Mehmed Pasha Bushati | |
---|---|
Governor of Scutari | |
Reign |
|
Successor | Mahmud Pasha |
Born | Sanjak of Scutari, Ottoman Empire |
Died | June 1775 |
Family | Bushati |
Issue | |
Religion | Islam |
Mehmed Pasha Bushati (fl. 1768–d. June 1775) was the Ottoman governor of the Sanjak of Scutari (known as the Pashalik of Scutari, in northern Albania), between 1768 and June 1775. He was succeeded by his son Mustafa Pasha Bushati, and thus founded the hereditary Bushati family of Scutari.
Bushati was an Albanian Muslim clan leader. The Bushati family claimed that it descended from the Islamized son of Lord Ivan Crnojević, Skenderbeg Crnojević. That tradition strengthened the family's pretention over the Montenegro Vilayet.
In 1768, Mehmed Pasha became the governor of the sanjak of Scutari. In 1769 he fought in Zadrima. In 1770 he fought in Morea against Greeks and Russians, and in 1772 he and his son participated in the march on Ulcinj. He continued the Scutari pretensions over Montenegro and Brda, and planned to suppress their revolt; in early April 1774, he was in Podgorica and met with some chieftains of the northern Albanian tribes to discuss the planned operation. In 1774, in the same month of the death of Šćepan Mali, he attacked the Kuči and Bjelopavlići with 15,000 troops, but was decisively defeated and returned to Scutari. He died in June 1775, but this did not return the Sultan's rule to northern Albania; he was succeeded by his young son, Mahmud Pasha.
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