In this highly original and influential book, Catherine Wendy
Bracewell reconstructs and analyzes the tumultuous history of the
uskoks of Senj, the martial bands nominally under the control of
the Habsburg Military Frontier in Croatia, who between the 1530s
and the 1620s developed a community based on raiding the Ottoman
hinterland, Venetian possessions in Dalmatia, and shipping on the
Adriatic.
Drawing on a broad range of sources, including the archives of
the Dalmatian communes under Venetian rule and military frontier
records, Bracewell provides the first comprehensive analysis of the
uskoks as a social phenomenon, examining their origins, their
military and social organization, their plunder economy, their
mental world, and their relations with other groups in this
borderland between three empires. The uskoks lived on the
Christian-Muslim frontier, and they invoked Europe's struggle
against Islam to justify their often bloody deeds. As Bracewell
demonstrates, however, their actions were also shaped by the maze
of local political and economic rivalries, social conflicts, and
confessional antagonisms. In a book that tests the concept of the
social bandit, the author analyzes the motives that guided the
uskoks and distinguishes these from the factors that impelled
various elements of the local population to support them.
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