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Stefan Vladislav

Stefan Vladislav (Serbian Cyrillic: Стефан Владислав, Serbian pronunciation: [stêfaːn]; c. 1198 – after 1264) was the King of Serbia from 1234 to 1243. He was the middle son of Stefan the First-Crowned of the Nemanjić dynasty, who ruled Serbia from 1196 to 1228. Radoslav, the eldest son of Stefan the First-Crowned, was ousted by the Serbian nobility due to increasing Epirote influence through his marriage alliance to Theodore Komnenos Doukas; thus Vladislav became his successor. He is celebrated as Saint Vladislav by the Serbian Orthodox Church.[2][3][4][5][6]


Stefan Vladislav
Стефан Владислав
Stefan Vladislav ktitor portrait in the Mileševa monastery (1235)
Ktetor
Bornaround 1198
Raška
Diedafter 1264
Zeta
Venerated inEastern Orthodox Church[1]
AttributesChurch builder
King of Serbia
Reign1234–1243
PredecessorStefan Radoslav
SuccessorStefan Uroš I
Burial
SpouseBeloslava of Bulgaria
DynastyNemanjić
FatherStefan the First-Crowned
MotherEudokia Angelina
ReligionSerbian Orthodox
Signature

During Vladislav's reign, his uncle Archbishop Sava went on a pilgrimage and died in Bulgaria while on his way home. Vladislav obtained the remains and buried them in the Mileševa monastery, which he had built intended to be his burial place.[7] Serbia was politically aligned with Bulgaria at the time,[8] since Vladislav was married to Beloslava, the daughter of Ivan Asen II.[9] Vladislav secured Hum, a maritime province under attack by Hungarian crusaders.

After the death of Ivan Asen II, there was unrest in Serbia. The Mongols, led by Kadan, invaded Hungary and devastated the Balkans, at which time the Serbian nobility rose up against Vladislav. In 1243, he abdicated in favour of his younger brother, but remained the governor of Zeta. The Serbian Orthodox Church venerates him as a saint on September 24 [O.S. October 7].[1]

Early life edit

 
 
 
Vladislav's father Stefan, and brothers Radoslav and Uroš.

Vladislav was born around 1198. His parents were King Stefan the First-Crowned and Queen Eudokia. He had two full brothers, Stefan Radoslav (b. 1192) and Predislav (b. 1201), and a younger agnate half-brother, Stefan Uroš I (b. 1223). He also had two sisters, Komnena being the only one whose name is known.

King Stefan the First-Crowned, who had become ill, took monastic vows and died in 1227, and Radoslav, the eldest son, became king; he was crowned at Žiča by his uncle, Archbishop Sava.[10] Radoslav's younger brothers, Vladislav and Uroš I, received appanages.[10] Sava II (Predislav) was appointed Bishop of Hum shortly thereafter, later serving as Archbishop of Serbia from 1263 to 1270.[10] The Church and state was thus controlled by the same family, and the ties between the two continued.[11]

Accession edit

According to monk and biographer Teodosije the Hilandarian, King Radoslav was a good ruler at first, but fell under the influence of his wife, Queen Anna, daughter of the Epirote ruler Theodore Komnenos Doukas (1216–1230). The Serbian nobility most likely disliked Radoslav due to this Greek influence. Radoslav was probably safe from domestic rebellion as long as Theodore remained strong.[11]

In 1230, Theodore was defeated and captured by Emperor Ivan Asen II of Bulgaria, after which Radoslav's position seems to have weakened; some of his nobility revolted in the autumn of 1233. Teodosije said that the nobility no longer supported Radoslav, and instead supported Vladislav.[11] Radoslav and his wife fled to Dubrovnik in 1233. He was unable to regain the kingdom, but eventually returned as a monk.[11] There are indications that Radoslav organized rebellions against Vladislav, and that he thought that he would regain the throne. This is evident from a document dated February 4, 1234, which promised Ragusa trading privileges once Radoslav had returned to Serbia and become king again. Because of this, Vladislav began threatening Ragusa, which then turned to Ban Matej Ninoslav of Bosnia for help. The revolt against Vladislav was unsuccessful, and Radoslav joined the court of Epirote ruler Manuel in Dyrrhachium.[12][13]

 
 
 
Mileševa (left), built by King Vladislav (middle), was the burial place of Vladislav and Saint Sava (right).

Archbishop Sava tried to stop the conflict. He most likely sympathized with Radoslav, as he was the legitimate ruler. However, to stop the conflict, which could become more serious, Vladislav was crowned king upon Radoslav's departure from Serbia. Thanks to Sava, Vladislav married the daughter of Ivan Asen II.[11] Sava then abdicated in favour of his apprentice, Arsenije, at the end of 1233.[11] Radoslav contacted Archbishop Sava, who welcomed him back to Serbia. Radoslav took monastic vows, and took the name Jovan (John). According to Teodosije, Sava did this to protect Radoslav from Vladislav. In 1235, while visiting the Bulgarian court, Sava died while on his way home from a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. He was respectfully buried at the Holy Forty Martyrs Church in Tarnovo.[11] Sava's body was returned to Serbia after a series of requests,[11] and was then buried in the Mileševa monastery, built by Vladislav in 1234.[11] Sava was canonized, and his relics were considered miraculous; his cult remained throughout the Middle Ages and the Ottoman occupation.[11]

After Radoslav had returned to Serbia as a monk, the details of his relationship with Vladislav are not fully known, but he likely did not disturb Vladislav. Some even believe that Radoslav received a part of Serbia to administrate. In any case, Radoslav lived the rest of his life in peace.[14][12][13]

Foreign policy edit

The Bulgarians lost Braničevo and Belgrade to Hungary in the late 1230s, and Hungarian crusaders fought in Bosnia between 1235 and 1241.[15] Serbia was never directly attacked by the Hungarians. However, the Hungarian crusaders did directly threaten Serbian Hum; they may have even occupied parts of it.[15] In 1237, Coloman of Galicia-Lodomeria attacked Hum, but it is unclear whether they attacked Serbian Hum (Eastern), or western Hum, between the Neretva and Cetina rivers, where the Serbs held no territory at the time.[15] The northern part, which was held by Vladislav's relative, Toljen II, fell quickly, but Vladislav dispatched an army to regain the region. The crusaders were pushed to the border, and Vladislav pursued them as far as the Cetina River, but there were no major encounters. After the incident, the Serbs asserted their possession of the Hum region, and Vladislav added "Hum" to his title.[15]

These events threatened Serbia, which had severed ties with Catholicism and was once again fully Orthodox.[15] The marriage alliance between Vladislav and Ivan Asen II may be a result of the Hungarian threat to both of the rulers' countries.[15] Some scholars have speculated that Vladislav accepted Bulgarian suzerainty, but this speculation has no evidence to support it, since no contemporary sources say that Vladislav recognized Asen as overlord of Serbia. However, Asen likely had the largest influence on the politics of Vladislav.[15]

In 1235, Vladislav signed a treaty regarding trading privileges with Giovanni Dandolo, a representative of Ragusa. The treaty gave Ragusa trading privileges under the condition that Ragusa would never allow any preparation of rebellion against Serbia on their territory, as Ragusa had helped Radoslav upon his exile.[16][17]

Pope Gregory IX's crusade against the Bogumils in Bosnia, who were deemed heretics, did not bring good results. Central Bosnia was not conquered, and Bosnian Ban Matej Ninoslav and his nobility retreated to the Republic of Ragusa in 1240. In an edict issued by Ninoslav on 22 March 1240, Ninoslav promised to protect the city of Ragusa (Dubrovnik) if Vladislav attacked. At the time, Serbian forces in the region of Hum roamed around Dubrovnik. The Ragusans may have feared Vladislav due to the earlier disputes with him, or Vladislav may have posed an actual danger to Ragusa.[15]

Mongol invasion edit

 
Kotor was invaded by forces of Kadan

Ivan Asen II was a powerful support to Vladislav; when Asen died, there was internal unrest, also affected by the Mongols threat. Between 1206 and 1227, the Mongol leader Genghis Khan conquered territories that none before him had been able to conquer; his empire extended all over Asia and to Crimea. By 1240, all of Russia had been captured by the Mongols; Poland, Hungary, and parts of Croatia, Bosnia and Serbia were subsequently taken. In the winter of 1241, the Mongols crossed the Danube and entered western Hungary; Béla IV could not manage to organize any resistance. All of Croatia was burned, and Kadan and Batu Khan (the grandson of Genghis Khan) looked for Béla IV, who was in Split at the time; Béla soon moved to Trogir, as Split was not safe. The Mongols did not attack Split, but instead unsuccessfully attacked Klis, where they had heard that Béla IV was hiding. Béla then fled to the island of Rab. The Mongols attempted to conquer the island, but their forces were hurt in naval battles; they were also forced to hurry back home to choose the new Khan after the death of Ogatay. While returning home, they crossed and devastated Serbia, Bosnia and Bulgaria.[18] Although the Serbian lowland was destroyed, the Mongol attack did not have a large impact, as the population had retreated into inaccessible forests that Mongols had no will to enter. The Serbian cities of Kotor, Drivast and Svač were destroyed. The Mongol invasion brought turmoil and shock, but not any major changes; the real shock came when Asen died, which left Vladislav without significant support.[19][20]

Ousting edit

In spring 1243, an uprising ousted Vladislav; Stefan Uroš I, his third brother, was put on the throne.[15] Scholars have argued that Bulgarian influence had been strong and unpopular, causing opposition that led to Vladislav's deposition after the death of Asen.[15]

The revolting nobility had chosen Uroš as their candidate for king; from 1242 to spring 1243, a war for the throne was fought, which ended with Vladislav being forced to give up the crown in favour of Uroš. It seems that Uroš captured Vladislav and held him in prison. The main resistance against Uroš was led by Vladislav's wife Beloslava, who spent some time exiled in Ragusa. The fact that she was the organizer of the resistance against Uroš is known from an edict dated to the summer of 1243, in which the Ragusans swore to King Uroš that they would not support Beloslava's resistance work. The hostilities did not last long, and the brothers quickly settled. Uroš was courteous towards Vladislav, gave him the administration of Zeta, with residence in Skadar. He died around 1269, and was buried in Mileševa monastery.[21][22][20][9]

Regal name and titles edit

 
Fresco from Krušedol, depicting Stefan Nemanja, Stefan the First-Crowned and Vladislav (1750).

The king's given name was Vladislav, while "Stefan" was a name adopted by all Nemanjić dynasty monarchs. The name is derived from Greek word Stephanos, meaning "crown". The tradition of medieval Serbian rulers taking the name is likely connected with the Byzantine association of the martyrdom of Saint Stephen. The custom began already with Vukanović dynasty and was continued by Stefan Nemanja and his successors, until the last ruler of the Nemanjić dynasty. St. Stephen was the patron saint of the Serbian state and government; he was depicted on the royal seals and coins of the early Nemanjić rulers. The name was more of a title than name in the Serbian rulers, and it had a special symbolical meaning to the Serbian state.[23]

In Serbian medieval biographies, Vladislav was praised as "the Faithful", "the God-Loving", "the Christ-Loving", "the Great", "the World-Loving".[24][25] In modern historiography, he is sometimes designated as "Stefan Vladislav I" to distinguish him from the later Stefan Vladislav II, son of Stefan Dragutin, who ruled ower Syrmia.[17][26]

The introduction of Vladislav's charter says: "Stefan Vladislav, with the help and grace of God, crowned King of All Serbian and Maritime Lands", while the signature reads: "Stefan Vladislav, by the grace of God, the King and Autokrator of All Serbian and Maritime Lands".[27] Sometimes, his signature said, "Stefan Vladislav, with the help of God, the Serbian King".[28] In Latin documents, he was called Stephanus Vladislav, Serbiae rex (1238).[29] He also signed himself with the expanded title of his father: "King of All Rascian Lands, and Diocletia, and Dalmatia, and Travunia, and Zachumlia".[30] The style "Rascian lands" was used in the tutelage during the reign of Uroš I (r. 1112–1145).[31]

When Serbian royalty was canonized, the church sometimes used their given names; examples of this include: St. Stefan Vladislav ("Св. Стефан Владислав, краљ српски"), Milutin, Stefan Uroš I, Stefan Uroš II, Urošica, and others.[32]

Flag of Serbia edit

 
    Flag of Serbia described in the 1281 document.

The son of King Stefan Vladislav, Desa Župan, sent delegates from Kotor to Ragusa (Dubrovnik) to return items from the king's treasury; the inventory list included, among other things, "a flag of red and blue colour"[33] ("vexillum unum de zendato rubeo et blavo" - a flag made of red and blue fabric, zendato or čenda being a type of light, silky fabric).[34][35][36] This is the oldest existing information on the colours of the Serbian flag.[33] Thus, the oldest known Serbian flag was red and blue.[33] But already in 1271 the colors of the flag of his son Desa, were red and white.[37] Although the color order is not known, the version with horizontal red and blue is sometimes used in medieval-themed events in modern Serbia, representing the oldest known Serbian flag.[38]

Family edit

Through his marriage with Beloslava,[9] the daughter of Ivan Asen II of Bulgaria, Stefan Vladislav had the following children:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Thomson 1993, p. 129.
  2. ^ Dvornik 1962, p. 101-103.
  3. ^ Fine 1994, p. 135-138.
  4. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 46-48, 58.
  5. ^ Curta 2006, p. 394-395.
  6. ^ Curta 2019, p. 666.
  7. ^ Mileusnić 1998, p. 130.
  8. ^ Maksimović 2010, p. 128.
  9. ^ a b c Madgearu 2017, p. 209, 246.
  10. ^ a b c Fine 1994, p. 135.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Fine 1994, p. 136.
  12. ^ a b Ćirković 2004, p. 46.
  13. ^ a b Ivanović 2019, p. 121.
  14. ^ Polemis 1968, p. 93.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Fine 1994, p. 137.
  16. ^ Jireček 1911, p. 306.
  17. ^ a b Janićijević 1998, p. 39.
  18. ^ Fine 1994, p. 155.
  19. ^ Fine 1994, p. 137-138, 155.
  20. ^ a b Ćirković 2004, p. 47.
  21. ^ Jireček 1911, p. 309-310.
  22. ^ Fine 1994, p. 137, 199.
  23. ^ Kalavrezou 1997, p. 61-62.
  24. ^ Marjanović-Dušanić 2006, p. 149-158.
  25. ^ Ivanović 2019, p. 105, 108, 121.
  26. ^ Krstić 2016, p. 33–51.
  27. ^ Arhivski vjesnik. Vol. 9–12. 1967. p. 207. »Stefan Vladislav pomoću i milošću božjom venčani kralj svih srpskih zemalja i pomorskih«, a potpis: »Stefan Vladislav po milosti božjoj kralj i samodržac svih srpskih zemalja i pomorskih.«1" To ne znači da vladari u XIII st.
  28. ^ Popov, Čedomir (2000). Istorija srpske državnosti. p. 146. Слично је чинио и његов син краљ Владислав, међутим, у неким случајевима он се потписивао као "Стефан Владислав помоћу Божијом краљ српски", па је и у интитулацији истицао да ...
  29. ^ Diplomatički zbornik kraljevine Hrvatske, Dalmacije i Slavonije. Zavod za povijesne znanosti JAZU. 1906. p. 624.
  30. ^ Jovan Jovetić (1985). Odjeci Srpske prošlosti: eseji, govori, polemike. Jovan Jovetić. p. 174. ... краљ Владислав (1234 — 1243), прихваћа поново опширнију титулу свога оца: "краљ свих рашких земаља и Диоклетије и Далма- ције и Травуније и Захумије." (Види о томе у Историји Југославије од Владимира Ћоровића).
  31. ^ Вемић, Мирчета (2007). Атлас старе Србије: европске карте Косова и Метохије. Светигора. ISBN 9788676600557. Владислав (1238) је имао печат са натписом "Стефан Владислав краљ свих рашких земаља". Назив "рашка земља" био је у титулатури и за време Уроша I.
  32. ^ Srpska Pravoslavna Crkva, Sveti Arhijerejski Sinod (2001). Službeni list Srpske pravoslavne crkve. p. 55.
  33. ^ a b c Stanoje Stanojević (1934). Iz naše prošlosti. Geca Kon. pp. 78–80.
  34. ^ Dragana Samardžić (1983). Vojne zastave Srba do 1918. Vojni muzej.
  35. ^ Marjanović-Dušanić, Smilja; Ćirković, Sima (1994). Vladarske insignije i državna simbolika u Srbiji od XIII do XV veka. University of California, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. p. 42.
  36. ^ Blagojević, Miloš (2000). Istorija srpske državnosti, Vol. 3. Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. p. 176.
  37. ^ Kostić 1960, p. 9-12.
  38. ^ "Nije bila trobojka: Ovako je izgledala najstarija srpska zastava". B92 (in Serbian). 22 July 2020. Retrieved 14 September 2020.

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Stefan Vladislav
Born: ca. 1198 Died: after 1267
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Serbia
1234–1243
Succeeded by

stefan, vladislav, serbian, king, dragutin, ruled, syrmia, vladislav, king, syrmia, serbian, cyrillic, Стефан, Владислав, serbian, pronunciation, stêfaːn, 1198, after, 1264, king, serbia, from, 1234, 1243, middle, stefan, first, crowned, nemanjić, dynasty, rul. For the son of Serbian King Dragutin who ruled Syrmia see Vladislav King of Syrmia Stefan Vladislav Serbian Cyrillic Stefan Vladislav Serbian pronunciation stefaːn c 1198 after 1264 was the King of Serbia from 1234 to 1243 He was the middle son of Stefan the First Crowned of the Nemanjic dynasty who ruled Serbia from 1196 to 1228 Radoslav the eldest son of Stefan the First Crowned was ousted by the Serbian nobility due to increasing Epirote influence through his marriage alliance to Theodore Komnenos Doukas thus Vladislav became his successor He is celebrated as Saint Vladislav by the Serbian Orthodox Church 2 3 4 5 6 SaintStefan VladislavStefan VladislavStefan Vladislav ktitor portrait in the Mileseva monastery 1235 KtetorBornaround 1198RaskaDiedafter 1264ZetaVenerated inEastern Orthodox Church 1 AttributesChurch builderKing of SerbiaReign1234 1243PredecessorStefan RadoslavSuccessorStefan Uros IBurialMileseva ktitor SpouseBeloslava of BulgariaDynastyNemanjicFatherStefan the First CrownedMotherEudokia AngelinaReligionSerbian OrthodoxSignature During Vladislav s reign his uncle Archbishop Sava went on a pilgrimage and died in Bulgaria while on his way home Vladislav obtained the remains and buried them in the Mileseva monastery which he had built intended to be his burial place 7 Serbia was politically aligned with Bulgaria at the time 8 since Vladislav was married to Beloslava the daughter of Ivan Asen II 9 Vladislav secured Hum a maritime province under attack by Hungarian crusaders After the death of Ivan Asen II there was unrest in Serbia The Mongols led by Kadan invaded Hungary and devastated the Balkans at which time the Serbian nobility rose up against Vladislav In 1243 he abdicated in favour of his younger brother but remained the governor of Zeta The Serbian Orthodox Church venerates him as a saint on September 24 O S October 7 1 Contents 1 Early life 2 Accession 3 Foreign policy 4 Mongol invasion 5 Ousting 6 Regal name and titles 7 Flag of Serbia 8 Family 9 See also 10 References 11 SourcesEarly life edit nbsp nbsp nbsp Vladislav s father Stefan and brothers Radoslav and Uros Vladislav was born around 1198 His parents were King Stefan the First Crowned and Queen Eudokia He had two full brothers Stefan Radoslav b 1192 and Predislav b 1201 and a younger agnate half brother Stefan Uros I b 1223 He also had two sisters Komnena being the only one whose name is known King Stefan the First Crowned who had become ill took monastic vows and died in 1227 and Radoslav the eldest son became king he was crowned at Zica by his uncle Archbishop Sava 10 Radoslav s younger brothers Vladislav and Uros I received appanages 10 Sava II Predislav was appointed Bishop of Hum shortly thereafter later serving as Archbishop of Serbia from 1263 to 1270 10 The Church and state was thus controlled by the same family and the ties between the two continued 11 Accession editAccording to monk and biographer Teodosije the Hilandarian King Radoslav was a good ruler at first but fell under the influence of his wife Queen Anna daughter of the Epirote ruler Theodore Komnenos Doukas 1216 1230 The Serbian nobility most likely disliked Radoslav due to this Greek influence Radoslav was probably safe from domestic rebellion as long as Theodore remained strong 11 In 1230 Theodore was defeated and captured by Emperor Ivan Asen II of Bulgaria after which Radoslav s position seems to have weakened some of his nobility revolted in the autumn of 1233 Teodosije said that the nobility no longer supported Radoslav and instead supported Vladislav 11 Radoslav and his wife fled to Dubrovnik in 1233 He was unable to regain the kingdom but eventually returned as a monk 11 There are indications that Radoslav organized rebellions against Vladislav and that he thought that he would regain the throne This is evident from a document dated February 4 1234 which promised Ragusa trading privileges once Radoslav had returned to Serbia and become king again Because of this Vladislav began threatening Ragusa which then turned to Ban Matej Ninoslav of Bosnia for help The revolt against Vladislav was unsuccessful and Radoslav joined the court of Epirote ruler Manuel in Dyrrhachium 12 13 nbsp nbsp nbsp Mileseva left built by King Vladislav middle was the burial place of Vladislav and Saint Sava right Archbishop Sava tried to stop the conflict He most likely sympathized with Radoslav as he was the legitimate ruler However to stop the conflict which could become more serious Vladislav was crowned king upon Radoslav s departure from Serbia Thanks to Sava Vladislav married the daughter of Ivan Asen II 11 Sava then abdicated in favour of his apprentice Arsenije at the end of 1233 11 Radoslav contacted Archbishop Sava who welcomed him back to Serbia Radoslav took monastic vows and took the name Jovan John According to Teodosije Sava did this to protect Radoslav from Vladislav In 1235 while visiting the Bulgarian court Sava died while on his way home from a pilgrimage to the Holy Land He was respectfully buried at the Holy Forty Martyrs Church in Tarnovo 11 Sava s body was returned to Serbia after a series of requests 11 and was then buried in the Mileseva monastery built by Vladislav in 1234 11 Sava was canonized and his relics were considered miraculous his cult remained throughout the Middle Ages and the Ottoman occupation 11 After Radoslav had returned to Serbia as a monk the details of his relationship with Vladislav are not fully known but he likely did not disturb Vladislav Some even believe that Radoslav received a part of Serbia to administrate In any case Radoslav lived the rest of his life in peace 14 12 13 Foreign policy editThe Bulgarians lost Branicevo and Belgrade to Hungary in the late 1230s and Hungarian crusaders fought in Bosnia between 1235 and 1241 15 Serbia was never directly attacked by the Hungarians However the Hungarian crusaders did directly threaten Serbian Hum they may have even occupied parts of it 15 In 1237 Coloman of Galicia Lodomeria attacked Hum but it is unclear whether they attacked Serbian Hum Eastern or western Hum between the Neretva and Cetina rivers where the Serbs held no territory at the time 15 The northern part which was held by Vladislav s relative Toljen II fell quickly but Vladislav dispatched an army to regain the region The crusaders were pushed to the border and Vladislav pursued them as far as the Cetina River but there were no major encounters After the incident the Serbs asserted their possession of the Hum region and Vladislav added Hum to his title 15 These events threatened Serbia which had severed ties with Catholicism and was once again fully Orthodox 15 The marriage alliance between Vladislav and Ivan Asen II may be a result of the Hungarian threat to both of the rulers countries 15 Some scholars have speculated that Vladislav accepted Bulgarian suzerainty but this speculation has no evidence to support it since no contemporary sources say that Vladislav recognized Asen as overlord of Serbia However Asen likely had the largest influence on the politics of Vladislav 15 In 1235 Vladislav signed a treaty regarding trading privileges with Giovanni Dandolo a representative of Ragusa The treaty gave Ragusa trading privileges under the condition that Ragusa would never allow any preparation of rebellion against Serbia on their territory as Ragusa had helped Radoslav upon his exile 16 17 Pope Gregory IX s crusade against the Bogumils in Bosnia who were deemed heretics did not bring good results Central Bosnia was not conquered and Bosnian Ban Matej Ninoslav and his nobility retreated to the Republic of Ragusa in 1240 In an edict issued by Ninoslav on 22 March 1240 Ninoslav promised to protect the city of Ragusa Dubrovnik if Vladislav attacked At the time Serbian forces in the region of Hum roamed around Dubrovnik The Ragusans may have feared Vladislav due to the earlier disputes with him or Vladislav may have posed an actual danger to Ragusa 15 Mongol invasion editFurther information Mongol invasion of Bulgaria and Serbia nbsp Kotor was invaded by forces of Kadan Ivan Asen II was a powerful support to Vladislav when Asen died there was internal unrest also affected by the Mongols threat Between 1206 and 1227 the Mongol leader Genghis Khan conquered territories that none before him had been able to conquer his empire extended all over Asia and to Crimea By 1240 all of Russia had been captured by the Mongols Poland Hungary and parts of Croatia Bosnia and Serbia were subsequently taken In the winter of 1241 the Mongols crossed the Danube and entered western Hungary Bela IV could not manage to organize any resistance All of Croatia was burned and Kadan and Batu Khan the grandson of Genghis Khan looked for Bela IV who was in Split at the time Bela soon moved to Trogir as Split was not safe The Mongols did not attack Split but instead unsuccessfully attacked Klis where they had heard that Bela IV was hiding Bela then fled to the island of Rab The Mongols attempted to conquer the island but their forces were hurt in naval battles they were also forced to hurry back home to choose the new Khan after the death of Ogatay While returning home they crossed and devastated Serbia Bosnia and Bulgaria 18 Although the Serbian lowland was destroyed the Mongol attack did not have a large impact as the population had retreated into inaccessible forests that Mongols had no will to enter The Serbian cities of Kotor Drivast and Svac were destroyed The Mongol invasion brought turmoil and shock but not any major changes the real shock came when Asen died which left Vladislav without significant support 19 20 Ousting editIn spring 1243 an uprising ousted Vladislav Stefan Uros I his third brother was put on the throne 15 Scholars have argued that Bulgarian influence had been strong and unpopular causing opposition that led to Vladislav s deposition after the death of Asen 15 The revolting nobility had chosen Uros as their candidate for king from 1242 to spring 1243 a war for the throne was fought which ended with Vladislav being forced to give up the crown in favour of Uros It seems that Uros captured Vladislav and held him in prison The main resistance against Uros was led by Vladislav s wife Beloslava who spent some time exiled in Ragusa The fact that she was the organizer of the resistance against Uros is known from an edict dated to the summer of 1243 in which the Ragusans swore to King Uros that they would not support Beloslava s resistance work The hostilities did not last long and the brothers quickly settled Uros was courteous towards Vladislav gave him the administration of Zeta with residence in Skadar He died around 1269 and was buried in Mileseva monastery 21 22 20 9 Regal name and titles edit nbsp Fresco from Krusedol depicting Stefan Nemanja Stefan the First Crowned and Vladislav 1750 The king s given name was Vladislav while Stefan was a name adopted by all Nemanjic dynasty monarchs The name is derived from Greek word Stephanos meaning crown The tradition of medieval Serbian rulers taking the name is likely connected with the Byzantine association of the martyrdom of Saint Stephen The custom began already with Vukanovic dynasty and was continued by Stefan Nemanja and his successors until the last ruler of the Nemanjic dynasty St Stephen was the patron saint of the Serbian state and government he was depicted on the royal seals and coins of the early Nemanjic rulers The name was more of a title than name in the Serbian rulers and it had a special symbolical meaning to the Serbian state 23 In Serbian medieval biographies Vladislav was praised as the Faithful the God Loving the Christ Loving the Great the World Loving 24 25 In modern historiography he is sometimes designated as Stefan Vladislav I to distinguish him from the later Stefan Vladislav II son of Stefan Dragutin who ruled ower Syrmia 17 26 The introduction of Vladislav s charter says Stefan Vladislav with the help and grace of God crowned King of All Serbian and Maritime Lands while the signature reads Stefan Vladislav by the grace of God the King and Autokrator of All Serbian and Maritime Lands 27 Sometimes his signature said Stefan Vladislav with the help of God the Serbian King 28 In Latin documents he was called Stephanus Vladislav Serbiae rex 1238 29 He also signed himself with the expanded title of his father King of All Rascian Lands and Diocletia and Dalmatia and Travunia and Zachumlia 30 The style Rascian lands was used in the tutelage during the reign of Uros I r 1112 1145 31 When Serbian royalty was canonized the church sometimes used their given names examples of this include St Stefan Vladislav Sv Stefan Vladislav kraљ srpski Milutin Stefan Uros I Stefan Uros II Urosica and others 32 Flag of Serbia editSee also Flag of Serbia and List of Serbian flags nbsp nbsp nbsp Flag of Serbia described in the 1281 document The son of King Stefan Vladislav Desa Zupan sent delegates from Kotor to Ragusa Dubrovnik to return items from the king s treasury the inventory list included among other things a flag of red and blue colour 33 vexillum unum de zendato rubeo et blavo a flag made of red and blue fabric zendato or cenda being a type of light silky fabric 34 35 36 This is the oldest existing information on the colours of the Serbian flag 33 Thus the oldest known Serbian flag was red and blue 33 But already in 1271 the colors of the flag of his son Desa were red and white 37 Although the color order is not known the version with horizontal red and blue is sometimes used in medieval themed events in modern Serbia representing the oldest known Serbian flag 38 Family editThrough his marriage with Beloslava 9 the daughter of Ivan Asen II of Bulgaria Stefan Vladislav had the following children Stefan who died before 1281 in Esphigmenou Desa zupan Duke of Kotor fl 1281 1285 A daughter who married Đura Kacic the count of Omis fl 1276 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Stefan Vladislav Nemanjic family tree List of Serbian saintsReferences edit a b Thomson 1993 p 129 Dvornik 1962 p 101 103 Fine 1994 p 135 138 Cirkovic 2004 p 46 48 58 Curta 2006 p 394 395 Curta 2019 p 666 Mileusnic 1998 p 130 Maksimovic 2010 p 128 a b c Madgearu 2017 p 209 246 a b c Fine 1994 p 135 a b c d e f g h i j Fine 1994 p 136 a b Cirkovic 2004 p 46 a b Ivanovic 2019 p 121 Polemis 1968 p 93 a b c d e f g h i j Fine 1994 p 137 Jirecek 1911 p 306 a b Janicijevic 1998 p 39 Fine 1994 p 155 Fine 1994 p 137 138 155 a b Cirkovic 2004 p 47 Jirecek 1911 p 309 310 Fine 1994 p 137 199 Kalavrezou 1997 p 61 62 Marjanovic Dusanic 2006 p 149 158 Ivanovic 2019 p 105 108 121 Krstic 2016 p 33 51 Arhivski vjesnik Vol 9 12 1967 p 207 Stefan Vladislav pomocu i miloscu bozjom vencani kralj svih srpskih zemalja i pomorskih a potpis Stefan Vladislav po milosti bozjoj kralj i samodrzac svih srpskih zemalja i pomorskih 1 To ne znaci da vladari u XIII st Popov Cedomir 2000 Istorija srpske drzavnosti p 146 Slichno јe chinio i њegov sin kraљ Vladislav meђutim u nekim sluchaјevima on se potpisivao kao Stefan Vladislav pomoћu Bozhiјom kraљ srpski pa јe i u intitulaciјi isticao da Diplomaticki zbornik kraljevine Hrvatske Dalmacije i Slavonije Zavod za povijesne znanosti JAZU 1906 p 624 Jovan Jovetic 1985 Odjeci Srpske proslosti eseji govori polemike Jovan Jovetic p 174 kraљ Vladislav 1234 1243 prihvaћa ponovo opshirniјu titulu svoga oca kraљ svih rashkih zemaљa i Diokletiјe i Dalma ciјe i Travuniјe i Zahumiјe Vidi o tome u Istoriјi Јugoslaviјe od Vladimira Ћoroviћa Vemiћ Mircheta 2007 Atlas stare Srbiјe evropske karte Kosova i Metohiјe Svetigora ISBN 9788676600557 Vladislav 1238 јe imao pechat sa natpisom Stefan Vladislav kraљ svih rashkih zemaљa Naziv rashka zemљa bio јe u titulaturi i za vreme Urosha I Srpska Pravoslavna Crkva Sveti Arhijerejski Sinod 2001 Sluzbeni list Srpske pravoslavne crkve p 55 a b c Stanoje Stanojevic 1934 Iz nase proslosti Geca Kon pp 78 80 Dragana Samardzic 1983 Vojne zastave Srba do 1918 Vojni muzej Marjanovic Dusanic Smilja Cirkovic Sima 1994 Vladarske insignije i drzavna simbolika u Srbiji od XIII do XV veka University of California Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts p 42 Blagojevic Milos 2000 Istorija srpske drzavnosti Vol 3 Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts p 176 Kostic 1960 p 9 12 Nije bila trobojka Ovako je izgledala najstarija srpska zastava B92 in Serbian 22 July 2020 Retrieved 14 September 2020 Sources editBatakovic Dusan T ed 2005 Histoire du peuple serbe History of the Serbian People in French Lausanne L Age d Homme ISBN 9782825119587 Cirkovic Sima 2004 The Serbs Malden Blackwell Publishing ISBN 9781405142915 Curta Florin 2006 Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1250 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521815390 Curta Florin 2019 Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1300 Leiden and Boston Brill ISBN 9789004395190 Dvornik Francis 1962 The Slavs in European History and Civilization New Brunswick Rutgers University Press ISBN 9780813507996 Ferjancic Bozidar Maksimovic Ljubomir 2014 Sava Nemanjic and Serbia between Epiros and Nicaea Balcanica 45 37 54 doi 10 2298 BALC1445037F hdl 21 15107 rcub dais 12894 Fine John Van Antwerp Jr 1994 1987 The Late Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press ISBN 0472082604 Ivanovic Milos 2019 Serbian Hagiographies on the Warfare and Political Struggles of the Nemanjic Dynasty from the Twelfth to Fourteenth Century Reform and Renewal in Medieval East and Central Europe Politics Law and Society Cluj Napoca Romanian Academy Center for Transylvanian Studies pp 103 129 Janicijevic Jovan ed 1998 The Cultural Treasury of Serbia Belgrade Idea Vojnoizdavacki zavod Markt system ISBN 9788675470397 Jirecek Constantin 1911 Geschichte der Serben Vol 1 Gotha Perthes Jirecek Constantin 1918 Geschichte der Serben Vol 2 Gotha Perthes Kalavrezou Ioli 1997 Helping Hands for the Empire Imperial Ceremonies and the cult of Relics at the Byzantine Court Byzantine Court Culture from 829 to 1204 Washington Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection pp 53 79 ISBN 9780884023081 Kalic Jovanka 2017 The First Coronation Churches of Medieval Serbia Balcanica 48 7 18 doi 10 2298 BALC1748007K Kostic Lazo M 1960 O zastavama kod Srba istoriska razmatranja Izd piscevo Krstic Aleksandar R 2016 The Rival and the Vassal of Charles Robert of Anjou King Vladislav II Nemanjic Banatica 26 2 33 51 Madgearu Alexandru 2017 The Asanids The Political and Military History of the Second Bulgarian Empire 1185 1280 Leiden Boston Brill ISBN 9789004333192 Maksimovic Ljubomir 2010 Serbia s View of the Byzantine World 1204 1261 Identities and Allegiances in the Eastern Mediterranean After 1204 Farnham Ashgate pp 121 132 ISBN 9781409410980 Marjanovic Dusanic Smilja 2006 Lʹ ideologie monarchique dans les chartes de la dynastie serbe des Nemanides 1168 1371 Etude diplomatique Archiv fur Diplomatik Schriftgeschichte Siegel und Wappenkunde 52 149 158 doi 10 7788 afd 2006 52 jg 149 S2CID 96483243 Mileusnic Slobodan 1998 Medieval Monasteries of Serbia 4th ed Novi Sad Prometej ISBN 9788676393701 Miller William 1923 The Balkan States I The Zenith of Bulgaria and Serbia 1186 1355 The Cambridge Medieval History Vol 4 Cambridge University Press pp 517 551 Orbini Mauro 1601 Il Regno de gli Slavi hoggi corrottamente detti Schiavoni Pesaro Apresso Girolamo Concordia Orbin Mavro 1968 Kraљevstvo Slovena Beograd Srpska kњizhevna zadruga Ostrogorsky George 1956 History of the Byzantine State Oxford Basil Blackwell Polemis Demetrios I 1968 The Doukai A Contribution to Byzantine Prosopography London The Athlone Press ISBN 9780485131222 Popovic Svetlana 2002 The Serbian Episcopal Sees in the Thirteenth Century Starinar 51 2001 171 184 Samardzic Radovan Duskov Milan eds 1993 Serbs in European Civilization Belgrade Nova Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts Institute for Balkan Studies ISBN 9788675830153 Sedlar Jean W 1994 East Central Europe in the Middle Ages 1000 1500 Seattle University of Washington Press ISBN 9780295800646 Thomson Francis J 1993 Archbishop Daniel II of Serbia Hierarch Hagiographer Saint With Some Comments on the Vitae regum et archiepiscoporum Serbiae and the Cults of Mediaeval Serbian Saints Analecta Bollandiana 111 1 2 103 134 doi 10 1484 J ABOL 4 03279 Stefan VladislavNemanjic dynastyBorn ca 1198 Died after 1267 Regnal titles Preceded byStefan Radoslav King of Serbia1234 1243 Succeeded byStefan Uros I Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stefan Vladislav amp oldid 1220800291, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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