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Šćepan Mali

Šćepan Mali (Serbian Cyrillic: Шћепан Мали pronounced [ɕt͡ɕɛ̂paːn mâːli]; c. 1739 – 22 September 1773), translated as Stephen the Little,[4][a] was the first and only "tsar" of Montenegro, ruling the country as an absolute monarch from 1768 until his death. Of unclear origins, Šćepan became the ruler of Montenegro through a rumour that he was in fact the deposed Russian emperor Peter III, who had died several years before Šćepan surfaced in the Balkans.

Šćepan Mali
Šćepan Mali as depicted in Stefano Zannowich's 1784 biography of his life
Tsar of Montenegro
ReignFebruary 1768[1] – 22 September 1773
PredecessorSava and Vasilije Petrović
(Prince-Bishops)
SuccessorSava Petrović
(Prince-Bishop)
Bornc. 1739[2]
Dalmatia (?)[3]
Died22 September 1773 (aged c. 34)
Donji Brčeli Monastery
ReligionSerbian Orthodox

Šćepan arrived in Montenegro in the autumn of 1766. Whether Šćepan was his real name is unknown, as is the reason for the epithet Mali. Who started the rumour that Šćepan was Peter and why is also unclear. Šćepan himself never formally proclaimed himself to be Peter, but never denied it either. Throughout 1767, he offered vague hints that he was the dead emperor, and as time went on, most of Montenegro became convinced of his supposed identity. Although Montenegro's legitimate ruler, Prince-Bishop Sava, who had met the real Peter and had received word from the Russian ambassador in Constantinople that Peter was dead, attempted to expose Šćepan, most Montenegrins continued to believe the rumours. In 1767, Šćepan was proclaimed as the country's ruler, and in February 1768, Sava was sidelined and confined to his monastery. Šćepan subsequently assumed the powers of an absolute monarch.

Šćepan's reign proved to be a surprisingly successful one. He managed to unite Montenegro's infighting clans for the first time in the country's history. Social, administrative and religious reforms laid the groundwork for Montenegro's transition into a true state. The sudden appearance of a "Russian emperor" in the Balkans was a cause for concern in Europe. Many wondered who Šćepan was, why he was impersonating Peter and what his intentions were. The Ottomans feared the development, but failed in an attempted invasion of Montenegro in 1768. Peter's widow and successor, Catherine the Great, was far from enthusiastic and engaged in numerous failed attempts to end Šćepan's rule. A Russian delegation finally arrived in Montenegro in 1769, exposed Šćepan as a fraud and briefly imprisoned him, but released him and returned him to power upon realising that he was the most competent of Montenegro's potential rulers. Though disappointed by the revelation that Šćepan was not Peter, the Montenegrins nevertheless welcomed his continued rule as he was now supported by Russia and there were few other good choices available. In 1771, Šćepan was injured in an accident involving a land mine. From that point until the end of his life, he was carried around in a sedan chair. During the last few years of his reign, Šćepan legislated numerous reforms, creating a court of Montenegrin clan leaders to dispense justice, introducing the death penalty and strengthening the central government. He ruled until he was murdered by one of his servants, bribed by the Ottomans, in September 1773.

Šćepan's legacy survives in the cultural memory of modern Montenegro and the surrounding countries. He is paradoxically remembered as both an ideal ruler and a fraud. Several stories and biographies have been written about him, alongside two theatre plays and two feature films. The film Lažni car [sh] ("The Fake Tsar"), released in 1955 and based on Šćepan's life, was the first ever Montenegrin feature film.

Background edit

 
1761 portrait of Peter III of Russia

Peter III of Russia briefly ruled the Russian Empire between 5 January and 9 July 1762, and died shortly after abdicating, probably killed in a plot orchestrated by his wife and successor Catherine the Great.[6] For years thereafter, rumours circulated in Russia and elsewhere that the Tsar was not dead and that he had escaped into exile. These rumours led to numerous people claiming to be Peter, such as the ataman Yemelyan Pugachev, who led an ill-fated rebellion in the mid-1770s seeking to depose Catherine and seize power for himself.[6]

At this time, the Prince-Bishopric of Montenegro, though independent, was more or less subjected to the Ottoman Empire. Since the Ottomans had a relatively weak central government, the Montenegrins occasionally fought against them.[6] As a small mountain realm, Montenegro remained one of the few more or less independent Orthodox Christian areas in the Balkans, and the Ottomans remained a constant threat to their continued existence.[7] On the Adriatic coast, Montenegro was also bordered by the Republic of Venice, which was slowly losing its grasp over the region. Montenegro's predicament was compounded by frequent infighting and the lack of authority enjoyed by the ruling Prince-Bishop, Sava.[6] The Montenegrins had little respect for Sava, who was an idle ruler. Though he had once co-ruled with his more respected and competent cousin, Vasilije, the latter died on 10 March 1766, leaving the country more or less leaderless.[8] There was no real state in Montenegro at the time, with the country rather being more akin to a conglomerate of autonomous and semi-nomadic clans precariously united because of external danger.[7] Šćepan Mali's subsequent success partly built on the widespread Montenegrin belief and hope for a saviour figure.[1]

Šćepan's true identity is unknown, though it is certain that he was not Russian.[9] Though he used the name Šćepan himself, there is little reason to believe that this was his real name. It is possible that the choice of this name came from its etymology (Stephanos means "crown" in Greek) or that it derived from the practice of the medieval Serbian rulers (such as Emperor Stefan Dušan) to typically use the name Stefan in conjunction with their own given names. The epithet Mali (small, little or humble), which Šćepan used himself, is also of unclear origin.[10]

One recent theory, first advocated independently by Rastislav Petrović (2001) and Dušan J. Martinović (2002), is that Šćepan was Jovan Stefanović Baljević, otherwise remembered for being the first Montenegrin to defend a doctoral dissertation. Baljević spent several years working in Hungary—earning money by, among other things, forging passports—and later served as an officer in the Imperial Russian Army. Though traditionally believed to have died in 1769, Petrović and Martinović have presented evidence that Baljević disappeared several years before 1769 and travelled to Montenegro.[11] Even if this identification was proved to be correct, it would not completely solve the mystery since Baljević's subsequent motivations would still remain unknown.[12]

Rise to power edit

 
Approximate political map of the Balkans c. 1750, Montenegro, the small country marked with green at the centre of the map, was surrounded by the Ottoman Empire to the east and the Republic of Venice to the west

The earliest record of Šćepan is his arrival in the village of Maine in the autumn of 1766.[1][13] Maine, which is located in modern-day Montenegro, was controlled by the Venetians at the time. At Maine, Šćepan served as a physician, and appears to have been popular among the locals. A group of prominent citizens, among them monks, soon expressed support for Šćepan and started a rumour that he was Peter III, who they claimed had gone into exile.[1] How this rumour originated, who exactly was behind it and why it was created in the first place is unclear.[14] By August 1767, the rumour had become widespread among the Montenegrins, though Šćepan himself did not formally proclaim himself to be Peter. The rumour was instead reinforced by the air of mystery surrounding Šćepan and several ambiguous statements he made to those around him.[9]

While in church during prayers for the Russian imperial family, it was said that Šćepan shed tears and turned to face the wall in sorrow at the mention of Peter's son, Paul. At one point, Šćepan wept upon seeing a portrait of Peter in Maine's Orthodox monastery.[9] Many of his supporters would later say they saw a distinct likeness between the portrait and Šćepan. Prominent Montenegrins who had visited Russia also reinforced the idea by swearing that Šćepan was none other than Peter.[10] Desperation due to the lack of leadership and a fanatical admiration for Russia among many Montenegrins led to Šćepan becoming an increasingly prominent figure.[8]

As these rumours circulated, Šćepan issued a proclamation to the people of Montenegro, urging them to end their internecine feuds, to adhere to their Orthodox Christian ideals, to prepare for war against external enemies and to expect bountiful rewards. He refused to confirm or deny if he was Peter, and signed documents with "Šćepan Mali, the smallest on Earth, and good unto the good".[10] In response to the proclamation, a gathering of Montenegrin chiefs and lords met at Cetinje, Montenegro's capital, on 3 October 1767, and agreed to stop all the feuds between the clans of Montenegro, but only until 23 April the next year (Saint George's Day). Šćepan considered this armistice unacceptable and tore up the message sent by the gathering of nobles, stamped on it and demanded that they instead swear to uphold peace between each other in perpetuity. Šćepan's display of royal displeasure convinced the people of Montenegro even more that he was Peter.[10] The excitement amongst the Montenegrins was so palpable that Prince-Bishop Sava was initially convinced of Šćepan's claims,[1] despite having once met the real Peter.[5]

On 17 October, the chiefs and lords of Montenegro gathered again on the plains outside Cetinje. A monk read out Šćepan's commands to a crowd of perhaps 400 nobles and soldiers, whereupon they agreed to uphold the perpetual peace.[7] The majority of Montenegrins now believed that Šćepan was Peter and their clan chieftains went to Maine, although it was still in Venetian territory, and paid homage to him. On 2 November, the Montenegrins issued a charter officially recognising Šćepan as Peter.[7]

In early February 1768,[7] Prince-Bishop Sava received word from the Russian ambassador to Constantinople that Šćepan was an impostor.[1] Armed with the letter, Sava attempted to convince the people of the truth, but the Montenegrins preferred the hopeful rumour to the more distressing reality. Sava was stripped of his possessions and secular power and locked up within his own monastery.[7] Šćepan also pillaged the Prince-Bishop's property in revenge.[1]

Šćepan had effectively been proclaimed Montenegro's ruler in 1767.[15] With the Prince-Bishop pushed aside,[5] Šćepan established himself as Montenegro's absolute ruler in February 1768,[1] becoming the country's first and only "tsar".[13] In April, he moved his residence to Montenegrin territory and began living there permanently.[1] The sole factor which had lent him authority and the love of the people in the first place was the widespread belief that he was Peter.[13] Without ever openly confirming or denying the truth of this claim, Šćepan had managed to seize power in Montenegro, unite the people and depose the country's legitimate ruler, all in the space of a few months.[14] The belief that Peter III of Russia had honoured Montenegro with his presence nourished hopes that Montenegro and Russia would soon join together and liberate the Orthodox Christians of the Balkans from Ottoman rule.[16]

Rule in Montenegro edit

 
Banner of Montenegro adopted during the reign of Šćepan Mali

During Šćepan's brief reign, the usual infighting among the Montenegrin clans subsided. The result was a level of peace and unity that had never existed before.[13] Šćepan respected the rights of local chiefs, who maintained order, and introduced some socio-political reforms, notably separating religious and secular power and thus undermining the priesthood's traditional claim to authority. The news of the arrival of a "Russian emperor" in Montenegro gained the country more attention across Europe.[15][17] In many places, Šćepan's ascent was the cause of great concern and political turmoil.[5][18] In some of the lands bordering Montenegro, vassals of the Venetians and the Ottomans stopped paying tribute to their overlords, which caused the Ottomans to fear a full-scale revolt.[1] Montenegrin soldiers also began raiding Ottoman and Venetian territory.[5] Šćepan's true identity was a topic of discussion throughout Europe. Although they all agreed that Šćepan was an impostor, numerous officials and diplomats in Vienna, the capital of the Habsburg monarchy, speculated as to Šćepan's true identity, and wondered what his intentions were and who benefited from his sudden rise to power.[1]

The first written descriptions of a flag of Montenegro comes from the reign of Šćepan. The banner used by the Montenegrins in his time was white within a red frame with a golden cross on the top of the flag pole.[19]

Russian reaction edit

 
1780s portrait of Catherine the Great, Empress of Russia

The Russian ambassador in Constantinople, Alexis Obreskov, had first learnt of Šćepan while speaking with the Venetian bailo of Constantinople, Rosini, on 16 November 1767, but had then deemed the matter as being of little importance. On 17 November, the very next day, Obreskov received word from Prince-Bishop Sava, who was unsure whether Šćepan was Peter III or not and feared the wrath of Catherine the Great in either case. Sava implored Obreskov to tell him "whether Peter III is dead or alive, for if he is alive, then he is verily in Montenegro".[16] Obreskov replied the same day, writing: "I reply that the Emperor of All the Russias, Peter III, passed away on July 6, 1762, and was solemnly interred with all honours in the cathedral church of the Monastery of St. Alexander Nevskij by the side of his grandfather, the Emperor Peter the Great of blessed and ever glorious memory".[16] Annoyed with Sava's suggestion that Peter III could be alive in Montenegro, Obreskov added that "I am astonished that Your Eminence has not been informed of this till now, and that you, together with your unenlightened people, could have so fallen into error as to believe this impostor and vagabond".[20] The ambassador advised Sava to immediately expose Šćepan as a fraud and drive him from Montenegro, otherwise the country might lose Russia's favour. As previously described, Sava's attempts to follow this advice only ended with Šćepan's rise to power.[20]

Obreskov reported on Šćepan to the Russian court on 10 December 1767. He implored Empress Catherine to inform him if she received any reports of Šćepan stepping on Ottoman soil, and if this happened, send him instructions to cover such a possibility.[20] Šćepan also decided to inform the Russian court of his existence himself. He probably knew of Sava's correspondence with Obreskov and might have wished to end the Prince-Bishop's attempts at discrediting him. As someone believed to be Peter III, it also increased his prestige to send emissaries to Russia.[20] In December 1767 and January 1768, four emissaries were sent to the Russian Embassy in Vienna. The emissaries were all detained at the Austrian border and the Russian Embassy did not hear from then until February,[20] when desperate letters from two of them, Grigorije Drekalovic and Archimandrite Avakum Milakovic, reached Vienna.[21] The Russian ambassador in Vienna, Prince Dimitrij Golicyn, wrote to Catherine on 20 February, saying: "Not content with his wondrous revelation unto his own unenlightened and stupid people, this Montenegrin messiah, who is known by the name of Peter the Third, has resolved to glorify himself throughout all the universe through his apostles", concluding that the letters sent to him by the Montenegrin emissaries were "worthy of complete contempt".[21]

Catherine herself was alarmed by the news. She immediately sent an order to the commanders of frontier towns along Russia's entire western border, reading: "it is possible that the pretender may send similar emissaries into Russia, and that perhaps he himself may be tempted to enter our borders".[21] Border officials in Smolensk, Riga, Reval, Vyborg, Kiev and Novorossiysk were ordered to detain all suspicious travellers, particularly if these travellers were from Montenegro. The councillor of the Russian Embassy in Vienna, George Merk, was instructed to immediately travel to Montenegro via Venice, with a letter from Catherine to the nobles of Montenegro to prove that Peter III was dead.[21] The letter also threatened that if Šćepan was not exposed and deposed, Russia would end its subsidies to Montenegro and perhaps invade and destroy the country. Merk left Vienna on 2 April 1768, but the Venetians refused to let him travel through their territory, fearing the ire of the Ottomans. After lengthy negotiations, Merk was allowed passage to Kotor but soon found that a Venetian blockade prevented him from crossing into Montenegro, and prevented the nobles of Montenegro from meeting him. He made an attempt to cross into Montenegro through the city of Ragusa, but Ragusa did not let him past the town gate and Merk gave up, returning to Vienna in early August. His failure made Catherine furious, and he was immediately dismissed from his position.[22]

Another attempt was made by sending Avakum Milakovic, one of Šćepan's own emissaries, whom the Russians had convinced of Šćepan's fraud, to the Montenegrins. Having learned of the fraud, Milakovic had agreed on his own accord to return to Montenegro and reveal the truth. Though the Russians asked him, Milakovic could not reveal Šćepan's true identity himself since he did not know it. Disguised as a Greek merchant, Milakovic left Vienna on 13 August 1768 but he too proved unable to get through the Venetian blockade and he learned that Montenegro was at war with the Ottoman Empire. Like Merk before him, Milakovic returned to Vienna unsuccessful.[23]

Attempted Ottoman invasion edit

The false Tsar proved difficult to get rid of. The Venetians had unsuccessfully attempted to poison him as early as 1767.[16] The Ottomans were highly concerned by the developments in Montenegro, believing that Šćepan had been placed in Montenegro by the Russians.[15] In August 1768, they thus prepared to invade Montenegro to put an end to his rule.[16] The Ottomans assembled an army of 50,000 soldiers and invaded Montenegro from three different directions.[15] At the same time, the Montenegrin coast was blockaded by the Venetians, meaning that the country was effectively surrounded by enemies.[16]

Šćepan himself appears to have momentarily fled his responsibilities due to the prospect of the Ottoman invasion.[5] The Montenegrin clans, united due to Šćepan's rule, managed to rally together an army of perhaps as many as 10,000 soldiers to defend their homeland. Miraculously, the outnumbered and quickly assembled Montenegrin force won the initial battle against the Ottoman invaders.[24] Soon afterwards, there was heavy rain, which soaked the gunpowder brought by the Ottomans, weakening the invading forces. Furthermore, Russia had just declared war on the Ottoman Empire, which forced the Ottomans to sign a ceasefire with the Montenegrins.[5]

Dolgorukov's mission to Montenegro edit

 
1780s portrait of Yuri Vladimirovich Dolgorukov

As part of the Russian plan of defeating the Ottomans, Catherine the Great hoped to inspire the Orthodox peoples of the Balkans, particularly the Moreot Greeks and the Montenegrins, to rise up against their Ottoman overlords alongside the Russian invasion forces.[25] On 5 August 1769, Prince Yuri Vladimirovich Dolgorukov was sent from Italy by Alexis Orlov, one of Catherine's most prominent generals, to Montenegro in order to expose Šćepan and prepare the Montenegrins for the arrival of additional Russian forces. Accompanying Dolgorukov were five officers, two noncomissioned officers, one servant and twenty-six Balkan Slavs recruited in Italy.[25] After a difficult journey constantly under the watch of Venetian informants, Dolgorukov and his party arrived in Montenegro a few days later, where they were provided with carrying aid and supplies by the locals. On 13 August, Dolgorukov confronted Šćepan at Donji Brčeli Monastery near Cetinje. Dolgorukov had also issued a written proclamation calling on all Montenegrins to send representatives to Cetinje for a great meeting on 17 August.[25]

Šćepan arrived at the Monastery around nine in the morning on 13 August, escorted by a guard of cavalrymen. Russian sources describe him as young, about thirty years old, with a pale and smooth face, bright black and combed back curly hair, falling loosely behind his ears, and as being of medium height. His voice is described as "thin", like a woman's voice, and he spoke rapidly.[2] The sources immediately thought he looked nothing like a Russian Tsar. They described him as dressed in the "Greek style" – he wore a white silk tunic, a red cap on his head which he never took off and carried a Turkish pipe. From his right side to his left shoulder, Šćepan wore a chain from which a pouch containing an icon hung.[2]

Šćepan and Dolgorukov remained together for eight hours, until five in the afternoon, recorded by an anonymous member of Dolgorukov's entourage as "in obscure and giddy conversation which, apart from its inaneness, allowed one to conclude nothing".[2] The two met again the next day, and though Šćepan was then apparently more humble and respectful than before, the Russian authors were again unsure if anything was achieved by the meeting. The Russian presence in Montenegro inflamed local patriotism and small skirmishes soon broke out along the Ottoman border, with Montenegrins engaging in raids. Fearing a premature uprising, Dolgorukov had to issue a manifesto condemning such activities for the moment.[2] By his mere arrival in the country, Dolgorukov had provoked a volatile situation over which he had limited control.[26]

On 15 August he travelled to Cetinje, intending to remove the only real central authority in Montenegro, Šćepan, from power. The meeting called by Dolgorukov convened outside of the city on 17 August after a church service. Two key figures were notably absent: Prince-Bishop Sava, who faked being ill in order to avoid a potentially harmful situation, and Šćepan, who pondered how to proceed. Šćepan had tried to discredit the Russians by claiming they were impostors sent by the Venetians to divide the Montenegrin people, but these attempts had failed. At Cetinje, the Russians implored the Montenegrins to abandon the impostor Šćepan, who they exposed as a fraud, and instead declare loyalty to the real ruler of Russia, Catherine the Great. A great cry of affirmation rose from the people present and the crowd swore an oath of allegiance to Russia.[26]

Though he believed he had succeeded, Dolgorukov was awakened at five in the morning on the next day by the sound of gunshots.[26] Šcepan and his mounted guards arrived at the monastery where Dolgorukov was staying near the capital. Although the Montenegrins had seen him exposed as an impostor and had formally sworn loyalty to Catherine the Great, they greeted him with joy and followed him. Šcepan would have lost the trust of the Montenegrin people if he had avoided the meeting. He decided to play the hero and returned to assert his rule.[3] Šćepan spent several hours outside the monastery, telling the crowds his own version of his story, and though Dolgorukov repeatedly ordered the Montenegrin nobles to capture him, no one listened. It was not until Dolgorukov ordered his own men to capture Šćepan, or kill him if he resisted, that the Montenegrins calmed down. Despite the orders, Šćepan arrived at the monastery's gate not in chains, but on horseback as the ruler of Montenegro.[3]

Imprisonment and reinstatement edit

 
Portrait of Sava Petrović, Prince-Bishop of Montenegro 1735–1782

Šćepan was immediately disarmed and soon interrogated. Dolgorukov demanded that the supposed Tsar reveal his true identity, but Šćepan merely replied that he was "a wanderer and the smallest of the small on Earth".[3] Dissatisfied, Dolgorukov asked what had compelled Šćepan to pretend to be Peter III of Russia. To this, Šcepan replied that he personally had never actually claimed to be Peter. Though this was technically true, it was far from an honest answer.[3] Dolgorukov threatened that if Šćepan did not reveal his actual origin and name, he would be tortured, which impelled Šćepan to say that he came from Ioannina in Greece. Since he could not speak Greek, it was obvious that this was a lie.[3] Following further threats of torture, Šćepan said that he was Dalmatian and that his family name was Rajčević. Though there was no proof that this was true, the Russians were satisfied that Šćepan had admitted to being a fraud and had him placed in chains in a guarded cell in the monastery. His admittance of not being Peter III was then read to the crowd of Montenegrins outside the monastery.[3]

According to the Russian sources, the Montenegrins were by now finally convinced and would have killed Šcepan if Dolgorukov's entourage had not intervened. The imprisonment of Šćepan left Dolgorukov, since he was a representative of the respected Russian Empire, as the de facto leader of Montenegro, a role he found himself ill-prepared to perform.[27]

Without Šćepan's leadership, the Montenegrin clans soon began feuding with each other again and raiding each other's lands, despite the Ottomans making threatening military preparations at the country's borders. Dolgorukov's orders to maintain stability and wait for further Russian forces were not only ignored, but resented. Dolgorukov also realised that his life was in danger; the Ottomans had placed a prize on his head, which he believed the Montenegrins might find attractive, and there were several Venetian plots to poison him. At one point, the powder magazine in his headquarters was blown up, something he found out had been orchestrated by the Ottomans in an attempt to kill him. As winter was approaching and he had received no word of any further Russian forces yet, Dolgorukov eventually decided to simply leave Montenegro and return to Italy.[27]

After he secured a ship, Dolgorukov decided that he had to move closer to the coast and thus told Prince-Bishop Sava that he intended to winter in Burčele Monastery. Dolgorukov wished to keep his plans secret from the Prince-Bishop since he knew he was in contact with the Venetians. Sava suggested, since he wanted to keep a close eye on the Russians in order to send reports to Venice, that Dolgorukov could instead winter in Sava's own monastery at Stanjevići. Since Stanjevići was also close to the coast, Dolgorukov agreed.[28]

It was agreed that the captured Šćepan be transferred in secret to Stanjevići to avoid causing any problems. On the night of 19 October, he was transferred there and once Dolgorukov and his entourage left Cetinje (and left the cells unguarded), a group of Montenegrins broke in there in an attempt to rescue Šćepan, but found his cell empty. The Russians had agreed to leave on 24 October but the problem of what to do with Šćepan still remained. Dolgorukov summoned Šćepan and informed him that the crime of impersonating Peter III was punishable by death.[28] Despite this, he decided to pardon Šćepan, made him a Russian officer, gave him a Russian officer's uniform and officially designated him as the ruler of Montenegro.[29]

Dolgorukov had perhaps decided to leave Šćepan in command since he did not wish Montenegro to fall into the hands of the incompetent Sava, who was allied to Venice.[29] Dolgorukov had realised that Šćepan had shown competence in governing the country. In return, Šćepan guided the Russians through the rocky and cliffed shore down to the sea in the night. Dolgorukov later recalled in his memoirs that: "I would truly have fallen into the abyss had not Šćepan Mali, who was accustomed to such places, virtually carried me in his arms".[29] At six in the morning the next day, Dolgorukov and his entourage left Montenegro, never to return.[29]

Later rule and death edit

 
The Donji Brčeli Monastery, where Šćepan held his court and where he was murdered in 1773

Though the imprisonment had somewhat damaged his prestige, Šćepan continued to be widely recognised as an important figure by the Montenegrins.[1] With Dolgorukov gone and the Montenegrins feeling abandoned by the Russians, his return to rule was welcomed by the people, who had grown accustomed to obeying him, and he would reign for another five years, until his death. That he was not Peter III of Russia now seemed a good thing; Catherine the Great no longer had a reason to be angry at the Montenegrins and with Dolgorukov designating him as the ruler of the country, Šćepan now had actual proof that his rule was supported by Russia.[30]

Šćepan made certain preparations for war, but never undertook a full military campaign against the Ottomans.[30] Alexis Orlov, though disappointed in the Montenegrins for their poor reception of Dolgorukov, promised to send aid, but never did, possibly the main reason for the lack of a campaign.[31] In the middle of 1771, Šćepan almost died while personally supervising the construction of a military highway through the mountains. He was demonstrating to one of his soldiers how to lay a land mine, when the charge exploded, leaving him a cripple and blind in one eye. From this incident until the end of his life, Šćepan was carried around in a luxurious sedan chair, donated to him by the Republic of Ragusa. Venetian emissaries observed that he was treated "as if he were a Roman dictator".[31]

Also in 1771, Šćepan ordered the first census in Montenegrin history. The official reason for the census was to equally distribute the stores of powder and lead left by Dolgorukov. At Vir, close to Lake Skadar, Šcepan ordered the construction of a building which was meant to serve as the headquarters of the Russian army, once they arrived to aid them against the Ottomans. The Montenegrins were tiring of Šćepan's promises of Russian aid. A Venetian report from October 1771 read that: "He has been promising them for some time that a Russian fleet would come with soldiers and supplies to support the campaign which he pretends to be preparing against Turkish Albania, but their expectations have thus far been disappointed, and this is perhaps the cause of his not being any longer in the same high repute with them".[32]

Šćepan appeared publicly very little for a year, but his authority was again strengthened in the autumn of 1772. After a series of failed negotiations, war broke out once more between the Ottomans and Russia. Russia again became interested in Montenegro as the sole independent bastion of Orthodoxy in the Balkans. In October, a Montenegrin priest serving the Russians as a sergeant major in the Russian army, Savić Barjamović, arrived in Montenegro and confirmed Russia's belief in Šćepan's leadership and called on the country's people to obey and follow their ruler.[33] Šćepan called a meeting of Montenegrin nobles and people and began taking measures to strengthen his government. Throughout his brief reign, Šćepan called such assemblies twenty-five times. Through these meetings, Šćepan succeeded in making the clans of Montenegro realise their common needs. A total of ninety death sentences to end vendettas are recorded to have been passed by him, alongside the same number of death sentences to punish pillaging.[33] The death penalty had not existed in Montenegro before Šćepan introduced it.[34] To oversee justice, he established a "Court of Twelve" composed of respected clan leaders tasked with touring Montenegro's districts and dealing justice. He even co-operated with his rival, Prince-Bishop Sava, in punishing monks who conspired to reorganise the local church. Šćepan successfully made peace with Venice and succeeded in keeping that peace through brutally punishing those Montenegrins who plundered Venetian lands.[33]

Whether Šćepan eventually intended to wage war on the Ottomans is unknown. In 1773, one of the Ottoman governors in Albania, Kara Mahmud Pasha, decided to rid himself of the threat posed by Montenegro.[33] Kara Mahmud bribed a Greek refugee from the Morea, who had recently entered Šćepan's service as a servant, to kill him. On 22 September 1773, the monks of the monastery where Šćepan held his court,[35] the Donji Brčeli Monastery,[36] discovered him in his bedroom with his throat cut from ear to ear.[35]

Legacy edit

 
Etching of Stefano Zannowich (here under the pseudonym "Castriotto of Albania"), who wrote the first biography on Šćepan Mali (published in 1784) and at one point impersonated the deceased "tsar"

Šćepan Mali proved to be one of the most competent leaders of Montenegro up until his time.[24] Though his reign had few long-term effects,[37] his administrative work, including the creation of the first true executive organs of a central administration (a contingent of 80 soldiers), was an important factor in accelerating the development of Montenegro into a state.[15] He is also noteworthy for bringing peace and order to the country and for the creation of a court of tribal leaders, effectively solving inter-tribal disputes without the need for fighting and bloodshed.[15]

Šcepan's story is sometimes invoked in works of literature and art, as well as in journal and newspaper articles.[18] The first work on Šćepan (French title: Stiepan-Mali, le pseudo Pierre III, empereur de Russie lit.'Šćepan Mali, the pseudo-Peter III, Emperor of Russia'), published in 1784, was written by Montenegrin Serb writer and adventurer Stefano Zannowich. In 2020, researcher Stefan Trajković Filipović described Zannowich's book as a mysterious and bizarre publication.[38] The location of publication is unclear (Zannowich claimed it was published in India, but Paris or London seems more likely), the book was allegedly already on its fifth edition and Zannowich attempted to remain anonymous by not signing himself as the author of the work.[38] In the book, Zannowich described Šćepan as energetic and bold, but also malicious, willing to do anything to gain power.[38] Zannowich further claims that Šćepan only travelled to Montenegro because he believed the people there were naive enough to believe him.[38] After becoming the leader of the country, he supposedly ruled as a tyrant, harshly punishing even the smallest offenses. According to Zannowich, Šćepan defeated the Ottomans and was planning expeditions of conquest throughout the Balkans.[38] Zannowich concluded that Šćepan was without a doubt an impostor, prepared to manipulate people and use ordinary people's belief in miracles to achieve what he wanted.[38] Because of the wealth of details, though many are probably fictional, provided by Zannowich, it is possible that he met Šćepan, or was provided information by someone who had.[39] Zannowich was so inspired by Šćepan that he at one point in 1776 wrote to Frederick the Great of Prussia, claiming to be Šćepan and arguing that he was mistakenly believed to be dead.[39]

A novel based on Šćepan's story by German author Carl Herloßsohn was published in 1828.[38] Titled the Der Montenegrinerhäuptling ("The Montenegrin Chief"), it imagined Šćepan as a Venetian officer by the name Stefano Piccolo (which means "Stephen the Little") who travelled to Montenegro to fulfill his dream of becoming an emperor. After Stefano gained the trust of the Montenegrins, he proclaimed that he was Peter III of Russia and seized power. Herloßsohn's novel included political intrigue in the form of people who knew Stefano was not the real Peter III and sought to expose him and a twist in the form of Stefano realising that he would never be a real emperor of Russia and thus choosing to surrender the country to the Ottomans in exchange for power. Once this scheme is revealed, Stefano is captured and beheaded.[39]

The Serbian poet, historian and adventurer Sima Milutinović Sarajlija dedicated a few pages of his 1835 history of Montenegro, Istorija Crne Gore od iskona do novijeg vremena, to Šćepan, writing that though the people of Montenegro by this time still remembered Šćepan's brief reign as a period of peace and prosperity, Šćepan was a childish and frivolous figure who came to power through lies, writing that he lacked strength, capability and laudable personal qualities. Sarajlija's contemporary, Serbian linguist and historian Vuk Karadžić, also dedicated a few pages of his own 1837 history of Montenegro, Montenegro und die Montenegriner: ein Beitrag zur Kenntniss der europäischen Türkei und des serbischen Volkes, to Šćepan. Karadžić wrote that once the rumour that Šćepan was Peter III started spreading, it was impossible to stop as more and more Montenegrins began believing it. Though his punishments for stealing and plunder were harsh, Karadžić wrote that the people obeyed Šćepan in everything and that they had chosen to forget that the war with the Ottoman Empire, which nearly destroyed Montenegro, had been started because of him.[40]

 
Facsimile of the 1851 first edition of the play Lažni car Šćepan Mali by Petar II Petrović-Njegoš, based on Šćepan's life

Petar II Petrović-Njegoš, Prince-Bishop of Montenegro from 1830 to 1851, created a play based on Šćepan's story, titled Lažni car Šćepan Mali ("Fake Tsar Šćepan Mali") and published in 1851. The play was overshadowed by Petrović-Njegoš's other works and not staged until 1969 in the Montenegrin National Theatre. Petrović-Njegoš had a negative opinion on Šćepan, viewing him as a liar and coward and giving him a surprisingly marginal role for a play based on his life. The play is perhaps better approached as a political drama focusing on the Montenegrins themselves and their desire for political unity, a theme still relevant in Petrović-Njegoš's day, rather than a biographical account of Šćepan,[41] who is presented as an expression of this desire for unity. As Petrović-Njegoš was a Prince-Bishop of Montenegro, part of a line that had been briefly broken by Šćepan, he might have had personal reasons to discredit the false Tsar.[42]

The Serbian and Montenegrin writer Stjepan Mitrov Ljubiša wrote a biography of Šćepan, published under the title Šćepan Mali kako narod o njemu povijeda ("Šćepan Mali according to folktales") in 1868. Ljubiša's version of Šćepan's story is notably more balanced than previous interpretations and was based both on written material (such as earlier works and preserved contemporary documents) and on stories he had heard from older generations of Montenegrins. The biography presents Šćepan as peaceful, fair, humble, smart and kind-hearted, but also as a vagabond who takes advantage of the gullible people of Montenegro. Ljubiša believed that Montenegro would have been a better place if Šćepan had been able to invest more time and effort and wrote that though the country suffered due to conflicts with the Ottomans and Venice during his reign, "suffering cannot be avoided on the path to progress".[42]

In addition to his life and his rule, modern studies on Šćepan Mali have overwhelmingly focused on the mystery of his origin and intentions.[6] Two films have been made about Šćepan's life, the first of which was Lažni car [sh] ("The Fake Tsar", 1955), directed by Ratko Đurović [sh], which was also the first Montenegrin feature film. The Šćepan presented in the film is kind-hearted and capable and at first unwilling to lend credence to the rumours of him being Peter III.[43] Through themes of integrity, sovereignty and order, the film also serves as a political allegory for the tensions between 1950s Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union. The second film, Čovjek koga treba ubiti ("The Man to Destroy", 1979) also portrays Šćepan as a positive character. Both films incorporate fantasy elements, including demons, and put a lot of focus on Šćepan's internal struggles, painting him as a misunderstood idealist and making him, and not the Montenegrin people he fooled, into a victim.[44]

Šćepan survives in the cultural memory of Montenegro and the surrounding countries as the formative figure of a bizarre and extraordinary period of history and as an interruption, or perhaps even disturbance, in the otherwise conventional flow of Montenegrin history. He remains paradoxically remembered as both an ideal ruler and a fraud.[37] His memory acts as a mystery, threads the line between fact and fiction and continues to inspire literary creations.[12] A second play based on Šćepan's reign was published in 2002, Mirko Kovać's Lažni car Šćepan Mali koji je vladao Crnom Gorom od 1766–1773 ("The Fake Tsar Šćepan Mali who Ruled over Montenegro from 1766 to 1773"). Kovać's play presents Šćepan as being found by members of the Montenegrin elite who wish to use him as a puppet ruler in order to grow rich, but Šćepan proves surprisingly competent, introducing order to the country. The narrator of the story, which becomes an acting character within the plot as it proceeds, brings in a witness to confirm that Šćepan is Peter III, though it is clear to everyone that he is not, stating that "you need to confirm ... that Tsar Šćepan Mali is something like an incarnation of the dead Russian Tsar Peter III. Montenegrins believe that he resurrected here, if he died at all".[11] In the play, Šćepan's last words are "I died, so I could stay" and after making sure the tsar is dead, the narrator addresses the audience, saying that "nothing changes as the centuries go by and the empires come and go. Fake emperors, however, last forever". While leaving the stage, the narrator sees that Šćepan's body has disappeared and wonders whether he has been resurrected again.[12]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Alternatively Stephen the Small[5] or Stephen the Humble.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Filipović 2020, p. 132.
  2. ^ a b c d e Petrovich 1955, p. 183.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Petrovich 1955, p. 185.
  4. ^ a b Filipović 2020, p. 129.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Jelavich 1999, p. 86.
  6. ^ a b c d e Filipović 2020, p. 131.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Petrovich 1955, p. 171.
  8. ^ a b Petrovich 1955, p. 172.
  9. ^ a b c Petrovich 1955, p. 169.
  10. ^ a b c d Petrovich 1955, p. 170.
  11. ^ a b Filipović 2020, p. 144.
  12. ^ a b c Filipović 2020, p. 145.
  13. ^ a b c d Malešević & Uzelac 2007, p. 699.
  14. ^ a b Petrovich 1955, p. 173.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Rastoder 2003, p. 117.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Petrovich 1955, p. 174.
  17. ^ Filipović 2020, p. 133.
  18. ^ a b Filipović 2020, p. 130.
  19. ^ Historical symbols, Official Montenegrin web presentation 28 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ a b c d e Petrovich 1955, p. 175.
  21. ^ a b c d Petrovich 1955, p. 176.
  22. ^ Petrovich 1955, p. 177.
  23. ^ Petrovich 1955, p. 178.
  24. ^ a b Hatzopoulos 2016, p. 131.
  25. ^ a b c Petrovich 1955, pp. 179–183.
  26. ^ a b c Petrovich 1955, p. 184.
  27. ^ a b Petrovich 1955, pp. 186–188.
  28. ^ a b Petrovich 1955, p. 189.
  29. ^ a b c d Petrovich 1955, p. 190.
  30. ^ a b Petrovich 1955, p. 191.
  31. ^ a b Petrovich 1955, p. 192.
  32. ^ Petrovich 1955, pp. 192–193.
  33. ^ a b c d Petrovich 1955, p. 193.
  34. ^ Gremaux 1984, p. 673.
  35. ^ a b Petrovich 1955, p. 194.
  36. ^ Stevenson 1914, p. 159.
  37. ^ a b Filipović 2020, p. 143.
  38. ^ a b c d e f g Filipović 2020, p. 134.
  39. ^ a b c Filipović 2020, p. 135.
  40. ^ Filipović 2020, p. 136.
  41. ^ Filipović 2020, p. 137.
  42. ^ a b Filipović 2020, p. 138.
  43. ^ Filipović 2020, p. 139.
  44. ^ Filipović 2020, p. 141.

Bibliography edit

  • Gremaux, Rene J. M. (1984). "Politics in 19th-Century Montenegro". Current Anthropology. 25 (5): 673–674. doi:10.1086/203204. S2CID 144467464. (subscription required)
  • Hatzopoulos, Marios (2016). "Prophetic Structures of the Ottoman-ruled Orthodox Community in Comparative Perspective: Some Preliminary Observations". In Kitromilides, Paschalis M.; Matthaiou, Sophia (eds.). Greek-Serbian Relations in the Age of Nation-Building. National Hellenic Research Foundation. ISBN 978-9609538503.
  • Jelavich, Barbara (1999) [1983]. History of the Balkans: Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries: Volume I. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-25249-0.
  • Malešević, Siniša; Uzelac, Gordana (2007). "A Nation-state without the nation? The trajectories of nation-formation in Montenegro" (PDF). Nations and Nationalism. 13 (4): 695–716. doi:10.1111/j.1469-8129.2007.00318.x.
  • Petrovich, Michael Boro (1955). "Catherine II and a False Peter III in Montenegro". The American Slavic and East European Review. 14 (2): 169–194. doi:10.2307/3000742. JSTOR 3000742.
  • Rastoder, Šerbo (2003). "A short review of the history of Montenegro". In Bieber, Florian (ed.). Montenegro in Transition: Problems of Identity and Statehood. Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft. ISBN 3-8329-0072-1.
  • Filipović, Stefan Trajković (2020). ""Empires of all kinds collapse, but the fake tsars, they last forever." Modern and Contemporary Memories of Tsar Šćepan Mali (1767-1773)". In Jordan, Christina; Polland, Imke (eds.). Realms of Royalty: New Directions in Researching Contemporary European Monarchies. Transcript Verlag. ISBN 978-3837645835.
  • Stevenson, Francis Seymour (1914) [1912]. A History of Montenegro. Jarrold & Sons. OCLC 1118526184.

Further reading edit

  • Herloßsohn, Carl (1853). Der Montenegrinerhäuptling [The Montenegrin Chief] (in German). Verlag J. L. Kober.
  • Stanojević, Gligor (1957). Šćepan Mali. Beograd: Srpska Akademija Nauka i Umetnosti. OCLC 871585483.
  • Zannowich, Stefano (1784). Stiepan-Mali c'est-a-dire Etienne-Petit ou Stefano-Piccolo le pseudo Pierre III, empereur de Russie, qui parut dans le grand-duché de Montenegro, situe entre la mer Egee, l'Albanie Turque & le golfe Adriatique, en 1767, 1768 & 69 [Šćepan Mali, that is to say Stephen the Small or Stefano Piccolo, the pseudo-Peter III, Emperor of Russia, who appeared in the Grand Duchy of Montenegro, situated by the Aegean Sea, Turkish Albania and the Adriatic Gulf, in 1767, 1768 and 1769] (in French).

Šćepan, mali, serbian, cyrillic, Шћепан, Мали, pronounced, ɕɛ, paːn, mâːli, 1739, september, 1773, translated, stephen, little, first, only, tsar, montenegro, ruling, country, absolute, monarch, from, 1768, until, death, unclear, origins, Šćepan, became, ruler. Scepan Mali Serbian Cyrillic Shћepan Mali pronounced ɕt ɕɛ paːn maːli c 1739 22 September 1773 translated as Stephen the Little 4 a was the first and only tsar of Montenegro ruling the country as an absolute monarch from 1768 until his death Of unclear origins Scepan became the ruler of Montenegro through a rumour that he was in fact the deposed Russian emperor Peter III who had died several years before Scepan surfaced in the Balkans Scepan MaliScepan Mali as depicted in Stefano Zannowich s 1784 biography of his lifeTsar of MontenegroReignFebruary 1768 1 22 September 1773PredecessorSava and Vasilije Petrovic Prince Bishops SuccessorSava Petrovic Prince Bishop Bornc 1739 2 Dalmatia 3 Died22 September 1773 aged c 34 Donji Brceli MonasteryReligionSerbian Orthodox Scepan arrived in Montenegro in the autumn of 1766 Whether Scepan was his real name is unknown as is the reason for the epithet Mali Who started the rumour that Scepan was Peter and why is also unclear Scepan himself never formally proclaimed himself to be Peter but never denied it either Throughout 1767 he offered vague hints that he was the dead emperor and as time went on most of Montenegro became convinced of his supposed identity Although Montenegro s legitimate ruler Prince Bishop Sava who had met the real Peter and had received word from the Russian ambassador in Constantinople that Peter was dead attempted to expose Scepan most Montenegrins continued to believe the rumours In 1767 Scepan was proclaimed as the country s ruler and in February 1768 Sava was sidelined and confined to his monastery Scepan subsequently assumed the powers of an absolute monarch Scepan s reign proved to be a surprisingly successful one He managed to unite Montenegro s infighting clans for the first time in the country s history Social administrative and religious reforms laid the groundwork for Montenegro s transition into a true state The sudden appearance of a Russian emperor in the Balkans was a cause for concern in Europe Many wondered who Scepan was why he was impersonating Peter and what his intentions were The Ottomans feared the development but failed in an attempted invasion of Montenegro in 1768 Peter s widow and successor Catherine the Great was far from enthusiastic and engaged in numerous failed attempts to end Scepan s rule A Russian delegation finally arrived in Montenegro in 1769 exposed Scepan as a fraud and briefly imprisoned him but released him and returned him to power upon realising that he was the most competent of Montenegro s potential rulers Though disappointed by the revelation that Scepan was not Peter the Montenegrins nevertheless welcomed his continued rule as he was now supported by Russia and there were few other good choices available In 1771 Scepan was injured in an accident involving a land mine From that point until the end of his life he was carried around in a sedan chair During the last few years of his reign Scepan legislated numerous reforms creating a court of Montenegrin clan leaders to dispense justice introducing the death penalty and strengthening the central government He ruled until he was murdered by one of his servants bribed by the Ottomans in September 1773 Scepan s legacy survives in the cultural memory of modern Montenegro and the surrounding countries He is paradoxically remembered as both an ideal ruler and a fraud Several stories and biographies have been written about him alongside two theatre plays and two feature films The film Lazni car sh The Fake Tsar released in 1955 and based on Scepan s life was the first ever Montenegrin feature film Contents 1 Background 2 Rise to power 3 Rule in Montenegro 3 1 Russian reaction 3 2 Attempted Ottoman invasion 3 3 Dolgorukov s mission to Montenegro 3 4 Imprisonment and reinstatement 3 5 Later rule and death 4 Legacy 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 Bibliography 7 Further readingBackground edit nbsp 1761 portrait of Peter III of Russia Peter III of Russia briefly ruled the Russian Empire between 5 January and 9 July 1762 and died shortly after abdicating probably killed in a plot orchestrated by his wife and successor Catherine the Great 6 For years thereafter rumours circulated in Russia and elsewhere that the Tsar was not dead and that he had escaped into exile These rumours led to numerous people claiming to be Peter such as the ataman Yemelyan Pugachev who led an ill fated rebellion in the mid 1770s seeking to depose Catherine and seize power for himself 6 At this time the Prince Bishopric of Montenegro though independent was more or less subjected to the Ottoman Empire Since the Ottomans had a relatively weak central government the Montenegrins occasionally fought against them 6 As a small mountain realm Montenegro remained one of the few more or less independent Orthodox Christian areas in the Balkans and the Ottomans remained a constant threat to their continued existence 7 On the Adriatic coast Montenegro was also bordered by the Republic of Venice which was slowly losing its grasp over the region Montenegro s predicament was compounded by frequent infighting and the lack of authority enjoyed by the ruling Prince Bishop Sava 6 The Montenegrins had little respect for Sava who was an idle ruler Though he had once co ruled with his more respected and competent cousin Vasilije the latter died on 10 March 1766 leaving the country more or less leaderless 8 There was no real state in Montenegro at the time with the country rather being more akin to a conglomerate of autonomous and semi nomadic clans precariously united because of external danger 7 Scepan Mali s subsequent success partly built on the widespread Montenegrin belief and hope for a saviour figure 1 Scepan s true identity is unknown though it is certain that he was not Russian 9 Though he used the name Scepan himself there is little reason to believe that this was his real name It is possible that the choice of this name came from its etymology Stephanos means crown in Greek or that it derived from the practice of the medieval Serbian rulers such as Emperor Stefan Dusan to typically use the name Stefan in conjunction with their own given names The epithet Mali small little or humble which Scepan used himself is also of unclear origin 10 One recent theory first advocated independently by Rastislav Petrovic 2001 and Dusan J Martinovic 2002 is that Scepan was Jovan Stefanovic Baljevic otherwise remembered for being the first Montenegrin to defend a doctoral dissertation Baljevic spent several years working in Hungary earning money by among other things forging passports and later served as an officer in the Imperial Russian Army Though traditionally believed to have died in 1769 Petrovic and Martinovic have presented evidence that Baljevic disappeared several years before 1769 and travelled to Montenegro 11 Even if this identification was proved to be correct it would not completely solve the mystery since Baljevic s subsequent motivations would still remain unknown 12 Rise to power edit nbsp Approximate political map of the Balkans c 1750 Montenegro the small country marked with green at the centre of the map was surrounded by the Ottoman Empire to the east and the Republic of Venice to the west The earliest record of Scepan is his arrival in the village of Maine in the autumn of 1766 1 13 Maine which is located in modern day Montenegro was controlled by the Venetians at the time At Maine Scepan served as a physician and appears to have been popular among the locals A group of prominent citizens among them monks soon expressed support for Scepan and started a rumour that he was Peter III who they claimed had gone into exile 1 How this rumour originated who exactly was behind it and why it was created in the first place is unclear 14 By August 1767 the rumour had become widespread among the Montenegrins though Scepan himself did not formally proclaim himself to be Peter The rumour was instead reinforced by the air of mystery surrounding Scepan and several ambiguous statements he made to those around him 9 While in church during prayers for the Russian imperial family it was said that Scepan shed tears and turned to face the wall in sorrow at the mention of Peter s son Paul At one point Scepan wept upon seeing a portrait of Peter in Maine s Orthodox monastery 9 Many of his supporters would later say they saw a distinct likeness between the portrait and Scepan Prominent Montenegrins who had visited Russia also reinforced the idea by swearing that Scepan was none other than Peter 10 Desperation due to the lack of leadership and a fanatical admiration for Russia among many Montenegrins led to Scepan becoming an increasingly prominent figure 8 As these rumours circulated Scepan issued a proclamation to the people of Montenegro urging them to end their internecine feuds to adhere to their Orthodox Christian ideals to prepare for war against external enemies and to expect bountiful rewards He refused to confirm or deny if he was Peter and signed documents with Scepan Mali the smallest on Earth and good unto the good 10 In response to the proclamation a gathering of Montenegrin chiefs and lords met at Cetinje Montenegro s capital on 3 October 1767 and agreed to stop all the feuds between the clans of Montenegro but only until 23 April the next year Saint George s Day Scepan considered this armistice unacceptable and tore up the message sent by the gathering of nobles stamped on it and demanded that they instead swear to uphold peace between each other in perpetuity Scepan s display of royal displeasure convinced the people of Montenegro even more that he was Peter 10 The excitement amongst the Montenegrins was so palpable that Prince Bishop Sava was initially convinced of Scepan s claims 1 despite having once met the real Peter 5 On 17 October the chiefs and lords of Montenegro gathered again on the plains outside Cetinje A monk read out Scepan s commands to a crowd of perhaps 400 nobles and soldiers whereupon they agreed to uphold the perpetual peace 7 The majority of Montenegrins now believed that Scepan was Peter and their clan chieftains went to Maine although it was still in Venetian territory and paid homage to him On 2 November the Montenegrins issued a charter officially recognising Scepan as Peter 7 In early February 1768 7 Prince Bishop Sava received word from the Russian ambassador to Constantinople that Scepan was an impostor 1 Armed with the letter Sava attempted to convince the people of the truth but the Montenegrins preferred the hopeful rumour to the more distressing reality Sava was stripped of his possessions and secular power and locked up within his own monastery 7 Scepan also pillaged the Prince Bishop s property in revenge 1 Scepan had effectively been proclaimed Montenegro s ruler in 1767 15 With the Prince Bishop pushed aside 5 Scepan established himself as Montenegro s absolute ruler in February 1768 1 becoming the country s first and only tsar 13 In April he moved his residence to Montenegrin territory and began living there permanently 1 The sole factor which had lent him authority and the love of the people in the first place was the widespread belief that he was Peter 13 Without ever openly confirming or denying the truth of this claim Scepan had managed to seize power in Montenegro unite the people and depose the country s legitimate ruler all in the space of a few months 14 The belief that Peter III of Russia had honoured Montenegro with his presence nourished hopes that Montenegro and Russia would soon join together and liberate the Orthodox Christians of the Balkans from Ottoman rule 16 Rule in Montenegro edit nbsp Banner of Montenegro adopted during the reign of Scepan Mali During Scepan s brief reign the usual infighting among the Montenegrin clans subsided The result was a level of peace and unity that had never existed before 13 Scepan respected the rights of local chiefs who maintained order and introduced some socio political reforms notably separating religious and secular power and thus undermining the priesthood s traditional claim to authority The news of the arrival of a Russian emperor in Montenegro gained the country more attention across Europe 15 17 In many places Scepan s ascent was the cause of great concern and political turmoil 5 18 In some of the lands bordering Montenegro vassals of the Venetians and the Ottomans stopped paying tribute to their overlords which caused the Ottomans to fear a full scale revolt 1 Montenegrin soldiers also began raiding Ottoman and Venetian territory 5 Scepan s true identity was a topic of discussion throughout Europe Although they all agreed that Scepan was an impostor numerous officials and diplomats in Vienna the capital of the Habsburg monarchy speculated as to Scepan s true identity and wondered what his intentions were and who benefited from his sudden rise to power 1 The first written descriptions of a flag of Montenegro comes from the reign of Scepan The banner used by the Montenegrins in his time was white within a red frame with a golden cross on the top of the flag pole 19 Russian reaction edit nbsp 1780s portrait of Catherine the Great Empress of Russia The Russian ambassador in Constantinople Alexis Obreskov had first learnt of Scepan while speaking with the Venetian bailo of Constantinople Rosini on 16 November 1767 but had then deemed the matter as being of little importance On 17 November the very next day Obreskov received word from Prince Bishop Sava who was unsure whether Scepan was Peter III or not and feared the wrath of Catherine the Great in either case Sava implored Obreskov to tell him whether Peter III is dead or alive for if he is alive then he is verily in Montenegro 16 Obreskov replied the same day writing I reply that the Emperor of All the Russias Peter III passed away on July 6 1762 and was solemnly interred with all honours in the cathedral church of the Monastery of St Alexander Nevskij by the side of his grandfather the Emperor Peter the Great of blessed and ever glorious memory 16 Annoyed with Sava s suggestion that Peter III could be alive in Montenegro Obreskov added that I am astonished that Your Eminence has not been informed of this till now and that you together with your unenlightened people could have so fallen into error as to believe this impostor and vagabond 20 The ambassador advised Sava to immediately expose Scepan as a fraud and drive him from Montenegro otherwise the country might lose Russia s favour As previously described Sava s attempts to follow this advice only ended with Scepan s rise to power 20 Obreskov reported on Scepan to the Russian court on 10 December 1767 He implored Empress Catherine to inform him if she received any reports of Scepan stepping on Ottoman soil and if this happened send him instructions to cover such a possibility 20 Scepan also decided to inform the Russian court of his existence himself He probably knew of Sava s correspondence with Obreskov and might have wished to end the Prince Bishop s attempts at discrediting him As someone believed to be Peter III it also increased his prestige to send emissaries to Russia 20 In December 1767 and January 1768 four emissaries were sent to the Russian Embassy in Vienna The emissaries were all detained at the Austrian border and the Russian Embassy did not hear from then until February 20 when desperate letters from two of them Grigorije Drekalovic and Archimandrite Avakum Milakovic reached Vienna 21 The Russian ambassador in Vienna Prince Dimitrij Golicyn wrote to Catherine on 20 February saying Not content with his wondrous revelation unto his own unenlightened and stupid people this Montenegrin messiah who is known by the name of Peter the Third has resolved to glorify himself throughout all the universe through his apostles concluding that the letters sent to him by the Montenegrin emissaries were worthy of complete contempt 21 Catherine herself was alarmed by the news She immediately sent an order to the commanders of frontier towns along Russia s entire western border reading it is possible that the pretender may send similar emissaries into Russia and that perhaps he himself may be tempted to enter our borders 21 Border officials in Smolensk Riga Reval Vyborg Kiev and Novorossiysk were ordered to detain all suspicious travellers particularly if these travellers were from Montenegro The councillor of the Russian Embassy in Vienna George Merk was instructed to immediately travel to Montenegro via Venice with a letter from Catherine to the nobles of Montenegro to prove that Peter III was dead 21 The letter also threatened that if Scepan was not exposed and deposed Russia would end its subsidies to Montenegro and perhaps invade and destroy the country Merk left Vienna on 2 April 1768 but the Venetians refused to let him travel through their territory fearing the ire of the Ottomans After lengthy negotiations Merk was allowed passage to Kotor but soon found that a Venetian blockade prevented him from crossing into Montenegro and prevented the nobles of Montenegro from meeting him He made an attempt to cross into Montenegro through the city of Ragusa but Ragusa did not let him past the town gate and Merk gave up returning to Vienna in early August His failure made Catherine furious and he was immediately dismissed from his position 22 Another attempt was made by sending Avakum Milakovic one of Scepan s own emissaries whom the Russians had convinced of Scepan s fraud to the Montenegrins Having learned of the fraud Milakovic had agreed on his own accord to return to Montenegro and reveal the truth Though the Russians asked him Milakovic could not reveal Scepan s true identity himself since he did not know it Disguised as a Greek merchant Milakovic left Vienna on 13 August 1768 but he too proved unable to get through the Venetian blockade and he learned that Montenegro was at war with the Ottoman Empire Like Merk before him Milakovic returned to Vienna unsuccessful 23 Attempted Ottoman invasion edit The false Tsar proved difficult to get rid of The Venetians had unsuccessfully attempted to poison him as early as 1767 16 The Ottomans were highly concerned by the developments in Montenegro believing that Scepan had been placed in Montenegro by the Russians 15 In August 1768 they thus prepared to invade Montenegro to put an end to his rule 16 The Ottomans assembled an army of 50 000 soldiers and invaded Montenegro from three different directions 15 At the same time the Montenegrin coast was blockaded by the Venetians meaning that the country was effectively surrounded by enemies 16 Scepan himself appears to have momentarily fled his responsibilities due to the prospect of the Ottoman invasion 5 The Montenegrin clans united due to Scepan s rule managed to rally together an army of perhaps as many as 10 000 soldiers to defend their homeland Miraculously the outnumbered and quickly assembled Montenegrin force won the initial battle against the Ottoman invaders 24 Soon afterwards there was heavy rain which soaked the gunpowder brought by the Ottomans weakening the invading forces Furthermore Russia had just declared war on the Ottoman Empire which forced the Ottomans to sign a ceasefire with the Montenegrins 5 Dolgorukov s mission to Montenegro edit nbsp 1780s portrait of Yuri Vladimirovich Dolgorukov As part of the Russian plan of defeating the Ottomans Catherine the Great hoped to inspire the Orthodox peoples of the Balkans particularly the Moreot Greeks and the Montenegrins to rise up against their Ottoman overlords alongside the Russian invasion forces 25 On 5 August 1769 Prince Yuri Vladimirovich Dolgorukov was sent from Italy by Alexis Orlov one of Catherine s most prominent generals to Montenegro in order to expose Scepan and prepare the Montenegrins for the arrival of additional Russian forces Accompanying Dolgorukov were five officers two noncomissioned officers one servant and twenty six Balkan Slavs recruited in Italy 25 After a difficult journey constantly under the watch of Venetian informants Dolgorukov and his party arrived in Montenegro a few days later where they were provided with carrying aid and supplies by the locals On 13 August Dolgorukov confronted Scepan at Donji Brceli Monastery near Cetinje Dolgorukov had also issued a written proclamation calling on all Montenegrins to send representatives to Cetinje for a great meeting on 17 August 25 Scepan arrived at the Monastery around nine in the morning on 13 August escorted by a guard of cavalrymen Russian sources describe him as young about thirty years old with a pale and smooth face bright black and combed back curly hair falling loosely behind his ears and as being of medium height His voice is described as thin like a woman s voice and he spoke rapidly 2 The sources immediately thought he looked nothing like a Russian Tsar They described him as dressed in the Greek style he wore a white silk tunic a red cap on his head which he never took off and carried a Turkish pipe From his right side to his left shoulder Scepan wore a chain from which a pouch containing an icon hung 2 Scepan and Dolgorukov remained together for eight hours until five in the afternoon recorded by an anonymous member of Dolgorukov s entourage as in obscure and giddy conversation which apart from its inaneness allowed one to conclude nothing 2 The two met again the next day and though Scepan was then apparently more humble and respectful than before the Russian authors were again unsure if anything was achieved by the meeting The Russian presence in Montenegro inflamed local patriotism and small skirmishes soon broke out along the Ottoman border with Montenegrins engaging in raids Fearing a premature uprising Dolgorukov had to issue a manifesto condemning such activities for the moment 2 By his mere arrival in the country Dolgorukov had provoked a volatile situation over which he had limited control 26 On 15 August he travelled to Cetinje intending to remove the only real central authority in Montenegro Scepan from power The meeting called by Dolgorukov convened outside of the city on 17 August after a church service Two key figures were notably absent Prince Bishop Sava who faked being ill in order to avoid a potentially harmful situation and Scepan who pondered how to proceed Scepan had tried to discredit the Russians by claiming they were impostors sent by the Venetians to divide the Montenegrin people but these attempts had failed At Cetinje the Russians implored the Montenegrins to abandon the impostor Scepan who they exposed as a fraud and instead declare loyalty to the real ruler of Russia Catherine the Great A great cry of affirmation rose from the people present and the crowd swore an oath of allegiance to Russia 26 Though he believed he had succeeded Dolgorukov was awakened at five in the morning on the next day by the sound of gunshots 26 Scepan and his mounted guards arrived at the monastery where Dolgorukov was staying near the capital Although the Montenegrins had seen him exposed as an impostor and had formally sworn loyalty to Catherine the Great they greeted him with joy and followed him Scepan would have lost the trust of the Montenegrin people if he had avoided the meeting He decided to play the hero and returned to assert his rule 3 Scepan spent several hours outside the monastery telling the crowds his own version of his story and though Dolgorukov repeatedly ordered the Montenegrin nobles to capture him no one listened It was not until Dolgorukov ordered his own men to capture Scepan or kill him if he resisted that the Montenegrins calmed down Despite the orders Scepan arrived at the monastery s gate not in chains but on horseback as the ruler of Montenegro 3 Imprisonment and reinstatement edit nbsp Portrait of Sava Petrovic Prince Bishop of Montenegro 1735 1782 Scepan was immediately disarmed and soon interrogated Dolgorukov demanded that the supposed Tsar reveal his true identity but Scepan merely replied that he was a wanderer and the smallest of the small on Earth 3 Dissatisfied Dolgorukov asked what had compelled Scepan to pretend to be Peter III of Russia To this Scepan replied that he personally had never actually claimed to be Peter Though this was technically true it was far from an honest answer 3 Dolgorukov threatened that if Scepan did not reveal his actual origin and name he would be tortured which impelled Scepan to say that he came from Ioannina in Greece Since he could not speak Greek it was obvious that this was a lie 3 Following further threats of torture Scepan said that he was Dalmatian and that his family name was Rajcevic Though there was no proof that this was true the Russians were satisfied that Scepan had admitted to being a fraud and had him placed in chains in a guarded cell in the monastery His admittance of not being Peter III was then read to the crowd of Montenegrins outside the monastery 3 According to the Russian sources the Montenegrins were by now finally convinced and would have killed Scepan if Dolgorukov s entourage had not intervened The imprisonment of Scepan left Dolgorukov since he was a representative of the respected Russian Empire as the de facto leader of Montenegro a role he found himself ill prepared to perform 27 Without Scepan s leadership the Montenegrin clans soon began feuding with each other again and raiding each other s lands despite the Ottomans making threatening military preparations at the country s borders Dolgorukov s orders to maintain stability and wait for further Russian forces were not only ignored but resented Dolgorukov also realised that his life was in danger the Ottomans had placed a prize on his head which he believed the Montenegrins might find attractive and there were several Venetian plots to poison him At one point the powder magazine in his headquarters was blown up something he found out had been orchestrated by the Ottomans in an attempt to kill him As winter was approaching and he had received no word of any further Russian forces yet Dolgorukov eventually decided to simply leave Montenegro and return to Italy 27 After he secured a ship Dolgorukov decided that he had to move closer to the coast and thus told Prince Bishop Sava that he intended to winter in Burcele Monastery Dolgorukov wished to keep his plans secret from the Prince Bishop since he knew he was in contact with the Venetians Sava suggested since he wanted to keep a close eye on the Russians in order to send reports to Venice that Dolgorukov could instead winter in Sava s own monastery at Stanjevici Since Stanjevici was also close to the coast Dolgorukov agreed 28 It was agreed that the captured Scepan be transferred in secret to Stanjevici to avoid causing any problems On the night of 19 October he was transferred there and once Dolgorukov and his entourage left Cetinje and left the cells unguarded a group of Montenegrins broke in there in an attempt to rescue Scepan but found his cell empty The Russians had agreed to leave on 24 October but the problem of what to do with Scepan still remained Dolgorukov summoned Scepan and informed him that the crime of impersonating Peter III was punishable by death 28 Despite this he decided to pardon Scepan made him a Russian officer gave him a Russian officer s uniform and officially designated him as the ruler of Montenegro 29 Dolgorukov had perhaps decided to leave Scepan in command since he did not wish Montenegro to fall into the hands of the incompetent Sava who was allied to Venice 29 Dolgorukov had realised that Scepan had shown competence in governing the country In return Scepan guided the Russians through the rocky and cliffed shore down to the sea in the night Dolgorukov later recalled in his memoirs that I would truly have fallen into the abyss had not Scepan Mali who was accustomed to such places virtually carried me in his arms 29 At six in the morning the next day Dolgorukov and his entourage left Montenegro never to return 29 Later rule and death edit nbsp The Donji Brceli Monastery where Scepan held his court and where he was murdered in 1773 Though the imprisonment had somewhat damaged his prestige Scepan continued to be widely recognised as an important figure by the Montenegrins 1 With Dolgorukov gone and the Montenegrins feeling abandoned by the Russians his return to rule was welcomed by the people who had grown accustomed to obeying him and he would reign for another five years until his death That he was not Peter III of Russia now seemed a good thing Catherine the Great no longer had a reason to be angry at the Montenegrins and with Dolgorukov designating him as the ruler of the country Scepan now had actual proof that his rule was supported by Russia 30 Scepan made certain preparations for war but never undertook a full military campaign against the Ottomans 30 Alexis Orlov though disappointed in the Montenegrins for their poor reception of Dolgorukov promised to send aid but never did possibly the main reason for the lack of a campaign 31 In the middle of 1771 Scepan almost died while personally supervising the construction of a military highway through the mountains He was demonstrating to one of his soldiers how to lay a land mine when the charge exploded leaving him a cripple and blind in one eye From this incident until the end of his life Scepan was carried around in a luxurious sedan chair donated to him by the Republic of Ragusa Venetian emissaries observed that he was treated as if he were a Roman dictator 31 Also in 1771 Scepan ordered the first census in Montenegrin history The official reason for the census was to equally distribute the stores of powder and lead left by Dolgorukov At Vir close to Lake Skadar Scepan ordered the construction of a building which was meant to serve as the headquarters of the Russian army once they arrived to aid them against the Ottomans The Montenegrins were tiring of Scepan s promises of Russian aid A Venetian report from October 1771 read that He has been promising them for some time that a Russian fleet would come with soldiers and supplies to support the campaign which he pretends to be preparing against Turkish Albania but their expectations have thus far been disappointed and this is perhaps the cause of his not being any longer in the same high repute with them 32 Scepan appeared publicly very little for a year but his authority was again strengthened in the autumn of 1772 After a series of failed negotiations war broke out once more between the Ottomans and Russia Russia again became interested in Montenegro as the sole independent bastion of Orthodoxy in the Balkans In October a Montenegrin priest serving the Russians as a sergeant major in the Russian army Savic Barjamovic arrived in Montenegro and confirmed Russia s belief in Scepan s leadership and called on the country s people to obey and follow their ruler 33 Scepan called a meeting of Montenegrin nobles and people and began taking measures to strengthen his government Throughout his brief reign Scepan called such assemblies twenty five times Through these meetings Scepan succeeded in making the clans of Montenegro realise their common needs A total of ninety death sentences to end vendettas are recorded to have been passed by him alongside the same number of death sentences to punish pillaging 33 The death penalty had not existed in Montenegro before Scepan introduced it 34 To oversee justice he established a Court of Twelve composed of respected clan leaders tasked with touring Montenegro s districts and dealing justice He even co operated with his rival Prince Bishop Sava in punishing monks who conspired to reorganise the local church Scepan successfully made peace with Venice and succeeded in keeping that peace through brutally punishing those Montenegrins who plundered Venetian lands 33 Whether Scepan eventually intended to wage war on the Ottomans is unknown In 1773 one of the Ottoman governors in Albania Kara Mahmud Pasha decided to rid himself of the threat posed by Montenegro 33 Kara Mahmud bribed a Greek refugee from the Morea who had recently entered Scepan s service as a servant to kill him On 22 September 1773 the monks of the monastery where Scepan held his court 35 the Donji Brceli Monastery 36 discovered him in his bedroom with his throat cut from ear to ear 35 Legacy edit nbsp Etching of Stefano Zannowich here under the pseudonym Castriotto of Albania who wrote the first biography on Scepan Mali published in 1784 and at one point impersonated the deceased tsar Scepan Mali proved to be one of the most competent leaders of Montenegro up until his time 24 Though his reign had few long term effects 37 his administrative work including the creation of the first true executive organs of a central administration a contingent of 80 soldiers was an important factor in accelerating the development of Montenegro into a state 15 He is also noteworthy for bringing peace and order to the country and for the creation of a court of tribal leaders effectively solving inter tribal disputes without the need for fighting and bloodshed 15 Scepan s story is sometimes invoked in works of literature and art as well as in journal and newspaper articles 18 The first work on Scepan French title Stiepan Mali le pseudo Pierre III empereur de Russie lit Scepan Mali the pseudo Peter III Emperor of Russia published in 1784 was written by Montenegrin Serb writer and adventurer Stefano Zannowich In 2020 researcher Stefan Trajkovic Filipovic described Zannowich s book as a mysterious and bizarre publication 38 The location of publication is unclear Zannowich claimed it was published in India but Paris or London seems more likely the book was allegedly already on its fifth edition and Zannowich attempted to remain anonymous by not signing himself as the author of the work 38 In the book Zannowich described Scepan as energetic and bold but also malicious willing to do anything to gain power 38 Zannowich further claims that Scepan only travelled to Montenegro because he believed the people there were naive enough to believe him 38 After becoming the leader of the country he supposedly ruled as a tyrant harshly punishing even the smallest offenses According to Zannowich Scepan defeated the Ottomans and was planning expeditions of conquest throughout the Balkans 38 Zannowich concluded that Scepan was without a doubt an impostor prepared to manipulate people and use ordinary people s belief in miracles to achieve what he wanted 38 Because of the wealth of details though many are probably fictional provided by Zannowich it is possible that he met Scepan or was provided information by someone who had 39 Zannowich was so inspired by Scepan that he at one point in 1776 wrote to Frederick the Great of Prussia claiming to be Scepan and arguing that he was mistakenly believed to be dead 39 A novel based on Scepan s story by German author Carl Herlosssohn was published in 1828 38 Titled the Der Montenegrinerhauptling The Montenegrin Chief it imagined Scepan as a Venetian officer by the name Stefano Piccolo which means Stephen the Little who travelled to Montenegro to fulfill his dream of becoming an emperor After Stefano gained the trust of the Montenegrins he proclaimed that he was Peter III of Russia and seized power Herlosssohn s novel included political intrigue in the form of people who knew Stefano was not the real Peter III and sought to expose him and a twist in the form of Stefano realising that he would never be a real emperor of Russia and thus choosing to surrender the country to the Ottomans in exchange for power Once this scheme is revealed Stefano is captured and beheaded 39 The Serbian poet historian and adventurer Sima Milutinovic Sarajlija dedicated a few pages of his 1835 history of Montenegro Istorija Crne Gore od iskona do novijeg vremena to Scepan writing that though the people of Montenegro by this time still remembered Scepan s brief reign as a period of peace and prosperity Scepan was a childish and frivolous figure who came to power through lies writing that he lacked strength capability and laudable personal qualities Sarajlija s contemporary Serbian linguist and historian Vuk Karadzic also dedicated a few pages of his own 1837 history of Montenegro Montenegro und die Montenegriner ein Beitrag zur Kenntniss der europaischen Turkei und des serbischen Volkes to Scepan Karadzic wrote that once the rumour that Scepan was Peter III started spreading it was impossible to stop as more and more Montenegrins began believing it Though his punishments for stealing and plunder were harsh Karadzic wrote that the people obeyed Scepan in everything and that they had chosen to forget that the war with the Ottoman Empire which nearly destroyed Montenegro had been started because of him 40 nbsp Facsimile of the 1851 first edition of the play Lazni car Scepan Mali by Petar II Petrovic Njegos based on Scepan s life Petar II Petrovic Njegos Prince Bishop of Montenegro from 1830 to 1851 created a play based on Scepan s story titled Lazni car Scepan Mali Fake Tsar Scepan Mali and published in 1851 The play was overshadowed by Petrovic Njegos s other works and not staged until 1969 in the Montenegrin National Theatre Petrovic Njegos had a negative opinion on Scepan viewing him as a liar and coward and giving him a surprisingly marginal role for a play based on his life The play is perhaps better approached as a political drama focusing on the Montenegrins themselves and their desire for political unity a theme still relevant in Petrovic Njegos s day rather than a biographical account of Scepan 41 who is presented as an expression of this desire for unity As Petrovic Njegos was a Prince Bishop of Montenegro part of a line that had been briefly broken by Scepan he might have had personal reasons to discredit the false Tsar 42 The Serbian and Montenegrin writer Stjepan Mitrov Ljubisa wrote a biography of Scepan published under the title Scepan Mali kako narod o njemu povijeda Scepan Mali according to folktales in 1868 Ljubisa s version of Scepan s story is notably more balanced than previous interpretations and was based both on written material such as earlier works and preserved contemporary documents and on stories he had heard from older generations of Montenegrins The biography presents Scepan as peaceful fair humble smart and kind hearted but also as a vagabond who takes advantage of the gullible people of Montenegro Ljubisa believed that Montenegro would have been a better place if Scepan had been able to invest more time and effort and wrote that though the country suffered due to conflicts with the Ottomans and Venice during his reign suffering cannot be avoided on the path to progress 42 In addition to his life and his rule modern studies on Scepan Mali have overwhelmingly focused on the mystery of his origin and intentions 6 Two films have been made about Scepan s life the first of which was Lazni car sh The Fake Tsar 1955 directed by Ratko Đurovic sh which was also the first Montenegrin feature film The Scepan presented in the film is kind hearted and capable and at first unwilling to lend credence to the rumours of him being Peter III 43 Through themes of integrity sovereignty and order the film also serves as a political allegory for the tensions between 1950s Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union The second film Covjek koga treba ubiti The Man to Destroy 1979 also portrays Scepan as a positive character Both films incorporate fantasy elements including demons and put a lot of focus on Scepan s internal struggles painting him as a misunderstood idealist and making him and not the Montenegrin people he fooled into a victim 44 Scepan survives in the cultural memory of Montenegro and the surrounding countries as the formative figure of a bizarre and extraordinary period of history and as an interruption or perhaps even disturbance in the otherwise conventional flow of Montenegrin history He remains paradoxically remembered as both an ideal ruler and a fraud 37 His memory acts as a mystery threads the line between fact and fiction and continues to inspire literary creations 12 A second play based on Scepan s reign was published in 2002 Mirko Kovac s Lazni car Scepan Mali koji je vladao Crnom Gorom od 1766 1773 The Fake Tsar Scepan Mali who Ruled over Montenegro from 1766 to 1773 Kovac s play presents Scepan as being found by members of the Montenegrin elite who wish to use him as a puppet ruler in order to grow rich but Scepan proves surprisingly competent introducing order to the country The narrator of the story which becomes an acting character within the plot as it proceeds brings in a witness to confirm that Scepan is Peter III though it is clear to everyone that he is not stating that you need to confirm that Tsar Scepan Mali is something like an incarnation of the dead Russian Tsar Peter III Montenegrins believe that he resurrected here if he died at all 11 In the play Scepan s last words are I died so I could stay and after making sure the tsar is dead the narrator addresses the audience saying that nothing changes as the centuries go by and the empires come and go Fake emperors however last forever While leaving the stage the narrator sees that Scepan s body has disappeared and wonders whether he has been resurrected again 12 Notes edit Alternatively Stephen the Small 5 or Stephen the Humble 4 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l Filipovic 2020 p 132 a b c d e Petrovich 1955 p 183 a b c d e f g Petrovich 1955 p 185 a b Filipovic 2020 p 129 a b c d e f g Jelavich 1999 p 86 a b c d e Filipovic 2020 p 131 a b c d e f Petrovich 1955 p 171 a b Petrovich 1955 p 172 a b c Petrovich 1955 p 169 a b c d Petrovich 1955 p 170 a b Filipovic 2020 p 144 a b c Filipovic 2020 p 145 a b c d Malesevic amp Uzelac 2007 p 699 a b Petrovich 1955 p 173 a b c d e f Rastoder 2003 p 117 a b c d e f Petrovich 1955 p 174 Filipovic 2020 p 133 a b Filipovic 2020 p 130 Historical symbols Official Montenegrin web presentation Archived 28 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e Petrovich 1955 p 175 a b c d Petrovich 1955 p 176 Petrovich 1955 p 177 Petrovich 1955 p 178 a b Hatzopoulos 2016 p 131 a b c Petrovich 1955 pp 179 183 a b c Petrovich 1955 p 184 a b Petrovich 1955 pp 186 188 a b Petrovich 1955 p 189 a b c d Petrovich 1955 p 190 a b Petrovich 1955 p 191 a b Petrovich 1955 p 192 Petrovich 1955 pp 192 193 a b c d Petrovich 1955 p 193 Gremaux 1984 p 673 a b Petrovich 1955 p 194 Stevenson 1914 p 159 a b Filipovic 2020 p 143 a b c d e f g Filipovic 2020 p 134 a b c Filipovic 2020 p 135 Filipovic 2020 p 136 Filipovic 2020 p 137 a b Filipovic 2020 p 138 Filipovic 2020 p 139 Filipovic 2020 p 141 Bibliography edit Gremaux Rene J M 1984 Politics in 19th Century Montenegro Current Anthropology 25 5 673 674 doi 10 1086 203204 S2CID 144467464 subscription required Hatzopoulos Marios 2016 Prophetic Structures of the Ottoman ruled Orthodox Community in Comparative Perspective Some Preliminary Observations In Kitromilides Paschalis M Matthaiou Sophia eds Greek Serbian Relations in the Age of Nation Building National Hellenic Research Foundation ISBN 978 9609538503 Jelavich Barbara 1999 1983 History of the Balkans Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries Volume I Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 25249 0 Malesevic Sinisa Uzelac Gordana 2007 A Nation state without the nation The trajectories of nation formation in Montenegro PDF Nations and Nationalism 13 4 695 716 doi 10 1111 j 1469 8129 2007 00318 x Petrovich Michael Boro 1955 Catherine II and a False Peter III in Montenegro The American Slavic and East European Review 14 2 169 194 doi 10 2307 3000742 JSTOR 3000742 Rastoder Serbo 2003 A short review of the history of Montenegro In Bieber Florian ed Montenegro in Transition Problems of Identity and Statehood Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft ISBN 3 8329 0072 1 Filipovic Stefan Trajkovic 2020 Empires of all kinds collapse but the fake tsars they last forever Modern and Contemporary Memories of Tsar Scepan Mali 1767 1773 In Jordan Christina Polland Imke eds Realms of Royalty New Directions in Researching Contemporary European Monarchies Transcript Verlag ISBN 978 3837645835 Stevenson Francis Seymour 1914 1912 A History of Montenegro Jarrold amp Sons OCLC 1118526184 Further reading editHerlosssohn Carl 1853 Der Montenegrinerhauptling The Montenegrin Chief in German Verlag J L Kober Stanojevic Gligor 1957 Scepan Mali Beograd Srpska Akademija Nauka i Umetnosti OCLC 871585483 Zannowich Stefano 1784 Stiepan Mali c est a dire Etienne Petit ou Stefano Piccolo le pseudo Pierre III empereur de Russie qui parut dans le grand duche de Montenegro situe entre la mer Egee l Albanie Turque amp le golfe Adriatique en 1767 1768 amp 69 Scepan Mali that is to say Stephen the Small or Stefano Piccolo the pseudo Peter III Emperor of Russia who appeared in the Grand Duchy of Montenegro situated by the Aegean Sea Turkish Albania and the Adriatic Gulf in 1767 1768 and 1769 in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scepan Mali amp oldid 1218435749, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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