Abstract
At the beginning of the early modern period, the concept of Europe did not
yet exist. Religion, not politics or geography, was the defining criterion.
It was Christendom that people referred to - not Europe - when they wanted
to introduce the concept of burdensharing. In military terms, differences
between Oriental and Occidental empires were less obvious; if anything, the
Ottomans seemed to have a head-start in terms of centralization and
professionalism. It was not the impact of Ottoman rule as such that created
the conditions for ?Balkan warfare?. It was the unsettled character of the
borders between ?East? and ?West? that gave rise to a form of low-intensity
conflict that might be said to provide a foretaste of what came to be known
as Balkan warfare.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia