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Vlachs in medieval Bosnia and Herzegovina

Vlachs in medieval Bosnia and Herzegovina were a Western Balkans population descending from a mixture of Romanized pre-Slavic Romance-speaking peoples and the South Slavs. From the 14th century the ethnic meaning of term "Vlach" was replaced with societal meaning and often meant the Slavic population with similar lifestyle.[1] They practiced transhumance as herdsmen, shepherds, farmers, and in time developed peculiar socio-political organizational units known as katuns. With their caravans, Vlach carried out much of the traffic between inland and coastal cities such as Dubrovnik. They also had close contacts and militarily served various Bosnian noble families and kings.

History edit

In older scholarship, Marko Vego argued that Vlach autochthony because some Vlach settlements named after Vlach tribes, like of Vojnići and Hardomilje, are found near Roman forts and monuments, while Bogumil Hrabak supported Vego's assertion that the Vlachs preceded both Turks and Bosnian Slavs in Zachlumia,[2] but by now it is certain that they emerged only as a medieval symbiosis of both autochthonous and Slavic peoples.[1] Hrabak and Dominik Mandić argued that some Vlachs from Herzegovina migrated there from Thessaly, Epirus and Macedonia before the Ottoman invasion into Southern Europe,[3] but although probably happened some waves of small migrations from there and Albania to Montenegro, Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina,[1][4] for such theorization there is a lack of evidence and loose onomastic correlations cannot be used as generalized evidence of a certain linguistic and geographic origin of an individual.[4]

Vlachs are first mentioned in Bosnian documents in c. 1234 by ban Matej Ninoslav. Sources from 1361, 1385, 1399, 1406, 1407, 1408 and 1417 among others mention them in relation to Bosnian bans and kings[2] Vlachs in the Bosnian state of Tvrtko I were considered as military element.[5] The relationship of Vlach katuns and feudal holdings can be traced from the 14th century.[6] By 1382 they were under the jurisdiction of the Bosnian ruler, to later be assigned to large landowners.[7] The Vlachs and lords relationships indicate that medieval Bosnia was not compact – some Vlach vassals (Gleđević) of the rulers were far from royal lands. Some Vlach vassals (Nenko Krajsalić, Radoslav Borojević) became vassals fairly late although Kosača ruled certain lands near Eastern banks of Neretva river for fifteen years. Some Vlach vassals (Maleš) were partly Pavlović and partly Kosača vassals although working on Kosača holdings.[8]

In 1382, Vukoslav Piščić was named as knez of all Vlachs by King Tvrtko I of Bosnia. As the earliest noble landowners, in Herzegovina they were assigned to the Sanković noble family, with katun Tomić.[9] In 1409, when Tvrtko I conquered parts of Rascia and Zeta they were located around 100 katuns. They were mentioned as "Vlachorum congregationes et cetus".[10] In the area around Stolac and Zabljak were so many Vlachs that at the end of the 15th century the territory was as Donji Vlasi (Lower Vlachs).[11] The Gornji Vlasi (Upper Vlachs) were only mentioned by Mavro Orbini.[10]

The 1376 and 1454 documents by Republic of Ragusa about trade with Bosnian lands mention Vlachi et Bosgnani.[12] In the 1418 document by Grgur Nikolić, Vlachs, Serbs and Ragusians are clearly distinguished.[13] In the 14th century documents, they are treated as shepherds from mountains that separate Croatia and Bosnia.[14] It is argued that some group of Vlachs in the 14th century migrated to Zagora and Cetina county in Croatia, followed by the sudden appearance of stećaks in the territory they lived.[15][16] In 1436, on the Cetina are mentioned Vlachs, Croats and Serbs which were part of Count Ivan Frankopan’s estate.[17] At a time of social unrest, the Vlachs often fled to the area of Ragusa or Kotor, served in the military of Ragusa during the Ottoman threat, and when most of Herzegovina was occupied by the Ottomans by 1472, once again fled to Ragusan territory.[18] Some data of historic documents show that a part of Vlachs were Bogomils and they largely contributed to the spread of this sect. [19] According to Sima Ćirković, ethnicity's which appear in the medieval texts from Bosnia include names such as "Bošnjanin", "Vlach", "Latinin" and "Serb".[20]

Ottoman rule edit

Ottomans in Bosnia and Herzegovina, following the example of katuns, organized filurîci eflakan (Vlach filurîci) according to "Vlach model" in Smederevo, Vidin and Braničevo.[11] From them was collected taxes baduhava eflakan,[21] or rusum eflak,[22] mostly in the form of sheep or goats, as well gold currency.[23] In the defters of the 1470s and 1480s in Central and North-Central Bosnia, around Visoko and Maglaj, roughly 800 Vlachs arrived accompanied by two Orthodox priests. With war and plagues, and as Catholics fled, the repopulation of Bosnia from Herzegovina and Serbia was of high interest for the Ottomans for their military activities. Benedikt Kuripečič in the 16th century noted that Bosnia is inhabited by three peoples; (Muslim) Turks, (Catholic) Bosnians and (Orthodox) Serbs "who call themselves Vlachs... They came from Smederevo and Belgrade". According to Noel Malcolm in these migrations also participated Serbs and Herzegovinians who were not Vlachs.[24] Since Vlachs weren't paid for military activity by the Ottomans they were permitted to plunder enemy territory, and became known as martolos or voynuk. Their military activity earned them special tax privileges. In the late 15th century at least 35,000 Vlachs lived in Herzegovina, while in the 16th century 82,692 Vlach households lived in the Smederevo region in Serbia.[25]

Within the territories ruled by the Ottoman Empire, Vlach groups moved from southeastern Bosnia (Pavlović area) to central regions of Tešanj and Žepče, also they spread northwest and north of the Sava towards the future Bosanska Krajina.[26] Living on the border of Habsburg Empire they relocated if the social situation was better on the other part of the border. There they received also a special social-militarh system. Before 1516, Vlachs settled nahia Vrbanja, Prusac, Glamoč and Kupres.[27] In 1527 Ferdinand I freed them from feudal obligations, shared booty with them, gave them their own captains (vojvodas) and magistrates (knezes), and freed them to practice Orthodox Christianity. It eventually led to the organisation of the Military Frontier, and the decree Statuta Valachorum by Ferdinand II. It resulted in a situation almost looking like Vlachs fighting against Vlachs.[28]

Herzegovinian Vlachs edit

In Southeastern Herzegovina between 1393–1437 many Vlach katuns emerged.[11][29] The primary lords of the Herzegovinian Vlachs were the Kosača, Pavlović, and Nikolić noble families.[7] The Vlachs from Herzegovina sometime plundered lands of Republic of Ragusa in the 14th and 15th century and grew rich by trade of goods between Ragusa and the mines of Bosnia.[22]

Vlachs were surnamed Pliščić, Gleđević, Ugarac, Boban, Mirilović, Vragović, Kresojević, Nenković, Bančić, Pilatovac, Pocrnja, Drobnjak and Riđani. Some of the Banjani and Maleševci (Stanković) were Kosača vassals.[7]

Vlachs surnamed Vlahović, Žurović, and Predojević, those belonging to the Pribač Nikolić pasture encampment, and some of the Banjan and Maleševac Vlachs (surnamed Hrebeljanović, Milićiević and Milošević) were Pavlovlić vassals.[7]

The Kutlovići were vassals of the Nikolići. The Primilovići belonged to a larger group of Vlachs, for whom no data on lords were found.[7]

Other katun Vlachs were Boljuni, Bukvići, Burmazi, Goduni, Hardomilići, Horojevići, Hrabreni, Jurjevići, Kersojevići, Kićurići, Kujavići, Milobradačići, Perventinići, Pribinovići, Rudinjani, Veseličići, Vitkovići, Vojnovići, Vragovići, Zotovići.[30]

Vlachs often don't bear "tribe-katun" name as a surname, instead using patronymics, for example katunar Dragić Dobrilović from Boban katun or katunars Klapac Stanković and Radosav Milićević from Maleševac katun.[31]

The Ottoman occupation conquered Vlach territories which caused migrations; Ragusan documents in 1386 recorded that some Vlach with their animals found shelter in Ston and Pelješac (...quod recipiantur in Stagno familie, pastores, animalia et carnesia Vlacorum et circum vicinorum propter eorum saluamentum terrore Teucrurum partes discurrentium),[32] in 1466 Korita, Banjani and Riđani east of Trebinje fell.[33] In 1448 Ragusa again accepted in Ston and Pelješac "peasants and Vlachs of duke Stjepan, Radoje Nikolić and Vukašin Grgurević with families and herds, with leaders and shepherds",[34] as well in 1463 (Vlachs and people from Popovo).[35] During the 15th century they continuously found shelter in the territory of Ragusan Republic, as well Venetian Dalmatia and Bay of Kotor.[35] In 1475–1477 in the nahija Počitelj eleven deserted villages (Gojanovići, Ričica, Kukrica, Opličiča, Plešivac, Svitava, Šanica, Kozica, Gornja Ljubinica, Skočim, Dretelj) were recorded, which were held by the Vlachs.[36] At the time many Vlachs (generally, and from Banjani, Maleševci, Bobani, Zubci) collaborated with Ottomans as slave agents.[37]

Culture edit

 
Vlach funerary monuments in Radimlja

They lived in small villages called katun whose chieftain were titled katunar. Around them they placed guards: guard stations were called varde or vardišta.[38] They practiced transhumance as herdsmen and shepherds, and became agricultural when settled permanently. They exported livestock products; animal skin, wool, cheese, butter and dried meat. Other exports included honey and wood. The Vlach cheese was reputable because of fat, and in 1325 sold one libra for 10 folars[clarification needed] compared to other cheese that sold for 8 folars. In 1420 Vlach cheese was sold for 15 folars.[18] With their caravans, led by kramar,[18] mostly composed of horses numbering between 10–100, they conducted a large part of the trade between inland and coastal cities.[10][11][22] Their military tradition and mobile lifestyle was used by the Bosnian lords and later by the Ottomans.[22] These traits changed very little over the centuries.[22]

The emergence of the stećaks and their symbolism in Bosnia and Herzegovina by the scholars is often related to Vlach communities.[22][39][40][41]

Language edit

Vlachs probably were bilingual (speaking a language close to Romanian and Slavic languages).[22] Many personal names in the records, of which many are preserved, indicate their bilingualism.[22] Initially Vlachs used an Ikavian accent and later I/jekavian accent (spreading it further), of Neo-Shtokavian dialect of Serbo-Croatian. Those who migrated to the West during Ottoman invasion spoke what are now labeled Eastern Herzegovinian and Bosnian–Dalmatian subdialects.[42][22] LZMK linguist Nataša Bašić argued that the Vlachs were creators of New-Shtokavian dialect with reduced number of cases in declination, with New-Shtokavian accent, with the loss of the phoneme /H/, with diphthongization old jat and other modifications characteristic for foreigners, especially for Romans.[43] Ćiro Truhelka argued that the evasion of the writing and spelling letter /H/ in Serbian language until Karadžić's reform is due to Vlachs influence as it is a Romance language characteristic.[38]

Truhelka noted many preserved non-Slavic family surnames in Bosnia and Herzegovina of Vlach origin, which are often Slavicized by suffixes , ović and ević, with most notable being; Banjan, Balac, Bilbija, Boban, Bokan, Banduka, Bencun, Belen, Bender, Besara, Bovan, Čokorilo, Darda, Doman, Drečo, Đerman, Gac, Gala, Jarakula, Kalin, Kešelj, Keser, Kočo, Kalaba, Kokoruš, Kosor, Lopar, Macura, Mataruga, Pađen, Palavestra, Punja, Riđan, Šola, Šolaja, Šabat, Šurla, Šatra, Škipina, Špira, Tubin, Taor, Tintor, as well Kecman, Šikman, Toroman, Šuman, Karan, Šurlan, Servan.[44]

Religion edit

Pope Gregory XI in 1372 letter for Franciscans in Bosnia ordered them to convert Vlachs who live in tents and pastures (Wlachorum... quorum nonnulli in pascuis et tentoriis habitant).[10] Their religion depended upon social and political events.[45] During Ottoman occupation the Orthodox Church was more politically favored than Roman Catholic.[46] The first Orthodox churches in Bosnia and Herzegovina were built in the 13th century on its eastern reaches. Before the arrival of the Ottomans, on the Bosnian proper the Orthodox Church had some presence as the Serbian Orthodox Church, limited exclusively to areas adjoined to the Kingdom of Bosnia by Tvrtko I's conquests in a lands to the east across the Drina River, traditionally under Serbian suzerainty. In the Eastern Herzegovina there was Eparchy of Zachlumia and the Littoral and it held a much prominent role. In the 16th century, although Ottoman law prohibited building of new churches, several Orthodox monasteries were built, notably in Tavna, Lomnica, Paprača, Ozren and Gostović, while Rmanj Monastery in northwestern Bosnia was first mentioned in 1515. According to Noel Malcolm, Orthodox believers were often oppressed and humiliated, although he asserts that Ottoman regime favored the Orthodox Church compared to the Roman Catholic church.[47] Under Christian rule a significant proportion of the churches in present-day Herzegovina were only built under Ottoman rule. Several larger monasteries were built for the needs of the hierarchy such as Žitomislić by the Neretva, Tvrdoš near Trebinje, Nikoljac (in Bijelo Polje), the Holy Trinity in Pljevlja and Piva. The example of Herzegovina reveals that the immigrant Vlach herdsmen had more economic power and they were more religious than their predecessors who lived there under Christian lords.[48] With time the Slavicized Vlachs who were of Orthodox faith were eventually Serbianized, and those of Roman Catholic faith were Croatized.,[49] while others who embraced Islam became Muslims (modern-days Bosniaks).[50]

Legacy edit

Ilona Czamańska claim that "The majority of Serbs from the Republika Srpska of modern Bosnia is of Vlach origin, as well as the majority of the population from Bosnia and Herzegovina in general" (this also applies to the entire Western Balkans as a mixture of Slavic and indigenous population), but also states that "there are none direct sources to support Vlach colonization of these lands."[1] Serbian Orthodox Church have a decisive role in the process of national identification of Vlachs in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina who became Serbs while Catholic Vlachs became Croats. Today only a small part of former Vlachs declares with this name.[51] According to Noel Malcolm, today it makes no sense to claim that Bosnian Serbs are "actually" Vlachs because members of the Serbian Orthodox Church over time crossed the Drina and moved to Bosnia or moved north from Herzegovina, but not all people who settled northern Bosnia in the 15th and 16th century were Vlachs. There were too many arrivals and departures to determine what is the percentage of Vlach ancestors of Bosnian Serbs since the Vlachs did not only contribute to the growth of the Serbian population, Vlachs mostly in Croatia converted to the Catholic faith, and many of them in Bosnia converted to Islam.[52]

Notable Bosnian Vlachs edit

  • Hasan Pasha Predojević[53] (c. 1530 – 22 June 1593) – the Predojević Vlachs are first mentioned 1372, while since 1468 were included in the Ottoman hierarchy.[54]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Ilona Czamańska (2016). (Adam Mickiewicz). "Vlachs and Slavs in the Middle Ages and Modern Era". Res Historica. 41: 18–19. doi:10.17951/rh.2016.41.1.11 (inactive 31 January 2024).{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of January 2024 (link)
  2. ^ a b Mužić 2009, p. 319.
  3. ^ Mužić 2010, pp. 202, 204, (Bogumil Hrabak).
  4. ^ a b Pijović 2018, p. 278–279.
  5. ^ Mužić 2010, p. 203, (Bogumil Hrabak).
  6. ^ Kurtović 2011a, p. 648.
  7. ^ a b c d e Kurtović 2011a, p. 694.
  8. ^ Kurtović 2011a, pp. 694–695.
  9. ^ Kurtović 2011a, pp. 649–650.
  10. ^ a b c d Vego 1957, p. 128.
  11. ^ a b c d Mužić 2010, p. 122, (Ćiro Truhelka).
  12. ^ Mužić 2010, p. 230.
  13. ^ Vego 1957, p. 128–129.
  14. ^ Mužić 2009, p. 318.
  15. ^ Mužić 2009, p. 318–319.
  16. ^ Mužić 2010, p. 219, (Bogumil Hrabak).
  17. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 117.
  18. ^ a b c Vego 1957, p. 129.
  19. ^ Ciobanu 2021a, p. 11-32.
  20. ^ Ćirković, Sima (2020). Živeti sa istorijom. Belgrade: Helsinški odbor za ljudska prava u Srbiji. p. 330.
  21. ^ Mužić 2010, p. 125, (Ćiro Truhelka).
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i Malcolm 1994.
  23. ^ Matkovki, Aleksandar (1990). "Stočarski danak filurija" [Stockmen tribute filurîci]. Arhivski vjesnik (in Serbo-Croatian). Zagreb: Croatian State Archives (34): 71–77.
  24. ^ Malcolm 1995, pp. 96–97.
  25. ^ Malcolm 1995, p. 105.
  26. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 114.
  27. ^ Adem Handžić; (1994) Studije o Bosni: historijski prilozi iz osmansko-turskog perioda(Studies on the history and culture of Bosnia and Hercegovina) p. 26; Organisation of the Islamic Conference, ISBN 9290630566
  28. ^ Malcolm 1995, p. 98.
  29. ^ Ciobanu 2018, p. 5-10.
  30. ^ Vego 1957, pp. 127–132.
  31. ^ Kurtović 2011a, pp. 655, 666.
  32. ^ Krešić 2010, p. 114.
  33. ^ Krešić 2010, p. 111.
  34. ^ Krešić 2010, p. 115.
  35. ^ a b Krešić 2010, p. 116.
  36. ^ Krešić 2010, p. 120.
  37. ^ Krešić 2010, pp. 117–118.
  38. ^ a b Mužić 2010, p. 121, (Ćiro Truhelka).
  39. ^ Kurtović, Esad (2013). "Vlasi i stećci" [Vlachs and stećaks]. Radovi (in Bosnian). Sarajevo: Filozofski fakultet (16): 79–88.
  40. ^ Fine 1987, p. 19.
  41. ^ Ciobanu 2018.
  42. ^ Šarić 2009, pp. 346–350.
  43. ^ Mirdita 2004, p. 333.
  44. ^ Mužić 2010, p. 129, (Ćiro Truhelka).
  45. ^ Mužić 2010, p. 126, (Ćiro Truhelka).
  46. ^ Mužić 2010, p. [page needed], (Ćiro Truhelka).
  47. ^ Malcolm 1995, pp. 92–95.
  48. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 118.
  49. ^ Mužić 2010, pp. 121, 128, (Ćiro Truhelka).
  50. ^ Lovrenović, Dubravko (2013). Stećci: Bosansko i humsko mramorje srednjeg vijeka [Stećci: Bosnian and Hum marbles from Middle Age] (in Serbo-Croatian). Ljevak. pp. 72, 225–231. ISBN 9789533035468.
  51. ^ Ladislav Heka (2019). "The Vlach law and its comparison to the privileges of Hungarian brigands". Podravina: Journal for Multidisciplinary Research. 18 (35).
  52. ^ Malcolm 1995, pp. 107–109.
  53. ^ Kurtović 2011b, p. 243.
  54. ^ Kurtović 2011a, pp. 675–677.

Sources edit

  • Vego, Marko (1957). Naselja bosanske srednjovjekovne države (in Serbo-Croatian). Sarajevo: Svjetlost. pp. 127–129.
  • Fine, John (1987). The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 9780472081493.
  • Malcolm, Noel (1994). Bosnia, A Short History. New York University Press.
  • Malcolm, Noel (1995). Povijest Bosne : kratki pregled. Erasmus Gilda : Novi Liber. ISBN 953-6045-03-6.
  • Ćirković, Sima (2004). The Serbs. Malden: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 9781405142915.
  • Mirdita, Zef (2004). Vlasi u historiografiji (in Croatian). Hrvatski institut za povijest. ISBN 953-6324-43-1.
  • Šarić, Marko (2009), "Predmoderne etnije u Lici i Krbavi prema popisu iz 1712./14.", in Željko Holjevac (ed.), Identitet Like: Korijeni i razvitak (PDF) (in Croatian), vol. 1, Zagreb: Institut društvenih znanosti Ivo Pilar, ISBN 978-953-6666-65-2
  • Mužić, Ivan (2009). "Vlasi i starobalkanska pretkršćanska simbolika jelena na stećcima". Starohrvatska Prosvjeta (in Croatian). Split: Museum of Croatian Archaeological Monuments. III (36): 315–349.
  • Mužić, Ivan (2010). Vlasi u starijoj hrvatskoj historiografiji (PDF) (in Croatian). Split: Muzej hrvatskih arheoloških spomenika. ISBN 978-953-6803-25-5.
  • Krešić, Milenko (2010). "Depopulacija jugoistočne Hercegovine izazvana turskim osvajanjem" [The depopulation of south-eastern Herzegovina caused by the Turkish conquest]. Povijesni prilozi (Historical Contributions) (in Croatian). Zagreb: Croatian Institute of History. 39 (39): 107–123.
  • Kurtović, Esad (2011a). "Seniori hercegovačkih vlaha" [Seniors of Herzegovinian Vlachs]. Hum i Hercegovina kroz povijest. Zbornik radova s međunarodnoga znanstvenog skupa održanog u Mostaru 5. i 6. studenoga 2009 [Hum and Herzegovina through History. Proceedings of the International Scientific Conference Held in Mostar on November 5 and 6, 2009] (in Croatian). Zagreb: Hrvatski institut za povijest [Croatian Institute of History]. pp. 646–695.
  • Kurtović, Esad (2011b). "Iz historije vlaha Predojevića" [About the history of Predojević Vlachs]. Godišnjak (in Bosnian). Academy of Sciences and Arts of Bosnia and Herzegovina (40): 242–254. ISSN 2232-7770.
  • Pijović, Marko (2018). Vlasi u dubrovačkim spomenicima do 14. stoljeća [Vlachs in the Ragusan sources until the 14th century] (PhD). Zagreb: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb.
  • Ciobanu, Octavian (2018). "The emergence of Vlach necropolises with petroglyphs in Western Balkans". The Journal of Ethnology and Culturology. Chişinău. XXIV: 5–10.
  • Ciobanu, Octavian (2021a). "The Role of the Vlachs in the Bogomils' Expansion in the Balkans". Journal of Balkan and Black Sea Studies. Istanbul. Year 4, Issue 7: 11–32.

Further reading edit

  • Kurtović, Esad (2005). "Sitni prilog o Vlasima Vlahovićima". Godišnjak BZK Preporod (in Bosnian). Sarajevo: Bošnjačka zajednica kulture "Preporod": 49–58. ISSN 1512-8180.
  • Kurtović, Esad (March 2006). "Prilog Historiji Vlaha Mirilovića". Most (in Bosnian). Mostar: Podružnica pisaca H N K – Mostar (196): 77–80. ISSN 0350-6517.
  • Kurtović, Esad (2006). "'Slavni ljudi svoje vrste' – Stankovići vremena vojvode Sandalja Hranića Kosače". Med Srednjo Evropo in Sredozemljem: Vojetov zbornik (in Bosnian). Ljubljana: ZRC SAZU. pp. 395–413. ISBN 9789616568883.
  • Kurtović, Esad (2007). "Prilog Historiji Vlaha Gleđevića". Prilozi (in Bosnian). Sarajevo: Institut za istoriju u Sarajevu. 36: 11–31. ISSN 0350-1159.
  • Kurtović, Esad (2008). "Iz historije vlaha Pliščića". Godišnjak (in Bosnian). ANUBiH. 35: 219–244. ISSN 0350-0020.
  • Kurtović, Esad (2008). "Дубравчићи, власи Угарци са подручја Љубомира, Историјски часопис". Historical Review (in Bosnian). Beograd. LVII: 107–122. ISSN 0350-1159.
  • Kurtović, Esad (2009). "Vlasi Nenkovići". Godišnjak (in Bosnian). ANUBiH. 36: 153–164. ISSN 0350-0020.
  • Kurtović, Esad (2012). Vlasi Bobani [The Boban Vlachs] (in Bosnian). Sarajevo: Filozofski fakultet, Društvo za proučavanje srednjovjekovne bosanske historije. ISBN 978-9958-625-26-8.
  • Kurtović, Esad (2013). "Vlah Drobnjak Žur Stipanović (1429-1459)". Godišnjak BZK Preporod (in Bosnian). Sarajevo: Bošnjačka zajednica kulture "Preporod": 373–383. ISSN 1512-8180.
  • Dženan, Dautović (2014). "Esad Kurtović, Vlasi Bobani [The Boban Vlachs] (Book Review)". Dubrovnik Annals. Zagreb: HAZU (18): 123–124.
  • Kurtović, Esad (2014). "Vlasi Pilatovci". Radovi (in Bosnian). Sarajevo: Odsjek za historiju Filozofskog fakulteta u Sarajevu. XVII (3): 301–310.
  • Kurtović, Esad (2015). "Vlasi Drobnjaci i stećci". Godišnjak (in Bosnian). ANUBiH. 44: 303–316. ISSN 0350-0020.

vlachs, medieval, bosnia, herzegovina, main, article, vlachs, were, western, balkans, population, descending, from, mixture, romanized, slavic, romance, speaking, peoples, south, slavs, from, 14th, century, ethnic, meaning, term, vlach, replaced, with, societa. Main article Vlachs Vlachs in medieval Bosnia and Herzegovina were a Western Balkans population descending from a mixture of Romanized pre Slavic Romance speaking peoples and the South Slavs From the 14th century the ethnic meaning of term Vlach was replaced with societal meaning and often meant the Slavic population with similar lifestyle 1 They practiced transhumance as herdsmen shepherds farmers and in time developed peculiar socio political organizational units known as katuns With their caravans Vlach carried out much of the traffic between inland and coastal cities such as Dubrovnik They also had close contacts and militarily served various Bosnian noble families and kings Contents 1 History 1 1 Ottoman rule 1 2 Herzegovinian Vlachs 2 Culture 3 Language 4 Religion 5 Legacy 6 Notable Bosnian Vlachs 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further readingHistory editIn older scholarship Marko Vego argued that Vlach autochthony because some Vlach settlements named after Vlach tribes like of Vojnici and Hardomilje are found near Roman forts and monuments while Bogumil Hrabak supported Vego s assertion that the Vlachs preceded both Turks and Bosnian Slavs in Zachlumia 2 but by now it is certain that they emerged only as a medieval symbiosis of both autochthonous and Slavic peoples 1 Hrabak and Dominik Mandic argued that some Vlachs from Herzegovina migrated there from Thessaly Epirus and Macedonia before the Ottoman invasion into Southern Europe 3 but although probably happened some waves of small migrations from there and Albania to Montenegro Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina 1 4 for such theorization there is a lack of evidence and loose onomastic correlations cannot be used as generalized evidence of a certain linguistic and geographic origin of an individual 4 Vlachs are first mentioned in Bosnian documents in c 1234 by ban Matej Ninoslav Sources from 1361 1385 1399 1406 1407 1408 and 1417 among others mention them in relation to Bosnian bans and kings 2 Vlachs in the Bosnian state of Tvrtko I were considered as military element 5 The relationship of Vlach katuns and feudal holdings can be traced from the 14th century 6 By 1382 they were under the jurisdiction of the Bosnian ruler to later be assigned to large landowners 7 The Vlachs and lords relationships indicate that medieval Bosnia was not compact some Vlach vassals Gleđevic of the rulers were far from royal lands Some Vlach vassals Nenko Krajsalic Radoslav Borojevic became vassals fairly late although Kosaca ruled certain lands near Eastern banks of Neretva river for fifteen years Some Vlach vassals Males were partly Pavlovic and partly Kosaca vassals although working on Kosaca holdings 8 In 1382 Vukoslav Piscic was named as knez of all Vlachs by King Tvrtko I of Bosnia As the earliest noble landowners in Herzegovina they were assigned to the Sankovic noble family with katun Tomic 9 In 1409 when Tvrtko I conquered parts of Rascia and Zeta they were located around 100 katuns They were mentioned as Vlachorum congregationes et cetus 10 In the area around Stolac and Zabljak were so many Vlachs that at the end of the 15th century the territory was as Donji Vlasi Lower Vlachs 11 The Gornji Vlasi Upper Vlachs were only mentioned by Mavro Orbini 10 The 1376 and 1454 documents by Republic of Ragusa about trade with Bosnian lands mention Vlachi et Bosgnani 12 In the 1418 document by Grgur Nikolic Vlachs Serbs and Ragusians are clearly distinguished 13 In the 14th century documents they are treated as shepherds from mountains that separate Croatia and Bosnia 14 It is argued that some group of Vlachs in the 14th century migrated to Zagora and Cetina county in Croatia followed by the sudden appearance of stecaks in the territory they lived 15 16 In 1436 on the Cetina are mentioned Vlachs Croats and Serbs which were part of Count Ivan Frankopan s estate 17 At a time of social unrest the Vlachs often fled to the area of Ragusa or Kotor served in the military of Ragusa during the Ottoman threat and when most of Herzegovina was occupied by the Ottomans by 1472 once again fled to Ragusan territory 18 Some data of historic documents show that a part of Vlachs were Bogomils and they largely contributed to the spread of this sect 19 According to Sima Cirkovic ethnicity s which appear in the medieval texts from Bosnia include names such as Bosnjanin Vlach Latinin and Serb 20 Ottoman rule edit Ottomans in Bosnia and Herzegovina following the example of katuns organized filurici eflakan Vlach filurici according to Vlach model in Smederevo Vidin and Branicevo 11 From them was collected taxes baduhava eflakan 21 or rusum eflak 22 mostly in the form of sheep or goats as well gold currency 23 In the defters of the 1470s and 1480s in Central and North Central Bosnia around Visoko and Maglaj roughly 800 Vlachs arrived accompanied by two Orthodox priests With war and plagues and as Catholics fled the repopulation of Bosnia from Herzegovina and Serbia was of high interest for the Ottomans for their military activities Benedikt Kuripecic in the 16th century noted that Bosnia is inhabited by three peoples Muslim Turks Catholic Bosnians and Orthodox Serbs who call themselves Vlachs They came from Smederevo and Belgrade According to Noel Malcolm in these migrations also participated Serbs and Herzegovinians who were not Vlachs 24 Since Vlachs weren t paid for military activity by the Ottomans they were permitted to plunder enemy territory and became known as martolos or voynuk Their military activity earned them special tax privileges In the late 15th century at least 35 000 Vlachs lived in Herzegovina while in the 16th century 82 692 Vlach households lived in the Smederevo region in Serbia 25 Within the territories ruled by the Ottoman Empire Vlach groups moved from southeastern Bosnia Pavlovic area to central regions of Tesanj and Zepce also they spread northwest and north of the Sava towards the future Bosanska Krajina 26 Living on the border of Habsburg Empire they relocated if the social situation was better on the other part of the border There they received also a special social militarh system Before 1516 Vlachs settled nahia Vrbanja Prusac Glamoc and Kupres 27 In 1527 Ferdinand I freed them from feudal obligations shared booty with them gave them their own captains vojvodas and magistrates knezes and freed them to practice Orthodox Christianity It eventually led to the organisation of the Military Frontier and the decree Statuta Valachorum by Ferdinand II It resulted in a situation almost looking like Vlachs fighting against Vlachs 28 Herzegovinian Vlachs edit Further information Miloradovic noble family In Southeastern Herzegovina between 1393 1437 many Vlach katuns emerged 11 29 The primary lords of the Herzegovinian Vlachs were the Kosaca Pavlovic and Nikolic noble families 7 The Vlachs from Herzegovina sometime plundered lands of Republic of Ragusa in the 14th and 15th century and grew rich by trade of goods between Ragusa and the mines of Bosnia 22 Vlachs were surnamed Pliscic Gleđevic Ugarac Boban Mirilovic Vragovic Kresojevic Nenkovic Bancic Pilatovac Pocrnja Drobnjak and Riđani Some of the Banjani and Malesevci Stankovic were Kosaca vassals 7 Vlachs surnamed Vlahovic Zurovic and Predojevic those belonging to the Pribac Nikolic pasture encampment and some of the Banjan and Malesevac Vlachs surnamed Hrebeljanovic Milicievic and Milosevic were Pavlovlic vassals 7 The Kutlovici were vassals of the Nikolici The Primilovici belonged to a larger group of Vlachs for whom no data on lords were found 7 Other katun Vlachs were Boljuni Bukvici Burmazi Goduni Hardomilici Horojevici Hrabreni Jurjevici Kersojevici Kicurici Kujavici Milobradacici Perventinici Pribinovici Rudinjani Veselicici Vitkovici Vojnovici Vragovici Zotovici 30 Vlachs often don t bear tribe katun name as a surname instead using patronymics for example katunar Dragic Dobrilovic from Boban katun or katunars Klapac Stankovic and Radosav Milicevic from Malesevac katun 31 The Ottoman occupation conquered Vlach territories which caused migrations Ragusan documents in 1386 recorded that some Vlach with their animals found shelter in Ston and Peljesac quod recipiantur in Stagno familie pastores animalia et carnesia Vlacorum et circum vicinorum propter eorum saluamentum terrore Teucrurum partes discurrentium 32 in 1466 Korita Banjani and Riđani east of Trebinje fell 33 In 1448 Ragusa again accepted in Ston and Peljesac peasants and Vlachs of duke Stjepan Radoje Nikolic and Vukasin Grgurevic with families and herds with leaders and shepherds 34 as well in 1463 Vlachs and people from Popovo 35 During the 15th century they continuously found shelter in the territory of Ragusan Republic as well Venetian Dalmatia and Bay of Kotor 35 In 1475 1477 in the nahija Pocitelj eleven deserted villages Gojanovici Ricica Kukrica Oplicica Plesivac Svitava Sanica Kozica Gornja Ljubinica Skocim Dretelj were recorded which were held by the Vlachs 36 At the time many Vlachs generally and from Banjani Malesevci Bobani Zubci collaborated with Ottomans as slave agents 37 Culture edit nbsp Vlach funerary monuments in RadimljaThey lived in small villages called katun whose chieftain were titled katunar Around them they placed guards guard stations were called varde or vardista 38 They practiced transhumance as herdsmen and shepherds and became agricultural when settled permanently They exported livestock products animal skin wool cheese butter and dried meat Other exports included honey and wood The Vlach cheese was reputable because of fat and in 1325 sold one libra for 10 folars clarification needed compared to other cheese that sold for 8 folars In 1420 Vlach cheese was sold for 15 folars 18 With their caravans led by kramar 18 mostly composed of horses numbering between 10 100 they conducted a large part of the trade between inland and coastal cities 10 11 22 Their military tradition and mobile lifestyle was used by the Bosnian lords and later by the Ottomans 22 These traits changed very little over the centuries 22 The emergence of the stecaks and their symbolism in Bosnia and Herzegovina by the scholars is often related to Vlach communities 22 39 40 41 Language editVlachs probably were bilingual speaking a language close to Romanian and Slavic languages 22 Many personal names in the records of which many are preserved indicate their bilingualism 22 Initially Vlachs used an Ikavian accent and later I jekavian accent spreading it further of Neo Shtokavian dialect of Serbo Croatian Those who migrated to the West during Ottoman invasion spoke what are now labeled Eastern Herzegovinian and Bosnian Dalmatian subdialects 42 22 LZMK linguist Natasa Basic argued that the Vlachs were creators of New Shtokavian dialect with reduced number of cases in declination with New Shtokavian accent with the loss of the phoneme H with diphthongization old jat and other modifications characteristic for foreigners especially for Romans 43 Ciro Truhelka argued that the evasion of the writing and spelling letter H in Serbian language until Karadzic s reform is due to Vlachs influence as it is a Romance language characteristic 38 Truhelka noted many preserved non Slavic family surnames in Bosnia and Herzegovina of Vlach origin which are often Slavicized by suffixes ic ovic and evic with most notable being Banjan Balac Bilbija Boban Bokan Banduka Bencun Belen Bender Besara Bovan Cokorilo Darda Doman Dreco Đerman Gac Gala Jarakula Kalin Keselj Keser Koco Kalaba Kokorus Kosor Lopar Macura Mataruga Pađen Palavestra Punja Riđan Sola Solaja Sabat Surla Satra Skipina Spira Tubin Taor Tintor as well Kecman Sikman Toroman Suman Karan Surlan Servan 44 Religion editPope Gregory XI in 1372 letter for Franciscans in Bosnia ordered them to convert Vlachs who live in tents and pastures Wlachorum quorum nonnulli in pascuis et tentoriis habitant 10 Their religion depended upon social and political events 45 During Ottoman occupation the Orthodox Church was more politically favored than Roman Catholic 46 The first Orthodox churches in Bosnia and Herzegovina were built in the 13th century on its eastern reaches Before the arrival of the Ottomans on the Bosnian proper the Orthodox Church had some presence as the Serbian Orthodox Church limited exclusively to areas adjoined to the Kingdom of Bosnia by Tvrtko I s conquests in a lands to the east across the Drina River traditionally under Serbian suzerainty In the Eastern Herzegovina there was Eparchy of Zachlumia and the Littoral and it held a much prominent role In the 16th century although Ottoman law prohibited building of new churches several Orthodox monasteries were built notably in Tavna Lomnica Papraca Ozren and Gostovic while Rmanj Monastery in northwestern Bosnia was first mentioned in 1515 According to Noel Malcolm Orthodox believers were often oppressed and humiliated although he asserts that Ottoman regime favored the Orthodox Church compared to the Roman Catholic church 47 Under Christian rule a significant proportion of the churches in present day Herzegovina were only built under Ottoman rule Several larger monasteries were built for the needs of the hierarchy such as Zitomislic by the Neretva Tvrdos near Trebinje Nikoljac in Bijelo Polje the Holy Trinity in Pljevlja and Piva The example of Herzegovina reveals that the immigrant Vlach herdsmen had more economic power and they were more religious than their predecessors who lived there under Christian lords 48 With time the Slavicized Vlachs who were of Orthodox faith were eventually Serbianized and those of Roman Catholic faith were Croatized 49 while others who embraced Islam became Muslims modern days Bosniaks 50 Legacy editIlona Czamanska claim that The majority of Serbs from the Republika Srpska of modern Bosnia is of Vlach origin as well as the majority of the population from Bosnia and Herzegovina in general this also applies to the entire Western Balkans as a mixture of Slavic and indigenous population but also states that there are none direct sources to support Vlach colonization of these lands 1 Serbian Orthodox Church have a decisive role in the process of national identification of Vlachs in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina who became Serbs while Catholic Vlachs became Croats Today only a small part of former Vlachs declares with this name 51 According to Noel Malcolm today it makes no sense to claim that Bosnian Serbs are actually Vlachs because members of the Serbian Orthodox Church over time crossed the Drina and moved to Bosnia or moved north from Herzegovina but not all people who settled northern Bosnia in the 15th and 16th century were Vlachs There were too many arrivals and departures to determine what is the percentage of Vlach ancestors of Bosnian Serbs since the Vlachs did not only contribute to the growth of the Serbian population Vlachs mostly in Croatia converted to the Catholic faith and many of them in Bosnia converted to Islam 52 Notable Bosnian Vlachs editHasan Pasha Predojevic 53 c 1530 22 June 1593 the Predojevic Vlachs are first mentioned 1372 while since 1468 were included in the Ottoman hierarchy 54 See also editVlachs Morlachs Vlach law Vlachs of Croatia Tribes of Montenegro Vlachs in medieval Serbia Vlach Ottoman social class References edit a b c d Ilona Czamanska 2016 Adam Mickiewicz Vlachs and Slavs in the Middle Ages and Modern Era Res Historica 41 18 19 doi 10 17951 rh 2016 41 1 11 inactive 31 January 2024 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of January 2024 link a b Muzic 2009 p 319 Muzic 2010 pp 202 204 Bogumil Hrabak a b Pijovic 2018 p 278 279 Muzic 2010 p 203 Bogumil Hrabak Kurtovic 2011a p 648 a b c d e Kurtovic 2011a p 694 Kurtovic 2011a pp 694 695 Kurtovic 2011a pp 649 650 a b c d Vego 1957 p 128 a b c d Muzic 2010 p 122 Ciro Truhelka Muzic 2010 p 230 Vego 1957 p 128 129 Muzic 2009 p 318 Muzic 2009 p 318 319 Muzic 2010 p 219 Bogumil Hrabak Cirkovic 2004 p 117 a b c Vego 1957 p 129 Ciobanu 2021a p 11 32 Cirkovic Sima 2020 Ziveti sa istorijom Belgrade Helsinski odbor za ljudska prava u Srbiji p 330 Muzic 2010 p 125 Ciro Truhelka a b c d e f g h i Malcolm 1994 Matkovki Aleksandar 1990 Stocarski danak filurija Stockmen tribute filurici Arhivski vjesnik in Serbo Croatian Zagreb Croatian State Archives 34 71 77 Malcolm 1995 pp 96 97 Malcolm 1995 p 105 Cirkovic 2004 p 114 Adem Handzic 1994 Studije o Bosni historijski prilozi iz osmansko turskog perioda Studies on the history and culture of Bosnia and Hercegovina p 26 Organisation of the Islamic Conference ISBN 9290630566 Malcolm 1995 p 98 Ciobanu 2018 p 5 10 Vego 1957 pp 127 132 Kurtovic 2011a pp 655 666 Kresic 2010 p 114 Kresic 2010 p 111 Kresic 2010 p 115 a b Kresic 2010 p 116 Kresic 2010 p 120 Kresic 2010 pp 117 118 a b Muzic 2010 p 121 Ciro Truhelka Kurtovic Esad 2013 Vlasi i stecci Vlachs and stecaks Radovi in Bosnian Sarajevo Filozofski fakultet 16 79 88 Fine 1987 p 19 Ciobanu 2018 Saric 2009 pp 346 350 Mirdita 2004 p 333 Muzic 2010 p 129 Ciro Truhelka Muzic 2010 p 126 Ciro Truhelka Muzic 2010 p page needed Ciro Truhelka Malcolm 1995 pp 92 95 Cirkovic 2004 p 118 Muzic 2010 pp 121 128 Ciro Truhelka Lovrenovic Dubravko 2013 Stecci Bosansko i humsko mramorje srednjeg vijeka Stecci Bosnian and Hum marbles from Middle Age in Serbo Croatian Ljevak pp 72 225 231 ISBN 9789533035468 Ladislav Heka 2019 The Vlach law and its comparison to the privileges of Hungarian brigands Podravina Journal for Multidisciplinary Research 18 35 Malcolm 1995 pp 107 109 Kurtovic 2011b p 243 Kurtovic 2011a pp 675 677 Sources editVego Marko 1957 Naselja bosanske srednjovjekovne drzave in Serbo Croatian Sarajevo Svjetlost pp 127 129 Fine John 1987 The Late Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century University of Michigan Press ISBN 9780472081493 Malcolm Noel 1994 Bosnia A Short History New York University Press Malcolm Noel 1995 Povijest Bosne kratki pregled Erasmus Gilda Novi Liber ISBN 953 6045 03 6 Cirkovic Sima 2004 The Serbs Malden Blackwell Publishing ISBN 9781405142915 Mirdita Zef 2004 Vlasi u historiografiji in Croatian Hrvatski institut za povijest ISBN 953 6324 43 1 Saric Marko 2009 Predmoderne etnije u Lici i Krbavi prema popisu iz 1712 14 in Zeljko Holjevac ed Identitet Like Korijeni i razvitak PDF in Croatian vol 1 Zagreb Institut drustvenih znanosti Ivo Pilar ISBN 978 953 6666 65 2 Muzic Ivan 2009 Vlasi i starobalkanska pretkrscanska simbolika jelena na steccima Starohrvatska Prosvjeta in Croatian Split Museum of Croatian Archaeological Monuments III 36 315 349 Muzic Ivan 2010 Vlasi u starijoj hrvatskoj historiografiji PDF in Croatian Split Muzej hrvatskih arheoloskih spomenika ISBN 978 953 6803 25 5 Kresic Milenko 2010 Depopulacija jugoistocne Hercegovine izazvana turskim osvajanjem The depopulation of south eastern Herzegovina caused by the Turkish conquest Povijesni prilozi Historical Contributions in Croatian Zagreb Croatian Institute of History 39 39 107 123 Kurtovic Esad 2011a Seniori hercegovackih vlaha Seniors of Herzegovinian Vlachs Hum i Hercegovina kroz povijest Zbornik radova s međunarodnoga znanstvenog skupa odrzanog u Mostaru 5 i 6 studenoga 2009 Hum and Herzegovina through History Proceedings of the International Scientific Conference Held in Mostar on November 5 and 6 2009 in Croatian Zagreb Hrvatski institut za povijest Croatian Institute of History pp 646 695 Kurtovic Esad 2011b Iz historije vlaha Predojevica About the history of Predojevic Vlachs Godisnjak in Bosnian Academy of Sciences and Arts of Bosnia and Herzegovina 40 242 254 ISSN 2232 7770 Pijovic Marko 2018 Vlasi u dubrovackim spomenicima do 14 stoljeca Vlachs in the Ragusan sources until the 14th century PhD Zagreb Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences University of Zagreb Ciobanu Octavian 2018 The emergence of Vlach necropolises with petroglyphs in Western Balkans The Journal of Ethnology and Culturology Chisinău XXIV 5 10 Ciobanu Octavian 2021a The Role of the Vlachs in the Bogomils Expansion in the Balkans Journal of Balkan and Black Sea Studies Istanbul Year 4 Issue 7 11 32 Further reading editKurtovic Esad 2005 Sitni prilog o Vlasima Vlahovicima Godisnjak BZK Preporod in Bosnian Sarajevo Bosnjacka zajednica kulture Preporod 49 58 ISSN 1512 8180 Kurtovic Esad March 2006 Prilog Historiji Vlaha Mirilovica Most in Bosnian Mostar Podruznica pisaca H N K Mostar 196 77 80 ISSN 0350 6517 Kurtovic Esad 2006 Slavni ljudi svoje vrste Stankovici vremena vojvode Sandalja Hranica Kosace Med Srednjo Evropo in Sredozemljem Vojetov zbornik in Bosnian Ljubljana ZRC SAZU pp 395 413 ISBN 9789616568883 Kurtovic Esad 2007 Prilog Historiji Vlaha Gleđevica Prilozi in Bosnian Sarajevo Institut za istoriju u Sarajevu 36 11 31 ISSN 0350 1159 Kurtovic Esad 2008 Iz historije vlaha Pliscica Godisnjak in Bosnian ANUBiH 35 219 244 ISSN 0350 0020 Kurtovic Esad 2008 Dubravchiћi vlasi Ugarci sa podruchјa Љubomira Istoriјski chasopis Historical Review in Bosnian Beograd LVII 107 122 ISSN 0350 1159 Kurtovic Esad 2009 Vlasi Nenkovici Godisnjak in Bosnian ANUBiH 36 153 164 ISSN 0350 0020 Kurtovic Esad 2012 Vlasi Bobani The Boban Vlachs in Bosnian Sarajevo Filozofski fakultet Drustvo za proucavanje srednjovjekovne bosanske historije ISBN 978 9958 625 26 8 Kurtovic Esad 2013 Vlah Drobnjak Zur Stipanovic 1429 1459 Godisnjak BZK Preporod in Bosnian Sarajevo Bosnjacka zajednica kulture Preporod 373 383 ISSN 1512 8180 Dzenan Dautovic 2014 Esad Kurtovic Vlasi Bobani The Boban Vlachs Book Review Dubrovnik Annals Zagreb HAZU 18 123 124 Kurtovic Esad 2014 Vlasi Pilatovci Radovi in Bosnian Sarajevo Odsjek za historiju Filozofskog fakulteta u Sarajevu XVII 3 301 310 Kurtovic Esad 2015 Vlasi Drobnjaci i stecci Godisnjak in Bosnian ANUBiH 44 303 316 ISSN 0350 0020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vlachs in medieval Bosnia and Herzegovina amp oldid 1202031618, wikipedia, wiki, 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