Herzegovina ( / ˌ h ɛər t s ɪ ˈ ɡ oʊ v ɪ n ə / HAIRT -sih- GOH -vih-nə or / ˌ h ɜːr t s ə ɡ oʊ ˈ v iː n ə / HURT -sə-goh- VEE -nə ; Serbo-Croatian : Hercegovina / Херцеговина , pronounced [xɛ̌rt͡se̞ɡoʋina] ) is the southern and smaller of two main geographical regions of Bosnia and Herzegovina , the other being Bosnia . It presently does not have strictly defined administrative borders; however, in the past it was organized as Sanjak of Herzegovina (1470–1833; 1851–1912) and Herzegovina Eyalet (1833–1851).
137-603: Bosnia, the larger of the two regions, lies to the north of Herzegovina; the Croatian region of Dalmatia lies to the southwest; the Montenegrin region of Old Herzegovina lies to the southeast. The land area of Herzegovina is around 12,000 km (4,600 sq mi), or around 23–24% of the country. The largest city is Mostar , in the center of the region. Other large settlements include Trebinje , Široki Brijeg , Ljubuški , Čapljina , Konjic and Posušje . The Ottomans were
274-764: A sanjak , the Sanjak of Herzegovina , within the Bosnia Eyalet . According to the Turkish census of Herzegovina from 1477, some villages were mentioned as being "in the possession of Vlachs," while others, were listed as "Serb settlements" and mostly deserted. According to Ottoman defters , at the end of the 15th century in Herzegovina were at least 35,000 Vlachs. During the Long War (1591–1606) , Serbs rose up in Herzegovina (1596–97) , but they were quickly suppressed after their defeat at
411-499: A stanak was convoked by the king and the noblemen who opposed the sale of Konavli by Radič Sanković to Dubrovnik . The Grand Duke Vlatko Vuković and the knez Pavle Radinović were sent against Radič in December 1391 after receiving the stanak 's blessings. The two captured Radič and occupied Konavli, dividing it between themselves, despite protests from Ragusa. After Vlatko Vuković died sometime between August 1392 - August 1393, he
548-609: A duke ; Serbo-Croatian : vojvoda ), and the first among the Kosača dukes to use the title was Herceg-Stjepan, who became the Herceg of Hum in 1449–50. In December 1481, the lands of Stjepan Vukčić's successors were finally occupied by Ottoman forces. Prior to the widespread adoption of the name "Herzegovina", the region was thus referred to as Humska zemlja ("Hum Land"), or Hum for short in Serbo-Croatian . However, this
685-597: A concept of spreading the religion. Though records mention no Christianization attempts toward the Serbs specifically, there are writings regarding the, more or less successful missionary attempts among the Bavarians and Thuringians , the neighboring Germanic tribes which were conquered by the Franks in the 6th century. Though the DAI asserts that already during the reign of Emperor Heraclius
822-610: A direct result of the resentment of the Serbs of Bosnia and Herzegovina against Austro-Hungarian rule. During World War I , Herzegovina was a scene of inter-ethnic conflict. During the war, the Austro-Hungarian government formed Šuckori , Muslim para-militia units. Šuckori units were especially active in Herzegovina. Persecution of Serbs conducted by the Austro-Hungarian authorities was the "first incidence of active 'ethnic cleansing' in Bosnia and Herzegovina". In 1918, Herzegovina became
959-595: A feudal and political unit of the Bosnian state, that honor befell Grand Duke of Bosnia , Vlatko Vuković , who received it from King Tvrtko I , while Sandalj Hranić expanded it and reaffirmed the Kosača family supremacy. While under governance of Austria-Hungary , the region was known in German as Herzgau , which etymologically corresponds to the Slavic name. Slavs settled in
1096-571: A feudal society. The first Serbian state with established political identity was founded by prince Vlastimir in the mid-9th century. It was followed by other Serbian proto states, unstable due to the constant clashes with the Bulgarians , Hungarians and Byzantines , and by the conflict between Rome and Constantinople regarding the Christianization with the Byzantines getting the upper hand in
1233-544: A half of the people with him, migrated over to Heraclius, emperor of the Romans, who took him in, and gave him the settling location in the Theme of Thessalonica , which is since then called Servia . But, after a while, those same Serbs decided to return to their [home]land and the emperor dispatched them. After they crossed the Danube, however, they changed their mind and sent out a note to
1370-508: A number of decades. In the course of the war between Stephen Uroš II Milutin and Stephen Dragutin , Paul I Šubić of Bribir from Croatia expanded not only into western Hum, but also beyond the Neretva river, and took the region of Nevesinje and Ston . Paul appointed his eldest son, Mladen II , as Lord of Hum. At least part of Paul's conquests were granted to his vassal Constantine Nelipčić . After Paul's death, Milutin and Dragutin concluded
1507-517: A number of years, Višeslav was born who fathered Radoslav , who fathered Prosigoj , who fathered Vlastimir . There are no dates in this genealogy, but some can be extrapolated. The first archon arrived during the 610-626 period, and died (long time?) before the Bulgar invasion which occurred in 680. Historian Konstantin Jireček in his History of the Serbs I , page 69, estimates the rule of Višeslav,
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#17330861771671644-404: A part of Republika Srpska . Herzegovina is a southern region of Bosnia and Herzegovina . Its borders and territory have never been strictly defined, be it geographically or culturally, nor has there ever been a geopolitical and economic subdivision of Bosnia and Herzegovina bearing the name. The larger of two Bosnia and Herzegovina regions, Bosnia , is to the west and north of Herzegovina, and
1781-509: A part of the newly formed Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (later renamed Kingdom of Yugoslavia ). In 1941 Herzegovina fell once again under the rule of the fascist Independent State of Croatia . During World War II , Herzegovina was a battleground between fascist Croat Ustaše , royalist Serb Četniks , and the communist Yugoslav Partisans ; Herzegovina was a part of the Independent State of Croatia , administratively divided into
1918-518: A peace, and went to war against the Šubić family . In the war that followed Milutin took one of Mladen's brother captive, and to get him back Mladen Šubić had to agree to restore a part of Hum to Milutin. After this agreement in 1313 the Neretva again became the border between eastern and western Hum. After the death of Milutin in 1321, various Serb nobles took sides and in Hum the Branivojević family became
2055-565: A primacy in the region. That family was the Sanković 's, credited for capturing Hum for Bosnia and the Ban Stjepan II, who in 1326, dispatched their early branch, the Draživojević's (the next generation of Bogopenec), whose head was Milten Draživojević , along with other noblemen, into Hum to oust the Branivojević family , who were, at the time, loyal to Serbia. So, Sanković's were very active in
2192-411: A region he ruled at the time of Ottoman conquest of Bosnia in the second half of the 15th century. Hercegovina is, thus, a possessive noun derived from Herceg-Stjepan's title-name compound and literally means 'duke's land' ( hercegovina ), 'herceg's land', herceg's holdings and/or territory owned/ruled by a herceg . The title herceg is a Slavic form of German herzog (the German term for
2329-532: A small geographical area, usually a river valley or a basin with the villages in it, bounded by the surrounding hills. The unit was called župa and the local chieftain who administered it was called župan . Župans, in turn, were subordinated to the knez or prince ( archon , ἄρχων in Greek; dux in Latin). The knez was the supreme elder and ruler of the entire people while župans were intermediaries between him and
2466-609: A small military elite which managed to organize other already settled and more numerous Slavs. Historical source which reappeared in the 9th century mention Serbs as a people "which is said to be holding the large part of Dalmatia", but Dalmatia in the Roman sense, as a region between the Adriatic on the south, the Sava on the north and the Drina (or Ibar ) on the east, but according to John (Jr.) Fine ,
2603-511: A supreme commander of the Bosnian army. Another powerful Bosnian noble family, Pavlović , at the time headed by Pavle Radinović , whose seat was near Rogatica in Drina county, including holdings in Drina and parts of Vrhbosna , also shared some of the territories in Hum centered around Trebinje . However, at the time when Kosače received the Hum from the King, another powerful Bosnian noble family had
2740-410: Is Mostar , in the center of the region. Other larger towns include Trebinje , Stolac , Široki Brijeg , Posušje , Ljubuški , Tomislavgrad , Grude , Konjic , and Čapljina . Mostar is the best-known urban area and the unofficial capital. It is the only city with over 100,000 citizens. There are no other large cities in Herzegovina, though some have illustrious histories. Stolac , for example,
2877-467: Is administratively divided into municipalities of Berkovići , Bileća , Gacko , Istočni Mostar , Ljubinje , Nevesinje , and Trebinje . Within the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Herzegovina is administratively divided between the cantons of Herzegovina-Neretva and West Herzegovina ; the two cantons only make mention of the region in relation to other locations or geographical features. Part of
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#17330861771673014-473: Is just a superficial understanding, and cannot be attributed to Herceg-Stjepan alone, as his title was not of decisive importance after all. Far more crucial was a well-known Ottoman custom to call newly acquired lands by the names of its earlier lords. It was enough for the Ottomans to conquer Stjepan 's land as a whole, to start calling it Herzegovina. Also, Herceg Stjepan did not establish this province as
3151-624: Is perhaps Herzegovina's oldest city. Settlements date from the Paleolithic period ( Badanj Cave ). An Illyrian tribe lived in the city of Daorson . There were several Roman settlements alongside the Bregava River and medieval inhabitants left large stone grave monuments called stećak in Radimlja . Trebinje , on the Trebišnjica River, is the southernmost city in Bosnia and Herzegovina, near
3288-649: Is typically credited with winning the battle as they broke the Ottoman ranks and pursued the retreating enemy. Celebrated Ottoman commander Lala Sahin Pasha ( Turkish : Lala Şahin Paşa , 1330 – cca 1382) barely managed to save himself with the small band of his soldiers. In 1391–1392, Radič and his brother Beljak tried to sell their possessions in Konavle to the Republic of Ragusa . However,
3425-494: Is when the first Christian names appear among the Serbs. Prince Mutimir , who ruled c. 850-891 named his son Stefan Mutimirović , while his nephew was named Petar Gojniković . Serbs who were relocated to Gordoserba in the Asia Minor were probably already Christianized by the end of the 7th century, as they had their bishop and were presumably part of the army of "selected peoples" (Christians) in 692. From this period originates
3562-581: The Aegean Sea , raided Dalmatia in 597 while the entire limes collapsed by 602. The decisive phase followed, mostly from 610 to 626, when the Slavs raided the inland of the Balkans, destroying large cities and ravaging the area between the Danube on the north and south of Greece , including the repeated sieges of Thessalonica in 616 and 618, and of Constantinople itself in 626. Only defeat at Constantinople stopped
3699-692: The Avars in the Pannonian Plain in 567 pushed the proper invasion raids. The Slavs followed the Avars in their, mostly destructive enterprises, into the Byzantine territory. They destroyed and conquered one by one city and fortress which constituted the Danubian Limes , northern border of the empire, like Sirmium (582) and Singidunum (modern Belgrade , 584). In 584 and 586 the Slavs already besieged Thessaloniki , on
3836-693: The Balkans in the 7th century. What later became known as Herzegovina was divided between Croatia , Zachlumia and Travunia in the Early Middle Ages . Parts of the region were ruled by various medieval rulers, who were in vassal relations to Medieval Serbia on the east, and the Kingdom of Croatia on the west. In the 1100s Hum was in the hands of the Nemanjić family, Hungary also claimed Hum as part of its claim on Bosnia, and wars were fought for control by Hungary and
3973-756: The Berlin Congress of 1878, including the Nikšić area; the historical Herzegovina region annexed to Montenegro is known as East or Old Herzegovina . As a result of the Treaty of Berlin (1878) , Herzegovina, along with Bosnia, were occupied by Austria-Hungary , only nominally remaining under Ottoman rule. The historical Herzegovina region in the Principality of Montenegro was known as East or Old Herzegovina . The Serb population of Herzegovina and Bosnia hoped for annexation to Serbia and Montenegro. The Franciscan order opened
4110-716: The Byzantine–Bulgarian war of 894–896 , which was continued as the Byzantine–Bulgarian war of 913–927 . This affected Serbia a lot. One of the most important moments in this second war was the Battle of Anchialus , held on 20 August 917, when Simeon defeated the Byzantines. Peter apparently leaned on the Byzantine side. Right before the battle, on the bank of the Neretva river, he met with Leo Rhabdouchos , Byzantine strategos of Dyrrachium . Michael Višević , ruler of Zachlumia, who held good personal relations with Simeon, dispatched this to
4247-537: The Dinarides and reached the Adriatic coast, but a closer reading of the DAI suggests that Constantine VII's consideration about the Serbian ethnic identity of the population of Pagania , Travunia and Zachlumia is based on 10th century Serbian political rule and does not indicate ethnic origin, neither a small group of people led by " Unknown Archon " could settle a large territory and they most probably arrived as
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4384-575: The Drina river valley, in modern Bosnia and Herzegovina, especially the large settlement near the village of Batković . The settlement had furnaces for the ore melting and smithing workshops. Serbian archaeologist Đorđe Janković considered that the Serbian Danube ornamental ceramic pots' analogies northwest of the Carpathian Basin (in Moravia and Austria) are evidence of the Serbian migration from
4521-494: The Montenegro border, and as the river flows west, it enters Herzegovina. The entire upper catchment of the Neretva constitutes a precious ecoregion with many endemic and endangered species. The river carves through the precipitous karst terrain, providing excellent opportunities for rafting and kayaking, while the spectacular scenery of the surrounding mountains and forests is a challenging hiking terrain. The Neretva's tributaries in
4658-540: The Montenegro border. Čapljina and Ljubuški are known for their history and their rivers; the village of Međugorje has religious importance for many Roman Catholics. In the modern state of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Herzegovina is divided between the countries' two major entities, Republika Srpska and the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina . Republika Srpska's part of Herzegovina, commonly referred to as East Herzegovina , or increasingly more often "Trebinje Region",
4795-612: The Peter's Church in Ras, built in the 7-9th century. The oldest phase of the construction of the Church of Saint Apostles Peter and Paul (Bijelo Polje) [ sr ] in Bijelo Polje (Montenegro) was moved also to the 8th century after the recent re-examination of the construction works and stone ornaments, and was enhanced or finished in the 12th century. Remains of the 8th-century churches, before
4932-698: The Trullan Council , held in Constantinople in 692, bishop Isidore of Gordoserba was mentioned, which is the possibly first mention of the Serbian name in the south of Europe. Prior to the migration to the south, while still living in the Polabian region, Serbs may be among the first Slavic people who came in contact with Christianity. In the 7th century, they became part of the Merovingian kingdom , which not only had Christianity as an official religion but also had
5069-607: The Venetian Republic 's influence. The Ottomans benefitted from this in gaining the region's salt. As a result of the Bosnian Uprising (1831–32) , the Vilayet was split to form the separate Herzegovina Eyalet , ruled by semi-independent vizier Ali-paša Rizvanbegović . After his death, the eyalets of Bosnia and Herzegovina were merged. The new joint entity was after 1853 commonly referred to as Bosnia and Herzegovina. Serbs in
5206-471: The theme of Thessalonica , which was formed ca. 150 years after the reign of Heraclius which was in the 7th century. For the purposes of its narrative, the DAI formulates a mistaken etymology of the Serbian ethnonym which it derives from Latin servi (serfs). The DAI mentioned that the Serbs from Polabia settled the Balkans during the reign of Emperor Heraclius (r. 610–641); however, some scholars consider that
5343-549: The 14th and start of the 15th century in Hum . Their seat was in Glavatičevo 's hamlet Biskupi, where today the family burial place with a stećci is still present and protected as a National monument of Bosnia and Herzegovina . The most prominent members were Sanko Miltenović, the eponymous founder of the Sanković's (the progenitor was Dražen Bogopenec ), who died in a battle while leading
5480-504: The 6th century with the Slavic migrations to Southeastern Europe , and lasted until the Ottoman conquest of Serbian lands in the second half of the 15th century. The period is also extended to 1537, when Pavle Bakić , the last titular Despot of Serbia in Hungarian exile, fell in the Battle of Gorjani . At the time of settling, Serbs were already transitioning from a tribal community into
5617-458: The 7th to the middle of the 9th century". The settlements were unfortified and of small size, at the outskirts of ancient ramparts . Numerous finds give evidence to the conclusion that a good part of native Roman population remained and continued to live within and near those ramparts. After the Christianization, under influence of Byzantine and Bulgarian Empires, since the mid-9th century
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5754-427: The 9th century. By the second-half of the 10th century Principality of Serbia , enlarged but unconsolidated, prone to the internal tribalism and foreign attacks, collapsed leaving Serbian lands to the plunderers. Serbian statehood moved to Duklja , which at one point reunited almost all Serbian lands, but the Byzantines successfully sidelined it. The stable, unified, and continuous Grand Principality of Serbia
5891-423: The Balkans and allied with the more numerous Slavs living in the region, forming an independent and well organized political entity, the First Bulgarian Empire in 681. The major expansion of Bulgaria began in the first half of the 9th century when they attacked Constantinople and conquered numerous Slavic tribes on the Balkans ( Guduscani , doubtful, and Timočani , which fled to the Frankish controlled areas in
6028-449: The Bosnian army to aid Ragusa against Serbian lord, the Altomanović, who campaigned against Ragusa in 1370, and his oldest son, Radić Sanković . The Ottoman threat was brewing to the east, threatening Bosnia and its southeastern regions in Hum. On 27 August 1388, Radić participated in the Battle of Bileća , when the Bosnian army led by the Grand Duke Vlatko, defeated an Ottoman raiding party of up to 18,000 strong. Bosnian heavy cavalry
6165-464: The Bosnian state, with the King Tvrtko I Kotromanić extending territories even further, beyond what is modern-day Herzegovina proper. During this period, parts of Herzegovina, or as it was called at the time Humska zemlja , or simply Hum , were given by the King Tvrtko I to, at that point in time relatively insignificant Bosnian clan of Kosača family and its Vuković branch, headed by Vlatko Vuković , who received it as an award for his service as
6302-466: The Bulgarian emperor, accusing Petar of collusion with the Byzantines. He also reported that the Byzantines are bribing Peter in order for him to cooperate with the Hungarians in the joint attack against Bulgaria. This was used by Simeon to start the Bulgarian–Serbian wars of 917–924 . Bulgarian army which attacked Serbia was headed by Pavle Branović , son of blinded Bran. Despite that safety was granted to Petar because of his close relations with Simeon, he
6439-462: The Bulgarians, managed to briefly capture the city of Dostinika, but was ultimately defeated and killed by Peter. During his reign, Petar kept good relations with both the Byzantine emperor Leo VI the Wise (ruled 886–912) and the emperor Simeon I of Bulgaria , second son of late emperor Boris, (893-927). He was connected with Simeon by the peace treaty but also with the custom of kumstvo . Strains between Bulgarian and Byzantine empires resulted in
6576-412: The Byzantine efforts to weaken the Bulgarian-Frankish alliance against the Great Moravia and cultural turning of the Bulgarians to Rome. The Serbian army led by Mutimir and his brothers was again victorious, capturing the leader of the Bulgarian army, and Boris' son and heir, Vladimir of Bulgaria and 12 boyars . This pressured Boris to reluctantly agree to a peace treaty. As a guarantee that his son and
6713-474: The Christianization process was finished, include localities of Bilimišće ( Zenica , previously thought to be late-Roman church from the 5th or the 6th century), Dabravine ( Visoko ), Mali Mošunj ( Vitez ), Lepenica ( Kiseljak ), but also in the vicinities of Stolac , Ljubuški , Livno , Glamoč , Foča , Breza (all in modern Bosnia) and Imotski (Croatia). However, though active during this period, many of them may be pre-Slavic, Roman churches. Either through
6850-401: The Deacon tells about the Slavic flotilla which attacked the town of Sipont in Italy in 642 (or 646). The Slavs arrived with "many ships", landed on the Gargano Promontory , close to Sipont, where they set their tent camp. They confronted the Lombards ' duke Aiulf I , killing him. They were then approached by the Aiulf's adopted younger brother Radoald who "spoke their language", confusing
6987-434: The Emperor Heraclius, through the strategos of Singidunum, that they want him to give them another land to settle. And since the modern Serbia and Paganija and the so called land of Zachlumia and Travunija and the land of Konavle remained desolate because of the Avars (who expelled the Romans from there which now inhabits Dalmatia and Dyrrachium ), the emperor settled Serbs in these lands, and they were subordinated to
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#17330861771677124-400: The Governance of the Empire", DAI ), compiled by the Byzantine Emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus , mentions that the White Serbs relocated from the land of Bojka , also called the White Serbia . Historiography can't pinpoint for sure where that is, but the general consensus is that it was around the region of Bohemia ( Boihaemum = Bojka) and Saxony . After a death of
7261-413: The Isaurian began to transfer regions and cities to the jurisdiction of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople , including some parts of the Balkans. Despite this, the division wasn't as sharp as it will become after the East–West Schism in 1054. The most important material testimony of the Christianization of the Serbs and other Slavs is the oldest known Christian temple among in Serbian lands,
7398-489: The Kosača family's supremacy. In 1451, Stjepan attacked and laid siege to the city of Dubrovnik . He had earlier been made a nobleman of the Republic of Ragusa , so consequently, the Ragusan government now proclaimed him a traitor. A reward of 15,000 ducats , a palace in Dubrovnik worth 2,000 ducats, and an annual income of 300 ducats was offered to anyone who would kill him, along with the promise of hereditary Ragusan nobility which also helped hold this promise to whoever did
7535-434: The Nemanjić family. By the early 13th century Raška held control of most of Hum, and Sava created a Serbian a bishopric at Ston in 1220. In the 1220s Peter is referred to as the Prince of Hum, and he was also elected Prince of Split . The Catholic Church excommunicated him because of his Orthodoxy , but the citizens of Split kept him as prince. Following his death his descendants continued to rule at least part of Hum for
7672-523: The Roman historians Tacitus and Pliny the Elder and by Claudius Ptolemy , under the name Veneti in the 1st and 2nd century AD. In the 6th century, Byzantine author Procopius and Gothic historian Jordanes mention them as Sclaveni . By this time, the Slavs already settled in the wide areas of central and eastern Europe, reaching lower and central Danube regions and invading Byzantine territories from Thrace , throughout Illyricum , up to Pannonia and Dalmatia . De Administrando Imperio ("On
7809-400: The Sanjak of Herzegovina besieged Vlatko's capital Novi but just before 14 December 1481, Vlatko ceased resisting and agreed with the Ottomans to move with his family to Istanbul. Now the entirety of Herzegovina was reorganized into the already established Sanjak of Herzegovina with the seat in Foča, and later, in 1580, would become one of the sanjaks of the Bosnia Eyalet . This signified
7946-410: The Serbian prince, his two sons took over the rule and divided White Serbs in two groups. One remained in White Serbia, while the other group migrated to the Balkans. Frankish Chronicle of Fredegar mentions Dervan , chieftain of the Serbs, in c. 631, who may be the first Serb mentioned by name in history. Dervan is considered to be the father or, more likely, brother of the nameless prince who led
8083-403: The Serbian tribe was not part of some later migration, as usually held by historiography, rather than migrating with the rest of early Slavs from Eastern Europe (with Đ. Janković theorizing even earlier presence of the Serbs and Antes in the Danube region). For the first two centuries after the settlement, from the early 7th century on, there are almost no historical records about the Serbs, and
8220-403: The Serbs ( civitas , or city-states). Ljudevit then fled to the Croatian domain, but was soon murdered. During the 822 uprising, Serbs supported the rebellion, thus siding against the Frankish Empire and indirectly supporting the Byzantines, but it is unknown to which extent they participated in the skirmishes between two empires in the 8th and the 9th century. In 680 the Bulgars settled on
8357-492: The Serbs and the Croats, some of the Slavic tribes which settled the Balkan peninsula included: According to archaeological evidence in Serbia, mainly along Morava River Basin (which was settled by Bulgarian-Slavic tribes of Timočani, Eastern Obotrites and Moravians ), the Slavs may have reached it earlier than thought, between late 6th and early 7th century, according many findings of fibulae and Slavic pottery at Roman forts, but "no grave has been found so far to be related to
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#17330861771678494-476: The Serbs during his reign ( Bulgar–Serb War (839–842) ) in order to "subdue them". Unlike the tribes on the east, Vlastimir decided to stand the ground and not to lead Serbs to the west. Aside from the Bulgarians, he was surrounded by the Franks on the entire north, west and southwest side, including the vassal Zachlumia. He tried to strengthen his position by connecting with the subordinated Travunija, marrying his daughter into Travunija's ruling family. However, after
8631-420: The Serbs in 924, but were defeated. Both commanders were killed and their heads, so as the confiscated weapons, were sent to the Byzantine emperor as the trophies. Later that year Simeon sent much larger army. Among the soldier was Klonimir's son, Časlav Klonimirović. In front of the much larger Bulgarian army, Zaharija fled to Croatia. The Bulgarian Empire summoned Serbian župans to gather and accept Časlav as
8768-457: 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. By the 7th century, the Serbs scattered all the way south to the Peloponnesus and other regions of Greece, while the emperor Heraclius originally settled them around Thessaloniki. However,
8905-418: The Serbs were Christianized and that the process was performed by the priests from Rome , it took some time before the new religion spread through the entire population. Other reports confirm that the church missionary activities were organized among the South Slavs already from the late 7th and mid-8th century. The process was mostly finished by the late 9th century during Byzantine Emperor Basil I which
9042-412: The Serbs were not mentioned during first Siege of Thessalonica (617) and second Siege of Thessalonica (676–678) , indicating the Serbs did not live in the area before and after that date. Emperor Justinian II possibly resettled some Serbs from the surroundings of Thessaloniki to Bithynia , in Asia Minor , in 688–689, and there they founded the town/district of Gordoservon . Among the participants of
9179-421: The Slavs long enough to defeat them and expel them from the Apennine Peninsula . Unlike some later attacks on modern Italian soil, it is unknown which specific Slavic tribe conducted this excursion. However, with some other data (Italian monks claim that Slavs acknowledged paramount rule of the Byzantine emperor), the well equipped attack on the Lombards, main opponents of the Byzantine Empire in Italy, points to
9316-539: The Slavs with a degree of certainty" and "the date when the Slavs started settling in Illyricum remains a question". In the Danube Basin of Serbia ( Vojvodina ) thirteen sites show that the earliest presence of Slavs in that area could be dated to the late second-half of the 6th century or later (with radiocarbon dating of 7-8th century), and possibly served as foederati protecting the Byzantine border fortresses. The sites have paralles with findings from both Central and Lower Danube and Sava Basin, with analogies showing that
9453-402: The White Serbs into the Balkans. Sclaveni raided and settled the western Balkans in the 6th and 7th century. Jointly with the Antes , another Slavic group, they conducted intrusions south of the Danube and Sava rivers into the Balkans, and the territory of the Byzantine Empire ruled by Justinian I (527-565), who reconquered several former territories of the Roman Empire . The arrival of
9590-411: The area was not well re-populated by the Slavs, and settlement patterns in the 8th and 9th century show "successive population inflows from the surrounding regions" (with significant Bulgarian influence ). The findings indicating Slavic residence in Byzantine cities puts into question survival of local Roman population. The found coins indicate "renewal of life in the central Balkans from the middle of
9727-441: The battle, its participants and circumstances were enshrined and immortalized in folk poetry and literature. It transcended the historical importance, reaching a spiritual level by the 19th century, and turned Kosovo into the "Jerusalem of the Serbs". Despite the defeat, Serbia endured for another 70 years, experiencing a territorial and cultural revival under Despot Stefan Lazarević (1389-1427). Serbian resistance continued until
9864-425: The border between two regions, Herzegovina and Bosnia, is unclear as it has never been strictly defined. To the south-southwest of region lies Croatian region of Dalmatia , and to the east-southeast is Montenegro . The land area is c. 11,500 km (4,400 sq mi), or around 23% of the total area of the present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina, to c. 12,300 km (4,700 sq mi), or around 24% of
10001-459: The close connections between the Slavs and the Byzantines and the Byzantine overall influence, corroborating the DAI s claim that Serbs settled in the Balkans in accordance with the Byzantine emperor. Through linguistical studies, it is concluded that the early South Slavs were made up of a western and eastern branch, of parallel streams, roughly divided in the Timok – Osogovo – Šar line. Apart from
10138-566: The counties of Hum and Dubrava, then in 1945, Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina became one of the republics of Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia . It remained so until the breakup of Yugoslavia in the early 1990s. During the Bosnian War , large parts of western and central Herzegovina came under control of the Croat republic of Herzeg-Bosnia (which later joined the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina ) while eastern Herzegovina became
10275-597: The country. It borders the Adriatic Sea along its 20 km (12 mi) coastline. The terrain of Herzegovina is mostly hilly karst with high mountains in the north such as Čvrsnica and Prenj , except for the central valley of the river Neretva . The upper reaches of the River Neretva lie in northern Herzegovina, a heavily forested area with fast-flowing rivers and high mountains. Konjic and Jablanica lie in this area. The Neretva rises on Lebršnik Mountain, close to
10412-644: The dates in the calendar of the Roman Catholic Church - St. Vitus' Day ( Vidovdan ), Michaelmas ( Miholjdan ), Theodore the Studite ( Mratindan ). Confirmation of the early missionary work by Rome, already in the 7th century, are writings of Pope Agatho and Thomas the Archdeacon . This wasn't unusual, as, following the ancient rules, this region of the still unified church was administered by Rome. This began to change after 732, when Byzantine emperor Leo III
10549-569: The deed. The threat worked and Stjepan eventually raised the siege. Stjepan Vukčić died in 1466 and was succeeded as herceg by his second-youngest son Vlatko Hercegović , who struggled to retain as much of the territory as he could. In 1471, the Ottomans excluded Hum from the Bosnian Sanjak and established a new, separate Sanjak of Herzegovina with its seat in Foča . In November 1481, Ajaz-Bey of
10686-459: The destruction of Serbian state and society was by the Bulgarians, considered that "at this point, fortifications were temporarily abandoned". Časlav recognized the supreme authority of the Byzantine emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus, who became his mentor and protector. The emperor helped Časlav to restore Serbia, including the heavy financial aid. Časlav repopulated Serbia returning some of
10823-470: The disappearance of the last-remaining independent point of the medieval Bosnian state. In 1482, the lands of Stefan Vukčić's successors were occupied by Ottoman forces. The Ottomans were the first to begin officially using the name Herzegovina (Hersek) for the region. The Bosnian beylerbey Isa-beg Ishaković mentioned the name in a letter from 1454. In the Ottoman Empire , Herzegovina was organized as
10960-417: The eastern or western border, with the latter more probable localization. They were not mentioned afterwards, possibly because of remote location, lost importance or became desolated after Bulgarian Samuel 's conquest in the end of the 10th century. It is considered that Destinikon was the ecclesiastical centre and capital of early medieval Serbia. There's no consensus in the scholarship whether Stari Ras
11097-525: The eldest one. Presian's son and successor, Boris I of Bulgaria , decided to avenge his father, and attacked Serbia again, instigating the Bulgar–Serb War of 853 , though the warfare is variously set by the historians in 854, 858, 863–864, 870 or even in the 880s. The war was also part of the larger skirmish in the region, which included the Bulgarian expansion in the direction of the central Danube Valley and
11234-522: The emperor of the Romans, the emperor brought priests from Rome to baptize them and teach them to perform the pious duties in order, and displayed the Christian faith to them. Another source on early medieval Serbia are the Royal Frankish Annals by Einhard , that recorded Serbs (in 822) who controlled great part of Dalmatia (" ad Sorabos, quae natio magnam Dalmatiae partem obtinere dicitur "). It
11371-414: The end of the Sanković family. When Sandalj died, Stjepan Vukčić , as Sandalj's nephew, inherited lordship over the Hum, and was the last Bosnian nobleman who had effective control over the province ( zemlja ) before Ottoman conquest . He titled himself Duke of Hum and Primorje, Bosnian Grand Duke, Knyaz of Drina , and later Herzog of Saint Sava, Lord of Hum and Bosnian Grand Duke, Knyaz of Drina and
11508-453: The fact that the major role in the Christianization of the Serbs had priests and missionaries from Rome, rather than from the closer Constantinople. This can also be seen in the earliest Christian terms in the Serbian language which came from the Latin language ( oltare from altare , altar), the earliest Christian toponymy and presence of several religious feasts and holidays which corresponded to
11645-490: The fall of Smederevo in 1459. Despite the claimed significance in which Turkish rule shaped national consciousness of the Serbs, the fall under the Ottomans was dubbed by the Serbian historians as “Turkish night”. The conquest severed continuity of economic, social and political development, and Serbia was cut off from the European cultural and political society where it was carving its own place. When development of Serbia and
11782-567: The field of Gacko . The Candian War of 1645 to 1669 caused great damage to the region as the Republic of Venice and the Ottoman Empire fought for control over Dalmatia and coastal Herzegovina. As a result of the Treaty of Karlowitz of 1699, the Ottomans gained access to the Adriatic Sea through the Neum - Klek coastal area. The Republic of Dubrovnik ceded this to distance themselves from
11919-615: The first Serbian ruler whose name is known, around 780. One of his two successors was in power in 822, as mentioned in the Royal Frankish Annals . The work deals with an episode concerning the Pannonian ruler Ljudevit Posavski . Under the Frankish attack he left his capital Sisak and fled over to the Serbs, for which is "said to be as holding the large part of (Roman) Dalmatia": Siscia civitate relicta, ad Sorabos, quae natio magnam Dalmatiae partem obtinere dicitur, fugiendo se contulit . However,
12056-480: The first to officially use the name Hercegovina (English: Herzegovina ; Turkish : Hersek , Ottoman Turkish : هرسك ) for the region in their administrative affairs in a letter from 1 February 1454, written by the Ottoman commander Esebeg from Skopje , and established a sanjak bearing that name in 1470, the Sanjak of Herzegovina , with its first seat at Foča . They simply followed their established custom of naming places and territories they conquered by
12193-631: The first university in Herzegovina in 1895 in Mostar . In 1908, Austria-Hungary annexed the province, leading to the Bosnian Crisis , an international dispute which barely failed to precipitate a world war immediately, and was an important step in the buildup of international tensions during the years leading up to the First World War . The assassination of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand came as
12330-469: The inhabited cities (καστρα/kastra) of Destinikon (or Serbian Dostinika) (Δεστινίκον), Tzernabouskeï (Τζερναβουσκέη), Megyretous (Μεγυρέτους), Dresneïk (Δρεσνεήκ), Lesnik (Λεσνήκ), Salines (Σαληνές), while the "small land" (χοριον/chorion) of Bosnia (Βοσωνα), part of Serbia, had the cities of Katera (Κατερα) and Desnik (Δέσνηκ). Almost all of them, apart Salines and possibly Destinikon, are still unidentified. Serbian towns could have been located more to
12467-476: The last few years of his life became inseparable from his name, to a region previously called Humska zemlja or Hum . The Ottoman custom of calling newly acquired lands by the names of their earlier rulers was of decisive importance. Also, Stjepan did not establish this province as a feudal and political unit of the Bosnian state; that honor befell Grand Duke of Bosnia Vlatko Vuković , who received it from King Tvrtko I ; Sandalj Hranić expanded it and reaffirmed
12604-500: The mentioning of "Dalmatia" in 822 and 833 as an old geographical term by the authors of Frankish Annals was Pars pro toto with a vague perception of what this geographical term actually referred to. In the contemporary Vita Hludovici that description of the Serbs is omitted. Ljudevit later killed the local župan who took him in and temporarily took over the rule in his župa, which is estimated to be either somewhere in western, central or eastern Bosnia . Some historians pointed to
12741-518: The missionary works of Roman or Byzantine monks, local remnants of the Romanized people or the Byzantine population in the cities, the Christianization of the Serbs appears to be peaceful and voluntary, unlike the forceful practices of the Frankish Empire . Apart from the political implications - use of new religion for the strengthening of the central rule and concentration of the power in the hands of
12878-462: The modern village of Srb in the region of Lika in modern Croatia, as the possible location as in the medieval period it was a town, described in the early 14th century as having "Serbian seat and court, like in the old times", while others opposed it. Frankish chronicle makes a distinctions between the settlements ruled by the Croats (referring to them as castellis , or castles ) and those held by
13015-594: The most important Serbian medieval ruler, who halted expansion of state in 1299 in order to consolidate it. Serbia peaked during the reign of king and later Emperor Dušan (1331-55). He expanded the state to encompass modern Serbia south of the Sava and the Danube , Macedonia , Montenegro , Albania , east Herzegovina , Epirus and Thessaly , organized Serbia after the Byzantine Empire, and introduced codified law . There
13152-468: The name of its prior rulers. In this case Ottomans used Stjepan Vukčić Kosača 's title, herceg , a title he gave himself in 1448, and a year later changed it to Herceg of St. Sava, after the Serb saint buried on his territory, considered a miracle worker by Christians of all faiths. It practically became part of his name, in the last few years of his life when he was commonly referred to as Herceg-Stjepan, to name
13289-424: The names of those early princes faded from the collective memory. In the DAI , the emperor basically gives the genealogy of the first Serbian ruling dynasty: After the " Unknown Archon " of the Serbs who fled over to the emperor Heraclius, in the time when Bulgaria was under the rule of the Romans, by the inheritance (rules) his son took over the rule, then his grandson and so other archons from his family line. After
13426-522: The new archon, but they were all captured and sent to Bulgaria. In the next few years, 925 and 926, Bulgarians completely ravaged Serbia. Part of the population was enslaved and taken to Bulgaria , while some managed to escape to Croatia or to the Byzantine Empire. According to Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus, the "country was left deserted". But situation changed after Simeon I the Great died in 927. His son and heir, Peter I of Bulgaria , changed completely
13563-584: The new king of Serbia, Stefan Dušan , sold Pelješac and Ston to Dubrovnik for cash and an annual tribute. Under Bosnia Kotoromanović's allies, the Draživojević/ Sankovic family of Nevesinje , became the leading family in Hum, while Serbian vassals retained eastern Herzegovina. Other than a rebellion by Toljen of Hum's son, Peter, whom Stjepan captured and put to death, the Hum nobles remained largely loyal to Kotoromanić, while also continuing to manage their local regions. Stjepan did take direct control of
13700-463: The nortwest to the Danube region with consent of the Byzantine Empire, but such hypothesis based on ceramics is not well substantiated as closer ceramic analogies exist in Lower Danube and Wallachian region. The history of the early medieval Serbian Principality is recorded in the DAI . The emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus assembled it from 948 to 952 for his son and heir Romanos II . The aim
13837-465: The others will be freed, Boris asked for the Mutimir's sons to accompany the prisoners to the border. Mutimir sent his two younger sons, Bran and Stefan, while the eldest and heir to the throne, Pribislav , was precautionary kept at home. Pleased with the release of his son, Boris gave them "lush gifts", while the Serbian princes gave to Boris "two slaves, two falcons, two dogs, and 80 furs". Soon after
13974-527: The peace was reached with Bulgaria, the internal strife hit the ruling triumvirate. Mutimir, eldest and probably the most powerful in the state, expelled his brothers Strojimir (and his son Klonimir ) and Gojnik to khan Boris in Bulgaria, keeping only Petar Gojniković, Gojnik's son and his nephew. This happened between 863 and 873, when the pope John VIII in his letter addressed Mutimir only. However, Petar soon fled to Croatia. Strojimir remained in Bulgarian exile for
14111-466: The people who fled to the neighboring countries. Serbia prospered, keeping good relations with the Byzantines and the emperor constantly pointed out the good relations with Serbia in this period. The borders of Časlav's state are uncertain, possibly expanding into Bosnia. It is presumed his reign stopped or died in the 940s. According to semi-fictional late 13th century Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja ,
14248-460: The people. As in the other parts of the early medieval Europe, Serbian "state" did not mean by default a rule over the territory, but over the people. So, the Serbian political organization included only areas which were populated by the Serbs, excluding the vast uninhabited areas in between. That way, the borders of the "state" cannot be accurately determined. According to DAI , "baptized Serbia" (known in historiography also as Raška ), included
14385-566: The politics of his country, falling under the heavy Byzantine influence. This allowed for Časlav, who returned to live in Bulgarian capital Preslav as Serbia was turned into the badlands, to come to Serbia and restore the state. This happened "7 years later", but historians are not sure is it 7 years after the 924 expedition to Serbia or after 927 and Simeon's death, but it had to be by 933–934, at latest. DAI claims that he and his entourage of 4 encountered only "50 single men, without wives and children, who lived from hunting", it shows how thorough
14522-497: The presence of Serbs in this area is disputable since the Byzantine sources were limited to the southern coast, but it is possible that among other tribes existed a tribe or group of small tribes of Serbs. According to Živković, the usage of the term Dalmatia in the Royal Frankish Annals refers both to the land where Serbs ruled as well as to the lands under the rule of Croat duke, but doesn not necessarily mean settlement of
14659-473: The prisoners and relics, whose account on the event survived. At the same time, citizens of the neighboring Spalatum complained to the "emperors in Constantinople" ( Heraclius and his son Heraklonas ) about the constant harassment by the Slavs, which prompted the emperors to issue an order to the "Goths and Slavs" to leave the town alone, which they complied to. The 8th century History of the Lombards by Paul
14796-523: The raids and pacified the situation on the peninsula, but by that time large portions of the Balkans were already inhabited by the Slavs. Around 640, the Avar-Slavic party raided the city of Salona on Dalmatian Adriatic coast, capturing Christian residents and numerous religious artifacts, including relics of the Saint Domnius and Saint Venantius of Salona . Pope John IV sent abbot Martin to buy off
14933-579: The realm of simply translating Byzantine works and established a unique Serbian civilization. Political and cultural growth was followed by economic growth. Agriculture developed; and while silver, tin and copper had been mined during the Roman era , mining vastly expanded in this period. Trade boomed as well utilizing old Roman roads. The apex was short-lived. Dušan's death was followed by disintegration of state under rival family branches and local leaders. The last emperor, Uroš , died in 1371. The major pretender to
15070-549: The region revolted against the Ottomans (1852–62) and were aided by the Montenegrins, who sought the liberation of the Serb people from Ottoman rule. The Herzegovinian Serbs frequently rose up against the Ottoman rule; culminating in the Herzegovina Uprising (1875-78) , which was supported by the Principality of Serbia and Montenegro. Montenegro did succeed in liberating and annexing large parts of Herzegovina before
15207-489: The region belongs to Canton 10 . Regions of Croatia Though the Republic of Croatia administratively consists of twenty counties , it is traditionally divided into four historical and cultural regions : Croatia proper , Dalmatia , Istria , and Slavonia . These are further divided into other, smaller regions. Serbia in the Middle Ages The medieval period in the history of Serbia began in
15344-404: The region in general, as even in the entire Byzantine Empire almost no contemporary chronicles or historical works survived. But in this period the process of resettling of the Serbs in the central region of the peninsula was finished. They inhabited the narrow valleys in the watersheds of Lim , Tara , Piva , Ibar , West Morava , Upper Drina and Upper Bosna . Certain groups possibly crossed
15481-557: The reign of Byzantine emperor Justinian I (527–565), defensive structures in the region were reinforced. In 535, the newly founded city of Justiniana Prima became center of the Archbishopric of Justiniana Prima , with metropolitan jurisdiction over all provinces of the Diocese of Dacia . At the beginning of the 7th century, region was invaded by Avars and Slavs , thus ending the Byzantine rule. The Slavs in general were mentioned by
15618-541: The rest . Following the Ottomans conquest and fall of Bosnian Kingdom , Hum or Humska zemlja became known as Hercegovina ( transl. Herzegovina ), which literally means "Herzog's land". The name "Herzegovina" , which still exists with the name Bosnia and Herzegovina , is the most-important and indelible legacy of Stjepan Vukčić Kosača; it is unique within the Serbo-Croatian-speaking Balkans, because one person gave his noble title, which in
15755-592: The rest of Europe in the 15th and the 19th century are compared, it shows the enormous erosion and falling behind. During the 6th century, at the beginning of the early medieval period, territory of later Serbia was controlled mainly by the Byzantine Empire (southern and central regions), and also by Byzantine neighboring rivals, the Gepid Kingdom and the Ostrogothic Kingdom (northern regions). During
15892-736: The rest of his life. Boris married him to a Bulgarian noblewoman and they had a son, Časlav Klonimirović . Mutimir's eldest son, Pribislav, succeeded to the throne after his father's death in 891. This was an opportunity for the descendants of the Mutimir's brothers to take over the Serbian throne. Already in 892 Petar Gojniković returned from Croatia, expelled all three Mutimir's sons to Croatia - Pribislav, Bran and Stefan - and began his rule which lasted until 917. In this period he suppressed two attempts for his dethronement. Petar defeated and blinded Bran who tried to overthrow him in 895 attacking from Croatia while in 897 he crushed Klonomir's attempt from Bulgaria to depose him. Klonimir, probably instigated by
16029-478: The ruler - there was also a cultural and spiritual dimension, which included acceptance of the basic cultural values and principles of the day, and the church was the founding stone of literacy and education in the Middle Age societies. The entire religious-cultural process spanned through three centuries. In those small, isolated areas, the Serbs formed their basic territorial and political units. Each unit comprised
16166-462: The same area by the Serbs, and was likely a reflection of the Franks' territorial aspirations towards the entire area of the former Roman Province of Dalmatia. In the contemporary Vita Hludovici that description of the Serbs is omitted. 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,
16303-478: The seal of the prince Strojimir , Mutimir's brother. The seal has a representation of a cross and the inscription Lord, help Strojimir ( ICE BOIΘ CTPOHMIP in Greek) around it. Pope John VIII addressed prince Mutimir in 873 and called in the letter for Mutimir that, "following the tradition of his ancestors", he submits his land to the jurisdiction of the new Pannonian bishop Methodius . Numerous arguments point to
16440-508: The settlements number increased and became fortified, also were re-settled ancient hillforts (more than 30%) but with reduced area size. No cemetery has been found, showing that the burial was mainly cremation and later biritual. Outside of Serbia, in lands which were settled by early Serbs (and other Slavs), main remains of the Slavic culture and social organization, from the 7th to the 9th century, includes several localities around Doboj and in
16577-450: The southeastern part of Serbian Danube region most probably was settled by Slavs from Ipotești–Cândești culture . The number of Slavic and Pannonian Avars findings in Serbia generally are very small, could be traces of warrior excursions or acculturation, and only since second half of the 7th century "can be interpreted with considerable certainty as a model of Slavic colonisation". However,
16714-578: The strongest. With their court at Ston they claimed lands from the Cetina River to Kotor, including Pelješac. The Bosnian Ban , Stjepan Kotoromanić , with allied Hum nobles and Serbia refusing to support the Branivojević , took over and annexed Hum in 1326. As part of the war for Hum, Dubrovnik sought to take over Pelješac and Ston , part of Hum held by the Branivojević. Serbia refused to yield it, which led to conflict between Dubrovnik and Serbia. In 1333
16851-406: The three years-long warfare, Presian didn't gain any territories and, additionally, lost the majority of its army. Vlastimir died c. 850 and Presijan in 852. Serbian throne was inherited by Vlastimir's sons, Mutimir, Strojimir and Gojnik . According to the conventional inheritance rules of the period, the state was probably administratively divided in three, but Mutimir held the "ruling right" as
16988-522: The town of Jablanica. From here on, the Neretva turns southward, continuing toward the Adriatic Sea . With the mountains lining its shores gradually receding, the Neretva enters a valley where the city of Mostar lies. It flows under the old bridge ( Stari most ) and continues, now wider, toward the town of Čapljina and the Neretva Delta in Croatia before emptying into the Adriatic Sea . The largest city
17125-664: The unbaptized Serbs, also called White Serbs, which live on the other side of the Turkey (i.e. Hungary ), in the land which they call Bojka, close to the Frankish Empire and the great Croatia, unbaptized, also known as the White Croatia ". The emperor also describes how the Serbian tribe was divided in two, with one group migrating to the Balkans: As two brothers inherited the rule over the Serbs after their father, one of them, taking
17262-420: The unified throne was King Vukašin , but he died clashing with the Ottomans in 1371 . The next who appeared able to restore Serbia was Prince Lazar Hrebeljanović , ruler of the expanded Moravian Serbia . The major clash with advancing Ottomans occurred on 28 June 1389 at Kosovo Polje . Both rulers, Sultan Murad I and prince Lazar, were killed in the battle. Due to its importance, magnitude, and consequences,
17399-530: The upper reaches are mostly short, due to the mountainous terrain: the River Rakitnica has cut a deep canyon, its waters being one of the least explored areas in this part of Europe. The Rakitnica flows into Neretva upstream from Konjic. The Neretva then flows northwest, through Konjic. It enters the Jablanica Reservoir ( Jablaničko jezero ), one of the largest in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The lake ends near
17536-520: The valuable custom's house at Drijeva ( Metković ). The population of Hum remained overwhelmingly Orthodox, compared to elsewhere in Bosnia where the Bosnian Church predominated, and after the arrival of the Franciscans in the 1340s, Catholicism also began to spread. During the 13th and early 14th centuries the Bosnian bans Stjepan I Kotromanić and Stjepan II Kotromanić joined these regions to
17673-486: The west, Praedenecenti in c. 825, Merehani - all of which disappeared from history afterwards), so as the remnants of the Avars in the Pannonian plain. By acquiring the Morava Valley and Belgrade, they came in contact with the Serbs. Because of the ensuing Bulgarian-Serbian relations, the reign of prince Vlastimir can be determined with greater certainty. According to the DAI , Presian I , Khan of Bulgaria , attacked
17810-490: Was a tight union of state and church which became autocephalous in 1219 under Saint Sava , and a patriarchate in 1346, rivaling the status of Ecumenical Patriarchate in Constantinople . The rulers endowed numerous monasteries, like Mileševa , Peć , Morača , Sopoćani , Visoki Dečani , Gračanica , which are today monuments with an important symbolism for Serbs. The union accelerated cultural development and moved beyond
17947-470: Was captured and sent to Bulgaria where he died imprisoned, while Pavle became the new ruler by the end of 917. At the beginning, Pavle ruled as a Bulgarian protégé . This prompted the new Byzantine emperor, Romanos I Lekapenos , to organize a party in 921 to overthrow Pavle. The campaign was headed by Pribislav's son, Zaharija Pribislavljević , who lived in Constantinople at the time, in the Romanos' court. He
18084-443: Was defeated and Pavle sent him to Bulgaria as a prisoner. In 923 Pavle turned against his sponsors, the Bulgarians, so Zaharija was again dispatched against him, now by Simeon. This time he was successful, expelling Pavle and taking over the rule himself. But Zaharija soon switched back to his original allies, the Byzantines. Simeon sent an army to conquer the shifty archon. His troops, headed by Theodore Sigritsa and Marmais attacked
18221-498: Was established in the late 11th century by Vukan . While under the rule of Stefan Nemanja and his descendants, the Nemanjić dynasty , Serbia achieved its Golden Age which lasted until the 14th century, when as a powerful state ( kingdom from 1217 , empire from 1346 ), it dominated the majority of the Balkan peninsula . By the 14th century, Serbia was a fully developed feudal state. Foundations were set by King Milutin (1282-1321),
18358-438: Was located on the Serbian or Bulgarian side of the border, but newer research indicates that Ras since the mid-9th century was renovated, inhabited and controlled by the Bulgarians hence being "a frontier district of Bulgaria". The ruling princely line originated from the first archon who led the Serbs to the Balkans during the emperor Heraclius' reign. However, by the time of the emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus,
18495-752: Was succeeded by his nephew the Grand Duke of Bosnia , Sandalj Hranić , who continued struggle against Radič, who regained his freedom in 1398, immediately seeking to restore his lost lands, becoming an important ally of the King Stjepan Ostoja . Radič participated in the Bosnian-Dubrovnik War in 1403-1404 , leading the attacks on Dubrovnik in the name of the King Stjepan Ostoja. Sandalj captured Radič, took all of his land, and after blinding him he throw him in prison, where Radić died in 1404 marking
18632-400: Was the oldest historical record which mentioned the name Serbs and gave some details about them. In contemporary historiography and archaeology, the narratives of De Administrando Imperio have been reassessed as they contain anachronisms and factual mistakes. The account in DAI about the Serbs mentions that they requested from the Byzantine commander of present-day Belgrade to settle in
18769-412: Was to warn the young prince on the problems which might occur during his reign. The Serbs are mentioned in the total of 8 chapters, from 29 to 36. The most important is the chapter 32, which is titled "About the Serbs and the lands in which they dwell today". The DAI drew information on the Serbs from, among others, Serbian sources. On the origin of the Serbs, the DAI says that "Serbs originate from
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