Paramilitary Violence in the Post-Ottoman Borderlands
Pro-state Militias and Nation-Building, 1905-1949
Paramilitary Violence in the Post-Ottoman Borderlands
Pro-state Militias and Nation-Building, 1905-1949
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Description
This book examines the emergence, activities and legacies of pro-state paramilitarism in the late and post-Ottoman borderlands during the era of the European civil war (1905-1949). This period was marked by profound violence and acute ethno-political transformation spurred on by the decline and eventual fall of the Ottoman empire and the emergence of a wide array of national and transnational political projects variably shaped by ethnic nationalism, fascism, and socialism. The chapters in this book examine the backstories, trajectories and activities of those who fought in the name of the various ethno-statal agendas, paramilitaries, gang leaders, bandits, and other pro-state actors, across the periphery of the empire and including understudied areas such as Kosovo, Montenegro, North-Western Greece. The book reveals the organization, patterns and logic of ethnic victimization, and the impact of ethnic and paramilitary mobilization in the governance structures and political institutions on the societies at the receiving end of violence. This approach offers new insights into the motivations of pro-state armed actors and challenges state-centric narratives on the history and legacy of nation-building, violence and paramilitary mobilization in the embattled borderlands of the Balkans, the Caucasus and Anatolia.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction, Spyros Tsoutsoumpis (The University of Manchester, UK)
and Ümit Kurt (University of Newcastle, Australia)
Section 1: Plunging into the abyss: Paramilitarism in the era of the Greater War (1905-1922)
2. Tribal Alliances, State Security, and Violence in the Ottoman Eastern Borderlands: The Hamidiye Light Cavalry Regiments as Paramilitary Forces, Edip Gölbasi (Leipzig University, Germany)
3. The Ottoman Special Organization's Activities in the South Caucasus Borderlands and the Participation of Local Muslims in Genocidal Killings, Candan Badem (Independent Scholar)
4. Young Bosnia Between Democracy and Paramilitarism: Serbia, Austria-Hungary, and the Evolution of Militant Irredentism from the Annexation Crisis to the Sarajevo Assassination, Edin Hajdarpasic (Loyola University Chicago, USA)
5. Ottoman Fedaîism, Caucasian Paramilitarism: The Revolutionism of Nikol Douman (1890-1914), Varak Ketsemanian (American University of Beirut, Lebanon)
6. The Political Economy of Late Ottoman Paramilitarism: Violence, Looting and the Destruction of the Aintab Armenians, Ümit Kurt (University of Newcastle, Australia)
7. (Para-)Military Entrepreneurship in Southeastern Europe amid the Greater War, Jovo Miladinovic (University of Konstanz, Germany)
8. Paramilitarism in the Early 20th Century Serbia. From Revolutionary Movement to Quasi-state Paramilitaries, Dmitar Tasic (Institute for Recent History, Belgrade, Serbia)
Section 2: A violent interregnum: Paramilitarism between the wars (1923-1939)
9. Anatomy of an Assassination: the 1928 Parliament Killings and the Paramilitarized Politics of Interwar Yugoslavia, John Paul Newman (Maynooth University, Ireland)
10. Outlaws, Bureaucrats, and the Gallows: Desertion, Brigandage, and Capital Punishment in Turkey's Early Republican Period, Ahmet Özcan (Gedik University, Turkey)
11. The Guiding Apparatus of the Zilan Massacre: Militias (1930-1950), Sedat Ulugana (Independent Scholar)
Section 3: Once more unto the breach: Paramilitarism during the Second World War and the early Cold War Period (1940-1949)
12. “For Nation and Fatherland”: Anti-Communist Kapetans in Greek Macedonia (1941–1944), Stratos N. Dordanas (University of Thessaloniki, Greece) and Vaios Kalogrias (Independent Scholar)
13. Armed collaboration in Italy's occupation areas of the Balkans during the Second World War, Paolo Fonzi (University of Eastern Piedmont, Italy)
14. Paramilitary organization of Vlachs and Italo-Romanian Rivalry in Nazi-Occupied Greece, Charalambos Gappas (The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA)
15. Paramilitarism after the Second World War: The Case of Greece, Spyros Tsoutsoumpis (The University of Manchester, UK)
Afterward: Intrigue Aboard the Savarona: The Long Arc of Ottoman Paramilitarism, Ryan Gingeras (Naval Postgraduate School in California, USA)
Product details
| Published | Dec 24 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Hardback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 288 |
| ISBN | 9780755654468 |
| Imprint | I.B. Tauris |
| Dimensions | 9 x 6 inches |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |

























