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Narentines

The Narentines were a South Slavic[1] tribe that occupied an area of southern Dalmatia centered at the river Neretva (Narenta), active in the 9th and 10th centuries, noted as pirates on the Adriatic. Named Narentani in Venetian sources, Greek sources call them Paganoi, "pagans", as they were for long pagan, in a time when neighbouring tribes were Christianized. The tribe were fierce enemies of the Republic of Venice, having attacked Venetian merchants and clergy passing on the Adriatic, and even raided close to Venice itself, as well as defeated the doge several times. Venetian–Narentine peace treaties did not last long, as the Narentines quickly returned to piracy. They were finally defeated in a Venetian crackdown at the turn of the 10th century and disappeared from sources by the 11th century.

Pagania of the Narentines
9th century–11th century
Narentine State or Pagania in the 9th century, according to De Administrando Imperio.
Common languagesSlavic
Religion
Slavic paganism
GovernmentChiefdom
Prince 
History 
• Formed
9th century
11th century
Succeeded by
Today part ofCroatia

Terminology

The word Narentine is a demonym derived from the local Neretva River (Latin: Narenta). The terms "Narentines", "Pagania" or "Pagans" are found in two contemporary sources: De Administrando Imperio (DAI), a mid-10th century Greek work, and Chronicon Venetum et Gradense, a Venetian chronicle by John the Deacon from the early 11th century.[2][3] In De Administrando Imperio of Byzantine Emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus (r. 913–959), the tribe is called Paganoi (Greek: Παγανοὶ, Παγανοἰ), and their polity Pagania (Παγανὶα, Παγανἰα), in Greek, while also noting that in Latin they are called Arentanoi (Αρεντανοἰ) and their polity Arenta (Αρεντα).[4] Chronicler John the Deacon used the geographical term Narentani (as in princeps Narentanorum,[5] Narrentanos Sclavos[6]). In Serbo-Croatian, the tribal name is rendered as Neretljani (Неретљани), Neretvani and Pagani (Пагани), while the polity mostly as Paganija (Паганија).

Geography and economy

In DAI's chapters Story of the province of Dalmatia and Of the Pagani, also called Arentani, and of the country they now dwell in, the geography of Pagania is described. Pagania had the counties (župa (zoupanias)) of Rhastotza, Mokros and Dalen.[7] Rhastotza and Mokros lay by the coast, and had galleys, while Dalen was distant from the sea and was based on agriculture.[7] Pagania had the inhabited cities of Mokron (Makarska[8]), Beroullia (presumably Brela[8]), Ostrok (Zaostrog[8]) and Slavinetza (near Gradac[8]), and the large islands of Kourkra/Kiker with a city (Korčula[8]), Meleta/Malozeatai (Mljet[8]), Phara (Hvar[8]) and Bratzis (Brač[8]).[9] The Pagani raised flocks on the islands.[7] Islands in the vicinity but not part of Pagania were Chora (presumably Sušac[8]), Iës (Vis[8]) and Lastobon (Lastovo[8]).[9] Croatia was situated to the northwest, and Zachumlia to the east; Serbia was situated inland to the northeast, behind Pagania, Zachumlia, Travunia and Dioklea, and bordered to Croatia on the Tzentina (Cetina) River.[7]

History

The Sclaveni (South Slavs) overwhelmed the Balkans in the 6th century. In 639 AD, Narona, until then a flourishing Roman city, was destroyed by a horde of Avars and Slavs.[10] A few years later, Slavic tribes took control of the lower Neretva.[10] The Slavs built a new town on the ruins of Narona, and erected a monument to their Slavic god Svetovid, on the ruins of Roman temples.[10] According to Evans, Narentia became a stronghold for pagans in the Balkans, similarly to Balto-Slavs in Rügen (at Jaromarsburg).[10] In 642, Slavs invaded southern Italy and attacked Siponto, by ship from the Dalmatian coast.[11] Slavic naval raids on the Adriatic increased and it became unsafe for travel.[11]

 
Slavic principalities in the early 9th century.

The first conflicts between the Venetians and Narentines came immediately before 830, around which time the first peace agreement was signed between the two (the Venetian Doge and Sclavorum de insula Narrentis).[12] Narentine Slavs sent envoys to Doge Giovanni I Participazio (r. 829–836).[13] P. Skok believes this period also being the first contact between Venice and the middle Dalmatian islands.[12] According to Šafárik (1795–1861), by the beginning of the 9th century their power had increased so much that Doge Giovanni I attacked them and then offered them peace.[14] The Republic of Venice was de facto subordinate the Byzantine Empire, a period in which Venice expanded its trade relations towards the East.[15] In the first half of the 9th century Byzantium was struck by internal unrest, while the Bulgars and Arabs strengthened themselves thanks to this.[16] Arabs took Crete in 825, Palermo in 831, Taranto in 839, then after destroying the Venetian navy by 840, they roamed freely in the Adriatic.[16] In 841 Arabic ships attacked Adriatic cities and reached a confluence of the Padua river, while smaller contingents attacked Budva, Roza and Lower Kotor.[16] In 842 the Arabs conquered Bari, and in 846 reached Rome itself.[16] The Venetian navy, obliged to defend the Byzantine Adriatic, were occupied almost fully with battles with the Arabs.[16] The Byzantine navy rarely appeared, and with small numbers of ships.[16] This, and Arab harassment, gave the Slavic pirates around the Neretva upswing to develop their ship capabilities.[16] When the Venetian navy was in Sicilian waters as guards in 827–828, the Narentines received momentum; when the Venetian navy returned, they calmed down.[16] Venetian chronicles speak of a Narentine leader having been baptized in Venice, for greater security for the latter; however, the Narentines are unsteady and deceptive as their sea; as soon as events in Venice or the Adriatic worsen, the Narentines continued their piracy.[16] One of their attacks in 834–835, when they robbed and killed some Venetian merchants returning from Benevento, caused great resentment against them in Venice.[16]

In order to stop these assaults, the Venetians undertook a large expedition against the Dalmatian Slavic pirates in 839.[16] Doge Pietro Tradonico sent warships against the Slavic lands (Sclavenia).[13] According to F. Šišić Doge Pietro ordered an attack on the Narentines in the spring of 839.[17] According to V. Klaić, Tradonico had first defeated and made peace with the Croats under Mislav, then proceeded to attack the Narentine islands and make peace with Narentine leader Drosaico.[18] There are no information on the fights that year, but it is known that peace was concluded with Croats and a part of the Narentines.[16] Venetian chronicler John the Deacon (1008) records a renewal of the peace treaty signed by Drosaico (ad Narrentanas insulas cum Drosaico, Marianorum iudice, similiter fedus instituit).[19] The peace with the Narentines did not last long, perhaps as the Narentines signed it to avoid danger, or more likely because it was not concluded with all, but a tribe or clan of the Narentines.[16] In 840 the Venetians attacked Narentine leader Ljudislav, ending in failure;[16] Ljudislav (Liuditus sclavus), possibly a successor or co-ruler of Drosaico, defeated the Venetian Doge and killed hundreds of his men.[17] According to Klaić it was the Narentines who broke the peace.[18] It seems that Narentine piracy even reached Istria by February 840.[17] The 840 Venetian–Frankish treaty included common fight against Slavic tribes (generationes Sclavorum inimicas).[20] After two defeats to the Venetian navy by the Arabs immediately after, the Venetians were unable to enter new fights with the Dalmatian Slavs.[16] In 846 the Narentines reached close to Venice itself, and raided nearby Caorle.[16][21]

 
Western Balkan polities in the late 9th century.

The arrival of Basil I (r. 867–886) to the Byzantine throne led to important changes in Byzantium; energetic, he managed to enter closer ties with the Bulgarians, and even the distant Croats, and protected the Empire well.[22] When Ragusa (Dubrovnik) asked for the emperor's help against the threat of the Saracens, he dispatched a strong navy into the Adriatic.[22] Byzantine admiral Niketas Ooryphas took up closer contacts with the Slavic tribes around Ragusa, the Zachumlians, Travunians and Kanalites, and invited them to jointly combat the Saracens, both on land and sea, in 869.[22] Only Slavic tribes of southern Dalmatia were called to cooperate; to the north, the Croats and Dalmatians entered relations with Italian king Louis at the dismay of the Byzantines.[22] When some "Slavs"[22] (Narentines according to Narayan[21]) in March 870 kidnapped the Bishop of Rome's emissaries returning home from the Fourth Council in Constantinople,[21] the Byzantines used this as a good pretext to attack and force them into submission (871).[22] The DAI mentions that the Narentines were called "pagans, because they did not accept baptism in the time when all Serbs were baptized", which is placed during Basil's rule.[22] The Narentines are not mentioned in relation to the Byzantine military expedition on Bari dispatched by Basil I (r. 867–886), in which other Dalmatian Slavs participated.[23] The Croats, Serbs, Zachlumians, Travunians, Konavlians, Ragusans, "with all the men of the towns of Dalmatia", crossed over the sea to Langobardia and took Bari.[24] Basil returned Dalmatia under Byzantine rule[23] by 878, and a large part of Dalmatia was put under the Patriarchate of Constantinople.[22] The DAI claims that the Dalmatian Slavs asked Basil I to baptize them; the Christianization of the Narentines seems to have failed.[23] According to Evans, the Narentines remained pagan until 873, when Byzantine admiral Ooryphas persuaded them to accept baptism.[10] While Doge Orso I Participazio and his son Giovanni II Participazio made peace and an alliance with the Croats after 876, the Venetians were still at war with the Narentines.[25]

In 880 the Venetian–Frankish treaty was renewed.[26] In 887 Doge Pietro I Candiano sent troops against the Narentine Slavs, landing at the "Slavic Hill" (mons Sclavorum), putting the Slavs to flight.[13] The Narentines were defeated in a battle in August 887 at Makarska, and their five ships were destroyed with axes.[26] With help from neighbours, the Narentines decisively defeated the Venetian navy on 18 September 887, with the Doge killed in action and his body left laying (Andrea Tribun later secretly took the body to Venice).[26] From this time until 948 the Venetian chronicles do not mention conflicts with the Croats, which would mean that the Venetians offered peace and paid tribute to the Croats.[26]

Pagania was by the reign of Serbian ruler Petar Gojniković (r. 892–917) part of the Serbian principality[citation needed]. Petar and the Byzantine commander of Dyrrhachion Leo Rhabdouchos met in Narentine lands regarding an alliance against the Bulgars.[27] Michael of Zahumlje, who had been pushed out from Zahumlje to the neighbouring islands by Petar, informed the Bulgars about these negotiations.[27] In 917 Petar was tricked by the Bulgars, who then annexed Serbia in 924–927,[28] until Časlav returned to Serbia and rebuilt the state, in Byzantine alliance.[29] Časlav's state included Pagania (the Narentines).[citation needed] In the 940s, the islands of Brač and Hvar, which had earlier become part of the Croatian kingdom, seceded during Ban Pribina's rebellion and rejoined the Narentine province.[30] The Narentines took advantage of the internal unrest in Croatia after the death of Krešimir I of Croatia (945) and took the islands of Sušac, Vis and Lastovo.[27] In 948 the Narentines were at war with Venetian Doge Pietro III Candiano, who sent 33 war galleys under Urso Badovario and Pietro Rozollo; the Narentines managed to defend themselves.[30] The Venetians were forced to pay tribute to the Narentines for safe sea passage.[27] Serbia collapsed after Časlav's death in ca. 960, into smaller units.[27]

In 997, the Narentines increased raids against Latin and Venetian towns, and they had close ties with Croat ruler Svetoslav Suronja, who at the time fought his two brothers over the throne; this relation caused the Latin Dalmatian towns and Venice to turn against Svetoslav.[31] In 998, the Republic of Venice, under the Byzantine Emperor, exerted control over the Byzantine Dalmatian towns; Dalmatian Croatia was in civil war; the Narentines were semi-independent, raiding the Adriatic, particularly against Venice.[32] As Venice gained authority in Dalmatia, some Dalmatian towns that felt threatened allied with the Narentines.[32] The Venetians then interved and defeated the Narentines and their Croatian allies decisively on sea, resulting in Narentine power decline.[32] The Neretljani principality in the 11th century was part of the Croatian Kingdom.[33]

On 9 May 1000, Venetian Doge Pietro II Orseolo[34] decided to conquer the allied Croats and Narentines, protecting the interests of their trading colonies and the Latin Dalmatian citizenry. Without difficulty, he struck the entire eastern Adriatic coastline - with only the Narentines offering him some resistance. As a counterattack, the Narentines kidnapped 40 of the foremost citizens of Zara (Zadar) and stole a transport of goods from Apulia.[citation needed] On their way home, Pietro II dispatched 10 ships that surprised them between Lastovo and Sušac and took them as prisoners to Trogir. Narentine emissaries came to the Doge's temporary residence at Split (Spalato) to beg for the release of the prisoners. They guaranteed that the Narentine prince himself would show up with his men and renounce the old rights to tax the Venetians for free passage. All prisoners were allowed to return to their homes, except for six that were kept as hostages. Lastovo and Korčula continued to oppose the Venetians. Korčula was conquered by Pietro II and Lastovo fell too after long bloody fights. As Lastovo was very infamous in the Venetian world for being a pirate haven, the Doge ordered it to be evacuated in order to be razed. After the denizens of Lastovo refused to concur, the Venetians attacked and razed it to the ground.

Leaders

  • Drosaico (Drosaik, Dražko, Draško), Venetian chronicler John the Deacon[35] (1008) records a renewal of Venetian–Narentine peace treaty signed by Drosaico (Ad Narrantanas insulas cum Drosaico, Marianorum iudice, similiter fedus instituit).[36]
  • Liuditus sclavus (Ljudislav), possibly a successor or co-ruler of Drosaico, defeated the Venetian Doge and killed hundreds of his men.[17]
  • Unusclavus and Diodurus were according to Johann Christian von Engel (1798)[37] the leaders of the raid on Caorle (which took place in 846 according to Narayan[21]). Šafařík included the note in Slowanské Starožitnosti (1837), and rendered their names as "Uneslaw" and "Diodur".[38]
  • Berigui or Berigoy (Berigoj), mentioned in a 1050 charter of the Benedictine monastery of St Mary on the island of Tremiti as a "king of the coastal people" (rex marianorum), then as a "judge of the coastal people" (iudex Maranorum).[5][39]

Legacy

There is a historical festival called matrimonio in Venice commemorating the victory over the Narentines,[40] held on Candlemas.[41]

Historiography

The question of the ethnic designation of the tribe, whether it, apart from being Slavic, was to be described as Serb or Croat, is often found in historiography.[42] The earliest information about the Narentines is from the early 9th century, compiled in the Chronicon Venetum et Gradense.[43] The Venetian chronicle used the Slavic ethnonym (Latin: Narrentanos Sclavos) to refer to the Narentines.[44] De Administrando Imperio also gives information about the Narentines and there, the Narentines are described as descendants from the "unbaptized Serbs" that settled Dalmatia from an area near Thessaloniki while earlier coming there from White Serbia under the protection of Byzantine Emperor Heraclius (r. 610–641), and that are called as Pagans because they did not accept baptism at the time when all the Serbs were baptized.[45][46][47]

In the 19th century, historian Pavel Jozef Šafárik (1795–1861) said that the first information on Serbs in history was from events regarding the Narentines.[14] Konstantin Josef Jireček (1854–1918) treated them as a distinct South Slavic tribe.[48] Croatian historians Miho Barada (1889–1957) and Nada Klaić also defined them as "neither Croats nor Serbs".[49] Croatian historian Ferdo Šišić (1869–1940) said that the Neretva population was "ever and always fully identical to the Croat [population], including also its Chakavian dialect" (1952).[48] Serbian historiography in the 19th and 20th century considered the Narentines to be Serbs.[50] Vladimir Ćorović (1885–1941) treated the Narentines as the first of the Serb tribes to take the initiative of fighting, not for defence and tribal organization, but for the liberty of selfish desires and security raids.[16] Czech historian Francis Dvornik in his analysis of DAI chapters concluded that they were more likely of Croatian than Serbian origin and the account is rather a political "ante-dating by three centuries the state of affairs in his own day".[51][52] Croatian historian Vladimir Košćak believed that the Narentines were under Croat rule from Trpimir until Domagoj (d. 876), and that after the latter's death, they sent emissaries to Basil I and recognized his rule, which was however short-lived as spanning only to the fall of Byzantine protégé Zdeslav (879) when the Narentines again fell away from Byzantium; Košćak wanted to reduce Byzantine rule also to the south of Pagania, claiming that the provinces of Pagania, Zachumlia, Travunia and Duklja again came under Croat rule during Branimir (r. 879–892).[53] This theory was criticized by Božidar Ferjančić.[54]

In modern historiography, Romanian-American historian Florin Curta agreed with those historians who "rightly interpreted as an indication that in the mid-tenth century the coastal zhupanias were under the control of the Serbian zhupan Časlav, who ruled over the regions in the interior and extended his power westwards across the mountains to the coast".[55] Serbian historian Tibor Živković also considered it a reflection of the political situation in the 10th century,[56] that there's no certainty the Narentines and others were Serbs or Croats or separate tribes which arrived with Serbs or Croats to the Balkans,[56] and that these ethnic identities are the result of political rather than ethnic development related to respective principalities.[57] He also noted that "it was stated in the DAI that the Serbs had been baptized much earlier, and therefore, the Pagans could not have belonged to the Serb tribe. There is information in chapter 32, that the Serbs controlled Pagania in ca. 895, during the rule of the Archon Peter, and from this political situation Constantine would have been able to write that the Pagans belonged to the Serbian tribe."[58] Croatian historian Neven Budak also holds that remarks regarding the Narentines were related to the political situation at the time and that the dispute between Croatian and Serbian historiographies regarding Narentines ethnicity is pointless.[59][60][61] According to Croatian historian Hrvoje Gračanin both the account about the settlement of Croats in Pannonia and Serbs in Pagania and near principalities in DAI do not reflect Croatian or Serbian ethnic origin but rather a political rule during the 9th and 10th century.[62] In a similar fashion Croatian historian Ivo Goldstein asserted that the Narentines "could not be regarded neither Serbs nor Croats", but should be considered as part of Croatian history.[63] Budak wrote that the Narentines were "undoubtedly a distinct ethnic group", who "disappeared as a separate ethnicity when their principality was joined into Croatia".[64] In Serbian (eg Sima Ćirković), and partly Croatian historiography, they are often considered as Serbs or Croats and their polity as part of medieval Serbian or Croatian state, but such a consideration is not taking into account the "complexity of multi-layered identities" by which "the Slavic population differentiated into more than two ethnogenetic nuclei".[65]

In the Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja, a work written by a Catholic bishop likely for a Croatian ruler in ca. 1300–10,[66] the southern Dalmatian principalities are referred to as part of "Red Croatia".[5] While later parts of the Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja are considered of high value, events described in the early Middle Ages are largely discredited in historiography.[67]

See also

References

  1. ^ Fine 1991, p. 306.
  2. ^ Ančić 2011, p. 255.
  3. ^ Živković 2012b, pp. 11–12.
  4. ^ Moravcsik 1967, pp. 152, 164–165.
  5. ^ a b c Fine 2006, p. 62.
  6. ^ Fine 2006, p. 39.
  7. ^ a b c d Moravcsik 1967, p. 145.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Institut za hrvatsku povijest 1974, p. 29.
  9. ^ a b Moravcsik 1967, p. 165.
  10. ^ a b c d e Evans 2007, p. 363.
  11. ^ a b Ćorović 2001, ch. "Prva srpska država"; Narayan 2009, p. 3
  12. ^ a b Filozofski fakultet 1964, p. 147.
  13. ^ a b c Fine 2006, p. 37.
  14. ^ a b Kostić 1963, p. 23.
  15. ^ Šišić 1990, p. 321.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Ćorović 2001, ch. "Prva srpska država"
  17. ^ a b c d Šišić 1990, p. 328.
  18. ^ a b Klaić 1972, p. 73.
  19. ^ Klaić 1971, p. 217.
  20. ^ Fine 2006, pp. 37–38.
  21. ^ a b c d Narayan 2009, p. 4.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h Ćorović 2001, ch. "Pokrštavanje Južnih Slovena"
  23. ^ a b c Ferjančić 1997, p. 15.
  24. ^ Živković 2008, p. 165.
  25. ^ Klaić 1972, p. 80.
  26. ^ a b c d Brković 2001, p. 32.
  27. ^ a b c d e Ćorović 2001, ch. "Srbi između Vizantije, Hrvatske i Bugarske"
  28. ^ Fine 1991, p. 153.
  29. ^ Fine 1991, p. 159.
  30. ^ a b Šišić 1990, p. 436.
  31. ^ Fine 1991, p. 274.
  32. ^ a b c Fine 1991, p. 276.
  33. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 24.
  34. ^ Lane, Frederic Chapin. Venice, a Maritime Republic, p. 26
  35. ^ Ernst Dümmler (1856). Über die älteste Geschichte der Slaven in Dalmatien: (549-928). Braumüller in Komm. pp. 45–.
  36. ^ Atti e memorie della Società dalmata di storia patria. Vol. 7–9. La Società. 1970. p. 119.
  37. ^ Johann Christian von Engel (1798). Kroatien Slavonien. Gebauer. p. 460.
  38. ^ Pavel Jozef Šafařík (1837). Slowanské Starožitnosti. tiskem J. Spurného. pp. 657–.
  39. ^ Ildar H. Garipzanov; Patrick J. Geary; Przemysław Urbańczyk (2008). Franks, Northmen, and Slavs: Identities and State Formation in Early Medieval Europe. Isd. p. 235. ISBN 978-2-503-52615-7.
  40. ^ Marcel Brion (1962). Venice: The Masque of Italy. Elek. p. 63.
  41. ^ Catholic World. Vol. 106–108. Paulist Fathers. 1918. p. 365.
  42. ^ Živković 2012b, p. 12.
  43. ^ Živković 2012b, p. 13.
  44. ^ Fine 2006, pp. 37, 39, 62.
  45. ^ Moravcsik 1967.
  46. ^ Ćirković, Sima (2008) [2004]. Srbi među europskim narodima [The Serbs] (PDF) (in Serbo-Croatian). Zagreb: Golden marketing / Tehnička knjiga. pp. 26–27. ISBN 9789532123388.
  47. ^ Živković 2012, pp. 194–195.
  48. ^ a b Zadarska smotra. Vol. 49. Matica hrvatska. 2000. p. 567.
  49. ^ Ančić 2011, p. 31–32.
  50. ^ Ančić 2011, p. 224.
  51. ^ Dvornik 1962a, p. 139, 141–142:He probably saw that in his time all these tribes were in the Serb sphere of influence, and therefore called them Serbs, thus ante-dating by three centuries the state of affairs in his own day. But in fact, as has been shown in the case of the Zachlumians, these tribes were not properly speaking Serbs, and seem to have migrated not with the Serbs but with the Croats. The Serbs at an early date succeeded in extending their sovereignty over the Terbouniotes and, under prince Peter, for a short time over the Narentans ... The Narentan Slavs differed in many respects from the other Slavs of Dalmatia ... The Narentan system seems thus to have been similar to that of the Polabian Slavs. The Narentans were scarcely influenced by Croats or Serbs, and seem to have been settled on the coast before the latter entered Illyricum. For C.’s statement that the Pagani are ‘descended from the unbaptized Serbs’ (36/5-6), see on 33/18-19. It is obvious that the small retinue of the Serbian prince could not have populated Serbia, Zachlumia, Terbounia and Narenta
  52. ^ Dvornik 1970, p. 26:Constantine regards all Slavic tribes in ancient Praevalis and Epirus—the Zachlumians, Tribunians, Diodetians, Narentans— as Serbs. This is not exact. Even these tribes were liberated from the Avars by the Croats who lived among them. Only later, thanks to the expansion of the Serbs, did they recognize their supremacy and come to be called Serbians
  53. ^ Ferjančić 1997, p. 15–16.
  54. ^ Ferjančić 1997, p. 16.
  55. ^ Curta 2006, p. 210: According to Constantine Porphyrogenitus, the Slavs of the Dalmatian zhupanias of Pagania, Zahumlje, Travounia, and Konavli all "descended from the unbaptized Serbs."51 This has been rightly interpreted as an indication that in the mid-tenth century the coastal zhupanias were under the control of the Serbian zhupan Časlav, who ruled over the regions in the interior and extended his power westwards across the mountains to the coast.
  56. ^ a b Živković 2006, p. 60.
  57. ^ Živković 2012b, p. 12–13.
  58. ^ Živković 2012a, p. 195.
  59. ^ Budak 1994, p. 58–61:Pri tome je car dosljedno izostavljao Dukljane iz ove srpske zajednice naroda. Čini se, međutim, očitim da car ne želi govoriti ο stvarnoj etničkoj povezanosti, već da su mu pred očima politički odnosi u trenutku kada je pisao djelo, odnosno iz vremena kada su za nj prikupljani podaci u Dalmaciji...
  60. ^ Budak 2018, p. 51:Sporovi hrvatske i srpske historiografije oko etničkoga karaktera sklavinija između Cetine i Drača bespredmetni su, jer transponiraju suvremene kategorije etniciteta u rani srednji vijek u kojem se identitet shvaćao drukčije...
  61. ^ Budak 2018, p. 177:Međutim, nakon nekog vremena (možda poslije unutarnjih sukoba u Hrvatskoj) promijenio je svoj položaj i prihvatio vrhovništvo srpskog vladara jer Konstantin tvrdi da su Zahumljani (kao i Neretvani i Travunjani) bili Srbi od vremena onog arhonta koji je Srbe, za vrijeme Heraklija, doveo u njihovu novu domovinu. Ta tvrdnja, naravno, nema veze sa stvarnošću 7. st., ali govori o političkim odnosima u Konstantinovo vrijeme.
  62. ^ Gračanin 2008, p. 71–72:Izneseni nalazi navode na zaključak da se Hrvati nisu uopće naselili u južnoj Panoniji tijekom izvorne seobe sa sjevera na jug, iako je moguće da su pojedine manje skupine zaostale na tom području utopivši se naposljetku u premoćnoj množini ostalih doseljenih slavenskih populacija. Širenje starohrvatskih populacija s juga na sjever pripada vremenu od 10. stoljeća nadalje i povezano je s izmijenjenim političkim prilikama, jačanjem i širenjem rane hrvatske države. Na temelju svega ovoga mnogo je vjerojatnije da etnonim "Hrvati" i doseoba skrivaju činjenicu o prijenosu političke vlasti, što znači da je car političko vrhovništvo poistovjetio s etničkom nazočnošću. Točno takav pristup je primijenio pretvarajući Zahumljane, Travunjane i Neretljane u Srbe (DAI, c. 33, 8-9, 34, 4-7, 36, 5-7).
  63. ^ Goldstein 1995, p. 196:Neretvani u to vrijeme ne pripadaju neposredno nijednoj od velikih etnogenetskih jezgri koje su se već afirmirale ili će se tek afirmirati na istočnom Jadranu i na evropskom prostoru uopće. Oni se tada ne mogu smatrati ni Srbima ni Hrvatima, iako car Konstantin tvrdi da "isti Pagani vode podrijetlo od nekrštenih Srba, iz vremena onog arhonta koji je prebjegao caru Herakliju"243. Naime, Neretvani su se vrlo rano afirmirali kao samostalan čimbenik, dobivši zbog toga i osebujna imena: Mariani (primorci), Arentani (Neretvani), Pagani (pogani). Neretvansku pak povijest i u ranosrednjovjekovnom razdoblju valja smatrati dijelom hrvatske povijesti zbog toga što se od kraja 11. stoljeća taj prostor vrlo brzo inkorporira u cjelinu Hrvatske (ili kasnije u hrvatsko-ugarsko kraljevstvo).
  64. ^ Budak 1994, p. 59.
  65. ^ Vedriš 2015, p. 590:No pri jednostranim pokušajima da se utvrdi etnička pripadnost tih sklavinija, često se nije uzimalau obzir sva složenost i višeslojnost identiteta razmatranje kojih upućuje na zaključakda se u ranome srednjem vijeku na istočnoj jadranskoj obali »slavensko pučanstvo diferenciralo u više nego dvije etnogenetske jezgre« (N. Budak).
  66. ^ Živković, T.; Kunčer, D. (2009), Gesta regum Sclavorum, I–II, Београд, pp. 362–365
  67. ^ Živković 2006, p. 16.

Sources

  • Ančić, Mladen (2011). "Miho Barada i mit o Neretvanima". Povijesni Prilozi (in Croatian). 41: 17–43.
  • Ančić, Mladen (2011). "Ranosrednjovjekovni Neretvani ili Humljani: Tragom zabune koju je prouzročilo djelo De administrando imperio" [The Early Medieval Narentines or Chulmians: Tracing the confusion caused by De administrando Imperio]. In Lučić, Ivica (ed.). Hum i Hercegovina kroz povijest: Zbornik radova. Radovi. Hrvatski Institut za povijest. ISBN 9789536324965.
  • Brković, Milko (October 2001). "The Papal Letters of the second half of the IXth Century to addressees in Croatia". Radovi (in Croatian). Institute for Historical Sciences of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts in Zadar (43): 29–44. Retrieved 27 July 2012.
  • Budak, Neven (1994). Prva stoljeća Hrvatske. Hrvatska sveučilišna naklada. ISBN 9789531690324.
  • Budak, Neven (2018), Hrvatska povijest od 550. do 1100. [Croatian history from 550 until 1100], Leykam international, ISBN 978-953-340-061-7
  • Ćirković, Sima (2004). The Serbs. Malden: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 9781405142915.
  • Ćorović, Vladimir (2001) [1997]. Istorija srpskog naroda (in Serbo-Croatian) (Internet ed.). Belgrade: Ars Libri.
  • Curta, Florin (2006). Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500–1250. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-81539-0.
  • Dvornik, F.; Jenkins, R. J. H.; Lewis, B.; Moravcsik, Gy.; Obolensky, D.; Runciman, S. (1962). P. J. H. Jenkins (ed.). De Administrando Imperio: Volume II. Commentary. University of London: The Athlone Press.
  • Dvornik, F. (1970). Byzantine missions among the Slavs. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 9780813506135.
  • Evans, Arthur (2007). Through Bosnia and the Herzegovina on Foot During the Insurrection, August and September 1875. Cosimo, Inc. pp. 363–. ISBN 978-1-60206-270-2.
  • Ferjančić, Božidar (1997). Basile Ier et la restauration du pouvoir byzantin au IXème siècle (in Serbian). Vol. 36. Naučno delo. pp. 9–29.
  • Filozofski fakultet (1964). Zbornik Filozofskog fakulteta. Vol. 8. Univerzitet u Beogradu; Naučno delo.
  • Fine, John V. A. Jr. (1991) [1983]. The Early Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0-472-08149-7.
  • Fine, John Van Antwerp Jr. (2005). When Ethnicity Did Not Matter in the Balkans: A Study of Identity in Pre-Nationalist Croatia, Dalmatia, and Slavonia in the Medieval and Early-Modern Periods. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0472025600.
  • Goldstein, Ivo (1995). Hrvatski rani srednji vijek [Croatian Early Medieval]. Zavod za hrvatsku povijest Filozofskog fakulteta Sveučilišta u Zagrebu. ISBN 9789531750431.
  • Gračanin, Hrvoje (2008), "Od Hrvata pak koji su stigli u Dalmaciju odvojio se jedan dio i zavladao Ilirikom i Panonijom: Razmatranja uz DAI c. 30, 75-78", Povijest U Nastavi (in Croatian), VI (11): 67–76
  • Institut za hrvatsku povijest (1974). Radovi (in Serbo-Croatian). Vol. 6–7. Institut.
  • Janković, Đorđe (2007). Српско поморје од 7. до 10. столећа (PDF) (in Serbian). Srpsko arheološko društvo. ISBN 978-86-904455-5-4.
  • Klaić, Vjekoslav (1972). Povijest Hrvata od najstarijih vremena do svršetka XIX stoljeća (in Croatian). Nakladni zavod Matice hrvatske.
  • Klaić, Nada (1971). Povijest Hrvata u ranom srednjem vijeku (in Croatian). Školska knjiga.
  • Kostić, Lazo M. (1963). Srpska istorija i srpsko more (in Serbian). Srpska misao.
  • Moravcsik, Gyula, ed. (1967) [1949]. Constantine Porphyrogenitus: De Administrando Imperio (2nd revised ed.). Washington D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks Center for Byzantine Studies. ISBN 9780884020219.
  • Narayan, S. S. (2009). Sea pirates. Sumit Enterprises. ISBN 978-81-8420-167-3.
  • Šišić, Ferdo (1990). Povijest Hrvata u vrijeme narodnih vladara (in Croatian). Nakladni zavod Matice hrvatske. ISBN 978-86-401-0080-9.
  • Vedriš, Trpimir (2015). "Balkanske sklavinije i Bugarska – Hrvatska u međunarodnom kontekstu" [Balkan 'sklavinias' and Bulgaria – Croatia in the international context]. In Zrinka Nikolić Jakus (ed.). Nova zraka u europskom svjetlu: Hrvatske zemlje u ranome srednjem vijeku (oko 550 − oko 1150) [Croatian lands in the Early Middle Ages (o. 550. – o. 1150.)] (in Croatian). Zagreb: Matica hrvatska. pp. 581–608. ISBN 978-953-150-942-8.
  • Živković, Tibor (2006). Portreti srpskih vladara (IX—XII vek) (in Serbian). Belgrade. ISBN 86-17-13754-1.
  • 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 (2012a). De conversione Croatorum et Serborum: A Lost Source. Belgrade: The Institute of History.
  • Živković, Tibor (2012b). "Неретљани – пример разматрања идентитета у раном средњем веку" [Arentani - an Example of Identity Examination in the Early Middle Ages]. Istorijski časopis. 61: 11–25.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Кунчер, Драгана (2009). Gesta Regum Sclavorum. Vol. 1. Београд-Никшић: Историјски институт, Манастир Острог.
  • Живковић, Тибор (2009). Gesta Regum Sclavorum. Vol. 2. Београд-Никшић: Историјски институт, Манастир Острог.

Further reading

  • Ančić, Mladen (2011). "Ranosrednjovjekovni Neretvani ili Humljani: Tragom zabune koju je prouzrocilo djelo De administrando imperio". Hum i Hercegovina Kroz Povijest: Zbornik Radova KNJ. 1 (in Croatian). Zagreb: Hrvatski Institut za povijest: 218–278.
  • Đekić, Đ.; Pavlović, M. (2016). "Drosiaco, Marianorum iudice". Zbornik Radova Filozofskog Fakulteta u Prištini (in Serbian). Kosovska Mitrovica. 46–4 (46–4): 243–253. doi:10.5937/zrffp46-12125.
  • Marković, Miodrag (2013). "On the attempts to locate the "inhabited cities" of porphyrogennetos' Pagania: a historiographic overview with special reference to controversial issues". Zbornik Radova Vizantološkog Instituta (in Serbian). 50 (1): 301–334. doi:10.2298/ZRVI1350301M.

External links

  • Aleksić, Marko (2008). Неретљани, заборављено српско племе (in Serbian). Rastko. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

Coordinates: 43°09′02″N 17°23′17″E / 43.1505969°N 17.3879242°E / 43.1505969; 17.3879242

narentines, pagania, redirects, here, other, uses, pagania, disambiguation, were, south, slavic, tribe, that, occupied, area, southern, dalmatia, centered, river, neretva, narenta, active, 10th, centuries, noted, pirates, adriatic, named, narentani, venetian, . Pagania redirects here For other uses see Pagania disambiguation The Narentines were a South Slavic 1 tribe that occupied an area of southern Dalmatia centered at the river Neretva Narenta active in the 9th and 10th centuries noted as pirates on the Adriatic Named Narentani in Venetian sources Greek sources call them Paganoi pagans as they were for long pagan in a time when neighbouring tribes were Christianized The tribe were fierce enemies of the Republic of Venice having attacked Venetian merchants and clergy passing on the Adriatic and even raided close to Venice itself as well as defeated the doge several times Venetian Narentine peace treaties did not last long as the Narentines quickly returned to piracy They were finally defeated in a Venetian crackdown at the turn of the 10th century and disappeared from sources by the 11th century Pagania of the Narentines9th century 11th centuryNarentine State or Pagania in the 9th century according to De Administrando Imperio Common languagesSlavicReligionSlavic paganismGovernmentChiefdomPrince History Formed9th century Conquered by Venetians11th centurySucceeded byRepublic of VeniceToday part ofCroatia Contents 1 Terminology 2 Geography and economy 3 History 4 Leaders 5 Legacy 6 Historiography 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksTerminology EditThe word Narentine is a demonym derived from the local Neretva River Latin Narenta The terms Narentines Pagania or Pagans are found in two contemporary sources De Administrando Imperio DAI a mid 10th century Greek work and Chronicon Venetum et Gradense a Venetian chronicle by John the Deacon from the early 11th century 2 3 In De Administrando Imperio of Byzantine Emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus r 913 959 the tribe is called Paganoi Greek Paganoὶ Paganoἰ and their polity Pagania Paganὶa Paganἰa in Greek while also noting that in Latin they are called Arentanoi Arentanoἰ and their polity Arenta Arenta 4 Chronicler John the Deacon used the geographical term Narentani as in princeps Narentanorum 5 Narrentanos Sclavos 6 In Serbo Croatian the tribal name is rendered as Neretljani Neretљani Neretvani and Pagani Pagani while the polity mostly as Paganija Paganiјa Geography and economy EditIn DAI s chapters Story of the province of Dalmatia and Of the Pagani also called Arentani and of the country they now dwell in the geography of Pagania is described Pagania had the counties zupa zoupanias of Rhastotza Mokros and Dalen 7 Rhastotza and Mokros lay by the coast and had galleys while Dalen was distant from the sea and was based on agriculture 7 Pagania had the inhabited cities of Mokron Makarska 8 Beroullia presumably Brela 8 Ostrok Zaostrog 8 and Slavinetza near Gradac 8 and the large islands of Kourkra Kiker with a city Korcula 8 Meleta Malozeatai Mljet 8 Phara Hvar 8 and Bratzis Brac 8 9 The Pagani raised flocks on the islands 7 Islands in the vicinity but not part of Pagania were Chora presumably Susac 8 Ies Vis 8 and Lastobon Lastovo 8 9 Croatia was situated to the northwest and Zachumlia to the east Serbia was situated inland to the northeast behind Pagania Zachumlia Travunia and Dioklea and bordered to Croatia on the Tzentina Cetina River 7 History EditThe Sclaveni South Slavs overwhelmed the Balkans in the 6th century In 639 AD Narona until then a flourishing Roman city was destroyed by a horde of Avars and Slavs 10 A few years later Slavic tribes took control of the lower Neretva 10 The Slavs built a new town on the ruins of Narona and erected a monument to their Slavic god Svetovid on the ruins of Roman temples 10 According to Evans Narentia became a stronghold for pagans in the Balkans similarly to Balto Slavs in Rugen at Jaromarsburg 10 In 642 Slavs invaded southern Italy and attacked Siponto by ship from the Dalmatian coast 11 Slavic naval raids on the Adriatic increased and it became unsafe for travel 11 Slavic principalities in the early 9th century The first conflicts between the Venetians and Narentines came immediately before 830 around which time the first peace agreement was signed between the two the Venetian Doge and Sclavorum de insula Narrentis 12 Narentine Slavs sent envoys to Doge Giovanni I Participazio r 829 836 13 P Skok believes this period also being the first contact between Venice and the middle Dalmatian islands 12 According to Safarik 1795 1861 by the beginning of the 9th century their power had increased so much that Doge Giovanni I attacked them and then offered them peace 14 The Republic of Venice was de facto subordinate the Byzantine Empire a period in which Venice expanded its trade relations towards the East 15 In the first half of the 9th century Byzantium was struck by internal unrest while the Bulgars and Arabs strengthened themselves thanks to this 16 Arabs took Crete in 825 Palermo in 831 Taranto in 839 then after destroying the Venetian navy by 840 they roamed freely in the Adriatic 16 In 841 Arabic ships attacked Adriatic cities and reached a confluence of the Padua river while smaller contingents attacked Budva Roza and Lower Kotor 16 In 842 the Arabs conquered Bari and in 846 reached Rome itself 16 The Venetian navy obliged to defend the Byzantine Adriatic were occupied almost fully with battles with the Arabs 16 The Byzantine navy rarely appeared and with small numbers of ships 16 This and Arab harassment gave the Slavic pirates around the Neretva upswing to develop their ship capabilities 16 When the Venetian navy was in Sicilian waters as guards in 827 828 the Narentines received momentum when the Venetian navy returned they calmed down 16 Venetian chronicles speak of a Narentine leader having been baptized in Venice for greater security for the latter however the Narentines are unsteady and deceptive as their sea as soon as events in Venice or the Adriatic worsen the Narentines continued their piracy 16 One of their attacks in 834 835 when they robbed and killed some Venetian merchants returning from Benevento caused great resentment against them in Venice 16 In order to stop these assaults the Venetians undertook a large expedition against the Dalmatian Slavic pirates in 839 16 Doge Pietro Tradonico sent warships against the Slavic lands Sclavenia 13 According to F Sisic Doge Pietro ordered an attack on the Narentines in the spring of 839 17 According to V Klaic Tradonico had first defeated and made peace with the Croats under Mislav then proceeded to attack the Narentine islands and make peace with Narentine leader Drosaico 18 There are no information on the fights that year but it is known that peace was concluded with Croats and a part of the Narentines 16 Venetian chronicler John the Deacon 1008 records a renewal of the peace treaty signed by Drosaico ad Narrentanas insulas cum Drosaico Marianorum iudice similiter fedus instituit 19 The peace with the Narentines did not last long perhaps as the Narentines signed it to avoid danger or more likely because it was not concluded with all but a tribe or clan of the Narentines 16 In 840 the Venetians attacked Narentine leader Ljudislav ending in failure 16 Ljudislav Liuditus sclavus possibly a successor or co ruler of Drosaico defeated the Venetian Doge and killed hundreds of his men 17 According to Klaic it was the Narentines who broke the peace 18 It seems that Narentine piracy even reached Istria by February 840 17 The 840 Venetian Frankish treaty included common fight against Slavic tribes generationes Sclavorum inimicas 20 After two defeats to the Venetian navy by the Arabs immediately after the Venetians were unable to enter new fights with the Dalmatian Slavs 16 In 846 the Narentines reached close to Venice itself and raided nearby Caorle 16 21 Western Balkan polities in the late 9th century The arrival of Basil I r 867 886 to the Byzantine throne led to important changes in Byzantium energetic he managed to enter closer ties with the Bulgarians and even the distant Croats and protected the Empire well 22 When Ragusa Dubrovnik asked for the emperor s help against the threat of the Saracens he dispatched a strong navy into the Adriatic 22 Byzantine admiral Niketas Ooryphas took up closer contacts with the Slavic tribes around Ragusa the Zachumlians Travunians and Kanalites and invited them to jointly combat the Saracens both on land and sea in 869 22 Only Slavic tribes of southern Dalmatia were called to cooperate to the north the Croats and Dalmatians entered relations with Italian king Louis at the dismay of the Byzantines 22 When some Slavs 22 Narentines according to Narayan 21 in March 870 kidnapped the Bishop of Rome s emissaries returning home from the Fourth Council in Constantinople 21 the Byzantines used this as a good pretext to attack and force them into submission 871 22 The DAI mentions that the Narentines were called pagans because they did not accept baptism in the time when all Serbs were baptized which is placed during Basil s rule 22 The Narentines are not mentioned in relation to the Byzantine military expedition on Bari dispatched by Basil I r 867 886 in which other Dalmatian Slavs participated 23 The Croats Serbs Zachlumians Travunians Konavlians Ragusans with all the men of the towns of Dalmatia crossed over the sea to Langobardia and took Bari 24 Basil returned Dalmatia under Byzantine rule 23 by 878 and a large part of Dalmatia was put under the Patriarchate of Constantinople 22 The DAI claims that the Dalmatian Slavs asked Basil I to baptize them the Christianization of the Narentines seems to have failed 23 According to Evans the Narentines remained pagan until 873 when Byzantine admiral Ooryphas persuaded them to accept baptism 10 While Doge Orso I Participazio and his son Giovanni II Participazio made peace and an alliance with the Croats after 876 the Venetians were still at war with the Narentines 25 In 880 the Venetian Frankish treaty was renewed 26 In 887 Doge Pietro I Candiano sent troops against the Narentine Slavs landing at the Slavic Hill mons Sclavorum putting the Slavs to flight 13 The Narentines were defeated in a battle in August 887 at Makarska and their five ships were destroyed with axes 26 With help from neighbours the Narentines decisively defeated the Venetian navy on 18 September 887 with the Doge killed in action and his body left laying Andrea Tribun later secretly took the body to Venice 26 From this time until 948 the Venetian chronicles do not mention conflicts with the Croats which would mean that the Venetians offered peace and paid tribute to the Croats 26 Pagania was by the reign of Serbian ruler Petar Gojnikovic r 892 917 part of the Serbian principality citation needed Petar and the Byzantine commander of Dyrrhachion Leo Rhabdouchos met in Narentine lands regarding an alliance against the Bulgars 27 Michael of Zahumlje who had been pushed out from Zahumlje to the neighbouring islands by Petar informed the Bulgars about these negotiations 27 In 917 Petar was tricked by the Bulgars who then annexed Serbia in 924 927 28 until Caslav returned to Serbia and rebuilt the state in Byzantine alliance 29 Caslav s state included Pagania the Narentines citation needed In the 940s the islands of Brac and Hvar which had earlier become part of the Croatian kingdom seceded during Ban Pribina s rebellion and rejoined the Narentine province 30 The Narentines took advantage of the internal unrest in Croatia after the death of Kresimir I of Croatia 945 and took the islands of Susac Vis and Lastovo 27 In 948 the Narentines were at war with Venetian Doge Pietro III Candiano who sent 33 war galleys under Urso Badovario and Pietro Rozollo the Narentines managed to defend themselves 30 The Venetians were forced to pay tribute to the Narentines for safe sea passage 27 Serbia collapsed after Caslav s death in ca 960 into smaller units 27 In 997 the Narentines increased raids against Latin and Venetian towns and they had close ties with Croat ruler Svetoslav Suronja who at the time fought his two brothers over the throne this relation caused the Latin Dalmatian towns and Venice to turn against Svetoslav 31 In 998 the Republic of Venice under the Byzantine Emperor exerted control over the Byzantine Dalmatian towns Dalmatian Croatia was in civil war the Narentines were semi independent raiding the Adriatic particularly against Venice 32 As Venice gained authority in Dalmatia some Dalmatian towns that felt threatened allied with the Narentines 32 The Venetians then interved and defeated the Narentines and their Croatian allies decisively on sea resulting in Narentine power decline 32 The Neretljani principality in the 11th century was part of the Croatian Kingdom 33 On 9 May 1000 Venetian Doge Pietro II Orseolo 34 decided to conquer the allied Croats and Narentines protecting the interests of their trading colonies and the Latin Dalmatian citizenry Without difficulty he struck the entire eastern Adriatic coastline with only the Narentines offering him some resistance As a counterattack the Narentines kidnapped 40 of the foremost citizens of Zara Zadar and stole a transport of goods from Apulia citation needed On their way home Pietro II dispatched 10 ships that surprised them between Lastovo and Susac and took them as prisoners to Trogir Narentine emissaries came to the Doge s temporary residence at Split Spalato to beg for the release of the prisoners They guaranteed that the Narentine prince himself would show up with his men and renounce the old rights to tax the Venetians for free passage All prisoners were allowed to return to their homes except for six that were kept as hostages Lastovo and Korcula continued to oppose the Venetians Korcula was conquered by Pietro II and Lastovo fell too after long bloody fights As Lastovo was very infamous in the Venetian world for being a pirate haven the Doge ordered it to be evacuated in order to be razed After the denizens of Lastovo refused to concur the Venetians attacked and razed it to the ground Leaders EditDrosaico Drosaik Drazko Drasko Venetian chronicler John the Deacon 35 1008 records a renewal of Venetian Narentine peace treaty signed by Drosaico Ad Narrantanas insulas cum Drosaico Marianorum iudice similiter fedus instituit 36 Liuditus sclavus Ljudislav possibly a successor or co ruler of Drosaico defeated the Venetian Doge and killed hundreds of his men 17 Unusclavus and Diodurus were according to Johann Christian von Engel 1798 37 the leaders of the raid on Caorle which took place in 846 according to Narayan 21 Safarik included the note in Slowanske Starozitnosti 1837 and rendered their names as Uneslaw and Diodur 38 Berigui or Berigoy Berigoj mentioned in a 1050 charter of the Benedictine monastery of St Mary on the island of Tremiti as a king of the coastal people rex marianorum then as a judge of the coastal people iudex Maranorum 5 39 Legacy EditThere is a historical festival called matrimonio in Venice commemorating the victory over the Narentines 40 held on Candlemas 41 Historiography EditThe question of the ethnic designation of the tribe whether it apart from being Slavic was to be described as Serb or Croat is often found in historiography 42 The earliest information about the Narentines is from the early 9th century compiled in the Chronicon Venetum et Gradense 43 The Venetian chronicle used the Slavic ethnonym Latin Narrentanos Sclavos to refer to the Narentines 44 De Administrando Imperio also gives information about the Narentines and there the Narentines are described as descendants from the unbaptized Serbs that settled Dalmatia from an area near Thessaloniki while earlier coming there from White Serbia under the protection of Byzantine Emperor Heraclius r 610 641 and that are called as Pagans because they did not accept baptism at the time when all the Serbs were baptized 45 46 47 In the 19th century historian Pavel Jozef Safarik 1795 1861 said that the first information on Serbs in history was from events regarding the Narentines 14 Konstantin Josef Jirecek 1854 1918 treated them as a distinct South Slavic tribe 48 Croatian historians Miho Barada 1889 1957 and Nada Klaic also defined them as neither Croats nor Serbs 49 Croatian historian Ferdo Sisic 1869 1940 said that the Neretva population was ever and always fully identical to the Croat population including also its Chakavian dialect 1952 48 Serbian historiography in the 19th and 20th century considered the Narentines to be Serbs 50 Vladimir Corovic 1885 1941 treated the Narentines as the first of the Serb tribes to take the initiative of fighting not for defence and tribal organization but for the liberty of selfish desires and security raids 16 Czech historian Francis Dvornik in his analysis of DAI chapters concluded that they were more likely of Croatian than Serbian origin and the account is rather a political ante dating by three centuries the state of affairs in his own day 51 52 Croatian historian Vladimir Koscak believed that the Narentines were under Croat rule from Trpimir until Domagoj d 876 and that after the latter s death they sent emissaries to Basil I and recognized his rule which was however short lived as spanning only to the fall of Byzantine protege Zdeslav 879 when the Narentines again fell away from Byzantium Koscak wanted to reduce Byzantine rule also to the south of Pagania claiming that the provinces of Pagania Zachumlia Travunia and Duklja again came under Croat rule during Branimir r 879 892 53 This theory was criticized by Bozidar Ferjancic 54 In modern historiography Romanian American historian Florin Curta agreed with those historians who rightly interpreted as an indication that in the mid tenth century the coastal zhupanias were under the control of the Serbian zhupan Caslav who ruled over the regions in the interior and extended his power westwards across the mountains to the coast 55 Serbian historian Tibor Zivkovic also considered it a reflection of the political situation in the 10th century 56 that there s no certainty the Narentines and others were Serbs or Croats or separate tribes which arrived with Serbs or Croats to the Balkans 56 and that these ethnic identities are the result of political rather than ethnic development related to respective principalities 57 He also noted that it was stated in the DAI that the Serbs had been baptized much earlier and therefore the Pagans could not have belonged to the Serb tribe There is information in chapter 32 that the Serbs controlled Pagania in ca 895 during the rule of the Archon Peter and from this political situation Constantine would have been able to write that the Pagans belonged to the Serbian tribe 58 Croatian historian Neven Budak also holds that remarks regarding the Narentines were related to the political situation at the time and that the dispute between Croatian and Serbian historiographies regarding Narentines ethnicity is pointless 59 60 61 According to Croatian historian Hrvoje Gracanin both the account about the settlement of Croats in Pannonia and Serbs in Pagania and near principalities in DAI do not reflect Croatian or Serbian ethnic origin but rather a political rule during the 9th and 10th century 62 In a similar fashion Croatian historian Ivo Goldstein asserted that the Narentines could not be regarded neither Serbs nor Croats but should be considered as part of Croatian history 63 Budak wrote that the Narentines were undoubtedly a distinct ethnic group who disappeared as a separate ethnicity when their principality was joined into Croatia 64 In Serbian eg Sima Cirkovic and partly Croatian historiography they are often considered as Serbs or Croats and their polity as part of medieval Serbian or Croatian state but such a consideration is not taking into account the complexity of multi layered identities by which the Slavic population differentiated into more than two ethnogenetic nuclei 65 In the Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja a work written by a Catholic bishop likely for a Croatian ruler in ca 1300 10 66 the southern Dalmatian principalities are referred to as part of Red Croatia 5 While later parts of the Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja are considered of high value events described in the early Middle Ages are largely discredited in historiography 67 See also EditDalmatia theme History of DalmatiaReferences Edit Fine 1991 p 306 Ancic 2011 p 255 Zivkovic 2012b pp 11 12 Moravcsik 1967 pp 152 164 165 a b c Fine 2006 p 62 sfn error no target CITEREFFine2006 help Fine 2006 p 39 sfn error no target CITEREFFine2006 help a b c d Moravcsik 1967 p 145 a b c d e f g h i j k Institut za hrvatsku povijest 1974 p 29 a b Moravcsik 1967 p 165 a b c d e Evans 2007 p 363 a b Corovic 2001 ch Prva srpska drzava Narayan 2009 p 3 a b Filozofski fakultet 1964 p 147 a b c Fine 2006 p 37 sfn error no target CITEREFFine2006 help a b Kostic 1963 p 23 Sisic 1990 p 321 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Corovic 2001 ch Prva srpska drzava a b c d Sisic 1990 p 328 a b Klaic 1972 p 73 Klaic 1971 p 217 Fine 2006 pp 37 38 sfn error no target CITEREFFine2006 help a b c d Narayan 2009 p 4 a b c d e f g h Corovic 2001 ch Pokrstavanje Juznih Slovena a b c Ferjancic 1997 p 15 Zivkovic 2008 p 165 Klaic 1972 p 80 a b c d Brkovic 2001 p 32 a b c d e Corovic 2001 ch Srbi između Vizantije Hrvatske i Bugarske Fine 1991 p 153 Fine 1991 p 159 a b Sisic 1990 p 436 Fine 1991 p 274 a b c Fine 1991 p 276 Cirkovic 2004 p 24 Lane Frederic Chapin Venice a Maritime Republic p 26 Ernst Dummler 1856 Uber die alteste Geschichte der Slaven in Dalmatien 549 928 Braumuller in Komm pp 45 Atti e memorie della Societa dalmata di storia patria Vol 7 9 La Societa 1970 p 119 Johann Christian von Engel 1798 Kroatien Slavonien Gebauer p 460 Pavel Jozef Safarik 1837 Slowanske Starozitnosti tiskem J Spurneho pp 657 Ildar H Garipzanov Patrick J Geary Przemyslaw Urbanczyk 2008 Franks Northmen and Slavs Identities and State Formation in Early Medieval Europe Isd p 235 ISBN 978 2 503 52615 7 Marcel Brion 1962 Venice The Masque of Italy Elek p 63 Catholic World Vol 106 108 Paulist Fathers 1918 p 365 Zivkovic 2012b p 12 Zivkovic 2012b p 13 Fine 2006 pp 37 39 62 sfn error no target CITEREFFine2006 help Moravcsik 1967 Cirkovic Sima 2008 2004 Srbi među europskim narodima The Serbs PDF in Serbo Croatian Zagreb Golden marketing Tehnicka knjiga pp 26 27 ISBN 9789532123388 Zivkovic 2012 pp 194 195 sfn error no target CITEREFZivkovic2012 help a b Zadarska smotra Vol 49 Matica hrvatska 2000 p 567 Ancic 2011 p 31 32 Ancic 2011 p 224 Dvornik 1962a p 139 141 142 He probably saw that in his time all these tribes were in the Serb sphere of influence and therefore called them Serbs thus ante dating by three centuries the state of affairs in his own day But in fact as has been shown in the case of the Zachlumians these tribes were not properly speaking Serbs and seem to have migrated not with the Serbs but with the Croats The Serbs at an early date succeeded in extending their sovereignty over the Terbouniotes and under prince Peter for a short time over the Narentans The Narentan Slavs differed in many respects from the other Slavs of Dalmatia The Narentan system seems thus to have been similar to that of the Polabian Slavs The Narentans were scarcely influenced by Croats or Serbs and seem to have been settled on the coast before the latter entered Illyricum For C s statement that the Pagani are descended from the unbaptized Serbs 36 5 6 see on 33 18 19 It is obvious that the small retinue of the Serbian prince could not have populated Serbia Zachlumia Terbounia and Narentasfn error no target CITEREFDvornik1962a help Dvornik 1970 p 26 Constantine regards all Slavic tribes in ancient Praevalis and Epirus the Zachlumians Tribunians Diodetians Narentans as Serbs This is not exact Even these tribes were liberated from the Avars by the Croats who lived among them Only later thanks to the expansion of the Serbs did they recognize their supremacy and come to be called Serbianssfn error no target CITEREFDvornik1970 help Ferjancic 1997 p 15 16 Ferjancic 1997 p 16 Curta 2006 p 210 According to Constantine Porphyrogenitus the Slavs of the Dalmatian zhupanias of Pagania Zahumlje Travounia and Konavli all descended from the unbaptized Serbs 51 This has been rightly interpreted as an indication that in the mid tenth century the coastal zhupanias were under the control of the Serbian zhupan Caslav who ruled over the regions in the interior and extended his power westwards across the mountains to the coast a b Zivkovic 2006 p 60 Zivkovic 2012b p 12 13 Zivkovic 2012a p 195 Budak 1994 p 58 61 Pri tome je car dosljedno izostavljao Dukljane iz ove srpske zajednice naroda Cini se međutim ocitim da car ne zeli govoriti o stvarnoj etnickoj povezanosti vec da su mu pred ocima politicki odnosi u trenutku kada je pisao djelo odnosno iz vremena kada su za nj prikupljani podaci u Dalmaciji Budak 2018 p 51 Sporovi hrvatske i srpske historiografije oko etnickoga karaktera sklavinija između Cetine i Draca bespredmetni su jer transponiraju suvremene kategorije etniciteta u rani srednji vijek u kojem se identitet shvacao drukcije Budak 2018 p 177 Međutim nakon nekog vremena mozda poslije unutarnjih sukoba u Hrvatskoj promijenio je svoj polozaj i prihvatio vrhovnistvo srpskog vladara jer Konstantin tvrdi da su Zahumljani kao i Neretvani i Travunjani bili Srbi od vremena onog arhonta koji je Srbe za vrijeme Heraklija doveo u njihovu novu domovinu Ta tvrdnja naravno nema veze sa stvarnoscu 7 st ali govori o politickim odnosima u Konstantinovo vrijeme Gracanin 2008 p 71 72 Izneseni nalazi navode na zakljucak da se Hrvati nisu uopce naselili u juznoj Panoniji tijekom izvorne seobe sa sjevera na jug iako je moguce da su pojedine manje skupine zaostale na tom podrucju utopivsi se naposljetku u premocnoj mnozini ostalih doseljenih slavenskih populacija Sirenje starohrvatskih populacija s juga na sjever pripada vremenu od 10 stoljeca nadalje i povezano je s izmijenjenim politickim prilikama jacanjem i sirenjem rane hrvatske drzave Na temelju svega ovoga mnogo je vjerojatnije da etnonim Hrvati i doseoba skrivaju cinjenicu o prijenosu politicke vlasti sto znaci da je car politicko vrhovnistvo poistovjetio s etnickom nazocnoscu Tocno takav pristup je primijenio pretvarajuci Zahumljane Travunjane i Neretljane u Srbe DAI c 33 8 9 34 4 7 36 5 7 Goldstein 1995 p 196 Neretvani u to vrijeme ne pripadaju neposredno nijednoj od velikih etnogenetskih jezgri koje su se vec afirmirale ili ce se tek afirmirati na istocnom Jadranu i na evropskom prostoru uopce Oni se tada ne mogu smatrati ni Srbima ni Hrvatima iako car Konstantin tvrdi da isti Pagani vode podrijetlo od nekrstenih Srba iz vremena onog arhonta koji je prebjegao caru Herakliju 243 Naime Neretvani su se vrlo rano afirmirali kao samostalan cimbenik dobivsi zbog toga i osebujna imena Mariani primorci Arentani Neretvani Pagani pogani Neretvansku pak povijest i u ranosrednjovjekovnom razdoblju valja smatrati dijelom hrvatske povijesti zbog toga sto se od kraja 11 stoljeca taj prostor vrlo brzo inkorporira u cjelinu Hrvatske ili kasnije u hrvatsko ugarsko kraljevstvo Budak 1994 p 59 Vedris 2015 p 590 No pri jednostranim pokusajima da se utvrdi etnicka pripadnost tih sklavinija cesto se nije uzimalau obzir sva slozenost i viseslojnost identiteta razmatranje kojih upucuje na zakljucakda se u ranome srednjem vijeku na istocnoj jadranskoj obali slavensko pucanstvo diferenciralo u vise nego dvije etnogenetske jezgre N Budak Zivkovic T Kuncer D 2009 Gesta regum Sclavorum I II Beograd pp 362 365 Zivkovic 2006 p 16 Sources EditAncic Mladen 2011 Miho Barada i mit o Neretvanima Povijesni Prilozi in Croatian 41 17 43 Ancic Mladen 2011 Ranosrednjovjekovni Neretvani ili Humljani Tragom zabune koju je prouzrocilo djelo De administrando imperio The Early Medieval Narentines or Chulmians Tracing the confusion caused by De administrando Imperio In Lucic Ivica ed Hum i Hercegovina kroz povijest Zbornik radova Radovi Hrvatski Institut za povijest ISBN 9789536324965 Brkovic Milko October 2001 The Papal Letters of the second half of the IXth Century to addressees in Croatia Radovi in Croatian Institute for Historical Sciences of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts in Zadar 43 29 44 Retrieved 27 July 2012 Budak Neven 1994 Prva stoljeca Hrvatske Hrvatska sveucilisna naklada ISBN 9789531690324 Budak Neven 2018 Hrvatska povijest od 550 do 1100 Croatian history from 550 until 1100 Leykam international ISBN 978 953 340 061 7 Cirkovic Sima 2004 The Serbs Malden Blackwell Publishing ISBN 9781405142915 Corovic Vladimir 2001 1997 Istorija srpskog naroda in Serbo Croatian Internet ed Belgrade Ars Libri Curta Florin 2006 Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1250 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 81539 0 Dvornik F Jenkins R J H Lewis B Moravcsik Gy Obolensky D Runciman S 1962 P J H Jenkins ed De Administrando Imperio Volume II Commentary University of London The Athlone Press Dvornik F 1970 Byzantine missions among the Slavs Rutgers University Press ISBN 9780813506135 Evans Arthur 2007 Through Bosnia and the Herzegovina on Foot During the Insurrection August and September 1875 Cosimo Inc pp 363 ISBN 978 1 60206 270 2 Ferjancic Bozidar 1997 Basile Ier et la restauration du pouvoir byzantin au IXeme siecle in Serbian Vol 36 Naucno delo pp 9 29 Filozofski fakultet 1964 Zbornik Filozofskog fakulteta Vol 8 Univerzitet u Beogradu Naucno delo Fine John V A Jr 1991 1983 The Early Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press ISBN 0 472 08149 7 Fine John Van Antwerp Jr 2005 When Ethnicity Did Not Matter in the Balkans A Study of Identity in Pre Nationalist Croatia Dalmatia and Slavonia in the Medieval and Early Modern Periods Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press ISBN 0472025600 Goldstein Ivo 1995 Hrvatski rani srednji vijek Croatian Early Medieval Zavod za hrvatsku povijest Filozofskog fakulteta Sveucilista u Zagrebu ISBN 9789531750431 Gracanin Hrvoje 2008 Od Hrvata pak koji su stigli u Dalmaciju odvojio se jedan dio i zavladao Ilirikom i Panonijom Razmatranja uz DAI c 30 75 78 Povijest U Nastavi in Croatian VI 11 67 76 Institut za hrvatsku povijest 1974 Radovi in Serbo Croatian Vol 6 7 Institut Jankovic Đorđe 2007 Srpsko pomorјe od 7 do 10 stoleћa PDF in Serbian Srpsko arheolosko drustvo ISBN 978 86 904455 5 4 Klaic Vjekoslav 1972 Povijest Hrvata od najstarijih vremena do svrsetka XIX stoljeca in Croatian Nakladni zavod Matice hrvatske Klaic Nada 1971 Povijest Hrvata u ranom srednjem vijeku in Croatian Skolska knjiga Kostic Lazo M 1963 Srpska istorija i srpsko more in Serbian Srpska misao Moravcsik Gyula ed 1967 1949 Constantine Porphyrogenitus De Administrando Imperio 2nd revised ed Washington D C Dumbarton Oaks Center for Byzantine Studies ISBN 9780884020219 Narayan S S 2009 Sea pirates Sumit Enterprises ISBN 978 81 8420 167 3 Sisic Ferdo 1990 Povijest Hrvata u vrijeme narodnih vladara in Croatian Nakladni zavod Matice hrvatske ISBN 978 86 401 0080 9 Vedris Trpimir 2015 Balkanske sklavinije i Bugarska Hrvatska u međunarodnom kontekstu Balkan sklavinias and Bulgaria Croatia in the international context In Zrinka Nikolic Jakus ed Nova zraka u europskom svjetlu Hrvatske zemlje u ranome srednjem vijeku oko 550 oko 1150 Croatian lands in the Early Middle Ages o 550 o 1150 in Croatian Zagreb Matica hrvatska pp 581 608 ISBN 978 953 150 942 8 Zivkovic Tibor 2006 Portreti srpskih vladara IX XII vek in Serbian Belgrade ISBN 86 17 13754 1 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 2012a De conversione Croatorum et Serborum A Lost Source Belgrade The Institute of History Zivkovic Tibor 2012b Neretљani primer razmatraњa identiteta u ranom sredњem veku Arentani an Example of Identity Examination in the Early Middle Ages Istorijski casopis 61 11 25 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link Kuncher Dragana 2009 Gesta Regum Sclavorum Vol 1 Beograd Nikshiћ Istoriјski institut Manastir Ostrog Zhivkoviћ Tibor 2009 Gesta Regum Sclavorum Vol 2 Beograd Nikshiћ Istoriјski institut Manastir Ostrog Further reading EditAncic Mladen 2011 Ranosrednjovjekovni Neretvani ili Humljani Tragom zabune koju je prouzrocilo djelo De administrando imperio Hum i Hercegovina Kroz Povijest Zbornik Radova KNJ 1 in Croatian Zagreb Hrvatski Institut za povijest 218 278 Đekic Đ Pavlovic M 2016 Drosiaco Marianorum iudice Zbornik Radova Filozofskog Fakulteta u Pristini in Serbian Kosovska Mitrovica 46 4 46 4 243 253 doi 10 5937 zrffp46 12125 Markovic Miodrag 2013 On the attempts to locate the inhabited cities of porphyrogennetos Pagania a historiographic overview with special reference to controversial issues Zbornik Radova Vizantoloskog Instituta in Serbian 50 1 301 334 doi 10 2298 ZRVI1350301M External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pagania Aleksic Marko 2008 Neretљani zaboravљeno srpsko pleme in Serbian Rastko a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Coordinates 43 09 02 N 17 23 17 E 43 1505969 N 17 3879242 E 43 1505969 17 3879242 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Narentines amp oldid 1138398611, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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