I jednom da se raščisti gde je Petrova Gora, severna granica Hrvatske sa Ugarskom:
Immediately after the Ottoman capture of the 
Dalmatian hinterland and 
Lika from the 
Kingdom of Croatia and the 
Republic of Venice in the 1520s, they organized it as a 
borderland entity and named it the Vilayet of "Croats" (
Turkish: 
Hırvat, 
Croatian: 
Hrvati).
[2][3] The southern border of the territory of this vilayet was river Cetina while north-western border was 
Lika and river 
Zrmanja.
[3][4] It also included region around river 
Krka.
[5] This territory was administratively governed as the Croatian vilayet which belonged to the 
Sanjak of Bosnia and listed as such in its 1530 
defter (tax registry).
[6]
Administration
The capital of the vilayet was 
Sinj. Its territory was under the jurisdiction of the Skradin 
kadiluk. Aličić claimed that territories of the Croatian vilayet and Skradin kadiluk were the same and that the official Ottoman administrative unit, Croatian vilayet, was under administrative-judicial jurisdiction of Skradin.
[7][8]
In 1528 the Croatian vilayet and 
kadiluk of Skradin had the following 
nahiyahs:
[9][10]
The first governor of the Croatian vilayet was 
Malkoč-beg.
[11] Around 1537 the governor of the Croatian vilayet was Mahmud Bey.
[1] Many soldiers from the vilayet participated at the 
Battle of Mohács. Most of the Ottoman soldiers registered before the battle were labelled as Bosnians or Croats, designating the territory they were recruited at.
[7] All of them had Muslim names, which proves that the process of 
Islamization of the newly conquered population was much faster than earlier assumed.
[7]
The Croatian vilayet was disestablished when it was annexed by the newly established 
Sanjak of Klis in 1537.
[12][13]
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