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Stefan Lazarevic (1389-1427)
Following the Kosovo battle where Prince
Lazar had perished, his son Stefan, still a minor, inherited rule
over Serbia. After a Hungarian raid on Serbia in late 1389, his mother,
acting as regent on his behalf, accepted a vassal relationship with the
Turks. In that capacity Stefan later diligently fought at Rovine (1395)
against the prince of Wallachia Mircea, and at Nikopolis (1396) against
the Crusaders, and the sultan - now his brother-in-law - duly rewarded
him for these services with Vuk Brankovic's possessions. With him Stefan
was later also in the famous Battle of Angora (1402), where the Turks
were defeated by the Mongols under Tamerlane, and Bayezid himself captured,
despite Stefan's valiant attempts to save his lord. Returning from Asia
Minor he visited Constantinople where he received the title of Despot
from the Byzantine emperor John VII. This marks the end of the initial
period of disintegration of Serbian state institutions following czar
Dusan's death and the begining of a recovery - now precipitated by the
Ottoman Angora debacle - which, although ultimately temporary, would prove
to be of great significance.
JUSTICE FOR ALL, illumination from Stefan's Mining
Law
In 1403 Stefan became a Hungarian vassal and received
in return Belgrade, the Macva region, the fortress of Golubac on the Danube,
the mining town of Srebrenica (eastern Bosnia) and possessions in southern
Hungary. He also established good relations with the new sultan Suleiman.
In the meantime, profiting from struggles between Suleiman and his brother
Musa, Stefan's brother Vuk rebelled, with some sucess, against him. However,
in a sudden clash in 1410, Vuk was killed by the despot's soldiers and
his Turkish allies. Stefan also managed to reconcile his differences with
the Brankovic family, and his nephew Djuradj in particular. The next dangerous
temptation arose after the sudden death of sultan Suleiman, as Musa, by
now the despot's bitter enemy, took possession of the Turkish throne.
Stefan answered by assembling a coalition with the Bosnians, Hungarians
and Musa's brother Mehemmed. Finally, in 1413, in the battle under Mount
Vitosa, Musa was defeated and killed. Shortly thereafter, Stefan signed
a favorable peace treaty with the new sultan Mehemmed, which had thus
enabled him, through his skillful and wise policy, to gather most central
Serbian lands under his power. Furthermore, just prior to his death in
1421, Stefan's nephew Balsa III Balsic bequeathed him Zeta, thus folding
this area once again back into the mainstream Serbian state. Serbia enjoyed
a new period of improvement and economic advance, and this was particularly
evident in mining (Novo Brdo, Srebrenica). It was responsible for a fifth
of the entire European silver production; only through Dubrovnik 5 tons
of silver were exported annually. In 1412 the well-known Mining Law was
passed, which among the rest guaranteed privileges to miners and security
in all mining activities. Also flourishing at the time were trade and
handicraft. Through intensive trade connections, Serbia was tied to two
important economic zones - the Adriatic and Danubian ones. Urban progress,
which filled the towns with men of trade and business from abroad (especially
from Dubrovnik), managed to partially detach Serbia from its feudal past,
in a manner somewhat reminiscent of contemporaneous Italian states of
the emerging Renaissance. Towns also gathered relative autonomy, and Belgrade
- at this point a thriving city of some 50,000 souls - became the new
Serbian capital, where the despot's dignified court was organized as an
interesting fusion of older Byzantine and humanistic gallant manners.
Significant fortifications from Stefan's reign remain today as the core
part of Belgrade's Upper City, with a commanding view of the confluence
of the Sava and Danube rivers. His main endowment is the famous Manasija
monastery.
According to his contemporaries, despot Stefan was a medieval warrior,
a well educated knight, delicate poet and humanistic savant, all at the
same time. He also belonged to the highest class of Hungarian aristocracy
and invested in huge possessions in Hungary where he settled Serbs, and
temporarily resided in his gothic palace in Buda - parts of which are
still preserved. Stefan Lazarevic died suddenly in 1427, leaving the throne
to his nephew Djuradj Brankovic.
His deeds elevated him eventually into sainthood, and the Church honors
him on August 1.
More on Stefan Lazarevic:
- Portrait Gallery
- Royal Attire, Monastery Rudenica
- Royal Attire, Monastery Resava, Manasija
- Monastery Resava, Manasija
- Monastery Ljubostinja
- Coin Minting
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