The influence of the Bushati was established between 1757 and 1775 by
Mehmed Bushati, known as Bushatli Mehmed Pasha Plaku (, 'the elder'). In 1757, Mehmed, having eliminated two rival families and heading the Tabak esnaf of Shkodra as their spiritual Sheikh proclaimed himself
pasha of Shkodër. Mehmet Bushati transformed the
Sanjak of Scutari, created in 1479, into a semi-autonomous Pashalik of Shkodra. He was praised by Istanbul for ending the Arab and Berber pirates' reign of terror over the Venetian ships in the Adriatic. Mehmet expanded his area of control to the northeast, enlarged his political authority and refused to pay taxes to the Sublime Porte. Mehmed Bushati's son and third successor,
Kara Mahmud Bushati, pursued a policy of military expansion and established his control over northern Albania up to the
Toskëria and
Kosovo. He launched two attacks on
Montenegro (1785, 1796) and against Venice in revenge for the Bey of Tunis. He defeated several Ottoman expeditions dispatched to subdue him for his uncontrolled behavior. Kara Mahmud subdued Montenegrin tribes and forced the Venetians to pay him a tribute (haraç). He courted both the
Austrian and
Russian empires, receiving a promise from Vienna that they would recognise him as lord of all Albania in return for an alliance against the Sublime Porte. However, after taking money from the Austrians he decapited the Viennese emissaries, sent their heads to Istanbul and pledged loyalty to the sultan. In response, the Ottomans
ex post facto pardoned Kara Mahmud for his attacks against Venice and reappointed him governor of Shkodër. In 1796, the Montenegrin tribes of
Piperi and
Bjelopavlići defeated an expedition launched against them by the Shkodran Muslims in the
Battle of Krusi and decapitated Kara Mahmud Bushati. His death signalled a decline in autonomy for the
pashalik. Kara Mahmud's successor
Ibrahim Bushati cooperated with the Ottoman empire until his own death (1810). He was appointed Beylerbey of Rumelia and subdued the Serbs during his military expeditions against Belgrade. When the
Russo-Turkish War (1828–1829) broke out the territories of the Pahsalik of Scutari were further extended by
Mustafa Pasha Bushati. Sultan
Mahmud II required Mustafa Pasha Bushati's aid in raising troops. In return for the Pasha's support the sultan put more than half of Albania under Bushati's administration, but Mustafa requested more territory and power. After the Russo-Turkish War, fearing Albanian disobedience and consequent independence, the sultan commanded Bushati to transfer his territories to the
Grand Vizier and to agree to the placement of an Ottoman garrison in Shkodra. However Bushati refused the sultan's order, consequently Ottoman troops were sent against him. The Albanian and Ottoman armies clashed in Macedonia, where Mustafa Bushati lost three battles and was obliged to retreat to Shkodra. The Bushati
dynasty's rule came to an end when an Ottoman army under
Mehmed Reshid Pasha laid siege to the Rozafa castle at Shkodër in 1831 and forced the surrender of the last pasha Mustafa Bushati who had rebelled against the sultan whom they accused as Kaurr – infidel. This defeat not only ended a planned alliance between the Albanians and the
Bosnians, who were similarly seeking autonomy, but also brought about the dissolution of the
pashalik. == Aftermath ==