић (Вуксангељовић) Груда. Шта ова имена уствари означују? Сокол је лично име и у кући оца му Баца он ће бити означаван само по личном имену — Сокол, изван куће он је у роду Сркол Бац, ван рода зову га Сокол Бац Прецај (Прецај је један од родсва у братству), изван свога братства [...]
  5. Mihailo Petrović (1941). Đerdapski ribolovi u prošlosti i u sadašnjosti. Izd. Zadužbine Mikh. R. Radivojeviča. pp. 47–48. Ивезићи
  6. 1 2 Wyon 1903, p. 314
  7. 1 2 Wyon 1903, p. 315
  8. 1 2 Gjergj Fishta, 2006, The Highland Lute, I.B. Tauris, Canto 28
    • Bourne, Kenneth (1989). British Documents on Foreign Affairs. 15. University Publications of America. pp. 511–.
  9. 1 2 Durham, Edith (1920). Twenty years of Balkan Tangle. London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd., London.
  10. Owen Pearson (22 July 2005). Albania in the Twentieth Century, A History: Volume I: Albania and King Zog, 1908-39. I.B. Tauris. pp. 19–. ISBN 978-1-84511-013-0.
  11. Srpski etnografski zbornik. Akademija. 1923. p. 111. Груде и Хоти су били уз Црну Гору, па онда већи дио Кострата и Шкреља, и један дио Кли- мената. Тиме је, да је било такта у команди црногорске војске, био олакшан напад и заузеће Скадра, и да се радило
  12. Durham, Edith (1914). The Struggle for Scutari. London: E. Arnold. p. 215.
  13. Pearson, Owen (2004). Albania in the twentieth century: a history. I.B. Tauris. p. 43. ISBN 978-1-84511-013-0. Retrieved 18 November 2011.
  14. Harapi, Anton (2008). Andrra e Pretashit. Shkodër: Botime Françeskane.
  15. Durham, Edith (1914). The Struggle for Scutari. London : E. Arnold. p. 34.
  16. Prilozi proučavanju jezika. Katedra za južnoslovenske jezike Filozofskog fakulteta. 1988. p. 106. Сокол Рац Грцај Везирић Вуксангељовић
  17. Stavro Skendi (1967). The Albanian national awakening, 1878-1912. Princeton University Press. p. 449. The man used as intermediary in this offer was Sokol Baci (in Austrian documents, Nikola Bacci), Albanian chieftain of the clan of Grade, who at the time was in the service of Montenegro.
  18. Bernard Comrie; Greville G. Corbett (2002). The Slavonic Languages. Taylor & Francis. pp. 539–. ISBN 978-0-415-28078-5.

Sources

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