 |
Ivan Crnojevic (1465-1490)
Upon the definitive Ottoman conquest of the central Serbian realm, the southwesterly
province of Zeta was initially spared - it continued a semi-independent existence for
another four decades, facing and often relying on the Venetian presence in the southern Adriatic.
This was accomplished under the leadership of princes from the house of Crnojevic, the most prominent
member of which was Ivan (sometimes referred to as Ivan-beg).
PRINTED LEGACY, the Oktoih
While Ivan's foreign dealings and his realm were generally of
minor importance, as its conquest was a mere sideshow in the Ottoman
subjugation of Europe, the rule and internal deeds of this ruler and his sons have considerably
larger historical significance. In many ways, this period represents a
key bridge - perhaps even a "missing link" of sorts - between the distant (and sometimes
legendary) times of medieval Serbian statehood, and the later period of Turkish yoke and
national liberation struggle culminating in the 19th c. This is signified by the
changes that occured during this rule - and symbolized by the switch of reference from
the medieval Zeta to the modern Montenegro ("Crna Gora" in Serbian). It is exemplified by
the shift of Ivan's capital from the lowland Zabljak first to the hilly Obod and
finally to the mountainous Cetinje, and evident in many other ways: the trade-oriented
monetary economy and farming of the coastal and lowland cities and adjoined areas
is replaced by a more primitive economy based on stock-raising and even brigandage;
as the quality farming lowlands are abandoned in favor of very sparsely populated barren
mountains, landed aristocracy and feudal land holdings disappear and get replaced by
a clan-oriented, patriarchal society organization; the significant and increasingly aggressive
coastal-based Venetian Catholic influences whither away as the Metropolitan of Zeta also shifts
his seat to Cetinje, thus establishing a staunch Orthodox presence. The
Crnojevics - in contrast, say, to previous feudal lords from Zeta -
figure prominently in the epics, where they appear in some of the finest
poems (like the famous "Wedding of Maksim Crnojevic") as the last, if modest, medieval dynasts in
the Nemanjic tradition - with a court in a castle, court officials, monastery endowments
and the like. On the other hand, the later line of Cetinje prince-bishops that
continuously led the increasingly autonomous Montenegro in the centuries that followed,
directly traced its roots to Ivan Crnojevic and the marvelous monastery he had dedicated to the Holy
Virgin. Legend has it that key Serbian nobility fled to the area under Turkish pressure, and
founded the prominent later tribes and clans. In many ways, that Montenegro, isolated and
self-sufficient, managed to harbor the purest Serbian epic tradition and the Kosovo-Nemanjic
collective memory. The foundation laid down by Ivan Crnojevic and his sons was instrumental
in facilitating much of that.
|