Malkoč-beg
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Malkoč-beg
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Native name |
Malkoç Bey
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Died | 1565 |
Allegiance | Ottoman Empire |
Rank | sanjak-bey |
Malkoč-beg (died in 1565) was an Ottoman military officer, the first governor of the Vilayet Croats.[1] He participated in the siege of Klis, and was later appointed as sanjakbeg of Sanjak of Klis (Kilis Sancağı, Klis).[2]
Family
Malkoč-beg was the son of Kara-Osman-beg, captain of the Ottoman cavalry military units[3] and sanjakbey of the Sanjak of Herzegovina whose turbe is in Kopčić near Bugojno.[4]
Some authors adopted view of Safvet-beg Bašagić that Malkoč-beg was Malkoč Dugalić, originally from village Duga near Prozor, which is disputed by some other authors.[5] According to some incomplete documents some of descendants of Malkoč-beg received zijamet in Duga, hence the last name Dugalić, or Dulali which was how their descendants were referred to.[6] The most famous Dugalić was Ahmed-paša Dugalić, appointed as beglerbey of Bosnia in 1598.[6]
Malkoč-beg had seven sons (Džafer, Osman, Omer, Ibrahim, Alija, Husein and Hasan) and one daughter (Hani).[7]
In the 1563 defter of the Sanjak of Pakrac it is mentioned that captain of the region around river Sava was Husein, son of Malkoč-beg.[8] According to Evliya Çelebi, Ibrahim built a mosque in Donji Vakuf.[9] Together with his sons Džafer and Husein, Malkoč-beg fought against Christian armies on the territory between rivers Una and Kupa.[10] Because of his successful conquests he was promoted to the position of sanjakbey.[10] In 1562 he personally wrote a document in Dubrovnik, as sanjakbey of the Sanjak of Herzegovina.[11]
According to Šabanović, Malkoč-beg died on 26 October 1565 in Banja Luka, where he was buried beside his son Džafer who died five years earlier.[12][11] According to Mazalić, Malkoč-beg died in 1562 in Pécs and buried in the grave of his father.[13]
Annotations
- Duganli-Malkoč-beg. He is also known as Karaosmanović.
See also
References
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External links
- Articles needing translation from foreign-language Wikipedias
- 16th-century Ottoman people
- Ottoman governors
- Ottoman military personnel
- Ottoman Bosnian Muslims
- Ottoman period in the history of Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Ottoman period in the history of Croatia
- Ottoman people of Croatian descent
- Croats of Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Croatian Muslims
- Croatian former Christians
- Croatian military personnel in Ottoman armies
- Devşirme
- Converts to Islam from Christianity
- 1565 deaths