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By Sima Cirkovic
The preconditions for the creation of the Serbian nation came about
in the seventh century when part of the Serbian tribes settled in the
Roman province of Dalmatia, along with some of the other groups of Slavs.
UNDER THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE
The preconditions for the creation of the Serbian nation came about in
the seventh century when part of the Serbian tribes settled in the
Roman province of Dalmatia, along with some of the other groups of
Slavs. It is not known what differentiated those groups at that time
or what the basis was for their individuality. Narratives about their
origins played a role in distinguishing them. Among the Balkan Serbs
the tradition was long held that they came from the north, from
"White" Serbia, whence also came the oldest ruling family.
The Slavs spread out widely across the Balkan peninsula, forming a
large number of small principalities. Byzantine writers of the day
took notice of their number, and described them with the
characteristic name "Sklavinija". Members of the Serbian tribes
participated in the development of several principalities. Apart from
Serbia which (in the ninth century)stretched from the Sava to the
Dinaric massif, approximately from Ibar in the East to Vrbas in the
West, they settled in mountainous regions and karst areas which would
give the inhabitants special names: the Tribes of Neretva - those who
settled between the Cetina and the Neretva and on the islands of Brac,
Hvar, and Korcula; the Tribes of the Zahumlje region - those who
settled between the Neretva and the hinterlands of Dubrovnik; the
Tribes of Travunija and Konavli - those who settled between Dubrovnik
and Boka Kotorska. In the eleventh century, one of the centres of Serb
political life was the Principality of Duklja, which spread around
Lake Scutari and the valley of the River Zeta.
A Votive Carriage from Dupljaja, near Vrsac,
1500-1200 years B.C.
Along with the other territories occupied by Slavonic tribes, the
Serbian tribes were exposed to the attempts of their neighbours to
rule them. In the seventh and eighth centuries, the Avars of Pannonia
tried to dominate them, while the Byzantine Empire had aspirations for
all the lands which had once belonged to the Roman Empire. After 680
A.D., the Slavonic tribes between the Danube and mountains of the
Balkans were ruled by the Proto-Bulgars who created a state which
would rapidly expand, absorbing all the Slavonic tribal
principalities. From the middle of the ninth century onward, Serbia
found itself in the path of the Bulgar expansion, and it became the
scene of rivalry between the Byzantine Empire and Bulgaria. Pretexts
for foreign intervention were given by numerous conflicts in the
ruling dynasty, as the descendants of Prince Viseslav were struggling
for power and frequently replacing each other on the throne.
The Byzantine Empire achieved a great success in 870 when it managed
to baptize the Serbian rulers, thus opening the way to the mass
conversion of the Serbs to Christianity, accompanied by strong
political and cultural influences from the Empire. The Serbian
principalities were subordinated to the ecclesiastical metropolises in
Split and Syrmium. With Christianization, some of the differences
among the tribes were pushed into the background, especially those
which were rooted in pagan beliefs, and the path to unification was
opened up on the basis of a common Christian culture. A significant
role in that was played by the translation of biblical and liturgical
texts, and by the alphabets which were adapted to the specificities of
Slavonic languages, first Glagolitic and then Cyrillic. However,
Christianity also caused the appearance of some new differences among
the Slavs as a result of the disparate influences of the
ecclesiastical centres under whose jurisdiction they found themselves.
The church's attitude toward the use of Slavonic in the liturgy had
deep roots and far-reaching consequences. It placed the Serbs in a
position where they could maintain, develop and further adapt their
literacy.
Resistance to the Bulgarian expansion stopped in 924, when Serbia was
conquered; the occupation lasted only for a short time, because Prince
Caslav (927-ca.950) managed to revive the Serbian state immediately
after the death of Tsar Simeon. Caslav expanded the borders to the
coastline, and he repelled the attack of the Magyars who had settled
in Pannonia at the end of the ninth century, imposing their rule over
the predominantly Slavonic population they found in the area. In the
subsequent period, the Serbs very strongly felt the consequences of
the Byzantine conquests. The battles to subordinate Bulgaria lasted
for four decades, for Bulgaria was the greatest of the Byzantine
opponents in the battle for rule over the Balkan Slavs. By the time
those battles had finished in 1018, the boundaries of the Byzantine
Empire had reached the Danube and Sava.
Gamzigrad (Felix Romuliana) near Zajecar,
the remains of the imperial palace and its bulwalks, end of the third
and beginning of the fourth centuries A.D.
At that time, the territories settled by the Serbs cut across the
borders which separated the regions under direct Byzantine rule, east
of the line from Syrmium (Sremska Mitrovica) - Ras (Novi Pazar) -
Prizren, and west of that line was a region under native rulers, with
a traditional structure grownout of its Slavonic background. Those
territories subordinated to the Byzantine Empire belonged to the
archbishopric in Ohrid, so that the Serbian lands were split by the
boundary between the jurisdictions of Rome and Constantinople even
before the Great Schism in the church (1054).
In the territories under direct Byzantine rule, ancient cities were
revived such as Syrmium, Belgrade, Branicevo, and Nis as they became
the sees of ecclesiastical and secular rule, and which constantly had
an influence on the surrounding population for over two centuries.
North of the Danube and Sava in the Hungarian Kingdom, sparsely
populated, ethnically heterogenous territories were given townships,
fortresses, organized government (districts) and bishoprics.
After the subordination of Bulgaria, pressure came only from the
Byzantine Empire, especially from its bastions in Dubrovnik and Drac,
and the centres of Serbian resistance were formed in the vicinity of
those towns. In Duklja (Zeta) and in Zahumlje, Prince Stefan Vojislav
(1037-1051) managed to overthrow the Byzantine rule, and his
descendants Mihailo (ca.1055-ca. 1082) and Bodin (ca. 1082-1101)
expanded and stabilized the state through reconciliation with the
supremacy of the emperors, and by temporarily subordinating themselves
to them. After the end of the eleventh century, a greater role was
played by the regions in the interior, the centres being in Bosnia and
in the fortress of Ras.
After the beginning of the twelfth century, the Hungarian Kingdom
conquered Croatia and began to rule over the Byzantine towns in
Dalmatia, and thus began the long-lasting battle between the Byzantine
Empire and Hungary for dominance in the Balkans. The Serbs found
themselves caught between two powerful opponents, so that those in
Bosnia under rulers who carried the title of "ban" were subordinated
to the Hungarian kings. Meanwhile, those in the eastern territories
under the rule of the "great Zupans" (regional rulers), were wards of
the Byzantine emperors. In battle they would sometimes desert and join
the opposing forces. Closer ties were formed between the Hungarian and
Serbian ruling dynasties during this period.
A Sculpture from Lepenski Vir, ca. 6000 years B.C.
The final triumph of the Byzantine Empire during the rule of Emmanuel
Comnen (1143-1180), when Hungary and the surrounding Serbian
territories were subdued, was paid for by greatly sapping the empire's
strength, so that after the death of the militant emperor there was a
long period of crisis. The great Serb leader of that time, Stefan
Nemanja (1166-1196), took advantage of the weaknesses of the Byzantine
Empire as it struggled through hard times and extended his authority
to the South Morava and Great Morava, then into the territory of what
is now Kosovo, and also to the plains around Lake Scutari and to the
coastal towns from Kotor to Scutari. The territories which had once
belonged to the principalities of Zahumlje and Travunija fell under
the rule of Nemanja's brothers and sons, so that the Serbian state
stretched from the River Neretva to South Morava, and from Mt. Rudnik
down to the Adriatic. Stefan Nemanja abdicated the throne, appointing
his middle son, Stefan, to replace him; Stefan was the son-in-law of
the Byzantine imperial family. Nemanja became a monk at the monastery
of Studenica (built under his own patronage), and soon after joined
his youngest son Sava (who was also a monk) in Athos. Together they
built the monastery of Hilandar for Serbian monks. This monastery
would play an important role in the development of the Serbian church
and of Serbian culture.
AMONG THE BALKAN STATES
As the son-in-law of the emperor and bearer of the title
"Sevastokrator" ("Sublime Ruler"), Stefan Nemanjic (1196-1227) enjoyed
the support of the Byzantine Empire and managed to maintain the
heritage left him by Nemanja. Yet, when the situation changed from the
ground up, since the western crusaders led by the Venetians conquered
Constantinople and over threw the Byzantine Empire, Stefan turned to
the West. Through clever political maneuvering he managed to remove
all the dangers threatening from Hungary, from the Latin Empire, from
the revived Bulgaria and from the newly independent rulers in the
Byzantine provinces. In this period of turbulence and violent change,
he managed to keep his own state intact. He improved its reputation
and rank by receiving a royal crown from the pope (1217), which among
his descendants and heirs brought him the title of "first-crowned
king" - Stefan Prvovencani.
The Nemanjic Family Tree,
a fresco in the narthex of the Patriarchate of Pec, ca. 1330
Due to the activities of the king's brother, Sava, the position of the
church changed significantly within the Serbian state, having a
bifurcated tradition: it was Roman Catholic in the towns on the
Adriatic coast and in their vicinity, and it was Byzantine-Orthodox in
the territory of the archbishopric of Ohrid. The Catholic territories
were under the jurisdiction of the archbishoprics of Bar and
Dubrovnik, while in the Orthodox territories the churches were under
the bishoprics in Ras, Lipljan and Prizren. Attempting to obtain a
unified ecclesiastical framework within his kingdom, under local
leadership, the king supported the Orthodox tradition of the regions
in the interior in spite of his relationship to the Catholic Holy See.
In Nicaea a, the centre for Greeks in Asia Minor who safe-guarded the
tradition of the Patriarchate of Constantinople and attempted to
revive the Byzantine Empire, Sava Nemanjic obtained agreement from the
emperor and patriarch to form a separate archbishopric. Sava was
appointed archbishop in 1219 in Nicaea, while it was foreseen that his
successors would be chosen and appointed in Serbia. The boundaries of
the Orthodox territories were moved to the west and the south all the
way to the coastline, not including the ancient coastal cities and
their districts. New bishoprics were founded, with their see sin the
monasteries where the priests were educated, and the books necessary
for the life of the church were copied. Sava I provided for a
translation of the Byzantine code of church laws and rules for the use
of the clergy, named Nomokanon (Krmcija, Svetosavska krmcija).
Saint Sava, the first Serbian archbishop,
a fresco at Mileseva, done before 1228
The Serbian kingdom and autocephalous church were a framework in which
renewed cultural activity developed specific traits. This can be seen
in the churches and other ecclesiastical buildings of the Raska School
of architecture (Studenica, Zica, Mileseva, Sopocani, Gradac, Arilje,
and elsewhere), and also in the great strides made in scribal and
literary activities. The inherited language of literary expression
began to take on traits of the vernacular, while the corpus of
translated and copied works and genres began to include works written
by the Serbs themselves. As in the construction and furnishing of the
monasteries and churches, the members of the ruling dynasty stood out
here as well: Stefan Prvovencani and Sava I both wrote vitae of St.
Simeon (Stefan Nemanja), their father and the founder of the dynasty.
These vitae played an important part in the founding of the cult,
which later included St. Sava and some of the other rulers who were
revered as saints in the Serbian autocephalous church. The cult of
holy rulers raised the authority of the dynasty and made it possible
for a distinctive Serbian tradition to arise with the further
development of Christianity, under the protection of the church.
Along with developing specific cultural values, the territories in the
Serbian archbishopric expanded toward those who had remained outside
of their boundaries, most of all toward the citizens of coastal towns
and the subjects of the Bosnian bans. Having arisen from the
foundations of Serbian tribes, the Bosnian state developed separately
and expanded to include parts of the neighbouring Croatian and Serbian
territories. Its distinctiveness was evidenced by the "Bosnian Church"
which was judged to be heretical by those in both the Catholic and
Orthodox churches. The confessional difference sand occasional
conflicts of the bans with the Serbian kings led to divisions among
the population. Only did the expansion of Bosnia into the territories
of the Nemanjic state make it possible for Bosnia to play a
significant role in the safeguarding and development of the Serbian
tradition in the second half of the fourteenth century.
After Stefan Prvovencani, his sons Stefan Radoslav (1227-1234) and
Stefan Vladislav (1234-1243) played a subordinated role in the
complexities of Balkan politics, but they managed to preserve their
state intact. Their youngest brother, Stefan Uros I (1243-1276)
attempted to expand the territories he had inherited northwards (the
banate of Macva) and to the south(Skopje). He achieved more long-
lasting results in stimulating mining operations, in the coining of
silver coins, in the strengthening of mercantile trade, and in the
unification of the different parts of the state.
It was actually Uros's sons, Stefan Dragutin (1276-1282, died 1316) and
Stefan Uros II Milutin (1282-1321), who achieved greater success in
the expansion of the Serbian state. Milutin conquered northern and
central Macedonia (up to the town of Prosek, today known as Demir
Kapija), while Dragutin was given the banate of Macva and Belgrade
with its environs because he was the son-in-law and vassal of the
Hungarian king. Together the brothers conquered the territories of
what is now northeastern Serbia from the local Bulgarian magnates,
territories which were known as Branicevo and Kucevo at that time. The
Serbian state thus temporarily expanded to the Sava and Danube,
thereby creating the conditions necessary for better settlement and
ties with the central regions of Serbia. The ground was prepared for
the later movement of the centre of political and cultural life to the
north.
A Silver Coin minted by King Milutin (1282-1321)
The beginning of the fourteenth century was shaken by the long years
of struggle between Milutin and Dragutin, brought about as both of
them tried to secure the Serbian throne for their heirs. This dynastic
struggle caused the state to weaken and some territories were lost
upon the succession of Milutin's son Stefan Uros III Decanski (1321-
1331). The policy of conquering was not taken up again until the
succession of his son Stefan Dusan (1331-1355), who took advantage of
the militancy of the feudal lords and the internal disintegration and
troubles within the Byzantine Empire. In several vanquishing waves
southward, toward the wealthy and urbanized regions of the Byzantine
Empire, Dusan's territorial authority extended even further: from
Macedonia and Albania (1334, 1342-1345) to Epirus and Thessaly (1347-
1348).
In April of 1346, Dusan was crowned the "Emperor of the Serbs and
Greeks", after having elevated the Serbian archbishopric to the level
of a Patriarchate. This change clearly expressed the newly-found
status of the Serbian state, which had become the leading power of the
Balkan peninsula. Through expansion, this state grew distant from its
primary nucleus, aspiring toward Constantinople, and also from its
ancient tradition, identifying itself with a universal Orthodox
empire. The enormous state, which spread from the Sava and Danube down
to the Gulf of Corinth, was constantly defending itself, both on the
battlefield and in the perfection of its organization and legislation.
The political expansion which was characteristic of Dusan's time made
stable internal growth possible, above all in the flourishing of the
economy, which also added to the wealth of the rulers. Due to the
interest in the products of the Serbian mines, especially in silver,
Serbia took part in the economic development of the Mediterranean
through the mediation of merchants on the coast. From the mines opened
up till this time, urban centres for trade and business, were
developed. This was especially the case with the opening of a large
number of mines at the end of the fourteenth and in the fifteenth
centuries.
From the time of Milutin onward, Serbia had been open to the
influences of the Byzantine Empire in the construction of a system of
government, in the creation of institutions, and in the establishment
of law and order. As emperor, Dusan conscientiously and consistently
transplanted the models of the Byzantine empire onto Serbian soil,
especially in the organization of the royal court and its
appointments, the system of ranks and titles, and the work of the
offices. As head of the state he spread a system of government which
was founded on "kefalija", governmental appointees in the towns and
regions.
Dusan's kingdom was made up of a wide range of territories. Some of
them had Byzantine law and governmental structure, others had never
been under direct Byzantine rule. Some lived under Byzantine law, and
others under the law of custom. The emperor's legislative activity,
the main product of which was Dusan's Code (1349, 1354), was intended
to enhance the unification of government and perfection of the
functioning of governmental authority. The two hundred articles of the
Code regulated a wide range of legal issues of the time, and it acted
as a bridge between the imported laws of the Byzantine Empire and the
Serbian law of custom. The law-maker accepted the great inequality in
society as a starting point, in which a widespread and heterogeneous
peasant class stood opposite to the nobles; he ensured the role of the
government in establishing law and order and in uprooting crime, but
he had to accept the jurisdiction of the aristocracy, of the
autonomous districts and of groups with special rights.
Dushan's Code, established in 1349 and 1354;
this is a page from a copy made in the fourteenth century
The cultural trends of this period indicate the long-lasting
consequences of the previous conquests. From the time of Milutin,
emulation of the models of Constantinople were prominent in
architecture and art, which led to the creation of a distinct Serbian-
Byzantine style. In scribal, translation and literary undertakings the
number of genres increased, including translations of Byzantine world
chronicles and legal manuals which served as a popularization of the
ideology of the Empire.
The policy of conquest was interrupted after Dusan's unexpected death
(1355). During the time of Dusan's successor, Stefan Uros (1355-1371),
noblemen who were appointed to certain regions grew more powerful and
gradually became independent lords. The development of the state was
reversed, so that the first parts to break off were those which had
last been conquered. Dusan's half-brother Simeon Uros Paleologos pro-
claimed himself emperor and founded a separate state in Thessaly which
was maintained until the end of the fourteenth century. Dusan's
appointees became the basis for the establishment of dynasties of
local lords in Epirus and southern Albania. However, they were not
related to the Serbian state.
IN THE BATTLE FOR SURVIVAL
This development had even greater consequences because somewhat
earlier the Turks had established footholds on European soil. In
opposition to them stood disunited, quarrelling local lords instead of
the powerful, united empire of Dusan. The first to face the Turkish
expansion was the lord of the town of Ser and its surroundings, Despot
Jovan Ugljesa. His brother, Vukasin, who was the lord of the
territories in western Macedonia, had become co-emperor with Uros,
with the ancient royal title of the Serbs. The brothers tried to
repulse the Turks, but they were defeated and killed at the Battle on
the Maritsa River (September 26, 1371). The Turks grew stronger. The
regions of their vassals extended to Macedonia where Vukasin's sons
were, and to the borderlands between Serbia and Bulgaria, where
Dusan's nephews of the Dejanovic family (the Dragasi) had their own
territory.
The lords of the central regions grew stronger and continued to
quarrel over territory. Prince Lazar Hrebeljanovic(1362-1389) became
more and more renowned. As the lord of the territory from Novo Brdo to
Krusevac, he gradually extended his authority all the way to the Sava
and Danube. His neighbour, Nikola Altomanovic (1363-1373) gained a
stronghold over the regions united earlier by Vojislav Vojinovic,
taking control over the regions from western Serbia down to the
coastline and threatening his neighbour regions. Due to the older and
newer conquests, starting from the Neretva valley and extending toward
the East, the Bosnian ban Tvrtko began to play an increasingly
important role. He was a cousin of the Nemanjic family and he had
claim to the Serbian throne on that basis. Together with Prince Lazar,
he defeated Nikola Altomanovic in 1377, and extended his rule to
include Polimlje and Boka. That same year he was crowned as the King
of the Serbs and of Bosnia.
King Stefan Dechanski and Tsar Dushan,
a fresco at Dechani, painted between 1346 and 1350
The lords in the central regions were also attacked by the Turks.
After several local conflicts, Prince Lazar, his son-in-law Vuk
Brankovic and King Stefan Tvrtko I (1353-1391), who sent a unit to
help, all tried to repulse the Turks. In a bloody battle at Kosovo
polje on June 15, 1389, Prince Lazar, the Turkish Sultan Murad, and
thousands of warriors on both sides were killed. In later historical
tradition, this battle would be remembered as the decisive defeat of
the Serbs, the end of the Serbian state.
The Turks quickly recovered and imposed their own rule over Lazar's
successors, and after 1392 over Vuk Brankovic, who had become a
leading figure until the Turks overthrew him and imprisoned him in
1397. In this wave of conquest, the Turks took what had been a vassal
state in Macedonia (1395).The reversal did not come about until the
Turkish defeat at Angora (1402) at the hands of the Mongols. Internal
struggles among the pretenders to the Turkish throne ensued, which
allowed the Balkan states a respite of several decades in which they
developed independently.
The son of Lazar, Stefan Lazarevic (1389-1427) managed to gain a
stronghold in the territories he inherited and gradually to gather in
the other territories of what had once been the Serbian state. In
1402, he was granted the title of despot by the Byzantine emperor, and
Serbian rulers would bear that title till the end of their independent
state. He accepted ultimate rule by the Hungarian king, thus obtaining
Belgrade and Macva which Serbia and Hungary had been quarrelling over
for ages. His position was weakened by conflicts with his brother and
with his nephews - the sons of Vuk Brankovic. After a truce in 1411,
the regions under their control were unified, and Vuk's son, Djuradj,
was appointed to be the successor to his uncle. Stefan's other nephew,
Balsa III, thelast of the Balsic family, willed Stefan his lands just
before his death. So, Zeta as well (although it was reduced in size
because part of it was held by the Venetians) came to be part of the
Serbian state, thus ending a long period of fragmentation. The lands
of the Serbian despots stretched from the Sava and Danube down to Sar-
planina and Lake Scutari, and they were centralized in the north:
Belgrade was the capital during the reign of Stefan Lazarevic, and
Smederevo during the reign of Djuradj Brankovic (1427-1456).
In spite of the difficulties and dual vassal responsibilities to
Hungary and Turkey, the despots managed to establish internal
stability in the state, along with economic prosperity and the
flourishing of culture. Apart from the old-established mines, new ones
were opened thus attracting merchants and increasing the rulers'
incomes more than ever. Along with their economic and governmental
functions, the towns gradually became centres of society and culture.
The tradition of the Nemanjic family as founders and builders was
taken up by Prince Lazar, and that tradition was continued by his
successors and by the noblemen of the time. The artistic monuments of
the epoch are grouped in the northern territories, and they bear the
common characteristics of the Morava school. In literary and
translation work, there was special interest in historical themes.
Holy Warriors, a fresco in the monastery of Manasija, ca. 1418
The short-lived prosperity of the era of the despots was built on a
weak foundation because Serbia did not have the strength to defend its
independence at that time. Caught between Hungary and Turkey, Serbia
depended on the relations between those two states. In one period of
enmity, the Turks conquered Serbia (1439), but Serbia was revived in
the war of 1443 and the truce of 1444. However, the last era of
independence did not last long. Under the rule of Mohammed II (1451-
1481), the Turks began to conquer the vassal states systematically and
Serbia found itself under attack every year (1451-1459). In those
assaults, the territory of Serbia grew ever smaller, until Smederevo
finally fell on June 20, 1459. Soon after that the Serbian territories
in Bosnia also fell (1463-1465). The mountain areas of Zeta held out
the longest, up until 1496. Then under the rule of the local dynasty
of the Crnojevic family, which safeguarded the old traditions and
symbols, Zeta was known as Crna Gora (Montenegro) from that time
forward. The printing shop at the monastery at Cetinje, which
published in Cyrillic, was a unique cultural achievement of the time
(1493-1496).
The Turkish conquest radically changed the conditions for the
development of the Serbian nation. The dynasty and most of the
nobility was uprooted. Secular institutions were destroyed, so that
only the church carried on the continuity of tradition, because it
alone could go on functioning, albeit in poverty and under
incomparably more difficult circumstances than previously. Now under
the guises of an Islamic theocratic empire, the Serbs (like all other
subordinate nations) were placed under constant pressure to adapt
themselves to the Moslem social order, including the state and legal
apparatus as well. The Ottoman state tolerated those of other faiths,
Christian citizens were considered to be wards of the sultan, but the
way to social acceptance was open only to those who accepted the
religious confession of the conquerors. From the very beginning of the
Turkish rule, up till its very end, individuals and groups from
various layers of Serbian society accepted Islam, sometimes to make
their life easier or to retain their property, sometimes to obtain a
place in the military or in the governmental machine. Most often,
conversion to Islam was a marginal process, usually accompanied by
ostracism of those who accepted Islam from the Serbian milieu. In
exceptional cases, compact groups of the Moslem population were
formed, separated from their compatriots not only by their faith, but
also by the accompanying cultural differences(names, clothing, eating
habits, ambience, the rituals and rites which frame life from birth to
death, etc.). Even if they remained in the same milieu and retained
their language, those who accepted Islam changed their relationship to
historical traditions. Their separation was reinforced by their
different attitudes toward the Ottoman empire.
Immediately after conquest, the lands were divided between the Turkish
warriors among whom, for a time some, some were even Christians. Part
of the lands was reserved for the sultan and the high dignitaries
(especially the mines and merchant centres in the towns). Territories
were divided into administrative units known as sanjaks, nahias, and
qadis. Their centres were in towns which took on an oriental
appearance and Islamic character more quickly than the villages,
especially because of the military garrisons, officers and Turkish
artisans.
Holy Prince Lazar, woodcuting,
end of the seventeenth century
The Turkish conquests were preceded and followed by great migrations
which swept the Serbs far from their homeland of times past. They
moved into the neighbouring territories along the Danube, settling in
what is now Vojvodina where the state traditions under the despots
(the Brankovic family, the Berislavic family and Pavle Bakic) were
maintained until the fall of Hungary (1541). Some of the Serbs were
forcibly moved and led from the Turkish to the Christian side, where
they were made a part of the system of defence (the Military
Border)which was formed in the sixteenth century. They spread into
Dalmatia, Croatia, Slavonia, parts of Slovenia, distant regions of
Hungary, and Transylvania. In some areas, the Serb settlers were small
in number and sparsely settled, so that in later times they were
assimilated by the more numerous and denser local populations of
colonists brought in from abroad.
Scattered out over a vast territory, divided between two empires at
war, the Serbs were kept together by a strong historical tradition and
by the unique framework of the Orthodox church. The patriarchs and
council disappeared soon after the Turkish conquest, the metropolitans
were chosen by local councils, and titles were obtained from the
sultan. The Patriarchate of Pec was not revived until 1557,
encompassing an enormous area with more than 40 metropolitans and
bishops. Significant juridical responsibilities in terms of marital
and inheritance rights also fell to the church. Although the church
had lost most of its lands, it still managed to carryout its mission
by supporting itself on the small contributions made by a large number
of believers. In spite of the official ban on the construction of new
Christian places of worship, numerous churches and monasteries were
erected in the period of Turkish rule.
In architecture and in art the traditions of the Middle Ages were
retained, and the old monuments served as models. Despite the
unsuitable conditions, scribal and literary activities remained vital,
and many important works were saved due to the copies made in the
period under the Turks. With the passing of time, the territories with
tribal societies in the mountainous areas of what are today
Herzegovina and Montenegro became the greatest keepers of the medieval
tradition, because they were cut off from direct Turkish interference
and pressure. The tribal chiefs and church hierarchy worked together
in organizing the battle against the Turkish rule at the end of the
sixteenth century, and they were inspired by the idea of a revived
Serbian kingdom.
The period of peace, after the uprising against the Turks at the end
of the sixteenth and beginning of the seventeenth centuries during the
time of Patriarch Pajsije (1614-1647) was filled with activity in the
realm of culture; the main aim of that activity was to maintain and
continue tradition. Old texts were zealously gathered and copied, the
Patriarch himself wrote the Vita of Tsar Uros (thereby founding his
cult),and churches were renovated and iconography revived. Among the
characteristic fruits of this revival there was also a new revision of
Dusan's legislation, which was more a memorial to the old Serbian
state than a real factor in the every day life of the seventeenth
century.
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