Vlastimir VON SERBIEN

Vlastimir VON SERBIEN

Eigenschaften

Art Wert Datum Ort Quellenangaben
Name Vlastimir VON SERBIEN
Beruf Groß Župan von Serbien

Ereignisse

Art Datum Ort Quellenangaben
Tod 850

Ehepartner und Kinder

Heirat Ehepartner Kinder

Notizen zu dieser Person

Vlastimir of Serbia (Serbian: Властимир, Greek: Βλαστίμηρος Ζουπάνος) was a Serbian Grand Župan who ruled the first independent Serbian state (Serbia -Rascia, Trebinje and Konavli[2]) from 835-850.[1] He is the founder of the first Serbian dynasty, the House of Vlastimirović.

Vlastimir was the son of Prosigoj. He ruled Rascia with the region of Konavli (later the region of Trebinje becomes an administrative unit formed in Rascia, Travunia) independent from theByzantine Empire.[3]

Bulgarian Khan Presian invades Serbian territory between 839-842 (Bulgarian–Serbian Wars) as the Bulgars may have felt a threat in the Serbs although they prior to this lived peacefullyasneighbours and shared a common frontier. The invasion ledto a 3-year war between the two and Presian made No territorial gain, was heavily defeated and lost many of His men, he was driven out by the army of Vlastimir which had expanded to the west, taking southeast Bosnia and northeastern Herzegovina(Hum).[2][4] However Braničevo, Morava, Timok, Vardar and Podrimlje subsequently fell into Bulgar hands.[5]

Vlastimir had three sons and one daughter. His daughter married Krajina Belojević (son of local lord Beloje of Trebinje) who was given the title of Župan, to rule the administrative unit of Travunia.[3][4]

His eldest son Mutimir became the Grand Župan while Strojimir and Gojnik becomes Župans with own domains subjugated to him. The three brothers successfully fought off a Bulgarian onslaught by Tsar Boris I in 853 or 854 and captured Vladimir, theson of Boris in an attempt of the Bulgars to revenge the previous defeat of Presian 839-842. Soon after this in the 860s the two younger brothers start a rebellion against their brother Mutimir after he had given them less and less power. Mutimir crushes the rebellion and the two brothers are sent as prisoners, a guarantee of peace, to Tsar Boris I.[2][3] Mutimir is baptized by Cyril and Methodius during the rule of Byzantine Emperor Basil I (867-886), and the Serbs are fully christianized by 873, seen in the tradition of theophoric names (e.g. Petar Gojniković, Pavle Branović) and a letter of Pope John VIII.

Quellenangaben

1 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vlastimir_of_Serbia

Datenbank

Titel Ackermann-Ahnen
Beschreibung Familienforschung Europa Schwerpunkte Hessen, Niedersachsen Hugenotten + Waldenser Europäisches Mittelalter
Hochgeladen 2024-01-01 13:36:39.0
Einsender user's avatar Thomas Wolfgang Ackermann
E-Mail ackermann.fuldatal@googlemail.com
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