Ethnographic cartography of the Balkans in the late 19th and early 20th century

The decline of the Ottoman Empire in the late 19th century led to fierce territorial competition between the Greeks, Serbs, Bulgarians and Turks, in particular over the contested region of Macedonia. As a result, a large number of maps attempting to depict the ethnic demographics of the Balkans were published at this time, particularly from 1876 onwards, following a Serb and Montenegrin uprising and the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-1878. Maps were produced and used by the various sides to justify their claims. The phenomenon has been labelled as a "map mania".[1]

Greeks, Serbs, and Bulgarians tended to manipulate and distort the maps, also relying on fake sources and modifying old data.[2] The maps depicted ethnic groups as blocks of solid colors, obscured ethnic diversity, merged sub-groups into dominant ethnicities, and ignored population density. In order to provide an impression of uniformity and stability, substantial minorities (even up to 49 percent in some cases) and scattered communities were omitted; map's scale was adjusted according to the map's aim whether to include or exclude specific minorities.[3]

The maps by Ami Boué and Guillaume Lejean were influential in the early period, and were generally favorable to the Bulgarians, but they greatly exaggerated Albanian presence towards the south, and their reputation suffered as a result.[4] The 1876 map by Heinrich Kiepert was particularly influential and used at the Congress of Berlin. In response, three pro-Greek maps were generated due to Greek efforts (Stanford, Bianconi, Synvet), but these had little impact,[5] and no one outside Greece took them seriously.[6] The standard Greek practice in all the maps it produced was to consider as Greeks not only the Greek-speakers, but also all the Christian Vlachs (Aromanians and Megleno-Romanians), the Christian Albanians, and the Exarchist Slavs, an approach rejected by international figures.[7]

Maps

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Image Date Cartographer Comments
  1847 Ami Boué The first map to show Slavic preponderance in the Balkans (until 1880). Among the maps' major mistakes are that it greatly exaggerated the southward presence of Albanians, while underrepresenting Ottomans and Muslims in Macedonia, Thrace, and northeastern Bulgaria, thereby ruining its reputation.[8] Boué was supported by the Austrian government and served Austrian imperial interests.[9]
  1861 Guillaume Lejean The map further served to legitimate Bulgarian aspirations. Although it was the first map to rely historical documents, it confused historical arguments with the current situation, and incorrectly extends Albanian presence too far southwards.[10]
  1867 M.F. Mirkovich Pro-Bulgarian map, which served as the basis of the Slavic Congress of 1867. It expanded the boundaries of the Bulgarian nation past Adrianople, and also greatly exaggerated Albanian presence west of the Pindus, extending it down to the Gulf of Corinth. As a result, the map's reputation suffered and it was labeled unreliable with regards to the rest of its content.[11]
  1876 Heinrich Kiepert Kiepert was considered the foremost cartographer of his day, particularly by Bismarck, and his map was used at the 1876 Congress of Berlin.[12]
  1877 Alexandre Synvet Pro-Greek map. Southern Albanians are not depicted as "Albanians", but as "Greeks" and "Muslims". The coast of the Black sea is indicated as "Greek". The map's coloring with thick and dense cross-hatching makes it more or less useless.[13]
  1877 Carl Sax Former Austrian consul working for Austrian interests. His map undermined Slavic presence and also attempted to show the complexity of the demographics of Macedonia. The map was generally well-received.[14]
  1877 Ioannis Gennadios Extreme pro-Greek map, which covers most of the Balkan peninsula with the color associated with the Greeks. Cartographers Sax and Kiepert 'dismissed the map as utter nonsense'.[6]
  1878 Constantine Paparrigopoulos Extreme pro-Greek map, falsely attributed to Heinrich Kiepert who publicly disclaimed it.[6][15]
  1880 Ernst Georg Ravenstein
  1881 Andrees Allgemeiner Handatlas
  1897 Pallas Nagy Lexikon
  1898 Paul Vidal de la Blache
  1911 Encyclopædia Britannica, 1911
  1911 William Robert Shepherd
  1916 War Office, London
  1918 Jovan Cvijić Pro-Serbian map.[16]
  1918 Jovan Cvijić Pro-Serbian map.[16]
  1918 George Soteiriades Pro-Greek map. Less extreme than the previous Greek maps, but continuing the Greek approach that considered Vlachs (Aromanians and Megleno-Romanians), Christian Albanians, and Patriarchate Bulgarians as Greeks, although acknowledging the existence of "Macedonoslavs". It was presented at the Paris conference of 1918 and represented the more realistic approach of Eleftherios Venizelos.[17]
  1918 National Georgaphic Society
  1922 J. N. Larned et al.
  1924 Unknown author - Historische alte Landkarte (Sammlerstück) 1924
  1932 Der Grosse Herder Atlas

References

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  1. ^ Peckham 2000, pp. 77–79.
  2. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, pp. 122–123.
  3. ^ Peckham 2000, p. 81.
  4. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, pp. 56–71.
  5. ^ Wilkinson 1951, pp. 68074.
  6. ^ a b c Heraclides 2020, p. 22.
  7. ^ Heraclides 2020, pp. 21–22.
  8. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, pp. 56–57: "It was Ami Boué, five years later, who drew the attention of the Western public opinion to the ethnic question and the Slavic predominance in the Balkans. In fact, the series of maps indicating Bulgarian predominance over the peninsula (a tendency remaining dominant until the 1880s) starts with Boué. Being a geologist (and not an ethnographer), he was among the first men trained for scientific fieldwork to explore the Balkan Peninsula in 1836–38. His attempt to separate Albanian tribes based on religion and dialects is remarkable, but his map contains major mistakes: the Albanian ethnos extends to the Bay of Arta in Greece, and the Ottomans are underrepresented in Macedonia. These mistakes ruined the reputation of the whole map. Compared to Šafarik's work, the map of Boué (published in 1847 in Berghaus's atlas) indicates fewer Greeks in Thrace and more Albanians in Kosovo and indicates the Vlachs separately in the Pindos Mountains. This map also underestimated the Turkish/Muslim presence in northeastern Bulgaria and in Thrace (App. 28). It is noteworthy that Boué was also supported by the Austrian government in his endeavour."
  9. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, p. 131: "Practically speaking, there is not much difference between the concept of Šafarik and Boué with the exception of their target groups. Both served Austrian imperial interests: the former advertised Austro-Yugoslavism for the inland (Slavs), while the latter was to disseminate this concept for the Western publicity, hiding imperial aspirations behind the sympathy towards the oppressed Slavs."
  10. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, pp. 56–57: "The map of Guillaume Lejean also served as a basis for the legitimization of Bulgarian aspirations (App. 30). Traveling the Ottoman Balkans in 1858–9, the consul pointed out in the introduction of his work (1861) that studying ethnographic relations is no longer an "object of purely scientific curiosity", but a political issue as well, implicitly stating that science cannot remain neutral in its attitudes toward the national question. He separated himself from the previous ethnographers, claiming that language alone is not an adequate criterion for determining nationality in a region where "religious hatred and political inequality" overwrite original patterns, and people adopt languages that did not correspond to their "race". Instead he advised the use of historical evidence to determine nationality. This is why he indicated small Serbian patches around Lake Ohrid, confirming their existence by using historical arguments (in the nineth century, the whole area as far as Durazzo was Slavic; a local saint – Jovan Vladislav of Duklja – was well-known to Serbs and was executed by a Bulgarian ruler in the 11th century; the neighbouring patriarchate of Ipek was a 'Serbian' one). Although he was the first to use historical documents to prove his statements, he committed two serious errors: he confused arguments from history with the contemporary situation; secondly, the southern limits of the Albanian nation were wrongly drawn."
  11. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, p. 71: "Another Slavist, the Russian L. F. Mirkovič, had one innovation (App. 25): the Muslim zone in northeastern Bulgaria, formerly indicated as a homogeneous patch, was dismembered and depicted as a mixed region using the technique of cross-hatching (in one of its earliest implementations). Furthermore, he expanded the boundaries of the Bulgarian nation in Thrace beyond Adrianople. In this way the Slavic preponderance on the peninsula became more obvious. This was another Bulgarophile map, serving as the basis of the Slavic Congress in 1867, and it was later sharply criticised by Cvijić because it depicted an unfavourable situation for the Serbs. Unfortunately, Mirkovič accepted Boué's idea that Albanians are abundant west of the Pindos Mountains down to the Gulf of Arta, for which the whole map was also labelled 'unreliable' in regard to its other content and ethnic boundaries."
  12. ^ Wilkinson 1951, pp. 68–69.
  13. ^ Demeter & Bottlik 2021, pp. 86–89.
  14. ^ Wilkinson 1951, pp. 76–82.
  15. ^ Yosmaoǧlu 2010, pp. 171, 175–179.
  16. ^ a b Peckham 2000, p. 80.
  17. ^ Heraclides 2020, p. 31.

Bibliography

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  • Demeter, Gábor; Bottlik, Zsolt (2021). Maps in the Service of the Nation: The Role of Ethnic Mapping in Nation-Building and Its Influence on Political Decision-Making Across the Balkan Peninsula (1840–1914). Berlin: Frank & Timme. ISBN 9783732906659.
  • Heraclides, Alexis (2020). The Macedonian Question and the Macedonians: A History. Routledge Histories of Central and Eastern Europe. Routledge. ISBN 9781000289404.
  • Peckham, Robert Shannan (2000). "Map mania: nationalism and the politics of place in Greece, 1870–1922" (PDF). Political Geography. 19: 77–95. doi:10.1016/S0962-6298(99)00036-0. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 February 2009.
  • Wilkinson, H.R. (1951). Maps and Politics; a review of the ethnographic cartography of Macedonia. Liverpool University Press. pp. 68–74.
  • Yosmaoǧlu, I. K. (2010). "Constructing national identity in Ottoman Macedonia". In Zartman, I. William (ed.). Understanding Life in the Borderlands: Boundaries in Depth and in Motion. University of Georgia Press. ISBN 9780820336145.