- The
kodjabashis (Gr****: κοτζαμπάσηδες, romanized: kotzabasides;
singular κοτζάμπασης, kotzabasis; Serbo-Croatian: kodžobaša, kodžabaša; from Turkish:...
-
thousands of relatives. The
leader of each
family is
known as a mukhtar.
Kodjabashi Mayor Amara,
Muhammad (1999).
Politics and
Sociolinguistic Reflexes: Palestinian...
- and the m****acre of some
inhabitants of the region,
including the Gr****
kodjabashi Chatzi-Aslanis and the
priest Antonakis Skouloglou. Avramea, Anna (1994)...
- the
Ottoman Empire. It was
another name for the
Ottoman Turkish rank of
kodjabashi, held by
local Christian chiefs. obor-knez (обор-кнез) was a
title borne...
- and politician. He was born in Agia Varvara,
Akrata and soon
became a
kodjabashi of the area. In 1819 he
entered the
Filiki Eteria, to
which he donated...
- Katouna, 1771 – Athens, 1836) was a Gr**** politician. He was the son of the
kodjabashi Mitsos Mavrommatis, and the
father of
Anastasios Mavrommatis, also a politician...
- a
title formerly given in
German and
Hungarian nations Primates or
Kodjabashis,
local Christian notables in
parts of
Ottoman Greece,
especially the...
-
Ottoman practice, with a
governor (voevoda),
judge (kadi), and
elders (
kodjabashis)
heading the
local Gr**** inhabitants. In the late 16th century, Lemnos...
- Sakellarios.
Retrieved 10
April 2010.
Athanasios T. Fotopoulos, The
Kodjabashis of the
Peloponnese during the
Second Turcocracy (1715-1821), Doctoral...
- Pasha. Kayzer-i Rûm:
Caesar of Rome,
Emperor (i.e.; the
Ottoman Sultan).
Kodjabashis:
local Christian notables in
parts of
Ottoman Greece who
exercised considerable...