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Serbian epic poetry

Serbian epic poetry (Serbian: Српске епске народне песме, romanizedSrpske epske narodne pesme) is a form of epic poetry created by Serbs originating in today's Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro and North Macedonia. The main cycles were composed by unknown Serb authors between the 14th and 19th centuries. They are largely concerned with historical events and personages. The instrument accompanying the epic poetry is the gusle.

A Serb sings to the gusle (drawing from 1823). Serbian epic poems were often sung to the accompaniment of this traditional bowed string instrument.
Guslar singing of the death of Lazar, at an encampent in Javor, during the Serbian–Ottoman War (1876–78).

Serbian epic poetry helped in developing the Serbian national consciousness.[1] The cycles of Prince Marko, the Hajduks and Uskoks inspired the Serbs to restore freedom and their heroic past.[1] The Hajduks in particular, are seen as an integral part of national identity; in stories, the hajduks were heroes: they had played the role of the Serbian elite during Ottoman rule, they had defended the Serbs against Ottoman oppression, and prepared for the national liberation and contributed to it in the Serbian Revolution.[2]

History

The earliest surviving record of an epic poem related to Serbian epic poetry is a ten verse fragment of a bugarštica song from 1497 in Southern Italy about the imprisonment of Sibinjanin Janko (John Hunyadi) by Đurađ Branković,[3][4] however the regional origin and ethnic identity of its Slavic performers remains a matter of scholarly dispute.[5][6] From at least the Ottoman period up until the present day, Serbian epic poetry was sung accompanied by the gusle and there are historical references to Serb performers playing the gusle at the Polish–Lithuanian royal courts in the 16th and 17th centuries, and later on in Ukraine and Hungary.[7] Hungarian historian Sebestyén Tinódi wrote in 1554 that "there are many gusle players here in Hungary, but none is better at the Serbian style than Dimitrije Karaman", and described Karaman's performance to Turkish lord Uluman in 1551 in Lipova: the guslar would hold the gusle between his knees and go into a highly emotional artistic performance with a sad and dedicated expression on his face.[8] Chronicler and poet Maciej Stryjkowski (1547–1582) included a verse mentions the Serbs singing heroic songs about ancestors fighting the Turks in his 1582 chronicle.[9] Józef Bartłomiej Zimorowic used the phrase "to sing to the Serbian gusle" in his 1663 idyll Śpiewacy (Singers).[9]

In 1824, Vuk Karadžić sent a copy of his folksong collection to Jacob Grimm, who was particularly enthralled by The Building of Skadar. Grimm translated it into German, and described it as "one of the most touching poems of all nations and all times".[10][11]

Many of the epics are about the era of the Ottoman occupation of Serbia and the struggle for the liberation. With the efforts of ethnographer Vuk Karadžić, many of these epics and folk tales were collected and published in books in the first half of the 19th century. Up until that time, these poems and songs had been almost exclusively an oral tradition, transmitted by bards and singers. Among the books Karadžić published were:

  • A Small Simple-Folk Slavonic-Serbian Songbook, 1814; Serbian Folk Song-Book (Vols, I-IV, Leipzig edition, 1823-8133; Vols. I-IV, Vienna edition, 1841-1862)
  • Serbian Folk Tales (1821, with 166 riddles; and 1853)
  • Serbian Folk Proverbs and Other Common Expressions, 1834.
  • "Women's Songs" from Herzegovina (1866) - which was collected by Karadžić's collaborator and assistant Vuk Vrčević

These editions appeared in Europe when romanticism was in full bloom and there was much interest in Serbian folk poetry, including from Johann Gottfried Herder, Jacob Grimm, Goethe and Jernej Kopitar.[12]

Gusle

The gusle (гусле) instrumentally accompanies heroic songs (epic poetry) in the Balkans.[13] The instrument is held vertically between the knees, with the left hand fingers on the neck.[13] The strings are never pressed to the neck, giving a harmonic and unique sound.[13] There is no consensus about the origin of the instrument, while some researchers believe it was brought with the Slavs to the Balkans, based on a 6th-century Byzantine source.[14] Teodosije the Hilandarian (1246–1328) wrote that Stefan Nemanjić (r. 1196–1228) often entertained the Serbian nobility with musicians with drums and "gusle".[15] Reliable written records about the gusle appear only in the 15th century.[14] 16th-century travel memoirs mention the instrument in Bosnia and Serbia.[14]

It is known that Serbs sang to the gusle during the Ottoman period. Notable Serbian performers played at the Polish royal courts in the 16th- and 17th centuries, and later on in Ukraine and in Hungary.[16] There is an old mention in Serbo-Croatian literature that a Serbian guslar was present at the court of Władysław II Jagiełło in 1415.[9] In a poem published in 1612, Kasper Miaskowski wrote that "the Serbian gusle and gaidas will overwhelm Shrove Tuesday".[9] Józef Bartłomiej Zimorowic used the phrase "to sing to the Serbian gusle" in his 1663 idyll Śpiewacy ("Singers").[9]

Corpus

The corpus of Serbian epic poetry is divided into cycles:

  • Non-historic cycle (Неисторијски циклус/Neistorijski ciklus) - poems about Slavic mythology, characteristically about dragons and nymphs
  • Cycle of Nemanjić (циклус Немањића)
  • Pre-Kosovo cycle (Преткосовски циклус/Pretkosovski ciklus) - poems about events that predate the Battle of Kosovo (1389)
  • Kosovo cycle (Косовски циклус/Kosovski ciklus) - poems about events that happened just before and after the Battle of Kosovo
  • Post-Kosovo cycle (Покосовски циклус/Pokosovski ciklus) - poems about post-Battle events
  • Cycle of Kraljević Marko (циклус Краљевића Марка/ciklus Kraljevića Marka)
  • Cycle of Branković (циклус Бранковића)
  • Cycle of Crnojević (циклус Црнојевића)
  • Cycle of hajduks and uskoks (хајдучки и ускочки циклус, Хајдучке и ускочке песме) – poems about brigands and rebels
  • Poems about the liberation of Serbia and Montenegro (циклус ослобођења Србије, Песме о ослобођењу Србије и Црне Горе) - poems about the 19th-century battles against the Ottomans

Poems depict historical events with varying degrees of accuracy.

 
Kosovo Maiden by Uroš Predić
Dying Pavle Orlović is given water by a maiden who seeks her fiancé; he tells her that her love, Milan, and his two blood-brothers Miloš and Ivan are dead.
—taken from the Serb epic poem

Notable people

Characters

Medieval era

Hajduk cycle

  • Ognjen Hadzovic, hajduk, main character in Ženidba Hadzovic Ognjena.[18]
  • Srbin Tukelija, hajduk, main character in Boj Arađana s Komadincima.[19]

Many other heroes of Serbian epic poetry are also based upon historical persons:

Some heroes are paired with their horses, such as Prince Marko—Šarac, Vojvoda Momčilo—Jabučilo (a winged horse), Miloš Obilić—Ždralin, Damjan Jugović—Zelenko, Banović Strahinja—Đogin, Hajduk-Veljko—Kušlja, Jovan Kursula—Strina, Srđa Zlopogleđa—Vranac.[20]

Excerpts

There two pines were growing together,
and among them one thin-topped fir;
neither there were just some two green pines
nor among them one thin-topped fir,
but those two were just some two born brothers
one is Pavle, other is Radule
and among them little sis' Jelena.

"I'm afraid that there will be a brawl.
And if really there will be a brawl,
Woe to one who is next to Marko!"

"Thou dear hand, oh thou my fair green apple,
Where didst blossom? Where has fate now plucked thee?
Woe is me! thou blossomed on my bosom,
Thou wast plucked, alas, upon Kosovo!"

"Oh my bird, oh my dear grey falcon,[21]
How do you feel with your wing torn out?"
"I am feeling with my wing torn out
Like a brother one without the other."

Modern example of Serbian epics as recorded in 1992 by film director Paweł Pawlikowski in a documentary for the BBC Serbian epics; an anonymous gusle singer compares Radovan Karadžić, as he prepares to depart for Geneva for peace talk, to Karađorđe, who had led the First Serbian Uprising against the Turks in 1804:[22]

"Hey, Radovan, you man of steel!
The greatest leader since Karađorđe!
Defend our freedom and our faith,
On the shores of Lake Geneva."

Quotes

  • The ballads of Serbia occupy a high position, perhaps the highest position, in the ballad literature of Europe. They would, if well known, astonish Europe... In them breathes a clear and inborn poetry such as can scarcely be found among any other modern people.

    Jacob Grimm
  • Everyone in the West who has known these poems has proclaimed them to be literature of the highest order which ought to be known better.

    Charles Simic

Modern Serbian epic poetry

Epic poetry is recorded still today. Some modern songs are published in books or recorded, and under copyright, but some are in public domain, and modified by subsequent authors just like old ones. There are new songs that mimic old epic poetry, but are humorous and not epic in nature; these are also circulating around with no known author. In the latter half of the 19th century, a certain MP would exit the Serbian parliament each day, and tell of the debate over the monetary reform bill in the style of epic poetry. Modern epic heroes include: Radovan Karadžić, Ratko Mladić and Vojislav Šešelj. Topics include: Yugoslav wars, NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, and the Hague Tribunal.

Popular modern Serbian epic performers, guslari (Guslars) include: Milomir "Miljan" Miljanić, Đoko Koprivica, Boško Vujačić, Vlastimir Barać, Sava Stanišić, Miloš Šegrt, Saša Laketić and Milan Mrdović.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Dragnich 1994, pp. 29–30.
  2. ^ Wendy Bracewell (2003). "The Proud Name of Hajduks". In Norman M. Naimark; Holly Case (eds.). Yugoslavia and Its Historians: Understanding the Balkan Wars of the 1990s. Stanford University Press. pp. 25–. ISBN 978-0-8047-8029-2.
  3. ^ Matica Srpska Review of Stage Art and Music. Matica. 2003. p. 109. ...родовског удруживања и кнежинске самоуправе, а према механизму фолклорне рецепци^е садржаја званичне културе, српске епске јуначке песме, посебно бугарштице, прва је забележена већ 1497. године, чувају успомене и ...
  4. ^ Milošević-Đorđević, Nada (2001). Srpske narodne epske pesme i balade. Zavod za udžbenike i nastavna sredstva. p. 10. ISBN 9788617088130. Крајем XV века, 1497. године, појављује се за сада први познати запис од десет бугарштичких стихова, које је у свом епу забележио италијански ... Јанка, ердељског племића (чије је право име Јанош Хуњади) у тамници српског деспота Ђурђа Бранковића.
  5. ^ Šimunović, Petar (1984), "Sklavunske naseobine u južnoj Italiji i naša prva zapisana bugaršćica", Narodna Umjetnost: Croatian Journal of Ethnology and Folklore Research (in Croatian), Institute of Ethonology and Folklore Research, 21 (1): 56–61 – via Hrčak - Portal znanstvenih časopisa Republike Hrvatske
  6. ^ Bošković-Stulli, Maja (2004), "Bugarštice", Narodna Umjetnost: Croatian Journal of Ethnology and Folklore Research (in Croatian), Institute of Ethonology and Folklore Research, 41 (2): 38–39 – via Hrčak - Portal znanstvenih časopisa Republike Hrvatske
  7. ^ Pejovic, Roksanda (1995). "Medieval music". The history of Serbian Culture. Rastko.
  8. ^ Petrović 2008, p. 100.
  9. ^ a b c d e Georgijević 2003.
  10. ^ Alan Dundes (1996). The Walled-Up Wife: A Casebook. Univ of Wisconsin Press. pp. 3–. ISBN 978-0-299-15073-0. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
  11. ^ Paul Rankov Radosavljevich (1919). Who are the Slavs?: A Contribution to Race Psychology. Badger. p. 332. Retrieved 1 March 2013. skadar.
  12. ^ Milošević-Đorđević 1995.
  13. ^ a b c Ling 1997, p. 87.
  14. ^ a b c Bjeladinović-Jergić 2001, p. 489.
  15. ^ Vlahović 2004, p. 340.
  16. ^ Pejovic, Roksanda (1995). "Medieval music". The history of Serbian Culture. Rastko.
  17. ^ Pavle Ivić (1996). Istorija srpske kulture. Dečje novine. p. 160. ISBN 9788636707920. Retrieved 9 September 2013. Бенедикт Курипечић. пореклом Словенаи, који између 1530. и 1531. путује као тумач аустријског посланства, у свом Путопису препричава део косовске легенде, спомиње епско певање о Милошу Обилићу у крајевима удаљеним од места догађаја, у Босни и Хрватској, и запажа настајање нових песама.
  18. ^ Karadžić 1833, pp. 265–271.
  19. ^ Karadžić 1833, pp. 271–276.
  20. ^ Политикин забавник 3147, p. 4
  21. ^ Black Lamb and Grey Falcon by Rebecca West is the title of one of the best-known books in English on the subject of Yugoslavia.
  22. ^ Judah, Tim (1997). The Serbs - History, Myth and the Destruction of Yugoslavia. New Haven and London: Yale University Press.

Sources

  • Bjeladinović-Jergić, Jasna (2001). Зборник Етнографског музеја у Београду: 1901-2001. Етнографски музеј. pp. 489–. ISBN 9788678910081.
  • Dragnich, Alex N. (1994). Serbia's Historical Heritage. East European Monographs. ISBN 978-0-88033-244-6.
  • Georgijević, Krešimir (2003) [1936]. "Српскохрватска народна песма у пољској књижевности: Студија из упоредне историје словенских књижевности". Belgrade: Rastko; Српска краљевска академија.
  • Karadžić, Vuk S. (1833). Narodne srpske pjesme. Vol. 4. Vienna: štamparija Jermenskog manastira.
  • Ling, Jan (1997). "Narrative Song in the Balkans". A History of European Folk Music. University Rochester Press. pp. 86–90. ISBN 978-1-878822-77-2.
  • Milošević-Đorđević, Nada (1995). "The oral tradition". The history of Serbian Culture. Rastko.
  • Petrović, Sonja (2008). "Oral and Written Art Forms in Serbian Medieval Literature". In Mundal, Else; Wellendorf, Jonas (eds.). Oral Art Forms and Their Passage Into Writing. Museum Tusculanum Press. pp. 85–108. ISBN 978-87-635-0504-8.
  • Popović, Tatyana (1988). Prince Marko: The Hero of South Slavic Epics. New York: Syracuse University Press. ISBN 9780815624448.
  • Vlahović, Petar (2004). Serbia: the country, people, life, customs. Ethnographic Museum. ISBN 978-86-7891-031-9.

Further reading

  • Burić, Ranko (1989). "KOSOVSKI CIKLUS" (PDF). Etnološke sveske. 10: 119–125.
  • Jakobson, Roman (1966). Slavic Epic Studies. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-088958-1.
  • Locke, Geoffry N. W. (1997). The Serbian epic ballads: an anthology. Nolit. ISBN 9788619021562.
  • Meredith, Owen (1861). Serbski Pesme, Or, National Songs of Serbia. London: Chapman and Hall. (  Public domain)
  • Noyes, George Rapall; Bacon, Leonard (1913). Heroic Ballads of Servia. Boston: Sherman, French & Company. (Public Domain)
  • Perić, Dragoljub Ž. (2013). "Temporal formulas in Serbian oral epic songs". Balcanica. 44 (44): 159–180. doi:10.2298/BALC1344159P.
  • Petrović, Sonja (2005). "Charity, good deeds and the poor in Serbian epic poetry". Balcanica. XXXVI (36): 51–71. doi:10.2298/BALC0536051P.
  • Petrovitch, Woislav M. (2007) [1915]. Hero Tales and Legends of the Serbians. Cosimo, Inc. ISBN 978-1-60206-081-4.
    • Petrovitch, Woislav M. (1915). "Hero Tales and Legends of the Serbians". (illustrated) (  Public domain)
  • Miodrag Stojanović; Radovan Samardžić (1984). Хајдуци и клефти у народном песништву. Српска академија наука и уметности, Балканолошки институт.

External links

  • Lew, Mark D. (1999). "Serbian Epic Poetry".
  • The Battle of Kosovo - Serbian Epic Poems Preface by Charles Simic Swallow Press/Ohio University Press, Athens 1987
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serbian, epic, poetry, serbian, Српске, епске, народне, песме, romanized, srpske, epske, narodne, pesme, form, epic, poetry, created, serbs, originating, today, serbia, bosnia, herzegovina, croatia, montenegro, north, macedonia, main, cycles, were, composed, u. Serbian epic poetry Serbian Srpske epske narodne pesme romanized Srpske epske narodne pesme is a form of epic poetry created by Serbs originating in today s Serbia Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia Montenegro and North Macedonia The main cycles were composed by unknown Serb authors between the 14th and 19th centuries They are largely concerned with historical events and personages The instrument accompanying the epic poetry is the gusle A Serb sings to the gusle drawing from 1823 Serbian epic poems were often sung to the accompaniment of this traditional bowed string instrument Guslar singing of the death of Lazar at an encampent in Javor during the Serbian Ottoman War 1876 78 Serbian epic poetry helped in developing the Serbian national consciousness 1 The cycles of Prince Marko the Hajduks and Uskoks inspired the Serbs to restore freedom and their heroic past 1 The Hajduks in particular are seen as an integral part of national identity in stories the hajduks were heroes they had played the role of the Serbian elite during Ottoman rule they had defended the Serbs against Ottoman oppression and prepared for the national liberation and contributed to it in the Serbian Revolution 2 Contents 1 History 2 Gusle 3 Corpus 4 Notable people 5 Characters 6 Excerpts 7 Quotes 8 Modern Serbian epic poetry 9 See also 10 References 11 Sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory EditThe earliest surviving record of an epic poem related to Serbian epic poetry is a ten verse fragment of a bugarstica song from 1497 in Southern Italy about the imprisonment of Sibinjanin Janko John Hunyadi by Đurađ Brankovic 3 4 however the regional origin and ethnic identity of its Slavic performers remains a matter of scholarly dispute 5 6 From at least the Ottoman period up until the present day Serbian epic poetry was sung accompanied by the gusle and there are historical references to Serb performers playing the gusle at the Polish Lithuanian royal courts in the 16th and 17th centuries and later on in Ukraine and Hungary 7 Hungarian historian Sebestyen Tinodi wrote in 1554 that there are many gusle players here in Hungary but none is better at the Serbian style than Dimitrije Karaman and described Karaman s performance to Turkish lord Uluman in 1551 in Lipova the guslar would hold the gusle between his knees and go into a highly emotional artistic performance with a sad and dedicated expression on his face 8 Chronicler and poet Maciej Stryjkowski 1547 1582 included a verse mentions the Serbs singing heroic songs about ancestors fighting the Turks in his 1582 chronicle 9 Jozef Bartlomiej Zimorowic used the phrase to sing to the Serbian gusle in his 1663 idyll Spiewacy Singers 9 In 1824 Vuk Karadzic sent a copy of his folksong collection to Jacob Grimm who was particularly enthralled by The Building of Skadar Grimm translated it into German and described it as one of the most touching poems of all nations and all times 10 11 Many of the epics are about the era of the Ottoman occupation of Serbia and the struggle for the liberation With the efforts of ethnographer Vuk Karadzic many of these epics and folk tales were collected and published in books in the first half of the 19th century Up until that time these poems and songs had been almost exclusively an oral tradition transmitted by bards and singers Among the books Karadzic published were A Small Simple Folk Slavonic Serbian Songbook 1814 Serbian Folk Song Book Vols I IV Leipzig edition 1823 8133 Vols I IV Vienna edition 1841 1862 Serbian Folk Tales 1821 with 166 riddles and 1853 Serbian Folk Proverbs and Other Common Expressions 1834 Women s Songs from Herzegovina 1866 which was collected by Karadzic s collaborator and assistant Vuk VrcevicThese editions appeared in Europe when romanticism was in full bloom and there was much interest in Serbian folk poetry including from Johann Gottfried Herder Jacob Grimm Goethe and Jernej Kopitar 12 Gusle EditMain article Gusle The gusle gusle instrumentally accompanies heroic songs epic poetry in the Balkans 13 The instrument is held vertically between the knees with the left hand fingers on the neck 13 The strings are never pressed to the neck giving a harmonic and unique sound 13 There is no consensus about the origin of the instrument while some researchers believe it was brought with the Slavs to the Balkans based on a 6th century Byzantine source 14 Teodosije the Hilandarian 1246 1328 wrote that Stefan Nemanjic r 1196 1228 often entertained the Serbian nobility with musicians with drums and gusle 15 Reliable written records about the gusle appear only in the 15th century 14 16th century travel memoirs mention the instrument in Bosnia and Serbia 14 It is known that Serbs sang to the gusle during the Ottoman period Notable Serbian performers played at the Polish royal courts in the 16th and 17th centuries and later on in Ukraine and in Hungary 16 There is an old mention in Serbo Croatian literature that a Serbian guslar was present at the court of Wladyslaw II Jagiello in 1415 9 In a poem published in 1612 Kasper Miaskowski wrote that the Serbian gusle and gaidas will overwhelm Shrove Tuesday 9 Jozef Bartlomiej Zimorowic used the phrase to sing to the Serbian gusle in his 1663 idyll Spiewacy Singers 9 Corpus EditThe corpus of Serbian epic poetry is divided into cycles Non historic cycle Neistoriјski ciklus Neistorijski ciklus poems about Slavic mythology characteristically about dragons and nymphs Cycle of Nemanjic ciklus Nemaњiћa Pre Kosovo cycle Pretkosovski ciklus Pretkosovski ciklus poems about events that predate the Battle of Kosovo 1389 Kosovo cycle Kosovski ciklus Kosovski ciklus poems about events that happened just before and after the Battle of Kosovo Post Kosovo cycle Pokosovski ciklus Pokosovski ciklus poems about post Battle events Cycle of Kraljevic Marko ciklus Kraљeviћa Marka ciklus Kraljevica Marka Cycle of Brankovic ciklus Brankoviћa Cycle of Crnojevic ciklus Crnoјeviћa Cycle of hajduks and uskoks haјduchki i uskochki ciklus Haјduchke i uskochke pesme poems about brigands and rebels Poems about the liberation of Serbia and Montenegro ciklus osloboђeњa Srbiјe Pesme o osloboђeњu Srbiјe i Crne Gore poems about the 19th century battles against the OttomansPoems depict historical events with varying degrees of accuracy Kosovo Maiden by Uros PredicDying Pavle Orlovic is given water by a maiden who seeks her fiance he tells her that her love Milan and his two blood brothers Milos and Ivan are dead taken from the Serb epic poemNotable people EditBenedikt Kuripecic 16th century diplomat who traveled through Ottoman Bosnia and Serbia in 1530 and recorded that epic songs about Milos Obilic are popular not only among Serbs in Kosovo but also in Bosnia and Croatia He also recorded some legends about the Battle of Kosovo 17 Dimitrije Karaman fl 1551 oldest known Serbian gusle player Avram Miletic 1755 after 1826 merchant and songwriter best known for writing the earliest collection of urban lyric poetry in Serbian Old Rashko one of the most important sources of epic poetry recorded by Vuk Karadzic Filip Visnjic 1767 1834 Serbian guslar dubbed the Serbian Homer both for his blindness and poetic gift Tesan Podrugovic 1783 1815 Serb hajduk storyteller and guslar who participated in the First Serbian Uprising and was one of the most important sources for Serbian epic poetry Zivana Antonijevic d 1822 known as Blind Zivana one of the favorite female singers of Vuk Karadzic Vuk Karadzic 1787 1864 was a Serbian philologist and linguist who was the major reformer of the Serbian language He deserves perhaps for his collections of songs fairy tales and riddles to be called the father of the study of Serbian folklore Vuk Vrcevic 1811 1882 collector of lyric poetry Petar Perunovic 1880 1952 known as Perun famous guslar who performed for Nikola Tesla and the first to record Serbian epic poetry in a studio Djuro Milutinovic the Blind 1774 1844 guslar at Serbian court Characters EditMedieval eraTsar Dusan Emperor Prince Lazar Prince and legendary Emperor Pavle Orlovic knight Milan Toplica knight Ivan Kosancic knight Jugovic brothers including Bosko Jugovic Beg Kostadin Milos Vojinovic Voivode Prijezda Mali Radojica hajduk Deli Radivoje Zmaj Ognjeni Vuk Vuk the Fiery Dragon based on Vuk Grgurevic the Serbian Despot r 1471 85 Ailing Dojcin possibly based on despots John VII Palaiologos and Andronikos Palaiologos Relja the Winged Pop Milo Jovovic Bajo Pivljanin Stari Vujadin Alil Aga Sibinjanin Janko Jug Bogdan Janko od Kotara Starina Novak partly Musa Kesedzija enemy of Kraljevic Marko he is the result of merging several historical people including Musa Celebi son of Bayezid I and Musa from the Muzaka Albanian noble family while Jovan Tomic believes he is based on the supporter of Jegen Osman Pasha Djemo the Mountaineer enemy of Kraljevic Marko a member of Muzaka noble family Gjin Muzaka or maybe Ottoman military person Jegen Osman Pasha General Vuca enemy of Kraljevic Marko Tanush Dukagjin a member of Dukagjini noble family or Prince Eugene of Savoy or Peter Doci Philip the Magyar enemy of Kraljevic Marko Pipo of Ozora an Italian condottiero general strategist and confidant of King Sigismund of Hungary Arnaut OsmanHajduk cycle Ognjen Hadzovic hajduk main character in Zenidba Hadzovic Ognjena 18 Srbin Tukelija hajduk main character in Boj Arađana s Komadincima 19 Many other heroes of Serbian epic poetry are also based upon historical persons Strahinja Banovic Đurađ II Stracimirovic Balsic Jug Bogdan Vratko Nemanjic Beg Kostadin Constantine Dragas Sibinjanin Janko John Hunyadi Petar Dojcin Petar Doci Maksim Crnojevic Stanisa Skenderbeg Crnojevic Bajo Pivljanin Bajo Nikolic Mihajlo Svilojevic Michael Szilagyi Janko od Kotara Janko Mitrovic Manojlo Grcic Manuel I Komnenos Relja the Winged Hrelja Grujica ZeravicaSome heroes are paired with their horses such as Prince Marko Sarac Vojvoda Momcilo Jabucilo a winged horse Milos Obilic Zdralin Damjan Jugovic Zelenko Banovic Strahinja Đogin Hajduk Veljko Kuslja Jovan Kursula Strina Srđa Zlopogleđa Vranac 20 Excerpts EditSlavic antithesis There two pines were growing together and among them one thin topped fir neither there were just some two green pinesnor among them one thin topped fir but those two were just some two born brothersone is Pavle other is Raduleand among them little sis Jelena Kraljevic Marko speaks I m afraid that there will be a brawl And if really there will be a brawl Woe to one who is next to Marko Thou dear hand oh thou my fair green apple Where didst blossom Where has fate now plucked thee Woe is me thou blossomed on my bosom Thou wast plucked alas upon Kosovo Oh my bird oh my dear grey falcon 21 How do you feel with your wing torn out I am feeling with my wing torn outLike a brother one without the other Modern example of Serbian epics as recorded in 1992 by film director Pawel Pawlikowski in a documentary for the BBC Serbian epics an anonymous gusle singer compares Radovan Karadzic as he prepares to depart for Geneva for peace talk to Karađorđe who had led the First Serbian Uprising against the Turks in 1804 22 Hey Radovan you man of steel The greatest leader since Karađorđe Defend our freedom and our faith On the shores of Lake Geneva Quotes EditThe ballads of Serbia occupy a high position perhaps the highest position in the ballad literature of Europe They would if well known astonish Europe In them breathes a clear and inborn poetry such as can scarcely be found among any other modern people Jacob Grimm Everyone in the West who has known these poems has proclaimed them to be literature of the highest order which ought to be known better Charles SimicModern Serbian epic poetry EditEpic poetry is recorded still today Some modern songs are published in books or recorded and under copyright but some are in public domain and modified by subsequent authors just like old ones There are new songs that mimic old epic poetry but are humorous and not epic in nature these are also circulating around with no known author In the latter half of the 19th century a certain MP would exit the Serbian parliament each day and tell of the debate over the monetary reform bill in the style of epic poetry Modern epic heroes include Radovan Karadzic Ratko Mladic and Vojislav Seselj Topics include Yugoslav wars NATO bombing of Yugoslavia and the Hague Tribunal Popular modern Serbian epic performers guslari Guslars include Milomir Miljan Miljanic Đoko Koprivica Bosko Vujacic Vlastimir Barac Sava Stanisic Milos Segrt Sasa Laketic and Milan Mrdovic See also Edit Poetry portalGusle Bugarstica Erlangen Manuscript List of national poetries The Building of Skadar Serbian literatureReferences Edit a b Dragnich 1994 pp 29 30 Wendy Bracewell 2003 The Proud Name of Hajduks In Norman M Naimark Holly Case eds Yugoslavia and Its Historians Understanding the Balkan Wars of the 1990s Stanford University Press pp 25 ISBN 978 0 8047 8029 2 Matica Srpska Review of Stage Art and Music Matica 2003 p 109 rodovskog udruzhivaњa i knezhinske samouprave a prema mehanizmu folklorne recepci e sadrzhaјa zvanichne kulture srpske epske јunachke pesme posebno bugarshtice prva јe zabelezhena veћ 1497 godine chuvaјu uspomene i Milosevic Đorđevic Nada 2001 Srpske narodne epske pesme i balade Zavod za udzbenike i nastavna sredstva p 10 ISBN 9788617088130 Kraјem XV veka 1497 godine poјavљuјe se za sada prvi poznati zapis od deset bugarshtichkih stihova koјe јe u svom epu zabelezhio italiјanski Јanka erdeљskog plemiћa chiјe јe pravo ime Јanosh Huњadi u tamnici srpskog despota Ђurђa Brankoviћa Simunovic Petar 1984 Sklavunske naseobine u juznoj Italiji i nasa prva zapisana bugarscica Narodna Umjetnost Croatian Journal of Ethnology and Folklore Research in Croatian Institute of Ethonology and Folklore Research 21 1 56 61 via Hrcak Portal znanstvenih casopisa Republike Hrvatske Boskovic Stulli Maja 2004 Bugarstice Narodna Umjetnost Croatian Journal of Ethnology and Folklore Research in Croatian Institute of Ethonology and Folklore Research 41 2 38 39 via Hrcak Portal znanstvenih casopisa Republike Hrvatske Pejovic Roksanda 1995 Medieval music The history of Serbian Culture Rastko Petrovic 2008 p 100 a b c d e Georgijevic 2003 Alan Dundes 1996 The Walled Up Wife A Casebook Univ of Wisconsin Press pp 3 ISBN 978 0 299 15073 0 Retrieved 1 March 2013 Paul Rankov Radosavljevich 1919 Who are the Slavs A Contribution to Race Psychology Badger p 332 Retrieved 1 March 2013 skadar Milosevic Đorđevic 1995 a b c Ling 1997 p 87 a b c Bjeladinovic Jergic 2001 p 489 Vlahovic 2004 p 340 Pejovic Roksanda 1995 Medieval music The history of Serbian Culture Rastko Pavle Ivic 1996 Istorija srpske kulture Decje novine p 160 ISBN 9788636707920 Retrieved 9 September 2013 Benedikt Kuripechiћ poreklom Slovenai koјi izmeђu 1530 i 1531 putuјe kao tumach austriјskog poslanstva u svom Putopisu preprichava deo kosovske legende spomiњe epsko pevaњe o Miloshu Obiliћu u kraјevima udaљenim od mesta dogaђaјa u Bosni i Hrvatskoј i zapazha nastaјaњe novih pesama Karadzic 1833 pp 265 271 Karadzic 1833 pp 271 276 Politikin zabavnik 3147 p 4 Black Lamb and Grey Falcon by Rebecca West is the title of one of the best known books in English on the subject of Yugoslavia Judah Tim 1997 The Serbs History Myth and the Destruction of Yugoslavia New Haven and London Yale University Press Sources EditBjeladinovic Jergic Jasna 2001 Zbornik Etnografskog muzeјa u Beogradu 1901 2001 Etnografski muzeј pp 489 ISBN 9788678910081 Dragnich Alex N 1994 Serbia s Historical Heritage East European Monographs ISBN 978 0 88033 244 6 Georgijevic Kresimir 2003 1936 Srpskohrvatska narodna pesma u poљskoј kњizhevnosti Studiјa iz uporedne istoriјe slovenskih kњizhevnosti Belgrade Rastko Srpska kraљevska akademiјa Karadzic Vuk S 1833 Narodne srpske pjesme Vol 4 Vienna stamparija Jermenskog manastira Ling Jan 1997 Narrative Song in the Balkans A History of European Folk Music University Rochester Press pp 86 90 ISBN 978 1 878822 77 2 Milosevic Đorđevic Nada 1995 The oral tradition The history of Serbian Culture Rastko Petrovic Sonja 2008 Oral and Written Art Forms in Serbian Medieval Literature In Mundal Else Wellendorf Jonas eds Oral Art Forms and Their Passage Into Writing Museum Tusculanum Press pp 85 108 ISBN 978 87 635 0504 8 Popovic Tatyana 1988 Prince Marko The Hero of South Slavic Epics New York Syracuse University Press ISBN 9780815624448 Vlahovic Petar 2004 Serbia the country people life customs Ethnographic Museum ISBN 978 86 7891 031 9 Further reading EditBuric Ranko 1989 KOSOVSKI CIKLUS PDF Etnoloske sveske 10 119 125 Jakobson Roman 1966 Slavic Epic Studies Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 088958 1 Locke Geoffry N W 1997 The Serbian epic ballads an anthology Nolit ISBN 9788619021562 Meredith Owen 1861 Serbski Pesme Or National Songs of Serbia London Chapman and Hall Public domain Noyes George Rapall Bacon Leonard 1913 Heroic Ballads of Servia Boston Sherman French amp Company Public Domain Peric Dragoljub Z 2013 Temporal formulas in Serbian oral epic songs Balcanica 44 44 159 180 doi 10 2298 BALC1344159P Petrovic Sonja 2005 Charity good deeds and the poor in Serbian epic poetry Balcanica XXXVI 36 51 71 doi 10 2298 BALC0536051P Petrovitch Woislav M 2007 1915 Hero Tales and Legends of the Serbians Cosimo Inc ISBN 978 1 60206 081 4 Petrovitch Woislav M 1915 Hero Tales and Legends of the Serbians illustrated Public domain Miodrag Stojanovic Radovan Samardzic 1984 Haјduci i klefti u narodnom pesnishtvu Srpska akademiјa nauka i umetnosti Balkanoloshki institut External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Ploughing of Marko Kraljevic Wikisource has original text related to this article Marko and the Turks Lew Mark D 1999 Serbian Epic Poetry The Battle of Kosovo Serbian Epic Poems Preface by Charles Simic Swallow Press Ohio University Press Athens 1987AudioLesson in rhyme permanent dead link Poem for Karadjordje permanent dead link Fate of vizier Mahmud pasha in the village of Krusa permanent dead link Pit of Korich Part 2 Part 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Serbian epic poetry amp oldid 1122805893, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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