Islamization of Bosnia and Herzegovina

A significant number of people in the former Kingdom of Bosnia converted to Islam after the conquest by the Ottoman Empire in the second half of the 15th century, giving it a unique character within the Balkan region.[6] Finally, under Ottoman rule there was significant religious conversion in many directions: many Catholics converted to the Orthodox church and vice versa.To fill up depopulated areas of northern and western Bosnia, the Ottomans encouraged the migration of large numbers of hardy settlers with military skills from Serbia and Herzegovina.Some of these settlers were Vlachs, members of a pre-Slav Balkan population that had acquired a Latinate language and specialized in stock breeding, horse raising, long-distance trade, and fighting.Under the feudal system imposed by the Ottomans, only those who converted to Islam could acquire and inherit land and property, which accorded them political rights, a status usually denied to non-Muslims.In the later Ottoman period, Bosnia attracted Muslim refugees from lands that were reconquered by Christian powers (mainly Croatia, Hungary and Slovenia).
IslamizationSpread of IslamIslamic missionary activityIslamization of PalestineIslamization of JerusalemIslamization of SyriaIslamization of EgyptIslamization of IranIslamization and Turkification of XinjiangIslamization of the Sudan regionSpread of Islam in Southeast AsiaSpread of Islam in IndonesiaIslamization of AlbaniaIslamization in PakistanConversion to IslamConversion to Islam in prisonsConversion to Islam in U.S. prisonsConversion of non-Islamic places of worship into mosquesList of converts to IslamKingdom of Bosniaconquest by the Ottoman EmpireBalkanBosnian ChurchBalkansBogomilismheresyPope John XXIICrusadeBogomilian traditionreligious symbolidolatryrelicssaintsLord's PrayerSir Thomas ArnoldoversimplificationCroatiaHungarySloveniadevşirmetaken for military serviceJanissaryGreat Turkish WarOttoman EmpireMuslim conquestsTraian StoianovichIslam in EuropeConquest of HispaniaAl-AndalusIslam in southern ItalyTransmission of the ClassicsCultural transmissionNorman-Arab-Byzantine cultureMedieval Christian views on MuhammadCrusadesReconquistaTatar yokeReception of Islam in early modern EuropeProtestantism and IslamAnglo-Moroccan allianceOttoman wars in EuropeOttoman–Habsburg warsBarbary piratesBarbary slave tradeRusso-Turkish warsOrientalism in early modern FranceIslam in the Far NorthOrientalismIslam and modernityIslam in the USSRPartition of the Ottoman EmpireNazi Germany and the Arab worldIslam and secularismIslamic democracyEuropean IslamIslamic terrorismLiberal and progressive Islam in EuropeReligion in the European UnionHijab and burka controversies in EuropeIslamophobiaJihadi tourismAlbaniaAndorraArmeniaAustriaAzerbaijanBelarusBelgiumBosnia and HerzegovinaBulgariaCyprusCzech RepublicDenmarkEstoniaFinlandFranceGeorgiaGermanyGreeceIcelandIrelandKosovoLatviaLiechtensteinLithuaniaLuxembourgMoldovaMontenegroNetherlandsNorth MacedoniaNorwayPolandPortugalRomaniaRussiaSerbiaSlovakiaSwedenSwitzerlandTurkeyUkraineUnited KingdomEnglandNorthern IrelandScotland