Principality of Serbia (early medieval)
Principality of Serbia | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
780–960 | |||||||||||||
Emblem of
prince Strojimir | |||||||||||||
Capital | several cities Destinikon[1] | ||||||||||||
Common languages | Old Serbian | ||||||||||||
Religion | Slavic paganism (before 860s) Christianity (c. 870) | ||||||||||||
Demonym(s) | Serbian, Serb | ||||||||||||
Government | Monarchy | ||||||||||||
Prince (Knyaz) | |||||||||||||
• c. 780 | Višeslav (first known by name) | ||||||||||||
• 831–850 | Vlastimir (notable) | ||||||||||||
• 850–891 | Mutimir (first Christian) | ||||||||||||
• 933–943/960 | Časlav (last) | ||||||||||||
Historical era | Early Middle Ages | ||||||||||||
• Established | 780 | ||||||||||||
• Byzantine annexation | 960 | ||||||||||||
ISO 3166 code | RS | ||||||||||||
|
The Principality of Serbia (Modern Serbian: Кнежевина Србија / Kneževina Srbija) was one of the early medieval states of the Serbs, located in the western regions of Southeastern Europe. It existed from the 8th century up to c. 969–971 and was ruled by the Vlastimirović dynasty. Its first ruler known by name was Višeslav who started ruling around 780. While by that time, starting from the year 680–681, the Bulgarian state had taken the lands to the east. Vlastimir resisted and defeated the Bulgarian army in a three-year-war (839–842), and the two powers lived in peace for some decades. Vlastimir's three sons succeeded in ruling Serbia together, although not for long; Serbia became a key part in the power struggle between the Byzantines and Bulgarians, predominantly allied with the Byzantines, which also resulted in major dynastic wars for a period of three decades. The principality was annexed in 924 by Simeon I and subjected to Bulgarian rule until 933 when Serbian prince Časlav was established as ruler of the Serbian land, becoming the most powerful ruler of the Vlastimirović dynasty.
An important process during this period was the Christianization of the Serbs,[2] completed by the establishment of Christianity as state-religion in the second half of the 9th century. The principality was annexed by the Byzantines in c. 969–971 and ruled as the Catepanate of Ras.[3] The main information of the history of the principality and Vlastimirović dynasty are recorded in the contemporary historical work De Administrando Imperio (written c. 948–949).[4][5][6]
Background
[edit]Slavs (Sklavenoi) settled throughout the Balkans during the 6th and the 7th centuries,[7] thus marking the end of the early Byzantine rule in those regions.[8] The history of the early medieval Serbian principality and the Vlastimirović dynasty is recorded in the work De Administrando Imperio (On the Governance of the Empire, abbr. "DAI"), compiled by the Byzantine Emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus (r. 913–959). The work mentions the first Serbian ruler, without a name (known conventionally as "Unknown Archon"), that led the White Serbs to southeastern Europe and received the protection of Emperor Heraclius (r. 610–641), prior to the Bulgar invasion (680).[9][10] The Serbian ruler was titled "Prince (archon) of the Serbia" (αρχων Σερβλίας).[11] The DAI mentions that this ruler was succeeded by a son, followed by a grandson, and historians generally accept the accounts of DAI on succession of princes from the same family, but their names are unknown until the coming of Višeslav (c. 780-800).[12]
Višeslav, Radoslav and Prosigoj (circa 780–830)
[edit]The time and circumstances of the first three Serbian rulers are almost unknown. The first of the dynasty known by name was Višeslav who began his rule around 780, being a contemporary of Charlemagne (fl. 768–814).[13] The Serbs at that time were organized into župe (sing. župa), a confederation of village communities (roughly the equivalent of a county), headed by a local župan (a magistrate or governor); the governorship was hereditary, and the župan reported to the Serbian prince, whom they were obliged to aid in war.[14] According to DAI, "baptized Serbia" (known erroneously in historiography as Raška[15]), included the inhabited cities (καστρα/kastra) of Destinikon (Δεστινίκον), Tzernabouskeï (Τζερναβουσκέη), Megyretous (Μεγυρέτους), Dresneïk (Δρεσνεήκ), Lesnik (Λεσνήκ), and Salines (Σαληνές), while the "small land" (χοριον/chorion) of Bosnia (Βοσωνα), part of Serbia, had the cities of Katara (Κατερα) and Desnik (Δέσνηκ).[16][17] The other Serb-inhabited lands (or principalities) that were mentioned included the "countries" of Paganija, Zahumlje and Travunija,[16][18] while the "land" of Duklja was held by the Byzantines (it was presumably settled with Serbs as well).[19][20] Given the large territory, the Serbs most likely arrived as a small military elite which managed to organize and assimilate other already settled and more numerous Slavs.[21][22][23] These polities bordered "Serbia" to the north.[16] The exact borders of the early Serbian state are unclear.[15]
Although Višeslav is only mentioned by name, the DAI mentions that the Serbs served the Byzantine Emperor and that they were at this time at peace with the Bulgars, whose neighbors they were and with whom they shared a common frontier.[24] The First Bulgarian Empire, under Telerig, planned to colonize some of their lands with more Slavs from the neighbouring Berziti, as the earlier Bulgar expansion had caused massive Slav migrations and depopulation of Bulgaria — in 762, more than 200,000 people fled to Byzantine territory and were relocated to Asia Minor.[25][26] The Bulgars were defeated in 774, after Constantine V learned of their planned raid. In 783, a large Slavic uprising took place in the Byzantine Empire, stretching from Macedonia to the Peloponnese, which was subsequently quelled by Byzantine patrikios Staurakios.[27]
Višeslav was succeeded by his son Radoslav, then grandson Prosigoj,[13] and one of these two most likely ruled during the revolt of Ljudevit Posavski against the Franks (819–822);[28] according to Einhard's Royal Frankish Annals, written in 822, Ljudevit went from his seat at Sisak to the Serbs,[28] with Einhard mentioning that for the Serbs "is said to be holding a great part of Dalmatia" (ad Sorabos, quae natio magnam Dalmatiae partem obtinere dicitur).[29] According to Živković, the usage of the term Dalmatia in the Royal Frankish Annals to refer both to the land where Serbs ruled as well as to the lands under the rule of Croat duke, was likely a reflection of the Franks' territorial aspirations towards the entire area of the former Roman Province of Dalmatia.[30]Though the described borders mark a large area, it is mostly a mountainous and inaccessible terrain, rugged with the high ranges of the Dinarides. Within this region, the Serbs settled only a small, isolated and mutually distant river valleys, karst fields and fertile basins. Those patches of the territory had fertile land, suitable for the agriculture, while the barely accessible, some mountain regions remained uninhabited.[31] Višeslav's great-grandson Vlastimir began his rule during 830s, and he is the oldest Serbian ruler on which there is more substantial data.[32]
Countering Bulgarian expansion (805–829)
[edit]In the east, the Bulgarian Empire grew strong. In 805 Krum conquered the Braničevci, Timočani and Obotrites, to the east of Serbia, and banished their tribal chiefs and replaced them with administrators appointed by the central government.[33] In 815, the Bulgarians and Byzantines signed a 30-year peace treaty, but in 818, during the rule of Omurtag (814–836), the Braničevci and Timočani together with other tribes of the frontiers, revolted and seceded from Bulgaria because of an administrative reform that had deprived them much of their local authority.[34] The Timočani left the society (association, alliance[35]) of the Bulgarian Empire, and sought, together with the Danubian Obotrites and Guduscani, protection from Holy Roman Emperor Louis the Pious (r. 813–840), and met him at his court at Herstal.[35] The Timočani migrated into Frankish territory, somewhere in Lower Pannonia, and were last mentioned in 819, when they were persuaded by Ljudevit to join him in fighting the Franks.[35] The Danubian Obotrites stayed in Banat, and resisted the Bulgars until 824 when nothing more is heard of them.[36] Krum sent envoys to the Franks and requested that the precise boundary be demarcated between them, and negotiations lasted until 826, when the Franks neglected him.[36] The Bulgars answered by subjugating the Slavs that lived in Pannonia. Then the Bulgars sent ships up the Drava river, and, in 828, devastated Upper Pannonia north of the Drava.[36] There was more fighting in 829 as well, and, by this time, the Bulgars had conquered all of their former Slavic allies.[36][37]
The Bulgarian Empire had a general policy of expansion in which they would first impose the payment of tribute on a neighboring people and the obligation of supplying military assistance in the form of an alliance (society), leaving them internal self-government and local rulers, and when the need for this kind of relationship expired, they would terminate the self-government of the said people and impose their direct and absolute power, integrating them fully into the Bulgarian political and cultural system.[38]
Vlastimir, Mutimir and Prvoslav (830–892)
[edit]Vlastimir succeeded his father, Prosigoj, in c. 830.[39] He united the Serbian tribes in the vicinity.[40] The Serbs were alarmed, and most likely consolidated due to the spreading of the Bulgarian Empire towards their borders by the Bulgarian conquest of neighbouring Slavs,[41][42] and possibly sought to cut off the Bulgar expansion to the south (Macedonia).[43] Emperor Theophilos (r. 829–842) was recognized as the nominal suzerain (overlord) of the Serbs,[41] and most likely encouraged them to thwart the Bulgars.[43] The thirty-year-peace treaty between the Byzantines and Bulgars, signed in 815, was still in effect.[44]
According to Constantine VII, the Serbs and Bulgars had lived peacefully as neighbours until the Bulgar invasion in 839 (in the last years of Theophilos).[41] It is not known what exactly prompted the war,[43] as Porphyrogenitus gives no clear answer; whether it was a result of Serbian-Bulgarian relations, i.e., the Bulgar conquest to the southeast, or a result of the Byzantine-Bulgarian rivalry, in which Serbia was allied with the Byzantines. According to Porphyrogenitus, the Bulgars wanted to continue their conquest of Slav lands and subjugate the Serbs. Presian I (r. 836–852) launched an invasion into Serbian territory in 839, which led to a war that lasted for three years, in which the victorious army of Vlastimir expelled Presian from Serbia; Presian lost a large number of his men, and made no territorial gains.[43][45] The Serbs had an advantage in the forests and gorges.[43] The defeat of the Bulgars, who had become one of the greater powers in the 9th century, shows that Serbia was an organized state, fully capable of defending its borders, and possessed a very high military and administrative organization. It is not known whether Serbia at the time of Vlastimir had a fortification system and developed military structures with clearly defined roles of the župan. After the victory over the Bulgars, Vlastimir's status rose, and according to Fine he went on to expand to the west, taking Bosnia, and Herzegovina (known as Hum).[46] In the meantime; Braničevo, Morava, Timok, Vardar and Podrimlje were occupied by the Bulgars.[47] Vlastimir married off his daughter to Krajina, the son of a local župan of Trebinje, Beloje, in ca. 847/848. With this marriage, Vlastimir elevated the title of Krajina to archon. The Belojević family was thus entitled to rule Travunia.[48]
After Vlastimir's death, the rule was divided among his three sons: Mutimir, Strojimir and Gojnik. The brothers defeated the Bulgars once again c. 853-854, capturing Bulgarian prince Vladimir, son of Boris of Bulgaria.[40][49] After that, Serbs and the Bulgarians concluded peace. During the following period, the Christianization of the Serbs was completed.[50][51] Mutimir maintained the communion with the Eastern Church (Constantinople) when Pope John VIII invited him to recognize the jurisdiction of the bishopric of Sirmium.
The Serbs and Bulgarians adopted the Old Slavonic liturgy instead of the Greek. Sometime after defeating the Bulgarians, Mutimir ousted his brothers, who fled to Bulgaria. He kept Gopnik's son Petar Gojniković in his court, but he managed to escape to Croatia. Mutimir ruled until 890, being succeeded by his son Prvoslav. However, Prvoslav was overthrown by Petar who had returned from his exile in Croatia in c. 892.[40]
Peter, Pavle and Zaharija (892–927)
[edit]The name Peter suggests that Christianity had started to permeate into Serbia, undoubtedly through Serbia's contacts with the Bulgarians and Byzantines. Peter secured himself on the throne (after fending off a challenge from Klonimir, son of Stojmir) and was recognized by Tsar Symeon I of Bulgaria. An alliance was signed between the two states. Already having Travunia's loyalty, Peter began to expand his state north and west. He annexed the Bosna River valley, and then moved west securing allegiance from the Narentines, a fiercely independent, pirateering Slavic tribe. However, Peter's expansion into Dalmatia brought him into conflict with Prince Michael of Zahumlje, who has also grown powerful, ruling the coastal Principality of Zachlumia.[52][53]
Although allied to Simeon I of Bulgaria, Peter became increasingly disgruntled by the fact that he was essentially subordinate to him. Peter's expansion toward the coast facilitated contacts with the Byzantines, by way of the strategies of Dyrrhachium. Searching for allies against Bulgaria, the Byzantines showered Peter with gold and promises of greater independence if he would join their alliance - a convincing strategy. Peter might have been planning an attack on Bulgaria with the Magyars, showing that his realm had stretched north to the Sava river. However, Michael of Zahumlje forewarned Symeon of this plan, since Michael was an enemy of Peter, and a loyal vassal of Symeon. What followed was multiple Bulgarian interventions and a succession of Serb rulers.[52][53]
Symeon attacked Serbia (in 917) and deposed Peter, placing Pavle Branović (a grandson of Mutimir) as Prince of Serbia, subordinate to Symeon (although some scholars suggest that Symeon took control over Serbia directly at this time). Unhappy with this, the Byzantines then sent Zaharija Prvoslavljević in 920 to oust Pavle, but he failed and was sent to Bulgaria as prisoner. The Byzantines then succeeded in turning Prince Pavle to their side. In turn, Zaharija invaded Serbia with a Bulgarian force, and ousted his cousin Pavle in 922. However, he too turned to Byzantium. A punitive force sent by the Bulgarians was defeated. Thus we see a continuous cycle of dynastic strife amongst Vlastimir's successors, stirred on by the Byzantine and Bulgarians, who were effectively using the Serbs as pawns. Whilst Bulgarian help was more effective, Byzantine help seemed preferable. Simeon made peace with the Byzantines to settle affairs with Serbia once and for all. In 924, he sent a large army accompanied by Časlav, son of Klonimir. The army forced Zaharija to flee to Croatia. The Serbian župans were then summoned to recognize Časlav as the new Prince. When they came, however, they were all imprisoned and taken to Bulgaria, as too was Časlav. Much of Serbia was ravaged, and many people fled to Croatia, Bulgaria and Constantinople. Simeon made Serbia into a Bulgarian province so that Bulgaria now bordered Croatia and Zahumlje. He then resolved to attack Croatia, because it was a Byzantine ally and had sheltered the Serbian Prince.[54][55][56][57]
Časlav (933–943/960)
[edit]The Bulgarian rule over Serbia lasted only three years. After Symeon died, Časlav Klonimirović (933- c. 943/960) led Serb refugees back to Serbia. He secured the allegiance of the Dalmatian duchies and ended Bulgarian rule in central Serbia. After Tomislav's death, Croatia was in near-anarchy as his sons vied for sole rule, so Časlav was able to extend his domain north to the Vrbas river (gaining the allegiance of the chiefs of the various Bosnian župas).[58]
During this apogee of Serbian power, Christianity and culture penetrated Serbia, as the Serb prince lived in peaceful and cordial relations with the Byzantines. However, strong as it had grown to be, Serbia's power (as in other early Slavic states) was only as strong as its ruler. There was no centralized rule, but instead a confederacy of Slavic principalities. The existence of the unified Grand Principality was dependent on the allegiance of the lesser princes to Časlav. When he died defending Bosnia against Magyar incursions sometime between 950 and 960, the coalition disintegrated.[58]
After this, there is a gap in the history of hinterland Serbia (in later western sources: Rascia),[59] as it was annexed by the Byzantine Empire (c. 970). The dynasty continued to rule the maritime regions, and in the 990s, Jovan Vladimir rose as the most powerful Serbian prince, ruling over present-day Montenegro, eastern Herzegovina, and northern Albania. This state became known as Duklja, after the ancient Roman town of Doclea. However, by 997, it was made subject to tsar Samuel of Bulgaria.[58]
When the Byzantines finally defeated the Bulgarians, they regained control over most of the Balkans for the first time in four centuries. Serbian lands were governed by a strategos presiding over the Theme of Sirmium. However, local Serbian princes continued to reign as vassals to the Byzantine Emperor, maintaining local autonomy over their lands, while only nominally being Byzantine subjects. Forts were maintained in Belgrade, Sirmium, Niš and Braničevo. These were, for the most part, in the hands of local nobility, which often revolted against Byzantine rule.
Fall and aftermath
[edit]After Časlav died c. 943/960, the hinterland of Serbia was annexed by the Byzantines and reorganized as the Catepanate of Ras, (971–976).[60][3][61] Serbia lost its centralized rule and the provinces once again came under the Empire. Jovan Vladimir emerged later as a ruler of Duklja, a small territory centered in Bar on the Adriatic coast, as a Byzantine vassal. His realm was called Serbia, Dalmatia, Sklavonia, etc., and eventually included much of the maritime provinces, including Travunia and Zachlumia. His realm probably stretched into the hinterland to include some parts of Zagorje (inland Serbia and Bosnia) as well. Vladimir's pre-eminent position over other Slavic nobles in the area explains why Emperor Basil approached him for an anti-Bulgarian alliance. With his hands tied by war in Anatolia, Emperor Basil required allies for his war against Tsar Samuel, who ruled a Bulgarian empire stretching over Macedonia. In retaliation, Samuel invaded Duklja in 997, and pushed through Dalmatia up to the city of Zadar, incorporating Bosnia and Serbia into his realm. After defeating Vladimir, Samuel reinstated him as a vassal prince. We do not know what Vladimir's connection was to the previous princes of Serbia, or to the rulers of Croatia—much of what is written in the Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja about the genealogy of the Doclean rulers is mythological. Vladimir was murdered by Vladislav, Samuel's nephew and successor of his son, circa 1016 AD. The last prominent member of his family, his uncle Dragimir, was killed by some local citizens in Kotor in 1018. That same year, the Byzantines defeated the Bulgarians, and in one masterful stroke re-took virtually all of southeastern Europe.[58]
Government
[edit]Vlastimirović dynasty |
---|
The Serbian ruler was titled "Prince (archon) of the Serbs" (αρχων Σερβλίας).[62] In Serbian historiography, the Slavic title of knez (кнез) is used instead of the Greek arhont (архонт).[63] The DAI mentions that the Serbian throne is inherited by the son, i.e. the first-born; his descendants succeeded him, though their names are unknown until the coming of Višeslav.[12] The Serbs at that time were organized into župe (sing. župa), a confederation of village communities (roughly the equivalent of a county), headed by a local župan (a magistrate or governor); the governorship was hereditary, and the župan reported to the Serbian prince, whom they were obliged to aid in war.[14]
Historian B. Radojković (1958) proposed that Serbia was a "divided principality". According to him, Višeslav could have been a chief military leader (veliki vojvoda) who with his company seized the entire power in his hands and turned himself into a hereditary ruler, as Veliki župan; in this way, the first Serbian state was thus established after 150 years of permanent living in the new homeland and existence of military democracy.[64] However, B. Radojković's work was discredited by Sima Ćirković in 1960.[65]
Geography
[edit]Cities
[edit]According to DAI, baptized Serbia included the following cities (καστρα/kastra),[66][67][68] with spellings used in Moravcsik's transcript (1967):
"Inhabited city" | Notes |
---|---|
Serbia (proper) | |
Destinikon (Δεστινίκον) | Slavicized as Destinik and Dostinik. —Unidentified[69] |
Tzernabouskeï (Τζερναβουσκέη) | Slavicized as Crnobuški and Černavusk. —Unidentified[69] |
Megyretous (Μεγυρέτους) | Slavicized as Međurečje (meaning "[land] between rivers"). —Unidentified[69] |
Dresneïk (Δρεσνεήκ) | Slavicized as Drežnik and Drsnik. —Unidentified[69] |
Lesnik (Λεσνήκ) | Slavicized as Lešnik and Lesnica —Unidentified[69] |
Salines (Σαληνές) | Slavicized as Soli. —Tuzla[69] |
Bosnia | |
Katera (Κατερα) | Slavicized as Kotor.[70] —Unidentified[69][71] |
Desnik (Δέσνηκ) | —Unidentified.[17][71][69] |
Religion
[edit]By the beginning of the 7th century, Byzantine provincial and ecclesiastical order in the region was destroyed by invading Sclaveni and Pannonian Avars. The church life was renewed in the same century in the province of Illyricum and Dalmatia after a more pronounced Christianization of the Serbs and other Slavs by the Roman Church.[72][1][73][74] In the 7th and mid-8th century the area wasn't under jurisdiction of the Patriarchate of Constantinople.[75] Early medieval Serbs are accounted as Christian by 870s,[76] but it was a process that ended in the late 9th century during the time of Basil I,[77] and medieval necropolises until the 13th century in the territory of modern Serbia show an "incomplete process of Christianization" as local Christianity depended on the social structure (urban and rural).[78] Basil I probably sent at least one embassy to Mutimir of Serbia,[79] who decided to maintain the communion of Church in Serbia with the Patriarchate of Constantinople when Pope John VIII invited him to get back to the jurisdiction of the bishopric of Sirmium (see also Archbishopric of Moravia) in a letter dated to May 873.[80][81][82] It is considered that Destinikon was an ecclesiastical centre and capital of early medieval Serbia.[83][1][84]
The seal of Strojimir (d. between 880 and 896), the brother of Mutimir, was bought by the Serbian state in an auction in Germany. The seal has a Patriarchal cross in the center and Greek inscriptions that say: "God, help Strojimir (CTPOHMIP)".[85][86]
Petar Gojniković (r. 892–917) was evidently a Christian prince.[87] Christianity presumably was spreading in his time.[40] Also, since Serbia bordered Bulgaria, Christian influence—and perhaps missionaries—came from there.[40] This would increase during the twenty-year peace.[88] The previous generation (Mutimir, Strojimir and Gojnik) had Slav names, but the following (Petar, Stefan, Pavle, Zaharija) had Christian names, an indication of strong Byzantine missions to Serbia, as well as to the Slavs of the Adriatic coast, in the 870s.[87]
The imperial charter of Basil II from 1020 to the Archbishopric of Ohrid, in which the rights and jurisdictions were established, mentions that the Episcopy of Ras belonged to the Bulgarian autocephal church during the time of Peter I (927–969) and Samuel of Bulgaria (977–1014).[89][90] It is considered that it was possibly founded by the Bulgarian emperor,[83][91] or it is the latest date when could have been integrated to the Bulgarian Church.[92] If previously existed, it probably was part of the Bulgarian metropolis of Morava, but certainly not of Durrës.[93] If it was on the Serbian territory, seems that the Church in Serbia or part of the territory of Serbia became linked and influenced by the Bulgarian Church between 870 and 924.[94][95][96] Anyway, the church would have been protected by Bulgarian controlled forts.[97] By then, at the latest, Serbia must have received the Cyrillic alphabet and Slavic religious text, already familiar but perhaps not yet preferred to Greek.[98]
Notable early church buildings include the Monastery of Holy Archangel Michael on Prevlaka, built in the beginning of the 9th century, on the location of older churches of three-nave structure with three apses to the East, dating from the 3rd and 6th centuries, Bogorodica Hvostanska (6th century) and Church of Saints Peter and Paul.[99]
Archaeology
[edit]History of Serbia |
---|
Serbia portal |
- Church of Saint Apostles Peter and Paul in Ras
- Sočanica basilica
- Gradina, Sebečevska reka, in Raška[100]
- Gradina Martinića, Zeta[100]
- Gradina, Brsenica, near Sjenica[100]
- Gradina on Jelica, near Čačak[100]
- Gradina on Postenj, near Petar's Church[100]
See also
[edit]- List of Serbian monarchs
- Names of Serbia
- Duklja
- Serbia in the Middle Ages
- White Serbia (before 610)
- Serbian Grand Principality (1091–1217)
- Serbian Kingdom (1217–1345)
- Serbian Empire (1345–1371)
- Fall of the Serbian Empire (1371–1402)
- Serbian Despotate (1402–1459)
- Bulgarian–Serbian wars (medieval)
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Živković 2013a, pp. 47.
- ^ Špehar 2010, p. 203-220.
- ^ a b Krsmanović 2008, p. 135.
- ^ Moravcsik 1967.
- ^ Curta 2001, p. 64-66.
- ^ Živković 2010a, p. 117–131.
- ^ Janković 2004, p. 39-61.
- ^ Špehar 2015b, p. 329-350.
- ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 10-15.
- ^ Živković 2008a, p. 89-90.
- ^ Moravcsik 1967, p. 156, 160.
- ^ a b Ćirković 2004, p. 14.
- ^ a b Samardžić & Duškov 1993, p. 24.
- ^ a b Fine 1991, pp. 225, 304.
- ^ a b Novaković 1981.
- ^ a b c Moravcsik 1967, pp. 153–155.
- ^ a b Mrgić-Radojčić 2004, pp. 46–47.
- ^ Komatina 2014, p. 38.
- ^ Fine 1991, p. 53.
- ^ Fine 1991, pp. 160, 202, 225.
- ^ Dvornik et al. 1962, pp. 139, 142.
- ^ Fine 1991, pp. 37, 57.
- ^ Heather 2010, pp. 404–408, 424–425, 444.
- ^ Moravcsik 1967, p. 155.
- ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 16.
- ^ Komatina 2014, pp. 33–42.
- ^ Ostrogorsky 1956, p. 170.
- ^ a b Ćirković 2004, pp. 14–15.
- ^ Pertz 1845, p. 83.
- ^ Živković 2011, p. 395.
- ^ Ćirković 2004, pp. 7–9.
- ^ Živković 2008a, pp. 63, 253.
- ^ Bulgarian Academy of Sciences 1966, p. 66.
- ^ Slijepčević 1958, pp. 35, 41, 52
- ^ a b c Komatina 2010, p. 4
- ^ a b c d Komatina 2010, p. 19
- ^ Einhard, year 827
- ^ Komatina 2010, p. 24
- ^ Živković 2008a, p. 208.
- ^ a b c d e Fine 1991, p. 141.
- ^ a b c Bury 1912, p. 372.
- ^ Fine 1991, pp. 109–110.
- ^ a b c d e Runciman 1930, p. 88.
- ^ Runciman 1930, p. 72.
- ^ Fine 1991, pp. 108, 110.
- ^ Fine 1991, p. 110.
- ^ Ashmore 1961, p. 341: "the eastern provinces (Branichevo, Morava, Timok, Vardar, Podrimlye) were occupied by the Bulgars."
- ^ Živković 2008a, pp. 222–223.
- ^ Shepard 1995, p. 239.
- ^ Špehar 2010, pp. 203–220.
- ^ Špehar 2015a, pp. 71–93.
- ^ a b Ćirković 2004, pp. 17–18.
- ^ a b Uzelac 2018, pp. 236–245.
- ^ Fine 1991, pp. 151–152.
- ^ Whittow 1996, p. 291.
- ^ Shepard 1999, p. 578.
- ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 18.
- ^ a b c d Ćirković 2004.
- ^ Kalić 1995, pp. 147–155.
- ^ Nesbitt & Oikonomides 1991, pp. 100–101.
- ^ Ivanišević & Krsmanović 2013, p. 450.
- ^ Moravcsik 1967, p. 156.
- ^ Ćirković 2004, pp. 11–12.
- ^ Radojković 1959, p. 9.
- ^ Ćirković 1960, pp. 195–198.
- ^ Živković 2008b, pp. 9–28.
- ^ Bulić 2013, pp. 137–234.
- ^ Špehar 2019, pp. 113–124.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Petrović 2013, p. 282.
- ^ Bulić 2013, p. 219.
- ^ a b Bulić 2013, p. 156.
- ^ Curta 2001, p. 125, 130.
- ^ Komatina 2015, pp. 713.
- ^ Komatina 2016, pp. 44–47, 73–74.
- ^ Komatina 2016, pp. 47.
- ^ Živković 2013a, pp. 35.
- ^ Komatina 2016, pp. 45–46.
- ^ Špehar 2010, pp. 216.
- ^ Živković 2013a, pp. 46.
- ^ Živković 2013a, pp. 44–46.
- ^ Komatina 2015, pp. 713, 717.
- ^ Komatina 2016, pp. 73.
- ^ a b Popović 1999, p. 401.
- ^ Živković 2013a, pp. 30.
- ^ Živković 2007, pp. 23–29.
- ^ "Pečat srpskog kneza Strojimira" [Seal of the Serbian prince Strojimir]. Glas javnosti (in Bosnian). 27 July 2006.
- ^ a b Vlasto 1970, p. 208.
- ^ Fine 1991, p. 142.
- ^ Komatina 2015, pp. 717.
- ^ Komatina 2016, pp. 76, 89–90.
- ^ Ćirković 2004, pp. 20, 30.
- ^ Komatina 2016, pp. 76–77.
- ^ Komatina 2016, pp. 75, 88–91.
- ^ Komatina 2015, pp. 717–718.
- ^ Komatina 2016, pp. 77, 91.
- ^ Špehar 2010, pp. 203, 216.
- ^ Špehar 2019, p. 122.
- ^ Vlasto 1970, p. 209.
- ^ Јанковић 2007.
- ^ a b c d e Јанковић 2012.
Sources
[edit]- Primary sources
- Ферјанчић, Божидар (1959). "Константин VII Порфирогенит". Византијски извори за историју народа Југославије. Vol. 2. Београд: Византолошки институт. pp. 1–98.
- Constantine Porphyrogenitus. "Περὶ τῆς Δελματίας καὶ τῶν ἐν αὐτῇ παρακειμένων ἐθνῶν" [ch. 29: Of Dalmatia and of the adjacent nations in it]. De Administrando Imperio [On Administering the Empire] (in Ancient Greek and English).
- Кунчер, Драгана (2009). Gesta Regum Sclavorum. Vol. 1. Београд-Никшић: Историјски институт, Манастир Острог.
- Moravcsik, Gyula, ed. (1967) [1949]. Constantine Porphyrogenitus: De Administrando Imperio (2nd revised ed.). Washington D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks Center for Byzantine Studies. ISBN 9780884020219.
- Nesbitt, John; Oikonomides, Nicolas, eds. (1991). Catalogue of Byzantine Seals at Dumbarton Oaks and in the Fogg Museum of Art, Volume 1: Italy, North of the Balkans, North of the Black Sea. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection. ISBN 0-88402-194-7.
- Pertz, Georg Heinrich, ed. (1845). Einhardi Annales. Hanover.
- Scholz, Bernhard Walter, ed. (1970). Carolingian Chronicles: Royal Frankish Annals and Nithard's Histories. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0472061860.
- Шишић, Фердо, ed. (1928). Летопис Попа Дукљанина (Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja). Београд-Загреб: Српска краљевска академија.
- Живковић, Тибор (2009). Gesta Regum Sclavorum. Vol. 2. Београд-Никшић: Историјски институт, Манастир Острог.
- Secondary sources
- Ashmore, Harry S. (1961). Encyclopædia Britannica: a new survey of universal knowledge. Vol. 20.
- Bataković, Dušan T. (1996). The Serbs of Bosnia & Herzegovina: History and Politics. Paris: Dialogue. ISBN 9782911527104.
- Bataković, Dušan T., ed. (2005). Histoire du peuple serbe [History of the Serbian People] (in French). Lausanne: L'Age d'Homme. ISBN 9782825119587.
- Bulić, Dejan (2013). "The Fortifications of the Late Antiquity and the Early Byzantine Period on the Later Territory of the South-Slavic Principalities, and their re-occupation". The World of the Slavs: Studies of the East, West and South Slavs: Civitas, Oppidas, Villas and Archeological Evidence (7th to 11th Centuries AD). Belgrade: The Institute for History. pp. 137–234. ISBN 9788677431044.
- Études historiques. Vol. 3. Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. 1966.
- Bury, John B. (1912). A History of the Eastern Empire from the Fall of Irene to the Accession of Basil I. (A.D. 802-867). London: Macmillan. ISBN 9781275594623.
- Ćirković, Sima (1960). "Критике и прикази: Разматрања о деоном владању и деоним кнежевинама". Istoriski glasnik (1–2). Društvo istoričara NR Srbije: 195–198. Archived from the original on 16 June 2016.
- Ćirković, Sima (2004). The Serbs. Malden: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 9781405142915.
- Crnčević, Dejan (2013). "Architecture of Cathedral Churches on the Eastern Adriatic Coast at the Time of the First Principalities of South Slavs (9th-11th Centuries)". The World of the Slavs: Studies of the East, West and South Slavs: Civitas, Oppidas, Villas and Archeological Evidence (7th to 11th Centuries AD). Belgrade: The Institute for History. pp. 37–136. ISBN 9788677431044.
- Curta, Florin (2001). The Making of the Slavs: History and Archaeology of the Lower Danube Region, c. 500–700. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781139428880.
- Curta, Florin (2006). Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500–1250. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-81539-0.
- Curta, Florin (2019). Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages (500-1300). Leiden and Boston: Brill. ISBN 9789004395190.
- Dvornik, F.; Jenkins, R. J. H.; Lewis, B.; Moravcsik, Gy.; Obolensky, D.; Runciman, S. (1962). Jenkins, R. J. H. (ed.). De Administrando Imperio: Volume II. Commentary. University of London: The Athlone Press.
- Ferjančić, Božidar (1997). "Basile I et la restauration du pouvoir byzantin au IXème siècle" [Vasilije I i obnova vizantijske vlasti u IX veku]. Zbornik radova Vizantološkog instituta (in French) (36). Belgrade: 9–30.
- Fine, John V. A. Jr. (1991) [1983]. The Early Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0-472-08149-7.
- Fine, John Van Antwerp Jr. (2005). When Ethnicity Did Not Matter in the Balkans: A Study of Identity in Pre-Nationalist Croatia, Dalmatia, and Slavonia in the Medieval and Early-Modern Periods. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0472025600.
- Heather, Peter (2010). Empires and Barbarians: The Fall of Rome and the Birth of Europe. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-974163-2.
- Hupchick, Dennis P. (2017). The Bulgarian-Byzantine Wars for Early Medieval Balkan Hegemony: Silver-Lined Skulls and Blinded Armies. New York: Springer. ISBN 9783319562063.
- Ivanišević, Vujadin; Krsmanović, Bojana (2013). "Byzantine Seals from the Ras Fortress" (PDF). Зборник радова Византолошког института. 50 (1): 449–460.
- Ivić, Pavle, ed. (1995). The History of Serbian Culture. Edgware: Porthill Publishers. ISBN 9781870732314.
- Janković, Đorđe (2004). "The Slavs in the 6th Century North Illyricum". Гласник Српског археолошког друштва. 20: 39–61.
- Јанковић, Ђорђе (2007). Српско Поморје од 7. до 10. столећа (Serbian Maritime from 7th to 10th Century) (PDF). Београд: Српско археолошко друштво.
- Јанковић, Ђорђе (2012). "О проучавању и публиковању утврђених места у Србији из VII-X столећа". Гласник Српског археолошког друштва. 28: 313–334.
- Kaimakamova, Miliana; Salamon, Maciej (2007). Byzantium, new peoples, new powers: the Byzantino-Slav contact zone, from the ninth to the fifteenth century. Towarzystwo Wydawnicze "Historia Iagellonica". ISBN 978-83-88737-83-1.
- Kalić, Jovanka (1995). "Rascia – The Nucleus of the Medieval Serbian State". The Serbian Question in the Balkans. Belgrade: Faculty of Geography. pp. 147–155.
- Komatina, Ivana (2016). Црква и држава у српским земљама од XI до XIII века [Church and State in the Serbian Lands from the XIth to the XIIIth Century]. Београд: Institute of History. ISBN 9788677431136.
- Komatina, Predrag (2010). "The Slavs of the mid-Danube basin and the Bulgarian expansion in the first half of the 9th century" (PDF). Зборник радова Византолошког института. 47: 55–82.
- Komatina, Predrag (2014). "Settlement of the Slavs in Asia Minor During the Rule of Justinian II and the Bishopric των Γορδοσερβων" (PDF). Београдски историјски гласник: Belgrade Historical Review. 5: 33–42.
- Komatina, Predrag (2015). "The Church in Serbia at the Time of Cyrilo-Methodian Mission in Moravia". Cyril and Methodius: Byzantium and the World of the Slavs. Thessaloniki: Dimos. pp. 711–718.
- Krsmanović, Bojana (2008). The Byzantine Province in Change: On the Threshold Between the 10th and the 11th Century. Belgrade: Institute for Byzantine Studies. ISBN 9789603710608.
- Mrgić-Radojčić, Jelena (2004). "Rethinking the Territorial Development of the Medieval Bosnian State". Историјски часопис. 51: 43–64.
- Novaković, Relja (1981). Gde se nalazila Srbija od VII do XII veka. Narodna knjiga i Istorijski institut. Google Books
- Obolensky, Dimitri (1974) [1971]. The Byzantine Commonwealth: Eastern Europe, 500-1453. London: Cardinal. ISBN 9780351176449.
- Ostrogorsky, George (1956). History of the Byzantine State. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
- Petrović, Vladeta (2013). "Terrestrial Communications in the Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages in the Western Part of the Balkan Peninsula". The World of the Slavs: Studies of the East, West and South Slavs: Civitas, Oppidas, Villas and Archeological Evidence (7th to 11th Centuries AD). Belgrade: The Institute for History. pp. 235–287. ISBN 9788677431044.
- Popović, Marko (1999). The Fortress of Ras. Belgrade: Archaeological Institute. ISBN 9788680093147.
- Popović, Marko; Marjanović-Dušanić, Smilja; Popović, Danica (2016). Daily Life in Medieval Serbia. Belgrade: Clio & Institute for Balkan Studies. ISBN 9788671025256.
- Radojković, Borislav M. (1959) [1958]. "Разматрања о деоном владању и деоним кнежевинама". Istorijski časopis. VIII. Naučno delo.
- Runciman, Steven (1930). A History of the First Bulgarian Empire. London: G. Bell & Sons. ISBN 9780598749222.
- Runciman, Steven (1988) [1929]. The Emperor Romanus Lecapenus and His Reign: A Study of Tenth-Century Byzantium. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521357227.
- Samardžić, Radovan; Duškov, Milan, eds. (1993). Serbs in European Civilization. Belgrade: Nova, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Institute for Balkan Studies. ISBN 9788675830153.
- Shepard, Jonathan (1995). "Slavs and Bulgars". The New Cambridge Medieval History. Vol. 2. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 228–248. ISBN 9780521362924.
- Shepard, Jonathan (1999). "Bulgaria: The other Balkan Empire". The New Cambridge Medieval History. Vol. 3. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 567–583. ISBN 9780521364478.
- Slijepčević, Đoko M. (1958). The Macedonian question:the struggle for southern Serbia. American Institute for Balkan Affairs.
- Špehar, Perica N. (2010). "By Their Fruit you will recognize them - Christianization of Serbia in Middle Ages". Tak więc po owocach poznacie ich. Poznań: Stowarzyszenie naukowe archeologów Polskich. pp. 203–220.
- Špehar, Perica N. (2015a). "Remarks to Christianisation and Realms in the Central Balkans in the Light of Archaeological Finds (7th-11th c.)". Castellum, Civitas, Urbs: Centres and Elites in Early Medieval East-Central Europe. Budapest: Verlag Marie Leidorf. pp. 71–93.
- Špehar, Perica N. (2015b). "(Dis)continuity of the Life in Late Antique Danubian Fortresses in Early Middle Ages: From Belgrade to the Confluence of the Timok River". Archaeology of the First Millennium A.D. Vol. 4. Brăila: Istros. pp. 329–350.
- Špehar, Perica N. (2019). "Reocupation of the Late Antique Fortifications on the central Balkans during the Early Middle Ages". Fortifications, Defence Systems, Structures, and Features in the Past. Zagreb: Institute of Archaeology. pp. 113–124.
- Stanojević, Stanoje (2019) [1927]. Serbian Rulers from the 9th to the 20th Century. Belgrade: Princip Pres.
- Stephenson, Paul (2000). Byzantium's Balkan Frontier: A Political Study of the Northern Balkans, 900–1204. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521770170.
- Stephenson, Paul (2003a). The Legend of Basil the Bulgar-Slayer. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521815307.
- Stephenson, Paul (2003b). "The Balkan Frontier in the Year 1000". Byzantium in the Year 1000. BRILL. pp. 109–134. ISBN 9004120971.
- Treadgold, Warren (1997). A History of the Byzantine State and Society. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-2630-2.
- Uzelac, Aleksandar B. (2018). "Prince Michael of Zahumlje – a Serbian ally of Tsar Simeon". Emperor Symeon's Bulgaria in the History of Europe's South-East: 1100 years from the Battle of Achelous. Sofia: St Kliment Ohridski University Press. pp. 236–245.
- Vlasto, Alexis P. (1970). The Entry of the Slavs into Christendom: An Introduction to the Medieval History of the Slavs. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521074599.
- Whittow, Mark (1996). The Making of Orthodox Byzantium, 600–1025. Basingstoke: Macmillan. ISBN 9781349247653.[permanent dead link ]
- Živković, Tibor (2006). Portreti srpskih vladara (IX—XII vek). Belgrade: Zavod za udžbenike. ISBN 86-17-13754-1.
- Živković, Tibor (2007). "The Golden Seal of Stroimir" (PDF). Historical Review. 55. Belgrade: The Institute for History: 23–29. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 March 2018. Retrieved 7 March 2018.
- Živković, Tibor (2008a). Forging unity: The South Slavs between East and West 550-1150. Belgrade: The Institute of History, Čigoja štampa. ISBN 978-86-7558-573-2.
- Živković, Tibor (2008b). "Constantine Porphyrogenitus' Kastra oikoumena in the Southern Slavs Principalities" (PDF). Историјски часопис. 57: 9–28.
- Živković, Tibor (2010a). "Constantine Porphyrogenitus' Source on the Earliest History of the Croats and Serbs". Radovi Zavoda Za Hrvatsku Povijest U Zagrebu. 42: 117–131.
- Živković, Tibor (2010b). "On the Beginnings of Bosnia in the Middle Ages". Spomenica akademika Marka Šunjića (1927-1998). Sarajevo: Filozofski fakultet. pp. 161–180.
- Živković, Tibor (2011). "The Origin of the Royal Frankish Annalist's Information about the Serbs in Dalmatia". Homage to Academician Sima Ćirković. Belgrade: The Institute for History. pp. 381–398. ISBN 9788677430917.
- Živković, Tibor (2012). De conversione Croatorum et Serborum: A Lost Source. Belgrade: The Institute of History.
- Živković, Tibor (2012b). "Неретљани – пример разматрања идентитета у раном средњем веку" [Arentani - an Example of Identity Examination in the Early Middle Ages]. Istorijski časopis. 61: 11–25.
- Živković, Tibor (2013a). "On the Baptism of the Serbs and Croats in the Time of Basil I (867–886)" (PDF). Studia Slavica et Balcanica Petropolitana (1): 33–53.
- Živković, Tibor (2013b). "The Urban Landcape [sic] of Early Medieval Slavic Principalities in the Territories of the Former Praefectura Illyricum and in the Province of Dalmatia (ca. 610-950)". The World of the Slavs: Studies of the East, West and South Slavs: Civitas, Oppidas, Villas and Archeological Evidence (7th to 11th Centuries AD). Belgrade: The Institute for History. pp. 15–36. ISBN 9788677431044.
External links
[edit]- Steven Runciman, A History of the First Bulgarian Empire, London 1930.
- Janković, Đorđe (2007). "Serbian Maritime from 7th to 10th Century: Summary of the Monograph".
- Medieval history of Serbia
- Principality of Serbia (early medieval)
- Serbia in the Early Middle Ages
- Medieval history of Montenegro
- Medieval history of Bosnia and Herzegovina
- 8th century in Serbia
- 9th century in Serbia
- 10th century in Serbia
- States and territories established in the 8th century
- States and territories disestablished in the 10th century
- Former principalities