STATE REPRESSION AGAINST THE JATAKS OF THE HAJDUKS IN THE FIRST HALF OF THE 19TH CENTURY
STATE REPRESSION AGAINST THE JATAKS OF THE HAJDUKS IN THE FIRST HALF OF THE 19TH CENTURY
Author(s): Nikola PantelićSubject(s): Social Sciences, Law, Constitution, Jurisprudence, Criminal Law, Sociology, Studies in violence and power, Penology
Published by: Naučno društvo za istoriju zdravstvene kulture
Keywords: death penalty; victimization; punishment; bandits; executioners; state measures; sanctions; state retaliation
Summary/Abstract: This paper focuses on legal and illegal measures that were applied by the Serbian state against jataks and hajduks. The essence of the state’s struggle against these social categories came down to cruelty and unwillingness to compromise. Due to such a setup, both categories (thugs and thieves) were largely equalized, which was unfair and excessive. After regulating the legal position of a hajduk, many legal provisions had an addendum that stipulated that they also apply to jataks. An additional problem of the state’s cruelty was reflected in the fact that there were at least two types of jataks. Namely, in addition to real jataks who were calculated accomplices of hajduk and who had their own benefit from hajduk crimes, there was also a certain number of “unwanted jataks”. The role of the state was particularly important in this period. While, on the one hand, it demanded the full cooperation of the population in dealing with the bandits, on the other hand, it did not provide citizens with any protection or help in case of bandit’s revenge. The state demonstrated its cruelty by not trying to separate the real from the unwanted jataks, and by not sanctioning the latter.
Journal: Acta historiae medicinae, stomatologiae, pharmaciae, medicinae veterinariae
- Issue Year: 41/2022
- Issue No: 1-2
- Page Range: 36-47
- Page Count: 12
- Language: English, Serbian