The name Kosovo (as referred to in this spelling) is the most frequently used form in
English when discussing the region in question. The Albanian spelling Kosova has lesser currency. The alternative spellings Cossovo and Kossovo were frequently used until the early 20th century.[1]
Terminology
The toponym Kosovo in contemporary times refers to entire territory of
Kosovo. Kosovo originally referred to
plain of Kosovo, which forms part of eastern Kosovo. Regions which are today considered parts of Kosovo include
Dukagjin/Metohija,
Llapusha,
Llap and other areas. Kosovo was used as the name of the entire territory for the first time in 1877 when the
Kosovo Vilayet was created by the
Ottoman administration.[2]
In antiquity
Dardania
There is a theory within linguistics that the name Dardania used in ancient times for the area of Kosovo is derived from the Albanian word
dardhë, meaning "pear".[3][4]
Due to its Slavic (Serbian) character, Kosovo Albanian leader
Ibrahim Rugova supported a name change to "
Dardania", in reference to the
ancient kingdom and later-turned
Roman province.[5] It, however, did not enter into general usage.
Medieval and contemporary
Kosovo
Kosovo (
Serbian Cyrillic: Косово) is the
Serbian neuter possessive adjective of kos (кос), meaning "
blackbird"; -ovo being an adjectival suffix – it is short for the region named the "field of the blackbird" (
Serbian: Kosovo polje), the
Kosovo Field, the site of the
1389 battle between a coalition led by Serbian Prince
Lazar and the Ottoman army, which resulted in depletion of
Serbian available manpower in future campaigns.[6] The name Kosovo Kos- is found in hundreds of Slavic locations.[7] The cognate of
Proto-Slavickosь is
Ancient Greekκόσσυφος.[8][7]
Linguistic and historical research have shown that the medieval Serb state expanded into the region during the twelfth century.[9][10][11] Many toponyms in Kosovo appear to be South Slavic.[11] The name Kosovo appears in Bulgaria as
Kosovo, Plovdiv Province.
Kosovo was part of the Ottoman state for 457 years.
Ottoman traveller
Evliya Çelebi, who went to the area in 1660 referred to central Kosovo as Arnavud (آرناوود) and noted that in
Vučitrn its inhabitants were speakers of
Albanian or
Turkish and few spoke "
Boşnakca".[12] The highlands around the
Tetovo, Peja and Prizren areas Çelebi considered as being the "mountains of Arnavudluk".[12] Çelebi referred to the "mountains of Peja" as being in Arnavudluk and considered the
Ibar river that converged in
Mitrovica as forming Kosovo's border with
Bosnia.[12] He viewed the "Kılab" or
Llapi river as having its source in Arnavudluk and by extension the
Sitnica as being part of that river.[12] Çelebi also included the central mountains of Kosovo within Arnavudluk.[12]
During Ottoman rule the area of Kosovo was referred to as Arnavudluk (آرناوودلق) meaning Albania by the empire in its documents such as those dating from the eighteenth century.[13][14][15]
Gegalik (Gegënia)
In the late Ottoman period Albanians claimed the sancaks of
Yeni Pazar (Novi Pazar),
Ipek (Peja),
Prizren, Priștine (Pristina) and
Üsküp (Skopje) which were all within
Kosovo Vilayet as forming part of Gegalık or Land of the Gegs, a term named after
Gheg Albanians who inhabited the area.[16]
The name "Kosovo and Metohija" was used for the autonomous province in Yugoslav Serbia since its creation in 1945 until 1968, when the term "Metohija" was dropped.[17][18] In 1990, the name was reversed to "Kosovo and Metohija". After the
Kosovo War, the
United Nations mission used only "Kosovo" as the name of the province.
^Wilkes, John (1992).
The Illyrians. Wiley. p. 244.
ISBN9780631146711. "Names of individuals peoples may have been formed in a similar fashion, Taulantii from ‘swallow’ (cf. the Albanian tallandushe) or Erchelei the ‘eel-men’ and Chelidoni the ‘snail-men’. The name of the Delmatae appears connected with the Albanian word for ‘sheep’ delmë) and the Dardanians with for ‘pear’ (dardhë)."
^Anscombe, Frederick (2006). "Albanians and "mountain bandits"". In Anscombe, Frederick (ed.).
The Ottoman Balkans, 1750–1830. Princeton: Markus Wiener Publishers. pp. 87–113.
ISBN9781558763838. Archived from
the original on 25 January 2016. p.88, 107 "In light of the recent violent troubles in Kosovo and Macedonia and the strong emotions tied to them, readers are urged most emphatically not to draw either of two unwarranted conclusions from this article: that Albanians are somehow inherently inclined to banditry, or that the extent of Ottoman "Albania" or Arnavudluk (which included parts of present-day northern Greece, western Macedonia, southern Montenegro, Kosovo, and southern Serbia) gives any historical "justification" for the creation of a "Greater Albania" today."