fbpx
Wikipedia

Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja

The Chronicle of the Priest of Dioclea or Duklja (Serbo-Croatian: Ljetopis popa Dukljanina) is the usual name given to a purportedly medieval chronicle written in the late 13th century by an anonymous priest from Duklja. Its oldest preserved copy is in Latin from the 17th century, while it has been variously claimed by modern historians to have been compiled between the late 14th and early 16th centuries.

Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja
AuthorAn anonymous priest in Duklja (presbyter Diocleas)
CountryRepublic of Venice
Republic of Ragusa
Kingdom of Serbia
LanguageLatin
Subjecthistory, hagiography
Publication date
  • 1510 (Marulić)
  • 1601 (Orbini)

It contains some semi-mythical material on the early history of the Western South Slavs. Historians have yet to discount the work as based on inaccuracies and fiction. The postulates are there that Slavs lived in the Balkans from the 5th- to the 12th-century.[1][2] It recounts the history of Dalmatia and nearby regions from the 5th to the mid-12th century.[3] The section "The Life of St. Jovan Vladimir", is believed to be a fictional account of earlier history.

Authorship and date edit

The work was purportedly compiled by an anonymous "priest of Duklja" (presbyter Diocleas, known in Serbo-Croatian as pop Dukljanin). The work is preserved only in its Latin redactions from a 17th-century printing.[4][5] Dmine Papalić, a nobleman from Split, found the text which he transcribed in 1509–10, which was translated by Marko Marulić into Latin in 1510, with the title Regnum Dalmatiae et Croatiae gesta.[6] Mavro Orbin, a Ragusan historian, included the work (amongst other works) in his Il regno de gli Slavi (ca. 1601); Johannes Lucius did the same in ca. 1666.[5] These Latin redactions claim that the original was written in Slavic.[7]

The chronicle, written in Latin, was completed between 1299 and 1301 in the town of Bar (in Montenegro), then part of the Serbian Kingdom. Its author was presbyter Rudger (or Rudiger), the Catholic Archbishop of Bar (Antivari), who was probably of Czech origin.[8] He is thought to have lived around 1300 because Bosnian borders are referred to in a way that coincides with an anonymous text, the Anonymi Descriptio Europae Orientalis (Cracow, 1916), that has been dated to the year 1308.[9] Early 21st-century research has established that Rudger flourished in ca. 1296–1300.[10]

Chapters 1–33 of the chronicle are based on oral traditions and its author's constructions; these are largely dismissed by historians.[11][12] However, the next three chapters possess invaluable historical data about this time period.[13][14] Despite its hagiographic nature, Chapter 36 (on Saint Jovan Vladimir), a summary of an older hagiography dating between 1075 and 1089 (when the Vojislavljević dynasty endeavored to obtain the royal insignia from the Pope, and to elevate the Bar Bishopric to an archbishopric), contains considerable historical data that has been found to be reliable.[11] Chapters 34 and 35, which deal with Vladimir's father and uncles, are likely based on the prologue of this 11th-century hagiography.[12]

Other obsolete and refuted theories include that the author lived in the second half of the 12th century.[10] Some Croatian historians put forward the theory,[15] of E. Peričić (1991),[14][13] that the anonymous author was a Grgur Barski (Gregory of Bar), a bishop of Bar, who lived in the second half of the 12th century. The bishopric of Bar was defunct at that time. In his 1967 reprint of the work, Yugoslav historian Slavko Mijušković said that the chronicle is a purely fictional literary product, belonging to the late 14th or early 15th century.[16] Serbian historian Tibor Živković, in his monograph Gesta regum Sclavorum (2009), concluded that its main parts are dated to ca. 1300–10.[17]

Content edit

Regnum Sclavorum (1601) can be divided into the following sections:[18]

  • Introduction (Auctor ad lectorem)
  • Libellus Gothorum, chapters I–VII
  • Constantine's Legend (or "Pannonian Legend"), chapters VIII and beginning of IX
  • Methodius (Liber sclavorum qui dicitur Methodius), rest of chapter IX
  • Travunian Chronicle, chapters X–XXXV, in two parts
  • The Life of St. Jovan Vladimir, chapter XXXVI
  • History of Dioclea, chapters XXXVII–LXVII

The author attempted to present an overview of ruling families over the course of over two centuries — from the 10th century up to the time of writing, the 12th century.[citation needed] There are 47 chapters in the text, of different sizes and varying subject matter.

Folklore and translations edit

The work is actually a number of separate but similar manuscripts, stemming from an original source that does not survive but assumed to have been written by the Priest of Duklja himself (or other monk-scribes giving a helping hand).

It has been generally agreed that this Presbyter included in his work folklore and literary material from Slavic sources which he translated into Latin.[19] Among the material he translated, rather than created, is "The Legend of Prince Vladimir" which is supposed to have been written by another clergyman, also from Duklja, more specifically, Zećanin from Krajina in Zeta or Duklja (an earlier name for Zeta). In its original version, it was a hagiographic work, a "Life of St. Vladimir" rather than a "Legend." Prince Vladimir, the protagonist of the story, as well as King Vladislav, who ordered Vladimir's execution, were historical persons, yet "The Legend of Prince Vladimir" contains non-historical material.

The chronicle was also added to by a bishop of Bar intent on demonstrating his diocese' superiority over that of Bishop of Split.

In 1986, the chronicle was translated from the Croatian into Ukrainian by Antin V. Iwachniuk.[20] The translation was financed by the Iwachniuk Ukrainian Studies and Research Fund at the University of Ottawa.

Assessment edit

Historical value, fiction edit

Various inaccurate or simply wrong claims in the text make it an unreliable source. Modern historians have serious doubts about the majority of this work as being mainly fictional, or wishful thinking. Some go as far as to say that it can be dismissed in its entirety, but that is not a majority opinion, rather, it is thought to have given us a unique insight into the whole era from the point of view of the indigenous Slavic population and it is still a topic of discussion.[21]

The work describes the local Slavs as a peaceful people imported by the Goth rulers, who invaded the area in the 5th century, but it doesn't attempt to elaborate on how and when this happened. This information contradicts the information found in the Byzantine text De Administrando Imperio.

The Chronicle also mentions one Svetopeleg or Svetopelek, the eighth descendant of the original Goth invaders, as the main ruler of the lands that cover Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro (Duklja) and Serbia. He is also credited with the Christianization of the people who are Goths or Slavs — a purely fictitious attribution. These claims about a unified kingdom are probably a reflection of the earlier glory of the Moravian kingdom. He may also have been talking about Avars.

The priest's parish was located at the seat of the archbishopric of Duklja. According to Bishop Gregory's late 12th-century additions to this document, this Archbishopric covered much of the western Balkans including the bishoprics of Bar, Budva, Kotor, Ulcinj, Svač, Skadar, Drivast, Pulat, Travunia, Zahumlje.

Further, it mentions Bosnia (Bosnam) and Rascia (Rassa) as the two Serbian lands, while describing the southern Dalmatian Hum/Zahumlje, Travunia and Dioclea (most of today's Herzegovina, Montenegro, as well as parts of Croatia and Albania) as Croatian lands ("Red Croatia"), which is a description inconsistent with other historical works from the same period, but not all.


The archbishop of Bar was later named Primas Serbiae. Ragusa had some claims to be considered the natural ecclesiastical centre of South Dalmatia but those of Dioclea (Bar) to this new metropolitan status were now vigorously pushed especially as the Pope intended Serbia to be attached to Dioclea.

In his 1967 reprint of the work, Yugoslav historian Slavko Mijušković stated that the chronicle is a purely fictional literary product, belonging to the late 14th or early 15th century.[16]

Region of Bosnia edit

The region of Bosnia is described to span the area west of the river Drina, "up to the Pine mountain" (Latin: ad montem Pini, Croatian: do gore Borave).[22] The location of this Pine mountain is unknown. In 1881, Croatian historian Franjo Rački wrote that this refers to the mountain of "Borova glava" near the Livno field.[23] Croatian historian Luka Jelić wrote the mountain was located either between Maglaj and Skender Vakuf, northwest of Žepče, or it was the mountain Borovina located between Vranica and Radovna, according to Ferdo Šišić's 1908 work.[24] In 1935, Serbian historian Vladimir Ćorović wrote that the toponym refers to the mountain of Borova glava, because of etymology and because it is located on the watershed (drainage divide).[25][26] In 1936, Slovene ethnologist Niko Županič had also interpreted that to mean that the western border of Bosnia was at some drainage divide mountains, but placed it to the southeast of Dinara.[27] Croatian historian Anto Babić, based on the work of Dominik Mandić in 1978, inferred that the term refers roughly to a place of the drainage divide between the Sava and Adriatic Sea watersheds.[28][29] In her discussion of Ćorović, Serbian historian Jelena Mrgić-Radojčić also points to the existence of a mountain of "Borja" in today's northern Bosnia with the same etymology.[25]

References edit

  1. ^ Kaimakamova, Miliana (13 September 2016). "Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja". Encyclopedia of the Medieval Chronicle.
  2. ^ East Central Europe in the Middle Ages, 1000-1500. University of Washington Press. March 2013. ISBN 9780295800646.
  3. ^ Kaimakamova, Miliana (13 September 2016). "Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja". Encyclopedia of the Medieval Chronicle.
  4. ^ Stephenson, Paul (7 August 2003). The Legend of Basil the Bulgar-Slayer. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. p. 27. ISBN 978-0-521-81530-7.
  5. ^ a b S. Bujan, La Chronique du pretre de Dioclee. Un faux document historique, Revuedes etudes byzantines 66 (2008) 5–38
  6. ^ Zarij M. Bešić (1967). Istorija Crne Gore: od najstarijih vremena do kraja XII vijeka. Pedakt︠s︡ija za istoriju t︠s︡rne gore. p. 423.
  7. ^

    Requested by you, my beloved brethren in Christ and honorable priests of the holy Archbishopric See of the Church in Duklja, as well as by some elders, but especially by the youth of our city who find pleasure not only in listening to and reading about the wars but in taking part in them also, to translate from the Slavic language into Latin the Book of Goths, entitled in Latin Regnum Sclavorum in which all their deeds and wars have been described...

  8. ^ Živković 2009, p. 379.
  9. ^ Živković 2010, p. 172.
  10. ^ a b Živković 2009.
  11. ^ a b Živković 2006, pp. 66–72.
  12. ^ a b Živković 2009, p. 260.
  13. ^ a b Vojislav Nikčević (2002). Kroatističke studije. Erasmus Naklada. ISBN 9789536132584. I Pop Dukljanin, najvjerovatnije Grgur Barski (v. PERI- ČIĆ, 1991) je u Kraljevstvu Slovjena (Regnum Sclavorum) donio i podatke o postojanju Bijele h(o)rvatske.
  14. ^ a b Hrvatski obzor. Eticon. 1996. Općenito se pretpostavlja da je u Ljetopisu nepoznati autor (E. Peričić naziva ga Grgur Barski) nastojao uzveličati starinu dukljanske crkve i države. Barska je, naime, nadbiskupija bila ukinuta 1142., pa se time nastojalo obnoviti nadbiskupiju, ...
  15. ^ Šanjek, Franjo (1996). Kršćanstvo na hrvatskom prostoru: pregled religiozne povijesti Hrvata (7-20. st.). Kršćanska sadašnjost. ISBN 978-953-151-103-2. Anonimni svećenik iz Bara, Pop Dukljanin ili - prema nekim istraživanjima - Grgur Barski, u drugoj polovici 12. stoljeća piše zanimljivo historiografsko djelo poznato kao Libellus Gothorum ili Sclavorum regnum (Ljetopis Popa Dukljanina), ...
  16. ^ a b Henrik Birnbaum (1974). "On Medieval and Renaissance Slavic Writing: Selected Essays". Slavistic Printings and Reprintings. Walter de Gruyter (266): 304. ISBN 9783111868905. ISSN 0081-0029.
  17. ^ Živković 2009, p. 362-365.
  18. ^ Zlatar, Zdenko (2007). The Poetics of Slavdom: Part III: Njegoš. Vol. 2. Peter Lang. pp. 573–. ISBN 978-0-8204-8135-7.
  19. ^ Đorđe Sp. Radojičić (1971). Živan Milisavac (ed.). Jugoslovenski književni leksikon [Yugoslav Literary Lexicon] (in Serbo-Croatian). Novi Sad (SAP Vojvodina, SR Serbia): Matica srpska. p. 110.
  20. ^ [Chronicle of Pop Duklianin - the oldest South Slavic monument]. Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky Institute of Eastern Christian Studies. 2019-02-22. Archived from the original on 2019-02-23. Retrieved 2019-02-22.
  21. ^ (in Croatian). Historiografija.hr. 2011-07-11. Archived from the original on 2013-10-09. Retrieved 2012-11-21.
  22. ^ Edin Mutapčić (2008). . Baština Sjeveroistočne Bosne. JU Zavod za zaštitu i korištenje kulturno-historijskog i prirodnog naslijeđa Tuzlanskog kantona (1): 18. ISSN 1986-6895. Archived from the original on 2016-03-05. Retrieved 2012-09-12.
  23. ^ "Hrvatska prije XII vieka: glede na zemljišni obseg i narod". Rad (in Croatian). Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts. LVI: 36. 1881. Retrieved 2012-09-12.
  24. ^ Jelić, Luka (September 1909). "Duvanjski sabor". Journal of the Zagreb Archaeological Museum (in Croatian). Zagreb Archaeological Museum. 10 (1): 138. ISSN 0350-7165. Retrieved 2012-09-12.
  25. ^ a b Mrgić-Radojčić 2004, p. 52–53.
  26. ^ Vladimir Ćorović, Teritorijalni razvoj bosanske države u srednjem vijeku, Glas SKA 167, Belgrade, 1935, pp. 10-13
  27. ^ Niko Županič, Značenje barvnega atributa v imenu „Crvena Hrvatska". Lecture at the IV Congress of Slavic geographers and ethnographers, Sofia, 18 August 1936.
  28. ^ Ivan Mužić (December 2010). "Bijeli Hrvati u banskoj Hrvatskoj i županijska Hrvatska". Starohrvatska Prosvjeta (in Croatian). Split, Croatia: Museum of Croatian Archaeological Monuments. III (37): 270. ISSN 0351-4536. Retrieved 2012-09-12.
  29. ^ D. Mandić, Državna i vjerska pripadnost sredovječne Bosne i Hecegovine. II. edition, Ziral, Chicago–Rome 1978, pp. 408–409.

Sources edit

  • Šišić, Ferdo, ed. (1928). Letopis Popa Dukljanina (Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja). Beograd-Zagreb: Srpska kraljevska akademija.
  • Kunčer, Dragana (2009). Gesta Regum Sclavorum. Vol. 1. Beograd-Nikšić: Istorijski institut, Manastir Ostrog.
  • Živković, Tibor (2009). Gesta Regum Sclavorum. Vol. 2. Beograd-Nikšić: Istorijski institut, Manastir Ostrog.

Bibliography edit

  • Fine, John Van Antwerp Jr. (1991) [1983]. The Early Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0472081497.
  • Slavko Mijušković (1967). Ljetopis popa Dukljanina.
  • Mijušković, S., ur. (1988) Ljetopis popa Dukljanina. Beograd: Prosveta
  • Nikola Banašević (1971). Letopis popa Dukljanina: i narodna predanja. Srpska književna zadruga.[ISBN missing]
  • Mrgić-Radojčić, Jelena (2004). "Rethinking the Territorial Development of the Medieval Bosnian State". Istorijski časopis. 51: 43–64.
  • Orbini, Mauro (1601). Il Regno de gli Slavi hoggi corrottamente detti Schiavoni (in Italian). Pesaro: Apresso Girolamo Concordia.
  • Orbin, Mavro (1968). Kraljevstvo Slovena (in Serbian). Beograd: Srpska književna zadruga.
  • Živković, Tibor (2000). Sloveni i Romeji: Slavizacija na prostoru Srbije od VII do XI veka [The Slavs and the Romans: Slavicization in the area of Serbia between VII and XI century] (in Serbian). Beograd: Istorijski institut SANU, Službeni glasnik. ISBN 9788677430221.
  • Živković, Tibor (2002). Južni Sloveni pod vizantijskom vlašću 600-1025 [South Slavs under the Byzantine Rule 600-1025] (in Serbian). Beograd: Istorijski institut SANU, Službeni glasnik. ISBN 9788677430276.
  • Živković, Tibor (2006). Portreti srpskih vladara: IX-XII vek [Portraits of Serbian Rulers: IX-XII Century] (in Serbian). Beograd: Zavod za udžbenike i nastavna sredstva. ISBN 9788617137548.
  • Živković, Tibor (2008). Forging unity: The South Slavs between East and West 550-1150. Belgrade: The Institute of History, Čigoja štampa. ISBN 9788675585732.
  • Živković, Tibor (2010). "On the Beginnings of Bosnia in the Middle Ages". Spomenica akademika Marka Šunjića (1927-1998). Sarajevo: Filozofski fakultet. pp. 161–180.

External links edit

  • Paul Stephenson. . Archived from the original on 2012-04-18.
  • The Latin version of the Chronicle (in Serbocroatian)
  • The Croatian version of the Chronicle

chronicle, priest, duklja, chronicle, priest, dioclea, duklja, serbo, croatian, ljetopis, popa, dukljanina, usual, name, given, purportedly, medieval, chronicle, written, late, 13th, century, anonymous, priest, from, duklja, oldest, preserved, copy, latin, fro. The Chronicle of the Priest of Dioclea or Duklja Serbo Croatian Ljetopis popa Dukljanina is the usual name given to a purportedly medieval chronicle written in the late 13th century by an anonymous priest from Duklja Its oldest preserved copy is in Latin from the 17th century while it has been variously claimed by modern historians to have been compiled between the late 14th and early 16th centuries Chronicle of the Priest of DukljaAuthorAn anonymous priest in Duklja presbyter Diocleas CountryRepublic of VeniceRepublic of RagusaKingdom of SerbiaLanguageLatinSubjecthistory hagiographyPublication date1510 Marulic 1601 Orbini It contains some semi mythical material on the early history of the Western South Slavs Historians have yet to discount the work as based on inaccuracies and fiction The postulates are there that Slavs lived in the Balkans from the 5th to the 12th century 1 2 It recounts the history of Dalmatia and nearby regions from the 5th to the mid 12th century 3 The section The Life of St Jovan Vladimir is believed to be a fictional account of earlier history Contents 1 Authorship and date 2 Content 3 Folklore and translations 4 Assessment 4 1 Historical value fiction 4 2 Region of Bosnia 5 References 6 Sources 7 Bibliography 8 External linksAuthorship and date editThe work was purportedly compiled by an anonymous priest of Duklja presbyter Diocleas known in Serbo Croatian as pop Dukljanin The work is preserved only in its Latin redactions from a 17th century printing 4 5 Dmine Papalic a nobleman from Split found the text which he transcribed in 1509 10 which was translated by Marko Marulic into Latin in 1510 with the title Regnum Dalmatiae et Croatiae gesta 6 Mavro Orbin a Ragusan historian included the work amongst other works in his Il regno de gli Slavi ca 1601 Johannes Lucius did the same in ca 1666 5 These Latin redactions claim that the original was written in Slavic 7 The chronicle written in Latin was completed between 1299 and 1301 in the town of Bar in Montenegro then part of the Serbian Kingdom Its author was presbyter Rudger or Rudiger the Catholic Archbishop of Bar Antivari who was probably of Czech origin 8 He is thought to have lived around 1300 because Bosnian borders are referred to in a way that coincides with an anonymous text the Anonymi Descriptio Europae Orientalis Cracow 1916 that has been dated to the year 1308 9 Early 21st century research has established that Rudger flourished in ca 1296 1300 10 Chapters 1 33 of the chronicle are based on oral traditions and its author s constructions these are largely dismissed by historians 11 12 However the next three chapters possess invaluable historical data about this time period 13 14 Despite its hagiographic nature Chapter 36 on Saint Jovan Vladimir a summary of an older hagiography dating between 1075 and 1089 when the Vojislavljevic dynasty endeavored to obtain the royal insignia from the Pope and to elevate the Bar Bishopric to an archbishopric contains considerable historical data that has been found to be reliable 11 Chapters 34 and 35 which deal with Vladimir s father and uncles are likely based on the prologue of this 11th century hagiography 12 Other obsolete and refuted theories include that the author lived in the second half of the 12th century 10 Some Croatian historians put forward the theory 15 of E Pericic 1991 14 13 that the anonymous author was a Grgur Barski Gregory of Bar a bishop of Bar who lived in the second half of the 12th century The bishopric of Bar was defunct at that time In his 1967 reprint of the work Yugoslav historian Slavko Mijuskovic said that the chronicle is a purely fictional literary product belonging to the late 14th or early 15th century 16 Serbian historian Tibor Zivkovic in his monograph Gesta regum Sclavorum 2009 concluded that its main parts are dated to ca 1300 10 17 Content editRegnum Sclavorum 1601 can be divided into the following sections 18 Introduction Auctor ad lectorem Libellus Gothorum chapters I VII Constantine s Legend or Pannonian Legend chapters VIII and beginning of IX Methodius Liber sclavorum qui dicitur Methodius rest of chapter IX Travunian Chronicle chapters X XXXV in two parts The Life of St Jovan Vladimir chapter XXXVI History of Dioclea chapters XXXVII LXVIIThe author attempted to present an overview of ruling families over the course of over two centuries from the 10th century up to the time of writing the 12th century citation needed There are 47 chapters in the text of different sizes and varying subject matter Folklore and translations editThe work is actually a number of separate but similar manuscripts stemming from an original source that does not survive but assumed to have been written by the Priest of Duklja himself or other monk scribes giving a helping hand It has been generally agreed that this Presbyter included in his work folklore and literary material from Slavic sources which he translated into Latin 19 Among the material he translated rather than created is The Legend of Prince Vladimir which is supposed to have been written by another clergyman also from Duklja more specifically Zecanin from Krajina in Zeta or Duklja an earlier name for Zeta In its original version it was a hagiographic work a Life of St Vladimir rather than a Legend Prince Vladimir the protagonist of the story as well as King Vladislav who ordered Vladimir s execution were historical persons yet The Legend of Prince Vladimir contains non historical material The chronicle was also added to by a bishop of Bar intent on demonstrating his diocese superiority over that of Bishop of Split In 1986 the chronicle was translated from the Croatian into Ukrainian by Antin V Iwachniuk 20 The translation was financed by the Iwachniuk Ukrainian Studies and Research Fund at the University of Ottawa Assessment editHistorical value fiction edit Various inaccurate or simply wrong claims in the text make it an unreliable source Modern historians have serious doubts about the majority of this work as being mainly fictional or wishful thinking Some go as far as to say that it can be dismissed in its entirety but that is not a majority opinion rather it is thought to have given us a unique insight into the whole era from the point of view of the indigenous Slavic population and it is still a topic of discussion 21 The work describes the local Slavs as a peaceful people imported by the Goth rulers who invaded the area in the 5th century but it doesn t attempt to elaborate on how and when this happened This information contradicts the information found in the Byzantine text De Administrando Imperio The Chronicle also mentions one Svetopeleg or Svetopelek the eighth descendant of the original Goth invaders as the main ruler of the lands that cover Croatia Bosnia and Herzegovina Montenegro Duklja and Serbia He is also credited with the Christianization of the people who are Goths or Slavs a purely fictitious attribution These claims about a unified kingdom are probably a reflection of the earlier glory of the Moravian kingdom He may also have been talking about Avars The priest s parish was located at the seat of the archbishopric of Duklja According to Bishop Gregory s late 12th century additions to this document this Archbishopric covered much of the western Balkans including the bishoprics of Bar Budva Kotor Ulcinj Svac Skadar Drivast Pulat Travunia Zahumlje Further it mentions Bosnia Bosnam and Rascia Rassa as the two Serbian lands while describing the southern Dalmatian Hum Zahumlje Travunia and Dioclea most of today s Herzegovina Montenegro as well as parts of Croatia and Albania as Croatian lands Red Croatia which is a description inconsistent with other historical works from the same period but not all The archbishop of Bar was later named Primas Serbiae Ragusa had some claims to be considered the natural ecclesiastical centre of South Dalmatia but those of Dioclea Bar to this new metropolitan status were now vigorously pushed especially as the Pope intended Serbia to be attached to Dioclea In his 1967 reprint of the work Yugoslav historian Slavko Mijuskovic stated that the chronicle is a purely fictional literary product belonging to the late 14th or early 15th century 16 Region of Bosnia edit The region of Bosnia is described to span the area west of the river Drina up to the Pine mountain Latin ad montem Pini Croatian do gore Borave 22 The location of this Pine mountain is unknown In 1881 Croatian historian Franjo Racki wrote that this refers to the mountain of Borova glava near the Livno field 23 Croatian historian Luka Jelic wrote the mountain was located either between Maglaj and Skender Vakuf northwest of Zepce or it was the mountain Borovina located between Vranica and Radovna according to Ferdo Sisic s 1908 work 24 In 1935 Serbian historian Vladimir Corovic wrote that the toponym refers to the mountain of Borova glava because of etymology and because it is located on the watershed drainage divide 25 26 In 1936 Slovene ethnologist Niko Zupanic had also interpreted that to mean that the western border of Bosnia was at some drainage divide mountains but placed it to the southeast of Dinara 27 Croatian historian Anto Babic based on the work of Dominik Mandic in 1978 inferred that the term refers roughly to a place of the drainage divide between the Sava and Adriatic Sea watersheds 28 29 In her discussion of Corovic Serbian historian Jelena Mrgic Radojcic also points to the existence of a mountain of Borja in today s northern Bosnia with the same etymology 25 References edit Kaimakamova Miliana 13 September 2016 Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja Encyclopedia of the Medieval Chronicle East Central Europe in the Middle Ages 1000 1500 University of Washington Press March 2013 ISBN 9780295800646 Kaimakamova Miliana 13 September 2016 Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja Encyclopedia of the Medieval Chronicle Stephenson Paul 7 August 2003 The Legend of Basil the Bulgar Slayer Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press p 27 ISBN 978 0 521 81530 7 a b S Bujan La Chronique du pretre de Dioclee Un faux document historique Revuedes etudes byzantines 66 2008 5 38 Zarij M Besic 1967 Istorija Crne Gore od najstarijih vremena do kraja XII vijeka Pedakt s ija za istoriju t s rne gore p 423 Requested by you my beloved brethren in Christ and honorable priests of the holy Archbishopric See of the Church in Duklja as well as by some elders but especially by the youth of our city who find pleasure not only in listening to and reading about the wars but in taking part in them also to translate from the Slavic language into Latin the Book of Goths entitled in Latin Regnum Sclavorum in which all their deeds and wars have been described Zivkovic 2009 p 379 Zivkovic 2010 p 172 a b Zivkovic 2009 a b Zivkovic 2006 pp 66 72 a b Zivkovic 2009 p 260 a b Vojislav Nikcevic 2002 Kroatisticke studije Erasmus Naklada ISBN 9789536132584 I Pop Dukljanin najvjerovatnije Grgur Barski v PERI CIC 1991 je u Kraljevstvu Slovjena Regnum Sclavorum donio i podatke o postojanju Bijele h o rvatske a b Hrvatski obzor Eticon 1996 Opcenito se pretpostavlja da je u Ljetopisu nepoznati autor E Pericic naziva ga Grgur Barski nastojao uzvelicati starinu dukljanske crkve i drzave Barska je naime nadbiskupija bila ukinuta 1142 pa se time nastojalo obnoviti nadbiskupiju Sanjek Franjo 1996 Krscanstvo na hrvatskom prostoru pregled religiozne povijesti Hrvata 7 20 st Krscanska sadasnjost ISBN 978 953 151 103 2 Anonimni svecenik iz Bara Pop Dukljanin ili prema nekim istrazivanjima Grgur Barski u drugoj polovici 12 stoljeca pise zanimljivo historiografsko djelo poznato kao Libellus Gothorum ili Sclavorum regnum Ljetopis Popa Dukljanina a b Henrik Birnbaum 1974 On Medieval and Renaissance Slavic Writing Selected Essays Slavistic Printings and Reprintings Walter de Gruyter 266 304 ISBN 9783111868905 ISSN 0081 0029 Zivkovic 2009 p 362 365 Zlatar Zdenko 2007 The Poetics of Slavdom Part III Njegos Vol 2 Peter Lang pp 573 ISBN 978 0 8204 8135 7 Đorđe Sp Radojicic 1971 Zivan Milisavac ed Jugoslovenski knjizevni leksikon Yugoslav Literary Lexicon in Serbo Croatian Novi Sad SAP Vojvodina SR Serbia Matica srpska p 110 Litopis Popa Duklyanina Najdavnisha pivdennoslov yanska pam yatka Chronicle of Pop Duklianin the oldest South Slavic monument Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky Institute of Eastern Christian Studies 2019 02 22 Archived from the original on 2019 02 23 Retrieved 2019 02 22 Ljetopis popa Dukljanina pred izazovima novije historiografije Zagreb 3 ozujka 2011 godine in Croatian Historiografija hr 2011 07 11 Archived from the original on 2013 10 09 Retrieved 2012 11 21 Edin Mutapcic 2008 Oblast Zemlja Soli u srednjem vijeku Bastina Sjeveroistocne Bosne JU Zavod za zastitu i koristenje kulturno historijskog i prirodnog naslijeđa Tuzlanskog kantona 1 18 ISSN 1986 6895 Archived from the original on 2016 03 05 Retrieved 2012 09 12 Hrvatska prije XII vieka glede na zemljisni obseg i narod Rad in Croatian Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts LVI 36 1881 Retrieved 2012 09 12 Jelic Luka September 1909 Duvanjski sabor Journal of the Zagreb Archaeological Museum in Croatian Zagreb Archaeological Museum 10 1 138 ISSN 0350 7165 Retrieved 2012 09 12 a b Mrgic Radojcic 2004 p 52 53 Vladimir Corovic Teritorijalni razvoj bosanske drzave u srednjem vijeku Glas SKA 167 Belgrade 1935 pp 10 13 Niko Zupanic Znacenje barvnega atributa v imenu Crvena Hrvatska Lecture at the IV Congress of Slavic geographers and ethnographers Sofia 18 August 1936 Ivan Muzic December 2010 Bijeli Hrvati u banskoj Hrvatskoj i zupanijska Hrvatska Starohrvatska Prosvjeta in Croatian Split Croatia Museum of Croatian Archaeological Monuments III 37 270 ISSN 0351 4536 Retrieved 2012 09 12 D Mandic Drzavna i vjerska pripadnost sredovjecne Bosne i Hecegovine II edition Ziral Chicago Rome 1978 pp 408 409 Sources editSisic Ferdo ed 1928 Letopis Popa Dukljanina Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja Beograd Zagreb Srpska kraljevska akademija Kuncer Dragana 2009 Gesta Regum Sclavorum Vol 1 Beograd Niksic Istorijski institut Manastir Ostrog Zivkovic Tibor 2009 Gesta Regum Sclavorum Vol 2 Beograd Niksic Istorijski institut Manastir Ostrog Bibliography editFine John Van Antwerp Jr 1991 1983 The Early Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press ISBN 0472081497 Slavko Mijuskovic 1967 Ljetopis popa Dukljanina Mijuskovic S ur 1988 Ljetopis popa Dukljanina Beograd Prosveta Nikola Banasevic 1971 Letopis popa Dukljanina i narodna predanja Srpska knjizevna zadruga ISBN missing Mrgic Radojcic Jelena 2004 Rethinking the Territorial Development of the Medieval Bosnian State Istorijski casopis 51 43 64 Orbini Mauro 1601 Il Regno de gli Slavi hoggi corrottamente detti Schiavoni in Italian Pesaro Apresso Girolamo Concordia Orbin Mavro 1968 Kraljevstvo Slovena in Serbian Beograd Srpska knjizevna zadruga Zivkovic Tibor 2000 Sloveni i Romeji Slavizacija na prostoru Srbije od VII do XI veka The Slavs and the Romans Slavicization in the area of Serbia between VII and XI century in Serbian Beograd Istorijski institut SANU Sluzbeni glasnik ISBN 9788677430221 Zivkovic Tibor 2002 Juzni Sloveni pod vizantijskom vlascu 600 1025 South Slavs under the Byzantine Rule 600 1025 in Serbian Beograd Istorijski institut SANU Sluzbeni glasnik ISBN 9788677430276 Zivkovic Tibor 2006 Portreti srpskih vladara IX XII vek Portraits of Serbian Rulers IX XII Century in Serbian Beograd Zavod za udzbenike i nastavna sredstva ISBN 9788617137548 Zivkovic Tibor 2008 Forging unity The South Slavs between East and West 550 1150 Belgrade The Institute of History Cigoja stampa ISBN 9788675585732 Zivkovic Tibor 2010 On the Beginnings of Bosnia in the Middle Ages Spomenica akademika Marka Sunjica 1927 1998 Sarajevo Filozofski fakultet pp 161 180 External links editPaul Stephenson Chronicle of the priest of Duklja Ljetopis Popa Dukljanina Archived from the original on 2012 04 18 The Latin version of the Chronicle in Serbocroatian The Croatian version of the Chronicle Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja amp oldid 1188863632, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.