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History of the Serbs

The History of the Serbs spans from the Early Middle Ages to present.[1] Serbs, a South Slavic people, traditionally live mainly in Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and North Macedonia. A Serbian diaspora dispersed people of Serb descent to Western Europe, North America and Australia.

Middle Ages edit

 
Seal of prince Strojimir of Serbia, from the late 9th century
 
Basil I with a delegation of Serbs.
 
The 1389 Battle of Kosovo is considered as one of the most influential events in the history of the Serbs.

Slavs settled in the Balkans during the 6th and 7th centuries, where they encountered and partially absorbed the remaining local population (Illyrians, Thracians, Dacians, Celts, Scythians).[2] One of those early Slavic peoples were Serbs.[3] According to De Administrando Imperio, a historiographical work compiled by the Byzantine emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus (d. 959), migration of Serbs from White Serbia to Balkans occurred sometime during the reign of emperor Heraclius I (610-641) when they arrived in an area near Thessaloniki, but shortly afterwards they left that area and settled lands between the Sava and the Dinaric Alps.[4][5][6] By the time of the first reign of emperor Justinian II (685-695), who resettled several South Slavic groups from Balkans to Asia Minor, a group of Serbian settlers in the region of Bithynia were already christianized. Their settlement, the city of Gordoserba (Greek: Γορδόσερβα), had its bishop, who participated at the Council of Trullo (691-691).[7] 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 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).[8]

As the Byzantine Empire sought to establish its hegemony towards the Serbs, the narrative of the DAI sought to establish a historical hegemony over the Serbs by claiming that their arrival, settlement and conversion to Christianity was the direct result of the Byzantine interference in the centuries which preceded the writing of DAI.[9] Historian Danijel Dzino considers that the story of the migration from White Serbia after the invitation of Heraclius as a means of explanation of the settlement of the Serbs is a form of rationalization of the social and cultural change which the Balkans had undergone via the misinterpretation of historical events placed in late antiquity.[10]

After their initial settlement in the western regions of the Balkans, Serbs created their first state, the early medieval Principality of Serbia, that was ruled by the first Serbian dynasty, known in historiography as the Vlastimirović dynasty.[4] During their reigh, christianization of the Serbs was undergoing, as a gradual process, that was finalized by the middle of the 9th century.[11] Serbs also created local states in regions of Neretvanija, Zahumlje, Travunija and Duklja. Some scholars, like Tibor Živković and Neven Budak, doubt their Serbian ethnic identity and suppose that sources like De Administrando Imperio are based on data related to Serbian political rule.[12][13]

Early medieval Serbian areal was also attested by the Royal Frankish Annals, that note, under the entry for 822, that prince Ljudevit left his seat at Sisak and went to the Serbs.[14] According to Živković, the usage of the term Dalmatia in the document to refer both to the land where Serbs ruled as well as to the lands under the rule of Croat duke, was likely a reflection of the Franks' territorial aspirations towards the entire area of the former Roman Province of Dalmatia.[15] The same entry mentions "the Serbs, who are said to hold a great/large part of Dalmatia" (ad Sorabos, quae natio magnam Dalmatiae partem obtinere dicitur),[16][17][18] but according to John (Jr.) Fine, it was hard to find Serbs in this area since the Byzantine sources were limited to the southern coast, also it is possible that among other tribes exists tribe or group of small tribes of Serbs.[19][20] However, 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.[21]

During the 11th and 12th centuries, Grand Principality of Serbia was ruled by the Vukanović dynasty. During that period, Serbs frequently fought against the neighbouring Byzantine Empire.[22]

Between 1166 and 1371, Serbs were ruled by the Nemanjić dynasty, founded by grand prince Stefan Nemanja (1166-1196), who conquered several neighbouring territories, including Kosovo, Duklja, Travunija and Zahumlje. Serbian state was elevated to a kingdom in 1217, during the reign of Nemanja's son, Stefan Nemanjić.[23] In the same time, Serbian Orthodox Church was organized as an autocephalous archbishopric in 1219,[24] through the efforts of Sava, who became the patron saint of Serbs.[25]

Over the next 140 years, Serbia expanded its borders. Its cultural model remained Byzantine, despite political ambitions directed against the empire. The medieval power and influence of Serbia culminated in the reign of Stefan Dušan, who ruled the state from 1331 until his death in 1355. and an empire In 1346, he was crowned as emperor, thus creating the Serbian Empire.[26] In the same time, Serbian Orthodox Church was raised to the Patriarchate (1346). Territory of the Empire included Macedonia, northern Greece, Montenegro, and almost all of Albania.[27] When Dušan died, his son Stephen Uroš V became Emperor.[28] With Turkish invaders beginning their conquest of the Balkans in the 1350s, a major conflict ensued between them and the Serbs, the first major battle was the Battle of Maritsa (1371),[29] in which the Serbs were defeated.[30] With the death of two important Serb leaders in the battle, and with the death of Stephen Uroš that same year, the Serbian Empire broke up into several small Serbian domains.[29] These states were ruled by feudal lords, with Zeta controlled by the Balšić family, Raška, Kosovo and northern Macedonia held by the Branković family and Lazar Hrebeljanović holding today's Central Serbia and a portion of Kosovo.[31] Hrebeljanović was subsequently accepted as the titular leader of the Serbs because he was married to a member of the Nemanjić dynasty.[29] In 1389, the Serbs faced the Ottomans at the Battle of Kosovo on the plain of Kosovo Polje, near the town of Pristina.[30] Both Lazar and Sultan Murad I were killed in the fighting.[32] The battle most likely ended in a stalemate, and Serbia did not fall to the Turks until 1459.[32] There exists c. 30 Serbian chronicles from the period between 1390 and 1526.[33]

Early modern period edit

 
Serbian Patriarch Arsenije III

The Serbs had taken an active part in the wars fought in the Balkans against the Ottoman Empire, and also organized uprisings.[34] Because of this, they suffered persecution and their territories were devastated.[34] Major migrations from Serbia into Habsburg territory ensued.[34] The period of Ottoman rule in Serbia lasted from the second half of the 15th century to the beginning of the 19th century, interrupted by three periods of Habsburg occupation during later Habsburg-Ottoman wars.

In early 1594, the Serbs in Banat rose up against the Ottomans.[35] The rebels had, in the character of a holy war, carried war flags with the icon of Saint Sava.[36] After suppressing the uprising, the Ottomans publicly incinerated the relics of Saint Sava at the Vračar plateau on April 27, 1595.[36] The incineration of Sava's relics provoked the Serbs, and empowered the Serb liberation movement. From 1596, the center of anti-Ottoman activity in Herzegovina was the Tvrdoš Monastery in Trebinje.[37] An uprising broke out in 1596, but the rebels were defeated at the field of Gacko in 1597, and were forced to capitulate due to the lack of foreign support.[37]

After allied Christian forces had captured Buda from the Ottoman Empire in 1686 during the Great Turkish War, Serbs from Pannonian Plain (present-day Hungary, Slavonia region in present-day Croatia, Bačka and Banat regions in present-day Serbia) joined the troops of the Habsburg Monarchy as separate units known as Serbian Militia.[38] Serbs, as volunteers, massively joined the Austrian side.[39] In 1688, the Habsburg army took Belgrade and entered the territory of present-day Central Serbia. Louis William, Margrave of Baden-Baden called Serbian Patriarch Arsenije III Čarnojević to raise arms against the Turks; the Patriarch accepted and returned to the liberated Peć. As Serbia fell under Habsburg control, Leopold I granted Arsenije nobility and the title of duke. In early November, Arsenije III met with Habsburg commander-in-chief, General Enea Silvio Piccolomini in Prizren; after this talk he sent a note to all Serb bishops to come to him and collaborate only with Habsburg forces.

A large migration of Serbs to Habsburg lands was undertaken by Patriarch Arsenije III.[40] The large community of Serbs concentrated in Banat, southern Hungary and the Military Frontier included merchants and craftsmen in the cities, but mainly refugees that were peasants.[40] Serbia remained under Ottoman control until the early 19th century, with the eruption of the Serbian Revolution in 1804.

Modern period edit

19th century edit

The uprising ended in the early 1830s, with Serbia's autonomy and borders being recognized, and with Miloš Obrenović being recognized as its ruler. The last Ottoman troops withdrew from Serbia in 1867, although Serbia's independence was not recognized internationally until the Congress of Berlin in 1878.[41] When the Principality of Serbia gained independence from the Ottoman Empire, Orthodoxy became crucial in defining the national identity, instead of language which was shared by other South Slavs (Croats and Muslims).[42]

20th century edit

 
Serbian Army during its retreat towards Albania; more than one hundred thousand Serbs died during World War I.

Serbia fought in the Balkan Wars of 1912–13, which forced the Ottomans out of the Balkans and doubled the territory and population of the Kingdom of Serbia. In 1914, a young Bosnian Serb student named Gavrilo Princip assassinated Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, which directly contributed to the outbreak of World War I.[43] In the fighting that ensued, Serbia was invaded by Austria-Hungary. Despite being outnumbered, the Serbs subsequently defeated the Austro-Hungarians at the Battle of Cer, which marked the first Allied victory over the Central Powers in the war.[44] Further victories at the battles of Kolubara and the Drina meant that Serbia remained unconquered as the war entered its second year. However, an invasion by the forces of Germany, Austria-Hungary and Bulgaria overwhelmed the Serbs in the winter of 1915, and a subsequent withdrawal by the Serbian Army through Albania took the lives of more than 240,000 Serbs. Serb forces spent the remaining years of the war fighting on the Salonika front in Greece, before liberating Serbia from Austro-Hungarian occupation in November 1918.[45]

Serbs subsequently formed the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes with other South Slavic peoples. The country was later renamed the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, and was led from 1921 to 1934 by King Alexander I of the Serbian Karađorđević dynasty.[46] In the period of 1920–31, Serb and other South Slavic families of the Kingdom of Hungary (and Serbian-Hungarian Baranya-Baja Republic) were given the option to leave Hungary for the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, and thereby change citizenship (these were called optanti).

 
Serbian civilians interned in Jasenovac concentration camp, 1942

During World War II, Yugoslavia was invaded by the Axis powers in April 1941. The country was subsequently divided into many pieces, with Serbia being directly occupied by the Germans.[47] Serbs in the Independent State of Croatia (NDH) experienced persecution at the hands of the Croatian ultra-nationalist, fascist Ustaše, who attempted to exterminate the Serb population in death camps. More than half a million Serbs were killed in the territory of Yugoslavia during World War II.[48] Serbs in occupied Yugoslavia subsequently formed a resistance movement known as the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland, or the Chetniks. The Chetniks had the official support of the Allies until 1943, when Allied support shifted to the Communist Yugoslav Partisans, a multi-ethnic force, formed in 1941, which also had a large majority of Serbs in its ranks in the first two years of war, later, after the fall of Italy, September 1943. other ethnic groups joined Partisans in larger numbers.[47] At the end of the war, the Partisans, led by the Croat Josip Broz Tito, emerged victorious. Yugoslavia subsequently became a Communist state. Tito died in 1980, and his death saw Yugoslavia plunge into economic turmoil.[49]

Yugoslavia disintegrated in the early 1990s, and a series of wars resulted in the creation of five new states. The heaviest fighting occurred in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, whose Serb populations rebelled and sought unification with Serbia, which was then still part of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. The war in Croatia ended in August 1995, with a Croatian military offensive known as Operation Storm crushing the Croatian Serb rebellion and causing as many as 200,000 Serbs to flee the country. The Bosnian War ended that same year, with the Dayton Agreement dividing the country along ethnic lines. In 1998–99, a conflict in Kosovo between the Yugoslav Army and Albanians seeking independence erupted into full-out war, resulting in a 78-day-long NATO bombing campaign which effectively drove Yugoslav security forces from Kosovo.[50] Subsequently, more than 200,000 Serbs and other non-Albanians fled the province.[51] On 5 October 2000, Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosević was overthrown in a bloodless revolt after he refused to admit defeat in the 2000 Yugoslav general election.[52]

Cultural history edit

Serbian Revival edit

The Serbian Revival refers to a period in the history of the Serbs between the 18th century and the de jure establishment of the Principality of Serbia (1878). It began in Habsburg territory, in Sremski Karlovci.[53] The "Serbian renaissance" is said to have begun in 17th-century Banat.[54] The Serbian Revival began earlier than the Bulgarian National Revival.[55] The first revolt in the Ottoman Empire to acquire a national character was the Serbian Revolution (1804–1817),[53] which was the culmination of the Serbian renaissance.[56] According to Jelena Milojković-Djurić: "The first literary and learned society among the Slavs was Matica srpska, founded by the leaders of Serbian revival in Pest in 1826."[57] Vojvodina became the cradle of the Serbian renaissance during the 19th century.[58] Vuk Stefanović Karadžić (1787–1864) was the most instrumental in this period.[59][60]

Maps edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ćirković 2004.
  2. ^ Miller 2005, p. 533.
  3. ^ Fine 1991, p. 52-53.
  4. ^ a b Ćirković 2004, p. 11.
  5. ^ Tibor Živković; (2000) Sloveni i Romeji p 96-97; Istorijski Institut SANU, Beograd, ISBN 8677430229
  6. ^ Siniša Mišić; (2014) Istorijska geografija srpskih zemalja od 6. do polovine 16. veka (in Serbian) p. 18; Magelan Pres, ISBN 8688873178
  7. ^ Komatina 2014, p. 33–42.
  8. ^ Curta 2001, p. 66: They were first given land in the province of Thessalonica, but no such theme existed during Heraclius’ reign. Emperor Constantine's explanation of the ethnic name of the Serbs as derived from servi is plainly wrong
  9. ^ Kardaras 2011, p. 94.
  10. ^ Dzino 2010, p. 112.
  11. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 15-17.
  12. ^ Živković 2012, p. 161–162, 181–196.
  13. ^ Budak, Neven (1994). Prva stoljeća Hrvatske (PDF). Zagreb: Hrvatska sveučilišna naklada. pp. 58–61. ISBN 953-169-032-4.
  14. ^ Curta 2019, p. 109.
  15. ^ Živković 2011, p. 395.
  16. ^ Serbian Studies. Vol. 2–3. North American Society for Serbian Studies. 1982. p. 29. ...the Serbs, a people that is said to hold a large part of Dalmatia
  17. ^ Dutton, Paul Edward (1993). Carolingian Civilization: A Reader. Broadview Press. p. 181. ISBN 9781551110035. ...who are said to hold a great part of Dalmatia
  18. ^ Djokić, Dejan (2023). A Concise History of Serbia. Cambridge University Press. p. 61. ISBN 9781107028388. 'a people that is said to hold a large part of Dalmatia'. This was a reference to the ancient Roman province of Dalmatia, which extended deep into the western Balkan interior, from the eastern Adriatic coast to the valleys of the Ibar and Sava Rivers.
  19. ^ John V. A. (Jr.) Fine; (2010) When Ethnicity Did Not Matter in the Balkans p. 35; University of Michigan Press, ISBN 0472025600
  20. ^ Curta 2006, p. 136.
  21. ^ Ančić, Mladen (1998). "Od karolinškoga dužnosnika do hrvatskoga vladara. Hrvati i Karolinško Carstvo u prvoj polovici IX. stoljeća". Zavod Za Povijesne Znanosti HAZU U Zadru. 40: 32.
  22. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 23-24.
  23. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 38.
  24. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 28.
  25. ^ Cox 2002, p. 20.
  26. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 64.
  27. ^ Cox 2002, p. 21.
  28. ^ Cox 2002, p. 23.
  29. ^ a b c Cox 2002, pp. 23–24.
  30. ^ a b Judah 2002, p. 5.
  31. ^ Judah 2000, p. 27.
  32. ^ a b Judah 2002, p. 7–8.
  33. ^ Dvornik 1962, p. 174.
  34. ^ a b c Ga ́bor A ́goston; Bruce Alan Masters (1 January 2009). Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire. Infobase Publishing. pp. 518–. ISBN 978-1-4381-1025-7.
  35. ^ Rajko L. Veselinović (1966). (1219-1766). Udžbenik za IV razred srpskih pravoslavnih bogoslovija. (Yu 68-1914). Sv. Arh. Sinod Srpske pravoslavne crkve. pp. 70–71.
  36. ^ a b Nikolaj Velimirović (January 1989). The Life of St. Sava. St. Vladimir's Seminary Press. p. 159. ISBN 978-0-88141-065-5.
  37. ^ a b Ćorović 2001, Преокрет у држању Срба
  38. ^ Gavrilović, Slavko (2006), (PDF), Zbornik Matice Srpske za Istoriju (in Serbian), vol. 74, Novi Sad: Matica Srpska, Department of Social Sciences, Proceedings i History, p. 7, archived from the original (PDF) on 16 September 2011, retrieved 21 December 2011
  39. ^ Janićijević 1998, p. 70.
  40. ^ a b Jelavich 1983a, p. 145.
  41. ^ Ágoston & Masters 2009, pp. 518–519.
  42. ^ Christopher Catherwood (1 January 2002). Why the Nations Rage: Killing in the Name of God. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 135–. ISBN 978-0-7425-0090-7.
  43. ^ Miller 2005, p. 542.
  44. ^ Pavlowitch 2002, p. 94.
  45. ^ Miller 2005, pp. 542–543.
  46. ^ Miller 2005, p. 544.
  47. ^ a b Miller 2005, p. 545.
  48. ^ Yugoslavian Front (WWII)#Casualties
  49. ^ Miller 2005, pp. 546–553.
  50. ^ Miller 2005, pp. 558–562.
  51. ^ Gall, Carlotta (7 May 2000). "New Support to Help Serbs Return to Homes in Kosovo". The New York Times.
  52. ^ Pavlowitch 2002, p. 225.
  53. ^ a b M. Şükrü Hanioğlu (8 March 2010). A Brief History of the Late Ottoman Empire. Princeton University Press. pp. 51–. ISBN 978-1-4008-2968-2.
  54. ^ Francis Deák (1942). Hungary at the Paris Peace Conference: The Diplomatic History of the Treaty of Trianon. Columbia University Press. p. 370. ISBN 9780598626240.
  55. ^ Viktor Novak (1980). Revue historique. Иако је српски препород старији од бугар- ског, они су се надопуњивали. Књижевно „славеносрпски" и „сла- веноблгарски" су били блиски један другом, „нису се много разли- ковали и једнако су били доступни и за наше и за ...
  56. ^ Fred Singleton (21 March 1985). A Short History of the Yugoslav Peoples. Cambridge University Press. pp. 72–. ISBN 978-0-521-27485-2.
  57. ^ Jelena Milojković-Djurić (1994). Panslavism and national identity in Russia and in the Balkans, 1830-1880: images of the self and others. East European Monographs. p. 21. ISBN 9780880332910.
  58. ^ Paul Robert Magocsi (2002). Historical Atlas of Central Europe. University of Toronto Press. pp. 34–. ISBN 978-0-8020-8486-6.
  59. ^ Ingrid Merchiers (2007). Cultural Nationalism in the South Slav Habsburg Lands in the Early Nineteenth Century: The Scholarly Network of Jernej Kopitar (1780-1844). DCL Print & Sign. ISBN 978-3-87690-985-1. The Serbian revival is especially linked with the name of Vuk Stefanovic Karadzic, who has been extensively studied and the subject of numerous monographs.
  60. ^ Soviet Literature. Foreign Languages Publishing House. January 1956. He helped Vuk Karadzich, prominent in the Serbian Renaissance, and one of the leading figures in the educational movement of his times,

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External links edit

  • Byzantine Illiricum - The Slavs Settlement (History of Balkan, part 1, Official channel)
  • Byzantine Illiricum - The Slavs Settlement (History of Balkan, part 2, Official channel)
  • Byzantine Illiricum - The Slavs Settlement (History of Balkan, part 3, Official channel)
  • Byzantine Dalmatia - The Arrival of Serbs (History of Balkan, part 1, Official channel)
  • Byzantine Dalmatia - The Arrival of Serbs (History of Balkan, part 2, Official channel)
  • Byzantine Dalmatia - The Arrival of Serbs (History of Balkan, part 3, Official channel)
  • Ćorović, Vladimir (2001). "Istorija srpskog naroda".

history, serbs, this, article, about, history, serbs, general, including, history, serbs, serbia, other, historical, serbian, lands, well, history, serbian, regional, migrations, modern, serb, diaspora, history, serbia, itself, history, serbia, spans, from, ea. This article is about the history of Serbs in general including the history of Serbs in Serbia and other historical Serbian Lands as well as history of Serbian regional migrations and modern Serb diaspora For history of Serbia itself see History of Serbia The History of the Serbs spans from the Early Middle Ages to present 1 Serbs a South Slavic people traditionally live mainly in Serbia Montenegro Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia and North Macedonia A Serbian diaspora dispersed people of Serb descent to Western Europe North America and Australia Contents 1 Middle Ages 2 Early modern period 3 Modern period 3 1 19th century 3 2 20th century 4 Cultural history 4 1 Serbian Revival 5 Maps 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksMiddle Ages edit nbsp Seal of prince Strojimir of Serbia from the late 9th century nbsp Basil I with a delegation of Serbs nbsp The 1389 Battle of Kosovo is considered as one of the most influential events in the history of the Serbs See also Serbia in the Middle Ages Montenegro in the Middle Ages and Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Middle Ages Slavs settled in the Balkans during the 6th and 7th centuries where they encountered and partially absorbed the remaining local population Illyrians Thracians Dacians Celts Scythians 2 One of those early Slavic peoples were Serbs 3 According to De Administrando Imperio a historiographical work compiled by the Byzantine emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus d 959 migration of Serbs from White Serbia to Balkans occurred sometime during the reign of emperor Heraclius I 610 641 when they arrived in an area near Thessaloniki but shortly afterwards they left that area and settled lands between the Sava and the Dinaric Alps 4 5 6 By the time of the first reign of emperor Justinian II 685 695 who resettled several South Slavic groups from Balkans to Asia Minor a group of Serbian settlers in the region of Bithynia were already christianized Their settlement the city of Gordoserba Greek Gordoserba had its bishop who participated at the Council of Trullo 691 691 7 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 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 8 As the Byzantine Empire sought to establish its hegemony towards the Serbs the narrative of the DAI sought to establish a historical hegemony over the Serbs by claiming that their arrival settlement and conversion to Christianity was the direct result of the Byzantine interference in the centuries which preceded the writing of DAI 9 Historian Danijel Dzino considers that the story of the migration from White Serbia after the invitation of Heraclius as a means of explanation of the settlement of the Serbs is a form of rationalization of the social and cultural change which the Balkans had undergone via the misinterpretation of historical events placed in late antiquity 10 After their initial settlement in the western regions of the Balkans Serbs created their first state the early medieval Principality of Serbia that was ruled by the first Serbian dynasty known in historiography as the Vlastimirovic dynasty 4 During their reigh christianization of the Serbs was undergoing as a gradual process that was finalized by the middle of the 9th century 11 Serbs also created local states in regions of Neretvanija Zahumlje Travunija and Duklja Some scholars like Tibor Zivkovic and Neven Budak doubt their Serbian ethnic identity and suppose that sources like De Administrando Imperio are based on data related to Serbian political rule 12 13 Early medieval Serbian areal was also attested by the Royal Frankish Annals that note under the entry for 822 that prince Ljudevit left his seat at Sisak and went to the Serbs 14 According to Zivkovic the usage of the term Dalmatia in the document to refer both to the land where Serbs ruled as well as to the lands under the rule of Croat duke was likely a reflection of the Franks territorial aspirations towards the entire area of the former Roman Province of Dalmatia 15 The same entry mentions the Serbs who are said to hold a great large part of Dalmatia ad Sorabos quae natio magnam Dalmatiae partem obtinere dicitur 16 17 18 but according to John Jr Fine it was hard to find Serbs in this area since the Byzantine sources were limited to the southern coast also it is possible that among other tribes exists tribe or group of small tribes of Serbs 19 20 However 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 21 During the 11th and 12th centuries Grand Principality of Serbia was ruled by the Vukanovic dynasty During that period Serbs frequently fought against the neighbouring Byzantine Empire 22 Between 1166 and 1371 Serbs were ruled by the Nemanjic dynasty founded by grand prince Stefan Nemanja 1166 1196 who conquered several neighbouring territories including Kosovo Duklja Travunija and Zahumlje Serbian state was elevated to a kingdom in 1217 during the reign of Nemanja s son Stefan Nemanjic 23 In the same time Serbian Orthodox Church was organized as an autocephalous archbishopric in 1219 24 through the efforts of Sava who became the patron saint of Serbs 25 Over the next 140 years Serbia expanded its borders Its cultural model remained Byzantine despite political ambitions directed against the empire The medieval power and influence of Serbia culminated in the reign of Stefan Dusan who ruled the state from 1331 until his death in 1355 and an empire In 1346 he was crowned as emperor thus creating the Serbian Empire 26 In the same time Serbian Orthodox Church was raised to the Patriarchate 1346 Territory of the Empire included Macedonia northern Greece Montenegro and almost all of Albania 27 When Dusan died his son Stephen Uros V became Emperor 28 With Turkish invaders beginning their conquest of the Balkans in the 1350s a major conflict ensued between them and the Serbs the first major battle was the Battle of Maritsa 1371 29 in which the Serbs were defeated 30 With the death of two important Serb leaders in the battle and with the death of Stephen Uros that same year the Serbian Empire broke up into several small Serbian domains 29 These states were ruled by feudal lords with Zeta controlled by the Balsic family Raska Kosovo and northern Macedonia held by the Brankovic family and Lazar Hrebeljanovic holding today s Central Serbia and a portion of Kosovo 31 Hrebeljanovic was subsequently accepted as the titular leader of the Serbs because he was married to a member of the Nemanjic dynasty 29 In 1389 the Serbs faced the Ottomans at the Battle of Kosovo on the plain of Kosovo Polje near the town of Pristina 30 Both Lazar and Sultan Murad I were killed in the fighting 32 The battle most likely ended in a stalemate and Serbia did not fall to the Turks until 1459 32 There exists c 30 Serbian chronicles from the period between 1390 and 1526 33 Early modern period edit nbsp Serbian Patriarch Arsenije IIISee also Early modern history of Serbia Early modern history of Montenegro Early modern history of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Military Frontier The Serbs had taken an active part in the wars fought in the Balkans against the Ottoman Empire and also organized uprisings 34 Because of this they suffered persecution and their territories were devastated 34 Major migrations from Serbia into Habsburg territory ensued 34 The period of Ottoman rule in Serbia lasted from the second half of the 15th century to the beginning of the 19th century interrupted by three periods of Habsburg occupation during later Habsburg Ottoman wars In early 1594 the Serbs in Banat rose up against the Ottomans 35 The rebels had in the character of a holy war carried war flags with the icon of Saint Sava 36 After suppressing the uprising the Ottomans publicly incinerated the relics of Saint Sava at the Vracar plateau on April 27 1595 36 The incineration of Sava s relics provoked the Serbs and empowered the Serb liberation movement From 1596 the center of anti Ottoman activity in Herzegovina was the Tvrdos Monastery in Trebinje 37 An uprising broke out in 1596 but the rebels were defeated at the field of Gacko in 1597 and were forced to capitulate due to the lack of foreign support 37 After allied Christian forces had captured Buda from the Ottoman Empire in 1686 during the Great Turkish War Serbs from Pannonian Plain present day Hungary Slavonia region in present day Croatia Backa and Banat regions in present day Serbia joined the troops of the Habsburg Monarchy as separate units known as Serbian Militia 38 Serbs as volunteers massively joined the Austrian side 39 In 1688 the Habsburg army took Belgrade and entered the territory of present day Central Serbia Louis William Margrave of Baden Baden called Serbian Patriarch Arsenije III Carnojevic to raise arms against the Turks the Patriarch accepted and returned to the liberated Pec As Serbia fell under Habsburg control Leopold I granted Arsenije nobility and the title of duke In early November Arsenije III met with Habsburg commander in chief General Enea Silvio Piccolomini in Prizren after this talk he sent a note to all Serb bishops to come to him and collaborate only with Habsburg forces A large migration of Serbs to Habsburg lands was undertaken by Patriarch Arsenije III 40 The large community of Serbs concentrated in Banat southern Hungary and the Military Frontier included merchants and craftsmen in the cities but mainly refugees that were peasants 40 Serbia remained under Ottoman control until the early 19th century with the eruption of the Serbian Revolution in 1804 Modern period editMain articles History of modern Serbia History of modern Montenegro Austro Hungarian rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Military Frontier 19th century edit The uprising ended in the early 1830s with Serbia s autonomy and borders being recognized and with Milos Obrenovic being recognized as its ruler The last Ottoman troops withdrew from Serbia in 1867 although Serbia s independence was not recognized internationally until the Congress of Berlin in 1878 41 When the Principality of Serbia gained independence from the Ottoman Empire Orthodoxy became crucial in defining the national identity instead of language which was shared by other South Slavs Croats and Muslims 42 20th century edit nbsp Serbian Army during its retreat towards Albania more than one hundred thousand Serbs died during World War I Serbia fought in the Balkan Wars of 1912 13 which forced the Ottomans out of the Balkans and doubled the territory and population of the Kingdom of Serbia In 1914 a young Bosnian Serb student named Gavrilo Princip assassinated Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria which directly contributed to the outbreak of World War I 43 In the fighting that ensued Serbia was invaded by Austria Hungary Despite being outnumbered the Serbs subsequently defeated the Austro Hungarians at the Battle of Cer which marked the first Allied victory over the Central Powers in the war 44 Further victories at the battles of Kolubara and the Drina meant that Serbia remained unconquered as the war entered its second year However an invasion by the forces of Germany Austria Hungary and Bulgaria overwhelmed the Serbs in the winter of 1915 and a subsequent withdrawal by the Serbian Army through Albania took the lives of more than 240 000 Serbs Serb forces spent the remaining years of the war fighting on the Salonika front in Greece before liberating Serbia from Austro Hungarian occupation in November 1918 45 Serbs subsequently formed the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes with other South Slavic peoples The country was later renamed the Kingdom of Yugoslavia and was led from 1921 to 1934 by King Alexander I of the Serbian Karađorđevic dynasty 46 In the period of 1920 31 Serb and other South Slavic families of the Kingdom of Hungary and Serbian Hungarian Baranya Baja Republic were given the option to leave Hungary for the Kingdom of Yugoslavia and thereby change citizenship these were called optanti nbsp Serbian civilians interned in Jasenovac concentration camp 1942During World War II Yugoslavia was invaded by the Axis powers in April 1941 The country was subsequently divided into many pieces with Serbia being directly occupied by the Germans 47 Serbs in the Independent State of Croatia NDH experienced persecution at the hands of the Croatian ultra nationalist fascist Ustase who attempted to exterminate the Serb population in death camps More than half a million Serbs were killed in the territory of Yugoslavia during World War II 48 Serbs in occupied Yugoslavia subsequently formed a resistance movement known as the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland or the Chetniks The Chetniks had the official support of the Allies until 1943 when Allied support shifted to the Communist Yugoslav Partisans a multi ethnic force formed in 1941 which also had a large majority of Serbs in its ranks in the first two years of war later after the fall of Italy September 1943 other ethnic groups joined Partisans in larger numbers 47 At the end of the war the Partisans led by the Croat Josip Broz Tito emerged victorious Yugoslavia subsequently became a Communist state Tito died in 1980 and his death saw Yugoslavia plunge into economic turmoil 49 Yugoslavia disintegrated in the early 1990s and a series of wars resulted in the creation of five new states The heaviest fighting occurred in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina whose Serb populations rebelled and sought unification with Serbia which was then still part of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia The war in Croatia ended in August 1995 with a Croatian military offensive known as Operation Storm crushing the Croatian Serb rebellion and causing as many as 200 000 Serbs to flee the country The Bosnian War ended that same year with the Dayton Agreement dividing the country along ethnic lines In 1998 99 a conflict in Kosovo between the Yugoslav Army and Albanians seeking independence erupted into full out war resulting in a 78 day long NATO bombing campaign which effectively drove Yugoslav security forces from Kosovo 50 Subsequently more than 200 000 Serbs and other non Albanians fled the province 51 On 5 October 2000 Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic was overthrown in a bloodless revolt after he refused to admit defeat in the 2000 Yugoslav general election 52 Cultural history editSerbian Revival edit Main article Serbian Revival The Serbian Revival refers to a period in the history of the Serbs between the 18th century and the de jure establishment of the Principality of Serbia 1878 It began in Habsburg territory in Sremski Karlovci 53 The Serbian renaissance is said to have begun in 17th century Banat 54 The Serbian Revival began earlier than the Bulgarian National Revival 55 The first revolt in the Ottoman Empire to acquire a national character was the Serbian Revolution 1804 1817 53 which was the culmination of the Serbian renaissance 56 According to Jelena Milojkovic Djuric The first literary and learned society among the Slavs was Matica srpska founded by the leaders of Serbian revival in Pest in 1826 57 Vojvodina became the cradle of the Serbian renaissance during the 19th century 58 Vuk Stefanovic Karadzic 1787 1864 was the most instrumental in this period 59 60 Maps edit nbsp Ethnic territory of the Serbs and South Slavs in the Pannonian Plain between 16th and 18th century according to Jovan Cvijic and Dr Dusan J Popovic nbsp Serbs in Serbia as per 2002 census data for Central Serbia and Vojvodina and 1991 census data for Kosovo nbsp Serbs in Montenegro as per 2003 census data nbsp Serbs blue in Bosnia and Herzegovina as per 2013 censusSee also editSerbs History of Montenegro History of Bosnia and HerzegovinaReferences edit Cirkovic 2004 Miller 2005 p 533 Fine 1991 p 52 53 a b Cirkovic 2004 p 11 Tibor Zivkovic 2000 Sloveni i Romeji p 96 97 Istorijski Institut SANU Beograd ISBN 8677430229 Sinisa Misic 2014 Istorijska geografija srpskih zemalja od 6 do polovine 16 veka in Serbian p 18 Magelan Pres ISBN 8688873178 Komatina 2014 p 33 42 Curta 2001 p 66 They were first given land in the province of Thessalonica but no such theme existed during Heraclius reign Emperor Constantine s explanation of the ethnic name of the Serbs as derived from servi is plainly wrong Kardaras 2011 p 94 Dzino 2010 p 112 Cirkovic 2004 p 15 17 Zivkovic 2012 p 161 162 181 196 Budak Neven 1994 Prva stoljeca Hrvatske PDF Zagreb Hrvatska sveucilisna naklada pp 58 61 ISBN 953 169 032 4 Curta 2019 p 109 Zivkovic 2011 p 395 Serbian Studies Vol 2 3 North American Society for Serbian Studies 1982 p 29 the Serbs a people that is said to hold a large part of Dalmatia Dutton Paul Edward 1993 Carolingian Civilization A Reader Broadview Press p 181 ISBN 9781551110035 who are said to hold a great part of Dalmatia Djokic Dejan 2023 A Concise History of Serbia Cambridge University Press p 61 ISBN 9781107028388 a people that is said to hold a large part of Dalmatia This was a reference to the ancient Roman province of Dalmatia which extended deep into the western Balkan interior from the eastern Adriatic coast to the valleys of the Ibar and Sava Rivers John V A Jr Fine 2010 When Ethnicity Did Not Matter in the Balkans p 35 University of Michigan Press ISBN 0472025600 Curta 2006 p 136 Ancic Mladen 1998 Od karolinskoga duznosnika do hrvatskoga vladara Hrvati i Karolinsko Carstvo u prvoj polovici IX stoljeca Zavod Za Povijesne Znanosti HAZU U Zadru 40 32 Cirkovic 2004 p 23 24 Cirkovic 2004 p 38 Cirkovic 2004 p 28 Cox 2002 p 20 Cirkovic 2004 p 64 Cox 2002 p 21 Cox 2002 p 23 a b c Cox 2002 pp 23 24 a b Judah 2002 p 5 Judah 2000 p 27 a b Judah 2002 p 7 8 Dvornik 1962 p 174 a b c Ga bor A goston Bruce Alan Masters 1 January 2009 Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire Infobase Publishing pp 518 ISBN 978 1 4381 1025 7 Rajko L Veselinovic 1966 1219 1766 Udzbenik za IV razred srpskih pravoslavnih bogoslovija Yu 68 1914 Sv Arh Sinod Srpske pravoslavne crkve pp 70 71 a b Nikolaj Velimirovic January 1989 The Life of St Sava St Vladimir s Seminary Press p 159 ISBN 978 0 88141 065 5 a b Corovic 2001 Preokret u drzhaњu Srba Gavrilovic Slavko 2006 Isaija Đakovic PDF Zbornik Matice Srpske za Istoriju in Serbian vol 74 Novi Sad Matica Srpska Department of Social Sciences Proceedings i History p 7 archived from the original PDF on 16 September 2011 retrieved 21 December 2011 Janicijevic 1998 p 70 a b Jelavich 1983a p 145 Agoston amp Masters 2009 pp 518 519 Christopher Catherwood 1 January 2002 Why the Nations Rage Killing in the Name of God Rowman amp Littlefield pp 135 ISBN 978 0 7425 0090 7 Miller 2005 p 542 Pavlowitch 2002 p 94 Miller 2005 pp 542 543 Miller 2005 p 544 a b Miller 2005 p 545 Yugoslavian Front WWII Casualties Miller 2005 pp 546 553 Miller 2005 pp 558 562 Gall Carlotta 7 May 2000 New Support to Help Serbs Return to Homes in Kosovo The New York Times Pavlowitch 2002 p 225 a b M Sukru Hanioglu 8 March 2010 A Brief History of the Late Ottoman Empire Princeton University Press pp 51 ISBN 978 1 4008 2968 2 Francis Deak 1942 Hungary at the Paris Peace Conference The Diplomatic History of the Treaty of Trianon Columbia University Press p 370 ISBN 9780598626240 Viktor Novak 1980 Revue historique Iako јe srpski preporod stariјi od bugar skog oni su se nadopuњivali Kњizhevno slavenosrpski i sla venoblgarski su bili bliski јedan drugom nisu se mnogo razli kovali i јednako su bili dostupni i za nashe i za Fred Singleton 21 March 1985 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Methodius IV Komatina Predrag 2010 The Slavs of the mid Danube basin and the Bulgarian expansion in the first half of the 9th century PDF Zbornik radova Vizantoloshkog instituta 47 55 82 Komatina Predrag 2014 Settlement of the Slavs in Asia Minor During the Rule of Justinian II and the Bishopric twn Gordoserbwn PDF Beogradski istoriјski glasnik Belgrade Historical Review 5 33 42 Komatina Predrag 2015 The Church in Serbia at the Time of Cyrilo Methodian Mission in Moravia Cyril and Methodius Byzantium and the World of the Slavs Thessaloniki Dimos pp 711 718 Krsmanovic Bojana 2008 The Byzantine Province in Change On the Threshold Between the 10th and the 11th Century Belgrade Institute for Byzantine Studies ISBN 9789603710608 Krstic Aleksandar R 2017 Which Realm will You Opt for The Serbian Nobility Between the Ottomans and the Hungarians in the 15th Century State and Society in the Balkans Before and After Establishment of Ottoman Rule Belgrade Institute of History Yunus Emre Enstitusu Turkish Cultural Centre pp 129 163 ISBN 9788677431259 Luttwak Edward N 2009 The Grand Strategy of the Byzantine Empire Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674035195 Lyon James B 2015 Serbia and the Balkan Front 1914 The Outbreak of the Great War London Bloomsbury ISBN 9781472580054 McCormick Rob 2008 The United States Response to Genocide in the Independent State of Croatia 1941 1945 Genocide Studies and Prevention 3 1 75 98 MacKenzie David 1996 The Serbian Warrior Myth and Serbia s Liberation 1804 1815 Serbian Studies Journal of the North American Society for Serbian Studies 10 2 133 148 MacKenzie David 2004 Jovan Ristic at the Berlin Congress 1878 Serbian Studies Journal of the North American Society for Serbian Studies 18 2 321 339 Meriage Lawrence P 1978 The First Serbian Uprising 1804 1813 and the Nineteenth Century Origins of the Eastern Question PDF Slavic Review 37 3 421 439 doi 10 2307 2497684 JSTOR 2497684 S2CID 222355180 Miller Nicholas 2005 Serbia and Montenegro Eastern Europe An Introduction to the People Lands and Culture Vol 3 Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO pp 529 581 ISBN 9781576078006 Mitrovic Andrej 2007 Serbia s Great War 1914 1918 West Lafayette Purdue University Press ISBN 9781557534767 Obolensky Dimitri 1974 1971 The Byzantine Commonwealth Eastern Europe 500 1453 London Cardinal ISBN 9780351176449 Orbini Mauro 1601 Il Regno de gli Slavi hoggi corrottamente detti Schiavoni Pesaro Apresso Girolamo Concordia Orbin Mavro 1968 Kraљevstvo Slovena Beograd Srpska kњizhevna zadruga Ostrogorsky George 1956 History of the Byzantine State Oxford Basil Blackwell Pavlovich Paul 1989 The History of the Serbian Orthodox Church Serbian Heritage Books ISBN 9780969133124 Pavlowitch Stevan K 2002 Serbia The History behind the Name London Hurst amp Company ISBN 9781850654773 Pavlowitch Stevan K 2008 Hitler s new disorder The Second World War in Yugoslavia New York Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231700504 Pisarri Milovan 2013 Bulgarian Crimes Against Civilians in Occupied Serbia during the First World War Balcanica 44 357 390 doi 10 2298 BALC1344357P Popovic Svetlana 2001 The Serbian Episcopal sees in the thirteenth century Starinar 51 171 184 Radic Radmila 2007 Serbian Christianity The Blackwell Companion to Eastern Christianity Malden MA Blackwell Publishing pp 231 248 ISBN 9780470766392 Samardzic Radovan Duskov Milan eds 1993 Serbs in European Civilization Belgrade Nova Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts Institute for Balkan Studies ISBN 9788675830153 Scekic Radenko Lekovic Zarko Premovic Marijan 2015 Political Developments and Unrests in Stara Raska Old Rascia and Old Herzegovina during Ottoman Rule Balcanica 46 79 106 doi 10 2298 BALC1546079S Stankovic Vlada ed 2016 The Balkans and the Byzantine World before and after the Captures of Constantinople 1204 and 1453 Lanham Maryland Lexington Books ISBN 9781498513265 Temperley Harold W V 1919 1917 History of Serbia PDF 2 ed London Bell and Sons Todic Branislav 1999 Serbian Medieval Painting The Age of King Milutin Belgrade Draganic ISBN 9788644102717 Todorovic Jelena 2006 An Orthodox Festival Book in the Habsburg Empire Zaharija Orfelin s Festive Greeting to Mojsej Putnik 1757 Aldershot Ashgate Publishing ISBN 9780754656111 Tomasevich Jozo 2001 War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 Occupation and Collaboration Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 9780804779241 Trgovcevic Ljubinka 2007 The Enlightenment and the Beginnings of Modern Serbian Culture PDF Balcanica 2006 103 110 Uzelac Aleksandar B 2011 Tatars and Serbs at the end of the Thirteenth Century Revista de istorie Militara 5 6 9 20 Uzelac Aleksandar B 2015 Foreign Soldiers in the Nemanjic State A Critical Overview Belgrade Historical Review 6 69 89 Uzelac Aleksandar B 2018 Prince Michael of Zahumlje a Serbian ally of Tsar Simeon Emperor Symeon s Bulgaria in the History of Europe s South East 1100 years from the Battle of Achelous Sofia St Kliment Ohridski University Press pp 236 245 Zens Robert W 2012 In the Name of the Sultan Haci Mustafa Pasha of Belgrade and Ottoman Provincial Rule in the Late 18th Century International Journal of Middle East Studies 44 1 129 146 doi 10 1017 S0020743811001280 JSTOR 41474984 S2CID 162893473 Zivkovic Tibor Bojanin Stanoje Petrovic Vladeta eds 2000 Selected Charters of Serbian Rulers XII XV Century Relating to the Territory of Kosovo and Metohia Athens Center for Studies of Byzantine Civilisation Zhivkoviћ Tibor 2000 Sloveni i Romeјi Slavizaciјa na prostoru Srbiјe od VII do XI veka The Slavs and the Romans Beograd Istoriјski institut SANU Sluzhbeni glasnik ISBN 9788677430221 Zhivkoviћ Tibor 2002 Јuzhni Sloveni pod vizantiјskom vlashћu 600 1025 South Slavs under the Byzantine Rule 600 1025 Beograd Istoriјski institut SANU Sluzhbeni glasnik ISBN 9788677430276 Zhivkoviћ Tibor 2004 Crkvena organizaciјa u srpskim zemљama Rani sredњi vek Organization of the Church in Serbian Lands Early Middle Ages Beograd Istoriјski institut SANU Sluzhbeni glasnik ISBN 9788677430443 Zhivkoviћ Tibor 2006 Portreti srpskih vladara IX XII vek Portraits of Serbian Rulers IX XII Century Beograd Zavod za uџbenike i nastavna sredstva ISBN 9788617137548 Zivkovic Tibor 2007 The Golden Seal of Stroimir PDF Historical Review Belgrade The Institute for History 55 23 29 Archived from the original PDF on 2018 03 24 Retrieved 2018 03 07 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 Zivkovic Tibor 2011 The Origin of the Royal Frankish Annalist s Information about the Serbs in Dalmatia Homage to Academician Sima Cirkovic Belgrade The Institute for History pp 381 398 ISBN 9788677430917 Zivkovic Tibor 2012 De conversione Croatorum et Serborum A Lost Source Belgrade The Institute of History Zivkovic Tibor 2013a On the Baptism of the Serbs and Croats in the Time of Basil I 867 886 PDF Studia Slavica et Balcanica Petropolitana 1 33 53 Zivkovic Tibor 2013b The Urban Landcape sic of Early Medieval Slavic Principalities in the Territories of the Former Praefectura Illyricum and in the Province of Dalmatia ca 610 950 The World of the Slavs Studies of the East West and South Slavs Civitas Oppidas Villas and Archeological Evidence 7th to 11th Centuries AD Belgrade The Institute for History pp 15 36 ISBN 9788677431044 External links editByzantine Illiricum The Slavs Settlement History of Balkan part 1 Official channel Byzantine Illiricum The Slavs Settlement History of Balkan part 2 Official channel Byzantine Illiricum The Slavs Settlement History of Balkan part 3 Official channel Byzantine Dalmatia The Arrival of Serbs History of Balkan part 1 Official channel Byzantine Dalmatia The Arrival of Serbs History of Balkan part 2 Official channel Byzantine Dalmatia The Arrival of Serbs History of 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