Ottoman times . The
Turkish Ottoman Empire conquered part of Croatia from the 15th to the 19th century. Numerous
Croats converted to
Islam, some after being taken
prisoners of war, some through the
devşirme system. The westernmost border of Ottoman Empire in
Europe became entrenched on Croatian soil. In 1519, Croatia was called the
Antemurale Christianitatis by
Pope Leo X. The historical names of many officials in the Ottoman Empire reveal their origin (Hirvat = Hrvat or Horvat, which is a Croatian name for Croat):
Rüstem Pasha (Rustem Pasha Hrvat - Opuković),
Piyale Pasha (Pijali Pasha Hrvat), Memipaša Hrvat, Tahvilpaša Kulenović Hrvat etc. There was some considerable confusion over the terms "Croat" and "Serb" in these times, and "Croat" in some of these cases could mean anyone from the wider South Slavic area. In 1553,
Antun Vrančić, Roman cardinal, and Franjo Zay, a diplomat, visited Istanbul as envoys of the
Croatian-Hungarian king to discuss a peace treaty with the
Ottoman Empire. During the initial ceremonial greetings they had with
Rüstem Pasha Hrvat (a Croat) the conversation led in Turkish with an official interpreter was suddenly interrupted. Rustem Pasha Hrvat asked in Croatian if Zay and Vrančić spoke
Croatian. The interpreter was then dismissed and they proceeded in Croatian during the entire process of negotiations. In 1585, traveler and writer
Marco A. Pigaffetta, in his
Itinerario published in
London, states:
In Constantinople it is customary to speak Croatian, a language which is understood by almost all official Turks, especially military men. Crucially though, the
lingua franca at the time among Slavic elites in the Ottoman Empire was still
Old Church Slavonic. For Italians traveling through to Istanbul, the language of the Slavic Croats was often the only exposure they had to any of the Slavic languages; indeed, Bulgarian and Macedonian dialects were far more common in Istanbul than Croatian.
Since the nineteenth century was completed in 1987. Within the territory of the present-day Republic of Croatia, Muslim believers were registered for the first time during the 1931 census: 1,239 of them were in Zagreb, and their overall number in Croatia was approximately 4,000. The Quran was translated into Croatian for the first time by
Džemaludin Čaušević and Muhamed Pandža in 1937. During the
Second World War the mufti of Zagreb was
Ismet Muftić. After the war he was tried and eventually publicly hanged by the
Partisans in 1945 because he collaborated with the fascist regime of the Croatian
World War II era dictator
Ante Pavelić. In the following censuses in the
People's Republic of Croatia, registered Muslim believers numbered as follows: • 1,077 persons in 1948 • 16,185 persons in 1953 • 3,113 persons in 1961 • 18,487 persons in 1971 • 23,740 persons in 1981 • 43,486 persons in 1991 In the 1960s, the Bosnians Muslims community advocated for the recognition of the
Muslims as a nationality in
SFR Yugoslavia. The
1974 Yugoslav Constitution allowed for the official recognition of the Muslims as a nationality, therefore allowing more individuals to declare their alignment with a compromise categorization of
ethnic Muslims (
Muslimani), in this case separated from a religious basis (
muslimani without capital letter). For example,
Džemal Bijedić, a communist federal prime-minister was a declared "Muslim" and an atheist. The spike in the number of self-declared "Muslims" during socialist Yugoslavia times should thus be understood as persons having a family Muslim cultural background (similar to the concept of
cultural Christians), rather than practicing believers in Islam. Based on the figures recorded during the 1931 to 1961 census, it may also be concluded that a certain number of Muslim believers declared themselves as
Croats or
Yugoslavs. After the
dissolution of Yugoslavia, an additional increase can be attributed to the influx of Bosnian Muslims that took place during and after the
1992-1996 Bosnian conflict. The
2001 Croatian census identified a total of 56,777 adherents of Islam, or 1.3% of the total population of Croatia. ==Statistics==