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Dragačevo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
View of the village of Goračići.

Dragačevo (Serbian: Драгачево) is a historical subregion (or microregion) in Western Pomoravlje in central Serbia. It includes villages between Čačak, Požega, Lučani and Arilje, most belonging to the Lučani municipality. It was a knežina (administrative unit) in Revolutionary Serbia and was then organized as a srez of the Požega okrug in the Principality of Serbia.

Geography

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The region includes the mountains of Krstac and Golubac.

Settlements

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The region includes settlements in mostly the Lučani municipality, and fewer settlements in Arilje and Čačak.

History

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During the First Serbian Uprising (1804–13), the Dragačevo area was organized into a knežina (administrative unit) of Revolutionary Serbia, belonging to the Požega nahiya.[1] The Požega nahiya had included three knežina (Christian self-governing village groups) prior to 1804, the Dragačevo, Podibar and Čačanska Morava;[2] with the uprising, Podibar and Čačanska Morava were united.[3]

The villages of Dragačevo involved in the uprising were Virovo, Viča, Vlasteljice, Guča, Goračići, Guberevci, Grab, Gornji Dubac, Donja Kravarica, Donji Dubac, Zeoke, Kaona, Krstac, Lučani, Lis, Lisa, Lisice, Kotraža, Markovica, Dučalovići, Negrišori, Mirosaljci, Prilipac, Puhovo, Milatovići, Osonica, Rti-Krivača (now Rti and Krivača), Rogača, Rtari, Cerova, Trešnjevica, Tijanje, Brezovica.[4]

Among the most notable participants in the Serbian Revolution that hailed from Dragačevo are:

During Hadži Prodan's rebellion (1814), Ottoman commander Ćor-Zuka and Serbian leader Miloš Obrenović suppressed the rebels in Dragačevo, captured Hadži Prodan's family and executed 60 Serbs.[7] After the executions at Belgrade, Vizier Adem Pasha of Novi Pazar took his troops back to Novi Pazar via Dragačevo.[8] Following the Takovo Meeting, which proclaimed the Second Serbian Uprising, vojvoda Lazar Mutap went to Dragačevo to collect rebels and then join with Jovan Obrenović in Čačak.[9] After taking over Čačak, Miloš Obrenović sent Avram Lukić, the vojvoda and knez of Dragačevo, to support Radosav Jelečanin's siege of Karanovac.[10]

See also

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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dragačevo .

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Pavlović 1990, p. 126.
  2. ^ Đorđević 1921, p. 517.
  3. ^ Pavlović 1990, p. 124.
  4. ^ Pavlović 1990, pp. 126–128.
  5. ^ a b c Pavlović 1990, p. 127.
  6. ^ Pavlović 1990, p. 128.
  7. ^ Nenadović 1903, p. 341.
  8. ^ Protić 1891, p. 14.
  9. ^ Protić 1891, p. 21.
  10. ^ Nenadović 1903, p. 395.

Sources

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Further reading

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  • Erdeljanović, Jovan (1902). "Доње Драгачево". Антропогеографска проучавања СЕЗб IV, Насеља српских земаља I. Српска краљевска академија.
  • Jovanović, Kosta (1908). "Горње Драгачево". Антропогеографска проматрања СЕЗб XI, Насеља српских земаља V. Српска краљевска академија – via Google Docs.
  • Nikolić, Desanka (1996). Горње Драгачево (PDF). SANU.

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