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Miloš Obrenović I of Serbia

Prince Miloš Obrenović I of Serbia (Serbian Cyrillic: Милош Обреновић I, romanizedMiloš Obrenović I; pronounced [mîloʃ obrěːnoʋit͡ɕ]; 18 March 1780 or 1783 – 26 September 1860) born Miloš Teodorović (Serbian Cyrillic: Милош Теодоровић; pronounced [mîloʃ teodǒːroʋit͡ɕ]), also known as Miloš the Great (Serbian Cyrillic: Милош Велики, romanizedMiloš Veliki) was the Prince of Serbia twice, from 1815 to 1839, and from 1858 to 1860. He was an eminent figure of the First Serbian uprising, the leader of the Second Serbian uprising, and the founder of the House of Obrenović. Under his rule, Serbia became an autonomous principality within the Ottoman Empire.[1] Prince Miloš was an autocrat, consistently refusing to decentralize power,[2][full citation needed] which gave rise to a strong internal opposition.[3] During his rule, Miloš the Great bought a certain number of estates and ships from the Ottomans and was also a prominent trader.[4] Despite his humble background, he eventually became the most affluent man in Serbia and one of the wealthiest in the Balkan peninsula, possessing estates in Vienna, Serbia and Wallachia[5][6]

Vožd
Miloš Obrenović I
Милош Обреновић I
Miloš Obrenović I, 1848
Prince of Serbia
Reign23 December 1858 – 26 September 1860
PredecessorAlexander Karađorđević
SuccessorMihailo III (Obrenović)
Prince of Serbia
Reign6 November 1817 – 25 June 1839
PredecessorHimself (As Grand Vožd of Serbia)
SuccessorMilan II
Grand Vožd of Serbia
Reign23 April 1815 – 6 November 1817
PredecessorKarađorđe
SuccessorHimself (as Prince of Serbia)
Born(1780-03-18)18 March 1780 or more probably 1783
Gornja Dobrinja near Požega, Ottoman Empire (now Serbia)
Died26 September 1860 (aged 77 or 80)
Belgrade, Serbia, Ottoman Empire
Burial
St. Mark's Church, Belgrade, Serbia
ConsortLjubica Vukomanović
IssuePrincess Petria
Princess Elisabeth
Prince Milan Obrenovic II
Prince Michael Obrenovic III
Princess Maria
Prince Todor
Prince Gabriel
HouseObrenović
FatherTeodor Mihailović
MotherVišnja Urošević
ReligionSerbian Orthodox

Early life

Miloš Teodorović was the son of Teodor "Teša" Mihailović (died 1802) from Dobrinja, and Višnja (died 18 June 1817).[7] His family descended from the Bratonožići tribe.[8] This was the second marriage of his mother Višnja, from which also sprung Jovan (1787–1850) and Jevrem (1790–1856).[7] From Višnja's first marriage, with Obren Martinović (died 1780) from Brusnica, Miloš had half-brothers Jakov (died 1811) and Milan (died 1810), and half-sister Stana.[7] After the death of Obren, Višnja moved from Brusnica and married Teodor in Dobrinja.[7]

Although many historians put 1780 as the year when Miloš was born, according to foundation plaque in the wall of the Old Church in Kragujevac, his capital, he was 35 when the church was finished in 1818, meaning that he was born in 1783. After the death of his brother Milan, a famed revolutionary with great reputation among the people, Miloš adopted the surname Obrenović. In official documents, his name was sometimes written Miloš Teodorović Obrenović (Serbian Cyrillic: Милош Теодоровић Обреновић; pronounced [mîloʃ teodǒːroʋit͡ɕ obrěːnoʋit͡ɕ]).[9]

First Serbian Uprising

Miloš fought in the First Serbian uprising[10] until its very end in 1813. He was wounded in the battle for Užice.[5] His half-brother Milan also took part in the uprising,[5] rising to become the voivode of the Rudnik district, until his death in 1810. After Milan's death, Miloš adopted the surname of his half-brother, Obrenović.[11] This name was the patronymic which his half-brother derived from Obren, the first name of his own father (Miloš's step-father).[11] After the rebellion collapsed, Miloš was among the few of its leaders that remained in Serbia to face the returning Ottomans.[6]

Second Serbian Uprising

 
Takovo, proclamation of Uprising.

In April 1815, Prince Miloš organized and led the Second Serbian uprising. After defeating the Turks, and Napoleon's defeat in Russia, the Turks agreed to the terms of the agreement from 1815. After the killing of Karađorđe Petrović, in 1817, Obrenović became the leader of the Serbs. As a result of the agreement, Serbia gained some autonomy, but remained under Ottoman sovereignty. Miloš Obrenović was left in power as its absolute ruler.[12]

Between the end of 1828 and the autumn of 1830, Prince Miloš created a so-called "legislative commission" to translate the Code Napoléon into Serbian and codify the laws and customs of the country. After discussing the commission, Miloš invited two distinguished legal specialists to come from Hungary to prepare a more suitable criminal and civil code of laws for Serbia. They were Vasilije Lazarević, Bürgermeister (mayor) of Zemun, and Jovan Hadžić, lawyer, poet, and member of the municipal senate of Novi Sad.[13]

In January 1831, Prince Miloš informed a great national assembly that he had obtained an imperial edict from the Sultan ending all direct obligations of Serbian peasants to their former Turkish lords, guaranteeing Ottoman recognition of Serbian autonomy in most matters of internal administration, and offering Serbia the prospect of territorial aggrandizement, as well as the express right to institute schools, courts, and a governmental administration of her own. The Sultan's decrees of 1830 and 1833 expanded the same rights to a larger territory, and made Serbia a sovereign principality,[14] with Miloš Obrenović as hereditary prince. A Metropolitanate of Serbia was established in Belgrade as an autonomous unit of the Patriarchate of Constantinople. Russia's status as the guarantor of Serbia's autonomy was also recognized.

Reign

 
Miloš Obrenović, portrait probably done in Istanbul. Exposition of Princess Ljubica's Residence (2017)

The supporters of the rule of law often rebelled against Miloš's government. Following one such rebellion, he agreed to adopt a constitution, the Sretenje or Candlemas constitution, in 1835.[15] The move was opposed by neighboring Austria, the ruling Ottoman Empire and Russia.[16] It is believed that the three great empires saw the constitution as a danger to their own autocratic systems of government.[17] Metternich's Austria particularly ridiculed the fact that Serbia had its own flag and foreign ministry. Miloš abolished the constitution at the demand of Russia and Turkey,[18] and it was replaced by the "Turkish" Constitution of 1838.

Miloš abdicated in 1839 in favor of his sons—Milan, who died a few weeks later, and Mihailo, who then became prince. Mihailo was deposed in 1842, and the family was out of power until 1858, when it returned with Miloš restored as prince for the last two years of his life.[19]

Thanks to his good contacts during his stay in Vienna, Johann Strauss II composed the Serben-Quadrille intended for Serbian balls.[20]

Legacy

 
Monument dedicated to Miloš Obrenović and Second Serbian Uprising, Takovo, Serbia.

Miloš Obrenović was given the epithet the Great. He was proclaimed Father of the Fatherland by the National Assembly.[21]

Things named after Miloš Obrenović

Biographies and memoirs

  • Milan Milićević published the book "Prince Miloš and His Story" in 1891. It was written with the basis of a manuscript in which Prince Miloš talked about his life.[22]
  • For several years his barber was Nićirof Ninković who left memoirs about it.
  • His personal physician during his first reign was Bartolomeo Kunibert, who wrote a two-volume book translated into Serbian entitled "The Serbian Uprising and the First Reign of Milos Obrenovic 1804–1850".
  • Part of Knez Miloš' family correspondences has been preserved with his daughter Petrija Bajić near Timișoara. In 1925 the property was bought by Joca Vujić who left the correspondences to the Belgrade University Library "Svetozar Marković", which the book "Family Correspondences of Knez Miloš Obrenović from the Archival Collection of Joca Vujić at the Belgrade University Library "Svetozar Marković"".[23][24]

Enterprises and organizations

Places

  • Miloš Obrenović's House in Gornja Crnuća, from which Miloš ruled Serbia for two years and in which the decision to start the Second Serbian Uprising was made, was declared a cultural monument of exceptional importance.
  • Saint Sava Church in Šarani was founded by him.[25]
  • Elementary School "Miloš Obrenović" in Aranđelovac.[26]
  • "Knez Miloš Street" in Belgrade is named after him, as well as streets in many other Serbian cities. Along this road, numerous state institutions and embassies are located. The street was called "Miloš the Great" until it was renamed with its present name during communist Yugoslavia.
  • "Miloš the Great" Highway, a section of Corridor XI (or A2 motorway; part of the E761 and E763 European routes) from Obrenovac to Preljina, was opened in Serbia on 18 August 2019.[27]

Plaques and memorials

Awards and honours

 
Seal of Miloš Obrenović

Marriage and children

In 1805, Miloš married Ljubica Vukomanović (September 1785 – Vienna, 26 May 1843). The couple had eight children whose names are known. It is speculated that Ljubica had other pregnancies that resulted in miscarriages, stillbirths, or children who died shortly after birth, with some sources giving a number as high as 17 pregnancies.

  • Prince Petar
  • Princess Petria (5 August 1808 – 1870)
  • Princess Elisabeth (28 March 1814 – 5 October 1848)
  • Prince Milan I of Serbia (21 October 1819 – 8 July 1839)
  • Prince Michael III of Serbia (16 September 1823 – 10 June 1868)
  • Princess Maria (born and died 9 July 1830)
  • Prince Todor (died in childhood)
  • Prince Gabriel (died in childhood)

See also

References

  1. ^ Melichárek, Maroš (January 2012). "Druhé Srbské povstanie proti osmanskej nadvláde (1815–1816) a vytváranie autonómneho srbského štátu počas prvej vlády Miloša Obrenovića /Second Serbian uprising against Ottomans (1815–1816) and creation of autonomous Serbia under Miloš Obrenović/". Dejiny. 6 (2): 26–39.
  2. ^ Marinković, Mirjana. "KAKO OGRANIČITI VLAST SAMODRŠCA". Srpsko Nasledje. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  3. ^ Hall, Richard C. (9 October 2014). War in the Balkans: An Encyclopedic History from the Fall of the Ottoman Empire to the Breakup of Yugoslavia. ABC-CLIO. p. 210. ISBN 978-1-61069-031-7.
  4. ^ Katić, Tatjana. Ottoman Documents on Sales of Turkish Real Estates to the Prince Milos Obrenovic / Osmanska dokumenta o prodaji turskih imanja knezu Milosu Obrenovicu.
  5. ^ a b c "Knez Miloš Obrenović". Virtuelni zavičajni muzej Požege. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  6. ^ a b "КНЕЗ МИЛОШ ОБРЕНОВИЋ – ПРВИ ИЛИ ДРУГИ "ОТАЦ" МОДЕРНЕ СРБИЈЕ?". Културни центар Новог Сада (in Serbian). 27 August 2018. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  7. ^ a b c d А. Ивић. "Родословне таблице: Број 16. и 17. Обреновићи".
  8. ^ Banac, Ivo (1988). The National Question in Yugoslavia: Origins, History, Politics. Cornell University Press. ISBN 0801494931.
  9. ^ Serbia (1877). Зборник закона и уредаба. p. 51.
  10. ^ "На данашњи дан 1860 умро кнез Милош Обреновић; 1371. одиграла се Маричка битка; Рођен Мартин Хајдегер; Потписан Споразум о успостављању специјалних паралелних односа између Србије и РС". Нова српска политичка мисао (in Serbian). Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  11. ^ a b "Поријекло српске краљевске династије Обреновић". Порекло (in Serbian). 17 March 2015. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  12. ^ Boric, Tijana (January 2018). "Konak in Gornja Crnuca: The Court of Prince Milos Obrenovic". FACTA UNIVERSITATIS: Series: Visual Arts and Music: 025. doi:10.22190/FUVAM1801025B. S2CID 159166778.
  13. ^ "Na današnji dan donet Srpski građanski zakonik | Fakulteti". fakulteti.edukacija.rs. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  14. ^ "Конак кнеза Милоша". IMUS – Istorijski muzej Srbije (in Serbian). Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  15. ^ Avramović, Sima. "Sretenjski Ustav – 175 godina posle" (PDF). {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  16. ^ Avramović, Sima. "Sretenjski Ustav – 175 godina posle" (PDF). {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  17. ^ "SRETENJSKI USTAV – PRVI USTAV MODERNE SRBIJE". Glas Šumadije. 15 February 2019. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  18. ^ "Sretenjski ustav: Događaji koji su menjali Srbiju (11)". Nedeljnik. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  19. ^ Leovac, Danko (2011). "Serbia and Russia during the Second Rule of Prince Miloš Obrenović (1858–1860)". Belgrade Historical Review. 2: 205–219.
  20. ^ Brusatti, Otto (1999). Johann Strauss: unter Donner und Blitz. Museen der Stadt Wien. p. 241. ISBN 9783852021416.
  21. ^ Milutin D. Nešić (1920). Knez Mihailo. Štamparija braće grujić i prometnog D.D. С државнога балкона у згради Народне Скупштине (Велика пивара) читаше се прокламација народу српском, да је повраћен па престо отац отаџбине Велики Милош. Ко је видео како је та одлука за час угасила оне упаљене ...
  22. ^ Кнез у чају Марсела Пруста („Данас“, 18. октобар 2013)
  23. ^ Породична преписка кнеза Милоша Обреновића (23. фебруар 2016)
  24. ^ Преки књаз меког срца („Политика”, 10. март 2018)
  25. ^ "Dva veka prve zadužbine kneza Miloša Obrenovića – Crkva Svetog Save na Savincu" (in Serbian). Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  26. ^ "Основна школа". www.osmilosobrenovic.edu.rs. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  27. ^ Sve o novom Autoputu Miloš Veliki, by A. Milutinović, Blitz, 18 August 2019.
  28. ^ Pavlović, Srđan Rudić; Lela (1 September 2016). Srpska revolucija i obnova državnosti Srbije: Dvesta godina od Drugog srpskog ustanka: =Serbian Revolution and Renewal of Serbian Statehood : Two Hundred Years since the Second Serbian Uprising (in Serbian). Istorijski institut, Beograd; Međuopštinski istorijski arhiv, Čačak. p. 209. ISBN 978-86-7743-116-7.
  29. ^ a b Acović, Dragomir (2012). Slava i čast: Odlikovanja među Srbima, Srbi među odlikovanjima. Belgrade: Službeni Glasnik. p. 78.
  30. ^ Acović, Dragomir (2012). Slava i čast: Odlikovanja među Srbima, Srbi među odlikovanjima. Belgrade: Službeni Glasnik. p. 543.
  31. ^ Leovac, Danko (2011). "Serbia and Russia during the Second Rule of Prince Miloš Obrenović (1858–1860)". Belgrade Historical Review. 2: 205–219.

Sources

  • Ćirković, Sima (2004). The Serbs. Malden: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 9781405142915.
  • Radosavljević, Nedeljko V. (2010). "The Serbian Revolution and the Creation of the Modern State: The Beginning of Geopolitical Changes in the Balkan Peninsula in the 19th Century". Empires and Peninsulas: Southeastern Europe between Karlowitz and the Peace of Adrianople, 1699–1829. Berlin: LIT Verlag. pp. 171–178. ISBN 9783643106117.
  • Rajić, Suzana (2010). "Serbia – the Revival of the Nation-state, 1804–1829: From Turkish Provinces to Autonomous Principality". Empires and Peninsulas: Southeastern Europe between Karlowitz and the Peace of Adrianople, 1699–1829. Berlin: LIT Verlag. pp. 143–148. ISBN 9783643106117.
  • Stojančević, Vladimir (1959). "Политички погледи кнеза Милоша Обреновића". Историјски часопис. Научно дело. 9–10: 345–362.
  • Cunibert, Barthélemy Sylvestre. Srpski ustanak i prva vladavina Miloša Obrenovića: 1804–1850. Vol. 96. Štamparija D. Dimitrijevića, 1901.
  • Krestić, Vasilije, and Nikola Petrović. Protokol kneza Miloša Obrenovića 1824–1825. SANU, 1973.
  • Катарина Митровиh "двор кнеза Милоша Обреновиhа" (2008).
  • Karadžić, Vuk S. Žizn'i podvigi knjazja Miloša Obrenovića, Verchovnogo Voždja i predvoditelja naroda serbskago. 1825.
  • Гавриловић, Михаило. Милош Обреновић. Давидовић, 1908.
  • Gavrilović, Mihailo, and Obrenović Miloš. Miloš Obrenović: 1813–1820. Vol. 126. Nova štamparija" Davidović", 1908.
  • Miloš Obrenović information (in Serbian)
Miloš Obrenović I of Serbia
Born: 18 March [7 March o.s.] 1780 Died: 26 September 1860
Regnal titles
Preceded by Grand Vožd of Serbia
1815–1817
Title abolished
proclaimed Prince of Serbia
New title Prince of Serbia
1817–1839
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prince of Serbia
1858–1860
Succeeded by

miloš, obrenović, serbia, this, article, expanded, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, serbian, december, 2015, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, version, serbian, article, machine, translation, lik. This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in Serbian December 2015 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Serbian article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 385 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Serbian Wikipedia article at sr Milosh Obrenoviћ see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated sr Milosh Obrenoviћ to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Prince Milos Obrenovic I of Serbia Serbian Cyrillic Milosh Obrenoviћ I romanized Milos Obrenovic I pronounced miloʃ obreːnoʋit ɕ 18 March 1780 or 1783 26 September 1860 born Milos Teodorovic Serbian Cyrillic Milosh Teodoroviћ pronounced miloʃ teodǒːroʋit ɕ also known as Milos the Great Serbian Cyrillic Milosh Veliki romanized Milos Veliki was the Prince of Serbia twice from 1815 to 1839 and from 1858 to 1860 He was an eminent figure of the First Serbian uprising the leader of the Second Serbian uprising and the founder of the House of Obrenovic Under his rule Serbia became an autonomous principality within the Ottoman Empire 1 Prince Milos was an autocrat consistently refusing to decentralize power 2 full citation needed which gave rise to a strong internal opposition 3 During his rule Milos the Great bought a certain number of estates and ships from the Ottomans and was also a prominent trader 4 Despite his humble background he eventually became the most affluent man in Serbia and one of the wealthiest in the Balkan peninsula possessing estates in Vienna Serbia and Wallachia 5 6 VozdMilos Obrenovic IMilosh Obrenoviћ IMilos Obrenovic I 1848Prince of SerbiaReign23 December 1858 26 September 1860PredecessorAlexander KarađorđevicSuccessorMihailo III Obrenovic Prince of SerbiaReign6 November 1817 25 June 1839PredecessorHimself As Grand Vozd of Serbia SuccessorMilan IIGrand Vozd of SerbiaReign23 April 1815 6 November 1817PredecessorKarađorđeSuccessorHimself as Prince of Serbia Born 1780 03 18 18 March 1780 or more probably 1783Gornja Dobrinja near Pozega Ottoman Empire now Serbia Died26 September 1860 aged 77 or 80 Belgrade Serbia Ottoman EmpireBurialSt Mark s Church Belgrade SerbiaConsortLjubica VukomanovicIssuePrincess PetriaPrincess ElisabethPrince Milan Obrenovic IIPrince Michael Obrenovic IIIPrincess MariaPrince TodorPrince GabrielHouseObrenovicFatherTeodor MihailovicMotherVisnja UrosevicReligionSerbian Orthodox Contents 1 Early life 2 First Serbian Uprising 3 Second Serbian Uprising 4 Reign 5 Legacy 5 1 Things named after Milos Obrenovic 5 1 1 Biographies and memoirs 5 1 2 Enterprises and organizations 5 1 3 Places 5 1 4 Plaques and memorials 6 Awards and honours 7 Marriage and children 8 See also 9 References 10 SourcesEarly life EditMilos Teodorovic was the son of Teodor Tesa Mihailovic died 1802 from Dobrinja and Visnja died 18 June 1817 7 His family descended from the Bratonozici tribe 8 This was the second marriage of his mother Visnja from which also sprung Jovan 1787 1850 and Jevrem 1790 1856 7 From Visnja s first marriage with Obren Martinovic died 1780 from Brusnica Milos had half brothers Jakov died 1811 and Milan died 1810 and half sister Stana 7 After the death of Obren Visnja moved from Brusnica and married Teodor in Dobrinja 7 Although many historians put 1780 as the year when Milos was born according to foundation plaque in the wall of the Old Church in Kragujevac his capital he was 35 when the church was finished in 1818 meaning that he was born in 1783 After the death of his brother Milan a famed revolutionary with great reputation among the people Milos adopted the surname Obrenovic In official documents his name was sometimes written Milos Teodorovic Obrenovic Serbian Cyrillic Milosh Teodoroviћ Obrenoviћ pronounced miloʃ teodǒːroʋit ɕ obreːnoʋit ɕ 9 First Serbian Uprising EditMain article First Serbian Uprising Milos fought in the First Serbian uprising 10 until its very end in 1813 He was wounded in the battle for Uzice 5 His half brother Milan also took part in the uprising 5 rising to become the voivode of the Rudnik district until his death in 1810 After Milan s death Milos adopted the surname of his half brother Obrenovic 11 This name was the patronymic which his half brother derived from Obren the first name of his own father Milos s step father 11 After the rebellion collapsed Milos was among the few of its leaders that remained in Serbia to face the returning Ottomans 6 Second Serbian Uprising Edit Takovo proclamation of Uprising Main article Second Serbian Uprising In April 1815 Prince Milos organized and led the Second Serbian uprising After defeating the Turks and Napoleon s defeat in Russia the Turks agreed to the terms of the agreement from 1815 After the killing of Karađorđe Petrovic in 1817 Obrenovic became the leader of the Serbs As a result of the agreement Serbia gained some autonomy but remained under Ottoman sovereignty Milos Obrenovic was left in power as its absolute ruler 12 Between the end of 1828 and the autumn of 1830 Prince Milos created a so called legislative commission to translate the Code Napoleon into Serbian and codify the laws and customs of the country After discussing the commission Milos invited two distinguished legal specialists to come from Hungary to prepare a more suitable criminal and civil code of laws for Serbia They were Vasilije Lazarevic Burgermeister mayor of Zemun and Jovan Hadzic lawyer poet and member of the municipal senate of Novi Sad 13 In January 1831 Prince Milos informed a great national assembly that he had obtained an imperial edict from the Sultan ending all direct obligations of Serbian peasants to their former Turkish lords guaranteeing Ottoman recognition of Serbian autonomy in most matters of internal administration and offering Serbia the prospect of territorial aggrandizement as well as the express right to institute schools courts and a governmental administration of her own The Sultan s decrees of 1830 and 1833 expanded the same rights to a larger territory and made Serbia a sovereign principality 14 with Milos Obrenovic as hereditary prince A Metropolitanate of Serbia was established in Belgrade as an autonomous unit of the Patriarchate of Constantinople Russia s status as the guarantor of Serbia s autonomy was also recognized Reign Edit Milos Obrenovic portrait probably done in Istanbul Exposition of Princess Ljubica s Residence 2017 The supporters of the rule of law often rebelled against Milos s government Following one such rebellion he agreed to adopt a constitution the Sretenje or Candlemas constitution in 1835 15 The move was opposed by neighboring Austria the ruling Ottoman Empire and Russia 16 It is believed that the three great empires saw the constitution as a danger to their own autocratic systems of government 17 Metternich s Austria particularly ridiculed the fact that Serbia had its own flag and foreign ministry Milos abolished the constitution at the demand of Russia and Turkey 18 and it was replaced by the Turkish Constitution of 1838 Milos abdicated in 1839 in favor of his sons Milan who died a few weeks later and Mihailo who then became prince Mihailo was deposed in 1842 and the family was out of power until 1858 when it returned with Milos restored as prince for the last two years of his life 19 Thanks to his good contacts during his stay in Vienna Johann Strauss II composed the Serben Quadrille intended for Serbian balls 20 Legacy Edit Monument dedicated to Milos Obrenovic and Second Serbian Uprising Takovo Serbia Residence of Prince Milos Belgrade Serbia Milos Obrenovic was given the epithet the Great He was proclaimed Father of the Fatherland by the National Assembly 21 Things named after Milos Obrenovic Edit Biographies and memoirs Edit Milan Milicevic published the book Prince Milos and His Story in 1891 It was written with the basis of a manuscript in which Prince Milos talked about his life 22 For several years his barber was Nicirof Ninkovic who left memoirs about it His personal physician during his first reign was Bartolomeo Kunibert who wrote a two volume book translated into Serbian entitled The Serbian Uprising and the First Reign of Milos Obrenovic 1804 1850 Part of Knez Milos family correspondences has been preserved with his daughter Petrija Bajic near Timișoara In 1925 the property was bought by Joca Vujic who left the correspondences to the Belgrade University Library Svetozar Markovic which the book Family Correspondences of Knez Milos Obrenovic from the Archival Collection of Joca Vujic at the Belgrade University Library Svetozar Markovic 23 24 Enterprises and organizations Edit Knjaz Milos a d is one of the leading Serbian producers of mineral water Places Edit Milos Obrenovic s House in Gornja Crnuca from which Milos ruled Serbia for two years and in which the decision to start the Second Serbian Uprising was made was declared a cultural monument of exceptional importance Saint Sava Church in Sarani was founded by him 25 Elementary School Milos Obrenovic in Aranđelovac 26 Knez Milos Street in Belgrade is named after him as well as streets in many other Serbian cities Along this road numerous state institutions and embassies are located The street was called Milos the Great until it was renamed with its present name during communist Yugoslavia Milos the Great Highway a section of Corridor XI or A2 motorway part of the E761 and E763 European routes from Obrenovac to Preljina was opened in Serbia on 18 August 2019 27 Plaques and memorials Edit Monument to Milos Obrenovic was the work of the sculptor Đorđe Jovanovic The monument was solemnly unveiled by King Aleksandar Obrenovic in the presence of state officials and citizens 24 June 1898 The Takovo Uprising monument representing him was set in front of the building of the Government of Serbia The Takovo Uprising monument by Petar Ubavkic in Takovo 28 Awards and honours Edit Seal of Milos Obrenovic Austria Order of the Iron Crown Knight 1st Class Greece Order of the Redeemer Grand Cross 29 Ottoman Empire Nisan i Zisan Portrait of the Sultan with Jewels Mahmud II Portrait of the Sultan with Jewels Abdulmecid II Russia Order of St Anna with Crown 1st Class 29 Order of St Anna with brilliants 2nd Class Order of the White Eagle 30 31 Marriage and children EditIn 1805 Milos married Ljubica Vukomanovic September 1785 Vienna 26 May 1843 The couple had eight children whose names are known It is speculated that Ljubica had other pregnancies that resulted in miscarriages stillbirths or children who died shortly after birth with some sources giving a number as high as 17 pregnancies Prince Petar Princess Petria 5 August 1808 1870 Princess Elisabeth 28 March 1814 5 October 1848 Prince Milan I of Serbia 21 October 1819 8 July 1839 Prince Michael III of Serbia 16 September 1823 10 June 1868 Princess Maria born and died 9 July 1830 Prince Todor died in childhood Prince Gabriel died in childhood Wikimedia Commons has media related to Milos Obrenovic I Prince of Serbia See also EditList of Serbian Revolutionaries Toma Vucic PerisicReferences Edit Melicharek Maros January 2012 Druhe Srbske povstanie proti osmanskej nadvlade 1815 1816 a vytvaranie autonomneho srbskeho statu pocas prvej vlady Milosa Obrenovica Second Serbian uprising against Ottomans 1815 1816 and creation of autonomous Serbia under Milos Obrenovic Dejiny 6 2 26 39 Marinkovic Mirjana KAKO OGRANICITI VLAST SAMODRSCA Srpsko Nasledje Retrieved 4 January 2020 Hall Richard C 9 October 2014 War in the Balkans An Encyclopedic History from the Fall of the Ottoman Empire to the Breakup of Yugoslavia ABC CLIO p 210 ISBN 978 1 61069 031 7 Katic Tatjana Ottoman Documents on Sales of Turkish Real Estates to the Prince Milos Obrenovic Osmanska dokumenta o prodaji turskih imanja knezu Milosu Obrenovicu a b c Knez Milos Obrenovic Virtuelni zavicajni muzej Pozege Retrieved 4 January 2020 a b KNEZ MILOSh OBRENOVIЋ PRVI ILI DRUGI OTAC MODERNE SRBIЈE Kulturni centar Novog Sada in Serbian 27 August 2018 Retrieved 4 January 2020 a b c d A Iviћ Rodoslovne tablice Broј 16 i 17 Obrenoviћi Banac Ivo 1988 The National Question in Yugoslavia Origins History Politics Cornell University Press ISBN 0801494931 Serbia 1877 Zbornik zakona i uredaba p 51 Na danashњi dan 1860 umro knez Milosh Obrenoviћ 1371 odigrala se Marichka bitka Roђen Martin Haјdeger Potpisan Sporazum o uspostavљaњu speciјalnih paralelnih odnosa izmeђu Srbiјe i RS Nova srpska politichka misao in Serbian Retrieved 4 January 2020 a b Poriјeklo srpske kraљevske dinastiјe Obrenoviћ Poreklo in Serbian 17 March 2015 Retrieved 4 January 2020 Boric Tijana January 2018 Konak in Gornja Crnuca The Court of Prince Milos Obrenovic FACTA UNIVERSITATIS Series Visual Arts and Music 025 doi 10 22190 FUVAM1801025B S2CID 159166778 Na danasnji dan donet Srpski građanski zakonik Fakulteti fakulteti edukacija rs Retrieved 4 January 2020 Konak kneza Milosha IMUS Istorijski muzej Srbije in Serbian Retrieved 4 January 2020 Avramovic Sima Sretenjski Ustav 175 godina posle PDF a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Avramovic Sima Sretenjski Ustav 175 godina posle PDF a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help SRETENJSKI USTAV PRVI USTAV MODERNE SRBIJE Glas Sumadije 15 February 2019 Retrieved 4 January 2020 Sretenjski ustav Događaji koji su menjali Srbiju 11 Nedeljnik Retrieved 4 January 2020 Leovac Danko 2011 Serbia and Russia during the Second Rule of Prince Milos Obrenovic 1858 1860 Belgrade Historical Review 2 205 219 Brusatti Otto 1999 Johann Strauss unter Donner und Blitz Museen der Stadt Wien p 241 ISBN 9783852021416 Milutin D Nesic 1920 Knez Mihailo Stamparija brace grujic i prometnog D D S drzhavnoga balkona u zgradi Narodne Skupshtine Velika pivara chitashe se proklamaciјa narodu srpskom da јe povraћen pa presto otac otaџbine Veliki Milosh Ko јe video kako јe ta odluka za chas ugasila one upaљene Knez u chaјu Marsela Prusta Danas 18 oktobar 2013 Porodichna prepiska kneza Milosha Obrenoviћa 23 februar 2016 Preki kњaz mekog srca Politika 10 mart 2018 Dva veka prve zaduzbine kneza Milosa Obrenovica Crkva Svetog Save na Savincu in Serbian Retrieved 4 January 2020 Osnovna shkola www osmilosobrenovic edu rs Retrieved 4 January 2020 Sve o novom Autoputu Milos Veliki by A Milutinovic Blitz 18 August 2019 Pavlovic Srđan Rudic Lela 1 September 2016 Srpska revolucija i obnova drzavnosti Srbije Dvesta godina od Drugog srpskog ustanka Serbian Revolution and Renewal of Serbian Statehood Two Hundred Years since the Second Serbian Uprising in Serbian Istorijski institut Beograd Međuopstinski istorijski arhiv Cacak p 209 ISBN 978 86 7743 116 7 a b Acovic Dragomir 2012 Slava i cast Odlikovanja među Srbima Srbi među odlikovanjima Belgrade Sluzbeni Glasnik p 78 Acovic Dragomir 2012 Slava i cast Odlikovanja među Srbima Srbi među odlikovanjima Belgrade Sluzbeni Glasnik p 543 Leovac Danko 2011 Serbia and Russia during the Second Rule of Prince Milos Obrenovic 1858 1860 Belgrade Historical Review 2 205 219 Sources EditCirkovic Sima 2004 The Serbs Malden Blackwell Publishing ISBN 9781405142915 Radosavljevic Nedeljko V 2010 The Serbian Revolution and the Creation of the Modern State The Beginning of Geopolitical Changes in the Balkan Peninsula in the 19th Century Empires and Peninsulas Southeastern Europe between Karlowitz and the Peace of Adrianople 1699 1829 Berlin LIT Verlag pp 171 178 ISBN 9783643106117 Rajic Suzana 2010 Serbia the Revival of the Nation state 1804 1829 From Turkish Provinces to Autonomous Principality Empires and Peninsulas Southeastern Europe between Karlowitz and the Peace of Adrianople 1699 1829 Berlin LIT Verlag pp 143 148 ISBN 9783643106117 Stojancevic Vladimir 1959 Politichki pogledi kneza Milosha Obrenoviћa Istoriјski chasopis Nauchno delo 9 10 345 362 Cunibert Barthelemy Sylvestre Srpski ustanak i prva vladavina Milosa Obrenovica 1804 1850 Vol 96 Stamparija D Dimitrijevica 1901 Krestic Vasilije and Nikola Petrovic Protokol kneza Milosa Obrenovica 1824 1825 SANU 1973 Katarina Mitrovih dvor kneza Milosha Obrenoviha 2008 Karadzic Vuk S Zizn i podvigi knjazja Milosa Obrenovica Verchovnogo Vozdja i predvoditelja naroda serbskago 1825 Gavriloviћ Mihailo Milosh Obrenoviћ Davidoviћ 1908 Gavrilovic Mihailo and Obrenovic Milos Milos Obrenovic 1813 1820 Vol 126 Nova stamparija Davidovic 1908 Milos Obrenovic information in Serbian Milos Obrenovic I of SerbiaHouse of ObrenovicBorn 18 March 7 March o s 1780 Died 26 September 1860Regnal titlesPreceded byKarađorđe Grand Vozd of Serbia1815 1817 Title abolishedproclaimed Prince of SerbiaNew title Prince of Serbia1817 1839 Succeeded byMilan Obrenovic IIPreceded byAleksandar Karađorđevic Prince of Serbia1858 1860 Succeeded byMihailo Obrenovic III Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Milos Obrenovic I of Serbia amp oldid 1132407248, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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