Hadji Sali Bey
Hadji Sali Bey was an Ottoman official in Srebrenica, a town in the Sanjak of Zvornik of the Bosnia Eyalet. He held the title of bey. As part of the Ottoman campaign against the Serbian rebellion beginning in 1805, Hadji Sali Bey was dispatched to fight the Serbian rebels.
Life
According to K. Nenadović, Hadji Sali Bey was an ethnic Turk who spoke and wrote in Serbian. He was an associate of the Nenadović family of the Valjevo nahija and was friendly with Serbs. He is included in the Memoirs of archpriest Matija Nenadović.In 1802, the Dahije leader Aganlija who ruled part of the Soko nahiya, sent his tax collectors to Azbukovica. Hadji Sali Bey sent his men who stole the collected money. Aganlija asked Aleksa Nenadović to muster a Serb army to accompany in fighting Hadji Sali Bey, who Aganlija knew was an associate of Aleksa. Hadji Sali Bey and Hasan Agha of Srebrenica filled trenches on the other side of the Drina with soldiers. Aleksa managed to talk Hadji Sali Bey into returning the taxes.
When the Serbs in the Sanjak of Smederevo rose up against the Dahije in 1804, Hadji Sali Bey wrote accusations to the Porte about Dahije abuse on Serbs and that it was the reason they had risen. When Bekir Pasha, the Vizier of Bosnia, was given the mission to pacify the Belgrade Pashalik, Hadji Sali Bey adviced rebel commander and archpriest Matija Nenadović to welcome Bekir Pasha without arms, as to show that they were loyal subjects. Hadji Sali Bey helped in the Porte's decision to send a commission regarding the uprising. Bekir Pasha and the Serbian rebels agreed on the assassination of the Dahije at Ada Kaleh. Despite getting rid of the Dahije, the Serbs decided for continued uprising and national liberation.
The new Vizier of Bosnia, Mustafa Pasha Ismailpašić, ordered for the mobilization of all of the Ottoman Bosnian army at Podrinje. Ismailpašić appointed Mustafa Pasha, the mutesarrif of Zvornik, as the general of the campaign, with deputies Hadji Sali Bey of Srebrenica, Sinan Pasha Sijerčić of Goražde, Mehmed Agha of Višegrad, and Sarajevo Janissary başağa Memiš-aga Mačković. They were subsequently accompanied by Hasan Pasha of Banja Luka, Bayraktar Ali from Prusce, the mutesarrif of Klis Suleyman Pasha, Ibrahim Agha from Kobaš, and Mahmud Agha from Jezero.
When the Ottoman Bosnian army was ordered to destroy the Serbian rebels in 1805, Hadji Sali Bey sent letters to the Nenadović family ahead of his crossing over the Drina, telling them of how many troops he had, as to have a fair fight. The Serbian rebels besieged Šabac in January 1806. The Ottoman Bosnian army of 30,000 under Vidajić and Hasan Pasha attacked the rebels by the Drina. Karađorđe and Jakov Nenadović attacked the Bosnian troops at Zičko Polje, while Hadji Bey went from Soko into the Valjevo nahiya. At Brankovina, Hadji Bey burnt down the property of Jakov Nenadović. Jakov, despite being wounded, mustered an army that pushed Hadji Bey to Valjevo, which was burnt down by Hadji Bey, who then retreated to Soko. Hadji Bey sent Osman-Džora with 6,000 men to fight Jakov, but this detachment was decimated by 2,800 after being defeated by Jakov's 2,000 men at Čučuge. In July 1806, the Ottoman Bosnian army under Ibrahim Pasha crossed the Drina, with detachments under Hadji Sali Bey and Hasan Pasha of Srebrenica, to Valjevo and Šabac, respectively. The two detachments were then to unite at Palež. Hasan Pasha was destroyed at Duge Njive near Krnjići, then retreated to Šabac. Bekir Pasha now crossed the Drina with 7 pashas and 40,000 troops.
The Ottoman Bosnian army besieged Loznica held by Petar Moler, in August 1813, and sent the metropolitan of Zvornik to ask the rebels to surrender; Moler negotiated, the Turks suggesting that the Serbs present give up their weapons and find refuge with Hadji Sali Bey, "taken to be a Serb friend". Moler refused to surrender and broke through after three days in heavy rain, with 200 survivors out of 800.