Sanjak of Bosnia

Sanjak of Bosnia (Turkish: Bosna Sancağı, Serbo-Croatian: Bosanski sandžak / Босански санџак) was one of the sanjaks of the Ottoman Empire established in 1463 when the lands conquered from the Bosnian Kingdom were transformed into a sanjak and Isa-Beg Isaković was appointed its first sanjakbey.After the Bosnia Eyalet was established in 1580 the Bosnian Sanjak became its central province.Although Bosnia Vilayet was officially still part of the Ottoman Empire until 1908 the Bosnian Sanjak de facto ceased to exist in 1878; when it was occupied by Austria-Hungary.[3] Apostolic visitor Peter Masarechi claimed in his 1624 report that the population of Bosnia was 450,000 Muslims, 150,000 Catholics, and 75,000 Orthodox.[4] List of sanjakbeys of Bosnian Sanjak is the following:[citation needed]
Tughra , or cipher, of the Ottoman Sultan Selim I , above Slavonic text addressed to the inhabitants of Bosnia. Created in Constantinople (modern-day Istanbul ), dated April 1519
TurkishSerbo-CroatianSanjakOttoman EmpireDemonymSiege of JajceEyalet of BosniaAustro-Hungarian occupation of Bosnia and HerzegovinaBosansko KrajišteKingdom of BosniaBosnia EyaletBosnia and HerzegovinaCroatiaSerbiaMontenegrosanjakslands conqueredBosnian KingdomIsa-Beg IsakovićsanjakbeyRumelia EyaletAustro-Hungarian occupationBosnia VilayetVilayet LawBanja LukabeylerbeysTughraSelim IIstanbulPeter MasarechiList of Ottoman governors of BosniasanjakbeysMinnetoğlu Mehmed BeyAjaz-begArnaut Davud-begSkender PashaFiruz BeySkender-paša MihajlovićHadum Sinan-beg BorovinićGazi Husrev-begSinan-beg BoljanićMustafa-beg SokolovićFerhad-beg SokolovićHistory ofBosnia and HerzegovinaEarly historyPrehistoryKakanjButmirGlasinac cultureCentral Bosnian cultureRoman DalmatiaRoman PannoniaMiddle AgesBosnia in the Early Middle AgesTravuniaZachumliaBanateKingdomDonji KrajiHum (Herzegovina from 1454)PodrinjeDuchy of HerzegovinaOttoman eraOttoman conquestBosnia SanjakSanjak of HerzegovinaHerzegovina EyaletHerzegovina UprisingHabsburg eraBosnian crisisYugoslaviaKingdom of YugoslaviaDrina BanovinaWorld War IISFR YugoslaviaSR Bosnia and HerzegovinaBreakup of YugoslaviaContemporaryRepublic of Bosnia and HerzegovinaBosnian WarHerzeg-BosniaWestern BosniaFederation of Bosnia and HerzegovinaRepublika SrpskaOttoman Bosnia and HerzegovinaPashaluk of HerzegovinaSanjak of Novi PazarAlaca Hișar (Kruševac)AlbaniaBerat/AvlonaÇanadÇirmenDedeağaç/DimetokaDelvinaDurrësEğribozElbasanGelibolu (Gallipoli)Görice (Korçë)Gümülcine (Komotini)Hersek (Herzegovina)Inebahti (Naupaktos)Yanya (Ioannina)İpek (Peć)Karli-EliKavalaKyustendilLemnosMidilli (Mytilene)MonastirKaradağ (Montenegro)Nakşa BerreNiğbolu (Nicopolis)Yeni Pazar (Novi Pazar)PakracPljevljaPojega (Požega)PrevezaPrizrenRhodesSakız (Chios)Selanik (Salonica)İşkodra (Scutari)Segedin (Szeged)Serfiğe (Servia)SjenicaSemendire (Smederevo)Sirem (Syrmia)TirhalaÜsküp (Skopje)Vize/TekfürtağiVoynuksVulçitrin (Vushtrri)İzvornik (Zvornik)