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  1. The Vilayet of the Danube or Danubian Vilayet (Ottoman Turkish: ولايت طونه, romanized: Vilâyet-i Tuna; Bulgarian: Дунавска област, Dunavska(ta) oblast, more commonly Дунавски вилает, Danube Vilayet; French: Vilayet du Danube) was a first-level administrative division of the Ottoman Empire from ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › VilayetVilayet - Wikipedia

    Danube Vilayet: sanjaks of Ruse, Varna, Vidin, Tulcea, Turnovo, Sofia, Niš. Bosnia Vilayet: sanjaks of Bosna-Serai, Zvornik, Banja Luka, Travnik, Bebkèh, Novi Pazar. Vilayet of Herzegovina: sanjaks of Mostar, Gacko. Salonica Vilayet: sanjaks of Salonica, Serres, Drama. Janina Vilayet: sanjaks of Ioannina, Tirhala, Ohrid, Preveze ...

  3. By 1865 the four vilayets of Danube, Aleppo, Erzurum and Bosnia were fully organized and in operation. Damascus , Tripolitania , and Edirne followed the next year. [17] In 1867, 13 new vilayets were organized, including Bursa , Izmir , Trabzon , Salonica , Prizren, and Iskodra , with an autonomous Crete being organized as a vilayet ...

  4. The Vilayet of the Danube or Danubian Vilayet was a first-level administrative division (vilayet) of the Ottoman Empire from 1864 to 1878. In the late 19th century it reportedly had an area of 34,120 square miles (88,400 km2).

  5. Danube Vilayet in the 1860s and 1870s Ventsislav Muchinov* Abstract This article examines problems related to the large-scale immigration of Circassians into the Danube Vilayet of the Ottoman Empire in the 1860s and 1870s. It looks at the overall process of immigration of Circassian refugees and the actions taken by the

  6. L'ancien vilayet ottoman, créé en 1864 et supprimé en 1878. Il s'étandait sur un territoire comprenant l'actuel Silistra (ville sur la rive droite du Danube), Niš (qui comprenait Sofia) et Vidin. - Sa capitale était Roussé.

  7. As early as 1860s they endeavoured to set up industrial or reform schools (sanayi mektepleri or islahhanes). My paper presents a myriad of sources on the islahhanes of the Danube Vilayet, published in the newspapers or held at the Oriental Department of the Bulgarian National Library.