Status of Ottoman Officials and military personnel in Bosnia and Herzegovina after the Austro-Hungarian occupation of 1878

Abstract

After the occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1878, the Austro- Hungarian government, in an effort to appease the local, especially Muslim population, proclaimed that the existing customs and laws would be preserved, for the purpose of achieving a gradual social transformation, without major setbacks. This paper seeks to re-examine the promise the new government on the example of the status and later fate of former Ottoman officials and military personnel, who were mostly locals in the occupied territory. Unpublished archival sources, which can be used to reconstruct the basic direction of Austro-Hungarian administration in the irst years following the occupation, are used to show how former Ottoman officials, principally Muslims, were temporarily or permanently incorporated into the Austro-Hungarian administrative system in Bosnia and Herzegovina

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