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Battle of Tabanovce

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Battle of Tabanovce
Part of the Macedonian Struggle
Date27 March 1905
LocationTabanovce, Ottoman Empire (modern North Macedonia)42°12′53″N 21°42′30″E / 42.214722°N 21.708333°E / 42.214722; 21.708333
Result Ottoman retreat
Belligerents
Serbian Chetnik Organization Ottoman Empire Kumanovo garrison
Commanders and leaders
Vladimir Kovačević N/A
Strength
27 112
Casualties and losses
11 dead and two lightly wounded c. 60 dead and wounded
Battle of Tabanovce is located in North MacedoniaBattle of Tabanovceclass=notpageimage| Location of Tabanovce in North Macedonia

The Battle of Tabanovce (Serbian: Borba na Tabanovcu, Serbian Cyrillic: Борба на Табановцу) between the Serbian Chetnik Organization, a Serbian rebel faction, and an Ottoman garrison from Kumanovo, took place on 27 March 1905.

Battle

The Chetnik band heading for Poreče, numbering 27 men, descended at dawn on 27 March (O.S. 14 March) into the village of Tabanovce. They carried a load of 101 rifles and 30,000 rounds of ammunition. It was commanded by sergeant Vladimir Kovačević, a nephew of Herzegovinian revolutionary Stojan Kovačević. The band included, among others, sergeant Veselin Veselinović, lieutenant Dragomir Protić (Kovačević's deputy), sublieutenant Dragomir Vasiljević, Stojan Koruba, and Stojan Ristić-Giljanče. The unit's most experienced fighters were Veselin Veselinović, Stojan Koruba, and Stojan Ristić-Giljanče. Immediately upon arriving, Kovačević divided the band, sending a group of six under Veselinović to a house at the opposite end of the village, while the others were placed in two neighboring houses. A Turkish informant saw Veselinović's group and informed the Kumanovo garrison, who already in the early afternoon began searching the houses. Vasiljević was seriously wounded, while Vitko Vranjanac was shot dead; Stojan promptly reacted and ran through the yard, killing two soldiers, then took Vasiljević to safety. The askeri surrounded Veselinović's house, and reformed Ottoman officer Turić informed the besieged that they had been abandoned by their comrades, who had fled before the army, and that he guaranteed them their lives if they surrendered; as resistance in these circumstances would be futile, they surrendered. Around 15:00 Kovačević's groups and the Ottoman army clashed. Protić and Vasiljević were killed right away when they attempted to break out. The battle lasted until late at night, with the Ottoman army eventually retreating as they typically avoided nightly engagements with the guerillas. The Ottomans had c. 60 dead and wounded, while the Chetniks had 11 dead (Dragomir Protić, Dragomir Vasiljević, Veselin Veselinković, Sava Jovanović, Trajko Đorđević, Radoš Radulović, Sava Stevanović, David Bošnjanin, Trajče Kumanovac, Stojan Kumanovac i Nikola Jablaničanin) and two lightly wounded. Only one man managed to escape the encirclement -- Stojan Koruba.

Aftermath

After the fights in Tabanovce, Savatije Milošević, Lazar Kujundžić and Aksentije Bacetović–Baceta left their offices as organizers of the action, wanting to feel the Chetnik lifestyle "from within" as voivodes. Baceta was to replace the then Chief of Upper Staff, Ilija Jovanović. Baceta and Savatije, by mid-April, had moved 107 freedom-fighters across the border.

References

  1. name=SCNPDV-7>cite web|last=Ilić|first=Vladimir|date=5 March 2003|title=Srpski četnici na početku dvadesetog veka (7): Ubistvo popa Taška|url=http://arhiva.glas-javnosti.rs/arhiva/2003/03/05/srpski/F03030402.shtml%7Cpublisher=Glas Javnosti
  2. name=SCNPDV-7
  3. name=SCNPDV-7
  4. name=RdV-102>cite book|title=Recueil de Vardar|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kmlpAAAAMAAJ%7Cyear=2005%7Cpublisher=Akademija%7Cpage=102
  5. name=SCNPDV-7
  6. name=RdV-102
  7. name=SCNPDV-7
  8. name=SCNPDV-7
  9. Đorđević 2014.
  10. name=SCNPDV-7
  11. name=SCNPDV-7
  12. name=SCNPDV-7
  13. name=SCNPDV-7
  14. name=SCNPDV-7
  15. name=SCNPDV-7

Sources

Serbian Chetnik Organization
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With the outbreak of the First Balkan War (1912), the organization was put under the supervision of the Serbian Army (see Chetniks in the Balkan Wars)
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