The SerbsJohn Wiley & Sons, 15. tra 2008. - Broj stranica: 352 This sweeping history of the Serbian people starts with the settlement of the Slavs on the Balkan Peninsula in the seventh century and ends with the dissolution of Yugoslavia at the end of the twentieth century.
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Stranica ix
... Serbian saints; copper engraving, Vienna, 1741 170 5.5 Front page of the Slaveno-serbskija vjedomosti, August 3, 1792 172 6.1 The Great School building (1808–13) 181 6.2 Monastery (1485) and palace (1838), Cetinje 189 6.3 Assignat ...
... Serbian saints; copper engraving, Vienna, 1741 170 5.5 Front page of the Slaveno-serbskija vjedomosti, August 3, 1792 172 6.1 The Great School building (1808–13) 181 6.2 Monastery (1485) and palace (1838), Cetinje 189 6.3 Assignat ...
Stranica xiv
... Serbian statesmen and intellectuals who claimed the state played a crucial role during the period of struggle for autonomy and independence. Thus in December 1830, Prince Miloš Obrenovic ́, announcing an act by which the sultan granted ...
... Serbian statesmen and intellectuals who claimed the state played a crucial role during the period of struggle for autonomy and independence. Thus in December 1830, Prince Miloš Obrenovic ́, announcing an act by which the sultan granted ...
Stranica xvii
... Serbian linguists have claimed that “within the group of Slav language types, the Lusatian and Sˇtokavian dialects are among the most distant in character” (P. Ivic ́). Therefore language does not confirm a possible genealogical link ...
... Serbian linguists have claimed that “within the group of Slav language types, the Lusatian and Sˇtokavian dialects are among the most distant in character” (P. Ivic ́). Therefore language does not confirm a possible genealogical link ...
Stranica xix
... Serbian dynasty included saints, primarily the founder Simeon Nemanja (1166–96) and later his son Sava (1175–1236), the first Serbian archbishop. Their cults offered an opportunity for the development of a specific Serbian tradition as ...
... Serbian dynasty included saints, primarily the founder Simeon Nemanja (1166–96) and later his son Sava (1175–1236), the first Serbian archbishop. Their cults offered an opportunity for the development of a specific Serbian tradition as ...
Stranica xx
... Serbian state maintained its political independence, the more its specific history became durable, its society more stable, and its culture more homogenized. Faced with the Ottoman conquest in the midfourteenth century, the Balkan ...
... Serbian state maintained its political independence, the more its specific history became durable, its society more stable, and its culture more homogenized. Faced with the Ottoman conquest in the midfourteenth century, the Balkan ...
Sadržaj
1 | |
2 The Dynasty of Sacred Roots | 34 |
3 Between the Cross and the Crescent | 77 |
4 The Sultans Protected Subjects | 111 |
5 The Emergence of Modern Christian Society | 146 |
6 The Era of Democratic Revolutions | 176 |
7 National State For and Against | 204 |
8 All the Serbs in One State | 252 |
Select Bibliography | 297 |
Index | 301 |
Ostala izdanja - Prikaži sve
Uobičajeni izrazi i fraze
administrative Adriatic Albanians archbishop army Assembly Austrian authorities Balkan Banat became Belgrade bishops Bosnia Brankovic Bulgarian Byzantine Byzantium century Christian church cities clans coastal conquered Constantinople court Croatia Croats cultural Dalmatia Danube defeated despot Djuradj Dubrovnik Duklja Dušan dynasty emperor established ethnic forced grand zupan Greek groups Habsburg Herzegovina Hungarian Hungarian king Hungary imperial included influence Karlovci king’s Kingdom Kosovo Kotor land language later linked lords Macedonia metropolitan migrations Military Border Miloš monarchy monastery Montenegro Muslims neighboring Nemanja Niš Novi Novo Brdo organization Orthodox Ottoman Empire Ottoman rule party patriarch peasants period political population Prince Lazar Prizren regime regions remained River role Roman rulers Russia sanjak Sava schools Serbian Serbs Skopje Slavic Slavs Smederevo Stefan Stefan Nemanja sultan territory Thessalonika tion took towns traditions Travunia Turkish Turks Ulcinj uprising Uroš vassal Venetian Venice villages Vlachs voivoda Vojvodina Vuk Brankovic Yugoslav Yugoslavia Zahumlje