Ičko's Peace

Ičko's Peace
Signed 13 July 1806 (Serbs)
January 1807 (Ottomans)
Location Revolutionary Serbia, Ottoman Empire
Signatories Karađorđe
Mladen Milovanović
Parties  Ottoman Empire
Revolutionary Serbia
Depositary Petar Ičko

Ičko's Peace (Serbian: Ичков мир/Ičkov mir) is the name given to a peace treaty negotiated in between July and October 1806 by Petar Ičko, an Ottoman dragoman (diplomat) and representative of the Serbian rebels, during the First Serbian Uprising. Ičko had been sent to Constantinople twice in the latter half of 1806 to negotiate peace. The Ottomans seemed ready to grant Serbia autonomy following rebel victories in 1805 and 1806, also pressured by the Russians, who had taken Moldavia and Wallachia; they agreed to a sort of autonomy and clearer stipulation of taxes in January 1807, by which time the rebels had already taken Belgrade. The rebels rejected the treaty and sought Russian aid to their independence, while the Ottomans had declared war on Russia in December 1806. A Russian-Serbian alliance treaty was signed on 10 June 1807.

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