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Principality of Montenegro

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Princedom of Montenegro
Књажевина Црнa Горa
1852–1910
Anthem: To Our Beautiful Montenegro (state)
There, o'er There! (national)
Montenegro before independence
Montenegro before independence
CapitalCetinje
Common languagesSerbian
Religion
Serbian Orthodoxy
GovernmentAbsolute Monarchy
Prince 
• 1852-1860
Danilo
• 1860-1910
Nicholas
• 1905-1906
Lazar Mijuskovic
• 1906-1907
Marko Radulovic
• 1907
Andrija Radovic
• 1907-1910
Lazar Tomanovic
LegislatureSerbian National Assembly
History 
• Secularization
13 March 1852
1905
• Elevation to Kingdom¹
28 August 1910
Area
18525,475 km2 (2,114 sq mi)
18789,475 km2 (3,658 sq mi)
Population
• 1909
317,856
CurrencyMontenegrin perper
ISO 3166 codeME
Preceded by
Succeeded by
File:Mitropolija.jpg Prince-Bishopric of Montenegro
Kingdom of Montenegro
¹ celebration of 50th anniversary of the monarch's reign

The Principality or Princedom of Montenegro was a principality in Southeastern Europe. It existed from 13 March 1852 to 28 August 1910. It was then proclaimed a kingdom by Knjaz Nikola, who then became king.

The capital of the Principality was at Cetinje and used the Perper as its currency since 1906. The area of the principality roughly consisted of the central area of modern Montenegro.

History

The Principality was formed on 13 March 1852 by Knjaz Danilo I Petrović-Njegoš, when Knjaz Danilo, then known as Vladika Danilo II, decided to overthrow his ecclesiastical position of the Vladika and get married, which, after centuries of theocratic rule, turned Montenegro into a secular principality.

After the assassination of Knjaz Danilo on 13 August 1860, Knjaz Nikola, the nephew of Knjaz Danilo, became the next ruler of Montenegro.

On 28 August 1910, it was proclaimed a kingdom by Knjaz Nikola, who then became king.

Battle of Grahovac

Grand Duke Mirko Petrović, elder brother of Knjaz Danilo, led a strong army of 7,500 and won a crucial battle against the Turks (army of between 7,000 to 13,000) at Grahovac on 1 May, 1858. The Turkish forces were routed. A considerable arsenal of war trophies were left in Montenegrin hands, to come in handy again in the final wars of independence in 1862 and 1875-1878.

This major victory had had even more diplomatic significance. The glory of Montenegrin weapons was soon immortalized in the songs and literature of all the South Slavs, in particular the Serbs in Vojvodina, then part of Austria-Hungary. This Montenegrin victory forced the Great Powers to officially demarcate the borders between Montenegro and Ottoman Turkey, de facto recognizing Montenegro's centuries-long independence. Montenegro gained Grahovo, Rudine, Nikšić's Župa, more than half of Drobnjaci, Tušina, Uskoci, Lipovo, Upper Vasojevići, and part of Kuči and Dodoši.

Constitution

Knjaz Danilo used the Law of Petar I Petrović-Njegoš, as an inspiration for his own General Law of the Land from 1855 (Zakonik Danila Prvog). Danilo's Code was based on the Montenegrin traditions and customs and it is considered to be the first national constitution in Montenegrin history. It also stated rules, protected privacy and banned warring on the Austrian Coast (Bay of Kotor). It also stated: "Although there is no other nationality in this land except Serb nationality and no other religion except Eastern Orthodoxy, each foreigner and each person of different faith can live here and enjoy the same freedom and the same domestic right as Montenegrin or Highlander."

Demographics

1882

Schwartz estimated in 1882 that the Principality had 160,000 inhabitants. Although, a more usual estimate is that it was around 230,000 inhabitants.

1900

In 1900, according to international sources, the Principality of Montenegro had 311,564 inhabitants. By religion:

By litteracy:

  • 77% illiterate
  • 71,528 (23%) literate

The Principality had besides the Serbs, around 5,000 Albanians and a colony of 800 Romas.

1907

In 1907, it had been estimated that there were around 282,000 inhabitants in Montenegro.

The supermajority being Serb (Eastern Orthodox).

1909

File:Montenegro1910.gif
ethnic map from 1910
Dark: Serb majority
Light: Albanian majority

The 1909 official census was undertaken by the authorities of the Principality. Ethnicity was decided according to the mother tongue, the official language, then being the Serbian language:

Total: 317,856 inhabitants. By language:

By religion:

The total population was overestimated for political reasons. It was at about 220,000 inhabitants.

Rulers