Hasan Pasha was from Srebrenica. He was the
mutesarrif ("
plenipotentiary") of the
Sanjak of Zvornik from 1797 to 1805. His cousin
Hadji Sali Bey (d. 1822) was an
ayan in Srebrenica, with the rank of Imperial
kapıcıbaşı. Hasan Pasha actively fought the Serbian rebels in the
First Serbian Uprising (1804–1813). The new Vizier of Bosnia,
Mustafa Pasha Ismailpašić ( January 1805–March 1806), ordered for the mobilization of all of the Ottoman Bosnian army at Podrinje. Ismailpašić appointed Hasan Pasha, the
mutesarrif of Zvornik, as the general of the campaign, with deputies Hadji Sali Bey of Srebrenica,
Sinan Pasha Sijerčić of Goražde,
Mehmed Agha of Višegrad, and Sarajevo Janissary
başağa Memiš-aga Mačković. They were subsequently accompanied by
Hasan Pasha of Banja Luka, Bayraktar Ali from Prusce, the
mutesarrif of Klis
Suleyman Pasha, Ibrahim Agha from Kobaš, and Mahmud Agha from Jezero. The Porte issued a
ferman (decree) to the Bosnian Vizier that called for the Bosnian Muslim to attack via the Drina in three directions, Užice, Šabac, Kara-Nevča, with all their might. Mustafa Pasha issued a
buyruldu (decree) on 24 November 1805 that informed Bosnian officials of the order to finally suppress the Serbian rebels. The first organized Ottoman Bosnian attack came in late January 1806 when two detachments crossed the
Drina, one via Lešnica towards Šabac, and the other via Srebrenica and Soko towards Valjevo.
Kara-Marko and
Milan Obrenović defeated Hasan Pasha in February 1806 and rebel leader
Karađorđe's troops burnt down several towns and villages in the
Podrinje area by March 1806. While
Stojan Čupić and
Janko Katić destroyed
kaptan Mehmed Bey Vidajić in Zvornik, the Bosnian Eyalet troops quickly consolidated and stopped rebel expansion in Bosnian Podrinje. In the summer of 1806, Karađorđe's envoy Matija Stefanović negotiated peace on the Drina with Bosnian leaders at Travnik but this failed due to a Serb attack on Belgrade. The new Vizier of Bosnia,
Koca Hüsrev Mehmed Pasha ( April 1806–January 1808) sent over 3,000 Bosnia Eyalet troops under
Mehmed Bey Kulenović (
Kulin-kapetan) over the Drina on 25 June 1806, which were destroyed by priest
Luka Lazarević, in the
Battle of Mišar that culminated on 13 August 1806, and ended in a decisive Serbian victory. Among the Ottoman fallen in the battle, several were
notable Bosnian nobility, including Kulenović, Mehmed Vidajić and his two sons, Sinan Sijerčić, and others. Among the prisoners-of-war were
kethüda Ibrahim Pasha,
Suleyman Pasha Skopljak, Ali Bey Vidajić, Hasan Pasha of Srebrenica and Hasan Pasha of Banja Luka, but they were quickly
exchanged. Ibrahim Pasha of Maglaj, Hasan Pasha of Srebrenica, and Ali Bey Vidajić lost two cannons, all ammunition, six war-flags, many horses, and all their personal baggage. Hasan Pasha allegedly offered 100 bags of gold to be released. Following Mišar, Hasan Pasha was among the commanders that stayed in Šabac with their troops and sought to negotiate with the Serbs. After the
takeover of Belgrade (December–January), it was eventually agreed that Šabac be handed over to the Serbs, while a
Janissary-agha with entourage stay in the fortress, and the Šabac Muslim population be transferred to Bosnia; Šabac was handed over on . In 1808,
during campaigns in Podrinje, Serbian generals
Anta Bogićević,
Petar Moler and
Krsta Ignjatović destroyed a large army led by Hasan Pasha and Sali Bey in a battle that took three days, during an encirclement of
Rožanj. Hasan Pasha fell
at Loznica in October 1810. ==See also==