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{{Infobox settlement
'''Gusinje''' (] ]: Гусиње, ]: Gucia) is a town in north-eastern ]. It is located in the geographical region of ], in the municipality of ]. ], also known as ''Ali Paša Gusinjski'', a famous military leader was from Gusinje (he is only famous to Montenegro).
<!--See Template:Infobox settlement for additional fields that may be available-->
<!--See the Table at Infobox settlement for all fields and descriptions of usage-->
<!-- Basic info ---------------->
|name = Gusinje<!-- at least one of the first two fields must be filled in -->
|settlement_type = ] and ]
|native_name = Гусиње<br>Gucia
|total_type = <!-- to set a non-standard label for total area and population rows -->
|motto =
<!-- images and maps ----------->
|image_skyline = File:Gusinje, typicke mestske domy z pocatku 19. stol.jpg
|image_alt =
|image_caption = Typical households in Gusinje
|image_flag = Flag of Gusinje.gif
|flag_size =
| image_shield = Coat of arms of Gusinje.svg
| shield_alt = ]
|image_blank_emblem =
|blank_emblem_type =
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|image_map =
|mapsize =
|map_caption =
|image_map1 =
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|pushpin_map = Montenegro
|pushpin_label_position = top<!-- the position of the pushpin label: left, right, top, bottom, none -->
|pushpin_map_caption = Location within Montenegro
|pushpin_mapsize =
<!-- Location ------------------>
|subdivision_type = ]
|subdivision_name = ]
| subdivision_type1 = ]
| subdivision_name1 = ]
|subdivision_type2 = ]
|subdivision_name2 = ]
<!-- Smaller parts (e.g. boroughs of a city) and seat of government -->
|seat_type =
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|parts_type =
|parts_style = <!-- =list (for list), coll (for collapsed list), para (for paragraph format)
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|parts = <!-- parts text, or header for parts list -->
|p1 =
|p2 = <!-- etc. up to p50: for separate parts to be listed-->
<!-- Politics ----------------->
|government_footnotes =
| government_type = ]
| leader_title = Mayor
| leader_name = Sanel Balić (])
|established_title = <!-- Settled -->
|established_date =
<!-- Area --------------------->
|area_magnitude =
|unit_pref = <!--Enter: Imperial, to display imperial before metric-->
|area_footnotes =
|area_total_km2 = 3.73
|area_land_km2 = <!--See table @ Template:Infobox settlement for details on unit conversion-->
|area_water_km2 =
|area_total_sq_mi =
|area_land_sq_mi =
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|area_water_percent =
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|elevation_footnotes = <!--for references: use <ref> tags-->
|elevation_m = 1014
|elevation_ft =
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|elevation_min_ft =
<!-- Population ----------------------->
|population_as_of =2011
|population_footnotes =
|population_note =
|population_total =1673
|population_density_km2 = <!--For automatic calculation, any density field may contain: auto -->
|population_density_sq_mi =
<!-- General information --------------->
|timezone = ]
|utc_offset = +1
|timezone_DST = ]
|utc_offset_DST = +2
|coor_type = <!-- can be used to specify what the coordinates refer to -->
|coordinates = {{coord|42|33|43|N|19|50|02|E|region:ME|display=inline}}
<!-- Area/postal codes & others -------->
|postal_code_type = <!-- enter ZIP code, Postcode, Post code, Postal code... -->
|postal_code =
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}}


'''Gusinje''' ({{langx|cnr|Гусиње}}, {{IPA|sh|ɡǔsiɲe|pron}}; {{langx|sq|Gucia}}) is a small ] in ] in the ]. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 1,673 and is the administrative center of ].
==The Town==
]
===Ali Paša's Springs===
There is an area of the town where there is the Ali Paša's Springs (]/] Alipašini Izvori), named after Ali Paša of Gusinje (]/] Ali Paša Gusinjski). There is a restaurant located right next to the spring, which give its customers an excellent view of the spring. Also, the water from the spring is drinkable. The water from the spring eventually finds its way to the Danube.


==External links== ==Name==
Two alternative etymologies have been proposed for the toponym ''Gusinje''. One links it to Slavic ''guska'' (]), the other to the Illyrian term ''Geusiae'' from which the ] name of the town, ''Guci(a)'', would have evolved.<ref name="Opstina16"/><ref name="Loma70">{{harvnb|Loma|2013|p=70}}</ref> In archival records, it has been recorded variably as ''Gousino'' (Гоусино), ''Gustigne'' (1614) in Venetian archives, ''Gusna'' (گوسن) and ''Gusinye'' in Ottoman Turkish.<ref name="Loma70"/><ref name="Elsie151"/>
*
*
*


==Geography==
{{Montenegro-geo-stub}}
{{main|Gusinje Municipality}}
The town is located in the Plav-Gusinje area, part of the upper ] valley in the ] range at an elevation of 1,014 m. ], the highest mountain in Montenegro about 10&nbsp;km south of Gusinje in the Prokletije National Park.<ref>{{Cite web|title = NACIONALNI PARK PROKLETIJE|url = http://www.nparkovi.me/sajt/np-prokletije|website = www.nparkovi.me|access-date = 2016-01-14}}</ref>


Gusinje is on the Vermosh River, which flows eastwards towards ]. About 2&nbsp;km south of Gusinje's center is the source of Vruja creek, ]'s springs (''Alipašini izvori''/''Krojet e Ali Pashës''). Vruja creek enters the Vermosh east of town, between this confluence and Plav is locally called ''Luca''. Just before the Vermosh reaches Plav it flows into ]. The Vermosh is the first tributary of the ] river.
]
]


Gusinje is the seat of the municipality of the same name. From 1953 to 2014, it was part of ]. In 2014, it became again a distinct municipality. The town's boundaries form ~3.73&nbsp;km<sup>2</sup> of the total 157&nbsp;km<sup>2</sup> of the municipality.{{sfn|Opstina Gusinje|2012|p=5}} Much of the area of the municipality is mountainous land used in the past for livestock herding.
]

==History==
]
The toponym ''Hotina Gora'' (mountains of Hoti) in the Plav and Gusinje regions on the ] river basin in 1330 is the first mention of the Hoti name in historical records in the chrysobulls of Dečani. Šufflay considers this region as the original area of settlement of ] from which they moved southwards.<ref name="1a">{{cite journal |last1=Ahmetaj |first1=Mehmet |title=TOPONYMY OF HOTI |journal= Studime Albanologjike |date=2007 |volume=37 |quote= Kundruar historikisht që në krye të herës, sipas kapërcejve historikë, Hoti i Kujit si vendbanim i moçëm thjesht me burim shqiptar dokumentohet, përkatësisht daton që moti, në Krisobulën e Deçanit, që nga viti 1330, ku përmenden hotjanët në malet në jug të fushës së Plavës (“Hutina Gora”), sot Malet e Hotit, të cilat sipas mendimit të M. Shuflajt duhet të kenë qenë djepi i fisit Hot.|page=170 |url=https://www.ceeol.com/search/previewpdf?id=144424 |access-date=27 January 2020 |ref=1a}}</ref><ref name="Sufflay">{{cite book |last1=Šufflay |first1=Milan |title=Srbi i Arbanasi: njihova simbioza u srednjem vijeku |date=1925 |publisher=Izdanje seminara za arbanasku filologiju |pages=60–61 |url=https://archive.org/details/SrbiIArbanasi |access-date=28 January 2020 |ref=Sufflay}}</ref>

It is known that a medieval settlement was located in the territory of present-day Gusinje. Gusinje was mentioned as a caravan station on the Ragusa-Cattaro–Scutari–Peć route, in the 14th century.<ref name="Opstina16">{{harvnb|Opstina Gusinje|2012|p=16}}</ref>{{sfn|Zajednica osnovnog obrazovanja i vaspitanja|1986|p=137}} In historical record, Gusinje appears in 1485 in the defter of the ] as a village in the ] of Plav, a '']'' (imperial domain) that stood directly under the Ottoman Sultan. It had 96 households, 21 unmarried men and four widows.{{sfn|Pulaha|1974|p=99}} This was a big settlement compared to other villages in Montenegro and northern Albania.{{sfn|Pulaha|1974|p=112}}

In oral tradition, the Nikaj are said to have replaced the Mavriqi when moving in to their modern territory. They were said to have steemed from ] near ] settling in the mountain of Nikaj in the period of 1416-1500. With this most of the Mavriqi emigrated to the area of Gusinje. <ref>{{cite book|title=The Tribes of Albania,:History, Society and Culture|date=24 April 2015|publisher=Robert Elsie|pages=151|isbn=9780857739322|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=i2IpDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA151}}</ref>

] (background), aerial view.]]
Gusinje stood at the intersection of the Ottoman trade routes between northern Albania, Montenegro and Kosovo. Thus, the trade that passed through Gusinje generated much wealth for the Sultan and the Ottoman officials who were granted taxing rights. This made the trade route a constant target for the Albanian tribal community (''fis'') of ], which lived along the route as they were in rebellion against the Ottomans and were plundering their trade routes. Venetian diplomat ] who travelled in the region reported that at the end of 1612 the building of the fortress of Gusinje - near which the modern town developed - was completed.<ref name="Elsie151"/> The location was chosen because it stands at the convergence of pathways from Kelmendi. The original location of the fort was near the village of Grnčar/Gërnçar. Modern Gusinje stands ~6&nbsp;km to the west and ~10&nbsp;km to the north of the routes from the Kelmendi mountains (''malet e Kelmendit'') to modern ]. The surrounding villages to the west and south (]) are Kelmendi settlements. The fortress was built at the reguest of Sem Zaus, the Ottoman bey of Podgorica who wanted to stop the attacks of Kelmendi and to be able to travel freely in his domain. In 1614, Mariano Bolizza reported that the village had 100 households and a garrison of 237 men under Belo Juvanin.<ref name="Elsie151">{{harvnb|Elsie|2003|p=151}}</ref> The fortress was also designed to stop the movement of the ] and ] tribes in the Upper Lim valley.

In time despite Ottoman expeditions and relocations of these communities in Sandzak, Kelmendi and other tribes like Kuči, Triepshi and ] came to form many of the historical neighbourhoods (]) of Gusinje of today. Their descendants although initially Christian, willingly or forcefully converted to Islam, largely by the middle 18th century. This conversion occurred as a way to obtain more rights since the Muslim population was more privileged than the Christian one. An important family - which later developed into a brotherhood - in the development of Gusinje is that of the Omeragaj (today known as Omeragić) from Shala who appeared in the village in the early 18th century .{{sfn|Dedushaj|2012|p=18}} The different mosques of Gusinje today represent the different brotherhoods that built them. For example, the Cekaj mosque (''Čekića džamija''/''xhamia e Cekajve'') was built by the Cekaj brotherhood from Triepshi in 1687, while the New Mosque built in 1899 is known as ''Radončića'' after the Radončići brotherhood from Kuči. At the beginning of the 18th century, Gusinje was the seat of the local ]. In terms of military administration, the captaincy of Gusinje was part of the ] in 1724. Central Ottoman administration collapsed in the decades to come and the ] emerged as a regional power. The Vezir's mosque, built by ] in 1765 in the town center is a symbol of the Pashalik's influence in the upper Lim valley. Its downfall in 1831 brought back actual Ottoman rule. In 1852, in the register of the ], Gusinje is recorded with 1,500 households. It was a developing town that had 350 shops, eight ]s and five mosques. The captaincy of Gusinje in 1869 was part of the ].<ref name="Opstina16"/>

The two strongest feudal families in the ]-] region (~90&nbsp;km to the northeast of Gruemirë) trace their origin to ]. The Rexhepagaj of ] (now, Redžepagić-Rexhepagiqi) moved to Plav in the beginning of the 1650s where their ancestor took the Muslim name ''Veli'' when he converted. ] who gave the name to the family was a great-great-grandson of Veli. The Shabanagaj (now also known as Šabanagić) were related via marriage with the ] of ]. Shaban Aga, their eponymous ancestor was the son-in-law of ], ] of Shkodra. He was sent in Gusinje as the commander of the fortress around 1690.{{CN|date=May 2023}} The Shabanagaj family owned large estates in ].<ref name="Bartl1976">{{harvnb|Bartl|1976|p=101|ps=:G. entstammte der alten und angesehenen Familie der Shabanagaj (Šabanagić) aus Plav (heute Montenegro), die einige Paschas hervorgebracht hat. Er besaß Çiftlik-Güter in der Nahiye Vasojevići; diese Güter verlor er allerdings nach 1858, als dieses Gebit an Montenegro fiel und dort das osmanische Feudalsystem zu bestehen aufhörte}}</ref> ], commander of the ] was a Shabanagaj<ref name="Bartl1976"/> and ], pedagogue in Kosovo, was a Rexhepagaj.

In 1675 ] who visited Gusinje during this time, described it as a "lively Albanian town".{{cn|date=September 2024}}
As the Ottoman Empire disintegrated in the long 19th century already in the ], Gusinje and Plav were awarded to the independent ]. Gusinje was developing as a commercial town at the time, but still remained outside properly established rule of Ottoman law. Gun ownership was widespread and Ottoman rule was difficult to enforce.{{sfn|Gawrych|2006|p=61}} This environment allowed for the existence of an effective resistance against annexation. The Albanians of Gusinje opposed the decisions of the treaty and sent telegrams of protest to the embassies of the ].{{sfn|Gawrych|2006|p=44}} In the ] and ] those decisions were finalized. The Albanians in the two regions reacted against the final decision in favor annexation and formed the ].

A noted figure of the League of Prizren was ], a landowner and military commander from Gusinje. In the ensuing ] the League of Prizren led by Shabanagaj defeated the approaching Montenegrin forces led by ].{{sfn|Gawrych|2006|p=62}} More than 140 dead and wounded of the ~300 casualties of the League of Prizren in the battle were from Gusinje. Ismail Omeraga, was a leading commander of the Gusinje volunteers who died in the battles for the defense of Plav-Gusinje. His head was carried back in ], capital of Montenegro. {{sfn|Dedushaj|2012|p=19}} Reports after the battle claim that the victors carried into the town 60 heads from their defeated foes. The annexation was effectively stopped and the Great Powers began another round of negotiations which eventually led to ]'s annexation by Montenegro as compensation. The battle became a point of reference in the ] and set a precedent about the need of armed struggle to defend other areas.{{sfn|Gawrych|2006|p=74}} Although the battle took place near Novšiće which is ~4&nbsp;km to the north of Plav, in the Ottoman press of the time it became known as ''Gusinye hadisesi'' (Gusinye Incident) because of its crucial role in the struggle.

In 1893, Gusinje had 1,600 households, 5 mosques and 240 shops.<ref name="Opstina16"/> The districts were part of the ] of the ] until October 1912 (de jure, until 1913). The Montenegrin army captured the region and entered Plav on 19 October and 20 October. Its entry was followed by a ] which until March 1913 had caused up to more than 1,800 killings of locals and 12,000 forced conversions to Christian Orthodoxy.<ref name="Milosevic">{{harvnb|Milosević|2013}}</ref> In the aftermath of the Balkan Wars, Gusinje became a subject of dispute between newly independent Albania and Montenegro. ] in the ] asked for the region of ] as otherwise communication between the capital of ] and the new eastern provinces of Montenegro would be blocked. As Kelmendi finally became part of Albania, Gusinje was given to Montenegro with the provision that the people of Kelmendi would have free passage to the town.{{sfn|Cornwall|1987|pp=6-12}} About 2000 Albanian refugees from Gusinje and Plav were reported in Shkodra in 1913 by the director of the Red Cross which was stationed in the city. The beginning of WWI in practice stopped the implementation of any agreement. In 1919, the decision was reaffirmed but the border was closed. In Albania, the closing of the border between ] and Gusinje has been seen as a main cause for the interwar impoverishment of areas like Kelmendi and ], which were deprived from access to their traditional market town.{{sfn|Galaty|Lafe|Lee|Tafilica|2013|p=56}}

The entry of the Montenegrin army in 1912-13 and the Yugoslav army after 1919 in Gusinje was accompanied by repressive policies against the local population.In 1919, an Albanian revolt, which later came to be known as the ''Plav rebellion'' rose up in the Plav, Gusinje and Rozaje districts, fighting against the inclusion of ] in the ].{{sfn|Morrison|2018|p=56}}<ref>Giuseppe Motta, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304185715/http://www.cambridgescholars.com/download/sample/59407 |date=2016-03-04 }}, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2013, p. 11</ref><ref>Klaus Roth, Ulf Brunnbauer, , LIT Verlag Münster, 2008, p. 221</ref> As a result, during the Serbian army's second occupation of Gusinje, which took place in 1919, Serb forces attacked Albanian populations in Plav and Gusinje, which had appealed to the British government for protection. About 450 local civilians were killed after the uprising was quelled.{{sfn|Morrison|2018|p=21}} These events resulted in a large influx of Albanians migrating to ].<ref>{{Cite book|last=Mulaj|first=Klejda|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sGQVdG63WPYC|title=Politics of Ethnic Cleansing: Nation-State Building and Provision of In/Security in Twentieth-Century Balkans|date=2008-02-22|publisher=Lexington Books|isbn=978-0-7391-4667-5|pages=33}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Banac|first=Ivo |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Zf6tDwAAQBAJ&q=Rozaj|title=The National Question in Yugoslavia: Origins, History, Politics|date=2015-06-09|publisher=Cornell University Press|isbn=978-1-5017-0194-8|pages=298 snippet view}}</ref> These events remain a matter of dispute in modern Montenegrin politics. In 2013, the President of Montenegro ] made one of the first direct acknowledgments of the events in Montenegrin politics in a ceremony in ] where he declared that ''the crimes performed in Plav and Gusinje are the dark side of the Montenegrin history''.{{sfn|Pacariz|2014|p=437}}

Gusinje became part of Albania in WWII by Fascist Italy and then Nazi Germany to win the support of the local population. After the war, the 1913 borders were reaffirmed. Gusinje's status as a distinct municipality was revoked in 1953. Along with other reasons it fueled immigration and impoverishment in the town and the municipality.{{sfn|Opstina Gusinje|2012|p=17}} In 2014, Gusinje regained its municipal status.

==Dialect==
Gusinje is almost entirely Muslim and either Albanian-speaking or Slavic-speaking. The Slavic dialect of Gusinje and Plav shows very high structural influence from Albanian. Its uniqueness in terms of language contact between Albanian and Slavic is explained by the fact that most of the Slavic-speakers in today's Gusinje are of Albanian origin, representing a case of an Albanian-speaking population shifting to a Slavic-speaking one.{{sfn|Curtis|2012|p=40}}<ref>:{{cite book|last1=Matthew C.| first1=Curtis |title=Slavic-Albanian Language Contact, Convergence, and Coexistence |publisher=The Ohio State University |quote= On the other hand, there are some areas, particularly in Montenegro, where Albanian-speaking populations have shifted to Slavic-speaking ones, such as the tribes of Piperi and Kuči, the Slavic Muslim populations in Plav/Plavë and Gusinje/Gucia, and perhaps with the Mrković.|year=2012|page=140}}</ref>

== Monuments ==
]
In Gusinje there are a number of the historical mosques of Montenegro. The oldest preserved mosque in the town is Čekića džamija or xhamia e Cekajve built by the Cekaj brotherhood of Triepshi. The second oldest is the Vezir's mosque (vezirova džamija/xhamia e vezirit) built by ] in 1765 on the existing site of another mosque originally built in 1626. The New Mosque (nova džamija/xhamia e re) also known as Radončića was built by the Radončići brotherhood of Kući in 1899. There are also a number of mosques whose ruins only remain today. The mosque of Sultan ] was built during his reign between 1603 and 1617. It was burnt in 1746-47. Another ruined mosque is that built by the Gjylbegaj family (a branch of the ]). It was built in 1833.{{sfn|Hadžić|2018|p=11}}

==Demographics==


{{Columns-start}}
{{Historical populations|align=none
|1948 | 2,402
|1953 | 2,555
|1961 | 2,756
|1971 | 2,695
|1981 | 2,625
|1991 | 2,472
|2003 | 1,704
|2011 | 1,673
|2023 | 2,225
}}
{{Columns-end}}

Since 1913, Gusinje has experienced many waves of emigration in the 20th century. These have depopulated it as a result in the 21st century. The municipality of Gusinje reports that 18,400 people trace their origins to the town of Gusinje out of a total diaspora of ~30,000 from the Gusinje area. They mostly live in the US.

===Ethnicity===

According to the Statistical Office of Montenegro, based on the 2023 census, 57.1% of the inhabitants of ] are ], while the second largest ethnic group are ] (34.4%).

===Religion===

{{Pie chart
|thumb = right
|caption = Religion in Gusinje (2023)<ref name=census2023>{{cite web|url= https://www.monstat.org/uploads/files/popis%202021/saopstenja/TABELA_Popis%20stanovnistva%202023%20II_CG.xlsx| title=Montenegrin census (2023)|publisher=MONSTAT|access-date=15 October 2023}}</ref>
|label1 = ]
|value1 = 92.55
|color1 = Green
|label2 = ]
|value2 = 3.10
|color2 = Orchid
|label3 = ]
|value3 = 1.86
|color3 = Yellow
|label4 = Other religions
|value4 = 2.26
|color4 = Grey
}}

==Sports==
The local football team is ], who play in the country's ]. They play their home games at the ]. The town's basketball team is ].

==Notable people==
<!-- ONLY ADD A PERSON TO THIS LIST IF THEY ALREADY HAVE AN ARTICLE IN THE ENGLISH WIKIPEDIA -->
* ], mayor of Gusinje
* ], Albanian military commander, leader of the ]
* ], Albanian anti-Yugoslav Kachak fighter
* ] (<abbr>fl.</abbr> 1804–05), ] Ottoman ] (''krdžalija'') who served the ], the renegade ] who had taken the rule of the ] following a coup.
* ], Albanian composer
* ], Montenegrin footballer
* ], businessman and politician
* ], kayaker
* ], basketball player

==Twin towns – Sister cities==
{{See also|List of twin towns and sister cities in Montenegro}}

Gusinje is ] with:
*{{flagicon|Kosovo}} ], ]<ref>{{Cite web|date=28 September 2018|title=Marrëveshja për Binjakëzim|trans-title=Twinning Agreement|url=https://kk.rks-gov.net/peje/wp-content/uploads/sites/24/2018/10/Vendim-Nr.58-2018.pdf |language=sq}}</ref>

==References==
{{Reflist}}

==Sources==
*{{cite book |last1=Bartl |first1=Peter |editor1-last=Bernath |editor1-first=Mathias |editor2-last=Von Schröder |editor2-first=Felix |editor3-last=Nehring |editor3-first=Karl |title=Südosteuropäische Arbeiten: Biographisches Lexikon zur Geschichte Südosteuropas |date=1976 |publisher=Südost-Institut München |isbn=9783486492415 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hlQsAQAAIAAJ}}
*{{cite journal |last1=Cornwall |first1=Mark |title=Between two wars. King Nikola of Montenegro and the Great Powers, 1913-1914 |journal=The South Slav Journal |volume=IX |issue=1–2 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CBpXAAAAYAAJ |date=1987 }}
*{{cite book |last1=Curtis |first1=Matthew |title=Slavic-Albanian Language Contact, Convergence, and Coexistence |date=2012 |publisher=Ohio State University |isbn=978-1-2675-8033-7 |url=https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED546136 }}
*{{cite book |last1=Dedushaj |first1=Rexhep |title=100 vjet luftë |date=2012 |publisher=New York |url=https://www.scribd.com/doc/200396068/100-vjet-Lufte }}
*{{cite book|last=Elsie|first=Robert|title=Early Albania: A reader of Historical texts, 11th–17th centuries|year=2003|location=Wiesbaden|publisher=Otto Harrassowitz Verlag|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_sHmTRCEe7kC|isbn=9783447047838}}
*{{cite book |last1=Galaty |first1=Michael |last2=Lafe |first2=Ols |last3=Lee |first3=Wayne |last4=Tafilica |first4=Zamir |title=Light and Shadow: Isolation and Interaction in the Shala Valley of Northern Albania |date=2013 |publisher=The Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press |isbn=978-1931745710 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=f2mRDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA73 }}
*{{cite book|last=Gawrych|first=George|title=The Crescent and the Eagle: Ottoman rule, Islam and the Albanians, 1874–1913|year=2006|location=London|publisher=IB Tauris|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=otuRDwAAQBAJ|isbn=9781845112875}}
*{{cite book|title=Gornje Polimlje: priroda, stanovništvo i naselja|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=y-rUJgAACAAJ|year=2005|publisher=Geografski institut Filozofskog fakulteta|isbn=978-86-7794-000-3}}
*{{cite journal |last1=Hadžić |first1=Fatih |title=DŽAMIJE U JUŽNOM SANDŽAKU |journal=Sto Godina Od Sjenicke Konferencije |date=2018 |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/328773149 }}
*{{cite book|last=Loma|first=Aleksandar|title=La toponymie de la charte de fondation de Banjska: Vers la conception d'un dictionnaire des noms de lieux de la Serbie medievale et une meilleure connaissance des structures onomastiques du slave commun|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nuy2BgAAQBAJ&pg=PA70|year=2013|publisher=Srpska akademija nauka i umetnosti|isbn=978-86-7025-621-7}}
*{{cite news |last1=Milosević |first1=Milena |title=Montenegro's Muslims Stage Mass Prayer to Mark 'Genocide' |url=https://balkaninsight.com/2013/03/06/montenegro-minorities-raise-up-voice-about-past-terrors/ |date=2013 |agency=Balkan Insight }}
*{{cite book |last1=Morrison |first1=Kenneth |title=Nationalism, Identity and Statehood in Post-Yugoslav Montenegro |date=2018 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GZw8DwAAQBAJ&pg=PT56 |isbn=978-1474235198 }}
*{{cite book |last1=Pacariz |first1=Sabina |title=Yearbook of Muslims in Europe |date=2014 |publisher=BRILL |page=437 |isbn=9789004283053 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=a-NTBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA437 }}
*{{cite book |last1=Pieroni |first1=Andrea |editor1-last=Santayana |editor1-first=Manuel Pardo |editor2-last=PIeroni |editor2-first=Andrea |editor3-last=Puri |editor3-first=Rajindra K. |title=Ethnobotany in the New Europe: People, Health, and Wild Plant Resources |date=2010 |publisher=Berghahn Books |isbn=978-1845454562 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xx59wPgQzdwC |chapter=People and Plants in Lëpushë Traditional Medicine, Local Foods and Post- communism in a Northern Albanian Village}}
*{{cite book |last1=Pulaha |first1=Selami |title=Defter i Sanxhakut të Shkodrës 1485 [Defter of the Sanjak of Shkodra in 1485 |date=1974 |publisher=Academy of Sciences of Albania |page=99 |url=https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B3ma9plMXxAEZi1PZTVXMXV1NFE/edit }}
*{{cite web |ref={{harvid|Opstina Gusinje|2012}} |title=STUDIJA O OPRAVDANOSTI OSNIVANJA OPŠTINE GUSINJE |date=2012 |url=https://www.opstinagusinje.me/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/GUSINJE-studija.pdf |website=Opstina Gusinje |publisher=Gusinje Municipality }}
*{{cite book|author=Zajednica osnovnog obrazovanja i vaspitanja|title=Simpozijum seoski dani Sretena Vukosavljevića|volume=11|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7WJpAAAAMAAJ|year=1986|publisher=Opštinska zajednica obrazovanja|location=Prijepolje}}

{{Gusinje Municipality}}{{Sandžak Albanians}}{{MontenegroCities}}
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Latest revision as of 16:20, 5 November 2024

Town and municipality in Northern, Montenegro
Gusinje Гусиње
Gucia
Town and municipality
Typical households in GusinjeTypical households in Gusinje
Flag of GusinjeFlagCoat of armsCoat of arms
Gusinje is located in MontenegroGusinjeGusinjeLocation within Montenegro
Coordinates: 42°33′43″N 19°50′02″E / 42.56194°N 19.83389°E / 42.56194; 19.83389
CountryMontenegro
RegionNorthern
MunicipalityGusinje
Government
 • TypeMayor-Assembly
 • MayorSanel Balić (BS)
Area
 • Total3.73 km (1.44 sq mi)
Elevation1,014 m (3,327 ft)
Population
 • Total1,673
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Vehicle registrationGS
ClimateCfb

Gusinje (Montenegrin: Гусиње, pronounced [ɡǔsiɲe]; Albanian: Gucia) is a small town in Montenegro in the northern region. According to the 2011 census, the town has a population of 1,673 and is the administrative center of Gusinje Municipality.

Name

Two alternative etymologies have been proposed for the toponym Gusinje. One links it to Slavic guska (goose), the other to the Illyrian term Geusiae from which the Albanian name of the town, Guci(a), would have evolved. In archival records, it has been recorded variably as Gousino (Гоусино), Gustigne (1614) in Venetian archives, Gusna (گوسن) and Gusinye in Ottoman Turkish.

Geography

Main article: Gusinje Municipality

The town is located in the Plav-Gusinje area, part of the upper Lim valley in the Accursed Mountains range at an elevation of 1,014 m. Zla Kolata, the highest mountain in Montenegro about 10 km south of Gusinje in the Prokletije National Park.

Gusinje is on the Vermosh River, which flows eastwards towards Plav. About 2 km south of Gusinje's center is the source of Vruja creek, Ali Pasha's springs (Alipašini izvori/Krojet e Ali Pashës). Vruja creek enters the Vermosh east of town, between this confluence and Plav is locally called Luca. Just before the Vermosh reaches Plav it flows into Lake Plav. The Vermosh is the first tributary of the Lim river.

Gusinje is the seat of the municipality of the same name. From 1953 to 2014, it was part of Plav Municipality. In 2014, it became again a distinct municipality. The town's boundaries form ~3.73 km of the total 157 km of the municipality. Much of the area of the municipality is mountainous land used in the past for livestock herding.

History

The Albanian Question: Tusi, offered in exchange for Gusinje, engraving published in the Illustrated London News, 1880

The toponym Hotina Gora (mountains of Hoti) in the Plav and Gusinje regions on the Lim river basin in 1330 is the first mention of the Hoti name in historical records in the chrysobulls of Dečani. Šufflay considers this region as the original area of settlement of Hoti from which they moved southwards.

It is known that a medieval settlement was located in the territory of present-day Gusinje. Gusinje was mentioned as a caravan station on the Ragusa-Cattaro–Scutari–Peć route, in the 14th century. In historical record, Gusinje appears in 1485 in the defter of the sanjak of Scutari as a village in the vilayet of Plav, a hass-ı hümayun (imperial domain) that stood directly under the Ottoman Sultan. It had 96 households, 21 unmarried men and four widows. This was a big settlement compared to other villages in Montenegro and northern Albania.

In oral tradition, the Nikaj are said to have replaced the Mavriqi when moving in to their modern territory. They were said to have steemed from Vajush near Shkodër settling in the mountain of Nikaj in the period of 1416-1500. With this most of the Mavriqi emigrated to the area of Gusinje.

Towns of Gusinje (front) and Plav (background), aerial view.

Gusinje stood at the intersection of the Ottoman trade routes between northern Albania, Montenegro and Kosovo. Thus, the trade that passed through Gusinje generated much wealth for the Sultan and the Ottoman officials who were granted taxing rights. This made the trade route a constant target for the Albanian tribal community (fis) of Kelmendi, which lived along the route as they were in rebellion against the Ottomans and were plundering their trade routes. Venetian diplomat Mariano Bolizza who travelled in the region reported that at the end of 1612 the building of the fortress of Gusinje - near which the modern town developed - was completed. The location was chosen because it stands at the convergence of pathways from Kelmendi. The original location of the fort was near the village of Grnčar/Gërnçar. Modern Gusinje stands ~6 km to the west and ~10 km to the north of the routes from the Kelmendi mountains (malet e Kelmendit) to modern Sandžak. The surrounding villages to the west and south (Vusanje) are Kelmendi settlements. The fortress was built at the reguest of Sem Zaus, the Ottoman bey of Podgorica who wanted to stop the attacks of Kelmendi and to be able to travel freely in his domain. In 1614, Mariano Bolizza reported that the village had 100 households and a garrison of 237 men under Belo Juvanin. The fortress was also designed to stop the movement of the Kuči and Triepshi tribes in the Upper Lim valley.

In time despite Ottoman expeditions and relocations of these communities in Sandzak, Kelmendi and other tribes like Kuči, Triepshi and Shala came to form many of the historical neighbourhoods (mahalla) of Gusinje of today. Their descendants although initially Christian, willingly or forcefully converted to Islam, largely by the middle 18th century. This conversion occurred as a way to obtain more rights since the Muslim population was more privileged than the Christian one. An important family - which later developed into a brotherhood - in the development of Gusinje is that of the Omeragaj (today known as Omeragić) from Shala who appeared in the village in the early 18th century . The different mosques of Gusinje today represent the different brotherhoods that built them. For example, the Cekaj mosque (Čekića džamija/xhamia e Cekajve) was built by the Cekaj brotherhood from Triepshi in 1687, while the New Mosque built in 1899 is known as Radončića after the Radončići brotherhood from Kuči. At the beginning of the 18th century, Gusinje was the seat of the local kadiluk. In terms of military administration, the captaincy of Gusinje was part of the Bosnia Eyalet in 1724. Central Ottoman administration collapsed in the decades to come and the Pashalik of Shkodra emerged as a regional power. The Vezir's mosque, built by Kara Mahmud Bushati in 1765 in the town center is a symbol of the Pashalik's influence in the upper Lim valley. Its downfall in 1831 brought back actual Ottoman rule. In 1852, in the register of the Kosovo Vilayet, Gusinje is recorded with 1,500 households. It was a developing town that had 350 shops, eight madrasas and five mosques. The captaincy of Gusinje in 1869 was part of the sanjak of Prizren.

The two strongest feudal families in the Plav-Gusinje region (~90 km to the northeast of Gruemirë) trace their origin to Gruemiri. The Rexhepagaj of Plav, Montenegro (now, Redžepagić-Rexhepagiqi) moved to Plav in the beginning of the 1650s where their ancestor took the Muslim name Veli when he converted. Rexhep Aga who gave the name to the family was a great-great-grandson of Veli. The Shabanagaj (now also known as Šabanagić) were related via marriage with the Bushati family of Shkodra. Shaban Aga, their eponymous ancestor was the son-in-law of Sulejman Pasha Bushati, sanjakbey of Shkodra. He was sent in Gusinje as the commander of the fortress around 1690. The Shabanagaj family owned large estates in Berane. Ali Pasha of Gusinje, commander of the League of Prizren was a Shabanagaj and Jashar Rexhepagiq, pedagogue in Kosovo, was a Rexhepagaj.

In 1675 Evliya Çelebi who visited Gusinje during this time, described it as a "lively Albanian town".

As the Ottoman Empire disintegrated in the long 19th century already in the Treaty of San Stefano, Gusinje and Plav were awarded to the independent Principality of Montenegro. Gusinje was developing as a commercial town at the time, but still remained outside properly established rule of Ottoman law. Gun ownership was widespread and Ottoman rule was difficult to enforce. This environment allowed for the existence of an effective resistance against annexation. The Albanians of Gusinje opposed the decisions of the treaty and sent telegrams of protest to the embassies of the Great Powers. In the Congress of Berlin and its final treaty those decisions were finalized. The Albanians in the two regions reacted against the final decision in favor annexation and formed the League of Prizren.

A noted figure of the League of Prizren was Ali Pasha Shabanagaj, a landowner and military commander from Gusinje. In the ensuing Battle of Novšiće the League of Prizren led by Shabanagaj defeated the approaching Montenegrin forces led by Marko Miljanov. More than 140 dead and wounded of the ~300 casualties of the League of Prizren in the battle were from Gusinje. Ismail Omeraga, was a leading commander of the Gusinje volunteers who died in the battles for the defense of Plav-Gusinje. His head was carried back in Cetinje, capital of Montenegro. Reports after the battle claim that the victors carried into the town 60 heads from their defeated foes. The annexation was effectively stopped and the Great Powers began another round of negotiations which eventually led to Ulcinj's annexation by Montenegro as compensation. The battle became a point of reference in the Albanian National Awakening and set a precedent about the need of armed struggle to defend other areas. Although the battle took place near Novšiće which is ~4 km to the north of Plav, in the Ottoman press of the time it became known as Gusinye hadisesi (Gusinye Incident) because of its crucial role in the struggle.

In 1893, Gusinje had 1,600 households, 5 mosques and 240 shops. The districts were part of the Sanjak of Novi Pazar of the Kosovo Vilayet until October 1912 (de jure, until 1913). The Montenegrin army captured the region and entered Plav on 19 October and 20 October. Its entry was followed by a period of harsh military administration which until March 1913 had caused up to more than 1,800 killings of locals and 12,000 forced conversions to Christian Orthodoxy. In the aftermath of the Balkan Wars, Gusinje became a subject of dispute between newly independent Albania and Montenegro. Nicholas I of Montenegro in the London Peace Conference asked for the region of Kelmendi as otherwise communication between the capital of Podgorica and the new eastern provinces of Montenegro would be blocked. As Kelmendi finally became part of Albania, Gusinje was given to Montenegro with the provision that the people of Kelmendi would have free passage to the town. About 2000 Albanian refugees from Gusinje and Plav were reported in Shkodra in 1913 by the director of the Red Cross which was stationed in the city. The beginning of WWI in practice stopped the implementation of any agreement. In 1919, the decision was reaffirmed but the border was closed. In Albania, the closing of the border between Malësia and Gusinje has been seen as a main cause for the interwar impoverishment of areas like Kelmendi and Shala, which were deprived from access to their traditional market town.

The entry of the Montenegrin army in 1912-13 and the Yugoslav army after 1919 in Gusinje was accompanied by repressive policies against the local population.In 1919, an Albanian revolt, which later came to be known as the Plav rebellion rose up in the Plav, Gusinje and Rozaje districts, fighting against the inclusion of Sandžak in the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. As a result, during the Serbian army's second occupation of Gusinje, which took place in 1919, Serb forces attacked Albanian populations in Plav and Gusinje, which had appealed to the British government for protection. About 450 local civilians were killed after the uprising was quelled. These events resulted in a large influx of Albanians migrating to Albania. These events remain a matter of dispute in modern Montenegrin politics. In 2013, the President of Montenegro Filip Vujanović made one of the first direct acknowledgments of the events in Montenegrin politics in a ceremony in Berane where he declared that the crimes performed in Plav and Gusinje are the dark side of the Montenegrin history.

Gusinje became part of Albania in WWII by Fascist Italy and then Nazi Germany to win the support of the local population. After the war, the 1913 borders were reaffirmed. Gusinje's status as a distinct municipality was revoked in 1953. Along with other reasons it fueled immigration and impoverishment in the town and the municipality. In 2014, Gusinje regained its municipal status.

Dialect

Gusinje is almost entirely Muslim and either Albanian-speaking or Slavic-speaking. The Slavic dialect of Gusinje and Plav shows very high structural influence from Albanian. Its uniqueness in terms of language contact between Albanian and Slavic is explained by the fact that most of the Slavic-speakers in today's Gusinje are of Albanian origin, representing a case of an Albanian-speaking population shifting to a Slavic-speaking one.

Monuments

The Vizier's Mosque in the town's center

In Gusinje there are a number of the historical mosques of Montenegro. The oldest preserved mosque in the town is Čekića džamija or xhamia e Cekajve built by the Cekaj brotherhood of Triepshi. The second oldest is the Vezir's mosque (vezirova džamija/xhamia e vezirit) built by Kara Mahmud Bushati in 1765 on the existing site of another mosque originally built in 1626. The New Mosque (nova džamija/xhamia e re) also known as Radončića was built by the Radončići brotherhood of Kući in 1899. There are also a number of mosques whose ruins only remain today. The mosque of Sultan Ahmed I was built during his reign between 1603 and 1617. It was burnt in 1746-47. Another ruined mosque is that built by the Gjylbegaj family (a branch of the Begolli family). It was built in 1833.

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1948 2,402—    
1953 2,555+6.4%
1961 2,756+7.9%
1971 2,695−2.2%
1981 2,625−2.6%
1991 2,472−5.8%
2003 1,704−31.1%
2011 1,673−1.8%
2023 2,225+33.0%

Since 1913, Gusinje has experienced many waves of emigration in the 20th century. These have depopulated it as a result in the 21st century. The municipality of Gusinje reports that 18,400 people trace their origins to the town of Gusinje out of a total diaspora of ~30,000 from the Gusinje area. They mostly live in the US.

Ethnicity

According to the Statistical Office of Montenegro, based on the 2023 census, 57.1% of the inhabitants of Gusinje Municipality are Bosniaks, while the second largest ethnic group are Albanians (34.4%).

Religion

Religion in Gusinje (2023)

  Islam (92.55%)  Eastern Orthodoxy (3.10%)  Roman Catholicism (1.86%)  Other religions (2.26%)

Sports

The local football team is FK Gusinje, who play in the country's third tier. They play their home games at the City Stadium. The town's basketball team is KK Stršljen.

Notable people

Twin towns – Sister cities

See also: List of twin towns and sister cities in Montenegro

Gusinje is twinned with:

References

  1. ^ Opstina Gusinje 2012, p. 16
  2. ^ Loma 2013, p. 70
  3. ^ Elsie 2003, p. 151
  4. "NACIONALNI PARK PROKLETIJE". www.nparkovi.me. Retrieved 2016-01-14.
  5. Opstina Gusinje 2012, p. 5.
  6. Ahmetaj, Mehmet (2007). "TOPONYMY OF HOTI". Studime Albanologjike. 37: 170. Retrieved 27 January 2020. Kundruar historikisht që në krye të herës, sipas kapërcejve historikë, Hoti i Kujit si vendbanim i moçëm thjesht me burim shqiptar dokumentohet, përkatësisht daton që moti, në Krisobulën e Deçanit, që nga viti 1330, ku përmenden hotjanët në malet në jug të fushës së Plavës ("Hutina Gora"), sot Malet e Hotit, të cilat sipas mendimit të M. Shuflajt duhet të kenë qenë djepi i fisit Hot.
  7. Šufflay, Milan (1925). Srbi i Arbanasi: njihova simbioza u srednjem vijeku. Izdanje seminara za arbanasku filologiju. pp. 60–61. Retrieved 28 January 2020.
  8. Zajednica osnovnog obrazovanja i vaspitanja 1986, p. 137.
  9. Pulaha 1974, p. 99.
  10. Pulaha 1974, p. 112.
  11. The Tribes of Albania,:History, Society and Culture. Robert Elsie. 24 April 2015. p. 151. ISBN 9780857739322.
  12. Dedushaj 2012, p. 18.
  13. ^ Bartl 1976, p. 101:G. entstammte der alten und angesehenen Familie der Shabanagaj (Šabanagić) aus Plav (heute Montenegro), die einige Paschas hervorgebracht hat. Er besaß Çiftlik-Güter in der Nahiye Vasojevići; diese Güter verlor er allerdings nach 1858, als dieses Gebit an Montenegro fiel und dort das osmanische Feudalsystem zu bestehen aufhörte
  14. Gawrych 2006, p. 61.
  15. Gawrych 2006, p. 44.
  16. Gawrych 2006, p. 62.
  17. Dedushaj 2012, p. 19.
  18. Gawrych 2006, p. 74.
  19. Milosević 2013
  20. Cornwall 1987, pp. 6–12.
  21. Galaty et al. 2013, p. 56.
  22. Morrison 2018, p. 56.
  23. Giuseppe Motta, Less than Nations: Central-Eastern European Minorities after WWI, Volume 1 Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2013, p. 11
  24. Klaus Roth, Ulf Brunnbauer, Region, Regional Identity and Regionalism in Southeastern Europe, Part 1, LIT Verlag Münster, 2008, p. 221
  25. Morrison 2018, p. 21.
  26. Mulaj, Klejda (2008-02-22). Politics of Ethnic Cleansing: Nation-State Building and Provision of In/Security in Twentieth-Century Balkans. Lexington Books. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-7391-4667-5.
  27. Banac, Ivo (2015-06-09). The National Question in Yugoslavia: Origins, History, Politics. Cornell University Press. pp. 298 snippet view. ISBN 978-1-5017-0194-8.
  28. Pacariz 2014, p. 437.
  29. Opstina Gusinje 2012, p. 17.
  30. Curtis 2012, p. 40.
  31. :Matthew C., Curtis (2012). Slavic-Albanian Language Contact, Convergence, and Coexistence. The Ohio State University. p. 140. On the other hand, there are some areas, particularly in Montenegro, where Albanian-speaking populations have shifted to Slavic-speaking ones, such as the tribes of Piperi and Kuči, the Slavic Muslim populations in Plav/Plavë and Gusinje/Gucia, and perhaps with the Mrković.
  32. Hadžić 2018, p. 11.
  33. "Montenegrin census (2023)". MONSTAT. Retrieved 15 October 2023.
  34. "Marrëveshja për Binjakëzim" [Twinning Agreement] (PDF) (in Albanian). 28 September 2018.

Sources


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  • The names in parentheses are in Albanian.
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