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Christmas Uprising
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==Rebellion== ===Fighting around Podgorica=== The rebellion first broke out around [[Podgorica]]. Some MartiniÄi headed by commanders Stevan and BogiÄ RadoviÄ took control of [[Spuž]] Fortress. The [[Piperi (tribe)|Piperi]] headed by [[Brigadier General]] [[Milutin VuÄiniÄ]] severed the road between Danilovgrad and Podgorica at VraniÄke Njive. [[Commandant (rank)|Commander]] Andrija and [[Captain (armed forces)|Captain]] Mato RaiÄeviÄ seized Velje Brdo overlooking Podgorica.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=49-50}} Since most [[BjelopavliÄi]] were supporters of the unification, the rebels who occupied Spuž Fortress were quickly forced to capitulate with no bullets fired. The leaders were detained and their troops were sent home. The BjelopavliÄi, for the most part consisting of the youth, continued toward Podgorica. They were met at VraniÄke Njive by VuÄiniÄ, where fighting would have probably broken out, had the youth of Podgorica, Piperi and [[KuÄi]] not simultaneously reached his troops from behind. VuÄiniÄ was surrounded, and ordered his troops to lay down their arms. The leaders were, again, detained and transported to Podgorica, and the troops sent home. The same happened at Velje Brdo.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=49-50}} The defeat at Podgorica would prove to be a strong setback for the rebels, since the troops that were disarmed were supposed to help with the sieges of [[NikÅ”iÄ]] and [[Cetinje]]. Also, the rebels seemed less united and less willing, which had its toll on the confidence of the [[Greens (Montenegro)|Greens]] in other areas.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=49-50}} ===Fighting around NikÅ”iÄ=== The town of NikÅ”iÄ was surrounded on {{OldStyleDate |3 January 1919||21 December 1918}} but no fighting broke out until the afternoon of 5 January. The siege was led from one side by [[Major (rank)|Major]] Å Äepan MijuÅ”koviÄ, a veteran of several previous wars. During the morning, the rebels delivered an ultimatum to the town's defenders to send their commanders to the new brewery by the Bistrica river. Shots were fired first from Trebjesa hill, and after from ÄaÄelica, Glavica and from around the brewery.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=51-54}} The town's youth organized a council where Dr Niko MartinoviÄ was elected president, and Marko Kavaja, later screenwriter, secretary. Some veterans also joined, however the troops in the town under the command of Captain StojiÄ lost contact with Cetinje and stood down. StojiÄ armed the youth with one machine gun. Kavaja went to negotiate with the rebels in [[Pandurica]], in the company of a [[Prisoner of war|POW]], the brother of Radojica NikÄeviÄ, one of the rebel leaders. He claims that the rebels were not opposed to the unification, but were fighting for their "honorable ''[[Voivode|vojvodas]]'' and ''[[Serdar (Ottoman rank)|serdars]]''". The negotiations failed to stop the fighting.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=51-54}} At sunset, the siege was relieved by BjelopavliÄi forces. After hearing that more reinforcements from [[Grahovo, NikÅ”iÄ|Grahovo]] were coming to the aid of the defenders, many rebels deserted. The [[Drobnjaci]] arrived late to the defense, being sidetracked by bad weather. After the fighting had ended, several rebel leaders were captured including Äuro and Marko PetroviÄ, and former [[Ministry of Defence (Montenegro)|Defense Minister]] Marko ÄukanoviÄ. Misja NikoliÄ and Brigadier General Äuro JovoviÄ escaped, having gone into hiding and crossed into [[Italy]], respectively.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=51-54}} ===Siege of Virpazar=== Unrest started around the [[Crmnica]] town of [[Virpazar]] on {{OldStyleDate |3 January 1919||21 December 1918}}, where the supporters of [[Nicholas I of Montenegro|King Nicholas]] were led by [[Jovan Plamenac]].{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=55-57}} According to Commander JagoÅ” DraÅ”koviÄ, Plamenac approached Virpazar in the morning of 3 January with over 400 men, while DraÅ”koviÄ defended the town with around 350. The number of defenders increased during the day, and Plamenac hoped to reach the [[Royal Italian Army|Italian troops]] further to the south for supplies and ammunition. Since DraÅ”koviÄ placed his troops between Plamenac and the Italians, Plamenac agreed to meet with DraÅ”koviÄ, who was accompanied by Dr Blažo LekiÄ, leader of the Crmnica youth and an older local, Stanko ÄuroviÄ. Plamenac agreed to send his men home, in return for a letter guaranteeing his safe passage to Cetinje after his men disbanded.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=55-57}} DraÅ”koviÄ concludes that Plamenac agreed to disband his troops because he was unsure of his victory, and because his plan was to deal with Virpazar and [[Rijeka CrnojeviÄa]] quickly, after which his troops in the area could join the siege of Cetinje, which was planned to be over by 5 January. Since this proved impossible, he counted on improving the Greens' odds with Cetinje by appearing in person and in the company of at least a few men.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=55-57}} Plamenac disbanded most of his troops in the evening of 3 January, and proceeded to his native village of BoljeviÄi with around 60 men, who planned to march on Cetinje the following day. On 4 January, Andrija RadoviÄ stopped in Virpazar while returning from [[ShkodĆ«r]], where he held a speech in front of the Crmnica locals. He threatened Plamenac, and pointed out that he was now decorated with more foreign honors than the late [[Ilija Plamenac]]. DraÅ”koviÄ considers this speech to have acted to the detriment of the White cause, primarily because it enraged the locals who held Ilija Plamenac in high regard. Because of this new situation, Jovan Plamenac started rallying his men again.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=55-57}} In the evening of 4 January, DraÅ”koviÄ marched on BoljeviÄi with around 150 men, but Plamenac had already retreated toward Seoca and Krnjice. DraÅ”koviÄ returned to Virpazar and boarded his men on a ship headed for Krnjice, where he attacked Plamenac and his troops. The Greens retreated into [[Skadarska Krajina]], and crossed the [[Buna (Adriatic Sea)|Bojana]] to join the Italian troops in [[Albania]].{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=55-57}} ===Fighting around Rijeka CrnojeviÄa=== Though a minor [[Hamlet (place)|hamlet]], [[Rijeka CrnojeviÄa]] was central to the Greens' plan. After its fall, troops from the area were to launch a serious strike on Cetinje. The town was surrounded on {{OldStyleDate |3 January 1919||21 December 1918}} by troops under the command of Commander Äuro Å oÄ. The towns defenders were led by Brigade General Niko PejanoviÄ and, though low in number, held their positions.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=59-64}} The first day of the siege, PejanoviÄ wrote to one of the Greens' commanders to call off the attack. Å oÄ wrote to the local command, the head of the ''[[srez]]'' and the president of the municipality. He requested that the defenders produce three hostages, evacuate all Serbian troops and provided that the defenders leave Rijeka CrnojeviÄa armed, after which he guaranteed that they would be escorted to ShkodĆ«r with honor. He states in his letters that Montenegro had been "sold for [[Thirty pieces of silver|Judas' silver]]" and that while being the "torch of Serb freedom", it was occupied by "brotherly [[Å umadija]]ns who replaces the [[Austria-Hungary|Austro-Hungarians]]". His claims that 35,000 Montenegrins were participating in the uprising and that Virpazar was already conquered were widely overstated.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=59-64}} During the night, reinforcements arrived from Podgorica to lift the siege. According to Jovan ÄetkoviÄ, member of the [[Podgorica Assembly]], the youth of Podgorica met with the Greens during the night around Carev Laz near RvaÅ”i. After a short verbal confrontation, leaders of the youth agreed to negotiate with the Greens in RvaÅ”i. Todor BožoviÄ, Captain Jovan VuksanoviÄ and Podgorica Assembly [[Member of parliament|MP]] Nikola KovaÄeviÄāMizara proceeded to RvaÅ”i accompanied by 5-6 other members of the youth. The rest set up camp near Carev Laz and were led by Captain Radojica DamjanoviÄ and flag-bearer Nikola DragoviÄ. There, they met Captains Äuza ÄuraÅ”koviÄ and Marko RadunoviÄ who were waiting for a negotiator from the Greens. They waited in RvaÅ”i until daybreak, when a group went toward Rijeka to the village of DruÅ”iÄi. They found ''serdar'' Joko JoviÄeviÄ who summoned a local, Captain Äuko KostiÄ, and initiated negotiations between the two groups.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=59-64}} In the morning of 4 January, while the groups were negotiating, the youth decided to push forward contrary to the command of Todor BožoviÄ. They met the Greens under the command of Captain Jovan VujoviÄ in the village of Å inÄon, near Rijeka CrnojeviÄa, where the Greens held higher ground. The Greens realized that, while initially outnumbering the town's defenders, they were now outnumbered. They agreed to send their men home and salute to the Whites' flag, which was highly unpopular among the rebel troops.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=59-64}} After breaking the siege of Rijeka CrnojeviÄa, the Whites achieved an extremely significant victory and by 5 January, troops under the command of Serbian General Dragutin MilutinoviÄ had both ended a minor uprising in Rijeka CrnojeviÄa and had stopped a larger attack on NikÅ”iÄ.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=59-64}}{{sfn|AndrijaÅ”eviÄ|2015|p=261}} ===Siege of Cetinje=== As Jovan Plamenac and the other rebel leaders had planned, Cetinje turned out to be the epicenter of the uprising. After several days of exchanging letters, the rebels began forming armed squads on {{OldStyleDate |31 December||18 December}} 1918. The rebels gathered in front of the House of Government on 1 January 1919 and left town for the hills. Recruits were called to arms by ringing the church bells in the vicinity of Cetinje. By 2 January, Cetinje was surrounded from all sides.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=65-84}} According to ÄetkoviÄ, the town was, at this moment in time, defended by around 100 members of the national guard i.e 20ā30 men each from several tribes around Cetinje, 50ā60 members of the youth, 50 gendarmes and policemen and 100 members of the 2nd Yugoslav Regiment under [[Colonel]] Dragutin MilutinoviÄ. The troops were lacking in ammunition, and every defender had between 50 and 100 rounds. MilutinoviÄ's troops were armed with two cannons and around 1,000 shells.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=65-84}} Youth leader Marko DakoviÄ requested that MilutinoviÄ deliver arms to his troops, but since he was himself lacking in arms and ammunition, he directed DakoviÄ toward the commander of the Second Army stationed in [[Sarajevo]], ''vojvoda'' [[Stepa StepanoviÄ]]. The telephone lines were still operational and StepanoviÄ allowed DakoviÄ to restock from the army garrison in [[Tivat]]. During 2 January, leader of the [[LjeÅ”anska nahija|LjeÅ”anska]] national guard [[Lieutenant]] Radoje ÄetkoviÄ reached Tivat and returned with around 2,000 rifles and ample ammunition.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=65-84}} The following day, on 3 January, a delegation headed by Brigade Generals Milutin VukotiÄ and [[Jovo BeÄir]] went to negotiate with the rebel leaders at their headquarters in the village of Bajice. According to General MilutinoviÄ, the negotiations were unsuccessful and he went to negotiate personally around 2 P.M. MilutinoviÄ met Captain Äuro DraÅ”koviÄ and Lieutenant Ilija BeÄir, the latter of whom he describes as insolent for having said "Either the [[Serbians]] leave Montenegro or there will be blood, there isn't and there cannot be any other way". In his return, MilutinoviÄ met his troops who begged him to attack Bajice, but their request was denied because he "still hoped that everything would end peacefully".{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=65-84}} In the morning of 4 January, ''serdar'' [[Janko VukotiÄ]] arrived in Cetinje. He had broken through the rebels' advance guard with a force of 30 men from [[Äevo]]. MilutinoviÄ advised VukotiÄ to make arrangements with the National Executive Committee, to allow him to try negotiating with the rebels in Bajice. The Committee agreed, and VukotiÄ went to Bajice by car, accompanied with two captains and an MP of the [[Podgorica Assembly]] . The two captains returned on foot not long after with word that VukotiÄ and the MP had been captured. Other than the capture of ''serdar'' VukotiÄ and some gendarmes encountering a minor roadblock on their way to the villages of Kosijeri and Jabuka, no fighting took place on that day.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=65-84}} Jailed in Bajice, ''serdar'' Janko VukotiÄ wrote to General MilutinoviÄ in the morning of 5 January, pleading him to allow the rebels to enter Cetinje without a struggle, while securing the area around his command with Serbian troops and the area between the Zetski Dom theater, the hospital and the barracks with troops under the command of ''vojvoda'' Stevo VukotiÄ. His message was pessimistic, as he believed MilutinoviÄ's forces to be severely outnumbered. Around 6 A.M., a list of demands written by Captain [[Krsto PopoviÄ]] the previous day was delivered to MilutinoviÄ, asking for the termination of resolutions of the Podgorica Assembly. The message was delivered to MilutinoviÄ by Captain Äuro DraÅ”koviÄ and Lieutenant GrujiÄiÄ. DraÅ”koviÄ complained to MilutinoviÄ verbally about the disrespect towards Montenegrin military units by the Serbian command.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=65-84}}{{sfn|AndrijaÅ”eviÄ|2015|p=261}} In his letter, Captain PopoviÄ demanded that the organization of the emerging Kingdom of Yugoslavia be decided by the Constitutional Assembly, that anyone responsible for the events in Montenegro be tried and that new elections were held to produce a new government which would represent Montenegro in international relations. He gave MilutinoviÄ until 6 January to acquiesce and threatened to enter the town with several thousand troops. MilutinoviÄ replied to PopoviÄ promising to put an end to any irregularities by the new police authorities and agreeing to bring PopoviÄ's requests to the government in Belgrade, but declining any of his other demands. MilutinoviÄ was more confident in his ability to hold Cetinje, as a load of arms and ammunition had arrived from Tivat the previous evening.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=65-84}}{{sfn|AndrijaÅ”eviÄ|2015|p=261}} During the afternoon, ''vojvoda'' Stevo VukotiÄ, brother of Queen [[Milena of Montenegro]], went to visit ''serdar'' Janko VukotiÄ in Bajice where he was being held. ''Serdar'' Janko pleaded with Stevo VukotiÄ in tears, while Stevo was unwilling to accept any of the rebels' demands. MilutinoviÄ held a meeting with the Executive Committee in the afternoon during which [[Divisional General]] [[Mitar MartinoviÄ]] suggested accepting the rebels' terms. MilutinoviÄ proceeded with his defense, ignoring the Committee's stance, and put [[Michael, Prince of Montenegro|Prince Michael]]'s godfather Captain Božo NovakoviÄ in command of the volunteer troops.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=65-84}} In the evening of 5 January, an artillery unit from [[Zelenika, Herceg Novi|Zelenika]] armed with two cannons and led by Commander Ljubodrag JankoviÄ tried to reach Cetinje. They reached [[Kotor]] around 5 P.M. and set off for Cetinje two hours later. The unit was held back by the rebels at the village of [[NjeguÅ”i]], after which the command in Kotor ordered them to open fire. They failed to follow their order and camped for the night on the hillside of Krstac near NjeguÅ”i. At the same time, a group of more than 600 Whites proceeded towards Cetinje from the failed siege of [[Rijeka CrnojeviÄa]]. The group was made up of [[KuÄi]], [[Piperi (tribe)|Piperi]] and [[BjelopavliÄi]] tribesmen. They formed a column near Belveder, where they were ambushed by the Greens. The group entered Cetinje near the hospital late in the evening.{{sfn|KordiÄ|1986|pp=65-84}} On 6 January 1919, around 250 Serbian troops and 850 volunteers from nearby [[Tribes of Montenegro|Montenegrin tribes]] fought a formation of approximately 1,500 to 2,000 rebel Greens in Cetinje.{{sfn|AndrijaÅ”eviÄ|2015|p=261}} That day, the Greens initiated a siege on Cetinje, killing some members of the Great National Assembly and killing some Whites. After that, the Greens experienced severe factionalism, in addition to facing the militarily stronger Whites.{{sfn|Morrison|2009|p=44}}
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