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Stari Ras

Ras (Serbian Cyrillic: Рас; Latin: Arsa), known in modern Serbian historiography as Stari Ras (Serbian Cyrillic: Стари Рас, "Old Ras"), is a medieval fortress and area located in the vicinity of former market-place of Staro Trgovište, some 10–11 kilometers (6.2–6.8 mi) west of modern-day city of Novi Pazar in Serbia.

Stari Ras
Native name
Serbian: Стари Рас
Overview of the Stari Ras (Gradina-Pazarište)
LocationNear Novi Pazar,  Serbia
Coordinates43°7′42″N 20°24′56″E / 43.12833°N 20.41556°E / 43.12833; 20.41556
Elevation755 m (2,477.0 ft)
TypeCultural
Criteriai, iii
Designated1979 (3rd session)
Part ofStari Ras and Sopoćani
Reference no.96
RegionEurope and North America
Official nameSrednjovekovni grad Ras
TypeMonument of Culture of Exceptional Importance
Designated22 August 1947
Reference no.SK 534
Location of Stari Ras within Serbia
The view from Stari Ras.

Old Ras was initially part of the First Bulgarian Empire (until 10th century), then Byzantine Empire (mid-10th until mid-12th century), in the end becoming one of the first and main capitals of the Grand Principality and Kingdom of Serbia (since mid-12th until early 14th century). Located in today's region of Raška, its favorable position in the area known as Old Serbia, along the Raška gorge at Pešter plateau, on the crossroads and trading routes between neighbouring regions of Zeta and Bosnia in the west and Kosovo in the south, added to its importance as a city.[1]

There exist two fortifications (gradina) around the site, Gradina-Pazarište and Gradina-Postenje,[2] while urban place Staro Trgovište below Gradina-Pazarište developed since the late medieval and influenced foundation of Novi Pazar eastward in the Ottoman period.[3] There are plans for future reconstruction of the site. In the close vicinity is impressive group of medieval monuments, including churches and monasteries. The 9th century Church of Saint Apostles Peter and Paul is one of the oldest early medieval churches in Serbia. The medieval Monastery of Sopoćani near Arsa is a reminder of the contacts between Western world and the Byzantine world. The site of Stari Ras, in combination with the nearby Monastery of Sopoćani, is already a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and Stari Ras monastery (12th century) is being reconstructed and it too may be included on the UNESCO World Heritage List with the site. Stari Ras and Sopoćani World Heritage Site is not far from another UNESCO World Heritage Site of Serbia, the medieval monastery and churches of Studenica.

Stari Ras was declared Monument of Culture of Exceptional Importance in 1990, and it is protected by Republic of Serbia.[4]

Etymology edit

The toponym Ras in Slavic form derives from pre-Slavic Arsa via metathesis.[5][6] It is considered that the settlement toponym derives from a hydronim of same named river.[7] The first mention of the fortress of Ras is from c. 1127,[8] while the oldest and only mention of the city of Ras in the native Serbian sources is from 1200, but as a toponym the region/župa of Ras is widely found.[9] In 1186 charter is the first attested use of the term Raška as a designation for the Serbian state, mentioning Nemanja as the ruler of Rascia, but in other sources would still be used alongside Serbia (even simultaneously as "of Serbia and Rascia").[10]

The 14th-century semi-mythical Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja anachronistically projects the events of Serbian early medieval history before 12th century also in the region named Raška (Rassa, Rassam, Rassae, Rasse), but identified with Serbia east of river Drina.[11] From the 12th century onwards realistic topographic description of the surroundings of the Church of St. Peter (Caldanae is Novopazarska Banja; Bello is Podbijelje; the town could be identified with near fort Gradina-Postenje).[11] Gradina-Pazarište is deemed the capital with the main fortress and Gradina-Postenje as the fort closer to the bishopric church of St. Peter.[12]

History edit

Archaeological findings of fortified structures and early churches from the area of Stari Ras, dated from fourth to the sixth century, correspond to the testimony of Byzantine historian Procopius who wrote that Roman castellum of Arsa in the province of Dardania has refortified during the reign of the emperor Justinian I (527-565).[13]

According to archaeological research, there exist two fortifications (gradina), Gradina-Postenje and Gradina-Pazarište. Throughout history their development was interconnected and probably made a uniform defensive system.[2] On the site of Gradina-Pazarište existed Early Bronze Age prehistoric settlement which in 5th century BCE of Iron Age became desolated.[14] In the 2nd and 3rd century of the Roman period was on a crossroad, with mining fields nearby, and military settlement.[15] Seemingly the wider area was spared in the late 4-5th century by migration period invasions.[16] In the 6th century were found some German barbarian remains and material associated with the Frankish Merovingian dynasty.[17] In c. 518 the area of Ras was hit by a devastated earthquake which caused much damage in the Roman province of Dardania.[18]

Both grading became abandoned in the late 6th or early 7th century.[19][20] They were re-settled and renovated in the mid-9th century by the Bulgarians (with the pottery findings typical of Pliska and Preslav, and other material, also with Bulgar runic inscriptions).[21][22][23] The 10th century De Administrando Imperio mentions that "Boris ... being about to return to Bulgaria and afraid lest the Serbs might ambush him on the way, he begged for his escort the sons of prince Mutimer, Borenas and Stephen, who escorted him safely as far as the frontier at Rasi",[24] usually dated around 880.[25] Not mentioned among the inhabited cities of Serbia,[5] in the scholarship there's no consensus whether Ras was located on the Serbian or Bulgarian side of the border,[26][27][28][29][22][30][31] and whether it was a reference to the city or a border area.[25] Newer research indicates that Ras since the mid-9th and in the 10th century was a western "frontier district of Bulgaria".[32][33][31][23] The lack of material of Bulgarian origin in Vrsjenice (assumed to be Serbian city Destinikon), indicates that the border between Serbs/Serbia and Bulgarians/Bulgaria in the 9th and 10th century was at Pešter plateau (and to the north at Čačak).[34][35] Pešter makes a natural border area, and in the direction in which the plateau is open, that's where the ruling power came from to Ras (i.e. Bulgaria).[5] The high medieval chronicles also give an impression that Rascia wasn't considered as the central and capital part of medieval Serbia but as a separate small domain within Serbia.[30][36]

The imperial charter of Basil II from 1020 to the Archbishopric of Ohrid, in which the rights and jurisdictions were established, mentions that the Episcopy of Ras belonged to the Bulgarian autocephal church during the time of Peter I (927–969) and Samuel of Bulgaria (977–1014).[37][38] It is considered that it was possibly founded by the Bulgarian emperor,[39][40] or it is the latest date when could have been integrated to the Bulgarian Church.[41] If previously existed, it probably was part of the Bulgarian metropolis of Morava, but certainly not of Durrës.[42] If it was on the Serbian territory, seems that the Church in Serbia or part of the territory of Serbia became linked and influenced by the Bulgarian Church between 870 and 924.[43][44][45] Anyway, the church would have been protected by Bulgarian controlled forts.[35]

According to archaeological research, the site suddenly became desolated near the end of the 10th century,[22] at least the western part of it abandoned and without military strategical importance and signs of Byzantines in the 11th century, and was defensively upgraded in the end of the 11th century.[46] Byzantine Emperor John Tzimiskes re-established control of Ras in 971 and founded the Catepanate of Ras.[47][48][49] The seal of protospatharios John of Ras has been found from that era.[50][51] By 976, the Bulgarian state had regained Ras (according to Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja would be the Serbs who freed themselves and defeated the Byzantines[52]), but Basil II recaptured it about 40 years later in 1016–1018.[52] In the imperial charter of Basil II from 1020, rights and jurisdictions of the autonomous Archbishopric of Ohrid were established, and one of the bishoprics in its jurisdiction was that of Ras. In 1032 overall commander of the region was strategoi and doukes Constantine Diogenes,[53][54] and meanwhile Ras was part of a defensive line of Byzantine watchtowers alongside Lipjan, Zvečan, Galič, Jeleč south of Ras and Brvenik north of Ras, watching to the west over a "no-man's-land" named Zygos mountains beyond which was Serbia.[55][56]

It remained a Byzantine frontier area until John II Komnenos lost the area as a result of the Byzantine–Hungarian War (1127–1129).[57] Recent archaeological research supports the notion that the Byzantines held control of Ras during Alexios I Komnenos's reign (1048–1118), but possibly not continuously.[58] Alexios's seal which dates to the period 1081–1092 was found in 2018 near the site.[59] It seems that the watchtowers commanders' skirmishes into the Serbian eastern frontiers provoked Vukan, Grand Prince of Serbia in the early 1090s to counterattack and to conquer the border fortresses in the Byzantine–Serbian War (1090–1095), but although John Ducas regained most of them, in 1093 Vukan "ravaged the neighbouring towns and districts. He even got as far as Lipjan, which he deliberately burnt down", but when Alexios came close, Vukan escaped to Zvečan and started peace negotiations.[60]

In the 1120s, the fortress of Ras was again burnt and destroyed by the Serbs, a "Dalmatian nation".[8][61] Its commander was a Kritoplos who was then punished by Emperor for the fall of the fortress.[62][63][64] The Byzantines rebuilt the fortress by 1143.[57][48] It would be re-conquered by Uroš II in aim to distract the Byzantines from engaging with Roger II of Sicily.[65] The Serbian Uprising of 1149 caused Byzantine emperor Manuel I Komnenos penetrated "Dalmatia" destroying the Ras fortress and devastate everything along the way, "the countless multitudes that he made slaves, he left there with the army of sebastohypertatos Constantine Angelos". He continued into Nikava, conquering all the forts with ease. After storming the nearby Galič, whose people were partly warriors and herdsmen who took away and settled in Serdika and other Roman regions to settle, and "having learned from Angelos that the Župan, waiting for an opportune moment after his departure from there began to attack the Romans and that a fight had already taken place, set out as fast as he could from there to capture him. But this one, hearing that the Romans were coming, fled over the mountain passes and escaped the danger on foot. The emperor headed through the country, since there was no one to stop him at all, devastated it, and after burning the buildings there intended for the archizoupanos as the ruling centre, left".[66][67][68] In the next year continued to successfully fight off the Serbians and Hungarians, ending at the Battle of Tara (1150).[69][70]

 
The cave monastery active in the late 12th and early 13th century.

Although not recorded in the historical sources, somewhere in the second half of the 12th century, Ras should have been finally conquered and controlled by the Serbs, greatly renovating it and becoming the centre of defence and residency for the Grand Principality of Serbia.[71] Stefan Nemanja, previously receiving the land of Dendra west of Niš, was the one who usurped the throne and expanded his territories in the late 1160s.[72] Nemanja supposedly in celebration erected the monastery of Đurđevi stupovi, with an inscription showing that the end of the construction was in 1170-1171.[10] During a short war in autumn 1168 he was captured, and again in 1171–1172, both times pleading loyalty.[73] The city of Ras wasn't the capital in the general meaning yet, but the wider area of Raška with various fortifications, as there's no evidence of urbanization in the whole Grand Principality of Serbia and Kingdom of Serbia until the 14th century.[74] In 1188 Nemanja showed intention to make Niš the centre of the state, also there was a royal court in Kotor.[10] Byzantine intervention continued until the end of the 12th century and the Serb feudal rulers of the region were often under Byzantine suzerainty. The full independence of Serbia including Raška's region was recognized by the Byzantines in 1190 after an indecisive win by Isaac II Angelos over Nemanja.[75][76]

Beneath the Podgrađe of the Gradina-Pazarište on a rocky cliff of the hill was constructed cave monastery of St. Michael (where later was active Monk Simeon who wrote Vukan's Gospel dated to c. 1202[77]).[78][79] In 1196 Nemanja held an assembly in Ras.[80] In the 1230s there was located the mint of Serbian money, possibly also the royal treasury.[77] A big granary was also found.[81] Somewhere in the early 13th century became damaged amid civil war,[82] but extensively renovated again by the time of the second Serbian king Stefan Radoslav (1228–1233). However, there's much archaeological evidences it was burnt and became desolated around the 1230s, probably being the scene of noble battles in which Radoslav lost and Stefan Vladislav (1234–1243) came to the throne.[82] Seemingly it was not well renovated again, and from that point in time gradually lost its status as the Serbian state "capital", but until then Serbian's state name became closely associated with the name of Rascia, and Serbian people with the Rasciani.[48] The final desolation happened in the early 14th century during the rulership of Stefan Milutin (1282–1321).[82]

 
Remains of Trgovište part of Ras.

During the 14th century, there was an important marketplace below the Stari Ras, Trgovište, that started to develop.[83] The scholarly thesis of Novi Pazar being a continuation of Stari Ras by identifying it with Ras-Trgovište is by now rejected.[84] By the mid-15th century, in the time of the final Ottoman conquest of the region, another market-place was developing to the east.[85] The older place was known as Staro Trgovište ("old market-place", in Turkish: Eski Pazar) and younger as Novo Trgovište ("new market-place", Turkish: Yeni Pazar).[86] The latter developed into the modern city of Novi Pazar, and there's no medieval archaeological site found in the centre of Novi Pazar.[87] In the Ottoman administrative division, Ras in 1455 was part of the vilayet of Skopije, by 1463 existed nahiye of Ras within vilayet of Jeleč (fort 12 km south of present-day Novi Pazar), and in 1475 was founded Novi Pazar which soon became its centre (but Novi Pazar itself shouldn't be considered as continuity of Ras).[88] The toponym of Ras vanished in the 18th century, influenced by the First of Great Migrations of the Serbs in the end of the 17th century.[89]

Monuments edit

In the region of Raška also existed other ancient church buildings, a basilica in village Pope north of Pazarište and a church within Novi Pazar/Novopazarska Banja borders (both outside fortifications), and churches in Gradina-Postenje and Zlatni Kamen (both within fortifications).[90] Such concentration could indicate the existence of an ancient episcopy (with a seat at a basilica near Pazarište), possibly connected to the ancient Bishopric of Ulpiana.[91] The oldest early medieval church-building in Serbia, the Church of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul (also known as St. Peter's Church), was founded near Novi Pazar, sometime during the 9th century.[92] Its commonly considered to have been built on the 6th century Byzantine foundations.[93]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Popović 1999, p. 291.
  2. ^ a b Popović 1999, p. 291, 393.
  3. ^ Popović 1999, p. 41–45, 393.
  4. ^ Monuments of Culture in Serbia: СТАРИ РАС СА СОПОЋАНИМА (SANU) (in Serbian and English)
  5. ^ a b c Popović 1999, p. 37.
  6. ^ Bulić 2013, p. 216.
  7. ^ Popović 1999, p. 295.
  8. ^ a b Popović 1999, p. 38, 301.
  9. ^ Popović 1999, p. 39–41.
  10. ^ a b c Kalić 1995, p. 147–155.
  11. ^ a b Popović 1999, p. 39.
  12. ^ Popović 1999, p. 39, 41, 295.
  13. ^ Popović 1999, p. 294–295.
  14. ^ Popović 1999, p. 291, 393–394.
  15. ^ Popović 1999, p. 292–294, 394–397.
  16. ^ Popović 1999, p. 294, 296.
  17. ^ Popović 1999, p. 294, 397–398.
  18. ^ Popović 1999, p. 294, 398.
  19. ^ Popović 1999, p. 294, 400.
  20. ^ Špehar 2019, p. 118–120.
  21. ^ Popović 1999, p. 155–161, 297, 400.
  22. ^ a b c Curta 2006, p. 146.
  23. ^ a b Špehar 2019, p. 118–120, 122.
  24. ^ Moravcsik, Gyula, ed. (1967) [1949]. Constantine Porphyrogenitus: De Administrando Imperio (2nd revised ed.). Washington D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks Center for Byzantine Studies. p. 155. ISBN 9780884020219.
  25. ^ a b Popović 1999, p. 37, 297.
  26. ^ Popović 1999, p. 37, 297–298, 400.
  27. ^ Živković 2013b, pp. 28, 31, 34.
  28. ^ Bulić 2013, pp. 217.
  29. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 12–15.
  30. ^ a b Novaković 1981.
  31. ^ a b Ivanišević & Krsmanović 2013, p. 450.
  32. ^ Popović 1999, p. 139–161, 297, 400–401.
  33. ^ Curta 2006, p. 146–147.
  34. ^ Popović 1999, p. 298.
  35. ^ a b Špehar 2019, p. 122.
  36. ^ Popović 1999, p. 38–41.
  37. ^ Komatina 2015, pp. 717.
  38. ^ Komatina 2016, pp. 76, 89–90.
  39. ^ Popović 1999, p. 401.
  40. ^ Ćirković 2004, pp. 20, 30.
  41. ^ Komatina 2016, pp. 76–77.
  42. ^ Komatina 2016, pp. 75, 88–91.
  43. ^ Komatina 2015, pp. 717–718.
  44. ^ Komatina 2016, pp. 77, 91.
  45. ^ Špehar 2010, pp. 203, 216.
  46. ^ Popović 1999, p. 162, 299, 402–403.
  47. ^ Popović 1999, p. 299, 402.
  48. ^ a b c Ćirković 2004, p. 30.
  49. ^ Komatina 2016, pp. 78–84.
  50. ^ Stephenson, Paul (2003). The Legend of Basil the Bulgar-slayer. Cambridge University Press. p. 42. ISBN 978-0-521-81530-7.
  51. ^ Byzantium in the year 1000. BRILL. 2003. p. 122. ISBN 978-90-04-12097-6.
  52. ^ a b Popović 1999, p. 299.
  53. ^ Stephenson 2004, p. 66.
  54. ^ Stephenson 2008, p. 667.
  55. ^ Stephenson 2004, p. 125, 148–150, 155.
  56. ^ Stephenson 2008, p. 668.
  57. ^ a b Popović 1999, p. 301.
  58. ^ Ivanišević & Krsmanović 2013, p. 451–452:Recently found seals on the site The Fortress of Ras support the opinion that the Byzantine Empire held dominant (but perhaps not continuous) control over Ras during Alexios' reign
  59. ^ Stojkovski 2020, p. 153.
  60. ^ Stephenson 2004, p. 148–150.
  61. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 29.
  62. ^ Popović 1999, p. 38.
  63. ^ Ivanišević & Krsmanović 2013, p. 451.
  64. ^ Curta 2019, p. 656.
  65. ^ Stephenson 2004, p. 225.
  66. ^ Popović 1999, p. 38, 302.
  67. ^ Stephenson 2004, p. 224–225.
  68. ^ Kinnamos 1976, p. 83.
  69. ^ Stephenson 2004, p. 225–226.
  70. ^ Kinnamos 1976, p. 83–90.
  71. ^ Popović 1999, p. 38, 302–303, 306.
  72. ^ Stephenson 2004, p. 267.
  73. ^ Stephenson 2004, p. 267–269.
  74. ^ Popović 1999, p. 304–305.
  75. ^ Dimnik 1995, p. 270.
  76. ^ Stephenson 2004, p. 301.
  77. ^ a b Popović 1999, p. 304.
  78. ^ Popović 1999, p. 279–285, 304.
  79. ^ Popović & Popović 1998, p. 105.
  80. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 33.
  81. ^ Popović 1999, p. 305.
  82. ^ a b c Popović 1999, p. 306.
  83. ^ Popović 1999, p. 44.
  84. ^ Popović 1999, p. 39, 41.
  85. ^ Popović 1999, p. 41, 44–45.
  86. ^ Popović 1999, p. 45.
  87. ^ Popović 1999, p. 41–45.
  88. ^ Popović 1999, p. 42–45.
  89. ^ Popović 1999, p. 46.
  90. ^ Popović 1999, p. 295–296, 399–400.
  91. ^ Popović 1999, p. 296, 399–400.
  92. ^ Popović 1999, p. 297, 399, 401.
  93. ^ Komatina 2016, pp. 76.
  • Bulić, Dejan (2013). "The Fortifications of the Late Antiquity and the Early Byzantine Period on the Later Territory of the South-Slavic Principalities, and their re-occupation". The World of the Slavs: Studies of the East, West and South Slavs: Civitas, Oppidas, Villas and Archeological Evidence (7th to 11th Centuries AD). Istorijski institut SANU. pp. 137–234. ISBN 9788677431044.
  • Curta, Florin (2006). Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500–1250. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Curta, Florin (2019). Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages (500-1300). Leiden and Boston: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-39519-0.
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  • Dimnik, Martin (1995). "Kievan Rus', the Bulgars and the southern Slavs, c. 1020-c. 1200". The New Cambridge Medieval History. Vol. 4/2. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 254–276. ISBN 978-0-521-41411-1.
  • Ivanišević, Vujadin; Krsmanović, Bojana (2013). "Byzantine seals from the Ras fortress" (PDF). Recueil des travaux de l'Institut d'études byzantines. 50 (1): 449–460. doi:10.2298/ZRVI1350449I.
  • Kalić, Jovanka (1995). "Rascia – The Nucleus of the Medieval Serbian State". The Serbian Question in the Balkans. Belgrade: Faculty of Geography. pp. 147–155.
  • Kinnamos, John (22 December 1976). Deeds of John and Manuel Comnenus. Translated by Charles M. Brand. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-52155-0.
  • Komatina, Ivana (2016). Црква и држава у српским земљама од XI до XIII века [Church and State in the Serbian Lands from the XIth to the XIIIth Century]. Београд: Institute of History. ISBN 9788677431136.
  • Komatina, Predrag (2015). "The Church in Serbia at the Time of Cyrilo-Methodian Mission in Moravia". Cyril and Methodius: Byzantium and the World of the Slavs. Thessaloniki: Dimos. pp. 711–718.
  • Novaković, Relja (1981). Gde se nalazila Srbija od VII do XII veka. Narodna knjiga i Istorijski institut. Google Books
  • Popović, Danica; Popović, Marko (1998). "The cave lavra of the Archangel Michael in Ras". Starinar. 49: 103–130.
  • Popović, Marko (1999). Tvrđava Ras [The Fortress of Ras] (in Serbian). Belgrade: Archaeological Institute. ISBN 9788680093147.
  • Stephenson, Paul (2004) [2000]. Byzantium's Balkan Frontier: A Political Study of the Northern Balkans, 900–1204. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-77017-0.
  • Stephenson, Paul (2008). "Balkan borderlands (1018–1204)". In Shepard, Jonathan (ed.). The Cambridge History of the Byzantine Empire c.500-1492. Cambridge University Press. pp. 664–691. ISBN 9780521832311.
  • Špehar, Perica N. (2010). "By Their Fruit you will recognize them - Christianization of Serbia in Middle Ages". Tak więc po owocach poznacie ich. Poznań: Stowarzyszenie naukowe archeologów Polskich. pp. 203–220.
  • Špehar, Perica N. (2019). "Reocupation of the Late Antique Fortifications on the Central Balkans during the Early Middle Ages". Fortifications, Defence Systems, Structures, and Features in the Past. Zagreb: Institute of Archaeology.
  • Stojkovski, Boris (2020). "Byzantine military campaigns against Serbian lands and Hungary in the second half of the eleventh century.". In Theotokis, Georgios; Meško, Marek (eds.). War in Eleventh-Century Byzantium. Routledge. ISBN 0429574770.
  • Vlasto, Alexis P. (1970). The entry of the Slavs into Christendom. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521074599.
  • Živković, Tibor (2013a). "On the Baptism of the Serbs and Croats in the Time of Basil I (867–886)" (PDF). Studia Slavica et Balcanica Petropolitana (1): 33–53.
  • Živković, Tibor (2013b). "The Urban landscape of Early Medieval Slavic Principalities in the Territories of the Former Praefectura Illyricum and in the Province of Dalmatia (ca. 610-950)". The World of the Slavs: Studies of the East, West and South Slavs: Civitas, Oppidas, Villas and Archeological Evidence (7th to 11th Centuries AD). pp. 15–36.

Further reading edit

  • Mrkobrad, D. 1997, "Ras-Postenje: Phases in the development of the fortress", Zbornik radova Vizantološkog instituta, no. 36, pp. 203–219.
  • "О ПРОУЧАВАЊУ И ПУБЛИКОВАЊУ УТВРЂЕНИХ МЕСТА У СРБИЈИ ИЗ VII-X СТОЛЕЋА".
  • Damjanović, L., Holclajtner-Antunović, I., Mioč, U.B., Bikić, V., Milovanović, D. and Evans, I.R., 2011. Archaeometric study of medieval pottery excavated at Stari (Old) Ras, Serbia. Journal of Archaeological Science, 38(4), pp. 818–828. doi:10.1016/j.jas.2010.11.004
  • Borojević, K., 2005. Nutrition and environment in medieval Serbia: charred cereal, weed and fruit remains from the fortress of Ras. Vegetation history and archaeobotany, 14(4), pp. 453–464. doi:10.1007/s00334-005-0092-9
  • Borojević, K., 2002. The analysis of plant remains from the fortress Ras-the 12th and the beginning of the 13th century. Starinar, (52), pp. 191–205. doi:10.2298/STA0252191B
  • Vanderheyde, C., 2002. M. POPOVIĆ, The Fortress of Ras (= Archaeological Institute Monographies, n° 34), Belgrade, 1999.
  • Dinić, B. and Janković, M., 1979. ABO blood groups in medieval remains (Ras, Novi Pazar, X-XII AD). Journal of Human Evolution, 8(7), pp. 715–718.
  • Живковић, Тибор (2002). Јужни Словени под византијском влашћу 600-1025 (South Slavs under the Byzantine Rule 600-1025). Београд: Историјски институт САНУ, Службени гласник. ISBN 9788677430276.
  • Živković, Tibor (2008). Forging unity: The South Slavs between East and West 550-1150. Belgrade: The Institute of History, Čigoja štampa. ISBN 9788675585732.

External links edit

  • UNESCO World Heritage Site
  • Gradina-Pazarište (Fortress Ras) - at Virtual Museum of Novi Pazar
  • Gradina-Postenje - at Virtual Museum of Novi Pazar
  • Trgovište - at Virtual Museum of Novi Pazar
  • St. Peter's Church - at Virtual Museum of Novi Pazar
  • Church in Pope - at Virtual Museum of Novi Pazar

stari, serbian, cyrillic, Рас, latin, arsa, known, modern, serbian, historiography, serbian, cyrillic, Стари, Рас, medieval, fortress, area, located, vicinity, former, market, place, staro, trgovište, some, kilometers, west, modern, city, novi, pazar, serbia, . Ras Serbian Cyrillic Ras Latin Arsa known in modern Serbian historiography as Stari Ras Serbian Cyrillic Stari Ras Old Ras is a medieval fortress and area located in the vicinity of former market place of Staro Trgoviste some 10 11 kilometers 6 2 6 8 mi west of modern day city of Novi Pazar in Serbia Stari RasNative name Serbian Stari RasOverview of the Stari Ras Gradina Pazariste LocationNear Novi Pazar SerbiaCoordinates43 7 42 N 20 24 56 E 43 12833 N 20 41556 E 43 12833 20 41556Elevation755 m 2 477 0 ft UNESCO World Heritage SiteTypeCulturalCriteriai iiiDesignated1979 3rd session Part ofStari Ras and SopocaniReference no 96RegionEurope and North AmericaCultural Heritage of SerbiaOfficial nameSrednjovekovni grad RasTypeMonument of Culture of Exceptional ImportanceDesignated22 August 1947Reference no SK 534Location of Stari Ras within SerbiaThe view from Stari Ras Old Ras was initially part of the First Bulgarian Empire until 10th century then Byzantine Empire mid 10th until mid 12th century in the end becoming one of the first and main capitals of the Grand Principality and Kingdom of Serbia since mid 12th until early 14th century Located in today s region of Raska its favorable position in the area known as Old Serbia along the Raska gorge at Pester plateau on the crossroads and trading routes between neighbouring regions of Zeta and Bosnia in the west and Kosovo in the south added to its importance as a city 1 There exist two fortifications gradina around the site Gradina Pazariste and Gradina Postenje 2 while urban place Staro Trgoviste below Gradina Pazariste developed since the late medieval and influenced foundation of Novi Pazar eastward in the Ottoman period 3 There are plans for future reconstruction of the site In the close vicinity is impressive group of medieval monuments including churches and monasteries The 9th century Church of Saint Apostles Peter and Paul is one of the oldest early medieval churches in Serbia The medieval Monastery of Sopocani near Arsa is a reminder of the contacts between Western world and the Byzantine world The site of Stari Ras in combination with the nearby Monastery of Sopocani is already a UNESCO World Heritage Site and Stari Ras monastery 12th century is being reconstructed and it too may be included on the UNESCO World Heritage List with the site Stari Ras and Sopocani World Heritage Site is not far from another UNESCO World Heritage Site of Serbia the medieval monastery and churches of Studenica Stari Ras was declared Monument of Culture of Exceptional Importance in 1990 and it is protected by Republic of Serbia 4 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Monuments 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksEtymology editThe toponym Ras in Slavic form derives from pre Slavic Arsa via metathesis 5 6 It is considered that the settlement toponym derives from a hydronim of same named river 7 The first mention of the fortress of Ras is from c 1127 8 while the oldest and only mention of the city of Ras in the native Serbian sources is from 1200 but as a toponym the region zupa of Ras is widely found 9 In 1186 charter is the first attested use of the term Raska as a designation for the Serbian state mentioning Nemanja as the ruler of Rascia but in other sources would still be used alongside Serbia even simultaneously as of Serbia and Rascia 10 The 14th century semi mythical Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja anachronistically projects the events of Serbian early medieval history before 12th century also in the region named Raska Rassa Rassam Rassae Rasse but identified with Serbia east of river Drina 11 From the 12th century onwards realistic topographic description of the surroundings of the Church of St Peter Caldanae is Novopazarska Banja Bello is Podbijelje the town could be identified with near fort Gradina Postenje 11 Gradina Pazariste is deemed the capital with the main fortress and Gradina Postenje as the fort closer to the bishopric church of St Peter 12 History editArchaeological findings of fortified structures and early churches from the area of Stari Ras dated from fourth to the sixth century correspond to the testimony of Byzantine historian Procopius who wrote that Roman castellum of Arsa in the province of Dardania has refortified during the reign of the emperor Justinian I 527 565 13 According to archaeological research there exist two fortifications gradina Gradina Postenje and Gradina Pazariste Throughout history their development was interconnected and probably made a uniform defensive system 2 On the site of Gradina Pazariste existed Early Bronze Age prehistoric settlement which in 5th century BCE of Iron Age became desolated 14 In the 2nd and 3rd century of the Roman period was on a crossroad with mining fields nearby and military settlement 15 Seemingly the wider area was spared in the late 4 5th century by migration period invasions 16 In the 6th century were found some German barbarian remains and material associated with the Frankish Merovingian dynasty 17 In c 518 the area of Ras was hit by a devastated earthquake which caused much damage in the Roman province of Dardania 18 Both grading became abandoned in the late 6th or early 7th century 19 20 They were re settled and renovated in the mid 9th century by the Bulgarians with the pottery findings typical of Pliska and Preslav and other material also with Bulgar runic inscriptions 21 22 23 The 10th century De Administrando Imperio mentions that Boris being about to return to Bulgaria and afraid lest the Serbs might ambush him on the way he begged for his escort the sons of prince Mutimer Borenas and Stephen who escorted him safely as far as the frontier at Rasi 24 usually dated around 880 25 Not mentioned among the inhabited cities of Serbia 5 in the scholarship there s no consensus whether Ras was located on the Serbian or Bulgarian side of the border 26 27 28 29 22 30 31 and whether it was a reference to the city or a border area 25 Newer research indicates that Ras since the mid 9th and in the 10th century was a western frontier district of Bulgaria 32 33 31 23 The lack of material of Bulgarian origin in Vrsjenice assumed to be Serbian city Destinikon indicates that the border between Serbs Serbia and Bulgarians Bulgaria in the 9th and 10th century was at Pester plateau and to the north at Cacak 34 35 Pester makes a natural border area and in the direction in which the plateau is open that s where the ruling power came from to Ras i e Bulgaria 5 The high medieval chronicles also give an impression that Rascia wasn t considered as the central and capital part of medieval Serbia but as a separate small domain within Serbia 30 36 The imperial charter of Basil II from 1020 to the Archbishopric of Ohrid in which the rights and jurisdictions were established mentions that the Episcopy of Ras belonged to the Bulgarian autocephal church during the time of Peter I 927 969 and Samuel of Bulgaria 977 1014 37 38 It is considered that it was possibly founded by the Bulgarian emperor 39 40 or it is the latest date when could have been integrated to the Bulgarian Church 41 If previously existed it probably was part of the Bulgarian metropolis of Morava but certainly not of Durres 42 If it was on the Serbian territory seems that the Church in Serbia or part of the territory of Serbia became linked and influenced by the Bulgarian Church between 870 and 924 43 44 45 Anyway the church would have been protected by Bulgarian controlled forts 35 According to archaeological research the site suddenly became desolated near the end of the 10th century 22 at least the western part of it abandoned and without military strategical importance and signs of Byzantines in the 11th century and was defensively upgraded in the end of the 11th century 46 Byzantine Emperor John Tzimiskes re established control of Ras in 971 and founded the Catepanate of Ras 47 48 49 The seal of protospatharios John of Ras has been found from that era 50 51 By 976 the Bulgarian state had regained Ras according to Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja would be the Serbs who freed themselves and defeated the Byzantines 52 but Basil II recaptured it about 40 years later in 1016 1018 52 In the imperial charter of Basil II from 1020 rights and jurisdictions of the autonomous Archbishopric of Ohrid were established and one of the bishoprics in its jurisdiction was that of Ras In 1032 overall commander of the region was strategoi and doukes Constantine Diogenes 53 54 and meanwhile Ras was part of a defensive line of Byzantine watchtowers alongside Lipjan Zvecan Galic Jelec south of Ras and Brvenik north of Ras watching to the west over a no man s land named Zygos mountains beyond which was Serbia 55 56 It remained a Byzantine frontier area until John II Komnenos lost the area as a result of the Byzantine Hungarian War 1127 1129 57 Recent archaeological research supports the notion that the Byzantines held control of Ras during Alexios I Komnenos s reign 1048 1118 but possibly not continuously 58 Alexios s seal which dates to the period 1081 1092 was found in 2018 near the site 59 It seems that the watchtowers commanders skirmishes into the Serbian eastern frontiers provoked Vukan Grand Prince of Serbia in the early 1090s to counterattack and to conquer the border fortresses in the Byzantine Serbian War 1090 1095 but although John Ducas regained most of them in 1093 Vukan ravaged the neighbouring towns and districts He even got as far as Lipjan which he deliberately burnt down but when Alexios came close Vukan escaped to Zvecan and started peace negotiations 60 In the 1120s the fortress of Ras was again burnt and destroyed by the Serbs a Dalmatian nation 8 61 Its commander was a Kritoplos who was then punished by Emperor for the fall of the fortress 62 63 64 The Byzantines rebuilt the fortress by 1143 57 48 It would be re conquered by Uros II in aim to distract the Byzantines from engaging with Roger II of Sicily 65 The Serbian Uprising of 1149 caused Byzantine emperor Manuel I Komnenos penetrated Dalmatia destroying the Ras fortress and devastate everything along the way the countless multitudes that he made slaves he left there with the army of sebastohypertatos Constantine Angelos He continued into Nikava conquering all the forts with ease After storming the nearby Galic whose people were partly warriors and herdsmen who took away and settled in Serdika and other Roman regions to settle and having learned from Angelos that the Zupan waiting for an opportune moment after his departure from there began to attack the Romans and that a fight had already taken place set out as fast as he could from there to capture him But this one hearing that the Romans were coming fled over the mountain passes and escaped the danger on foot The emperor headed through the country since there was no one to stop him at all devastated it and after burning the buildings there intended for the archizoupanos as the ruling centre left 66 67 68 In the next year continued to successfully fight off the Serbians and Hungarians ending at the Battle of Tara 1150 69 70 nbsp The cave monastery active in the late 12th and early 13th century Although not recorded in the historical sources somewhere in the second half of the 12th century Ras should have been finally conquered and controlled by the Serbs greatly renovating it and becoming the centre of defence and residency for the Grand Principality of Serbia 71 Stefan Nemanja previously receiving the land of Dendra west of Nis was the one who usurped the throne and expanded his territories in the late 1160s 72 Nemanja supposedly in celebration erected the monastery of Đurđevi stupovi with an inscription showing that the end of the construction was in 1170 1171 10 During a short war in autumn 1168 he was captured and again in 1171 1172 both times pleading loyalty 73 The city of Ras wasn t the capital in the general meaning yet but the wider area of Raska with various fortifications as there s no evidence of urbanization in the whole Grand Principality of Serbia and Kingdom of Serbia until the 14th century 74 In 1188 Nemanja showed intention to make Nis the centre of the state also there was a royal court in Kotor 10 Byzantine intervention continued until the end of the 12th century and the Serb feudal rulers of the region were often under Byzantine suzerainty The full independence of Serbia including Raska s region was recognized by the Byzantines in 1190 after an indecisive win by Isaac II Angelos over Nemanja 75 76 Beneath the Podgrađe of the Gradina Pazariste on a rocky cliff of the hill was constructed cave monastery of St Michael where later was active Monk Simeon who wrote Vukan s Gospel dated to c 1202 77 78 79 In 1196 Nemanja held an assembly in Ras 80 In the 1230s there was located the mint of Serbian money possibly also the royal treasury 77 A big granary was also found 81 Somewhere in the early 13th century became damaged amid civil war 82 but extensively renovated again by the time of the second Serbian king Stefan Radoslav 1228 1233 However there s much archaeological evidences it was burnt and became desolated around the 1230s probably being the scene of noble battles in which Radoslav lost and Stefan Vladislav 1234 1243 came to the throne 82 Seemingly it was not well renovated again and from that point in time gradually lost its status as the Serbian state capital but until then Serbian s state name became closely associated with the name of Rascia and Serbian people with the Rasciani 48 The final desolation happened in the early 14th century during the rulership of Stefan Milutin 1282 1321 82 nbsp Remains of Trgoviste part of Ras During the 14th century there was an important marketplace below the Stari Ras Trgoviste that started to develop 83 The scholarly thesis of Novi Pazar being a continuation of Stari Ras by identifying it with Ras Trgoviste is by now rejected 84 By the mid 15th century in the time of the final Ottoman conquest of the region another market place was developing to the east 85 The older place was known as Staro Trgoviste old market place in Turkish Eski Pazar and younger as Novo Trgoviste new market place Turkish Yeni Pazar 86 The latter developed into the modern city of Novi Pazar and there s no medieval archaeological site found in the centre of Novi Pazar 87 In the Ottoman administrative division Ras in 1455 was part of the vilayet of Skopije by 1463 existed nahiye of Ras within vilayet of Jelec fort 12 km south of present day Novi Pazar and in 1475 was founded Novi Pazar which soon became its centre but Novi Pazar itself shouldn t be considered as continuity of Ras 88 The toponym of Ras vanished in the 18th century influenced by the First of Great Migrations of the Serbs in the end of the 17th century 89 Monuments editIn the region of Raska also existed other ancient church buildings a basilica in village Pope north of Pazariste and a church within Novi Pazar Novopazarska Banja borders both outside fortifications and churches in Gradina Postenje and Zlatni Kamen both within fortifications 90 Such concentration could indicate the existence of an ancient episcopy with a seat at a basilica near Pazariste possibly connected to the ancient Bishopric of Ulpiana 91 The oldest early medieval church building in Serbia the Church of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul also known as St Peter s Church was founded near Novi Pazar sometime during the 9th century 92 Its commonly considered to have been built on the 6th century Byzantine foundations 93 nbsp Church of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul nbsp Đurđevi stupovi 12th century nbsp Sopocani 13th centurySee also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Stari Ras Monument of Culture of Exceptional Importance Tourism in Serbia Nemanjic dynasty Spatial Cultural Historical Units of Great ImportanceReferences edit Popovic 1999 p 291 a b Popovic 1999 p 291 393 Popovic 1999 p 41 45 393 Monuments of Culture in Serbia STARI RAS SA SOPOЋANIMA SANU in Serbian and English a b c Popovic 1999 p 37 Bulic 2013 p 216 Popovic 1999 p 295 a b Popovic 1999 p 38 301 Popovic 1999 p 39 41 a b c Kalic 1995 p 147 155 a b Popovic 1999 p 39 Popovic 1999 p 39 41 295 Popovic 1999 p 294 295 Popovic 1999 p 291 393 394 Popovic 1999 p 292 294 394 397 Popovic 1999 p 294 296 Popovic 1999 p 294 397 398 Popovic 1999 p 294 398 Popovic 1999 p 294 400 Spehar 2019 p 118 120 Popovic 1999 p 155 161 297 400 a b c Curta 2006 p 146 a b Spehar 2019 p 118 120 122 Moravcsik Gyula ed 1967 1949 Constantine Porphyrogenitus De Administrando Imperio 2nd revised ed Washington D C Dumbarton Oaks Center for Byzantine Studies p 155 ISBN 9780884020219 a b Popovic 1999 p 37 297 Popovic 1999 p 37 297 298 400 Zivkovic 2013b pp 28 31 34 Bulic 2013 pp 217 Cirkovic 2004 p 12 15 a b Novakovic 1981 a b Ivanisevic amp Krsmanovic 2013 p 450 Popovic 1999 p 139 161 297 400 401 Curta 2006 p 146 147 Popovic 1999 p 298 a b Spehar 2019 p 122 Popovic 1999 p 38 41 Komatina 2015 pp 717 Komatina 2016 pp 76 89 90 Popovic 1999 p 401 Cirkovic 2004 pp 20 30 Komatina 2016 pp 76 77 Komatina 2016 pp 75 88 91 Komatina 2015 pp 717 718 Komatina 2016 pp 77 91 Spehar 2010 pp 203 216 Popovic 1999 p 162 299 402 403 Popovic 1999 p 299 402 a b c Cirkovic 2004 p 30 Komatina 2016 pp 78 84 Stephenson Paul 2003 The Legend of Basil the Bulgar slayer Cambridge University Press p 42 ISBN 978 0 521 81530 7 Byzantium in the year 1000 BRILL 2003 p 122 ISBN 978 90 04 12097 6 a b Popovic 1999 p 299 Stephenson 2004 p 66 Stephenson 2008 p 667 Stephenson 2004 p 125 148 150 155 Stephenson 2008 p 668 a b Popovic 1999 p 301 Ivanisevic amp Krsmanovic 2013 p 451 452 Recently found seals on the site The Fortress of Ras support the opinion that the Byzantine Empire held dominant but perhaps not continuous control over Ras during Alexios reign Stojkovski 2020 p 153 Stephenson 2004 p 148 150 Cirkovic 2004 p 29 Popovic 1999 p 38 Ivanisevic amp Krsmanovic 2013 p 451 Curta 2019 p 656 Stephenson 2004 p 225 Popovic 1999 p 38 302 Stephenson 2004 p 224 225 Kinnamos 1976 p 83 Stephenson 2004 p 225 226 Kinnamos 1976 p 83 90 Popovic 1999 p 38 302 303 306 Stephenson 2004 p 267 Stephenson 2004 p 267 269 Popovic 1999 p 304 305 Dimnik 1995 p 270 Stephenson 2004 p 301 a b Popovic 1999 p 304 Popovic 1999 p 279 285 304 Popovic amp Popovic 1998 p 105 Cirkovic 2004 p 33 Popovic 1999 p 305 a b c Popovic 1999 p 306 Popovic 1999 p 44 Popovic 1999 p 39 41 Popovic 1999 p 41 44 45 Popovic 1999 p 45 Popovic 1999 p 41 45 Popovic 1999 p 42 45 Popovic 1999 p 46 Popovic 1999 p 295 296 399 400 Popovic 1999 p 296 399 400 Popovic 1999 p 297 399 401 Komatina 2016 pp 76 Bulic Dejan 2013 The Fortifications of the Late Antiquity and the Early Byzantine Period on the Later Territory of the South Slavic Principalities and their re occupation The World of the Slavs Studies of the East West and South Slavs Civitas Oppidas Villas and Archeological Evidence 7th to 11th Centuries AD Istorijski institut SANU pp 137 234 ISBN 9788677431044 Curta Florin 2006 Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1250 Cambridge Cambridge University Press Curta Florin 2019 Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1300 Leiden and Boston Brill ISBN 978 90 04 39519 0 Cirkovic Sima 2004 The Serbs Malden Blackwell Publishing ISBN 9781405142915 Dimnik Martin 1995 Kievan Rus the Bulgars and the southern Slavs c 1020 c 1200 The New Cambridge Medieval History Vol 4 2 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 254 276 ISBN 978 0 521 41411 1 Ivanisevic Vujadin Krsmanovic Bojana 2013 Byzantine seals from the Ras fortress PDF Recueil des travaux de l Institut d etudes byzantines 50 1 449 460 doi 10 2298 ZRVI1350449I Kalic Jovanka 1995 Rascia The Nucleus of the Medieval Serbian State The Serbian Question in the Balkans Belgrade Faculty of Geography pp 147 155 Kinnamos John 22 December 1976 Deeds of John and Manuel Comnenus Translated by Charles M Brand New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 52155 0 Komatina Ivana 2016 Crkva i drzhava u srpskim zemљama od XI do XIII veka Church and State in the Serbian Lands from the XIth to the XIIIth Century Beograd Institute of History ISBN 9788677431136 Komatina Predrag 2015 The Church in Serbia at the Time of Cyrilo Methodian Mission in Moravia Cyril and Methodius Byzantium and the World of the Slavs Thessaloniki Dimos pp 711 718 Novakovic Relja 1981 Gde se nalazila Srbija od VII do XII veka Narodna knjiga i Istorijski institut Google Books Popovic Danica Popovic Marko 1998 The cave lavra of the Archangel Michael in Ras Starinar 49 103 130 Popovic Marko 1999 Tvrđava Ras The Fortress of Ras in Serbian Belgrade Archaeological Institute ISBN 9788680093147 Stephenson Paul 2004 2000 Byzantium s Balkan Frontier A Political Study of the Northern Balkans 900 1204 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 77017 0 Stephenson Paul 2008 Balkan borderlands 1018 1204 In Shepard Jonathan ed The Cambridge History of the Byzantine Empire c 500 1492 Cambridge University Press pp 664 691 ISBN 9780521832311 Spehar Perica N 2010 By Their Fruit you will recognize them Christianization of Serbia in Middle Ages Tak wiec po owocach poznacie ich Poznan Stowarzyszenie naukowe archeologow Polskich pp 203 220 Spehar Perica N 2019 Reocupation of the Late Antique Fortifications on the Central Balkans during the Early Middle Ages Fortifications Defence Systems Structures and Features in the Past Zagreb Institute of Archaeology Stojkovski Boris 2020 Byzantine military campaigns against Serbian lands and Hungary in the second half of the eleventh century In Theotokis Georgios Mesko Marek eds War in Eleventh Century Byzantium Routledge ISBN 0429574770 Vlasto Alexis P 1970 The entry of the Slavs into Christendom Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521074599 Zivkovic Tibor 2013a On the Baptism of the Serbs and Croats in the Time of Basil I 867 886 PDF Studia Slavica et Balcanica Petropolitana 1 33 53 Zivkovic Tibor 2013b The Urban landscape of Early Medieval Slavic Principalities in the Territories of the Former Praefectura Illyricum and in the Province of Dalmatia ca 610 950 The World of the Slavs Studies of the East West and South Slavs Civitas Oppidas Villas and Archeological Evidence 7th to 11th Centuries AD pp 15 36 Further reading editMrkobrad D 1997 Ras Postenje Phases in the development of the fortress Zbornik radova Vizantoloskog instituta no 36 pp 203 219 O PROUChAVAЊU I PUBLIKOVAЊU UTVRЂENIH MESTA U SRBIЈI IZ VII X STOLEЋA Damjanovic L Holclajtner Antunovic I Mioc U B Bikic V Milovanovic D and Evans I R 2011 Archaeometric study of medieval pottery excavated at Stari Old Ras Serbia Journal of Archaeological Science 38 4 pp 818 828 doi 10 1016 j jas 2010 11 004 Borojevic K 2005 Nutrition and environment in medieval Serbia charred cereal weed and fruit remains from the fortress of Ras Vegetation history and archaeobotany 14 4 pp 453 464 doi 10 1007 s00334 005 0092 9 Borojevic K 2002 The analysis of plant remains from the fortress Ras the 12th and the beginning of the 13th century Starinar 52 pp 191 205 doi 10 2298 STA0252191B Vanderheyde C 2002 M POPOVIC The Fortress of Ras Archaeological Institute Monographies n 34 Belgrade 1999 Dinic B and Jankovic M 1979 ABO blood groups in medieval remains Ras Novi Pazar X XII AD Journal of Human Evolution 8 7 pp 715 718 Zhivkoviћ Tibor 2002 Јuzhni Sloveni pod vizantiјskom vlashћu 600 1025 South Slavs under the Byzantine Rule 600 1025 Beograd Istoriјski institut SANU Sluzhbeni glasnik ISBN 9788677430276 Zivkovic Tibor 2008 Forging unity The South Slavs between East and West 550 1150 Belgrade The Institute of History Cigoja stampa ISBN 9788675585732 External links editUNESCO World Heritage Site Official site of monastery Đurđevi stupovi in Stari Ras Gradina Pazariste Fortress Ras at Virtual Museum of Novi Pazar Gradina Postenje at Virtual Museum of Novi Pazar Trgoviste at Virtual Museum of Novi Pazar St Peter s Church at Virtual Museum of Novi Pazar Church in Pope at Virtual Museum of Novi Pazar Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stari Ras amp oldid 1210484800, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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