|
The Military Frontier and the
Insurrection in Poland
The outbreak of the insurrection
in Poland in January 1863 made the Military Frontier highly
interesting for those nations which expected the Polish question
to have wider international repercussions. Immediately after the
outbreak of the insurrection, Oreskovic amplified his
"operational war plan" which he had drafted a year
earlier. He devoted particular attention to the rising in Bosnia,
which was to be effected with the help of the frontier units. The
plan made provision for an incursion into Bosnia from the north,
from Croatia, rather than from the east, from Serbia. Thereby
Oreskovic wanted to secure for his further action those northern
regions of Bosnia which were "most exposed to Austrian
intrigues." Furthermore, he believed that if the battlefield
were to be placed close to the Croatian Military Frontier, he
would be able to obtain the greatest possible military
assistance. As the frontiersmen were held to be the best skilled
soldiers in Europe, he expected them to constitute the core of an
army of regular units which "everyone would admire for its
prowess." The plan provided not only for an incursion into
Bosnia by the frontiersmen, but also, in the event of need, for
assistance "in the Bulgarian battle area." To organize
and equip 8,000 frontiersmen, Oreskovic made provision of some
40,000 ducats. He supposed that the number of volunteers from the
Frontier might double, and even reach the figure of about 20,000
men, but only provided the beginning of the action was
successful.46
By the end of the winter of
1863, some war preparations in Serbia had already gotten under
way. The volunteer frontiersmen, who had come during bombardment
of Belgrade crisis in 1862, and after the disbandment of the
volunteer corps had been scattered all over Serbia, were ordered
by the military authorities to assemble near Sabac. The Serbian
steamboat "Deligrad," with three barges, was to
transfer the volunteers from Belgrade to Brcko. One company of
the Bosnians in Serbia was sent to western Bosnia through
Karlovac in Croatia, where they were to receive arms from the
frontiersmen and begin the uprising.47 However, they
were thwarted by the Austrian authorities. Owing to the treachery
by former Garibaldian, Giuseppe Bideschini, the military
authorities of Austria managed to uncover the secret committee in
Karlovac which had the job of linking up with the Italian
liberation movement, and with the money received from Italy to
redouble its efforts in the recruitment of volunteers and
preparation of the insurrection. An investigation established
that the uprising was prepared by Serbia and that the
frontiersmen were to help by making an incursion into Bosnia
under the leadership of their committees. The authorities found
out that the final objective of the entire movement was the
creation of a Southern Slav state, which would encompass the
Military Frontier. This disclosure led to the arrest of the more
prominent members of the Karlovac Committee. Those arrested
included Petar Uzelac, a merchant from Karlovac, the retired
lieutenant Stevan Priljeva, Captain Mihailo Loncar of the Lika
Regiment, and the Orthodox chaplain of the Ogulin Regiment,
Father Jovan Sorak. Searches brought to light a list of officers
and Orthodox priests from the Karlovac and Banska Krajina, who
had agreed to collaborate in preparing the uprising in Bosnia.48
One man particularly interested in the fate of the detained
people, whose arrest was concealed from the public, was Danilo
Medakovic. In the newspaper Napredak, he simply requested
the Croatian newspapers, who being closer to the events were
supposed to be better informed, to say something about the
detainees, who were all Serbs, and who, according to him, had
come to grief because they "intended to buy ammunition for
the Bosnian Christians in case of need."49
Almost at the same time as the
secret committee in Karlovac was uncovered and its members put
under arrest, Ilija Gutesa, an agent of the Serbian government in
Zagreb, whose underground name was Albini, was also arrested.
With his arrest, the authorities uncovered the code for the
ciphered letters with which he kept contact with Belgrade. The
materials found on Gutesa led A. T. Brlic, one of the most active
Croat collaborators with Serbia in carrying out revolutionary
propaganda and fomenting the uprising, to suspect that Matija
Mrazovic, a prominent member of the Croatian National Party, was
compromised in the eyes of the authorities because of his links
with Serbia.50 Brlic's suspicion suggests that
Mrazovic at this time, early in 1863, might have had some
contacts with Belgrade. However, at present it is not known with
whom he may have maintained those links and with what object in
view.
Fairly well acquainted with the
work of the secret committees in the Frontier, with the plans of
raising insurrections and with the far-flung network of arms
smugglers, Austria tried to put a stop to the various illegal
activities instigated from Belgrade by making arrests and
undertaking other measures. It feared an uprising in Bosnia not
only because of Bosnia, which it wanted for itself, but also
because it feared that the conflagration in the Balkans could
easily spread to its southern regions bordering on Turkey. To
prevent this from happening, Austria either posted all the
doubtful Frontier officers, mainly those of Serbian nationality,
to other areas, "far from their homeland," as Oreskovic
wrote, or relieved them of their command posts. In less than one
year, from the end of May 1862 to early February 1863, 117
Serbian officers from the Military Frontier had been dislocated.
This was a heavy blow to Serbia's revolutionary plans, which led
Oreskovic, dissatisfied with what had been achieved, to write
critically: "It should not be surprising - even if there
were to be a general uprising at all - if the Bosnian units
bordering on the Croatian Military Frontier should reveal
themselves to be more difficult and intractable."
The Serbian government's secret
links with the Military Frontier cost around 60,000 forints per
annum. To organize the illegal actions even better, it was
necessary, according to Garasanin, to spend annually at least
100,000 forints. When official circles in Italy requested
cooperation with Serbia at the time of the insurrection in
Poland, in anticipation of an anti-Austrian movement in Hungary,
Garasanin proposed, in June 1863, that the government in Turin
financially assist the Principality's work in the Military
Frontier. The Italian government accepted Serbia's proposal and
sent money to Oreskovic through General Türr or various agents.
It is not possible to establish exactly what resources Italy
contributed to finance the action in the Military Frontier, but
Garasanin was not satisfied with this aid. In 1866 he told Consul
Scovasso that Italy two years previously had refused to
participate in the expenses for the work in the Military
Frontier, which for Serbia were much too high.52
Although Serbia was not
financially in a position to organize its activities in the
Frontier on a broader basis, the Principality of Serbia held an
important place in Italo-Hungarian plans to involve the Frontier
in any future conflict with Austria. Italians and Hungarians did
take Serbia into consideration in their liberatory plans and
wanted her to participate in a concerted anti-Austrian action.
Serbia was interesting to them because of the Military Frontier,
because the Belgrade government was believed to hold in its hands
the levers which moved the frontiersmen. An important testimony
about this was left by Oreskovic, the central figure in work with
the frontiersmen. He wrote: "Whenever a foreign power
negotiated with Prince Mihailo, negotiated not with the prince of
a small Serbia, but with the leader of all Southern Slavs, and,
very importantly, with the supreme commander of the gallant
frontier army."53 Oreskovic wrote these words
thirty years after the event, but this is also how he viewed
small Serbia at the time of his greatest activities. He told
General Istvan Türr in 1864: "I reiterate what I have often
told you: to win over the Southern Slavs in Austria, at least
those who can resolve the whole thing decisively, these being the
inhabitants of the Military Frontier, be they Croats or Serbs, it
is indispensable to win over the Principality of Serbia. An
agreement to this end with the Principality, whose demands for
national progress are as reasonable as those of Hungary, and
which is entitled to leadership among the Southern Slavs, should
be obtained first, and it is furthermore, desirable and
beneficial for both sides."54
An official offer to the Italian
government to come to an agreement with Serbia was made by
Garasanin to Consul Scovasso in the summer of 1864. In the hope
that it would be accepted, Oreskovic in September of the same
year drafted an aide memoire about the role of the
Military Frontier in a war between Italy and Austria. It proposed
that an insurrection be launched in Hungary and in the Military
March simultaneously, to be followed by Italy's entry into the
war. In the planned collaboration between the men of the Frontier
and the Hungarians and Italians, provision was made for the
landing of Hungarian and Italian troops on the Dalmatian coast,
which would permit the frontiersmen to procure artillery and
obtain supplies from the areas under Turkish rule, whence he
expected assistance from the "militant element." Being
in favour of an agreement between Italy and Serbia, he stressed
the importance and military strength of the Principality,
pointing out that its assistance in a war against Austria could
only be counted on if the planned general insurrection in Turkey
were called off. He intimated that this could be achieved with
Napoleon's assistance, if he persuaded the Porte to hand over
Skadar, Sabac, and Smederevo to Serbia. He ended his aide
memoire with the warning that the Italian government must
hurry with the war if it wanted collaboration and help from the
Military Frontier, because Austria had already started removing
from it those officers whose loyalty and fidelity it doubted.55
Negotiations leading to an
agreement between Italy and Serbia, under which Serbia, under
certain conditions would join the war against Austria, did not
come to fruition. No reply ever came from Turin to Garasanin's
offer of an agreement. This outcome was due to a number of
events, including first of all the quelling of the insurrection
in Poland, dissensions within the Italian movement for
unification, and the changes which took place in the Italian
government after it was taken over, late in 1864, by General La
Marmora. This was also the moment when the entire network of
secret agents along the Military Frontier was broken, following
the betrayal of Lt. Aleksandar Vukobratic, one of Oreskovic's
close collaborators. Thus Serbia's political propaganda in the
Military Frontier was temporarily brought to a halt, and
Oreskovic was compelled to look for new collaborators.56
During the Polish uprising and
in the course of Italo-Serbian and Serbo-Hungarian negotiations
on cooperation, there were few contacts between representatives
of the Serbian government and Croatian politicians. One such
contact, although only episodic in character, was that which was
established with the vice-zupan of the county of Rijeka, Ivan
Voncina. Voncina was one of the leading members of the Croatian
Independent Party, which included in its ranks a number of
prominent Serbs from Croatia and which in the national question
held broad Yugoslav visions. By all appearances, Voncina probably
knew about Serbia's activities in the Military March. This is
suggested by the fact that in November 1863, Oreskovic sent Lt.
Aleksandar Vukobratic to Rijeka to get from Voncina a map of the
Istrian and Dalmatian coast, which Garibaldi needed for his
planned landing on the Adriatic coast.57
During the Polish uprising,
Eugen Kvaternik, who after mid-October 1863 was for the second
time in exile, joined an international conspiracy against
Austria. An important place in this revolutionary plan, which was
forged by Polish and Hungarian emigrés in collaboration with the
Italian government, was assigned to the Military Frontier and the
frontiersmen. Because the frontiersmen were to be included in the
planned action, Kvaternik was also persuaded to cooperate. He was
induced to take part in the plan by the Czech revolutionary and
emigré, J. V. Fritsch. According to the plan of the Polish
national government, whose agent Kvaternik had become in March
1864, the movement in Croatia had to be synchronized with the
Italian movement for unification. It was necessary to send
proclamations and brochures to Croatia, and in Italy to recruit
volunteers for the Croatian Legion among the frontiersmen and
other Austrian soldiers stationed there. Kvaternik was instructed
to purchase a printing press in Italy and to write to Ante
Starcevic with the request that a popular government be set up in
Croatia. He made his cooperation conditional upon the demand that
the army, which would cross the Adriatic from Italy to land on
Croatian state territory, should appear under the Croatian and
not the Hungarian flag. To finish what he had undertaken to do,
Kvaternik received from the Polish national government 1,000
franks and gave a written undertaking to promote Croatia's
collaboration with Poland, Italy, Hungary, Bohemia and other
nations against Austria. Thanks to this collaboration, the treaty
which the Polish national government concluded with the Hungarian
national committee provided for the creation of a Croatian state,
which would be independent of Hungary. Fulfilling his contractual
obligations to the Polish national government, already in March
1864, while he was in Paris, Kvaternik wrote a proclamation
addressed to soldiers from Croatia who were in Italy. It was
printed together with a proclamation in the Czech and Polish
languages, calling upon soldiers to fight against Austria. In the
meanwhile, a committee was set up in Zagreb which wanted the
uprising in Croatia and the landing of allied troops on the
Dalmatian coast to run concurrently. Prompted by former Austrian
officers, among whom Oreskovic was a key person, and encouraged
by proclamations of the Zagreb Committee and Garibaldi, the
Military Frontier would also rise. Kvaternik wrote his
proclamation to the frontiersmen following instructions from the
Zagreb Committee. Like the proclamation on the setting up of the
popular government, it was not printed in Italy but in Geneva,
because the Italians did not permit Kvaternik to print propaganda
material in their territory. They did not even permit him to work
on the setting up of a Croatian legion, for in the meanwhile
Garibaldi had broken off his treaty on joint action with Poland,
and Kvaternik had come into conflict with the Italians because of
the territories (Istria and Dalmatia) which after liberation were
to go to either Italy or Croatia.58
When the uprising in Poland was
crushed in mid-June 1864 and when the Hungarian liberals, led by
Ferenc Deák, were about to find a common basis for agreement
with the court, thus resolving the Hungarian national question,
the plans of the Polish, Czech and Hungarian emigrés on
destroying Austria through revolution had to be abandoned.
Knowing full well that nothing would come of the action,
Kvaternik attempted to achieve something on his own. He firmly
believed that
conditions for the raising of an
insurrection in the Military March were more favourable than in
any other part of Austria.59 For as long as he hoped
to solve the Croatian question with the help of Polish, Czech,
and Hungarian emigrés and the Italian government, Kvaternik was
against opening the Eastern Question and thereby the Serbian
question as well. He wanted to keep Turkey on the sidelines
during the settlement of the Croatian question, so that its
territory, in case of need, might serve as a sanctuary.60
Obviously, such a solution did not suit the Serbian government
and the Serbs. As a Croatian patriot who did try hard to solve
the national question of his people in the best possible way,
Kvaternik had completely neglected the burning national problems
of the Serbs. This is why differences sprang up between the
Rightists and the Serbs over the best way of the solving of the
Croatian and Serbian national questions respectively.
Copyright © 1997 by Vasilije Krestic
Copyright © 1997 by BIGZ , Beograd
Copyright © 1998 by Serbian Unity Congress
|