Two of Latif Agha's men were robbed on Latif's possessions about to be transferred to the
Trnava monastery below the
Jelica, where Latif sought to stay clear from the
plague. Hadži-Prodan's brother Mihajlo and the monk Pajsije had a fight with the two, and took them tied up into the mountains. Borislav Palalić from
Atenica informed Hadži-Prodan on what had happened. Upon this Hadži-Prodan went around the Trnava area and gathered men. Radoslav Jelečanin was sent by Latif to Trnava and he asked Hadži-Prodan what had happened, and Hadži-Prodan told him that he was unaware of the robbery and that he had freed and returned the goods to the two. Hearing of this, Latif went to
Karanovac (now Kraljevo) and sent letters to Vizier Sulejman Pasha, neighbouring Ottoman leaders and pashas to send troops, as the "Serbs had risen again". Latif feared and contemplated whether to leave for
Leskovac, having gathered all Karanovac and
Trstenik troops, but he decided to send those troops there and return to Čačak. For two days, hajduks fought with Kara-Fejza from Čačak, until both sides retreated. The surrounding Serb areas heard of
Dragačevo rising up and the flight of Karanovac and Trstenik. The rebellion broke out in the Čačak nahiya and echoed most strongly in the
Gruža region of the Kragujevac nahiya and to a smaller extent in the Jagodina nahiya. In Gruža, the leaders
Toma Vučić,
Petar Tucaković and
Stanko Miljčević quickly gathered men and pursued the Karanovac-Trstenik column and raided them at Rataji and
Lopaš, taking all their weapons, leaving many dead and wounded, but only having one loss. The column was allowed to proceed to Leskovac. Latif mustered Čačak troops and clashed with Vučić and Tucaković for two days, but was forced to retreat to Čačak. Another organizer in the Kragujevac nahiya was merchant
Nikola Vukićević from
Svetlić. In the meantime, Miloš had been informed by
hegumen Pajsije Ristić on the robbery and was asked to join the rebellion, but he strongly refused. Among the organizers of the rebellion were the Trnava clergy of
hegumen Pajsije, hieromonk Genadije, deacon
Avakum and priest Radovan Vujović. Miloš feared for atrocities and also believed that the Belgrade Turks and Sulejman were out to get him; he had wounded the latter and fought with him at Ravnje in 1813. He understood the rebellion was disorganized and too early, and that the Ottoman army was powerful and the Serbs were weak, dispersed and unorganized. Miloš told priest Radovan Vujović that it was the wrong time in harsh winter and without necessities and that the rebels should go home, and Vujović forwarded this to Hadži-Prodan at the Ilijak hill. Hearing of the rebels,
mutesellim Ašin-beg of Brusnica (Rudnik
nahiya) sent for Miloš; in order to save the people, Miloš joined him in suppressing the rebellion. In 2–3 October the
Hofkriegsrat was informed by general Siegenthal about the outbreak of rebellion in the Čačak nahiya led by Hadži-Prodan and the Ottoman dispatch of 2,000 Arnauts (Muslim Albanians) under Ćaja-paša on 29 September, and about the potential that the rebellion spreads over Šumadija to the
Danube. On 7 October he informed the Habsburg emperor of 3,000 rebels, the plague in Serbia and decision to not let Serb refugees into Austria. An undated
Hofkriegsrat document tells of 500 refugees in
Banat and failure of Ćaja-paša's campaign and his retreat, as well as the pause of transportation to Serbia and Bosnia. On 9 October minister
Metternich stressed the need for good Austrian–Ottoman relations and allowance for Ottoman troops to enter Austrian territory if needed, and the prohibition of Serbs to do so, and the need to prevent communications between Serbs and refugees and to forbid the latter to return to Serbia. Miloš gathered men in his nahiyas and with
bölükbaşı (captain) Ćor-Zuka went to Neboš-Gora (a peak of Jelica) to find Hadži-Prodan. Hadži-Prodan lost followers when Miloš appeared, and thus went to
Ježevica from where he and Nikola Vukićević rose the Rudnik nahiya and then the
Gruža and
Lepenica areas, upon which also the Jagodina nahiya joined. At Gruža, Vukićević drafted a proclamation dated 6 October, which said: In Dragačevo, Miloš and Ćor-Zuka killed 60 rebels and sent captives to Ašin-beg in Čačak. In the meantime, a large Ottoman army mustered at Čačak, part gathered by Sulejman's deputy
Ćaja-paša from Belgrade, and part gathered by Vizier
Adem Pasha of
Novi Pazar. Ćaja-paša commanded a force of 800
deli cavalry. Ćaja-paša imprisoned many notable Serbs in the Čačak nahiya, including Pajsije, wanting to deter the Serbs from future rebellion. 78 Serbian captives from Požega nahiya were executed in Čačak by Ćaja-paša. At Knić (in Gruža), the Serbian rebel trench with 200 or 1,000 men was approached by Turk troops numbering 1,000 infantry and 150 cavalry with Miloš calling them to surrender by warning them of bad consequences in further resistance and they surrendered to him "
on the face and on the soul" in the same day. At Knić,
Toma Vučić Perišić and
Sima Paštrmac surrendered to Miloš, while
Petar Tucaković refused and went into the hills. Hadži-Prodan and Vukićević refused, and led a victorious skirmish the next day, but seeing that they could not resist, and that Miloš did not want to join them, they disbanded the army. Hadži-Prodan and his young brothers crossed the
Sava over to Austrian territory, and Vukićević returned to his village, thereby ending the rebellion. According to the
Memoirs of Aleksa Simić, the Gruža leaders took to the Rudnik mountain and were safe thanks to Miloš. From Knić, Miloš and Ašin-beg were sent by Ćaja-paša to Kragujevac where they captured some and deterred the people from rebellion, then went to Jagodina, while Latif was sent to
Karanovac to hold the
hillfort. Ćaja-paša then arrived at Kragujevac where he killed 50 and put 86 in chains. Miloš easily managed to stop the people in Kragujevac and Jagodina from joining the rebellion. Ćaja-paša captured Serbs in Čačak, Knić, Kragujevac and Jagodina, and brought all captives, including women and children, to Sulejman in Belgrade as token of victory. Vukićević surrendered to Ćaja-paša and was at first free, but then captured with his younger brother. Adem Pasha left his army with Latif in Čačak and accompanied Ćaja-paša to Belgrade. Miloš saw what was happening and went to Rudnik. At the end of November 1814, Bosnian Vizier
Darendeli Ali Pasha mobilized 40,000, and sent 6,000 into Serbia, to loot and take slaves. Contemporary Ibrahim Mensur Efendi wrote how Bosnian roads were filled with "herds and Serb slaves driven into Bosnia". ==Belgrade executions==