Kachaks ( Albanian : kaçak , Serbian : качаци / kačaci ) is a term used for the Albanian rebels active in the late 19th and early 20th century in northern Albania , Montenegro , Kosovo and Macedonia , and later as a term for the militias of Albanian revolutionary organizations against the Kingdom of Serbia (1910–18) Kingdom of Yugoslavia (1918–24), called the " Kachak Movement ".
10-401: Cene may refer to: People [ edit ] Cene Marković , Serbian commander Cene Prevc (born 1996), Slovenian ski jumper Charles Le Cène (1647?–1703), French controversialist Ilhami Çene (born 1909), Turkish fencer Michel-Charles Le Cène (1684–1743), French printer Places [ edit ] Cene, Lombardy , town in
20-679: A cavalry officer of the Bulgarian Army . He joined the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO) and quickly became a voivoda (commander). After the massacre of Serbs in Kokošinje and Rudar by IMRO in 1905 he left the organization and joined the Serbian Chetnik Organization . Identifying as a Serb , he could not forgive the cruelty of the massacres, and fled at once at night and joined
30-716: The Austro-Hungarians in Belgrade , then was sent to his home region to monitor the IMRO. In 1915, with the fall of Serbia , the Bulgarians attacked Tetovo , killing Marković's horse, but he survived and escaped into Albania. He fought on the Macedonian front . During this time he married in Bitola , then returned to fighting in the north. When the war ended, he returned to his village, which
40-632: The "Kachak movement", a large-scale revolt in Drenica involving around 10,000 people under Galica. The uprising was quelled by the Royal Yugoslav Army Armed conflicts between the Royal Yugoslav Army and the Kachaks took place in the years 1920 and 1921, 1923, with a revival in 1924. One of the achievements was the creation of the "neutral zone" around Junik , which would serve to jeopardize
50-714: The Committee called for a general uprising in Kosovo and other Albanian-inhabited regions in Yugoslavia. The Kachaks were popular among Albanians , and local support to them increased in the 1920s when Hasan Prishtina became a member of the Albanian parliament, Kadri Prishtina ("Hoxhe Kadriu") became Minister of Justice, and Bajram Curri became Minister of war (1921). All three were Kosovar Albanians . During this time, Kosovar Albanians under Azem Galica began an armed struggle, also known as
60-808: The Serbian bands, operating on the left side of the Vardar , with his band in Upper Poreč and in the Gostivar region. He mainly fought against Albanian kachaks . With the outbreak of the First Balkan War in 1912, he joined the Chetnik detachment of Vojislav Tankosić and participated in fighting in Merdare, destroying the Ottoman border stations. In World War I he fought against
70-512: The intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cene&oldid=974361391 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Disambiguation pages with surname-holder lists Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Cene Markovi%C4%87 Aleksandar Marković ( Serbian Cyrillic : Александар Марковић , 1864–1918+), known by his nickname Cene (Цене Марковић),
80-406: The province of Bergamo, Italy Other [ edit ] Clube Esportivo Nova Esperança , Brazilian football team See also [ edit ] Cena (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Cene . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to
90-753: Was a Serbian Chetnik commander ( voivoda ) in Macedonia, in the Balkan Wars and World War I . Marković was born in the village of Jelošnik near Tetovo (now in North Macedonia ). He lived in his village for his first 15 years, then sought work in the Principality of Bulgaria , then a vassal state of the Ottoman Empire . He finished training at the NCO school and served as a soldier, then returned to Bulgaria, as
100-770: Was devastated, the houses having been burnt down by the Bulgarians. Kachaks The word is derived from Turkish kaçak for "outlaw". The Committee for the National Defense of Kosovo ( Albanian : Komiteti për Mbrojten Kombëtare e Kosovës ) was created in Shkodër , under Hasan Prishtina , in 1918. The committee organizationally and financially supported the kachaks in Albanian-populated areas of Yugoslavia, in Kosovo and Skopje (the former Kosovo vilayet ). Kachaks were also active around Ohrid and Bitola. On 6 May 1919
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