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Zachlumia

Zachlumia or Zachumlia (Serbo-Croatian: Zahumlje / Захумље, pronounced [zǎxuːmʎe]), also Hum, was a medieval principality located in the modern-day regions of Herzegovina and southern Dalmatia (today parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia, respectively). In some periods it was a fully independent or semi-independent South Slavic principality. It maintained relations with various foreign and neighbouring powers (Byzantine Empire, First Bulgarian Empire, Kingdom of Croatia, Principality of Serbia) and later was subjected (temporarily or for a longer period) to Kingdom of Hungary, Kingdom of Serbia, Kingdom of Bosnia, Duchy of Saint Sava and at the end to the Ottoman Empire.

Principality of Zachlumia
Захумље
Zahumlje
9th century–1054
Zachlumia in 9th century
Religion
Christianity
GovernmentMonarchy
Prince 
• 910–935
Michael (first known)
• 1039–1054
Ljutovid (last independent)
History 
• Established
9th century
• Conquered by Duklja
1054
Today part ofCroatia
Bosnia and Herzegovina

Etymology

Zachlumia is a derivative of Hum, from Proto-Slavic *xŭlmŭ, borrowed from a Germanic language (cf. Proto-Germanic *hulma-), meaning "Hill".[1] South Slavic Zahumlje is named after the mountain of Hum (za + Hum "behind the Hum"), above Bona, at the mouth of the Buna.[citation needed] The principality is named Zahumlje or Hum in Serbo-Croatian (Serbian Cyrillic: Захумље, Хум). It is Zachlumia in Latin, Хлъмъ in Old Church Slavonic, and Ζαχλούμων χώρα ("land of Zachlumians") in Greek. The names Chelmania, Chulmia and terra de Chelmo appear in later Latin and Italian chronicles.

Geography

De Administrando Imperio described the polity of Zachlumia, likely during the reign of Časlav Klonimirović (r. 927–960): "From Ragusa begins the domain of the Zachloumoi (Ζαχλοῦμοι) and stretches along as far as the river Orontius, and on the side of the coast it is neighbour to the Pagani, but on the side of the mountain country it is neighbour to the Croats on the north and Serbia at the front ... The Zachloumoi that now live there are Serbs, originating from the time of the prince (archon) who fled to emperor Heraclius ... The land of the Zachloumoi comprises the following cities: Ston (το Σταγνον / to Stagnon), Mokriskik (το Μοκρισκικ), Josli (το Ιοσλε / to Iosle), Galumainik (το Γαλυμαενικ / to Galumaenik), Dobriskik (το Δοβρισκικ / to Dovriskik)".

The Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja (14th or 16th century) described the geography under the rule of the South Slavic rulers, Hum had two major cities: Bona and Hum. The main settlements in Zachlumia were Ston, Ošlje, Dobar, the towns of Mokriskik and Glumainik. The Principality sprang from Dalmatia (Croatia) to the northwest and Pagania to the west; to the mountain of Kalinovik and the Gatačko polje, where it bordered Travunia. The eastern border of Zahumlje went along the line Popovo-Ljubinje-Dabar and met with the Travunian border at the city of Ragusa, which had to pay the annual tax mogorish of 36 pieces of gold to the Zachlumian rulers and at times accept their rule.[when?] Zachlumia was split on 9 zhupanates: Ston, Popovo, Dubrava, Luka, Dabar, Žapska, Gorička and Večenik around Neretva. Zahumlje had access to the Adriatic Sea with the Pelješac peninsula and faced Serbia northwards.[citation needed]

In its later periods,[when?] Zahumlje was split into two Duchies: Upper Zahumlje in the west and Lower Zahumlje in the east.[citation needed]

As the toponym Pagania disappeared by the turn of the 11th century, the land of Hum was expanded to include the territory between Neretva and Cetina previously referred to as Pagania. This territory was at the time controlled by local magnates called Radivojevići, Jurjevići, or Vlatkovići.[2]

Slavic settlement

Slavs invaded Balkans during Justinian I (r. 527–565), when eventually up to 100,000 Slavs raided Thessalonica. The Western Balkans was settled with Sclaveni (Sklavenoi), the east with Antes.[3] The Sklavenoi plundered Thrace in 545, and again the next year. In 551, the Slavs crossed Niš initially headed for Thessalonica, but ended up in Dalmatia.[4] In 577 some 100,000 Slavs poured into Thrace and Illyricum, pillaging cities and settling down.[5] Hum had also a large number of Vlachs who were descendent from a pre-Slavic population. Related to Romanians and originally speaking a language related to Romanian, the Vlachs of what was Hum are today Slavic speaking.[6]

History

7th century

In the second decade of the 7th century, the Avars and their Slavic subjects occupied most of the Byzantine province of Dalmatia, including the territory of what would become Zahumlje, sacking towns and enslaving or displacing the local population. Some of the Slavs and Avars might have permanently settled in the occupied areas. They attacked Constantinople in 626 but were defeated by the Byzantines, after which the Avars ceased to play a significant role in the Balkans.[7]

Around 630, during the reign of Byzantine Emperor Heraclius, Serbs and Croats (Slavic tribes) led by their respective aristocracies entered the western Balkans from the north, which was approved by the emperor. They inhabited areas that had been devastated by the Avars, where Byzantium (East Roman Empire) had generally been reduced to only nominal rule. According to DAI, Zahumlje was one of the regions settled by the Serbs from an area near Thessaloniki who previously arrived there from White Serbia,[8] but a closer reading of the source suggests that the Constantine VII's consideration about the population's ethnic identity is based on Serbian political rule during the time of Časlav and does not indicate ethnic origin.[9][10][11][12][13][14] According to Noel Malcolm, today's western Serbia was area where Serbs settled in 7th century and from there they expanded their rule on territory of Zachlumia.[15] According to Tibor Živković the area of the Vistula where the Litziki ancestors of Michael of Zahumlje originate was the place where White Croats would be expected and not White Serbs,[16] and it's unclear whether the Zachlumians "in the migration period to the Balkans really were Serbs or Croats or Slavic tribes which in alliance with Serbs or Croats arrived in the Balkans".[17] According to Francis Dvornik the Zachlumians "had a closer bond of interest with the Croats than with the Serbs, since they seem to have migrated to their new home not with the Serbs, but with the Croats".[18] Michael's tribal origin is related to the oral tradition from Historia Salonitana by Thomas the Archdeacon about seven or eight tribes of nobles called Lingones who arrived from Poland and settled in Croatia.[19][20][21][22] Much of Dalmatia was sometime earlier settled by the Croats, and Zahumlje bordered their territory on the north.[23] According to Thomas the Archdeacon, when describing the reign of Croatian king Stephen Držislav in the late 10th century, notes that Duchy of Hum (Zachlumia or Chulmie) was a part of the Kingdom of Croatia, before and after Stjepan Držislav:

"Istaque fuerunt regni eorum confinia: ab oriente Delmina, ubi fuit civitas Delmis, ... ab occidente Carinthia, versus mare usque ad oppidum Stridonis, quod nunc est confinium Dalmatie et Ystrie; ab aquilone vero a ripa Danubii usque ad mare Dalmaticum cum tota Maronia et Chulmie ducatu."

"The boundaries of that kingdom were as follows. To the east: Delmina. ... To the west: Carinthia, towards the sea up to the town of Stridon, which now marks the boundary between Dalmatia and Istria. To the north, moreover: from the banks of the Danube down to the Dalmatian sea, including all of Maronia and the Duchy of Hum."

9th century

 
Slavic principalities in ca. 814 AD.
 
Slavic principalities in ca. 850 AD.

Charlemagne, King of the Franks from 768 until his death in 814, expanded the Frankish kingdom into an empire (800) that incorporated much of western and central Europe.[25] He brought the Frankish state face to face with the West Slavs to the northeast and the Avars and South Slavs to the southeast of the Frankish empire.[25] Dalmatia which was southeast of the Frankish empire, was chiefly in the hands of South Slavic tribes.[26] North of Dubrovnik these came to be under Croatian župans (princes) and eventually came to consider themselves Croatians, while many of those to the south of Dubrovnik were coming to consider themselves Serbs.[26] Despite Frankish overlordship, the Franks had almost no role in Dalmatia (Dalmatian Croatia and Zahumlje) in the period from the 820s through 840s.[27]

In 866, a major Arab raid along Dalmatia struck Budva and Kotor, and then laid siege to Dubrovnik in 867.[27] The city of Dubrovnik appealed to Byzantine Emperor Basil the Macedonian, who responded by sending over one hundred ships.[27] Finally, the 866–867 Saracens' siege of Dubrovnik, which lasted fifteen months, was raised due to the intervention of Basil I, who sent a fleet under the command of Niketas Oryphas in relief of the city.[28] After this successful intervention, the Byzantine navy sailed along the coast collecting promises of loyalty to the empire from the Dalmatian cities.[27] At this moment the local Slavic tribes (in Zahumlje, Travunija, and Konavle), who had aided the intervention, also accepted Byzantine suzerainty.[27] Afterwards, the Slavs of Dalmatia and Zahumlje took part in the Byzantine military actions against the Arabs in Bari in 870–871.[27] The Roman cities in Dalmatia had long been pillaged by the Slavic tribes in the mountaines around them.[27] Basil I allowed the towns to pay tribute to the Slavic tribes to reduce the Slavs raiding.[27] Presumably a large portion of this tribute went to the prince of Dalmatian Croatia.[27] In late 870s, the theme of Dalmatia ("thema Dalmatias") was established, but with no real Byzantine authority.[29] These small cities in the region (also Dyrrachium) did not stretch into the hinterlands, and had none military capacity, thus Basil I paid a tax of '72 gold coins' to the princes of Zahumlje and Travunia.[29]

In 879, the Pope asked for help from Croatian prince Zdeslav for an armed escort for his delegates across southern Dalmatia and Zahumlje. Later in 880, the Pope ask the same from Zdeslav's successor, prince Branimir.[citation needed]

10th century

 
Map of Michael's territorial extent over Chelmia (Zahumlje), between the Kingdom of Croatia and the Bulgarian Empire.

The history of Zahumlje as a greater political entity starts with the emerging of Michael of Zahumlje, an independent South Slavic ruler who flourished in the early part of the 10th century. A neighbour of Croatian Kingdom and Principality of Serbia as well as an ally of Bulgaria, he was nevertheless able to maintain independent rule throughout at least a good part of his reign.[10]

Michael have come into territorial conflict with the neighbouring prince Peter Gojniković, the ruler of inner Serbia, who was extending his power westwards.[30][31] To eliminate that threat and as a close ally of Bulgaria, Michael warned the Bulgarian Tsar Simeon I about the alliance between Peter and Symeon's enemy, the Byzantine Empire.[30] In 912 Michael kidnapped the Venetian Doge's son Peter Badoari that was returning to Venice from Constantinople and sent him to Czar Simeon as a sign of loyalty. Symeon attacked inner Serbia and captured Peter, who later died in prison, and Michael was able to restore the majority of control.[32] Before the annexation of inner Serbia in 924, Bulgaria did not yet border on Zahumlje, but a part of Croatia lay between both lands. The Venetian chronicler John the Deacon (d. 1009) says that in 912 during Michael's rule, Zachlumia was a part of the Croatian land.[33][better source needed] The historical work Historia Salonitana by Thomas the Archdeacon, when describing the reign of Croatian king Stephen Držislav in the late 10th century, notes that Duchy of Hum (Chulmie) was a part of the Kingdom of Croatia, before and after Stjepan Držislav.[24]

The Historia Salonitana maior, whose composition may have begun in the late 13th century,[34] cites a letter of Pope John X to Tomislav, "king (rex) of the Croats", in which he refers to the first council in some detail. If the letter is authentic, it shows that the council was attended not only by the bishops of Croatian and Byzantine Dalmatia, but also by Tomislav, whose territory also included the Byzantine cities of Dalmatia, and by a number of Michael's representatives. Zahumlje may have been under Croatian influence, but remained a separate political entity. Both Zahumlje and Croatia were under the religious jurisdiction of the Archbishopric of Split. In this letter, John describes Michael as "the most excellent leader of the Zachlumi" (excellentissimus dux Chulmorum).[35][36]

After the Italian city of Siponto (Latin: Sipontum) was heavily jeopardized by the raiding Arabs and Langobards, Mihailo won a magnificent military victory by taking the city upon the recommendations from Constantinople and orders from his ally, King Tomislav Trpimirovic, but didn't keep it permanently.[37] Mihailo Višević entered into closer relations with the Byzantine Empire, after the death of Bulgaria's Tsar Simeon. He gained the grand titles of the Byzantine court as anthypatos and patrician (patrikios).[32] He remained as ruler of Zahumlje into the 940s, while maintaining good relations with the Papacy.[38]

After the death of Mihailo, Zahumlje came under the rule of Serbian prince Časlav Klonimirović, the last of the Vlastimirović dynasty. With the death of Časlav, Serbia disintegrated and in 11th century Duklja absorbed most of Raška along with Zahumlje and Travunija.[39] In the 990s, Bulgarian Tsar Samuel made client states out of most of the Balkans, including Duklja and Zahumlje.[40] In 998, Samuel launched a major campaign against Jovan Vladimir to prevent a Byzantine-Serbian alliance, resulting in a surrender.[41] The Bulgarian troops proceeded to pass through Dalmatia, taking control of Kotor and journeying to Dubrovnik. Although they failed to take Dubrovnik, they devastated the surrounding villages. The Bulgarian army then attacked Croatia in support of the rebel princes Krešimir III and Gojslav and advanced northwest as far as Split, Trogir and Zadar, then northeast through Bosnia and Raška and returned to Bulgaria.[41]

11th century

In a charter dated July 1039, Ljutovid of Zahumlje who was an independent Slavic ruler of Zahumlje, styled himself "Ljutovit, protospatharios epi tou Chrysotriklinou, hypatos, strategos" of Serbia and Zahumlje, which suggests the Byzantine Emperor granted him nominal right over neighbouring lands, including Duklja.[42] Ljutovid's claim to be strategos not only of Zahumlje, but all Serbia suggests that he had been courted by the emperor, and awarded nominal rights neighbouring lands, including Duklja, which was at the time at war with the empire.[42] If we can trust the Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja, our only narrative source, we must conclude that none of the Serbian lands was under direct Byzantine control in 1042.[42] Vojislav of Duklja (fl. 1018–1043) soon took Zahumlje from the Byzantines.[43] During the rule of Constantine Bodin (r. 1081–1101), neither Bosnia, Rascia nor Zahumlje was ever integrated into Doclea, each retained its own nobility and institutions and simply acquired a Vojislavljević to head the local structure as Prince or Duke.[44] Zahumlje subsequently became part of the Grand Principality of Serbia.

12th century

 
Zahumlje in 1190 as a lower part of Kingdom of Hungary

Kočapar, the Prince of Duklja (r. 1102–1103), ruled in the name of Vukan I of Serbia. There was a split between the two, and Vukan sent forces to Duklja, making Kočapar flee to Bosnia and then Zahumlje, where he died.[45] Zavida ruled Zahumlje before getting into a conflict with his brothers, resulting in him being exiled to Duklja, where he would have the title of Lord of Ribnica.[46] Grand Princes Desa (r. 1148–1162) and Uroš II Prvoslav ruled Serbia together 1149–1153; Desa had the title of 'Prince of Duklja, Travunija and Zahumlje', mentioned in 1150 and 1151.[47][better source needed]

About 1150, the Byzantine Emperor Manuel I Komnenos displeased with king Radoslav of Duklja, divided up his lands between princes of the old Serbian family of Zavida, and Stefan Nemanja secured the land of Hum.[48] After 1168 when Nemanja was raised to the Serbian throne with Manuel's favor, Hum passed to his brother Miroslav.[48] He married a sister of Ban Kulin, who in meantime acquired the throne of Bosnia.[48] The subjects of Miroslav and Kulin included both Catholic and Orthodox.[48] Prince Miroslav himself was Orthodox.[49] In meantime, both Bosnia and Hum had been fought between Kingdom of Hungary and Byzantine Empire.[48] The Catholics supported the former and the Orthodox the latter.[48] A support of the growing heresy seemed the best solution for both Kulin and Miroslav.[48]

 
Miroslav Gospel, one of the oldest surviving documents written in Serbian recension of Old Church Slavonic, was created by order by prince Miroslav of Hum

Following the death of Emperor Manuel in 1180 Miroslav started ecclesiastical superior of Hum.[50] He refused to allow Rainer, Latin Archbishop of Spalato (Split) whom he considered to be an agent of Hungarian king, to consecrate a bishop for the town of Ston.[50] In addition, Miroslav confiscated the Archbishop's money.[50] Rainer complained to the Pope Alexander III, who sent Teobald to report on the matter.[50] The Pope's nuncio Teobald found Miroslav as a patron of heretics.[50] After this, the Pope wrote to king Béla III of Hungary who was overlord of Hum (which Miroslav did not recognize), telling him to see that Miroslav performed his duty, but Miroslav remained as Prince of Hum.[50] In 1190–1192, Stefan Nemanja briefly assigned the rule of Hum to his son Rastko Nemanjić, while Miroslav held the Lim region with Bijelo Polje.[51] Rastko however took monastic vows and Miroslav continued ruling Hum after 1192.[51]

Latin vengeance came in March 1198, when Andrew II of Hungary become the prince of Dalmatia, Croatia and Hum, while Miroslav died a year after and his wife was living in exile.[50] The Miroslav Gospels are the oldest surviving documents written in Serbian recension of Old Church Slavonic, very likely produced for the Church of St Peter in Lima, commissioned by prince Miroslav.[52]

13th century

 
Part of Zahumlje under Medieval Serbian Kingdom in 1265

Until beginning of the 13th century, areas of Zahumlje were under jurisdiction of the Roman Church.[53] When Sava became the first archbishop of Serbia in 1219, he appointed Ilarion as the Orthodox bishop of Hum.

Andrija Mirosavljević is entitled the rule of Hum, but the Hum nobility chose his brother Petar. Andrija is exiled to Rascia, to the court of his cousin Grand Prince Stefan Nemanjić. In the meantime, Petar fought successfully with neighbouring Bosnia and Croatia. Stefan Nemanjić sided with Andrija and went to war and secured Hum and Popovo field for Andrija sometime after his accession. Petar was defeated and crossed the Neretva, continuing to rule the west and north of the Neretva, which had around 1205 been briefly occupied by Andrew II of Hungary.[54][55] Toljen II, the son of Toljen Mirosavljević, succeeded as prince, ruling 1227–1237. Andrija's sons Bogdan, Radoslav and George succeed as princes of Hum in 1249, Radoslav held the supreme rule. During the war against Ragusa, he aided his kinsman Stephen Uroš I of Serbia, at the same time swearing allegiance to Béla IV of Hungary. Following an earthquake in the Hum capital of Ston, the Serbian Orthodox bishop of Hum moved to the church of St Peter and St Paul built on the Lim River near the Serbian border in the 1250s.[54]

Radoslav of Zahumlje was from 1254 a vassal of Hungary, but probably afterwards his land were absorbed into Serbia.[56] However, he was at war with Serbia in 1268, while still under Hungarian suzerainty.[57] But seeking to centralize his realm, Stephen Uroš I of Serbia tried to stamp out regional differences by dropping references to Zahumlje (Hum), Trebinje and Duklja (Zeta), and called himself "King of all Serbian land and the Coast".[57] Miroslav's descendants dropped to the level of other local nobles.[57]

14th century

Paul I Šubić of Bribir as Ban of Croatia and Dalmatia controlled Croatia from Gvozd Mountain to the river Neretva mouth.[58] Paul became Lord of all of Bosnia in 1299.[59] Although supporting the king, Paul continued to act independently, and ruled over a large portion of modern-day Croatia and Bosnia.[59] In the course of the war between Stephen Uroš II Milutin and Stephen Dragutin, Paul Šubić expanded not only into western Hum, but also beyond the Neretva river, and took the region of Nevesinje and Ston.[29] Paul appointed his eldest son, Mladen II, as Lord of Hum.[60] At least part of Paul's conquests were granted to his vassal Constantine Nelipčić.[29] Mladen succeeded his father in 1312. After Paul's death, Milutin and Dragutin concluded a peace, and went to war against the Šubić family.[29] In the war that followed Milutin took one of Mladen's brother captive, and to get him back Mladen Šubić had to agree to restore a part of Hum to Milutin.[29] After this agreement in 1313 the Neretva again became the border between eastern and western Hum.[29]

By 1325, the Branivojević family had emerged as strongest in Hum.[61] Probably at their highest point they ruled from Cetina River to the town of Kotor.[61] Though nominal vassals of Serbia, the Branivojević family attacked Serbian interests and other local nobles of Hum, who in 1326 turned against Serbia and Branivojević family.[61] The Hum nobles approached to Stjepan Kotromanić II, the ban of Bosnia, who then annexed most of Hum.[61] The Draživojevići of Nevesinje as vassals of Bosnian Ban, become the leading family of Hum in the 1330s.[62] Because of the war in 1327-1328 between Serbia and Dubrovnik, Bosnian lordship of inner Hum and the war in Macedonia, Stephen Uroš IV Dušan sold Ston and Pelješac to Dubrovnik, and turned to the east to acquire all of Macedonia.[62]

The region was overwhelmed by the House of Kotromanić from Bosnia in 1322–1326. By the mid-14th century, Bosnia apparently reached a peak under Ban Tvrtko I who came into power in 1353.[citation needed]

15th century

 
Zahumlje divided between the realm of Hrvoje Vukčić Hrvatinić and the duchy of Sandalj Hranić around 1412 – the principality toward its end

In the beginning of the 15th century, Hrvoje Vukčić Hrvatinić ruled over the western Hum, and Sandalj Hranić Kosača ruled over its eastern part, while the Neretva river remain a border between their possessions.[63]

Bosnian regional lord Stjepan Vukčić Kosača who ruled over Zahumlje, in 1448 dropped his title "Vojvode of Bosnia", assuming the title "Herceg [Duke] of Hum and the Coast".[64] He changed it again in 1449 to "Herceg of Saint Sava" in recollection of the Serbian saint.[64] This title had considerable public relations value, because Sava's relics were consider miracle-working by people of all Christian faiths.[64] His lands were known as Herzog's lands or later Herzegovina.[64]

In 1451 he attacked Dubrovnik, and laid siege to the city.[65] He had earlier been made a Ragusan nobleman and, consequently, the Ragusan government now proclaimed him a traitor.[65] A reward of 15,000 ducats, a palace in Dubrovnik worth 2,000 ducats, and an annual income of 300 ducats was offered to anyone who would kill him, along with the promise of hereditary Ragusan nobility which also helped hold this promise to whoever did the deed.[65] Stjepan was so scared by the threat that he finally raised the siege.[65]

Demographics

12th–13th centuries

Most of Hum's territory was inhabited by Slavs,[66] and Vlachs, and belonged to the Eastern Church after the Great Schism.[67] Hum's coastal region, including its capital Ston, had a mixed population of Catholics and Orthodox.[49][67]

14th–15th centuries

In contrast to Bosnia, where Roman Catholicism and Bosnian Church were firmly established, eastern parts of Hum was mostly Orthodox, from 13th century and the rise of Nemanjići.[68] In the 14th- and 15th centuries, there was an influx of settlers from the župa of Trebinje, around forts Klobuk, Ledenica and Rudina, and the Hum lands around Gacko and Dabar, to Kotor. The people from Hum were mostly girls from Gacko, who took up working as servants to wealthy families.[69]

List of rulers

Legacy

The historical name of the region is officially represented in the name of the Eparchy of Zahumlje and Herzegovina of the Serbian Orthodox Church. Also, the honorific title Grand Voivode (Duke) of Zahumlije has been granted at times to junior members of the Petrović-Njegoš dynasty that ruled in Montenegro until 1918. The last grand duke of Zahumlije was Prince Peter of Montenegro, who died in 1932.[73]

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Entry "холм" in М. Фасмер (1986), Этимологический Словарь Русского Языка (Москва: Прогресс), 2-е изд. — Перевод с немецкого и дополнения О.Н. Трубачёва.
  2. ^ Korać, Dijana (December 2007). "Vjerske prilike na području knezova Jurjevića – Vlatkovića". Radovi Zavod Za Povijesne Znanosti Hazu U Zaru (in Serbo-Croatian). Zadar: Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts (49): 221–237. ISSN 1330-0474. Retrieved 2012-07-09.
  3. ^ Hupchick 2002.
  4. ^ Janković 2004, p. 39-61.
  5. ^ J B Bury, History of the Later Roman Empire from Arcadius to Irene, Vol 2 L
  6. ^ Fine 1994, p. 19.
  7. ^ Fine 1991, p. 25.
  8. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 12.
  9. ^ Dvornik et al. 1962, pp. 139, 142: He probably saw that in his time all these tribes were in the Serb sphere of influence, and therefore called them Serbs, thus ante-dating by three centuries the state of affairs in his day... It is obvious that the small retinue of the Serbian prince could not have populated Serbia, Zachlumia, Terbounia and Narenta.
  10. ^ a b Curta 2006, p. 210: According to Constantine Porphyrogenitus, the Slavs of the Dalmatian zhupanias of Pagania, Zahumlje, Travounia, and Konavli all "descended from the unbaptized Serbs."51 This has been rightly interpreted as an indication that in the mid-tenth century the coastal zhupanias were under the control of the Serbian zhupan Časlav, who ruled over the regions in the interior and extended his power westwards across the mountains to the coast.
  11. ^ Živković 2006, p. 60–61:Data on the family origin of Mihailo Višević indicate that his family did not belong to a Serbian or Croatian tribe, but to another Slavic tribe who lived along the Vistula River and who joined the Serbs during the migration during the reign of Emperor Heraclius. The introduction of Mihajlo Višević and his family by Porphyrogenitus suggests that the rulers of Zahumlje until his time belonged to this ruling family, so that, both in Serbia and Croatia, and in Zahumlje, there would be a very early established principle of inheriting power by members of one family. Constantine Porphyrogenitus explicitly calls the inhabitants of Zahumlje Serbs who have settled there since the time of Emperor Heraclius, but we cannot be certain that the Travunians, Zachlumians and Narentines in the migration period to the Balkans were Serbs or Croats or Slavic tribes which in alliance with Serbs or Croats arrived in the Balkans. The emperor-writer says that all these principalities are inhabited by Serbs, but this is a view from his time when the process of ethnogenesis had already reached such a stage that the Serbian name became widespread and generally accepted throughout the land due to Serbia's political domination. Therefore, it could be concluded that in the middle of the 10th century the process of ethnogenesis in Zahumlje, Travunija, and Paganija was probably completed, because the emperor's informant collected data from his surroundings and transferred to Constantinople the tribal sense of belonging of the inhabitants of these archons ... The Byzantine writings on the De Ceremoniis, which were also written under the patronage of Constantine Porphyrogenitus, listed the imperial orders to the surrounding peoples. The writings cite orders from the archons of Croats, Serbs, Zahumljani, Kanalites, Travunians, Duklja and Moravia. The above-mentioned orders may have originated at the earliest during the reign of Emperor Theophilus (829 - 842) and represent the earliest evidence of the political fragmentation of the South Slavic principalities, that is, they confirm their very early formation. It is not known when Zahumlje was formed as a separate principality. All the news that Constantine Porphyrogenitus provides about this area agrees that it has always been so - that is, since the seventh-century settlement in the time of Emperor Heraclius. It is most probable that the prefects in the coastal principalities recognized the supreme authority of the Serbian ruler from the very beginning, but that they aspired to become independent, which took place according to the list of orders preserved in the book De Ceremoniis, no later than the first half of the 9th century. A falsified and highly controversial papal charter from 743 also mentions Zahumlje and Travunija as separate areas. If the basic information about these countries were correct, it would mean that they formed as very early principalities that were practically independent of the archon of Serbia.
  12. ^ Budak, Neven (1994). Prva stoljeća Hrvatske (PDF). Zagreb: Hrvatska sveučilišna naklada. pp. 58–61. ISBN 953-169-032-4. Pri tome je car dosljedno izostavljao Dukljane iz ove srpske zajednice naroda. Čini se, međutim, očitim da car ne želi govoriti ο stvarnoj etničkoj povezanosti, već da su mu pred očima politički odnosi u trenutku kada je pisao djelo, odnosno iz vremena kada su za nj prikupljani podaci u Dalmaciji.
  13. ^ Gračanin, Hrvoje (2008), "Od Hrvata pak koji su stigli u Dalmaciju odvojio se jedan dio i zavladao Ilirikom i Panonijom: Razmatranja uz DAI c. 30, 75-78", Povijest U Nastavi (in Croatian), VI (11): 67–76, Izneseni nalazi navode na zaključak da se Hrvati nisu uopće naselili u južnoj Panoniji tijekom izvorne seobe sa sjevera na jug, iako je moguće da su pojedine manje skupine zaostale na tom području utopivši se naposljetku u premoćnoj množini ostalih doseljenih slavenskih populacija. Širenje starohrvatskih populacija s juga na sjever pripada vremenu od 10. stoljeća nadalje i povezano je s izmijenjenim političkim prilikama, jačanjem i širenjem rane hrvatske države. Na temelju svega ovoga mnogo je vjerojatnije da etnonim "Hrvati" i doseoba skrivaju činjenicu o prijenosu političke vlasti, što znači da je car političko vrhovništvo poistovjetio s etničkom nazočnošću. Točno takav pristup je primijenio pretvarajući Zahumljane, Travunjane i Neretljane u Srbe (DAI, c. 33, 8-9, 34, 4-7, 36, 5-7).
  14. ^ Budak, Neven (2018), Hrvatska povijest od 550. do 1100. [Croatian history from 550 until 1100], Leykam international, pp. 51, 177, ISBN 978-953-340-061-7, Sporovi hrvatske i srpske historiografije oko etničkoga karaktera sklavinija između Cetine i Drača bespredmetni su, jer transponiraju suvremene kategorije etniciteta u rani srednji vijek u kojem se identitet shvaćao drukčije. Osim toga, opstojnost većine sklavinija, a pogotovo Duklje (Zete) govori i u prilog ustrajanju na vlastitom identitetu kojim su se njihove elite razlikovale od onih susjednih ... Međutim, nakon nekog vremena (možda poslije unutarnjih sukoba u Hrvatskoj) promijenio je svoj položaj i prihvatio vrhovništvo srpskog vladara jer Konstantin tvrdi da su Zahumljani (kao i Neretvani i Travunjani) bili Srbi od vremena onog arhonta koji je Srbe, za vrijeme Heraklija, doveo u njihovu novu domovinu. Ta tvrdnja, naravno, nema veze sa stvarnošću 7. st., ali govori o političkim odnosima u Konstantinovo vrijeme.
  15. ^ Malcolm 1995, p. 10-11.
  16. ^ Živković, Tibor (2001). "О северним границама Србије у раном средњем веку" [On the northern borders of Serbia in the early middle ages]. Zbornik Matice srpske za istoriju (in Serbian). 63/64: 11. Plemena u Zahumlju, Paganiji, Travuniji i Konavlima Porfirogenit naziva Srbima,28 razdvajajuči pritom njihovo političko od etničkog bića.29 Ovakvo tumačenje verovatno nije najsrećnije jer za Mihaila Viševića, kneza Zahumljana, kaže da je poreklom sa Visle od roda Licika,30 a ta je reka isuviše daleko od oblasti Belih Srba i gde bi pre trebalo očekivati Bele Hrvate. To je prva indicija koja ukazuje da je srpsko pleme možda bilo na čelu većeg saveza slovenskih plemena koja su sa njim i pod vrhovnim vodstvom srpskog arhonta došla na Balkansko poluostrvo.
  17. ^ Živković 2006, p. 60.
  18. ^ Dvornik et al. 1962, p. 139: Even if we reject Gruber's theory, supported by Manojlović (ibid., XLIX), that Zachlumje actually became a part of Croatia, it should be emphasized that the Zachlumians had a closer bond of interest with the Croats than with the Serbs, since they seem to have migrated to their new home not, as C. says (33/8-9), with the Serbs, but with the Croats; see below, on 33/18-19 ... If this is so, we must regard the dynasty of Zachlumje and at any rate part of its people as neither Croat nor Serb, It seems more probable that Michael’s ancestor, together with his tribe, joined the Croats when they moved south; and settled on the Adriatic coast and the Narenta, leaving the Croats to push on into Dalmatia proper.
  19. ^ Dvornik et al. 1962, p. 139.
  20. ^ Uzelac, Aleksandar (2018). "Prince Michael of Zahumlje – a Serbian ally of Tsar Simeon". In Angel Nikolov; Nikolay Kanev (eds.). Emperor Symeon's Bulgaria in the History of Europe's South-East: 1100 years from the Battle of Achelous. Sofia: Univerzitetsvo izdatelstvo "Sveti Kliment Ohridski". p. 237. ...the enigmatic Litziki were associated with the archaic names of Poles(Lendizi, Liakhy),7 or with the Slavic tribe of Lingones mentioned by chronicler Adam of Bremen.8 Be that as it may, it is certain that, although his subjects were perceived as Serbs, the family of Prince Michael of Zahumlje did not descend from Serbs or Croats, and was not related to their dynasties.
  21. ^ Živković 2006, p. 75.
  22. ^ Lončar, Milenko; Jurić, Teuta Serreqi (2018). "Tamno more u spisu De administrando imperio: Baltičko ili Crno?" [The Dark Sea in De administrando imperio: The Baltic or the Black Sea?]. Povijesni Prilozi (in Croatian). 37 (54): 14. Kao potporna analogija može poslužiti i podrijetlo Mihaela Viševića, vladara Zahumljana s područja Visle.21 Teško da je netko drugi (osim njega samoga i njegova roda) iznosio takvu obavijest. Ista hrvatska tradicija, ponešto izmijenjena, zadržala se u Dalmaciji sve do 13. stoljeća kada ju spominje Toma Arhiđakon: "Iz krajeva Poljske došlo je s Totilom sedam ili osam uglednih plemena, koji se zovu Lingoni."2
  23. ^ Fine 1991, p. 32-33.
  24. ^ a b c Thomas of Split 2006, p. 60–61.
  25. ^ a b Ross 1945, p. 212–235.
  26. ^ a b Fine 1991, p. 253.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h i Fine 1991, p. 257.
  28. ^ Norris 1993, p. 24.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g Fine 1991, p. 258.
  30. ^ a b Fine 1991, p. 149.
  31. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 18.
  32. ^ a b Moravcsik 1967, p. 152-162.
  33. ^ John the Deacon, Chronicon Venetum, ed. Pertz, pp. 22-3.
  34. ^ Fine 2005, pp. 54–55: "John the Deacon [...] makes no mention of either council", "manuscript from the 16th century Historia Salonitana maior has long descriptions of the two councils" and "the labels of identity [...] represent views from no earlier than the late 13th century, and possibly the 14th, 15th and 16th"
  35. ^ Vlasto 1970, p. 209.
  36. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 17.
  37. ^ Omrčanin 1984, p. 24.
  38. ^ a b Fine 1991, p. 160.
  39. ^ Fine 1991, p. 193.
  40. ^ Fine 1991, p. 274.
  41. ^ a b Шишић 1928, p. 331.
  42. ^ a b c Stephenson 2003, p. 42-43.
  43. ^ Zlatar 2007, p. 572.
  44. ^ Fine 1991, p. 223.
  45. ^ Fine 1991, p. 231.
  46. ^ Fine 1994, p. 3.
  47. ^ Cawley, Charles, BOSNIA: Toc283713263, Medieval Lands database, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy,[self-published source][better source needed]
  48. ^ a b c d e f g Runciman 1982, p. 101.
  49. ^ a b Fine 1975, p. 114.
  50. ^ a b c d e f g h Runciman 1982, p. 102.
  51. ^ a b Fine 1994, p. 20-21.
  52. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 19.
  53. ^ Krešić, Milenko (2016). "Religious situation in the Hum land (Ston and Rat) during the Middle Ages". Hercegovina: Časopis za kulturno i povijesno naslijeđe (2): 66. doi:10.47960/2712-1844.2016.2.65. Do početka 20-ih godina 13. stoljeća prostori Humske zemlje bili su pod jurisdikcijom zapadne, odnosno rimske Crkve.
  54. ^ a b Fine 1994, p. 52-54.
  55. ^ Ćirković 2004, p. 37.
  56. ^ Runciman 1982, p. 107.
  57. ^ a b c Fine 1994, p. 203.
  58. ^ Fine 1994, p. 207-208.
  59. ^ a b Fine 1994, p. 209-210.
  60. ^ Karbić 2004, p. 17.
  61. ^ a b c d Fine 1994, p. 266.
  62. ^ a b Fine 1994, p. 267.
  63. ^ Zlatar 2007, p. 555.
  64. ^ a b c d Fine 1994, p. 578.
  65. ^ a b c d Viator (1978), pp. 388–389.
  66. ^ Fine, John V. A. (Jr ) (5 February 2010). When Ethnicity Did Not Matter in the Balkans: A Study of Identity in Pre-Nationalist Croatia, Dalmatia, and Slavonia in the Medieval and Early-Modern Periods. University of Michigan Press. pp. 94–98. ISBN 978-0-472-02560-2. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  67. ^ a b Fine 1994, p. 20.
  68. ^ Velikonja 2003, p. 38.
  69. ^ Тошић 2005, p. 221-227.
  70. ^ a b "Ranokršćanske i predromaničke crkve u Stonu" [Early Christian and pre-romanesque churches in Ston] (PDF). Građevinar (in Serbo-Croatian). Zagreb: Croatian Society of Civil Engineers. 58: 757–766. 2006. Retrieved 2011-02-18.
  71. ^ Fine 1994, p. 258.
  72. ^ a b Runciman 1982, p. 111.
  73. ^ Ulla Tillander-Godenhielm (2005): The Russian Imperial Award System During the Reign of Nicolas II, p. 446.

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External links

  • Medieval Lands: BOSNIA - Chapter 2. HERCEGOVINA (formerly ZAHUMLJE, HUM)

zachlumia, this, article, section, contains, close, paraphrasing, more, free, copyrighted, sources, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, improve, this, article, writing, your, words, january, 2021, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, zach. This article or section contains close paraphrasing of one or more non free copyrighted sources Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please improve this article by re writing it in your own words January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Zachlumia or Zachumlia Serbo Croatian Zahumlje Zahumљe pronounced zǎxuːmʎe also Hum was a medieval principality located in the modern day regions of Herzegovina and southern Dalmatia today parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia respectively In some periods it was a fully independent or semi independent South Slavic principality It maintained relations with various foreign and neighbouring powers Byzantine Empire First Bulgarian Empire Kingdom of Croatia Principality of Serbia and later was subjected temporarily or for a longer period to Kingdom of Hungary Kingdom of Serbia Kingdom of Bosnia Duchy of Saint Sava and at the end to the Ottoman Empire Principality of ZachlumiaZahumљeZahumlje9th century 1054Zachlumia in 9th centuryReligionChristianityGovernmentMonarchyPrince 910 935Michael first known 1039 1054Ljutovid last independent History Established9th century Conquered by Duklja1054Preceded by Succeeded byPrincipality of SerbiaByzantine Empire DukljaToday part ofCroatia Bosnia and Herzegovina Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 3 Slavic settlement 4 History 4 1 7th century 4 2 9th century 4 3 10th century 4 4 11th century 4 5 12th century 4 6 13th century 4 7 14th century 4 8 15th century 5 Demographics 5 1 12th 13th centuries 5 2 14th 15th centuries 6 List of rulers 7 Legacy 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Footnotes 9 2 Bibliography 10 External linksEtymology EditZachlumia is a derivative of Hum from Proto Slavic xŭlmŭ borrowed from a Germanic language cf Proto Germanic hulma meaning Hill 1 South Slavic Zahumlje is named after the mountain of Hum za Hum behind the Hum above Bona at the mouth of the Buna citation needed The principality is named Zahumlje or Hum in Serbo Croatian Serbian Cyrillic Zahumљe Hum It is Zachlumia in Latin Hlm in Old Church Slavonic and Zaxloymwn xwra land of Zachlumians in Greek The names Chelmania Chulmia and terra de Chelmo appear in later Latin and Italian chronicles Geography EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message De Administrando Imperio described the polity of Zachlumia likely during the reign of Caslav Klonimirovic r 927 960 From Ragusa begins the domain of the Zachloumoi Zaxloῦmoi and stretches along as far as the river Orontius and on the side of the coast it is neighbour to the Pagani but on the side of the mountain country it is neighbour to the Croats on the north and Serbia at the front The Zachloumoi that now live there are Serbs originating from the time of the prince archon who fled to emperor Heraclius The land of the Zachloumoi comprises the following cities Ston to Stagnon to Stagnon Mokriskik to Mokriskik Josli to Iosle to Iosle Galumainik to Galymaenik to Galumaenik Dobriskik to Dobriskik to Dovriskik The Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja 14th or 16th century described the geography under the rule of the South Slavic rulers Hum had two major cities Bona and Hum The main settlements in Zachlumia were Ston Oslje Dobar the towns of Mokriskik and Glumainik The Principality sprang from Dalmatia Croatia to the northwest and Pagania to the west to the mountain of Kalinovik and the Gatacko polje where it bordered Travunia The eastern border of Zahumlje went along the line Popovo Ljubinje Dabar and met with the Travunian border at the city of Ragusa which had to pay the annual tax mogorish of 36 pieces of gold to the Zachlumian rulers and at times accept their rule when Zachlumia was split on 9 zhupanates Ston Popovo Dubrava Luka Dabar Zapska Goricka and Vecenik around Neretva Zahumlje had access to the Adriatic Sea with the Peljesac peninsula and faced Serbia northwards citation needed In its later periods when Zahumlje was split into two Duchies Upper Zahumlje in the west and Lower Zahumlje in the east citation needed As the toponym Pagania disappeared by the turn of the 11th century the land of Hum was expanded to include the territory between Neretva and Cetina previously referred to as Pagania This territory was at the time controlled by local magnates called Radivojevici Jurjevici or Vlatkovici 2 Slavic settlement EditSlavs invaded Balkans during Justinian I r 527 565 when eventually up to 100 000 Slavs raided Thessalonica The Western Balkans was settled with Sclaveni Sklavenoi the east with Antes 3 The Sklavenoi plundered Thrace in 545 and again the next year In 551 the Slavs crossed Nis initially headed for Thessalonica but ended up in Dalmatia 4 In 577 some 100 000 Slavs poured into Thrace and Illyricum pillaging cities and settling down 5 Hum had also a large number of Vlachs who were descendent from a pre Slavic population Related to Romanians and originally speaking a language related to Romanian the Vlachs of what was Hum are today Slavic speaking 6 History Edit7th century Edit See also Migration period In the second decade of the 7th century the Avars and their Slavic subjects occupied most of the Byzantine province of Dalmatia including the territory of what would become Zahumlje sacking towns and enslaving or displacing the local population Some of the Slavs and Avars might have permanently settled in the occupied areas They attacked Constantinople in 626 but were defeated by the Byzantines after which the Avars ceased to play a significant role in the Balkans 7 Around 630 during the reign of Byzantine Emperor Heraclius Serbs and Croats Slavic tribes led by their respective aristocracies entered the western Balkans from the north which was approved by the emperor They inhabited areas that had been devastated by the Avars where Byzantium East Roman Empire had generally been reduced to only nominal rule According to DAI Zahumlje was one of the regions settled by the Serbs from an area near Thessaloniki who previously arrived there from White Serbia 8 but a closer reading of the source suggests that the Constantine VII s consideration about the population s ethnic identity is based on Serbian political rule during the time of Caslav and does not indicate ethnic origin 9 10 11 12 13 14 According to Noel Malcolm today s western Serbia was area where Serbs settled in 7th century and from there they expanded their rule on territory of Zachlumia 15 According to Tibor Zivkovic the area of the Vistula where the Litziki ancestors of Michael of Zahumlje originate was the place where White Croats would be expected and not White Serbs 16 and it s unclear whether the Zachlumians in the migration period to the Balkans really were Serbs or Croats or Slavic tribes which in alliance with Serbs or Croats arrived in the Balkans 17 According to Francis Dvornik the Zachlumians had a closer bond of interest with the Croats than with the Serbs since they seem to have migrated to their new home not with the Serbs but with the Croats 18 Michael s tribal origin is related to the oral tradition from Historia Salonitana by Thomas the Archdeacon about seven or eight tribes of nobles called Lingones who arrived from Poland and settled in Croatia 19 20 21 22 Much of Dalmatia was sometime earlier settled by the Croats and Zahumlje bordered their territory on the north 23 According to Thomas the Archdeacon when describing the reign of Croatian king Stephen Drzislav in the late 10th century notes that Duchy of Hum Zachlumia or Chulmie was a part of the Kingdom of Croatia before and after Stjepan Drzislav Istaque fuerunt regni eorum confinia ab oriente Delmina ubi fuit civitas Delmis ab occidente Carinthia versus mare usque ad oppidum Stridonis quod nunc est confinium Dalmatie et Ystrie ab aquilone vero a ripa Danubii usque ad mare Dalmaticum cum tota Maronia et Chulmie ducatu The boundaries of that kingdom were as follows To the east Delmina To the west Carinthia towards the sea up to the town of Stridon which now marks the boundary between Dalmatia and Istria To the north moreover from the banks of the Danube down to the Dalmatian sea including all of Maronia and the Duchy of Hum Thomas the Archdeacon 24 9th century Edit See also Byzantine Arab Wars 780 1180 Slavic principalities in ca 814 AD Slavic principalities in ca 850 AD Charlemagne King of the Franks from 768 until his death in 814 expanded the Frankish kingdom into an empire 800 that incorporated much of western and central Europe 25 He brought the Frankish state face to face with the West Slavs to the northeast and the Avars and South Slavs to the southeast of the Frankish empire 25 Dalmatia which was southeast of the Frankish empire was chiefly in the hands of South Slavic tribes 26 North of Dubrovnik these came to be under Croatian zupans princes and eventually came to consider themselves Croatians while many of those to the south of Dubrovnik were coming to consider themselves Serbs 26 Despite Frankish overlordship the Franks had almost no role in Dalmatia Dalmatian Croatia and Zahumlje in the period from the 820s through 840s 27 In 866 a major Arab raid along Dalmatia struck Budva and Kotor and then laid siege to Dubrovnik in 867 27 The city of Dubrovnik appealed to Byzantine Emperor Basil the Macedonian who responded by sending over one hundred ships 27 Finally the 866 867 Saracens siege of Dubrovnik which lasted fifteen months was raised due to the intervention of Basil I who sent a fleet under the command of Niketas Oryphas in relief of the city 28 After this successful intervention the Byzantine navy sailed along the coast collecting promises of loyalty to the empire from the Dalmatian cities 27 At this moment the local Slavic tribes in Zahumlje Travunija and Konavle who had aided the intervention also accepted Byzantine suzerainty 27 Afterwards the Slavs of Dalmatia and Zahumlje took part in the Byzantine military actions against the Arabs in Bari in 870 871 27 The Roman cities in Dalmatia had long been pillaged by the Slavic tribes in the mountaines around them 27 Basil I allowed the towns to pay tribute to the Slavic tribes to reduce the Slavs raiding 27 Presumably a large portion of this tribute went to the prince of Dalmatian Croatia 27 In late 870s the theme of Dalmatia thema Dalmatias was established but with no real Byzantine authority 29 These small cities in the region also Dyrrachium did not stretch into the hinterlands and had none military capacity thus Basil I paid a tax of 72 gold coins to the princes of Zahumlje and Travunia 29 In 879 the Pope asked for help from Croatian prince Zdeslav for an armed escort for his delegates across southern Dalmatia and Zahumlje Later in 880 the Pope ask the same from Zdeslav s successor prince Branimir citation needed 10th century Edit See also Michael of Zahumlje Map of Michael s territorial extent over Chelmia Zahumlje between the Kingdom of Croatia and the Bulgarian Empire The history of Zahumlje as a greater political entity starts with the emerging of Michael of Zahumlje an independent South Slavic ruler who flourished in the early part of the 10th century A neighbour of Croatian Kingdom and Principality of Serbia as well as an ally of Bulgaria he was nevertheless able to maintain independent rule throughout at least a good part of his reign 10 Michael have come into territorial conflict with the neighbouring prince Peter Gojnikovic the ruler of inner Serbia who was extending his power westwards 30 31 To eliminate that threat and as a close ally of Bulgaria Michael warned the Bulgarian Tsar Simeon I about the alliance between Peter and Symeon s enemy the Byzantine Empire 30 In 912 Michael kidnapped the Venetian Doge s son Peter Badoari that was returning to Venice from Constantinople and sent him to Czar Simeon as a sign of loyalty Symeon attacked inner Serbia and captured Peter who later died in prison and Michael was able to restore the majority of control 32 Before the annexation of inner Serbia in 924 Bulgaria did not yet border on Zahumlje but a part of Croatia lay between both lands The Venetian chronicler John the Deacon d 1009 says that in 912 during Michael s rule Zachlumia was a part of the Croatian land 33 better source needed The historical work Historia Salonitana by Thomas the Archdeacon when describing the reign of Croatian king Stephen Drzislav in the late 10th century notes that Duchy of Hum Chulmie was a part of the Kingdom of Croatia before and after Stjepan Drzislav 24 The Historia Salonitana maior whose composition may have begun in the late 13th century 34 cites a letter of Pope John X to Tomislav king rex of the Croats in which he refers to the first council in some detail If the letter is authentic it shows that the council was attended not only by the bishops of Croatian and Byzantine Dalmatia but also by Tomislav whose territory also included the Byzantine cities of Dalmatia and by a number of Michael s representatives Zahumlje may have been under Croatian influence but remained a separate political entity Both Zahumlje and Croatia were under the religious jurisdiction of the Archbishopric of Split In this letter John describes Michael as the most excellent leader of the Zachlumi excellentissimus dux Chulmorum 35 36 After the Italian city of Siponto Latin Sipontum was heavily jeopardized by the raiding Arabs and Langobards Mihailo won a magnificent military victory by taking the city upon the recommendations from Constantinople and orders from his ally King Tomislav Trpimirovic but didn t keep it permanently 37 Mihailo Visevic entered into closer relations with the Byzantine Empire after the death of Bulgaria s Tsar Simeon He gained the grand titles of the Byzantine court as anthypatos and patrician patrikios 32 He remained as ruler of Zahumlje into the 940s while maintaining good relations with the Papacy 38 After the death of Mihailo Zahumlje came under the rule of Serbian prince Caslav Klonimirovic the last of the Vlastimirovic dynasty With the death of Caslav Serbia disintegrated and in 11th century Duklja absorbed most of Raska along with Zahumlje and Travunija 39 In the 990s Bulgarian Tsar Samuel made client states out of most of the Balkans including Duklja and Zahumlje 40 In 998 Samuel launched a major campaign against Jovan Vladimir to prevent a Byzantine Serbian alliance resulting in a surrender 41 The Bulgarian troops proceeded to pass through Dalmatia taking control of Kotor and journeying to Dubrovnik Although they failed to take Dubrovnik they devastated the surrounding villages The Bulgarian army then attacked Croatia in support of the rebel princes Kresimir III and Gojslav and advanced northwest as far as Split Trogir and Zadar then northeast through Bosnia and Raska and returned to Bulgaria 41 11th century Edit In a charter dated July 1039 Ljutovid of Zahumlje who was an independent Slavic ruler of Zahumlje styled himself Ljutovit protospatharios epi tou Chrysotriklinou hypatos strategos of Serbia and Zahumlje which suggests the Byzantine Emperor granted him nominal right over neighbouring lands including Duklja 42 Ljutovid s claim to be strategos not only of Zahumlje but all Serbia suggests that he had been courted by the emperor and awarded nominal rights neighbouring lands including Duklja which was at the time at war with the empire 42 If we can trust the Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja our only narrative source we must conclude that none of the Serbian lands was under direct Byzantine control in 1042 42 Vojislav of Duklja fl 1018 1043 soon took Zahumlje from the Byzantines 43 During the rule of Constantine Bodin r 1081 1101 neither Bosnia Rascia nor Zahumlje was ever integrated into Doclea each retained its own nobility and institutions and simply acquired a Vojislavljevic to head the local structure as Prince or Duke 44 Zahumlje subsequently became part of the Grand Principality of Serbia 12th century Edit Zahumlje in 1190 as a lower part of Kingdom of Hungary Kocapar the Prince of Duklja r 1102 1103 ruled in the name of Vukan I of Serbia There was a split between the two and Vukan sent forces to Duklja making Kocapar flee to Bosnia and then Zahumlje where he died 45 Zavida ruled Zahumlje before getting into a conflict with his brothers resulting in him being exiled to Duklja where he would have the title of Lord of Ribnica 46 Grand Princes Desa r 1148 1162 and Uros II Prvoslav ruled Serbia together 1149 1153 Desa had the title of Prince of Duklja Travunija and Zahumlje mentioned in 1150 and 1151 47 better source needed About 1150 the Byzantine Emperor Manuel I Komnenos displeased with king Radoslav of Duklja divided up his lands between princes of the old Serbian family of Zavida and Stefan Nemanja secured the land of Hum 48 After 1168 when Nemanja was raised to the Serbian throne with Manuel s favor Hum passed to his brother Miroslav 48 He married a sister of Ban Kulin who in meantime acquired the throne of Bosnia 48 The subjects of Miroslav and Kulin included both Catholic and Orthodox 48 Prince Miroslav himself was Orthodox 49 In meantime both Bosnia and Hum had been fought between Kingdom of Hungary and Byzantine Empire 48 The Catholics supported the former and the Orthodox the latter 48 A support of the growing heresy seemed the best solution for both Kulin and Miroslav 48 Miroslav Gospel one of the oldest surviving documents written in Serbian recension of Old Church Slavonic was created by order by prince Miroslav of Hum Following the death of Emperor Manuel in 1180 Miroslav started ecclesiastical superior of Hum 50 He refused to allow Rainer Latin Archbishop of Spalato Split whom he considered to be an agent of Hungarian king to consecrate a bishop for the town of Ston 50 In addition Miroslav confiscated the Archbishop s money 50 Rainer complained to the Pope Alexander III who sent Teobald to report on the matter 50 The Pope s nuncio Teobald found Miroslav as a patron of heretics 50 After this the Pope wrote to king Bela III of Hungary who was overlord of Hum which Miroslav did not recognize telling him to see that Miroslav performed his duty but Miroslav remained as Prince of Hum 50 In 1190 1192 Stefan Nemanja briefly assigned the rule of Hum to his son Rastko Nemanjic while Miroslav held the Lim region with Bijelo Polje 51 Rastko however took monastic vows and Miroslav continued ruling Hum after 1192 51 Latin vengeance came in March 1198 when Andrew II of Hungary become the prince of Dalmatia Croatia and Hum while Miroslav died a year after and his wife was living in exile 50 The Miroslav Gospels are the oldest surviving documents written in Serbian recension of Old Church Slavonic very likely produced for the Church of St Peter in Lima commissioned by prince Miroslav 52 13th century Edit Part of Zahumlje under Medieval Serbian Kingdom in 1265 Until beginning of the 13th century areas of Zahumlje were under jurisdiction of the Roman Church 53 When Sava became the first archbishop of Serbia in 1219 he appointed Ilarion as the Orthodox bishop of Hum Andrija Mirosavljevic is entitled the rule of Hum but the Hum nobility chose his brother Petar Andrija is exiled to Rascia to the court of his cousin Grand Prince Stefan Nemanjic In the meantime Petar fought successfully with neighbouring Bosnia and Croatia Stefan Nemanjic sided with Andrija and went to war and secured Hum and Popovo field for Andrija sometime after his accession Petar was defeated and crossed the Neretva continuing to rule the west and north of the Neretva which had around 1205 been briefly occupied by Andrew II of Hungary 54 55 Toljen II the son of Toljen Mirosavljevic succeeded as prince ruling 1227 1237 Andrija s sons Bogdan Radoslav and George succeed as princes of Hum in 1249 Radoslav held the supreme rule During the war against Ragusa he aided his kinsman Stephen Uros I of Serbia at the same time swearing allegiance to Bela IV of Hungary Following an earthquake in the Hum capital of Ston the Serbian Orthodox bishop of Hum moved to the church of St Peter and St Paul built on the Lim River near the Serbian border in the 1250s 54 Radoslav of Zahumlje was from 1254 a vassal of Hungary but probably afterwards his land were absorbed into Serbia 56 However he was at war with Serbia in 1268 while still under Hungarian suzerainty 57 But seeking to centralize his realm Stephen Uros I of Serbia tried to stamp out regional differences by dropping references to Zahumlje Hum Trebinje and Duklja Zeta and called himself King of all Serbian land and the Coast 57 Miroslav s descendants dropped to the level of other local nobles 57 14th century Edit Further information Kingdom of Bosnia Paul I Subic of Bribir as Ban of Croatia and Dalmatia controlled Croatia from Gvozd Mountain to the river Neretva mouth 58 Paul became Lord of all of Bosnia in 1299 59 Although supporting the king Paul continued to act independently and ruled over a large portion of modern day Croatia and Bosnia 59 In the course of the war between Stephen Uros II Milutin and Stephen Dragutin Paul Subic expanded not only into western Hum but also beyond the Neretva river and took the region of Nevesinje and Ston 29 Paul appointed his eldest son Mladen II as Lord of Hum 60 At least part of Paul s conquests were granted to his vassal Constantine Nelipcic 29 Mladen succeeded his father in 1312 After Paul s death Milutin and Dragutin concluded a peace and went to war against the Subic family 29 In the war that followed Milutin took one of Mladen s brother captive and to get him back Mladen Subic had to agree to restore a part of Hum to Milutin 29 After this agreement in 1313 the Neretva again became the border between eastern and western Hum 29 By 1325 the Branivojevic family had emerged as strongest in Hum 61 Probably at their highest point they ruled from Cetina River to the town of Kotor 61 Though nominal vassals of Serbia the Branivojevic family attacked Serbian interests and other local nobles of Hum who in 1326 turned against Serbia and Branivojevic family 61 The Hum nobles approached to Stjepan Kotromanic II the ban of Bosnia who then annexed most of Hum 61 The Drazivojevici of Nevesinje as vassals of Bosnian Ban become the leading family of Hum in the 1330s 62 Because of the war in 1327 1328 between Serbia and Dubrovnik Bosnian lordship of inner Hum and the war in Macedonia Stephen Uros IV Dusan sold Ston and Peljesac to Dubrovnik and turned to the east to acquire all of Macedonia 62 The region was overwhelmed by the House of Kotromanic from Bosnia in 1322 1326 By the mid 14th century Bosnia apparently reached a peak under Ban Tvrtko I who came into power in 1353 citation needed 15th century Edit Zahumlje divided between the realm of Hrvoje Vukcic Hrvatinic and the duchy of Sandalj Hranic around 1412 the principality toward its end In the beginning of the 15th century Hrvoje Vukcic Hrvatinic ruled over the western Hum and Sandalj Hranic Kosaca ruled over its eastern part while the Neretva river remain a border between their possessions 63 Bosnian regional lord Stjepan Vukcic Kosaca who ruled over Zahumlje in 1448 dropped his title Vojvode of Bosnia assuming the title Herceg Duke of Hum and the Coast 64 He changed it again in 1449 to Herceg of Saint Sava in recollection of the Serbian saint 64 This title had considerable public relations value because Sava s relics were consider miracle working by people of all Christian faiths 64 His lands were known as Herzog s lands or later Herzegovina 64 In 1451 he attacked Dubrovnik and laid siege to the city 65 He had earlier been made a Ragusan nobleman and consequently the Ragusan government now proclaimed him a traitor 65 A reward of 15 000 ducats a palace in Dubrovnik worth 2 000 ducats and an annual income of 300 ducats was offered to anyone who would kill him along with the promise of hereditary Ragusan nobility which also helped hold this promise to whoever did the deed 65 Stjepan was so scared by the threat that he finally raised the siege 65 Demographics Edit12th 13th centuries Edit Most of Hum s territory was inhabited by Slavs 66 and Vlachs and belonged to the Eastern Church after the Great Schism 67 Hum s coastal region including its capital Ston had a mixed population of Catholics and Orthodox 49 67 14th 15th centuries Edit In contrast to Bosnia where Roman Catholicism and Bosnian Church were firmly established eastern parts of Hum was mostly Orthodox from 13th century and the rise of Nemanjici 68 In the 14th and 15th centuries there was an influx of settlers from the zupa of Trebinje around forts Klobuk Ledenica and Rudina and the Hum lands around Gacko and Dabar to Kotor The people from Hum were mostly girls from Gacko who took up working as servants to wealthy families 69 List of rulers EditMichael of Zahumlje independent Slavic ruler of Zahumlje Prince of Zahumlje 910 940 38 Caslav knez of Serbia 940 960 Tihomir knez of Serbia 960 969 Stephen Drzislav of Croatia King of Croatia 969 997 24 better source needed Dragimir Prince of Travunia and Zachlumia as a part of Duklja 1000 1018 Part of Byzantine empire 1018 1039 Ljutovid Prince of Hum 1039 1054 Mihailo Vojislavljevic Prince and King of Duklja 1054 1081 Bodin Vojislavljevic King of Duklja 1081 1101 Vladimir II of Duklja King of Duklja c 1103 1113 George I of Duklja King of Duklja c 1113 1118 and 1125 1131 Desa Duke of Zahumlje 1149 1162 Miroslav of Hum Prince of Zahumlje 1162 1190 Rastko of Nemanja 1190 1192 ruling in the name of Stefan Nemanja Miroslav of Hum Prince of Zahumlje 1192 Toljen of Hum Prince of Zahumlje 1192 1196 He married a daughter of Duke Berthold von Meran Margrave of Istria To Hungary 1198 1199 50 Petar son of Miroslav Duke of Zahumlje 1196 1216 and a count of the city of Split 1222 1225 In 1216 Stephen the First Crowned divided Hum Mainland of Zachlumia Stefan Radoslav of Serbia Prince of Serbia and Zahumlje 1216 1228 Toljen II son of Toljen Duke of Upper Zahumlje 1228 1239 Coastal Zachlumia Andrija son of Miroslav Prince of the Seaside and Duke of Southern Zahumlje 1216 1239 Union of Zachlumia Andrija 1239 1250 Radoslav of Zahumlje Bogdan I and George I 1249 1252 brothers sons of Andrew Radoslav of Zahumlje and George I 1252 1268 George I 1268 1280 Bogdan II 1280 1299 Mladen I Subic of Bribir a Croatian noble and Bosnian Ban from 1299 to 1304 70 Paul I Subic of Bribir a Ban of Croatia and Lord of all of Bosnia from 1304 to 1312 70 Mladen II Subic of Bribir Ban the Croats and Bosnia and general lord of Hum country 1312 1322 71 Nikola Prince of Zahumlje 1322 1326 Son of Bogdan I or Radoslav He married Katarina Kotromanic in 1338 Stjepan Kotromanic II a Bosnian Ban from 1326 to 1353 Tvrtko the first Bosnian King 1353 1391 Stephen Dabisa of Bosnia 1391 1395 Helen I 1395 1398 Stephen Ostoja of Bosnia 1398 1404 72 Stephen Tvrtko II of Bosnia 1404 1409 Stephen Ostoja of Bosnia again 1409 1418 72 Sandalj Hranic Kosaca Grand Duke of Hum from 1418 to 1435 Stjepan Vukcic Kosaca 1435 1466 was Serbian noble In 1448 changed his title from Vojvode of Bosnia into Herceg Duke of Hum and the Coast and from 1449 into Herceg of Saint Sava Vlatko Hercegovic from 1466 to 1481Legacy EditThe historical name of the region is officially represented in the name of the Eparchy of Zahumlje and Herzegovina of the Serbian Orthodox Church Also the honorific title Grand Voivode Duke of Zahumlije has been granted at times to junior members of the Petrovic Njegos dynasty that ruled in Montenegro until 1918 The last grand duke of Zahumlije was Prince Peter of Montenegro who died in 1932 73 See also EditHistory of Bosnia and Herzegovina History of Dalmatia History of Croatia History of SerbiaReferences EditFootnotes Edit Entry holm in M Fasmer 1986 Etimologicheskij Slovar Russkogo Yazyka Moskva Progress 2 e izd Perevod s nemeckogo i dopolneniya O N Trubachyova Korac Dijana December 2007 Vjerske prilike na podrucju knezova Jurjevica Vlatkovica Radovi Zavod Za Povijesne Znanosti Hazu U Zaru in Serbo Croatian Zadar Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts 49 221 237 ISSN 1330 0474 Retrieved 2012 07 09 Hupchick 2002 Jankovic 2004 p 39 61 J B Bury History of the Later Roman Empire from Arcadius to Irene Vol 2 L Fine 1994 p 19 Fine 1991 p 25 Cirkovic 2004 p 12 Dvornik et al 1962 pp 139 142 He probably saw that in his time all these tribes were in the Serb sphere of influence and therefore called them Serbs thus ante dating by three centuries the state of affairs in his day It is obvious that the small retinue of the Serbian prince could not have populated Serbia Zachlumia Terbounia and Narenta a b Curta 2006 p 210 According to Constantine Porphyrogenitus the Slavs of the Dalmatian zhupanias of Pagania Zahumlje Travounia and Konavli all descended from the unbaptized Serbs 51 This has been rightly interpreted as an indication that in the mid tenth century the coastal zhupanias were under the control of the Serbian zhupan Caslav who ruled over the regions in the interior and extended his power westwards across the mountains to the coast Zivkovic 2006 p 60 61 Data on the family origin of Mihailo Visevic indicate that his family did not belong to a Serbian or Croatian tribe but to another Slavic tribe who lived along the Vistula River and who joined the Serbs during the migration during the reign of Emperor Heraclius The introduction of Mihajlo Visevic and his family by Porphyrogenitus suggests that the rulers of Zahumlje until his time belonged to this ruling family so that both in Serbia and Croatia and in Zahumlje there would be a very early established principle of inheriting power by members of one family Constantine Porphyrogenitus explicitly calls the inhabitants of Zahumlje Serbs who have settled there since the time of Emperor Heraclius but we cannot be certain that the Travunians Zachlumians and Narentines in the migration period to the Balkans were Serbs or Croats or Slavic tribes which in alliance with Serbs or Croats arrived in the Balkans The emperor writer says that all these principalities are inhabited by Serbs but this is a view from his time when the process of ethnogenesis had already reached such a stage that the Serbian name became widespread and generally accepted throughout the land due to Serbia s political domination Therefore it could be concluded that in the middle of the 10th century the process of ethnogenesis in Zahumlje Travunija and Paganija was probably completed because the emperor s informant collected data from his surroundings and transferred to Constantinople the tribal sense of belonging of the inhabitants of these archons The Byzantine writings on the De Ceremoniis which were also written under the patronage of Constantine Porphyrogenitus listed the imperial orders to the surrounding peoples The writings cite orders from the archons of Croats Serbs Zahumljani Kanalites Travunians Duklja and Moravia The above mentioned orders may have originated at the earliest during the reign of Emperor Theophilus 829 842 and represent the earliest evidence of the political fragmentation of the South Slavic principalities that is they confirm their very early formation It is not known when Zahumlje was formed as a separate principality All the news that Constantine Porphyrogenitus provides about this area agrees that it has always been so that is since the seventh century settlement in the time of Emperor Heraclius It is most probable that the prefects in the coastal principalities recognized the supreme authority of the Serbian ruler from the very beginning but that they aspired to become independent which took place according to the list of orders preserved in the book De Ceremoniis no later than the first half of the 9th century A falsified and highly controversial papal charter from 743 also mentions Zahumlje and Travunija as separate areas If the basic information about these countries were correct it would mean that they formed as very early principalities that were practically independent of the archon of Serbia Budak Neven 1994 Prva stoljeca Hrvatske PDF Zagreb Hrvatska sveucilisna naklada pp 58 61 ISBN 953 169 032 4 Pri tome je car dosljedno izostavljao Dukljane iz ove srpske zajednice naroda Cini se međutim ocitim da car ne zeli govoriti o stvarnoj etnickoj povezanosti vec da su mu pred ocima politicki odnosi u trenutku kada je pisao djelo odnosno iz vremena kada su za nj prikupljani podaci u Dalmaciji Gracanin Hrvoje 2008 Od Hrvata pak koji su stigli u Dalmaciju odvojio se jedan dio i zavladao Ilirikom i Panonijom Razmatranja uz DAI c 30 75 78 Povijest U Nastavi in Croatian VI 11 67 76 Izneseni nalazi navode na zakljucak da se Hrvati nisu uopce naselili u juznoj Panoniji tijekom izvorne seobe sa sjevera na jug iako je moguce da su pojedine manje skupine zaostale na tom podrucju utopivsi se naposljetku u premocnoj mnozini ostalih doseljenih slavenskih populacija Sirenje starohrvatskih populacija s juga na sjever pripada vremenu od 10 stoljeca nadalje i povezano je s izmijenjenim politickim prilikama jacanjem i sirenjem rane hrvatske drzave Na temelju svega ovoga mnogo je vjerojatnije da etnonim Hrvati i doseoba skrivaju cinjenicu o prijenosu politicke vlasti sto znaci da je car politicko vrhovnistvo poistovjetio s etnickom nazocnoscu Tocno takav pristup je primijenio pretvarajuci Zahumljane Travunjane i Neretljane u Srbe DAI c 33 8 9 34 4 7 36 5 7 Budak Neven 2018 Hrvatska povijest od 550 do 1100 Croatian history from 550 until 1100 Leykam international pp 51 177 ISBN 978 953 340 061 7 Sporovi hrvatske i srpske historiografije oko etnickoga karaktera sklavinija između Cetine i Draca bespredmetni su jer transponiraju suvremene kategorije etniciteta u rani srednji vijek u kojem se identitet shvacao drukcije Osim toga opstojnost vecine sklavinija a pogotovo Duklje Zete govori i u prilog ustrajanju na vlastitom identitetu kojim su se njihove elite razlikovale od onih susjednih Međutim nakon nekog vremena mozda poslije unutarnjih sukoba u Hrvatskoj promijenio je svoj polozaj i prihvatio vrhovnistvo srpskog vladara jer Konstantin tvrdi da su Zahumljani kao i Neretvani i Travunjani bili Srbi od vremena onog arhonta koji je Srbe za vrijeme Heraklija doveo u njihovu novu domovinu Ta tvrdnja naravno nema veze sa stvarnoscu 7 st ali govori o politickim odnosima u Konstantinovo vrijeme Malcolm 1995 p 10 11 Zivkovic Tibor 2001 O severnim granicama Srbiјe u ranom sredњem veku On the northern borders of Serbia in the early middle ages Zbornik Matice srpske za istoriju in Serbian 63 64 11 Plemena u Zahumlju Paganiji Travuniji i Konavlima Porfirogenit naziva Srbima 28 razdvajajuci pritom njihovo politicko od etnickog bica 29 Ovakvo tumacenje verovatno nije najsrecnije jer za Mihaila Visevica kneza Zahumljana kaze da je poreklom sa Visle od roda Licika 30 a ta je reka isuvise daleko od oblasti Belih Srba i gde bi pre trebalo ocekivati Bele Hrvate To je prva indicija koja ukazuje da je srpsko pleme mozda bilo na celu veceg saveza slovenskih plemena koja su sa njim i pod vrhovnim vodstvom srpskog arhonta dosla na Balkansko poluostrvo Zivkovic 2006 p 60 Dvornik et al 1962 p 139 Even if we reject Gruber s theory supported by Manojlovic ibid XLIX that Zachlumje actually became a part of Croatia it should be emphasized that the Zachlumians had a closer bond of interest with the Croats than with the Serbs since they seem to have migrated to their new home not as C says 33 8 9 with the Serbs but with the Croats see below on 33 18 19 If this is so we must regard the dynasty of Zachlumje and at any rate part of its people as neither Croat nor Serb It seems more probable that Michael s ancestor together with his tribe joined the Croats when they moved south and settled on the Adriatic coast and the Narenta leaving the Croats to push on into Dalmatia proper Dvornik et al 1962 p 139 Uzelac Aleksandar 2018 Prince Michael of Zahumlje a Serbian ally of Tsar Simeon In Angel Nikolov Nikolay Kanev eds Emperor Symeon s Bulgaria in the History of Europe s South East 1100 years from the Battle of Achelous Sofia Univerzitetsvo izdatelstvo Sveti Kliment Ohridski p 237 the enigmatic Litziki were associated with the archaic names of Poles Lendizi Liakhy 7 or with the Slavic tribe of Lingones mentioned by chronicler Adam of Bremen 8 Be that as it may it is certain that although his subjects were perceived as Serbs the family of Prince Michael of Zahumlje did not descend from Serbs or Croats and was not related to their dynasties Zivkovic 2006 p 75 Loncar Milenko Juric Teuta Serreqi 2018 Tamno more u spisu De administrando imperio Balticko ili Crno The Dark Sea in De administrando imperio The Baltic or the Black Sea Povijesni Prilozi in Croatian 37 54 14 Kao potporna analogija moze posluziti i podrijetlo Mihaela Visevica vladara Zahumljana s podrucja Visle 21 Tesko da je netko drugi osim njega samoga i njegova roda iznosio takvu obavijest Ista hrvatska tradicija ponesto izmijenjena zadrzala se u Dalmaciji sve do 13 stoljeca kada ju spominje Toma Arhiđakon Iz krajeva Poljske doslo je s Totilom sedam ili osam uglednih plemena koji se zovu Lingoni 2 Fine 1991 p 32 33 a b c Thomas of Split 2006 p 60 61 a b Ross 1945 p 212 235 a b Fine 1991 p 253 a b c d e f g h i Fine 1991 p 257 Norris 1993 p 24 a b c d e f g Fine 1991 p 258 a b Fine 1991 p 149 Cirkovic 2004 p 18 a b Moravcsik 1967 p 152 162 John the Deacon Chronicon Venetum ed Pertz pp 22 3 Fine 2005 pp 54 55 John the Deacon makes no mention of either council manuscript from the 16th century Historia Salonitana maior has long descriptions of the two councils and the labels of identity represent views from no earlier than the late 13th century and possibly the 14th 15th and 16th Vlasto 1970 p 209 Cirkovic 2004 p 17 Omrcanin 1984 p 24 a b Fine 1991 p 160 Fine 1991 p 193 Fine 1991 p 274 a b Shishiћ 1928 p 331 a b c Stephenson 2003 p 42 43 Zlatar 2007 p 572 Fine 1991 p 223 Fine 1991 p 231 Fine 1994 p 3 Cawley Charles BOSNIA Toc283713263 Medieval Lands database Foundation for Medieval Genealogy self published source better source needed a b c d e f g Runciman 1982 p 101 a b Fine 1975 p 114 a b c d e f g h Runciman 1982 p 102 a b Fine 1994 p 20 21 Cirkovic 2004 p 19 Kresic Milenko 2016 Religious situation in the Hum land Ston and Rat during the Middle Ages Hercegovina Casopis za kulturno i povijesno naslijeđe 2 66 doi 10 47960 2712 1844 2016 2 65 Do pocetka 20 ih godina 13 stoljeca prostori Humske zemlje bili su pod jurisdikcijom zapadne odnosno rimske Crkve a b Fine 1994 p 52 54 Cirkovic 2004 p 37 Runciman 1982 p 107 a b c Fine 1994 p 203 Fine 1994 p 207 208 a b Fine 1994 p 209 210 Karbic 2004 p 17 a b c d Fine 1994 p 266 a b Fine 1994 p 267 Zlatar 2007 p 555 a b c d Fine 1994 p 578 a b c d Viator 1978 pp 388 389 Fine John V A Jr 5 February 2010 When Ethnicity Did Not Matter in the Balkans A Study of Identity in Pre Nationalist Croatia Dalmatia and Slavonia in the Medieval and Early Modern Periods University of Michigan Press pp 94 98 ISBN 978 0 472 02560 2 Retrieved 21 July 2021 a b Fine 1994 p 20 Velikonja 2003 p 38 Toshiћ 2005 p 221 227 a b Ranokrscanske i predromanicke crkve u Stonu Early Christian and pre romanesque churches in Ston PDF Građevinar in Serbo Croatian Zagreb Croatian Society of Civil Engineers 58 757 766 2006 Retrieved 2011 02 18 Fine 1994 p 258 a b Runciman 1982 p 111 Ulla Tillander Godenhielm 2005 The Russian Imperial Award System During the Reign of Nicolas II p 446 Bibliography Edit Batakovic Dusan T 1996 The Serbs of Bosnia amp Herzegovina History and Politics Paris Dialogue ISBN 9782911527104 Cirkovic Sima 2004 The Serbs Malden Blackwell Publishing ISBN 9780631204718 Thomas of Split 2006 Karbic Damir Matijevic Sokol Mirjana Peric Olga Sweeney James Ross eds History of the Bishops of Salona and Split 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Jr 1994 1987 The Late Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press ISBN 0472082604 Fine John Van Antwerp Jr 2005 When Ethnicity Did Not Matter in the Balkans A Study of Identity in Pre Nationalist Croatia Dalmatia and Slavonia in the Medieval and Early Modern Periods Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press ISBN 0472025600 Fleming Thomas 2002 Montenegro The Divided Land Rockford Illinois Chronicles Press ISBN 9780961936495 Hupchick Dennis P 2002 The Balkans From Constantinople to Communism New York Palgrave ISBN 9780312217365 Hupchick Dennis P 2017 The Bulgarian Byzantine Wars for Early Medieval Balkan Hegemony Silver Lined Skulls and Blinded Armies New York Springer ISBN 9783319562063 Jankovic Đorđe 2004 The Slavs in the 6th Century North Illyricum Glasnik Srpskog arheoloshkog drushtva 20 39 61 John the Deacon Chronicon Venetum ed G H Pertz 1846 Monumenta Germaniae Historica Scriptores 7 Hanover pp 1 36 22 3 Archived from the original on 2011 07 19 A later edition is that by G Monticolo 1890 Rome Forzani The relevant passage is also found in Racki F 1877 Documenta historiae chroaticae periodum antiquam illustrantia Zagreb Zagrabiae Sumptibus Academiae Scientiarum et Artium pp 388 no 197 1 Karbic Damir 2004 Subici Bribirski do gubitka nasljedne banske casti 1322 The Subici of Bribir until the Loss of the Hereditary Position of the Croatian Ban 1322 Historical Contributions in Croatian Zagreb Croatia Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts 22 1 26 Luttwak Edward N 2009 The Grand Strategy of the Byzantine Empire Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674035195 Norris H T 1993 Islam in the Balkans religion and society between Europe and the Arab world University of South Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 87249 977 5 Omrcanin Ivo 1984 Military History of Croatia Dorrance ISBN 9780805928938 Racki Franjo 1861 Odlomci iz drzavnoga prava hrvatskoga za narodne dynastie Bec Klemm Ross James Bruce 1945 Two Neglected Paladins of Charlemagne Erich of Friuli and Gerold of Bavaria Speculum 20 2 212 235 doi 10 2307 2854596 JSTOR 2854596 S2CID 163300685 Runciman Steven 1982 The Medieval Manichee A Study of the Christian Dualist Heresy Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521289269 Runciman Steven 1988 The Emperor Romanus Lecapenus and His Reign A Study of Tenth Century Byzantium Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521357227 Samardzic Radovan Duskov Milan eds 1993 Serbs in European Civilization Belgrade Nova Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts Institute for Balkan Studies ISBN 9788675830153 Sedlar Jean W 1994 East Central Europe in the Middle Ages 1000 1500 Seattle University of Washington Press ISBN 9780295800646 Stephenson Paul 2003 The Legend of Basil the Bulgar Slayer Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521815307 Stephenson Paul 2004 Byzantium s Balkan Frontier A Political Study of the Northern Balkans 900 1204 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521770170 Stoianovich Traian 1994 Balkan worlds the first and last Europe M E Sharpe ISBN 978 1 56324 033 1 Velikonja Mitja 2003 Religious Separation and Political Intolerance in Bosnia Herzegovina College Station Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 9781585442263 Viator 1978 Medieval and Renaissance Studies University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 03608 6 Vlasto Alexis P 1970 The Entry of the Slavs into Christendom An Introduction to the Medieval History of the Slavs Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521074599 Zlatar Zdenko 2007 The poetics of Slavdom the mythopoeic foundations of Yugoslavia Peter Lang ISBN 978 0 8204 8135 7 Ostrogorsky George 1956 History of the Byzantine State Oxford Basil Blackwell Toshiћ Ђuro 2005 Trebiњci i Zahumљani u sredњovјekovnom Kotoru Istrazhivaњa Filozofski fakultet u Novom Sadu 16 221 227 Klaic Nada 1989 Srednjovjekovna Bosna Politicki polozaj bosanskih vladara do Tvrtkove krunidbe 1377 g Zagreb Graficki zavod Hrvatske ISBN 9788639901042 Shishiћ Ferdo ed 1928 Letopis Popa Dukљanina Beograd Zagreb Srpska kraљevska akademiјa Kuncher Dragana 2009 Gesta Regum Sclavorum Vol 1 Beograd Nikshiћ Istoriјski institut Manastir Ostrog Zivkovic Tibor 2006 Portreti srpskih vladara IX XII vek Portraits of Serbian Rulers IX XII Century in Serbian Beograd Zavod za uџbenike i nastavna sredstva ISBN 9788617137548 Zhivkoviћ Tibor 2009 Gesta Regum Sclavorum Vol 2 Beograd Nikshiћ Istoriјski institut Manastir Ostrog Zivkovic Tibor 2008 Forging unity The South Slavs between East and West 550 1150 Belgrade The Institute of History Cigoja stampa ISBN 9788675585732 Zivkovic Tibor 2010 Constantine Porphyrogenitus Source on the Earliest History of the Croats and Serbs Radovi Zavoda Za Hrvatsku Povijest U Zagrebu 42 117 131 Zivkovic Tibor 2013a On the Baptism of the Serbs and Croats in the Time of Basil I 867 886 PDF Studia Slavica et Balcanica Petropolitana 1 33 53 Zivkovic Tibor 2013b The Urban Landcape sic of Early Medieval Slavic Principalities in the Territories of the Former Praefectura Illyricum and in the Province of Dalmatia ca 610 950 The World of the Slavs Studies of the East West and South Slavs Civitas Oppidas Villas and Archeological Evidence 7th to 11th Centuries AD Belgrade The Institute for History pp 15 36 ISBN 9788677431044 Malcolm Noel 1995 Povijest Bosne kratki pregled Erasmus Gilda Novi Liber ISBN 953 6045 03 6 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Zahumlje Medieval Lands BOSNIA Chapter 2 HERCEGOVINA formerly ZAHUMLJE HUM Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Zachlumia amp oldid 1137989762, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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