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What Should I Know About Kosovo?

By Brendan McGuigan
Updated May 17, 2024
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Kosovo is a small country in Eastern Europe that was formerly part of Serbia. It declared independence in 2008, although Serbia has refused to recognize this. The country covers 4,200 square miles (10,890 sq. km), and shares borders with Albania, Montenegro, and the Republic of Macedonia.

The region that is now Kosovo has been inhabited for millennia. Its early history is somewhat shrouded, but it appears that the region was controlled at different times by various Thracian and Illyrian tribes, the ancestors of the Albanian people. Eventually the region was occupied entirely by the Roman Empire.

In the late-6th century, the Slavic people arrived in the Balkans, and began to settle, assimilating Kosovo into their various kingdoms and empires. Kosovo was a part of the Bulgarian Empire from the mid-9th century to the early-11th century. In the 11th century, the Byzantine Empire seized the region. In the early 13th century, Serbia took control, retaining it until Serbia collapsed in on itself in the mid-14th century.

With the power vacuum left by Serbia, the Ottoman Empire moved into the region, quickly creating Kosovo as a territory of the Empire. Over the next few centuries, the Ottomans pushed a campaign of Islamization, reducing the Christian population of the region drastically, and forcing a large segment of the population to leave. Around the mid-17th century, the Albanian population of Kosovo began to increase substantially, likely as a result of a small number of large migrations from what is now Albania.

In the late 17th century, the Habsburgs invaded, driving the Ottoman forces back through Kosovo. Many Serbs and Albanians joined in the fight on both sides, and when the Ottomans drove the Habsburgs back out, they also brutalized many of the residents of Kosovo in retaliation. A huge exodus of Serbs resulted, with hundreds of thousands leaving the region. More Albanians immigrated to take over this land and fill the void left by the departing Serbs.

In 1912, following the first Balkan War, Kosovo became a part of Serbia, later becoming assimilated into the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, which would later become Yugoslavia. In the late 1930s, the new government made moves to remove the Albanian population from Kosovo to Albania, to replace it with Serbs. A decade later, with newfound power in the wake of World War II, the Albanians killed and pushed out around a hundred-thousand Serbs from the region.

When Yugoslavia became Communist in the late 1940s, Kosovo was made an autonomous region, and two decades later was made an autonomous province. In the mid 1970s, as Yugoslavia embraced a new constitution, Kosovo was made almost entirely autonomous, with nearly-complete self-government. The Albanian population continued to push for more autonomy, conflicting strongly with the Serb population, which wanted to become closer to Yugoslavia.

In the late 1980s, Yugoslavia abandoned Communism, and a hyper-nationalist Serbian, Slobodan Milosevic, took power. He pushed a strongly pro-Serbian agenda, and within a few years had removed much of Kosovo’s autonomy. By 1990, Milosevic had completely eliminated autonomy, and filled the regional government with his own supporters. By the late 1990s, the situation had become so intolerable for many of the ethnic Albanians in Kosovo that the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) was formed, immediately launching a guerrilla war against civilians and governmental targets.

Fighting intensified over the next few years, with atrocities being committed by both parties. It is thought that hundreds of thousands of Albanians were killed in this period. In early 1999, a massacre occurred at Racak, and galvanized the Western nations to more of an active role than they had been taking in quelling the conflict. NATO launched an offensive against Yugoslavian targets to force compliance from the government.

Travel to Kosovo is generally safe, although violence does still break out periodically. Before considering a visit, it is highly encouraged to check with State Department reports on the region.

WiseGEEK is dedicated to providing accurate and trustworthy information. We carefully select reputable sources and employ a rigorous fact-checking process to maintain the highest standards. To learn more about our commitment to accuracy, read our editorial process.

Discussion Comments

By anon234604 — On Dec 13, 2011

It is very safe to come to kosovo. I know because I have been living here for the past seven years.

Both parties did not cause atrocities because there would be no need for the albanians to even go to war had there not been mass killings and massacres and ethnic cleansing going on by the Serbian people lead by Slobodan. Read your history, not Serbian history. Factual history tells you that it was ethnic cleansing.

General Wesley Clark from NATO actually went to talk to Slobodan twice to ask him to remove his supporters from high positions in Kosovo and the army and both times he said no, which only shows how nationalistic and against Albanians they were to begin with.

By anon127883 — On Nov 17, 2010

Albanians are Illyrians. It is proved that Serbian (gypsies from Russia) came in the late sixth century. Serbians must accept the fact that is like that and in my opinion also half of Serbia belongs to the Albanians.

--Dr. M.

By anon118064 — On Oct 12, 2010

Albanians are Illyrians, and that is proved. Read more history, but not history made up by Serbs. The Serbians came to Balkan in the late 6th century, but somehow they think everything belongs to them. There lived people before the 6th century in Balkan. There has never been a record that Albanians settle from somewhere else to Balkan. They just were there.

By anon114348 — On Sep 28, 2010

Albaninas are not Illyrians, and it is proved they came to the Balkans in the 12th century when Serbia was already established.

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