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Stefan Uros II Milutin (1282-1321)
The long reign of one of the most illustrious and powerful
medieval Serbian figures - the "Holy King Uros", (Milutin by given vernacular
name; pr. mee-LOO-tin) - marked the elevation of Serbia to a dominant
Balkan position, and saw cultural and economic prosperity and advances
along many lines.
The first 17 years or so of the new king's rule witnessed
considerable international activity - through much warfare and some diplomacy
- most of it south and east against the ailing Byzantine state, some against
decentralized Bulgarian interests in the northeast. Much of that was brought
to a close with the Serbo-Byzantine peace treaty of 1299, which recognized
the new realities of Serb expansion into the mostly South Slavic ethnic
space in Macedonia. The agreement was sealed by a high-level royal marriage
between the king and emperor Andronikos' minor daughter Simonida (Simonis),
and assured a generally cordial relationship between the two courts for
the rest of Milutin's reign. Helplessly caught in the middle of court
diplomacy was the unhappy young princess; her unlikely moral vindication
ultimately came through her fine portrait, well preserved and juxtaposed
to the much older king at Gracanica
monastery: her firm forceful gaze, having mostly defied visible Ottoman
attempts at vandalism and eradication, remained for generations a famous
reminder and symbol - as much of defiance as the transcendental triumph
of real values over time.
In many ways Milutin's policies show him as a self-styled
revivalist and heir to Byzantine traditions and legacy, assuming that
the classical establishment on the Bosporus no longer had the moral fortitude
and life-bearing energy to carry out its sacred duties. Preserved notes
by the leader of the Byzantine embassy during these negotiations, Theodore
Metohites, shows at the same time the traditional austerity of the Raskan
royal setting, and yet the selective splendor of a court with budding
imperial ambition. Much of the Byzantine court ceremonial and protocol
were further accepted, and a continuity of Greek customs and legal and
other institutions was emphasized wherever possible. This was particularly
true of the newly acquired Greek areas. In any case, the geopolitical
gravitation of his state was clearly more in the southeasterly, Aegean
direction, as opposed to the more traditional southwestern, Adriatic one,
and this consequently resulted in a visible cultural refocus.
EVERYDAY LIFE, "Children learning the alphabet"
He also built and established several courts, among them
Skoplje, which became the most important one, and continued as such during
the reigns of his successors.
Of course, none of this would have been possible without
a sound economic and trade basis, which was nurtured during this time.
While some wealth initially came from that customary but transient martial
side-effect - war booty - the stability of Milutin's long reign saw a
continued expansion of the fruitful economic policies of his father, Uros
I. A burgeoning monetary economy is evidenced by copious output of
silver coinage, the later series of which produced some novel and artistic
designs. Its aggressivenes also provoked trade sanctions from Venice,
and thence - among other things - landed Milutin, "the Raskan king", into
Dante's Paradise. Natural resource exploitation and trade patterns were
further expanded, and rights and obligations of the various ethno-economic
casts (inevitably more socio-economic as time passed: e.g. "Saxs" became
a synonym for miners, "Vlachs" for shepherds) were strictly regulated.
Milutin's generosity was legendary, as he erected several
dozen monasteries, churches and hospitals and endowed many more; much
of this legacy is still visible today. In Serbia, the most notable examples
include the opulent Gracanica monastery near Pristina, King's Church in
Studenica, Bogorodica
(Virgin) Ljeviska in Prizren, Banjska and Staro Nagoricino. However, these
efforts did not stop at national borders, and his generous foundations
and donations can still be witnessed in a wide area ranging from Italy,
via Thessalonika and Mt. Athos, to Constantinople and the Holy Land. No
doubt sinful at times, Milutin nonetheless retained the conviction of
a repentant Christian, and on balance emerged as a saintly figure. His
relics lie in the Church of the Holy Week in Sofia, Bulgaria, serving
as a hope and cure for many faithful to this day.
More on Stefan Uros II Milutin:
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- Portrait Gallery
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- Royal
Attire, King Milutin
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- Royal
Attire, Queen Simonida
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- Coin
Minting
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